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No. 154 | A JWC Media publication
NEWS
I
Tickets Rise as Willow Road Construction Finally Clears Joanna Schneider dailynorthshore.com
A
fter more than two years of construction, all lanes of traffic along Willow Road reopened August 22, with the majority of the project completed from Waukegan Road to the Edens Expressway. Along with wider roads, the area is seeing an increase in speeding violations, police said. The controversial project – which brings a 1.2-mile corridor in Northfield from two lanes to four – represents years of debate weighing the needs of drivers and nearby towns with safety concerns in tiny Northfield. Continued on PG 12
the marriage between his sister and the scholar, was converted t’s difficult to imagine anyone from a classical costume opera better suited than Sophia originated from the Shanghai Wong Boccio to create and area. Mother played Tiger Wang. curate the bi-weekly Asian She not only had to act as a man, Pop-Up Cinema series showcas- wear special costumes and liping an assortment of Asian synch all the songs for the entire language films, both current and movie, but she practiced really contemporary. hard to learn the special theatriThe Hong Kong-born daugh- cal opera acting styles that norter of Wong Tsao-she, the mally require years of trainings. Motion Picture and General I was extremely proud of my Investment Company/Cathy mother’s efforts, and the movie Studio’s award-winning editor, also marked a significant highand Sil-Metropole Organization light of her career. Ltd. actress Yu Wan-fei, Boccio GS: Your father, Wong Tsaogrew up on studio sets. Boccio’s she, was an award-winning film love of and interest in film con- editor. Do you have a favorite tinued into the 1990s, when she film of his and if so, why is that launched the “S ophia’s movie a favorite? SWB: I was too young to apChoice” movie series in Beijing and later became the managing preciate editing techniques. My director of the Chicago Interna- father unfortunately passed away tional Film Festival from 2000 at 57 years old of a heart attack. to 2007. GS: Do you think that, Asian Pop-Up Cinema runs growing up in a film family, it through Dec. 4 at the Wilmette was your destiny to also be inTheatre, 1122 Central Avenue, volved in film in some way? as well as at the AMC River East SWB: Not exactly, but I defi21 in Chicago. nitely grew up watching a lot of Gregg Shapiro: Sophia, your movies. I watched almost every mother, Yu Wan-fei, was an film that my parents were inactress. Do you have a favorite volved in. My father was a fullfilm of hers and if so, why is that time editor of the studio and if the studio produced 30 films a movie a favorite? Sophia Wong Boccio: The year, he edited all of them. My word for word translation of the parents also took us to watch a Chinese title 王老虎搶親 /Tiger lot of Hollywood movies that Wang Kidnapped a Bride, about were exported and released in a local wealthy family’s son who Hong Kong. mistakenly kidnapped a young scholar and ended up matching Continued on PG 12 By Gregg Shapiro
Sophia Wong Boccio. Photography by Joel Lerner
Coming attractions Hong Kong native with family history in film creates Asian Pop-Up Cinema series
S E PT E M B E R 18 , 19 , 2 0
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INDEX
12
IN THIS ISSUE [ NEWS ] September Monthly Special
Available Lunch and Dinner Monday to Friday before 6pm $25.95 ChoiCe of Soup (three to choose from) or Mixed Green Salad ChoiCe of Dover Sole Almondine or Steak au Poivre
12 p lenty of pop
Sophia Wong Boccio is the founder of Asian Pop-Up Cinema, a new contemporary Asian film series that just launched at the Wilmette Theatre.
13 n orth shore announcements
Find out what’s happened and what’s slated to happen in the area.
[LIFESTYLE & ARTS ] 18 north shore foodie
18
Check out a delicious recipe from a top chef on the North Shore.
19 north shorts
Read Mike Lubow’s brief, insightful musings about life.
20 social whirl
Take a look at some of the top parties attended by North Shore residents recently.
Not available with any other offer. While quantities last.
WednesdayLadies Night! Half Price House Wine & Cocktails
[ REAL ESTATE ] 24 open houses
Find out — complete with map — what houses you can walk through for possible purchase on the North Shore on Sunday.
25 houses of the week
Intriguing houses for sale in our towns are profiled.
[ SPORTS ] 40 multi-dimensional
Lake Forest High School football player Quinn Julian, a pass-catching running back, has reached the end zone 10 times in three games.
[ LAST BUT NOT LEAST ] 50 sunday breakfast
JoEllen Kaufmann, founder of Nutrition & Health Consultants, talks about healthy eating habits.
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10
| saturday september 19 | sunday september 20 2015
the north shore weekend
NEWS
Winnetka Halts Stormwater Tunnel Project By Emily Spectre dailynorthshore.com
W
hile many Winnetka residents have expressed dismay over the rising costs of a proposed stormwater tunnel under Willow Road, the Village Council finally decided to put the breaks on the project when cost estimates rose to $81.3 million. “This very obviously compares unfavorably with previous cost estimates,” noted Steve Saunders, director of Public Works, at the Village Council meeting on September 1. Saunders was referring to the rising costs of a stormwater project that would provide relief for about 2,400 homes in the
western portion of Winnetka. The original estimate for the project provided by MWH Global in 2011 was $34.6 million based on conceptual designs, a cost that was still rejected by the majority of residents in a non-binding referendum held in March 2014. But the estimated costs increased to $58.5 million in April 2015, at which point the Village Council hired V3 Companies partnered with Hatch Mott MacDonald to conduct an independent cost analysis of the project. At the Village Council meeting on September 1, Greg Wolterstorff, project manager at V3, presented the firm’s analysis of the project estimating the project’s cost at $81.3 million. Wolterstorff
Our 30th Anniversary. My, how tiMe flies.
“This has been a wake up call. Every time we look at this project the costs go up.” –Bill Krucks
noted that due to the narrow roadway it would take more time to install the tunnel, thus driving the costs up, as well as significant added costs to dispose of material according to state requirements. Saunders proposed that the Village Council consider a reconciliation between the two estimates, where MWH and V3 work together to create another estimate. He also suggested V3 could conduct a value engineering analysis to find creative ways to make the project perform better and save costs. But the Village Council ultimately decided to completely shelve the project due to the high estimated costs and halt the per-
mitting process due to its uncertainty. “This has been a wake up call. Every time we look at this project the costs go up,” Trustee Bill Krucks said. “I strongly believe the time is now to put the breaks on this project.” Noting that he lived in the affected area, Trustee Krucks further encouraged the council to consider other options. “I urge the council to look at non-tunnel solutions for those 2,400 homes,” he said. Trustee Andrew Cripe agreed. “It is a waste of time. It is a waste of energy,” he said. “Put it on a shelf.” Trustee Marilyn Prodromos was the only council member who
supported the tunnel project. “We need to bring Winnetka into the modern age,” she said. “Unfortunately it costs money.” While President Gene Greable agreed that the tunnel project should be shelved, he urged the council to continue searching for a viable alternative. “We have to find a solution to the water problems in this wonderful community,” he said. The Village has received 14 responses to an RFP seeking an engineering firm to study alternate non-tunneling options to address Winnetka’s stormwater management. Those responses will be discussed at the next Village Council meeting on September 15.
John Conatser founder & publisher Arnold Klehm general manager [ EDITORIAL ] Brian Slupski executive news & digital editor Bill McLean senior writer/associate editor Kevin Reiterman sports editor Katie Ford editorial assistant [ DESIGN ] Linda Lewis production manager Samantha Suarez account manager/graphic designer Kevin Leavy graphic designer Bill Werch graphic designer [ CONTRIBUTING WRITERS ] Joanna Brown Sheryl Devore Sam Eichner Bob Gariano Scott Holleran Jake Jarvi Angelika Labno Simon Murray Gregg Shapiro Jill Soderberg
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12
| saturday september 19 | sunday september 20 2015
the north shore weekend
NEWS
SOPHIA Continued from PG 1 GS: What is your personal preference when it comes to movie genres and why? SWB: I like almost all the genres as long as the films possess a strong, intelligent script. GS: What is your all-time favorite movie? SWB: Cinema Paradiso! I absolutely adored how the village people grew old alongside the theatre; the father and son relationship between the projectionist Alfredo and the little boy; and still today, my dream is to own my own theatre and share films that I love with other people. GS: The original Sophia’s Choice movie series launched in Beijing in the early 1990s at a time when you were working in the business world. How do you see business and film working in conjunction with the other? SWB: The original Sophia’s Choice, showing primarily Chinese films with English subtitles, was a bi-weekly event at one venue for about 200 seats. It Sophia Wong Boccio. Photography by Joel Lerner was targeted primarily for an English-speaking audience. I hired a full-time Chinese national assistant to handle all the marketing and promotional activities as well as the actual operation of the screenings. I took care of the films’ selection and moderated the Q&As as well as being the interpreter for the talent participating in the screenings. It was doable. My Chinese business counterparts also appreciated my efforts in promoting simultaneously except in different national Film Festival. Can you Chinese culture through Chinese scopes. please share one or two of your GS: You were the managing fondest memories of that expemovies. Both business and film careers prospered and developed director of the Chicago Inter- rience?
SWB: My fondest memories include giving the entire seasonal staff the preparation talk at the beginning of the season every year; the post-festival thank you luncheons when everybody (staff and sponsors) relaxed and had fun sharing anecdotes; and lastly seeing how the International Connections summer screenings grew to today’s 20+ films/countries from the original six films/countries’ collaboration when I initiated the series. GS: What can you tell me about the process of selecting
Speed issues Since the reopening of all Officials and community ad- lanes on the east-west artery, vocate groups in Northfield police have seen an uptick in consistently opposed a wider speeding, with Northfield PD Willow Road for fear it would issuing upwards of 150 tickets jeopardize the safety of pedes- so far. Officers will continue to trians, especially children, at enforce the road’s new, 30 mph nearby schools, parks, churches speed limit – down from 35 mph and residential areas. – said Police Chief William The intergovernmental, $27 Lustig. million project involving IDOT “Willow Road is Northfield’s and the Villages of Northfield, main street,” reminded Lustig. Glenview, Winnetka and North- “We understand the importance brook, is aimed at improving of Willow Road for motorists traffic flow during key spikes like driving to and from Edens Exrush hour and weekends. The pressway. But we likewise ask project also included nearly $5 motorists to understand that this million in funds allocated spe- is a community of families, cifically to ease flooding in whose safety is our highest priNorthfield and complete addi- ority.” tional infrastructure improvePart of a larger series of safety ments. measures to minimize reckless
Until then, the Village will maintain a proactive approach including: • Back-to-school banners and posters displayed to remind drivers that school is open and to drive safely. • An illuminated monitor placed on Willow Road facing both directions to remind motorists of their speed. • Highly visible police patrols along the route will continue to enforce the road’s new, 30 mph speed limit. “The road was built to be safer.” Lustig said. “And we want to keep it safe.” Guy Tridgell, spokesperson for the Illinois Department of Transportation, said drivers can expect occasional lane closures over the next several weeks as
“My dream is to own my own
theatre and share films that I love with other people.”
–Sophia Wong Boccio
TICKETS Continued from PG 1
driving, the decreased speed limit along Northfield’s stretch of Willow Road transitions to 40 mph west of Sunset Ridge and then to 35 mph east of the Edens Expressway. Other safety elements include narrower, 10-foot-wide lanes (from 12 feet), a curbed median, dedicated left-turn lanes and landscaping features alongside the street, all of which will provide a “traffic calming effect,” state officials said. Speed monitors have been placed in both directions on Willow Road, Lustig explained, though currently, violators are commonly driving 15 miles or more over the speed limit. Once the project’s final elements are complete, officials anticipate speeding will subside.
films for the current iteration of Sophia’s Choice —Asian Pop-Up Cinema, which showcases Asian language films and how has it evolved over the years? SWB: Over the last 15 years while heading up different notfor-profits here, including two non-film related (Fulcrum Point New Music Project and Redmoon Theater), I still maintained a close connection with the Far East Film Festival in Udine, Italy, having served as their Hong Kong coordinator starting in 1999. I’ve attended at
least 12 of their festivals since then and met and befriended many filmmakers, producers and film festival directors from Asia throughout the years. The program that I selected for the inaugural season of Asian Pop-Up Cinema were chosen from films that I saw at the 17th Udine Festival in April this year; plus other recommendations f rom my Advisory Board members who are based in the Asian countries where the films were made. For the inaugural season, my objective is to present contemporary films with modern day stories that provoke interesting Q&A discussions. The films also need to be entertaining and accessible for the general public. GS: Why was the Wilmette Theater selected? SWB: Wilmette Theatre is a unique, independent film house whose innovative programming attracts smart audiences similar to what Asian Pop-Up Cinema is targeting. I’m hoping this location brings the films closer to the doors of busy parents living in the suburbs. GS: What do you hope to achieve with the Asian Pop-Up Cinema series? SWB: I hope to develop and cultivate a strong audience base in preparation for launching a full-fledged Chicago Asian Film Festival with in-person participation by top artists and talent from Asia. We are a non-profit, and so providing that funding is available, I would like to see Asian Pop-Up Cinema continuing to ‘pop up’ during the fall, winter and spring seasons while climaxing each year at an official Chicago Asian Film Festival.
“ The end result will be a much safer roadway that reduces congestion, improves traffic flow and encourages economic growth throughout the region.” –Guy Tridgell final items like striping, landscaping, lighting and traffic signals are checked off IDOT’s list. “We are excited that the project is nearing completion,”
Tridgell said. “The end result will be a much safer roadway that reduces congestion, improves traffic flow and encourages economic growth throughout the region.”
the north shore weekend
saturday september 19 | sunday september 20 2015 |
13
NEWS
North Shore Announcements PREVIEW
established the WGA in 1899 to help spread the game of golf across the Midwest. A Lake Bluff The 2015 Distinguished year later, the club hosted the Home Awards will be pre- second Western Amateur. The sented by the Lake Bluff U.S. Amateur and U.S. Open History Museum at a recep- also have been played at Ontion on Sunday, Sept. 20 from wentsia. 5 p.m.-6 p.m. in Lake Bluff “Few golf clubs have the Village Hall. tradition and history of OnFollowing the presentation, wentsia,” said Vince Pelmuseum representatives will legrino, the WGA’s senior vice unveil the restored mural of president of tournaments. explorers Marquette and Joliet, installed in its new Lake Forest home in the Village Hall The Friends of the Lake boardroom. The mural was Forest Library is holding a painted by local artist Mar- gently used book sale f rom guerite Kreutzberg and hung Friday, Sept. 18 through in Lake Bluff ’s now-demol- Sunday, Sept. 20 at the Lake ished East School for 85 years. Forest Recreation Center Community members are Gym. More than 100.000 gently invited to attend. used books will be on sale along with thousands of Lake Forest Onwentsia Club will host DVDS, music CDs and books a Western Golf Association on CDs. Most are priced championship for the first from $2-$7. time in more than a century The money raised supports when the 103rd Western the library’s free programming Junior Championship is for children, teens and adults. played there in 2020. The Friends has also funded The Onwentsia Club was several capital projects within among 11 charter clubs that the library.
Lake Forest
This year marks the 35th anniversary of the Academy Award-winning film “Ordinary People” being produced in Lake Forest. Citadel Theatre kicks off its 2015-2016 season with this play, running from Sept. 18–Oct 18. In addition, Citadel Theatre will host an “Ordinary People Shuttle Bus Tour” showcasing the locations and homes that were featured in the original film. Sign up at citadeltheatre.org.
Northfield
The Winnetka-Northfield Chamber of Commerce will host a Harvest Fest on Saturday, Sept. 26 at the Northfield Farmers Market. Pumpkins, fresh apples, vegetables, mums, cornstalks and more will be available. This family-f riendly event will feature children’s activities and food. Stop by from 7:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. The market runs through Oct. 17, rain for shine. For more information, go to www.winnetkanorthf ieldchamber.com
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14
| saturday september 19 | sunday september 20 2015
the north shore weekend
NEWS
STANDOUT STUDENT
Teen lobbies Congress for diabetes research convert sugars and other carbohydrates into the energy we use n the middle of July, 17-year-old to live. It’s unrelated to diet and Timothy Lacher of Lake Forest exercise habits, and the exact enjoyed a break from his usual cause is unknown. Though it can daily routine. He traveled to be managed, there is no known Washington, D.C. for three days cure. to meet with representatives from Lobbying for continued reCongress and the Senate about search into a cure is what brought the importance of that particular Lacher to D.C. along with 162 daily routine for more than 1 other delegates from all over the million Americans — those who United States at the 2015 Juvenile are afflicted with type 1 diabetes Diabetes Research Fund ( JDRF) (T1D). Children’s Congress. The JDRF Lacher was diagnosed with received more than 1,500 applicaT1D three years ago, the third in tions from children ages 4 to 17 his family following his father, who wanted to tell their stories Joe, and his older brother, Patrick. about life with T1D to WashingIt is a condition in which a per- ton decision makers. They also son’s immune system starts de- thanked Congressmen and stroying the cells that produce Senators for the two-year renewal insulin, a hormone needed to of the Special Diabetes Program
By Jake Jarvi
I
Timothy Lacher
that will provide $300 million to type 1 diabetes research. “In my daily life, I have devices connected to me, I’m always
Ravinia North Shore 9-18 Flooding ad_Layout 1 9/9/15 7:05 AM Page 1
“When I got to D.C., everyone was checking their blood sugars, counting their carbs at the meals. It sort of felt like you were a normal kid again, rather than being the odd man out.” People living with T1D are required to maintain constant vigilance of their blood sugar levels. To do this, Lacher has a continuous glucose monitor attached to his stomach with a display that shows his current blood sugar levels. Another spot in his stomach is attached to an insulin pump, which delivers micro-bursts of insulin into his system based on his days diet and monitoring things,” Lacher says. activities. Even with these devices, “I have to carry supplies around he still has to prick his finger to with me everywhere. So, you kind test his blood with a blood of feel out of place sometimes. glucose meter four to six times
per day. In between all of that, Lacher finds the time to live actively. He’s on the golf team at Carmel Catholic High School in Mundelein, and he’s training to run in the Chicago Marathon next month for the JDRF. Participating in such strenuous activity calls for extra vigilance with his glucose monitoring systems, turning down the insulin pump to keep his blood sugar high and eating an energy gel every couple miles. “There are a lot of misconceptions about diabetes out there,” Lacher says. “I feel, at least for me, that this is something that won’t hold me back or prevent me from doing anything. It’s definitely a motivation.”
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280 E. Deerpath, Lake Forest, IL 60045 | 8 E. Scranton, Lake Bluff, IL 60044
847.234.0485 | 847.234.0816 | www.gglrealty.com
911 MOUNT VERNON | LAKE FOREST, IL
GRIFFITH, GRANT & LACKIE REALTORS®
$2,950,000
Extraordinary quality of construction is found in this custom built estate home. Situated on 2.8 acres, the property provides a gorgeous pool and poolhouse, tennis court, expansive patios, play yard and privacy. Exceptional room sizes, tall ceilings, marble and hardwood flooring and lovely finishes. Gorgeous formal dining room with fireplace, Spacious family room with wet bar, 2-story sun room, paneled library, wonderful kitchen spaces and pantry areas. Fabulous master with sitting room, exquisite bath, and two large walk-in closets. All bedrooms are en-suite, with all baths freshly remodeled. One is a suite with kitchenette and sitting room. Huge basement with bar and wine storage, and rec/exercise rooms. Second floor laundry. 4 car heated garage. Gated entries to large circular drive. All masonry exterior and clay tile roof, 7 fireplaces, custom lighting. Dramatic, yet a very warm, family home. Tremendous value!
Elizabeth Wieneke Five Star Professional Award Winner, 2009-2014
847.732.4039 (cell) ewieneke@gglrealty.com
Celebrating 100 Years Storewide Sale
Save 10% to 50% Hand Knotted Rugs Traditional, Modern & Transitional
5140 Golf Road, Skokie, IL (2 blocks west of Old Orchard) 847-676-2500 | nahigian.com Monday-Saturday 9 a.m.– 5 p.m.
Nancy Adelman #1 in Lake Forest Sales & top 5 in overall sales in Lake County, 2014
847.338.5068 (cell) nadelman@gglrealty.com
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LIFESTYLE & ARTS
exposition will highlight handcrafted work 11, when she received a book from her mother. It was a thin book, Simply Beads. It made her profoundly happy. She also tackled craft kits, gifts from her mother. “I loved sitting in my room and making stuff when I was young,” Hector says. “I remember making beaded flowers, and I remember thinking, ‘Wow, that looks great.’ My mom saved a lot of my stuff. Today, when I look at it, I’m horrified. It doesn’t look so great anymore. It looks … tacky.” She has evolved into a quite an artist since then, crafting unique, jury-approved jewelry year after year. Call her driven. She plans to show four cases (28-30 pieces of jewelry per case) at this year’s ACE. Some of her pieces are valued between $100-$150, others between $3,000-$5,000. “I love making necklaces now,” Hector says. “Making one gives me the opportunity to make a significant statement.”
BY BILL MCLEAN
J
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Valerie Hector. Photography by robin subar
baskets, ceramics, fiber decorative, fiber wearable, furniture, glass, jewelry, leather, metal, mixed media, paper and wood. “It’s a radical move,” Hector says. “Everybody is excited. Everybody is a little nervous. We’ll be fine; it’s in good hands. The ones running it [ACE co-chairs Liz Dauten and Debbie Kerr] are
organized and making good decisions. What’s also exciting is Chicago Botanic Garden’s willingness to promote it, to reach out to its members. “The ACE is one of the top four [expositions] in the country,” she adds. “You’ll see some of the most innovative work there, created by dedicated artists.”
At Lake Forest Acute Care you will be seen by a Board Certified Emergency Room Doctor and a staff of professional Nurses, Radiology Technicians and Patient Care Technicians.
RT 41
Waukegan Rd.
ewelry designer Valerie Hector owned a 1972 Ford in 1992. She got in it to drive to her first American Craft Exposition (ACE) in Evanston. The car’s driver-side floor mat doubled as a makeshift toupee for part of the floorboard. “The bottom of my car had a hole in it,” Hector, a native of Wilmette and a business owner in Evanston, recalls. “Without a mat, I would have been able to look down and see the road while driving.” After showing her pieces of jewelry at ACE, a juried show, in ’92, Hector was able to afford a down payment for a new car. She dubs the down payment “a lifechanging moment.” She displayed her wares at ACE shows for the next nine years and every year from 2003-2014 at Henry Crown Sports Pavilion on Northwestern University’s campus. Her creative ornaments — necklaces, mostly — and a slew of craftwork from established and emerging artisans will catch the eyes of attendees at this year’s ACE, presented by The Auxiliary of NorthShore University HealthSystem Sept. 25-27. Henry Crown Sports Pavilion, undergoing renovations, won’t host the event this fall. ACE organizers selected Chicago Botanic Garden in Glencoe to showcase handcrafted work in 12 categories:
Everett Rd.
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 1025 W. Everett Rd. Lake Forest, IL 60045 | 847-234-7950
The 31st Annual American Craft Exposition (ACE) is also a major fundraiser for breast and ovarian Hector runs her business the customers,” Hector says. cancer research and care at North(Valerie Hector Designs, Ltd.), “What I’ve found is, when I’m Shore University HealthSystem. The established in 1988, from her ready to move on [to create differ- exposition at Chicago Botanic home in Evanston. She works ent products], the customers are Garden starts Sept. 25 at 10 a.m. It seven days per week. Her volumet- usually ready to move on, too. It’s concludes with a session (11 a.m.-5 ric pieces of jewelry for the 2015 a way of life, designing and making p.m.) on Sept. 27. The event’s Benefit ACE are airier and lighter in jewelry. It’s a lifestyle, not a job. I Preview is scheduled for Sept. 24, structure than her previous lines tried to be an academic, but that 5:30-9 p.m. For more information made me profoundly unhappy.” and ticket information, visit www. of necklaces. “I hope they go over well with Hector was 10 years old, maybe chicagobotanic.org/craft.
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the north shore weekend
LIFESTYLE & ARTS
north shore foodie
Beautiful Buffets II: Cookbook Sequel 25 Years in the Making Twenty-five years ago, when Bronstein would see Stagman rlene Bronstein couldn’t shopping or at school functions believe her bad luck. She in Glencoe, she knew one thing had been searching all had to ring true about her. “I over for “Beautiful Buffets”—a would look at Cookie and I cookbook she edited 25 years ago would think, ‘Who’s this glamorin collaboration with fashion ous woman? She can’t possibly retailer Cookie Stagman—as a know how to cook!’ ” says Bronstein. gift for an upcoming wedding. When she eventually found it But when Stagman fatefully she was shocked. It was selling approached her to edit her new on Amazon for $168. cookbook, that impression inThen and there, Bronstein had stantly changed. Adds Bronstein, to buy a copy of her own book. “She is an excellent cook, a wonWith that purchase, a new col- derful mom, and this person was laboration would spark that a homebody that I wouldn’t of would take the foodie duo on a expected.” The proof was in the trip down memory lane. pudding—or cookies, cakes, and brownies that would come to litter her cookbook’s pages. In the late 70s, Stagman and her husband Barry opened a showroom at the Chicago Apparel Center. She wanted her showroom to standout amongst the 300 others in the building. So Cookie cooked, and directed her own mini catering company. In only a few years time, their showroom was serving 1,200 people a week. Says Stagman, “After the markets I would get phone calls. ‘How did you make your lemon Cookie Stagman and Arlene mousse jello? How did you make Michlin Bronstein your egg salad caviar mold?’” By Simon Murray
A
Never one to keep family recipes a secret, Stagman would Xerox copies and hand them out to friends and acquaintances. But it was only until Barry mentioned the idea of taking all these recipes and compiling them into a cookbook—Stagman calls him “the heart and soul of [her] first book”—did she actually consider it. Though Barry has since passed away, his legacy lives on in its pages. “He took pure delight in his wife’s success,” says Bronstein. “He would’ve gotten such a kick out of us doing this again.” Similar to the first cookbook, “Beautiful Buffets, II” features recipes from sartorial legends Donna Karan, Carolina Herrera, Isaac Mizrahi, Bob Mackie, Judith Leiber, Carolyne Roehm, Arnold Scaasi, Chicago’s own Mark Heister and the late Bill Blass and Oscar de la Renta, the last of whom gave her a recipe for his lemon chicken. “Once we got his recipe everyone else followed,” says Stagman. “Beautiful Buffets II” can be found on Amazon or at The Book Stall (811 Elm St, Winnetka), Books on Vernon (664 Vernon Ave, Glencoe), and select Neiman Marcus and Sunset Foods.
Cookie Stagman’s Peanut Butter Doodles TOTAL TIME: 1 hour YIELD: 40
½ cup butter ½ cup peanut butter ½ cup sugar ½ cup brown sugar 1 egg 1 teaspoon vanilla extract 1 ½ cups flour ½ teaspoon baking powder ½ teaspoon baking soda 2 9-ounce bags mini peanut butter cups Mini muffin pans Mini muffin papers 1. Combine butter, peanut butter, sugar, brown sugar, egg, and vanilla extract. Mix well. 2. Add the flour, baking powder, and baking soda and blend well.
Cookie Stagman’s Peanut Butter Doodles (center). Photography by Joel Lerner
3. Spray mini muffin tins with non-stick cooking spray. Take a teaspoonful of dough and shape into a ball. Press lightly into muffin tins. Bake for 10-12 minutes in a preheated 350 degree oven until light brown. Remove from oven and press I mini peanut butter cup into the
middle of each muffin. Cool in the refrigerator and then remove from tins. Place in paper cups. Freezes well. 4. P.S. “You’ll have about 10 mini peanut butter cups left over,” adds Stagman. “I freeze them and enjoy them when I crave something sweet.”
Since 1991
Exceptional Value & Quality Exceeding Our Customers' Expectations www.premiercustomhomesltd.com 825 S. Waukegan Road-a8 #171 ■ Lake FoReSt, IL 60045 ■ (847) 735-9090
the north shore weekend
saturday september 19 | sunday september 20 2015 |
19
LIFESTYLE & ARTS
North Shorts Y
In Time for the Holidays
Musings by Mike Lubow
ou’re driving alone on Green Bay Road. It’s a steamy late summer night. A car pulls alongside. The attractive woman in the driver’s seat glares at you, then calmly makes a gesture known in slang as “flipping the bird.” This doesn’t anger you as she might’ve hoped. It just raises a couple of questions. One: Why is she mad enough to throw her dignity out the window? And two: Why is this gesture called “flipping the bird?” The second is more compelling since you’re someone who works with words. You throw her
a baffled half-smile and shrug. Then you start musing about the origin of that curious phrase. You’ve gotta get home and Google it. Soon you have an answer. But first... Okay, maybe a few blocks back you might’ve tapped your horn when she was ahead of you in the left-turn lane. She wouldn’t advance into the middle of the intersection. Which means you couldn’t go when the light changed. Some drivers do that, and you wonder why. You figure Google won’t help with this question, so
you don’t even try. But, as far as the “bird flipping” idiom, you found plenty. Seems the expression came from 19th-century England when theatergoers there would hiss at bad actors, sounding like mad geese. Their angry feedback came to be called “giving the bird.” The woman made her point. But, instead of making you feel bad or mad, she inadvertently helped you understand the reason for the bird reference. Now, if you could just understand why she doesn’t know how to make a proper left turn.
Let’s Talk Real Estate by Jean Wright, President/Broker Owner Crs, GrI
Early lO an QualIfICatIOn Financially speaking, there are a few steps that all parties entering a real estate contract should take to ensure the smoothness of their path from home search and home listing to successful closing. For prospective buyers, these steps are especially crucial to a stress-free transaction. With the help of a certified, skilled REALTOR®, these steps will be easily undertaken and deliver the keys to your dream home! In a temperamental market, many lenders have become hesitant to underwrite loans for large sums of money. In such instances, pre-qualification for loans has become an essential home buying tool that benefits both the borrower and the lender. By obtaining loan qualification early and securing a mortgage lender, you are able to provide your Realtor® with a very clear idea of your home buying budget. By narrowing your home search to only the homes that are in your price range, you limit the range of your search and focus only on the homes that are smart choices for your finances and long-term goals. This, in turn, leads to an expedited closing, where the buyer and their Realtor® are assured not to run into the unexpected obstacle of being turned down for a loan at the last minute. By securing your loan before beginning your home search, not only do you have a more realistic picture of your financial capability, but you also ensure that your loan will perform as expected over time. For professional advice from an experienced Realtor, call Jean Wright at (847) 217-1906 or email at jwright@jeanwright.com
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| saturday september 19 | sunday september 20 2015
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LIFESTYLE & ARTS
Socials Party on the Pier 2015 Photography by Mary Carol Fitzgerald
Supporters of the Winnetka Park Foundation crowded Tower Beach in late August for a nautical-themed night that will not soon be forgotten. Party on the Pier drew hundreds out for a night of food samplings from local establishments, an allinclusive bar, and the sounds of Chicago favorite Dick Holliday & The Bamboo Gang Band, all set to the backdrop of the setting sun along the lake. Funds raised went to the Winnetka Park Foundation, an all-volunteer organization whose mission is to enrich and extend the community’s recreational services beyond the means of conventional funding. partyonthepier.org
Allision Weise, Rose Wormley, Molly Cassin
Lisa Madlener, Garrin Kapecki
Elizabeth Christopher, Kim & Greg Frezado
Terry & Celeste Robbins, Ann von Kreuter
Steve & Maria Hole
Alexandra Perrand, Mark Salmon, Katherine Houlick
NEW CONSTRUCTION UNDERWAY!
114 E Woodland LAKE BLUFF
Interior photos are of other recent US Shelter homes in area, now sold.
Be Home for the Holidays in East Lake Bluff!
For additional information, contact
JULIE MORSE 847.830.4356 jmorse@koenigrubloff.com
This stunning approximately 2,850 sf home in walk-to-town Lake Bluff will be finished by end of year—and early fall buyers can make their own final selections! The impressive 5 bedroom, 3.1 bath home with front porch and finished lower level, offers gracious and spacious living on a beautiful quiet tree lined street in coveted East Lake Bluff. Part of veteran builder US Shelter’s select North Shore luxury portfolio, the inviting cedar-clad home offers high-caliber finishes on all levels, top to bottom. Among the highlights are high ceilings on all levels, hardwood floors, custom cabinetry, natural stone counters, 2 masonry fireplaces, Marvin windows and other energy efficient elements throughout the home.
778 N. WESTERN AVE | LAKE FOREST, ILLINOIS 60045
Buyers can now tour the home in progress. Under-construction pricing in high $1.2s. Visit www.usshelter.com for more information. Time to personalize is now!
KoenigRubloff.com
©BHH Affiliates, LLC.
saturday september 19 | sunday september 20 2015 |
the north shore weekend
LIFESTYLE & ARTS
Socials 24th Annual Play for the Cure Golf Outing Photography by Sheri Whitko Photography
Lynn Sage Cancer Research Foundation (LSCRF) recently hosted it annual golf outing at Westmoreland Country Club in Wilmette, raising more than $120,000 as more than 60 golfers turned out to “putt for pink�. After a buffet lunch, the players hit the course, concluding the day with dinner and winner announcements. Funds raised will support LSCRF, which provides contributions to the research and treatment of breast cancer in partnership with Northwestern Memorial Hospital and with the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University. lynnsage.org
Bill Evans, Mike Murlas, Craig Abraham, Andy Lapp
David Sack, Megan Levin
Cindy Mazzetta, Joanie Goodman, Cheryl Seder, Martha Glass
Betsy Solaro, Stephanie Letchinger, Jill Hart, Jacqui Chatz
Cindy & Thomas Mazzetta
Ryan Goldstein, Richard Goldstein, Michael Siemer, Marc Joseph
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Who says home buying has to be a hassle? Meet your North Shore Mortgage Team. Whether it’s purchasing a new home or refinancing your current, it helps to have an industry expert on your side. KEN PERLMUTTER, Founder & President 773.413.6234 Office | ken@perlmortgage.com perlmortgage.com/kperlmutter BEN GLAZER, Assistant to the President & Mortgage Advisor 773.413.6237 Office | bglazer@perlmortgage.com perlmortgage.com/bglazer
PERL Mortgage is an Illinois residential mortgage licensee (MB0004358) and equal housing lender. Licensed by Department of Business Oversight under the California Residential Mortgage Lending Act. NMLS #19186 - Illinois Residential Mortgage LicenseeDepartment of Financial and Professional Regulation, Division of Banking, 100 West Randolph, 9th Floor, Chicago, Illinois, 60601, (312) 793-3000, 2936 W Belmont Ave, Chicago, IL 60618 MB0004358 - NMLS #: 192568; IL:031.0007758 - NMLS #: 19532; IL:031.0001776
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REAL ESTATE
OPEN HOUSES
Skokie H
1. 341 E Woodland Road Lake Bluff Sunday 1-3 $1,225,000 Andra O'Neill, @properties 847.295.0700
wy
2. 15 E Washington Lake Bluff Saturday 1:30-3:30 $359,900 Laura Henderson, Baird & Warner 708.997.7778
Buckley Rd
Lake Bluff
E Park Ave
N Green
4. 166 Kimberly Lake Forest Sunday 2-4 $1,625,000 Martha Pederson, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 847.687.2946 5. 1742 N. Waukegan Road Lake Forest Sunday 1-3 $699,000 Julie Morse, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 847.830.4356 6. 341 Granby Road Lake Forest Sunday 2-4 $549,000 Ann Jones, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 847.691.1111 7. 383 Washington Road Lake Forest Sunday 12-2 $1,049,000 24Joe Pasquesi, Berkshire 33 Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 847.615.5023
Bay Rd
Lake Forest 3-22
Everett Rd
ie Va
Skok lley
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Half Day Rd
10. 728 Rosemary Road East Lake Forest Sunday 1-3PM $1.295,000 Katherine Hudson, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors® 847.234.0485
3. 971 W Deerpath Road Lake Forest Sunday 11-1 $824,900 Sondra M. Douglass, @properties 847.295.0700
1-2
E Townline Rd
9. 650 Lake Road Lake Forest Sunday 1-3 $3,400,000 Brad Andersen, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors® 847.234.0816
34
Highland Park
Deerfield ega auk N. W n Rd
37 3536
Dundee Rd
Glencoe
Northbrook
Northfield
Tower Rd
4258
Winnetka
13. 1680 Stratford Court Lake Forest Sunday 1-2 $849,000 Nancy Adelman, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors® 847.234.0485 14. 443 W. Deerpath Lake Forest Sunday 1-3 $1,675,000 Jack Comerford, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors® 847.234.0485 15. 495 S McCormick Lake Forest Sunday 11-1 $1,250,000 Laura Henderson, Baird & Warner 708.997.7778 16. 327 S Basswood Lake Forest Sunday 1-3 $1,099,000 Laura Henderson, Baird & Warner 708.997.7778 17. 529 Briar Lane Lake Forest Sunday, 1 - 4 $787,900 Mark Lanigan, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 224.636.1005 18. 1 East Stone Lake Forest Sunday 2-4pm $599,000 Suzanne Myers, Coldwell Banker 847.234.8000 19. 165 Marion Lake Forest Sunday 2-4pm $769,000 Leslie Dhamer, Coldwell Banker 847.234.8000
ida
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Lake Ave
6675 7678
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6465
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Kenilworth Glenview
12. 441 Rockefeller Road Lake Forest Sunday 2-4 $959,000 Nancy Adelman, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors® 847.234.0485
her N. S
Sunset Ridge Rd
Shermer Rd
Willow Rd
3941
8. 175 Suffolk Lane Lake Forest Saturday 1-3 PM $1,795,000 Elizabeth Wieneke, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors® 847.234. 0485
11. 107 Washington Road Lake Forest Sunday 12-2 $949,000 Ann Marie Hodgdon Farino, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors® 847.234.0485
Wilmette
20. 1918 Hackberry Lake Forest Sunday 1-3 pm $649,000 Lori Baker, Coldwell Banker 847.234.8000 21. 130 Winston Lake Forest Sunday 2-4pm $499,000 Pat Carter, Coldwell Banker 847.234.8000 22. 301 Terrace Lake Forest Saturday 1-4 $999,000 Coldwell Banker Lake Forest 847.234.8000 23. 15914 W Port Clinton Road Lincolnshire Saturday 1-4 $699,000 Robert Casorio, @properties 847.881.0200 24. 2445 Hybernia Drive Highland Park Sunday 1-3 $1,300,000 Alla Kimbarovsky, @properties 847.432.0700 25. 1902 Cloverdale Avenue Highland Park Sunday 2-4 $1,085,000 Marla J Forbes, @properties 847.432.0700 26. 1693 Violet Court Highland Park Sunday 1-3 $849,900 Jane Pickus, @properties 847.432.0700 27. 996 Park Avenue Highland Park Sunday 1-3 $799,000 Pickus/Schulkin, @properties 847.432.0700 28. 830 Moseley Road Highland Park Sunday 12-2 $599,000 Debbie Scully, @properties 847.432.0700
33. 1111 Princeton Ave. Highland Park Sunday 1-3 $395,000 Pat Denenberg Baird and Warner 847.644.5921 34. 1407 Arbor Vitae Road Deerfield Sunday 2-4 $419,000 Karen Skurie/Margie Brooks, Baird and Warner 847.361.4687 35. 2985 Walters Ave. Northbrook Sunday, 12-2 $1,939,000 Vicki Nelson, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 36. 2567 Chedworth Northbrook Sunday 1-3 $735,000 Marina Burman, Jean Wright Real Estate 847-401-1048 37. 551 Oakdale Glencoe Sunday 12-3 $695,000 Peg O'Halloran, Baird & Warner 847.446.1855 38. 1851 Mission Hills Lane Northbrook Sunday 1-3 $379,000 Peggy Cahill, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 847-707-3366 39. 273 Eaton Street Northfield Sunday 1-3 $475,000 Laura Cross Collyer, @properties 847.881.0200 40. 3010 Arbor Lane, #302 Northfield Sunday 1-3 $295,000 Beverly Smith, @properties 847.881.0200
29. 1538 Oakwood Avenue Highland Park Sunday 2:30-4:30 $550,000 Nancy S. Karp, @properties 847.432.0700
41. 342 Lagoon Northfield Sunday 1-3 $519,000 Julie Bradbury Miller, The Hudson Company 847.971.5024
30. 190 Leonard Wood South, Unit 105 Highland Park Sunday 1-3 $439,000 Marie Colette, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors® 847.234.0816
42. 263 Chestnut Street Winnetka Sunday 2:30-4:30 $3,149,900 Lyn Flannery, @properties 847.881.0200
31. 2550 Highmoor Road Highland Park Sunday 1-3 $799,000 Karen Skurie, Baird and Warner 847.361.4687
43. 1008 Asbury Court Winnetka Sunday 1-3 $2,850,000 Baylor/Shields, @properties 847.881.0200
32. 348 Park Ave Highland Park sunday, 2-4 $399,000 Karen Skurie, Baird & Warner 847.361.4687
44. 1103 Cherry Street Winnetka Sunday 1-3 $1,699,000 Kate Huff, @properties 847.881.0200
saturday september 19 | sunday september 20 2015 |
the north shore weekend
25
REAL ESTATE
OPEN HOUSES 45. 882 Elm Street Winnetka Sunday 1-3 $1,495,000 Alla Kimbarovsky, @properties 847.432.0700
56. 940 Ash St. Winnetka Sunday, 12-2 $1,845,000 Vicki Nelson, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000
67. 1518 Forest Avenue Wilmette Sunday 11-1 $1,629,000 Kate Huff, @properties 847.881.0200
46. 579 Hill Terrace Winnetka Sunday 12-2 $1,475,000 Maria Kernahan, @properties 847.881.0200
68. 3148 Temple Lane Wilmette Saturday 12-2 $1,050,000 Lisa Finks, @properties 847.881.0200
47. 50 Longmeadow Road Winnetka Sunday 1-3 $1,325,000 Baylor/Shields, @properties 847.881.0200
57. 11 Winfield Winnetka Sunday 12-2 $1,999,900 Joanne Hudson, The Hudson Company 847.971.5024 58. 15 Longmeadow Winnetka Sunday 2-4 $1,089,000 Joanne Hudson, The Hudson Company 847.971.5024
48. 385 Provident Winnetka Sunday 1-3 $1,149,000 Meg Sudekum, Baird & Warner 847.446.1855
59. 712 Maclean Avenue Kenilworth Sunday 12-2 $849,000 Mary Grant, @properties 847.881.0200
49. 433 Locust Winnetka Sunday 1-3 $1,550,000 Peg O'Halloran, Baird & Warner 847.446.1855
60. 143 Sheridan Road Kenilworth Sunday 2:30-4:30 $4,250,000 The Skirving Team, Coldwell Banker 847.924.4119/847.863.3614
50. 556 Willow Winnetka Sunday, 1 - 3 $1,495,000 Betsy Burke, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 847.565.4264 51. 1070 Sunset Winnetka Sunday, 1 - 3 $2,150,000 Betsy Burke, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 847.565.4264 52. 835 Hill Winnetka Sunday, 1 - 3 $1,760,000 Betsy Burke, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 847.565.4264
61. 325 Richmond Kenilworth Sunday, 1 - 4 $2,499,000 Betsy Burke, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 847.565.4264
53. 1065 Fisher Lane Winnetka Sunday 2-4 $1,900,000 Dana Slager, Conlon/Christie’s International Real Estate 312.415.2611 54. 1185 Elm St. Winnetka Sunday, 2-4 $969,000 Mary Kay Burke, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 55. 808 Lincoln Ave. Winnetka Sunday, 1-3 $1,349,000 Claudia Gaynor, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000
62. 520 Sheridan Kenilworth Sunday 2-4 $1,299,000 Paige Dooley, The Hudson Company 847.609.0963 63. 326 Oxford Kenilworth Sunday 12-2 $1,499,000 Joanne Hudson, The Hudson Company 847.971.5024 64. 1919 Central Road Glenview Sunday 12-2 $524,900 Connie Nadia Dornan, @properties 847.998.0200 65. 2750 Commons #208 Glenview Sunday 12-2 $339,500 Dawn Miller, Jean Wright Real Estate 847-312-8413 66. 2217 Chestnut Ave. Wilmette Sunday, 3-5:30 $1,175,000 Vicki Nelson, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000
69. 2610 Laurel Lane Wilmette Sunday 2-4 $599,000 Megan Jordan, @properties 847.295.0700 70. 1020 Pontiac Road Wilmette Sunday 2-4 $749,000 Chris Veech, @properties 847.881.0200 71. 320 Central Park Wilmette Sunday 3-4:30 $836,000 Betty Finn, Baird & Warner 847.446.1855 72. 727 Lamon Wilmette Saturday 11-1 $559,000 Laura Henderson, Baird & Warner 708.997.7778 73. 1535 Greenwood Wilmette Sunday, 1 - 3 $649,000 Jeanie Moysey, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 847.800.8110 74. 1001 Greenleaf Wilmette Sunday 2-4 $699,000 Joanne Hudson, The Hudson Company 847.971.5024 75. 749 12th Street Wilmette Sunday 12-2 $789,000 Coco Harris, The Hudson Company 847.372.3324 76. 1705 South Boulevard Evanston Sunday 1-3 $449,900 Linda Schwartz, @properties 847.295.0700 77. 2437 Ridge Avenue Evanston Sunday 1:30-4 $525,000 Ziegler/Lai, @properties 847.998.0200 78. 2759 Asbury Avenue Evanston Sunday 12-2 $729,000 Annika Valdiserri, @properties 847.881.0200
Houses of the week
$1,050,000
3148 Temple Lane Wilmette 5 Bedrooms, 4.1 Bathrooms Exclusively Presented By: Lisa Finks @properties 847.881.0200 lisafinks@atproperties.com Don't miss this custom home with huge rooms & tons of natural light. Grand Foyer leads to charming Living/Music Room & formal Dining Room for easy, elegant entertaining. Massive Great Room with vaulted ceiling, soaring windows & stone fireplace serves as home's centerpiece. Spacious kitchen fully equipped with granite island & casual dining area.
$659,000
827 Timber Hill Rd Highland Park 6 Bedrooms, 4 Baths Exclusively Presented By: Linda Waldman Baird & Warner 847.691.1044 linda.waldman@bairdwarner.com You will be amazed at the space - inside and out, all on a tree-lined street in sought-after Braeside, steps from Ravinia Park. Soaring 2-story entry, large gracious rooms throughout. Many updates include upstairs bathrooms -heated floors in master, custom closets and built-ins, stainless kitchen appliances and granite counters, washer/dryer. So much to love - including the price!
$1,300,000
1500 Sheridan Road #9EF Willmette Exclusively Presented By: Carrie Nadler Healy Jean Wright Real Estate 847.507.7666 chealy@jeanwright.com www.1500Sheridan9EF.com Luxury Condominium on the shores of Lake Michigan. The main level - beautiful foyer complete with wet bar; large living room opens into balcony; dining room; large paneled library; powder room. Kitchen with attached breakfast room overlooks Lake Michigan. A half level up - master bedroom with “His” and “Her” marble bathroom and dressing room, built-in drawers and closets, large 2nd bedroom and full bath. Just 1/2 a level down, contains a bedroom with built-in beds and a full bath.
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Anna’s WAREHOUSE & MARKETPLACE new fall items arriving daily
531 Bank Lane | Highwood, IL 60040 | 847.432.9151
Jacob Bloom, M.D.
everywhere
630 BLACKTHORN ROAD WINNETKA 6 bedroom/4.2 bath $1,749,000 630blackthorn.info
appraised for $1.8m seller says sell!
BRANDIE MALAY SIAVELIS Mobile: 773.968.4550 Office: 847.881.0200 brandie@atproperties.com atproperties.com
1102 OAK STREET WINNETKA 5 bedroom/4.1 bath $1,649,000 1102oak.info
CHERYL CHAMBERS Mobile: 847.977.3924 Office: 847.881.0200 cheryl@atproperties.com atproperties.com
971 W. DEERPATH ROAD LAKE FOREST 4 bedroom/4.1 bath $824,900 971wdeerpath.info
open house sunday, september 20 11am - 1pm
SONDRA DOUGLASS Mobile: 847.309.9095 Office: 847.295.0700 sondra@atproperties.com atproperties.com
1066 MOUNT PLEASANT RD. WINNETKA 6 bedroom/4.1 bath $2,075,000 1066mountpleasant.info
great new price!
GINNY GRINSTEAD
DEBBIE RICHWINE
Mobile: 847.502.1035 Office: 847.881.0200 ginnygrins@atproperties.com atproperties.com
Mobile: 847.702.4633 Office: 847.881.0200 debbierichwine@atproperties.com atproperties.com
1660 RYDERS LANE HIGHLAND PARK 5 bedroom/3.1 bath $1,725,000
new price!
SUSAN BROWN BURKLIN
LYN WISE
Mobile: 847.910.8905 Office: 847.432.0700 susanb@atproperties.com atproperties.com
Mobile: 847.624.6143 Office: 847.432.0700 lynwise@atproperties.com atproperties.com
881 KNIGHTSBRIDGE CT. LAKE FOREST 3 bedroom/2.2 bath $1,075,000
open house sunday, september 20 1 - 3pm
KERI COOK FALLS
SONDRA DOUGLASS
Mobile: 847.226.0016 Office: 847.295.0700 kericookfalls@atproperties.com atproperties.com
Mobile: 847.309.9095 Office: 847.295.0700 sondra@atproperties.com atproperties.com
996 PARK AVENUE HIGHLAND PARK 6 bedroom/4.1 bath $799,000 996park.info
five years new
550 LYMAN COURT HIGHLAND PARK 4 bedroom/2.2 bath $699,000 550lyman.info
braeside location
TED PICKUS Mobile: 847.417.0520 Office: 847.432.0700 tedpickus@atproperties.com atproperties.com
72 locust road, Winnetka 6 bed | 7.2 bath | $1,999,000 | 72locust.info i
Renovated and expanded in 2007, this custom-designed estate offers gorgeous formal rooms, an unrivaled first floor master suite, separate guest/in-law suites, an impressive chef’s kitchen, paneled library with a wet-bar, a three-car garage and nanny quarters -- all situated on a scenic acre in one of Winnetka’s most prestigious areas. i
Stunning architectural details provide elegant or casual living for all lifestyles.
JOHN BAYLOR mobile: 847.502.7471 | john@atproperties.com BARBARA SHIELDS mobile: 312.613.9802 | barbara@atproperties.com LIKE US: facebook.com/ShieldsandBaylor ShieldsandBaylor.com | Proud Sponsors of JDRF
*Based on total sales, BrokerMetrics, All MLS 1/2014-12/2014
Open House - Sunday, Sept. 20th, 1-3p.m. 1255 N. WAUKEGAN ROAD, LAKE FOREST Custom built, modern and luxurious 4,000 sqft ranch. Open floor plan to the living and dining rooms with 20 foot ceilings. Large living room with fireplace and wet bar surrounded by unique windows and a large dining area. Modern chef’s kitchen with two islands, custom Italian oak cabinetry blended with luxurious granite countertops and backsplash, and luxurious stainless steel appliances. Family room with fireplace, 20+foot ceilings, and sliding doors to your screened sunroom and rear yard. Split bedroom floor plan with two guest bedrooms and full bath at one end of the home and master suite at other end. Master suite with massive walk-in closet and built in dresser, huge ensuite master bathroom with large and modern open shower, oversized jacuzzi tub, double vanities and workout room. Private office with custom built-in desk and shelving. Two car attached garage and 1.4 acre lot with beautiful Koi pond. Offered at $899,900.
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Just Listed 345 Elder Lane | Winnetka
If you are looking for a classic East Winnetka home that has been updated to perfection, THIS IS IT! Stunning 2011-2012 renovation with the absolute finest details and finishes, and no detail overlooked. First floor features elegant living and dining room, stunning kitchen adjacent to large family room, library, laundry, mudroom, huge pantry and large breakfast room. Fantastic master retreat with fireplace, walk in closet for him and huge dressing room for her and a bathroom with jetted soaker tub, shower and radiant heat floors. Deck off of the master suite offers views of the large, tranquil property. Five additional BR’s including one on finished 3rd floor and one in finished basement. Five additional baths and lovely powder room. 345 Elder is steps from Elder Lane beach and an easy walk to Greeley School and New Trier, the Indian Hill Metra station and Centennial Park. Brand new roof in August 2015. Detached two car garage. Don’t miss the special home! $2,425,000 www.345ElderLn.com
A FRESH PERSPECTIVE ON REAL ESTATE!
Cathryn Lopez | (312) 339-7095 | Cathryn.Lopez@cbexchange.com | ColdwellBankerOnline.com ©2015 Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor sales associates and are not employees of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage.
North North Sho North North Sho 330 330 WestW Northfield, Northfi
saturday september 19 | sunday september 20 2015 |
the north shore weekend
sports
39
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Letter-perfect
Ultra-competitive Tashima ideal for libero position — and poignant with the pen BY BILL MCLEAN, sports@northshoreweekend.com
T
he Tashima sisters,Taylor and Isabelle, are sitting at the kitchen table at home in Wilmette. An elbow hits the table, anchoring an elevated hand. It is time. Time to engage in another bout of arm wrestling in their favorite venue. An elbow of the other sister hits the table.Two eyes glare at two eyes. Translation: “You’re on!”The sisters clasp hands. The sisters battle, their faces scrunching and reddening. A sister wins.The other elbows hit the table shortly thereafter, ready for Round Two.Taylor (New Trier,’14), a lefty, is a sophomore setter on Northwestern University’s volleyball team. Isabelle, a righty, is a senior libero on New Trier’s volleyball team. “My sister is so competitive,” Taylor, also competitive, says. “You should have seen us when we were little, playing Candy Land or Chutes and Ladders or any game. Those games got intense. Isabelle does not like to lose. She’s competitive and focused when she plays volleyball … when she plays anything.” Isabelle Tashima gripped a pen one day this past February and started to write a letter. Her older sister wasn’t nearby this time, wasn’t getting ready for an entirely different kind of in-house test — one involving, perhaps, ink and cursive script. Taylor Tashima would soon undergo surgery to remove a benign tumor from her right sinus and orbital cavity. Isabelle, all alone on that day in February, wrote heartfelt thoughts after writing “Dear Taylor.” Compassion had supplanted competition. “A nice letter, really nice,”Taylor recalls. “I still have it. You keep letters like that. What she wrote reassured me.” The surgery was a success, but Taylor developed an infection a couple of months later and returned to a hospital. Her parents, Paul and Jennie, were out of town at the time. Taylor’s favorite arm-wrestling opponent showed up at the hospital to talk, to listen, to be there. “It was scary,” Isabelle says of her sister’s diagnosis. “Taylor … she was positive, stayed positive. She was
really strong. We talked on the phone, and I tried to be there for her as often as I could.” Isabelle Tashima, on a volleyball court, is everywhere. She had to be everywhere, seemingly at the same time, in the final of the New Trier Tournament on Sept. 5, against an undefeated Loyola Academy team. How else would the 5-foot-7 libero have been able to finish with 21 digs in a two-set victory? Tashima here. Tashima there. Tashima everywhere. “To be a great libero, you have to be able to read the game well, think ahead,” Taylor says. “Isabelle does those things. She gets to so many shots because she wants to win so badly. And she grew up all around volleyball, watching my matches [at the high school and club levels] and learning the game from our father [a skills coach for Wildcat Juniors volleyball club teams]. “Isabelle,” big sis adds, “has a high volleyball IQ.” Isabelle, verbally committed to Harvard University, and Taylor played together on New Trier’s varsity volleyball squad in 2013, Isabelle’s sophomore year and Taylor’s senior season. That unit placed third at the Class 4A state tournament, a year after Taylor helped the Trevians finish runner-up at state. Isabelle totaled 129 digs and 27 aces in ’13, with six of the digs and one of the aces coming in NT’s three-set defeat of Crystal Lake South in the match for third place at state. New Trier won six of its first eight matches this fall. Its co-captains are Tashima and senior outside hitter Erin Denham. “Her consistency, her calmness, her aggressiveness on defense, how skilled she is at handling the ball,” Trevians coach Hannah Hsieh says of Tashima’s top strengths as a libero. “She’s quiet, and she’s also a steady, confident force for us.” Denham, like Hsieh and the team’s setters, appreciates Tashima’s consistency. If the setter is a volleyball team’s “quarterback,” the libero is a volleyball’s “center.” The big difference: the “center” in volleyball has to “hike” the ball to her “quarterback” from all kinds of angles and, at times, while hustling
and 25, her team’s point totals in a 25-22, 25-19 decision. Those mattered. She cares about teaching kids the game of volleyball, a coach’s daughter developing youngsters’ volleyball IQs and repeating tips and reminders she had heard from her father and her sister. She cares about the teens and adults at Our Place in Wilmette, a place where she volunteers to support people with developmental disabilities. She cares about the patients at a local hospice care center, where she also volunteers her time and energy. Tashima digs volleyballs. Kids and teens and adults dig Tashima. “Isabelle,” Taylor Tashima says, “is a special person. Smart, too. She is incredibly smart. Harvard and Isabelle — that’s a perfect fit. Isabelle does a great job of finding balance in her life. Her dedication to school, to volleyball, to everything … I look up to her to because of her commitments. “I watched her play [against Lake Forest High on Sept. 8, a 25-12, 25-10 NT win], and afterward I went up to her to ask her to join my dad and me for dinner. She said, ‘No, sorry, I have to do homework.’ She has earned everything she has achieved.” The Taylor Tashima Story, following Taylor’s surgery in February, got good, really good. Sports Illustrated noted it in its “Faces in the Crowd” segment (Sept. 7 issue). Tashima, ranked 10th in the Big Ten with 8.38 assists per set as a freshman last fall, had attended the tryout sessions for the junior national team before her surgery in February. The 6-foot setter found out she had made the team in May and then helped the U.S. capture gold at the European Global Challenge in Pula, Croatia, in July. Isabelle Tashima must have highfived Taylor Tashima at least once after the championship. Can you see it and hear it? Can you see and hear their right hands slapping ‘Belle of the courT: Isabelle Tashima of the Trevians strikes a shot during recent action this fall. somewhere above their beaming She made a verbal commitment to Harvard University. PHOTOGRAPHY BY JOEL LERNER faces? Can you see those smiles laterally. getic in matches, always ready to go. mitted she is to putting the team disappear slowly, kindred competi“Ball control, Isabelle is good at She executes great passes when we first.” tive spirits nudging kindred pure joy Those 21 digs she got to in that to some sideline? controlling the ball and getting the need them. Digs and passes … we ball to the setter, and she’s a really can count on her for those, always. win over LA earlier this month? You know what each must be good communicator,” the 6-foot “What I also like about her, what Those meant little to Tashima, thinking. Each is thinking, Kitchen Denham says. “She’s very ener- we all like about her, is how com- maybe nothing. She cared about 25 table, now!
40
| saturday september 19 | sunday SEptember 20 2015
the north shore weekend
SPORTS
Quinn-essential
Lake Forest High School’s multi-dimensional Julian can score in an array of ways BY KEVIN REITERMAN, sports@northshoreweekend.com
T
he mad scientists, aka offensive coaches at Lake Forest High School, have devised quite the concoction. They put 1 and 1 together and came up with … 11. Caution, opposing defensive coordinators. Quinn Julian — No. 11 — will cause sleep deprivation. He’s a challenge to track in LF ’s multi-formational offense. “Other teams have to know where he is at all times,” says LF offensive coordinator Phil DeWald, who likes to line up the speedster in just about every skill position — including tailback, slot receiver and wide receiver — imaginable. DeWald and Co. are looking to cook up new innovations and wrinkles daily. “I’m sure we will invent even more plays for him,” says DeWald, a rare football coach who fights fires in Chicago when he’s not on LF’s sideline. “He’s got nice ability to make people miss,” DeWald adds. “He’s yet to score on the same play twice.” Julian was being Julian — again — in LF’s 34-28 loss to visiting Warren on Sept. 11. On the Scouts’ fifth snap of the game, the 6-foot, 170-pound senior turned a broken play into a go-for-broke undertaking. He caught a bailout pass from quarterback Danny Carollo in the left flat, broke a tackle and used some catch-me-if-you, crossthe-field trajectory to score an electrifying 60-yard touchdown. “Danny ran out of the pocket when the play broke down,” Julian says. “I did what I could. “Danny and I have a mutual understanding,” he adds. “(If a play breaks down) he looks to me, and I look for some open space.” LF wideout Brian Doherty, meanwhile, was just looking for a piece of the action. His block — think Mack truck — inside the Blue Devils’ red zone put Julian on the red carpet leading directly to the right corner of the end zone. “I was gassed at the end,” says Julian. “But it’s a great feeling to
a wide-open, revved-up offense. “Fast-paced,” he says. “That’s how football should be played. I like it chaotic. I like keeping the energy up.” A rusher who likes the adrenaline rush? Go figure. Julian’s running style at times can be unique. He’s not afraid to try and pick up extra yards by running sideways through a hole. “Picking up two extra yards can make a difference in the grand scheme of the game,” says Julian. “I’m not the biggest back,” he adds. “So I don’t just lower my shoulder and plow through.” Instead, he saves that for teammate Chris Meng. “We’re contrasting backs,” says Julian. “He’s the one who likes to take on contact.” And, in case your asking, Julian admitted that he’s a big fan of that legendary folk-rock song: “Quinn the Eskimo (Mighty Quinn)”. It was concocted — uh, written— in 1968 by Bob Dylan. And it’s become one of Julian’s anthems. “I’m always listening to that song,” he says. “My parents have been playing it forever.” “Come all without, come all within, you’ll not see nothing like the mighty Quinn.” How fitting.
Stride right: Quinn Julian of the Scouts gets loose in the open field on his way to a 60-yard touchdown against Warren. PHOTOGRAPHY BY JOEL LERNER
get into the end zone in front of the home fans, especially when you’re down by seven.” Julian’s evening also included a pair of touchdown runs (1 and 11 yards). He now has 10 touchdowns in three games. Four of Julian’s five TD catches have been of the home run variety. In addition to the 60-yarder against Warren, he’s popped a 38-yarder, a 65-yarder and a 42-yarder. So far, it’s been a very Matt Forte-like season for Julian. In addition to averaging 20.2 yards
per grab (13-262), he also has rolled up a 7.8 rushing average (30-232) with five touchdowns — and a long of 61 yards. “He’s a running back with wide receiver skills,” says DeWald. “And since we have other playmakers, we can also use him as a decoy. “Hey, he’s a tough kid. Hardworking,” DeWald adds. “We don’t want to build a statue for him, but he’s having a very nice senior year.” Julian is coming off a solid junior season. He especially
sparkled in the state playoffs. Sharing handoffs with Wes Janeck, he ended up with 607 rushing yards, 143 receiving yards and six touchdowns. “Quinn brings so much energy,” says Carollo. “He’s so fast, so quick and so shifty. A great athlete. “And he’s multi-dimensional,” the QB adds. “He can make plays all over the field.” Lining up all over the field is just fine with Julian, an Eagle Scout in a family of Eagle Scouts.
“I don’t have a preferred position,” he says. “I just try to come up with my best effort and work as hard as I can on every play. “When I get the ball, it’s a frantic situation, and I’m just scanning the field, seeing my options, paying attention to my blockers and trying to find open lanes,” he adds. Turning on the burners is what Julian does best. A sprinter in the spring for the LF track and field team, he runs the 100 in 11.2 and the 200 in 22.4. Thus, Julian is a perfect fit for
Notable: Quarterback Carollo completed 23 of 36 passes for 341 yards and no interceptions in LF’s loss to Warren. Jack Skinner made six catches for 64 yards. Reed Thomas hauled in four passes for 86 yards, while Brian Doherty had four receptions for 47 yards. In three games, Carollo has connected on 51 of 79 passes for 765 yards with nine TDs and one interception. … LF’s defensive leaders were John Deering (10 tackles, QB sack, tackle for loss), Cal Wonham (6 tackles, interception), Jonathan DiValerio (3 tackles, interception), Andrew Athenson (5 tackles) and Gabe Funk (5 tackles). … Lake Forest (2-1) will travel to Libertyville (3-0) on Sept. 18 (7:30 p.m.).
A RareOffering in an Exceptional Location
679 Hill road, Winnetka
NEW TO THE MARKET!
6 bed | 6.2 bath | $2,495,000 | 679hill.info
i This all-brick, stately home sits gracefully on almost a half acre on one of Winnetka’s most prestigious roads i Formal and graceful living and dining rooms flank both sides of the two-story grand, yet welcoming, foyer. An oak-paneled office with a fireplace and a wall of book shelves, a large family room/chef’s kitchen complete the first floor. i The master suite boasts 2 walk-in closets, a spa-like bath, sitting area with fireplace, and a private balcony overlooking the impressive rear lawn. i Unrivaled lower level includes large recreation space (with a wet bar), exercise room, billiard area, 2 bedrooms and 2 ½ baths JOHN BAYLOR mobile: 847.502.7471 | john@atproperties.com BARBARA SHIELDS mobile: 312.613.9802 | barbara@atproperties.com LIKE US: facebook.com/ShieldsandBaylor ShieldsandBaylor.com | Proud Sponsors of JDRF
#1 NORTH SHORE @PROPERTIES TEAM IN 2014* *Based on total sales, BrokerMetrics, All MLS 1/2014-12/2014
42
| saturday september 19 | sunday SEptember 20 2015
the north shore weekend
SPORTS
Tenacious on ‘D’
LeRoy a constant, disruptive force on Loyola Academy’s dominant defense BY KEVIN REITERMAN, sports@northshoreweekend.com
H
e’s one of the major drawing cards for the Loyola Academy football team. No need for him to throw a pass, catch a pass or take a handoff. Ben LeRoy’s value is measured in double teams. And they’ve been multiplying on a weekly basis. Seemingly, the senior defensive tackle can’t go anywhere on the field without attracting a crowd — of guys wearing jersey numbers in the 50s, 60s and 70s. “He’s a monster out there,” Loyola head coach John Holecek says. “So gifted. He plays the game at another level.” In LA’s decisive 28-0 home victory over highly regarded Brother Rice (2-1) on Sept. 12, the muscle-bound 6-foot-3, 265pound LeRoy didn’t make any splash plays. But No. 91, a Northern Illinois recruit who fills out a football jersey like he’s a model for EA Sports, Madden NFL 16, was his usual disruptive force against the Crusaders. “He eats up blocks,” says LA defensive line coach Beau Desherow. “He’s always getting double-teamed, and that opens things up for our other linemen and linebackers. And the pressure he puts on quarterbacks helps our young secondary.” LeRoy, one of the few returning starters for the 3-0 Ramblers, shook off enough blockers to record five tackles in last Saturday’s Chicago Catholic Blue opener. “I like to rely on my technique most,” LeRoy says. “My strength and my quickness. There’re plusses.” In three games this season, he has 11 tackles to go along with three quarterback sacks. “He’s just a terror on the field,” says Desherow, a former defensive end for LA and the University of Tulsa. “He’s a high-motor guy. Very quick. Deceptively quick. And he’s one of the most powerful guys that I’ve coached during my 12 years here at Loyola. “It’s fun to get the opportunity to coach a kid like him,” adds Desherow, who describes LeRoy as a prototypical three-technique defensive tackle. “What he does on the field allows others to
Desherow. “One of the nicest kids that you’ll ever meet.”
HOLD THAT RAMBLER: Loyola Academy’s Ben LeRoy (No. 91) tries to fight off a double team in win against visiting Brother Rice. Photography by George Pfoertner
shine.” Teammate Justin Somuah lights up at the mention of LeRoy’s name. “We feed off him,” says the 5-foot-10, 240-pound senior nose tackle. “He’s full of exuberance, and he’s full throttle on every play. “He’s got size, strength and versatility,” Somuah adds. “And his leadership oozes out on us.” With LeRoy as one of the defensive centerpieces, the Ramblers recorded their second shutout of the season. LA’s firstteam defense has yet to allow a point. “We’re working really well
together. Everyone counts on each other. And we’ve done a good job of communicating,” says LeRoy, a Glencoe resident who attended Pope John III elementary school in Evanston. “Nobody is trying to do another person’s job.” Brother Rice (2-1), which entered the game averaging 52.5 points per game, had only two plays go for 20 yards or more: a 26-yard completion to Branden Houston from quarterback Camren Miller (35-46-2, 231 yards) in the opening series and a harmless 42-yard catch by Ricky Smalling early in the fourth quarter.
“They have a lot of weapons. Their quarterback (Miller) is accurate. A good athlete,” LeRoy says. “But you have to ignore that and just keep coming, keep pounding away.” Being coached up doesn’t hurt either. “Our coaches have seen it all,” says LeRoy. “They have every answer.” The same goes for LeRoy. Being a two-year starter on one of the state’s top football programs gives him a decided edge. “There’s always room to improve. You can always do better,” LeRoy says. “But last year
was really great for me. That’s when I came into my own.” He finished last season as the team’s seventh-leading tackler (61). And he had his share of disruptions: six tackles for loss and three quarterback sacks. And that game face you see on Friday nights and Saturday afternoons? Don’t put too much stock into that. Out of the trenches, LeRoy is LeHulk without the attitude. “What’s really refreshing about him is that he’s very humble,” says Holecek. “He’s a great kid. A great teammate.” “He’s a gentleman,” adds
Notable: Dara was dominant. The 5-foot-9, 180-pound senior running back proved to be a major star in Loyola’s win over Brother Rice. Dara Laja amassed 209 rushing yards and 40 receiving yards. And he scored three of his team’s four touchdowns, including a 36-yard catch and a 46-yard run. … LA quarterback Emmett Clifford had another solid outing, completing 18 of 30 passes for 213 yards. Behind solid line play from John Brekke, Jack Badovinac, Sam Badovinac, Thomas Nute and Daniel Kurkowski, senior connected with five different receivers, including Jonah Isaac (5 catches, 47 yards, 17-yard TD), Robert Sullivan (4-66) and Thomas Smart (5-37). … Patrick Tata was worthy of a game ball. He not only went 4-for-4 on PAT kicks, but he also had two brilliant punts. On his very first punt of the game, he pinned Brother Rice down at its own one-yard line. In the second half, he used the wind and a nice bounce to send a punt 65 yards. … If this were baseball, Bobby Desherow would have been awarded a save. He preserved the shutout by making two big plays in the red zone on Brother Rice’s best scoring opportunity of the game midway through the fourth quarter. First, Desherow tackled Brother Rice wide receiver Julian Blain for a five-yard loss at the LA 13-yard line. Two plays later, he tackled Blain at the LA one-yard line on fourth-and-goal. He finished with an interception, four tackles, including one for a five-yard loss. “He’s a hitter. He brings a lot of physicality to the safety position,” said LA head coach John Holecek. … In addition to Desherow and Ben LeRoy, LA’s other defensive leaders were Cross Daffada (8 tackles), Anthony Romano (8 tackles, interception), Graham Repp (7 tackles, QB sack), Frank Doherty (6 tackles, QB sack), Ian Swenson (6 tackles), Jack Hough (4 tackles). … The Ramblers will travel to Fenwick on Sept. 19 (1:30 p.m.) The Friars are 1-2.
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44
| saturday september 19 | sunday SEptember 20 2015
the north shore weekend
SPORTS
For the fun of the game Highland Park High School’s lighthearted Guzman plays for keeps on the gridiron BY BILL MCLEAN, sports@northshoreweekend.com
G
abriel Guzman played soccer, mostly as a goalkeeper, back in the day, the day being way before he became an offensive and defensive lineman for Highland Park High School football teams. Other soccer players did not just occasionally run into Guzman. They bounced off Guzman. “Soccer coaches and some of my friends told me I should try football,” Guzman, now a 5-foot-11, 255-pound senior, says. “I’m so glad they did. I tried football. I loved it right away. I’m now in my eighth year of tackle football. “I love this sport, love the contact, love the hitting.” Guzman, in his late teens, breaks into a smile. It’s a smile that would look perfectly normal on the face of a boy in his early teens. Guzman is okay with that. Guzman wants to be youthful, forever. “I’m a child at heart,” the 2014 all-Central Suburban League North pick admits. “I think I’ll always be a child at heart. I still enjoy LEGO. I enjoy building things. LEGO … you get to build a variety things using LEGO [pieces]. I might consider [studying] architecture.” Guzman is a four-limbed, helmet-wearing building block on both sides of the line for the Giants, owners of a 1-2 record after a 33-14 loss to visiting Glenbrook South (also 1-2) on Sept. 11. The young man collides with other young men on a football field for practically every minute of every game, bumping into behemoths from his left guard position on offense and stuffing running backs from his defensive tackle position. He shoves big
linemen. He sheds big linemen. “It takes heart,” Guzman says of the key to playing heavy minutes in the trenches. “It takes passion, definitely. It also takes good conditioning. Wrestling has helped me get in good condition.” A first-year varsity grappler last winter, Guzman took on heavyweights as a 220-pound junior. A good chunk of the heavyweights he faced weighed between 270 and 285 pounds. (Guzman gained weight, some 30 pounds, between the end of his wrestling season and the beginning of his senior football season). He lifted weights in the spring, in the summer, all while thinking about something bigger, much bigger, than Gabriel Guzman. Namely, the Giants. “I’m all about the team,” Guzman, one of four Giants captains, says. “Looking back [at 2014, when HP won the CSL North and went 9-1], I had a decent year. I hadn’t reached my potential. So I stepped it up. I wanted to step it up for the team. In the offseason I wanted to show people, remind people, what our program is all about. I worked hard. I encouraged guys to work hard, to never quit working hard.” A consummate leader is, in many ways, a first-year head coach’s best friend. A certain two-way, returning all-league lineman welcomed Joe Horeni to the HPHS program. Horeni spelled out his vision for the program, his football philosophy. Guzman, among other veterans, bought into the vision and philosophy. Varsity rookies watched Guzman, listened to Guzman. They eventually bought in, too.
quarterback someday. That’s down the road, way down the road. All that matters now, to Guzman, is the Giants’ next opponent. HP coaches and dozens of Giants are thankful for that.
“Gabriel is a big-time leader for us, bigtime, and he’s a fun guy,” Horeni says. “ He ’s an emotional leader, a hard worker. He embraces being a lineman. We run the ball quite a bit, and his athleticism helps our running game. We ask our guards to pull a lot. Gabriel moves well. We rely on him, on his skills as a backside guard. We count on him.” Guzman visited St. Norbert College in De Pere, Wisconsin, in early September. He checked out Illinois Wesleyan University last weekend. The former soccer goalkeeper wants to keep college defensive linemen from bruising his college
“Gabe is awesome, a great player,” HP senior running back/ defensive back/ A l l -Wo r l d special teams player Cristian Volpentesta says. “ He ’s voc al a n d physical and a great guy to have on the field.” The big guy, No. 66, has a thing for the little things in life. Author Kurt Vonnegut noted, “Enjoy the little things in life because one day you’ll look back and realize they were the big things.” Recite the quote to Guzman and watch him break into another boyish smile. “I love that saying,” he says.
Gabriel Guzman PHOTOGRAPHY BY GEORGE PFOERTNER
Notable: Highland Park visits New Trier (3-0) on Sept. 18 (7:30 p.m.). NT def eated host Maine West 29-14 last
weekend. … HP junior running back D.J. Penick, another wrestler, was at it again last weekend, amassing yards in bunches against visiting Glenbrook South on Military Appreciation Night. Penick grabbed 31 handoffs from senior quarterback Toby Tigges and rushed for 207 yards, including a 20-yard touchdown run at the 7:14 mark of the fourth quarter. He now has rushed for 798 yards in three games. … Tigges scored the Giants’ other TD, keeping a snap and running one yard to cut the Titans’ lead to 7-6 in the first quarter. … Volpentesta, the recipient of scholarship offers f rom Valparaiso University in Indiana (“ Volpo” to Valpo?) and Winona State University in Minnesota, rushed six times for 26 yards and recovered a muffed punt return against GBS in last weekend’s 33-14 loss. … Also in the GBS-HP game, junior linebacker Robert McCraren recorded a sack nine yards behind the line of scrimmage, and senior DB Jeremy Allen intercepted a Daniel Jenkins pass early in the fourth quarter. Giants senior lineman Jordan Mendiola stopped Titans senior fullback Calvin Sailer for no gain on a first-and-10 play in the second quarter. … HP started the second half of the GBS game with 15-play drive. Penick ran the ball on 11 of the plays, gaining 57 of his 207 yards. The Giants turned the ball over on downs at the GBS 12-yard line. … Volpentesta, on his hope for the Giants following the loss last weekend: “We have to have a good week of practice, lock in, focus.” ts chilly.
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46
| saturday september 19 | sunday SEptember 20 2015
the north shore weekend
SPORTS
Inside the Press Box the rundown | boys cross country
First to the Finish Invite: Highland Park senior Brett Davidson was one of the standouts at the talent-filled First to the Finish Invite at Peoria’s Detweiller Park on Sept. 12. Davidson, who claimed third (15:37.3) in the Lake County Invite at Lakewood Forest Preserve on Sept. 2, cruised the three-mile layout in 14:43.3 to take fifth place. The Giants finished 16th (444 points) in the 45-team meet. Meanwhile, New Trier proved to be one of the top teams: 4th, 209 points. Josh Derrick led the way, finishing eighth in 14:46.5. NT also had a top 25-showing by Jack Litowitz (15:06.5). DePaul Prep Invite: Paced by champion Paolo Tiongson (15:29.6), Loyola claimed top honors in this invite at Horner Park on Sept. 12. The Ramblers scored 27 points to easily to surpass runner-up Prospect (64). LA’s other top finishers were Andrew Niewiarowski (3rd, 16:08.22), Matthew Kadus (5th, 16:31.93), Daniel Pasco (7th, 16:40.77) and William Shortal (11th, 16:52.05).
Girls Cross Country
First to the Finish Invite: Led by sophomore Emma Milburn and freshman Lauren Garriques, the Scouts placed fifth (163 points) in the rugged First to the Finish Invite at Detweiller Park in Peoria on Sept. 12. Milburn took 17th in 17.41.5. Garriques finished 18th in 17:42.8. Katie Condon (24th, 17:53.7) and Brett Chody (27th, 17:55.7) also turned in strong performances. Meanwhile, New Trier placed seventh with 197 points. Oona Jung-Beeman led the way with a 22nd-place finish in 17:49.0. Savannah Noethlich placed 31st (18:01.2).
DePaul Prep Invite: Margot Dooley, Payton Hoag and Emily Plodzeen went 1-2-3 to help Loyola to a convincing win (20 points) at the Horner Park on Sept. 12. Annie Foley added a sixth-place showing, while K.K. Connolly added an eighth-place finish.
Chip Shots | Boys Golf
Deerfield Invite: It was a win-win tourney for Glenbrook South. The Titans not only claimed the team title (294) in this 12-team field at Twin Orchard Country Club on Sept. 12, but GBS junior Charlie Nikitas earned medalist honors with a 69 after beating Deerfield’s Jacob Krugman in playoff. Meanwhile, Loyola gained runner-up honors (299) thanks to the work of Chip Savarie (3rd, 72), Connor Prassis (6th-tie, 74), Kevin Meehan (10th-tie, 75) and Jack McGuire (18th-tie, 78). Lake Forest, which was led by Jed Thomas (4th-tie, 73), ended up in third place with 304. Elliott Georges shot a 76 (14th). The other scorers were Austin Fletcher (15th-tie, 77) and Scott Frevert (18th-tie, 78). New Trier finished fourth with a 307. Nick Iserloth paced the Trevians by shooting a 74 (tied for 6th). Matt Murlick and Michael Adler recorded 77s to finish in a tie for 15th, while Justin Choi ended up in a tie for 21st (79). Highland Park came in eighth. Noah Fishbein finished in a tie for fourth (73). Ben Udell shot an 80 to finish in tie for 25th.
Footnotes | Boys Soccer
Highland Park: Ethan Ochoa came up with a hat trick
to spark the Giants (3-2-2) to a 4-2 victory over New Trier on Sept. 10. Justin Illes also scored while the assists belonged to Ethan Feinburg and Caleb Cunningham. On Sept. 12, HP took care of Grayslake Central 4-0 on goals by Ochoa, Cunningham, Justin Nedoss and Aidan Subra. Ochoa, Subra, Feinburg and Gabriel Mundo had the assists. Lake Forest: The Scouts finished 1-1-1 in last weekend’s Kenosha Tournament. They beat Tremper 5-2 on goals by Matthew Mick (2), Matt Moderwell, Daniel Hanson and Noah Dunlap. In a 4-4 tie against Bradford, LF received goals from Moderwell (2), Keegan Kullby and Colton England. And in a 3-1 loss to Indian Trail, Kullby scored the team’s lone goal. On Sept. 8, the Scouts topped Zion-Benton on goals by Kullby, Hanson, Moderwell and John Schlachtenhaufen. Moderwell had the game-winner. New Trier: Ryan Krueger and Louis Shaw tallied goals to lift the Trevians (4-2-3) to a 2-0 victory over Whitney Young in the opening round of the Pepsi Challenge on Sept. 12. Ameen Salako had the assists. On Sept. 8, NT used goals by Salako and Matt Gallo to top Glenbrook North 2-0. Will Felitto and Krueger were credited with the assists. Sam Rutherford earned the shutout. And, on Sept. 10, in a 4-2 setback to Highland Park, Michael Gallo had a goal and assist for the Trevians. Felitto also scored, while Michael McCue picked up an assist.
Stick Nation | Girls Field Hockey
Loyola: Captains Jane Totaro and Lindsay Getz tallied
two goals each to lift LA to a 4-0 victory over Highland Park on Sept. 10. With the win, the Ramblers improved to 4-5. On Sept. 8, Getz came up with a hat trick in LA’s 4-0 victory over Glenbrook South. Totaro also scored for the Ramblers. On Sept. 3, a goal by Katie Finnegan was the difference as Loyola edged St. Ignatius 1-0. And on Sept. 2, the Ramblers cruised past Stevenson 8-1. Getz, Totaro, Brennan O’Malley and Kelsey Cook did the scoring.
Volleys | Girls Volleyball
Loyola: Highlighted by senior Christina Reed, who will play collegiately at Brown University, the Ramblers defeated Evanston 25-27, 25-18, 26-16 on Sept. 9. Reed led the team with eight kills and seven digs. Katie Randolph finished the contest with 30 assists and 10 digs. On Sept. 11, the Ramblers improved to 9-1 overall with a 25-15, 25-20 victory over Glenbrook North. The team was led by Randolph (22 assists, 8 digs), Olivia Van Zelst (10 kills) and Lauren Stadler (10 digs).
Roaming the Sidelines | Football
New Trier: The Trevians improved to 3-0 with a 29-14 victory at Maine West on Sept. 11. NT’s defensive leaders were Blake Field (4 solo tackles, 8 assists, 1 QB sack, 2 tackles for loss), Max Rosenthal (4 solos, 7 assists, 2 tackles for loss), Colin Casas (5 solos, 5 assists, 2 sacks, 2 tackles for loss) and Eric Nicholas (interception).
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The 2015 Distinguished Home Awards (DHA) will be presented at a reception
suNday, septeMBer 20th 5 - 6 p.M. in Lake Bluff Village Hall. Following the Distinguished Home Awards presentation, museum representatives will unveil the restored mural of explorers Marquette and Joliet, installed in its new home in the Village Hall Boardroom. The mural was painted by local artist Marguerite Kreutzberg and hung in Lake Bluff’s now-demolished East School for 85 years. Community members are invited to join us as we enjoy refreshments, congratulate this year’s winners, and view the newly restored mural.
www.700eDeerpath.info
OPEN SUNDAY! 1 - 3 PM
821 reilly laNe, lake forest
5 Bedrooms, 4.2 Baths
www.821Reilly.info
$1,549,000
728 roseMary road, lake forest
5 Bedrooms, 4.1 Baths
$1,295,000
www.728Rosemary.info
870 tiMBer laNe, lake forest
5 Bedrooms, 4 Baths
www.870Timber.info
$1,260,000
391 Belle foret driVe, lake Bluff
$1,095,000
5 Bedrooms, 4.2 Baths
www.391BelleForet.info
Griffith, Grant & Lackie reaLtors 280 E. Deerpath, Lake Forest, Illinois 60045 8 E. Scranton Avenue, Lake Bluff, Illinois 60044
www.GGLreaLty.com
107 washiNGtoN road, lake forest
4 Bedrooms, 3.1 Baths
www.107Washington.info
$949,000
174 leoNard wood s, #210, hiGhlaNd park 2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths
www.174Leonard.info
$399,000
191 wildwood road, lake forest
3 Bedrooms, 1 Baths
www.191Wildwood.info
$324,900
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50
| saturday september 19 | sunday september 20 2015
the north shore weekend
SUNDAY BREAKFAST
Healthy food claims not always what they seem By simon murray
"E
at with your eyes wide open,” JoEllen Kaufman tells me. The nutritionist is speaking of the tiny, visually challenging label on the underbelly of packaged foods that sounds like a Trivial Pursuit category: a product’s nutrition facts. To prove her point, she reaches into her purse and takes out what amounts to handfuls of energy bars, letting the brightly packaged rectangles spill onto the table in cascades of gluten-free promises and preposterous claims of doubledigit servings of protein. She looks at me over the egg white omelet that we’re sharing, one that Kaufman custom-ordered with a long list of vegetables, minus cheese (she’s lactose intolerant), with a side of fruit and — shhh, don’t tell anyone — a greasy, salty, all-around delicious side of breakfast potatoes. “I’d say most of [the energy bars] aren’t even healthy choices,” says Kaufman. “They’re healthier choices.” How did we get here? Not necessarily here here, as in where we’re eating (Prairie Grass Café in Northbrook, if you’re wondering). But how did the conversation get here, with Kaufman looking like she robbed a vending machine, and me wondering if we can ever trust brightly packaged rectangles ever again? The answer is 600 miles away, in a letter dated March 17, 2015. The letter’s author, one William
A. Correll Jr., or the Director of the Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition in Mount Airy, Md., had fired what amounted to a warning shot. Addressed to Daniel Lubetsky, the CEO of Kind, LLC (who you might know as the makers of those KIND snack bars that you have stocked in your kitchen cabinet shelves at this moment), the letter took the company to task, addressing the myriad violations the FDA levied at Kind. On Kind’s website, there’s a quote attributed to Henry James: “Three things in human life are important: the first is to be kind; the second is to be kind; and th e third is to be kind.” If he had ever heard of that quote before, Correll sure didn’t show it. Pulling no punches, he addressed what the FDA takes serious issue with: the claim that the brand is in fact “healthy.” He mentioned certain bars in particular: Kind Fruit & Nut Almond & Apricot, Kind Fruit & Nut Almond & Coconut, Kind Plus Peanut Butter Dark Chocolate & Protein, and Kind Plus Dark Chocolate Cherry Cashew & Antioxidants. "None of your products listed above meet the requirements for
“A truly healthy snack would be a piece of fruit and raw nuts.” –JoEllen Kaufman in a unique position to answer my questions. She boasts more than 25 years experience counseling and educating people of all ages in the field of nutrition and health. She comes across issues like this with her clients all the time. First off, not all energy bars are created equal. Even within brands, certain bars pack more health benefits than the other, more candy bar-ish choices. Of the bars that Kaufman brought with her, three stuck out: Kind Nut Delight, Lärabar Peanut Butter Cookie, and Quest Bar JoEllen Kaufman | Illustration by Barry Blitt Chocolate Brownie Protein Bar. use of the nutrient content claim are pretty much the nirvana of Brownies and cookies and 'healthy,' even though the Kind healthful tastiness.”) saturated fat, oh, my, you might That’s what I wanted to know, say. But it turns out, thinkThin’s label reads 'Healthy and tasty, convenient and wholesome,'" and what Kaufman was happy to Chocolate Dipped Mixed Nuts answer. wrote Correll. Crunch Bar is much worse. And So is Kind, in fact, misleading With a master’s of science in that’s because of one thing. consumers about the healthy ben- adult fitness from the University “The coating,” says Kaufman, efits their products provide? (At of Illinois, Kaufman, an Illinois making a mock sign of the cross one time, their website not so Licensed Dietitian Nutritionist at it, as if the energy bar grew legs subtly stated: “All of our snacks and Clinical Lipid Specialist, was and started crawling across the
table. “This is the danger — this is where the alarms go off. Palm kernel oil! So this is the really bad fat, the one we don’t want to have.” It’s not just palm kernel oil, says Kaufman. It’s coconut oil and palm oil, too. Especially if it’s been fractionated or hydrogenated; a process that involves heating the oil, then quickly cooling it so that it breaks up into fractions (hence the name). While the chocolate coating keeps it from melting, it has tons of saturated fat and leads to increased LDL cholesterol — or the bad kind. When Kaufman was 21, she was teaching exercise classes at the Mayer Kaplan JCC Community Center in Skokie. Though she was running 100 miles a week, a free blood clot and health screening revealed that her total cholesterol was 260 — or well above healthy. Shortly afterwards she sought out the advice of Dr. Peter Economou, of Presbyterian-St. Luke's Hospital in the city. “He changed my life course,” says Kaufman. Since then, Kaufman has seen things that were touted as being healthy — things like Lean Cuisine and Healthy Choice — go from being very unhealthy to something a little closer to what the name suggests. She hopes to see the same from these energy bar companies. Still, her answer to the question of is it “healthy” is a blunt one. Says Kaufman, “A truly healthy snack would be a piece of fruit and raw nuts.”
177 S. Deere Park Dr | Highland Park | $1,395,000 Enchanting English Country home nestled on a lush 1/2 acre in East Highland Park. Skillfully constructed in 1929 and thoughtfully renovated blending the original charm with today’s amenities. 4 levels of living space characterized by beautifully proportioned rooms and architectural detail. Private Beach rights. This is a house to treasure for generations.
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