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SUNDAY BREAKFAST ILLUSTRATION BY BARRY BLITT
Brad Rose talks about the salacious production Avenue Q. P54
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Winnetka’s T.L. Fritts to Close BY EMILY SPECTRE DAILYNORTHSHORE.COM
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esidents are mourning the pending closure of T.L. Fritts Sporting Goods, which has been a fixture in the community for more than three decades. Started by Tom Fritts in 1979, the store has been the go-to place for all things sports related. Fritts told Daily North Shore on October 6 that he decided to close the store and retire after selling the building to Kelly Golden, owner of Neapolitan, the Winnetka clothing store located on Elm Street. “I’ve worked hard since I was 16 years old, so this is wonderful,” he said.Fritts plans to have fun in his retirement, dedicating his time to his seven grand children and volunteer work. He said he is looking forward to the next chapter of his life. “I appreciate [the community’s] support. It’s been a great run. It’s been a great community,” he said. Fritts said Neapolitan has plans to relocate to the building at 560 Chestnut Street and will spend six months renovating the storefront. After clearing out all of its merchandise, T.L. Fritts plans to officially close by mid-December.
MEDICAL MARIJUANA COMES TO HIGHLAND PARK Meet the couple that was inspired to open a marijuana dispensary on the North Shore
was a qualifying condition in a state that issues medical marijuana cards to nonresidents. She ndy and Veronica Hunt, a ingested, in pill form, cannabis. couple living in Lake She got her life back, for a Forest, had a friend. The while. Cancer eventually claimed friend was a grandmother. She her. “The last three months of her had cancer. The simple act of eating eventually became a chore, life,” Andy Hunt recalls, “were an ordeal. good ones, better ones. She got Cancer consumed and con- to enjoy Thanksgiving, her grandtrolled her. children, her life. She was no “She wanted to get her life longer loopy from her pain back,” Veronica says. medication.” The ailing woman, an Illinois Andy Hunt, a retired trader for resident, flew to Oregon last year Citigroup at the Chicago Board to obtain medical marijuana from of Trade, and Veronica Hunt, a a dispensary. Her form of cancer former restaurateur, threw themBY BILL MCLEAN DAILYNORTHSHORE.COM
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Andy and Veronica Hunt of Lake Forest are opening a medical cannabis dispensary in Highland Park. PHOTOGRAPHY BY JOEL LERNER.
selves into researching the medical marijuana business after learning the plight and brief relief of their friend. Illinois’ Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
Pilot Program Act, under former Gov. Pat Quinn, was enacted in 2013. The number of conditions and diseases that can qualify a patient
to use medical marijuana in Illinois is 39. Among them are AlContinued on PG 12; Related story on PG 10
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INDEX
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IN THIS ISSUE [ NEWS ] 12 m edical marijuana
Meet the couple that was inspired to open a dispensary on the North Shore
12 n orth shore school district 211 Construction plans for District 211
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[ REAL ESTATE ] 22 o pen houses
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40 freakish talent
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[ LAST BUT NOT LEAST ] 54 sunday breakfast
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| SATURDAY OCTOBER 17 | SUNDAY OCTOBER 18 2015
THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND
NEWS
Medical Marijuana Treats Conditions, Not Disease State Sen. Julie Morrison hosted a forum on the topic this month BY STEVE SADIN DAILYNORTHSHORE.COM
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he purpose of using medical marijuana is not treating any specific approved disease but easing some of the conditions of those sicknesses, according to a physician involved with the state’s new program. Dr. Daniel Wynn, a Northbrook-based neurologist, took that position as one of four panelists at a public forum moderated by state Sen. Julie Morrison (D-Deerfield)
Oct. 8 at the Patty Turner Center in Deerfield. The event was designed to answer questions she and other public officials have been asked. “This is a drug that treats the symptoms of an illness, not the illness,” Wynn said. “This program may help people with MS or a form of cancer but it will not cure them.” Wynn was part of a group assembled by Morrison and West Deerfield Township Supervisor Alyson Feiger. It also included
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Mitch Kahn, CEO of Greenhouse, a dispensary; Bannockburn Police Chief Ron Price; and Bob Morgan, an attorney who oversaw the state’s medical marijuana program in its early stages. Morgan told a group of more than 50 that approximately 3,100 people are already registered users, the state’s licensed growers are cultivating cannabis, and dispensaries will open later this year. Kahn’s dispensary will be located at 151 Pfingsten Road in Deerfield and another, owned by Andy and Veronica Hunt of Lake Forest, will open at 1460 Old Skokie Valley Road in Highland Park. Kahn said he hoped to open in the fourth quarter of 2015 or in January. The medical marijuana industry will be the state’s most regulated, according to Morgan. “It will be more regulated than a hospital. If you can believe it, it will have more regulations than a casino.” People at the meeting had the opportunity to ask questions, which were submitted on index cards and were asked by Morrison. They included how to register to receive medical cannabis; legal
implications of how and when to use it; and the cost. “This is a free-market system, there is no regulation,” Kahn said of the price of the drug. “We will look very seriously at the competition and be competitive. We recognize there are people who might not have the wherewithal and we will look at finding ways for them to buy at reduced prices.” Kahn said after the meeting that price accommodations would be made, but he had no details yet. After two more questions, an unidentified man wearing a back brace interrupted the meeting before Morrison could ask the next one. “What is the price going to be,” he said. “I’m 75, I’ve been using it and I pay $50 for an eighth of an ounce.” He left before he could be asked his name. Kahn said he expected the dispensary prices to be approximately the same as those the man was paying on the black market, but patients buying cannabis legally would know what they were purchasing. Wynn said it was important for patients to work closely with their
doctors to determine the proper dosage and method of ingesting the medicine. He warned that cannabis could aggravate a condition because of other medicine a person is taking for their illness. “This is 100 times stronger than what you may have used 40 years ago in high school or college,” Wynn said. “It could cause someone using a walker to get drowsy, fall and break a hip. You may not think it’s not working, take more and 30 minutes later you’re totally wasted.” People using medical cannabis should regularly consult with their doctor to see how it is working and if the strain or method of ingestion should be altered, Wynn said. The physician making the recommendation for use must be one who has a regular relationship with the patient, according to Morgan. Other people wanted to know how medical marijuana lying around the house can be kept out of the hands of youth and whether the police would harass them if they had it in their car driving home from a dispensary. Kahn said it is illegal to open
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the package before getting it home or to use it anywhere other than in a patient’s residence. Price said people using medical marijuana would be treated like law-abiding citizens and illegal acts would continue to be prosecuted. “If people are driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs we will continue to arrest them like we already do,” Price said. “Kids still raid the liquor cabinet,” he added suggesting potential patients take the same precautions keeping drugs away from young people they do with alcohol. Customers at Kahn’s dispensary will learn about the different strains and methods of ingestion like smoking, vaping (electronic cigarettes) and edibles. He suggested coordination between medical providers and his company. There are currently 31 diseases which can be treated with medical cannabis, according to Morgan. Wynn said they include MS, Cancer, Aids, Crohn’s Disease and agitation of Alzheimer’s. A full list is available on the Illinois Department of Public Health website.
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| SATURDAY OCTOBER 17 | SUNDAY OCTOBER 18 2015
THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND
NEWS legal and welcoming and elegant,” Veronica Hunt, an alumna of St. Ignatius Prep School in Chicago, says. “They’ll find that [at elevele]. They will also feel safe and receive information, important information, from well-trained professionals.” The security at elevele will be Fort Knox-ish. Only people with valid registration cards — as well as staff members, including a dispensary agent in charge — will be allowed to enter the building. A patient, after receiving a treatment recommendation (not a prescription) of medical marijuana from a doctor, must provide specific forms of identification and fingerprints in order to secure a registration card. The marijuana must be grown in Illinois. Patients won’t be allowed to ingest the medication on the premises of the
MEDICAL Continued from PG 1 zheimer’s disease, fibromyalgia, multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis. A doctor’s recommendation of cannabis for treatment is Step No. 1 for a patient seeking to receive a valid registration card. The Hunts began their quest to open and run a local dispensary late last year. They received authorization to register for a dispensary in early February. On Sept. 28, the couple won zoning approval from the Highland Park City Council for a medical marijuana dispensary, named elevele, in a building under construction. Its location is 1460 Old Skokie Road. An attorney is preparing an
ordinance that will allow a special use permit to be issued for the Hunts’ dispensary, which will be called elevele. “Our hope is that the building will pass an inspection in midDecember and be ready to open in mid-January,” Andy Hunt says. “Our emphasis will be the training of our staff. Staff members won’t be pharmacists; they’ll be patient care representatives, and our dispensary won’t have an affiliation with any doctor. The key will be listening … listening to the patients. Our patient care representatives will be there to help patients choose the right path and right products [medical marijuana in the form of buds, concentrates, infused edibles or topical creams].
D-112 Considers Consolidation Plan Mohsin Dada, CFO provided an estimated Construction Timeline for the building reconorth Shore School District figuration plan: 112 board heard presenta- • Referendum approval in March tions on projected costs, 2016 construction schedule, and traffic • Design phase April 2016-April plans for the proposed middle 2017 school on the Sherwood and Red • Middle School campus construcOak school sites at its October tion May 2017- August 2019 6 Committee of the Whole • Elementary school construction August 2018 – August 2021 meeting.
BY JULIE KEMP PICK DAILYNORTHSHORE.COM
N
“The business will be profitable, and it will benefit ill people,” he adds. “People won’t have to break the law to get relief from their conditions.” Lake County’s first medical marijuana dispensary, The Clinic Mundelein (owned and operated by Green Thumb Industries), opened on Sept. 17. In June the Deerfield Village Board approved a petition for a dispensary license from The Greenhouse Group. Its location, 151 N. Pfingsten Road, is three miles from elevele. Under Illinois’ medical cannabis pilot program, patients suffering from a qualifying condition will be able to legally buy up to 2.5 ounces (70 grams) of medical marijuana every two weeks. Both Hunts, North Shore
residents since 1999 and Lake Forest denizens since 2007, know there is a stigma associated with marijuana, no matter the context. Marijuana is, after all, classified as a Schedule 1 controlled substance, along with heroin, cocaine and other narcotics, by the federal government. Both Hunts also see the presence of dispensaries and the accounts of marijuana as a palliative medicine gradually eroding the stigma. It is legal to use medical marijuana in 22 other states, four (Alaska, Colorado, Oregon and Washington) of which also legalized the recreational use of the drug. Marijuana is legal, medicinally and recreationally, in Washington, D.C. “Patients want a place that is
“These are approximate timelines that can change slightly,” said Dada. “Either we’ll be spending one year early or borrowing one year early.” The district spent approximately $50 million and borrowed $10 million in alternate revenue bonds when they were building Oak Terrace, explained Dada. Alternative revenue bonds have low interest rates at .05 percent to .10 percent. To pay for the estimated cost of $198 million the district would seek approval of a referendum to float a $150 million bond and raise the remaining money from: • Savings of $1.5 million per year for five years of a 2005 capital
improvement loan that has been paid off- that’s $7.5 million. • $3 million per year for six years from the Operations & Maintenance (O & M) fund that will no longer be needed for capital improvements if referendum passes- that’s $18 million. • Use the current fund balance in bond and interest fund plus part of the fund balance in the O & M fund to provide an additional $4.5 million. In 2021, the district could use working cash fund balances as an inter fund loan to borrow between $15 and $20 million. Options for this loan include a debt certificate (similar to a promissory note)
“What I like about the Illinois law is that it combines the best parts of the laws from the other states that allow medical marijuana.” –Andy Hunt bank loan and alternative revenue bonds, said Dada. Building Reconfiguration Update The middle school would have two acres of green space and earth berms along the north side with a soccer field, a track around the soccer field and a baseball diamond, according to Don McKay, principal architect Nagle Hartray. “We’re trying to find the right balance between the different elements.” Fifth and sixth graders would have a north side entrance, while seventh and eighth grade students would enter from the south side. McKay also discussed two
dispensary or around anybody younger than 18. And each patient will be advised to place the child-proof packaged medication in the trunk of the patient’s car on the way home. “Security … that also will be a heavy emphasis at our dispensary,” Andy Hunt, a graduate of Sullivan High School in Chicago, says. “We’ll have video surveillance there, 24/7. If a photographer from a publication wants to take pictures inside, after we open, we’d have to decline the request. We talked about our security plans with the Chief of Police in Highland Park, with the fire department, and both were fine with it. “We want the community to feel comfortable about [elevele], about medical marijuana. We realize not everybody fully understands the issues involved here, but there are so many upsides to this. We’ve heard stories, countless stories, from people who have seen the benefits of this, the relief it brings.” The Hunts know the Illinois medical marijuana law, chapter and verse, backwards and forwards. Ask them about the law’s fine print. Expect quick answers, thorough answers. “What I like about the Illinois law is that it combines the best parts of the laws from the other states that allow medical marijuana,” Andy Hunt says. “I know exactly what we need to do to keep our license and to keep the community safe.” The device Gordon helped perfect determines which allergens are in the air in a persons’ home or another location so they can take the necessary steps for relief. “We turned it into a marketable product,” Gordon said. “We put the device in their home. They send it into the lab and we analyze it for allergens.”
traffic plans. Option one would have a one access drive, while option two added a second access drive on the south end of West Ridge Park. This plan would reduce green space and replace it with three quarters of an acre of paved area. It would be an open campus with a recreational area that’s open to the public. “The advantage of having a second access drive is just potentially relieving some of the turns that we might have when a bus crosses in front of a car. We’re trying to alleviate traffic on Red Oak Lane to the extent that we could,” added McKay. Continued on PG 14
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14
| SATURDAY OCTOBER 17 | SUNDAY OCTOBER 18 2015
THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND
NEWS
MAIN STREET
LOCAL JURY DUTY MORE PROFESSIONAL THAN DAYS OF YORE (AND RYE)
The Circuit Court in the area now known as Lake and McHenry counties first held court on May 10, 1838. The Honorable John Pearson, who travelled from his home in Danville, Illinois, presided over the first proceedings that were held in the upper floor of a log house. The first floor of the building housed a tavern. With a docket of 62 cases, the court heard 19 that first day, three of which were for trespass and one for slander. t has been said that every On the second day, the grand American citizen has two jury returned three indictments fundamental duties that are for larceny and one for assaulting inherent to our system of gov- an officer in the discharge of his ernment. The first is to vote, and duty. After three days, the court the second is to serve on a jury handled all but 18 of the cases. Not many people lived in the when called to do so. Even in our modern world, area In the 1830s. Newspapers the right to be judged in an open reported, “This court was one of and public proceeding and to the curiosities of the day for have those arguments decided there was scarcely an adult in the by a jury of one’s peers is an county who was not either a unimaginable luxury in many plaintiff or defendant, juror or countries. The American legal witness. “All kinds of gaming at cards system ensures open courtrooms and horse racing were practiced with peer juries. If a resident of Lake County during the recesses. The essence is called upon to serve on a jury, of rye was dealt out at no small that person will be instructed to rate, not less than five or six report to the courthouse in barrels having been drunk and Waukegan. This facility serves the place left dry before court the Nineteenth Judicial Circuit was adjourned.” Court of Lake County. The term Today, the atmosphere is concircuit court dates to a time siderably more professional — when judges would ride on and sober — in the courthouse. horseback from location to loca- The Nineteenth Circuit Court tion on a predetermined sched- hears both civil and criminal ule, making a circuit of stops to cases. It says much about human hear and adjudicate cases nature that cases are often settled brought before them. at the 11th hour, either through
I
Bob Gariano D-112 Continued from PG 12
to start building the new middle school would begin in June 2017. Board president Michael Once the referendum passes in Cohn pointed out that they still 2016, design and bidding would need to sit down with the park take about a year, and then they district to decide what their needs would start building in the are in designing the baseball summer of 2017. School would diamond, fields and community open in 2019 or 2020. After the design on the middle school has playground. been completed, they would Budget and Schedule begin working on Indian Trail The middle school would and Oak Terrace elementary account for 59 percent of the schools. Only the additions work overall cost, said Jeff Masters, would be done during the school executive construction manager, year, as the renovations would Gilbane Building Company. The occur during the summer. rest of the cost would be spent at When board member Jane Braeside, Edgewood, Indian Solmor-Mordini asked if stuTrail, Northwood and Ravinia, dents would need any temporary with one percent spent on Oak classrooms during the construcTerrace, the newest school, and tion process, John Fuhrer director another one percent spent on of operations and facilities said other costs including moving that they weren’t planning on expenses, consultant fees and using mobile classrooms. “The builder’s risk insurance. goal is one move in the shortest According to Masters, plans amount of time.”
“It begs the question in my mind if we’re not able to do this and we can’t in the next couple of years capitalize on this opportunity and the efficiencies that we’ve all discussed, what’s our plan B?” Solmor-Mordini asked the board at the end of the meeting. She continued, “How and when are we going to determine what buildings we’re going to have to close and what classrooms we’re going to enlarge; what programs we’re going to have to curtail? What are we going to do with the 12 buildings that we can’t maintain? “It is a question that we’re asked all the time and we’re so buried in our current work and also with the reconfiguration,’ said Dr. Michael Bregy superintendent. We’d be happy to look at it as a cabinet and then make a presentation as a board.”
“This court was one of the curiosities of the day for there was scarcely an adult in the county who was not either a plaintiff or defendant, juror or witness.” a plea bargain in the case of criminal charges or through an out of court settlement in civil cases, right before the court convenes. These settlements are achieved just as jurors and judges are waiting to hear the case. This means that jurors will often spend a morning in the waiting room only to be told that their services are not needed in court as originally planned. At a time when the efficiency of government can be questioned, the Waukegan Court-
house is a model of courtesy and accommodation. Jurors who are reporting for duty will wait in a modern, well-equipped room with wireless access and the latest conveniences. The walls are festooned with portraits of 46 serious-looking judges who have presided in the circuit court in modern times. One of the active judges will instruct the waiting jurors about the need for confidentiality during the trial and will answer questions about the procedures. The web site for the Nineteenth Circuit Court (http://19thcircuitcourt.state. il.us) is a fascinating read. Not only does it describe the history and current status of the court, it also has two pages of volunteer suggestions for citizens of Lake County. These ideas include such compelling and worthwhile volunteer activities as Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA). These trained volunteers help advocate for the best interests of children in court. Another substantial volunteer opportunity is the Probation Support Volunteers Program, which provides mentorship for offenders now on probation. It would be hard to imagine a more interesting civics lesson for our young people than to attend a session at the Waukegan Courthouse. Spending a day there gives a citizen a chance to see one of our most important government processes in action.
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| SATURDAY OCTOBER 17 | SUNDAY OCTOBER 18 2015
THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND
LIFESTYLE & ARTS
NORTH SHORE FOODIE
A GRILLING DELIGHT: CALDWELL’S GRILLE A TASTY TREAT BY SIMON MURRAY
W
ho says grilling season is over? On the contrary my contrarian grill-masters: The leaves may crunch underfoot as you’re greeted by a cold chill, but such gas grilling need not be left to the idyllic summer months. We can have our seared steaks and eat them, too. “Think of a propane grill as an outdoor stove, and you will discover a form of cooking that delivers the pleasures of the summer cookout as easily in November as in July,” writes Sam Sifton, Food Editor of the New York Times. Heady words, especially for those who practice each
Chef Eric Kim
season’s culinary trends—hot chocolate in winter, ice cream in the summer—as if it were dogma. It’s easy. Peel off the protective layering of your grill (you might peel off a protective layer or two yourself ); or you could stand there, rubbing gloved hands together for warmth—ah, the fickleness of fall—as you check on the sizzling smorgasbord under the hood. In your heart of hearts, you know its better this way— even if that means you’re outside in a parka and snow pants, flipping burgers like a pro. Raise a spatula if you’ll still be grilling this month, then look around. You’re not crazy. Add Executive Chef Eric Kim of Cadwell’s Grille to that list. In the middle of the Embassy Suites Hotel in Deerfield, the open-air layout of the restaurant ensconced inside a large atrium means a comfortable meal without the worry of unwanted elements, but still gives an impression of a summer cabana. It’s here that Kim serves a fourteen-ounce, hand-cut ribeye to traveling businessmen and women, and neighborhood families and friends. Loaded with sides: bacon confit fingerling potatoes, balsamic marinated
seasonal vegetables, and a bourbon brown sugar steak sauce—the rib eye “melts in your mouth; tender. It’s like a tenderloin: like you’re eating a filet mignon with a lot of flavor,” says Kim. The trick starts at your local butcher. When ordering your ribeye, you want to ask for an enlarged spinalis dorsi—what is colloquially referred to as “butcher’s butter.” (The French word for it is calotte—as in skullcap.) It’s the ribeye cap, the deckle. It’s pricey for a reason: It’s by far the tastiest cut. Says Kim, “Unless you’re really watching your cholesterol; I say go for it, man.” Turn your grill on high heat. Slap said ribeye on the grill. If you’re using a thermometer, 135 degrees is medium rare. Leave the top open—“You want to see your steak,” adds Kim—and turn your steak only once. Enjoy. Close the top of your grill. Repeat. Who says grilling season is over? Here’s to an endless, propane-fueled summer. Whether cooking in sandals or boots, in humidity or six-inches of snow. Cadwell’s Grille is located in the Embassy Suites Hotel in Deerfield at 1445 Lake Cook Rd. Call 847945-4500 for reservations.
N
Flu Shots Available
RT 41
Waukegan Rd.
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.
Everett Rd.
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 1025 W. Everett Rd. Lake Forest, IL 60045 | 847-234-7950
Caldwell Grille’s Hand Cut Ribeye. PHOTOGRAPHY BY JOEL LERNER
Caldwell Grille’s Hand Cut Ribeye TOTAL TIME: 1½ HOURS SERVES: 4
Cadwell’s Grille’s Knob Creek Brown Sugar Steak Sauce • 1 quart ketchup • ¼ cup brown sugar • ¼ cup Knob Creek Bourbon • ¼ cup apple cider vinegar • 2 teaspoons roasted garlic pepper • 1 teaspoon Worcester sauce Combine all ingredients in a pot. Bring up to a boil. Lower the heat and reduce by half.
Vegetable Marinade • 1 zucchini, sliced thick • 1 yellow squash, sliced thick • 1 red onion, sliced thick • 1 red bell pepper, sliced thick • ½ cup olive oil • ¼ cup balsamic vinegar • 4 cloves garlic, minced • Salt and pepper to taste Place all items in a Ziploc bag and marinate for an hour. Salt and pepper to taste before grilling. Grill on high heat for 1 minute on each side.
LAKE FOREST
ACUTE CARE The DocTor Is AlwAys In AT lAke ForesT AcuTe cAre.
Dr. Mark Mass
THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND
SATURDAY OCTOBER 17 | SUNDAY OCOTBER 18 2015 |
17
LIFESTYLE & ARTS
North Shorts Musings by Mike Lubow
“Storm”
I
t’s raining hard over a woodland waterway in one of the prettiest places on the North Shore, Winnetka’s Skokie lagoons. Storms can happen suddenly on autumn days that start out sunny. The sky darkens. Low clouds roll in and unload. The water’s surface makes you think of machine-gun fire. Thunderclaps encourage that idea. Wind shakes trees. Leaves and branches fly off and spin around. Somebody’s picnic setup blows into the waves along with a fisherman’s pail. Rain comes
down with “sound and fury” as Shakespeare said somewhere. But unlike his sound and fury, this isn’t “a tale told by an idiot signifying nothing.” It’s a tale told by a warm front in disagreement with a cold front signifying nothing. Except maybe the uncertainty of steady sunshine. Now, a bird flies across the lake through the rain. It might be an ordinary robin but it’s not doing an ordinary thing. It’s flying a bullet-straight route through all that wind and falling water, implacable and flapping fast in spite of it. You gotta wonder: where’s it going? What’s so important
there? How can it maintain altitude when the weight of a deluge is pushing down on its back? What’s it thinking? You’ll never know. And it doesn’t matter. All that matters is that you feel an unexpected flash of admiration for a fellow creature unfazed in a storm. This makes your day. Today’s “North Shorts” piece was adapted from a collection of such writings from Mike Lubow’s newest book, “Wild Notes— Observations over time about birds and other fleeting things.” It’s available now on Amazon, Barnes & Noble and may be ordered in bookstores.
Let’s Talk Real Estate by Jean Wright, President/Broker Owner Crs, GrI
NOw, where DID I Put that PaPer? the ImPOrtaNCe Of DOCumeNtatION A common obstacle buyers and Realtors® face at the closing table is that of improperly filled out or lost documents. Many lenders, through changing mortgage documentation, last-minute denials, contract cancellations, lost or misfiled paperwork and rating requirements have caused both buyers and Realtors® alike to lose faith in the organization of these institutions. Smart Realtors® and savvy buyers will take this into account and have a “Plan B” at the ready, in order to ensure expediency in closings. Keep copies of all pertinent paperwork collected in one safe place where you can access it easily. If possible, make duplicates of each document and give them to your Realtor® for safekeeping. Know your credit rating and if possible, obtain pre-approval to keep your closing running as smooth as possible. With a little extra effort, someone else’s lost papers don’t have to be your problem!
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 OCTOBER 17 | SUNDAY OCTOBER 18 2015
THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND
LIFESTYLE & ARTS
SOCIALS 35TH ANNUAL COLUMBIAN BALL Photography by Jillian Marsala, Jeff Schear and Alison Neidt Toonen
The Museum of Science and Industry (MSI) held their annual Columbian Ball, a night which raised more than $2 million for the Chicago institution. The nearly 700 guests enjoyed an evening of food, drink, dancing, and memorable moments, which included experiencing MSI’s new temporary exhibition, Robot Revolution. Funds raised from the night will go toward MSI’s inspirational educational programs, exhibits, and experiences. msichicago.org
AMY ELLIS, MEREDITH MITCHELL, CATHY DOHANALK JODY SCHUMACHER, CRISTY DONALDSON, JULIE BROWN
DUNCAN & BROOKE MACLEAN
ANTHONY & LESLIE SCATTONE, NANCY & MARK STACY
QUESTLOVE
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GUS & IRINA SCHAEFER
SATURDAY OCTOBER 17 | SUNDAY OCOTBER 18 2015 |
THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND
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LIFESTYLE & ARTS
WILMETTE THEATRE HOSTS LIGHT AND NOIR FILM FESTIVAL DAILYNORTHSHORE.COM
A
s part of the special programming for the Light & Noir: Exiles and Émigrés in Hollywood, 1933-1950 exhibition that is on display at the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center from Oct. 11, 2015, to Jan. 10, 2016, the Wilmette Theatre is proud to partner with the Museum to present the Light & Noir Film Festival, November 14-15, 2015. The theatre is located at 1122 Central Avenue, Wilmette. Tickets for each of the films are $10 regular and $8 senior & student and are available at the Box Office, by phone 847.251.7424 or online at: www.wilmettetheatre.com. Light & Noir: Exiles and Émigrés in Hollywood, 1933–1950 tells the fascinating story of immigration, acculturation, and innovation that inf luenced
Hollywood film as an American cultural phenomenon. After coming to power in early 1933, Hitler took control of the German film industry and used cinema to fuel his propaganda. As a result, many Germanspeaking film icons f led to America and became the actors, directors, writers, and composers of Hollywood’s “Golden Age.” Through costumes, props, film footage, and personal memorabilia, the exhibition explores how beloved films such as Casablanca and Double Indemnity were shaped by these pioneering film artists. Light & Noir Film Festival at the Wilmette Theatre will screen three of the finest examples of Noir, comedy, and anti-Nazi films from the 1930s and 1940s: Saturday, November 14 “Ninotchka” (1939) 7:30 p.m.
Directed by Ernst Lubitsch, stars the incomparable Greta Garbo as an icy Soviet official whose heart is melted by a handsome Frenchman. This humorous take on the philosophy of communism provides a different take on the Cold War. Saturday’s post screening discussion: Ron Falzone, Columbia College Sunday, November 15 “Hangmen Also Die!” (1943) 1 p.m. Directed by Fritz Lang with a story by Berthold Brecht, this anti-Nazi film is a rarely seen examination of the assassination of Reinhard Heydreich, and the Nazi pursuit of members of the resistance movement. When the film was released, it introduced American audiences to a completely different set of good guys.
“Mildred Pierce” (1945) 4 p.m. Directed by Michael Curtiz, received five Oscar nominations, including Best Picture. Features Joan Crawford as a mother willing to do anything for her daughter – possibly even murder. Sunday’s post-screening discussions: Alison Cuddy, Associate Artistic Director of the Chicago Humanities Festival Supporting Sponsor: DePaul University School of Cinematic Arts Community Partner: DANK Haus German Cultural Center, Goethe-Institut of Chicago Sunday, November 22 at the Illinois Holocaust Museum “The Life of Emile Zola” 1:30 p.m. Winner of 1938 Academy Award for Best Picture, and starring Paul Muni, this film profiles French author Emile Zola,
including his campaign on behalf of Alfred Dreyfus, a Jewish army captain accused of treason. A post-screening discussion will be led by David Chack, Producing Artistic Director of ShPIeLPerforming Identity Theatre. Reservations for this film are required at: www.ilholocaustmuseum.org/lightnoir. Submitted by The Wilmette Theater More than 100 years after opening its doors, the not-forprofit 501 (c)(3) Wilmette Theatre continues to be the premiere multi-arts and performance center anchoring the downtown Wilmette business district. The theatre plays host to an eclectic mix of film, movies, concerts and live programs and is also home to the well-respected Actors Training Center, offering classes for kids, teens and adults. 1122 Central Avenue, Wilmette,
IL, 60091. www.wilmettetheatre. com Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center uses the history and lessons of the Holocaust to honor the memories of those who were lost and to teach universal lessons that combat hatred, prejudice and indifference. The Museum fulfills its mission through the exhibition, preservation and interpretation of its collections and by presenting educational programs and initiatives that foster the promotion of human rights and the elimination of genocide. The Museum is open Monday through Friday from 10:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m.; Thursday evenings until 8:00 p.m.; and Saturdays and Sundays from 10:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. Learn more at www.illinoisholocaustmuseum.org
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LAKEFRONT ESTATE IN KENILWORTH
Sealed Bids Due By 5:00 P.M. On October 30, 2015 245 SHERIDAN ROAD, KENILWORTH
ORIGINAL LIST PRICE: $5,750,000 RESERVE PRICE: $4,500,000* Historically significant 5000 sq. ft. George Maher designed prairie style residence on 3/4 of an acre with 100 feet of private lakefront beach. Will be shown by appointment and/or open for inspection on: Saturday, October 17, 2015 from 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm Saturday, October 24, 2015 from 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm To schedule a private showing or more information, please contact Peter Cummins at 847.710.6798. *The owner is not obligated to accept any offer unless the price & terms of any contract submitted are satisfactory even if the reserve price of $4,500,000 is met or exceeded.
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| SATURDAY OCTOBER 17 | SUNDAY OCTOBER 18 2015
THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND
REAL ESTATE
OPEN HOUSES 1. 440 Oak Ridge Court LAKE BLUFF Sunday, 11-1 $659,000 Tracy Wurster Team, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 312.972.2515 2. 548 E. Scranton Avenue LAKE BLUFF Sunday 12 – 3:30 $798,000 Janice Post, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 847.903.4514
Buckley Rd
Lake Bluff
3. 325 Ravine Forest LAKE BLUFF Sunday 12-2 $818,000 Linda Landsell, Coldwell Banker 847.234.8000 4. 650 Maple LAKE BLUFF Sunday 2-4 $1,399,000 Suzanne Myers, Coldwell Banker 847.234.8000 5. 138 E. Sheridan LAKE BLUFF Sunday 12-2 $749,000 Suzanne Myers, Coldwell Banker 847.234.8000
1-9
N Green Bay Rd
Lake Forest
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6. 130 E. North Avenue LAKE BLUFF Sunday 1-3 $530,000 Jack Comerford, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors® 847.234.0485
Skok
7. 605 Moffett LAKE BLUFF Sunday 2-4pm $497,000 Jennifer Moreland, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors® 847.234.0816
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Northbrook
8. 235 Green Bay Road LAKE BLUFF Sunday 1-3PM $614,000 Flor Hasselbring, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors® 847.234.0816
18. 1311 Burr Oak Road LAKE FOREST Sunday 1-4PM $637,000 Linda Smith, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors® 847.234.0485
9. 639 W. Quassey Ave. LAKE BLUFF Sunday 1-3 PM $499,000 Marie Colette, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors® 847.234.0816
19. 920 Grandview Lane LAKE FOREST Sunday 1-3 $695,000 Katherine Hudson, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors® 847.234.0485
10. 1270 Kathryn Lane LAKE FOREST Sunday 1-4 $1,995,000 Mona Hellinga, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 847.814.1855 11. 1270 Longmeadow Lane LAKE FOREST Sunday 1-4 $2,795,000 Jean Anderson/Donna Mancuso, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 847.460.5412
20. 440 Saddle Run LAKE FOREST Sunday 1-3 $1,499,000 Katherine Hudson, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors® 847.234.0485 21. 951 Carroll Road LAKE FOREST Sunday 2-4 $799,000 Elizabeth Wieneke, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors® 847.234.0485 22. 165 Marion LAKE FOREST Sunday 2-4 PM $745,000 Leslie Dhamer, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors® 847.234.0485
12. 829 Knightsbridge Court LAKE FOREST Sunday 1-3 $990,000 Bill Castle, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 312.316.5380
23. 1126 Pine Oaks Circle LAKE FOREST Sunday 12-2 $479,000 Lisa Trace, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors® 847.234.0485
13. 1301 N Western Ave, #313 LAKE FOREST Sunday, 2 – 4pm $289,900 Julie Hartvigsen, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 773.266.9850
24. 1297 Edgewood LAKE FOREST Sunday 12-2 $749,000 Flor Hasselbring, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors® 847.234.0816
14. 385 Onwentsia Road LAKE FOREST Sunday 1-3 $1,990,000 Carol Russ, Coldwell Banker 847.234.8000 15. 640 Old Elm Road LAKE FOREST Sunday 1-3 $1,990,000 Mary Pat Lundgren, Coldwell Banker 847.234.8000 16. 1665 Oak Knoll LAKE FOREST Sunday 12-2 $995,000 Mary Pat Lundgren, Coldwell Banker 847.234.8000 17. 950 Symphony LAKE FOREST Sunday 1-3 $749,000 Mary Pat Lundgren, Coldwell Banker 847.234.8000
25. 1079 Jensen Dr. LAKE FOREST Sunday 12-2 $1,475,000 Elizabeth Rasmussen, Baird & Warner 847.721.3481 26. 1467 Estate Lane LAKE FOREST Sunday 1-4 $960,000 Roger Owen, Baird & Warner 847.471.0150 27. 810 Buena Road LAKE FOREST Sunday 1-3pm $ 636,600 Brunhild Baass, Baird & Warner 847.804.0092 28. 1185 Breckenridge Ave. LAKE FOREST Sunday, 12-2 $698,000 Robin Bentley Gold, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000
5964
Tower Rd
6592
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133136
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Lake Ave
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Kenilworth Glenview
29. 15914 W Port Clinton Road LINCOLNSHIRE Sunday 2:30-4:30 $679,000 Robert Casorio, @properties 847.881.0200
N. S
Sunset Ridge Rd
Shermer Rd
Willow Rd
Northfield
Wilmette
30. 1725 Wildrose Court HIGHLAND PARK Sunday 12-2 $1,099,000 Karen Skurie Baird and Warner 847-361-4687 31. 348 Park Ave HIGHLAND PARK Sunday 2:15-4:15 $392,000 Karen Skurie, Baird and Warner 847-361-4687 32. 188 Braeburn HIGHLAND PARK Sunday 12-2 $599,000 Marla Pierson, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 847-778-5339 33. 1765 Orchid Court HIGHLAND PARK Sunday 1-3 $799,500 Camille Bass & Millie Weinberg, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 847-380-0733 34. 651 Timber Hill Road DEERFIELD Sunday 1-3 $670,000 Susan Brown Burklin, @properties 847.432.0700 35. 1115 Kenton Rd DEERFIELD Sunday 1-3 $484,500 Amy Antonacci/Debbie Glickman, Baird & Warner 312.543.2758/847.687.4332 36. 809 Castlewood Lane DEERFIELD Sunday 1-3 $985,000 Amy Antonacci/Debbie Glickman, Baird & Warner 312.543.2758/847.687.4332 37. 362 Kelburn Road, Unit 321 DEERFIELD Sunday 11am – 1pm $174,900 Barb Pepoon, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 847-962-5537 38. 1057 Central Avenue DEERFIELD Sunday 1:30-3:30 $949,500 Marsha Schwartz, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 847-217-9599 40. 2417 Peachtree Lane NORTHBROOK Sunday 11-1 $879,000 Kathy Menighan Wilson, @properties 773.472.0200 41. 2985 Walters Ave. NORTHBROOK Sunday, 4-6 $1,939,000 Vicki Nelson, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 42. 485 Anthony Trail NORTHBROOK Sunday 12-2 $433,125 Bryce Fuller, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 847-208-7888 43. 2746 The Mews NORTHBROOK Sunday 11am-1pm $449,000 Bryce Fuller, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 847-208-7888 44. 89 Andover Circle NORTHBROOK Sunday 1-3
$519,900 Katie Marx, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 847-525-6254 45. 2806 Farmington Road NORTHBROOK Sunday 2-4 $539,000 Irit Jacobson, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 847-323-6200 46. 2 The Court of Chapel Wood NORTHBROOK Sunday 12-2 $574,900 Barb Pepoon, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 847-962-5537 47. 4024 Brittany Court NORTHBROOK Sunday 1-3 $589,000 Bryce Fuller, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 847-208-7888 48. 3765 Techny Road NORTHBROOK Sunday 1:30-3:30 $598,000 Barb Pepoon, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 847-962-5537 49. 2027 Butternut Lane NORTHBROOK Sunday 2-4 $598,900 Barb Pepoon, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 847-962-5537 50. 3357 Old Mill Road NORTHBROOK Sunday 12-2 $769,000 Marsha Schwartz, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 847-217-9599 51. 2432 The Strand NORTHBROOK Sunday 12-2 $850,000 Anne Margolis, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 847-226-5028 52. 2553 Greenview Road NORTHBROOK Sunday 1-3 $875,000 Steven Sims, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 847-567-9000 53. 3900 Oak Avenue NORTHBROOK Sunday 12-2 $950,000 Dorina Botezatu & Emilia Salonikas, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 847-707-5448 54. 1200 Hillside Drive NORTHBROOK Sunday 1-3 $1,175,000 Bridget Fritz & Meg Thompson, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 847-331-0456
$749,000 Mac DuBose, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 58. 560 Drexel Ave. GLENCOE Sunday, 2:30-4:30 $525,000 Hilde Wheeler Carter, C oldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 59. 2021 Old Willow NORTHFIELD Sunday 1-3 $435,000 Peg O'Halloran, Baird & Warner 847.446.1855 60. 76 E. Canterbury Lane NORTHFIELD Sunday 2-4 $649,000 Rene Nelson, The Hudson Company 847.338.4001 61. 2420 Dorina Drive NORTHFIELD Sunday 12-2 $1,390,000 Chris Veech, @properties 847.881.0200 62. 3010 Arbor Lane, #302 NORTHFIELD Sunday 1-3 $293,000 Beverly Smith, @properties 847.881.0200 63. 621 Woodland Ln. NORTHFIELD Sunday, 2:30-4:30 $789,999 Linda Martin, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 64. 358 Eaton Ln. NORTHFIELD Sunday, 1-3 $745,000 Gretchen Ake, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 65. 433 Locust WINNETKA Sunday 1-3 $1,550,000 Peg O'Halloran, Baird & Warner 847.446.1855 66. 316 Sheridan WINNETKA Sunday 2-4 $1,275,000 Florence Krieger, Baird & Warner 847.446.1855 67. 341 Woodland Ave WINNETKA Sunday 1-3 $1,278,000 The Skirving Team, Coldwell Banker 847.924.4119/847.863.3614 68. 4 Golf Lane WINNETKA Sunday 1-3 $3,475,000 The Skirving Team, Coldwell Banker 847.924.4119/847.863.3614
56. 1080 Beinlich Court GLENCOE Sunday 12-2 $1,329,000 Susan J. Maman, @properties 847.881.0200
69. 1520 Tower Road WINNETKA Sunday 1-3 $599,000 Debbie Hepburn, The Hudson Company 847.867.5825 70. 867 Prospect WINNETKA Sunday 12-2 $2,445,000 Joanne Hudson, The Hudson Company 847.971.5024
57. 551 Dundee Rd. GLENCOE Sunday, 11-1
71. 436 Glendale WINNETKA Sunday 2-4
55. 551 Oakdale GLENCOE Sunday 1-3 $695,000 Peg O'Halloran, Baird & Warner 847.446.1855
SATURDAY OCTOBER 17 | SUNDAY OCTOBER 18 2015 |
THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND
23
REAL ESTATE
OPEN HOUSES $869,000 Julie Bradbury Miller, The Hudson Company 847.751.2619 72. 120 Bertling WINNETKA Sunday 2-4 $1,049,000 Howard Meyers, The Hudson Company 847.778.1394
$1,729,000 Harold Nations, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 85. 484 Cedar St. WINNETKA Sunday, 12-2 $1,725,000 Maureen Mohling, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000
73. 925 Forest Glen East WINNETKA Sunday 2-4 $1,299,000 Joanne Hudson, The Hudson Company 847.971.5024 74. 5 Indian Hill Road WINNETKA Sunday 2:15 – 4:15 $5,999,000 Joanne Hudson, The Hudson Company 847.971.5024 75. 1121 Ash WINNETKA Sunday 12-2 $1,015,000 Rene Nelson, The Hudson Company 847.338.4001
86. 1183 Tower Rd. WINNETKA Sunday, 2-4 $1,479,000 Annie Flanagan, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000
76. 160 Woodley Road WINNETKA Sunday 1-3 $2,250,000 Hambleton/Hazlett, @properties 847.763.0200 77. 334 Woodland Avenue WINNETKA Sunday 2:30-4:30 $1,800,000 Lyn Flannery, @properties 847.881.0200 78. 882 Elm Street WINNETKA Sunday 1-4 $1,495,000 Alla Kimbarovsky, @properties 847.432.0700 79. 1070 Sunset WINNETKA Sunday, 1 – 3pm $2,150,000 Betsy Burke, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 847.565.4264 80. 556 Willow WINNETKA Sunday, 1 – 3pm $1,395,000 Betsy Burke, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 847.565.4264 81. 1149 Laurel Ave. WINNETKA Sunday, 12-2 $2,349,000 Sue Hertzberg, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 82. 349 Sheridan Rd. WINNETKA Sunday, 1-3 $1,950,000 Blanche Egan Romey, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 83. 1200 Sunset Rd. WINNETKA Sunday, 12-2 $1,745,000 SFC Team, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 84. 181 Apple Tree Ln. WINNETKA Sunday, 1-3
87. 808 Lincoln Ave. WINNETKA Sunday, 1-3 $1,349,000 Claudia Gaynor, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 88. 1185 Elm St. WINNETKA Sunday, 1-4 $969,000 Mary Kay Burke, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 89. 139 Bertling Ln. WINNETKA Sunday, 1-3 $969,000 Beth Groebe, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 90. 95 Church Rd. WINNETKA Sunday, 1:30-3 $969,000 Robin Bentley Gold, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 91. 77 Church Rd. WINNETKA Sunday, 2-4 $799,000 Barbara Mawicke, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 92. 1099 Merrill St. #2 WINNETKA Sunday, 12-2 $115,000 Hilde Wheeler Carter, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 93. 326 Oxford KENILWORTH Sunday 12-2 $1,389,000 Joanne Hudson, The Hudson Company 847.971.5024 94. 245 Sheridan Road KENILWORTH Saturday 1-3 $4,995,000 Cummins/Maman, @properties 847.881.0200 95. 126 Abingdon Ave. KENILWORTH Sunday, 2:30-4:30 $2,595,000 Barbara Mawicke, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 96. 154 Kenilworth Ave. KENILWORTH Sunday, 11-1 $2,449,000 Barbara Mawicke, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 97. 138 Abingdon Ave. KENILWORTH Sunday, 1-3 $1,695,000
Barbara Mawicke, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 98. 555 Earlston Rd. KENILWORTH Sunday, 2:30-4:30 $1,369,000 Barbara Mawicke, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 99. 704 Roger Ave. KENILWORTH Sunday, 12-2 $799,000 Barbara Mawicke, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 100. 1598 Cottonwood Drive GLENVIEW Sunday 1-3 $1,090,000 Vittoria Logli, @properties 847.998.0200 101. 700 Laramie Avenue GLENVIEW Sunday 12-2 $775,000 Lyn Flannery, @properties 847.881.0200 102. 4217 Linden Tree Lane GLENVIEW Sunday 1-3 $499,900 Renee and Tom Clark, @properties 847.381.0300 103. 2275 Winnetka Road GLENVIEW Sunday 2-4 $3,350,000 Kathy Menighan Wilson, @properties 773.472.0200 104. 1805 Grove GLENVIEW Sunday, 2 – 4pm $529,000 James Luxom, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 847.501.0196 105. 2300 Linden Leaf Dr. GLENVIEW Sunday, 1-3 $589,000 Team Van Horn, oldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 106. 3089 Lexington Lane GLENVIEW Sunday 11am – 1pm $385,000 Marsha Schwartz, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 847-217-9599 107. 2718 Brassie Drive GLENVIEW Sunday 1:30-3:30 $683,000 Bryce Fuller, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 847-208-7888 108. 2822 Birchwood WILMETTE Sunday 12-3 $1,375,000 Alicja Skibicki, Baird & Warner 847.446.1855 109. 2616 Wilmette WILMETTE Sunday 1-3 $489,000 Margaret Goss, Baird & Warner 847.446.1855 110. 2600 Kenilworth Avenue WILMETTE Sunday 1-3 $1,699,000 The Skirving Team, Coldwell Banker 847.924.4119/847.863.3614
111. 1022 Pawnee Road WILMETTE Sunday 2-4 $1,795,000 Julie Bradbury Miller, The Hudson Company 847.751.2619 112. 305 Central Avenue WILMETTE Sunday 1-4 $1,625,000 Alla Kimbarovsky, @properties 847.432.0700 113. 1518 Forest Avenue WILMETTE Sunday 2-4 $1,579,000 Kate Huff, @properties 847.881.0200 114. 1920 Washington Avenue WILMETTE Sunday 1-3 $999,999 Jacobs/Hall, @properties 847.881.0200 115. 2401 Concord Lane Wilmette Sunday 12-2 $899,000 Laura Fitzpatrick, @properties 847.881.0200 116. 336 Skokie Court WILMETTE Sunday 1-3 $279,000 Jacobs/Hall, @properties 847.881.0200 117. 1020 Pontiac Road WILMETTE Sunday 2:30-4:30 $729,000 Chris Veech, @properties 847.881.0200 118. 1947 Greenwood WILMETTE Sunday, 1 – 3pm $1,225,000 Sandy Clifton and Sherry Molitor, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 847.212.3981 / 847.204.6282 119. 835 16th Street WILMETTE Sunday, 1 – 3pm $2, 082,000 MJ Black, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 847.507.9124 120. 2130 Iroquois WILMETTE Sunday, 1 – 3pm $899,000 Jim Davis, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff 847.744.0747 121. 2117 Wilmette Ave. WILMETTE Sunday, 12-2 $1,499,000 Julie Dowdle Rogers, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 122. 1220 Maple Ave. WILMETTE Sunday, 2:30-4:30 $1,249,000 SFC Team, Coldwell Banker Winnekta 847.446.4000 123. 925 Ashland Ave. WILMETTE Sunday, 12-2 $1,199,000 Sue Hertzberg, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 124. 921 Sheridan Rd. WILMETTE Sunday, 2-4 $1,199,000
Sue Hertzberg, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 125. 2217 Chestnut Ave. WILMETTE Sunday, 1-3:30 $1,125,000 Vicki Nelson, Coldwell Banker Winnketa 847.446.4000 126. 1420 Sheridan Rd. #1C WILMETTE Sunday, 1-3 $1,085,000 Blanche Egan Romey, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 127. 3209 Sprucewood Rd. WILMETTE Sunday, 1-3 $1,049,000 Sue Hertzberg, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 128. 1228 Gregory Ave. WILMETTE Sunday, 2:30-4:30 $899,000 SFC Team, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 129. 2245 Birchwood Ave. WILMETTE Sunday, 1-3 $725,000 Pam & Jim McClamroch, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 130. 3204 Wilmette Ave. WILMETTE Sunday, 11:30-1:30 $699,000 Sarah Rothschild, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 131. 1630 Sheridan Rd. #6F WILMETTE Sunday, 2:30-4:30 $650,000 Julie Dowdle Rogers, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 132. 1500 Sheridan Rd. #9B WILMETTE Sunday, 12-2 $599,000 Pam & Jim McClamroch, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 133. 2347 Lake Ave. WILMETTE Sunday, 11-1 $521,000 Vicki Nelson, Coldwell Banker Winnetka 847.446.4000 134. 1418 Washington Street EVANSTON Sunday 12-2 $1,100,000 Dana Gerstenschlager, @properties 773.432.0200
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24
| SATURDAY OCTOBER 17 | SUNDAY OCTOBER 18 2015
THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND
REAL ESTATE
LOWEST PRICES OF THE SEASON
HOUSES OF THE WEEK $1,475,000
1094 Pine Street Winnetka 4 Bedrooms, 3.1 Bathrooms Exclusively Presented By: Karen Fata @properties 847.881.0200 karenfata@atproperties.com This French provincial blends architectural beauty with all the coveted design elements of a professionally designed home. Stately standing on a quite tree-lined street, the house stands proudly with a gorgeous slate roof and gated yard. Interior features include open-to-dining kitchen, large family room with double set of French doors leading outside to Hamptons style deck/pergola overlooking in-ground pool, stone hot tub, and lush landscaping.
$429,000
1874 York Ln Highland Park 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths Exclusively Presented By: Margie Brooks, Baird & Warner 847.494.7998 margie.brooks@bairdwarner.com Totally rehabbed mid century modern ranch on oversized lot in prime Sherwood forest. Newer kitchen with High end stainless steel appliances. New flooring throughout house, New HVAC. Urban/suburban loft like feel. Soaring wood beamed ceilings with sliding glass doors opening to park like back yard!
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$2,795,000
90 Indian Hill Road Winnetka 11 Rooms, 6 bedrooms, 4 ½ Baths Exclusively Presented By: Dinny Dwyer, Jean Wright Real Estate ddwyer@jeanwright.com 847-217-5146 Colonial on private acre wooded cul-de-sac. Entry hall with curved stairway, yard with pool and hot tub, living room w/fireplace and bay window, dining room for all occasions. Family room overlooks yard and pool, library with fireplace. De Guilio kitchen includes wood cabinets, granite counters, island, butler’s pantry, breakfast room. Master suite w/dressing area & bath. 5 bedrooms & 3 full baths on the 2nd floor. Lower level, recreation room w/fireplace & bar area, den w/ fireplace, storage & laundry. 4 car attached garage.
1840 Skokie Boulevard, Northbrook, IL 60062 phone: 847.835.2400 | www.lewisfloorandhome.com CARPET · AREA RUGS · TILE · COUNTERTOPS · HARDWOOD WINDOW TREATMENTS · CABINETRY · GREEN PRODUCTS Northbrook Chamber 2014 Small Business of the Year recipient
Stop looking, start finding速 atproperties.com
1688 ELMWOOD DRIVE HIGHLAND PARK 4 bedroom/4.1 bath $1,250,000 1688elmwood.info
new listing
677 EUCLID AVENUE HIGHLAND PARK 3 bedroom/2.1 bath $550,000
new listing
TED PICKUS
LISA SCHULKIN
Mobile: 847.417.0520 Office: 847.432.0700 tedpickus@atproperties.com atproperties.com
Mobile: 847.602.1112 Office: 847.432.0700 lschulkin@atproperties.com atproperties.com
458 BRIERHILL ROAD DEERFIELD 5 bedroom/5.1 bath $2,450,000 458brierhill.info
first floor master suite
DEANNE NISSEN
GREG WEISSMAN
Mobile: 847.624.2241 Office: 847.432.0700 deanne@atproperties.com atproperties.com
Mobile: 312.802.7585 Office: 847.432.0700 gsweissen@atproperties.com atproperties.com
960 FISHER LANE WINNETKA 3 bedroom/3.1 bath $1,595,000 960fisher.info
new listing
CHERYL CHAMBERS Mobile: 847.977.3924 Office: 847.881.0200 cheryl@atproperties.com atproperties.com
573 OAK TREE LANE NORTHFIELD 4 bedroom/3.1 bath $1,100,000 573oaktree.info
new listing
CHERYL CHAMBERS Mobile: 847.977.3924 Office: 847.881.0200 cheryl@atproperties.com atproperties.com
334 WOODLAND AVENUE WINNETKA 5 bedroom/4.1 bath $1,800,000 334woodland.info
open house sunday, october 18 2:30 - 4:30
700 LARAMIE AVENUE GLENVIEW 4 bedroom/2.1 bath $775,000 700laramie.info
open house sunday, october 18 12:00 - 2:00 new trier district!
LYN FLANNERY Mobile: 847.338.2753 lynflannery@atproperties.com atproperties.com
406 CAROL COURT HIGHLAND PARK 5 bedroom/4.1 bath $669,000 406carolct.info
Gracious Braeside brick Georgian!
DEBBIE SCULLY Mobile: 847.373.4296 Office: 847.432.0700 debbiescully@atproperties.com atproperties.com
661 DRIFTWOOD LANE NORTHBROOK 6 bedroom/6.1 bath $2,200,000 661driftwoodlane.info
13675 LUCKY LAKE DR. LAKE FOREST 7 bedroom/7.1 bath $2,490,000 13675luckylake.info
JOANNA KOPERSKI Mobile: 847.668.0096 Office: 847.295.0700 jkoperski@atproperties.com atproperties.com
37375 N. ILLINOIS RT 83 LAKE VILLA 4 bedroom/2.1 bath $798,000 37375nroute83.info
superb entertainer’s dream home
350 WEST EVERETT ROAD LAKE FOREST $775,000 350weverett.info
1.5 acres build your own dream home
CHARLES POTTER Mobile: 224.544.9255 Office: 847.295.0700 charles@atproperties.com atproperties.com
1090 HIGHLAND AVENUE LAKE FOREST 5 bedroom/3.1 bath $749,500 1090highland.info
LORI NIEMAN Mobile: 312.343.7070 Office: 847.881.0200 lorinieman@atproperties.com atproperties.com
915 ASHLAND AVENUE WILMETTE 5+ bedroom/4.1 bath $1,495,000 915ashland.info
LORI NIEMAN Mobile: 312.343.7070 Office: 847.881.0200 lorinieman@atproperties.com atproperties.com
2420 DORINA DRIVE NORTHFIELD 6 bedroom/4.1 bath $1,390,000 2420dorina.info
open house sunday, october 18 12:00 - 2:00
1020 PONTIAC ROAD WILMETTE 4 bedroom/2.1 bath $729,000 1020pontiac.info
open house sunday, october 18 2:30 - 4:30
CHRIS VEECH Mobile: 847.913.3662 Office: 847.881.0200 chrisveech@atproperties.com atproperties.com
1225 MIDDLEBURY LANE WILMETTE 5 bedroom/4.1 bath $1,450,000 1225middlebury.info
open house sunday, october 25 12:00 - 2:00
2401 CONCORD LANE WILMETTE 5 bedroom/3.1 bath $899,000 2401concord.info
open house sunday, october 18 12:00 - 2:00
LAURA FITZPATRICK Mobile: 312.217.6483 Office: 847.881.0200 laurafitzpatrick@atproperties.com atproperties.com
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SATURDAY OCTOBER 17 | SUNDAY OCTOBER 18 2015 |
THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND
SPORTS
39
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COURT WIZARD
Power-hitting Williams turning in magical moments for Lake Forest volleyball team BY BILL MCLEAN, SPORTS@NORTHSHOREWEEKEND.COM
A
shley Williams rises to greet a set from Emma Patlovich in a volleyball match. The left-handed right-side hitter, a Lake Forest High School junior, swings at the ball, crushes it. Nobody on the other side of the net gets a hand on the kill. Everybody on the other side of the net is thankful. Two healthy hands are good things in volleyball. Only a hardwood floor prevents the volleyball from finding a new home, somewhere in Earth’s inner core, lost forever. “It’s like a pinball [catapulted by a pinball machine’s flipper],” Scouts captain and senior outside Emma Butler says of a typical Williams kill. “She’s powerful. People going up against her usually have no chance, no shot at blocking it, even if they’re set up perfectly for a block. Basically, when we need to do well, we give her the ball. We can always count on her. “If we’re down and she gets a kill, that’s a boost for us, a huge boost.” Williams, 6-foot-1, is a thirdyear varsity member and a member of Crystal Lake-based Sky High Volleyball Club. She officially paces a 27-5 Lake Forest High School team (4-1 in the North Suburban Conference Lake division) in kills and unofficially leads the Scouts in hardwood indentations this fall. She made the alltournament team at a home invite on Oct. 3 and made the all-tournament team at the Antioch Invitational on Oct. 10. Her numbers, in a three-set defeat of Stevenson on Sept. 24: 18 kills, eight aces. Her kill total, in a three-set defeat of Lake Zurich High School on Sept. 11: 18. Her kill total, in a three-set defeat of Loyola Academy on Sept. 16: 15. Add them all up, and what do you get? Lots and lots and lots of resounding echoes in gymnasiums. “There was a time when coaches would hide girls at the right side,” Scouts first-year coach Molly Grzesik says. “Not anymore. It has become a power position, and
nifer, attended Lake Forest College. Both played Division III tennis at LFC. Love was in the air, right up there with a tennis ball. “They’ve been great, always assuring me, ‘Everything will work out,’ ” Ashley Williams says. “They’ve pushed me and encouraged me, in all areas of my life. What they want the most is for me to be the best person I can be. I’m a dedicated, committed person because of my parents. I got my work ethic from my parents.” Talent near a net, too. Lake Forest was leading Stevenson 24-22 in the third set of a match on Sept. 24. Match point. A set floated above Williams. An instinct took over, and she managed to execute a unique, on-the-fly maneuver. “Ashley did this windmill move, near the net,” Butler recalls. “She turned in the air, hit the ball. We got the point. We won the match. You should have seen her smile. Then she started cheering with the rest of us.” Williams had thought a referee would call her for a carry, or a lift, and award the point to Stevenson. Right after realizing the kill had clinched the big NSC Lake victory, Williams turned to her teammates and covered her mouth with a hand, the international gesture for EYES WIDE OPEN: Lake Forest High School’s Ashley Williams bumps the ball during earlier action this season. The junior has been utter disbelief. dynamic right-side hitter for 27-5 Scouts. PHOTOGRAPHY BY JOEL LERNER “I couldn’t believe it,” Williams Ashley is a powerful hitter. She She tried out for the Deer Path in the world. I feel empowered kids through Beacon Place’s says. “That shot … that never has a competitive fire, and her seventh-grade volleyball team the after a kill. I’m a more well-round- Summer Lunch Bunch and happens.” Point, set, match, Lake Forest. mindset in matches, her attitude, next year and made the team. She ed person because of volleyball. It Summer Backpack programs. is to look at [setter Patlovich] and had discovered more than a sport; has helped me become a leader, a Nourish their bodies. Nourish It happened. Thanks to a pinball wizard. demand, ‘I want the ball, get me volleyball had become a passion, a better communicator.” their minds. What she hears the the ball.’ But Ashley is not just super reason to get up each Williams’ life away from her most when she’s there, from little powerful; she’s also smart as an morning, smile, stretch her arms commitments to volleyball is a full kids, from wide-eyed kids, from Notable: LFHS senior Lucy attacker, finding spots in defenses, and look forward to demoralizing one. There’s schoolwork, the north- open-mouthed kids: “You’re so Ward and juniors Emma Patlovich and Meghan McGrail joined finding holes.” an opposing blocker or two and ernmost priority on her list of tall.” Williams found the sport of high-fiving a teammate or two. priorities. (Williams aces a tough What she always feels when she Williams on the Antioch Invite volleyball at Deer Path Middle Fast forward to last summer, at test. Does the volleyball player say, heads home: a longing. all-tournament team on Oct. 10. To return to Beacon Place. School. She was a sixth-grader at USA Volleyball Open Nationals “Killed it”? Just wondering.) Time, The Scouts captured the team title, “I enjoy being there so much,” going 5-0. The Scouts edged Zithe time, in a gym class, well on in Florida. Williams, after devel- any amount of time, spent with her way to becoming a 5-9 middle oping a new weapon (topspin- her dogs, Bella and Sophie, is her Williams, a Teen Leadership on-Benton’s Zee-Bees 25-11, schooler. A volleyball went up in jump serve), and her Sky High 16 favorite time of the day. Bella, 11, Board member at LFHS, says. “It’s 23-25, 15-12 in their final match. the PE class. Williams went up. Black teammates finished 11th. is a chocolate lab, nine-year-old important to be there, to give back. … Patlovich lofted 17 assists in Williams returned the volleyball “Volleyball … it changed my Sophie a yellow lab. Williams Connecting with the kids, playing Lake Forest’s 25-10, 25-14 defeat to earth, violently and emphati- life,” she says. “It’s such a big part commits time, mostly in the with the kids … I’d go there every of visiting Warren on Oct. 7. Wilof my life. I don’t know what I’d summers, to volunteering at day if I could, if I had the time.” liams pounded seven kills, and cally and resourcefully. Her father, Jeff, attended Lake Ward finished with six kills and “I thought, ‘Hey, I like this sport. do without it. Getting a kill in a Beacon Place in Waukegan. She match, it’s one of the best feelings helps hungry and eager-to-learn Forest College. Her mother, Jen- four aces. This is fun,’ ” Williams recalls.
40
| SATURDAY OCTOBER 17 | SUNDAY OCTOBER 18 2015
THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND
SPORTS
IMPOSING
Advanced skill set puts Lake Forest Academy’s Joseph on a different plane BY KEVIN REITERMAN, SPORTS@NORTHSHOREWEEKEND.COM
L
ake Forest Academy lineman Jake Cirame didn’t have to ponder too long — or too hard — to come up with an apt description of teammate Daniel Joseph. “He is,” says Cirame, “a Freak of Nature.” Capital F. Capital N. That phrase gets tossed around a lot these days. But when it’s thrown at Joseph, it has a dartboard effect. It sticks. “I’ve been around. I’ve played against some of the best players in the area,” says Cirame, who transferred to LFA after earning allChicago Catholic League honors at Mount Carmel last fall. “I’d say he’s the best football player in the state.” And Cirame, a Lake Forest resident, is not alone in that assessment. According to ESPN’s RecruitingNation.com, the 6-foot-3, 245pound Joseph entered the 2015 campaign as the No. 1 ranked player in Illinois and the 13th best defensive end in the country. Scout.com listed Joseph as the state’s second-best defensive end and sixth best in the Midwest. All of the fanfare has done wonders for Joseph. He became a hot item. A blue-chip recruit. LFA head coach Robin Bowkett saw this coming. “He’s a no-brainer off the tape,” Bowkett says. “We had sent some stuff out on him, and we got some great feedback. It was only a matter of time before he blew up. “I had a revolving door in my office for a while there,” adds Bowkett. “It got pretty busy.” Teams from far and wide came after Joseph. He collected 21 Division I offers. He eventually — on June 30 — picked Penn State over such schools as Iowa, Michigan, Michigan State Boston College, Syracuse and Nebraska. “To his credit, he learned to stay humble throughout that [recruiting] process,”says Bowkett.“I challenged him to stay humble and stay hungry. I’m most proud of the way he handled all that.” Joseph thanked the hype machine and moved on. He’s not one to get too carried away by the
been a great captain for us. He’s grown a lot as a person. He’s come a long way.” Next year, Joseph will be part of an interesting storyline for Big Ten college football writers. On Nov. 5, 2016, when Iowa hosts Penn State, siblings — with the same parents but different last names — will square off against one another. Daniel Joseph took his father’s surname. His older brother, Faith Ekakitie, a 2011 LFA grad and current redshirt junior defensive lineman for the Hawkeyes, took his mother’s maiden name. “We’re of Nigerian descent,” says Joseph, who also has two other siblings (a younger sister, Ann Marie Joseph, a dancer; and an older brother, Love Joseph, a 6-5 basketball player for the University of Guelph in Canada). “Having different last names? I’m pretty sure it’s a family tradition thing.” And that hoops thing? It runs in the family. He’s developed a fondness for the game. A former club player for Fundamental U, he will be a four-year varsity player for the Caxys this winter. Joseph’s mentality on the basketball court doesn’t exactly mellow out. He has a powerful, wrecking-ball presence inside the paint. He’s not afraid to play a physical brand of ball. He’s not afraid to mix things STANCE AND DELIVER: Lake Forest Academy’s Daniel Joseph eyes the situation during action this fall. He’ll take his formidable game up. to Penn State next year. PHOTOGRAPHY BY GEORGE PFOERTNER “He gets into it,” LFA head basbuzz. he’d rather work — and work hard it that way, hopefully you get re- the team, he was shifted from de- ketball coach Matt Vaughn says. “I’m not a big fan of YouTube or — for everything. warded.” fensive end to linebacker. He’s made “Sometimes, we have to tone him He resides in a “no excuse” zone. Moments after the Libertyville the best of it. down a little. But I love that about stuff like that,” Joseph says. “I’d rather work in silence. Be the “I’ve always been an underdog. game in Week Two, Joseph walked “Playing linebacker was a little him. He’s such a competitor. He’ll common man. I don’t need to be a The way I look at it, life is not easy. out of the locker room with a limp. foreign to him. He’s used to having battle you every single play. “He’s most effective around the headliner.” You’re going to come across adver- He had done just about everything his fingers in the dirt,” says Bowkett. The University of Toledo will sity,” Joseph says. “You just keep he could do in a rough 48-0 loss. “He’s made a lot of plays [two in- hoop,” adds Vaughn. “That’s where always hold a soft spot in his heart. going. He lined up at linebacker. He lined terceptions]. And playing line- he can use his strength and skill. “Toledo was the first to offer. Last “Football teaches you a lot of life up at tight end. He punted. backer doesn’t take as much of a toll Not a lot of teams have someone “I always hurt after a game,” he on him.” year, at Christmas break,” says skills,” he adds. “There are a lot of who can match up against him.” Joseph. “I have much respect for bumps along the way. So you push says. “You play 150 plays. It’s gonna His sack total, as you might Joseph, who also possesses a yourself to the limit. You see what hurt. those guys. expect, has taken a hit. He has two shooter’s touch with decent range, “But I’m happy about all of the you’re made of. You see what kind “But I never want to come off this season, while he finished with won’t be hard to find this winter. offers I received,” he adds. “It means of man you are. I quickly learned the field,” he adds. seven last year while lining up on The Caxys, who finished 18-6 last that my college will be paid for.” not to make excuses.” With a running clock going and the D-line. season, graduated a big chunk of Joseph hopes to turn that grateHe’s had to take that underdog less than two minutes left in the But, his passion remains as strong their starting five: guard Isaiah fulness into greatness, when he role to heart this fall.The 2-5 Caxys game, Joseph’s motor still was revved as ever. Foust, center Diago Quinn, shoot“He’s vocal. He plays with a lot ing guard Ryan Clamage and wing heads to Happy Valley and suits up have struggled mightily. up. He showed his true colors by with the Nittany Lions. He plans “You give full effort no matter busting through the line and coming of spirit, a lot of emotion. He’s full Dejon Brissett. Thus, Joseph figures to be “The to go far in this game. what. It doesn’t matter if you are up with one of those “game’s-not- of personality,” says Bowkett. “He But Joseph, who grew up in down by two, by three or down by over-yet” quarterback sacks. might have been a little bit of a hot Man” this winter, along with stellar Brampton, Ontario, doesn’t expect 50,” Joseph says. “You go as hard as It’s been a transitional year on head at times last year and the year guard Chris Harris. But then, what else is new? anything to be given to him. In fact, you can all of the time. And by doing the field for Joseph. For the good of before that. But’s he matured. He’s
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42
| SATURDAY OCTOBER 17 | SUNDAY OCTOBER 18 2015
THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND
SPORTS
CALM, COOL AND CONNECTED
Ramblers count on consistent Kyle — a go-to relay member — in big-meet environment BY BILL MCLEAN, SPORTS@NORTHSHOREWEEKEND.COM
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larm clocks blare in the Kyle household, at around 5 a.m. Maria Kyle, Loyola Academy senior swimmer, wakes up. Emma Kyle, Loyola Academy junior swimmer, wakes up. Time to get ready to depart for another early swim practice. The sisters live in Gurnee. Loyola Academy sits in Wilmette, 27 miles away. They near a car, Maria heading for the driver’s side, Emma for the shotgun seat. “Maria doesn’t let me drive,” the little sister, smiling, says. “She criticizes my driving.” The commute begins. Maria grips the car’s wheel. Emma slumps in her seat, returning to a deep sleep in no time. “It’s a struggle, getting up that early and driving that early,” Maria admits. “To stay alert, I blast the music. I listen to songs on the radio, country and pop mostly. My sister, right next to me, isn’t listening; she’s passed out.” They’re sisters and teammates, Maria and Emma. They’re good friends, too. Two seasons ago, their older sister, Liz (now a University of Dayton sophomore), was a senior swimmer at Loyola Academy. Ramblers varsity coach Mike Hengelmann coached all three Kyle sisters — daughters of John Kyle, a Loyola Academy graduate — in the 2013 season. “Gene pool” took on a whole new meaning whenever the trio entered the water at LA’s natatorium. Maria Kyle, 5-foot-8 and one of four captains this fall, is a relay ace and a butterflyer. If her final prep season at LA were a 100-yard butterfly race, she’d be at the 50-yard mark (the second wall) right about now, churning and aiming for another strong finish. Each of her first three varsity seasons ended where every swimmer hopes it ends: at the state meet. She touched 11th in the 100 fly (56.76) and anchored the fourth-place 200 free relay (1:35.97) as a freshman; swam on three top-10 relays as a sophomore, her best finish as a relay leg
kick out of the new Kyle. “That was tough, trying to pry words out of her during her freshman year,” Hengelmann recalls. “She’s more vocal now, much more vocal, and she has an interesting sense of humor.” Emma Kyle gets to enjoy her sister’s sense of humor at home and at practices and at meets. Not so much in a car on certain mornings. But when Emma is wide awake and interacting with teammates, she has one eye on her big sister. What she sees at home is what she sees on pool decks. “Maria, when she’s around the team, her best qualities come out — how caring she is, the way she motivates teammates,” Emma says. “She looks out for everybody, especially the underclassmen. She connects well with the underclassmen.” It is late at the state meet, last fall, moments before the start of the 400 free relay. Emma Kyle sits in the packed natatorium stands at Evanston Township High FLY-ING COLORS: Loyola Academy senior Maria Kyle brings a wealth of experience to the pool. She collected seven medals in her first School, next to teammates and three state meets. PHOTOGRAPHY BY JOEL LERNER friends, shoulders pressed against coming in the 200 medley relay blers had to complete 100 yards sponsored trip. Emma Kyle and football. shoulders. Maria Kyle climbs a (fourth place, 1:45.04) in her without committing an infraction. Ella Tierney, a junior swimmer at LA scored a meet-best 381.5 start block. “I started tearing up … I was sophomore season; and, for the A disqualification had the poten- LA, flew to Europe on the same points at the six-team gathering, state champion Ramblers last fall, tial to result in a runner-up or trip. Tierney, current junior Olivia a couple of gridirons ahead of the nervous, emotional,” Emma motored for the fifth-place 200 third-place trophy for Hengel- Andrew and Grace Tierney (LA, host school (331, second place). recalls. “Everybody around me was ’15) swam the other legs on last Lyons Township placed third tearing up. That was exciting, medley relay (1:45.84) and cham- mann’s crew. “At that point [before the start fall’s state-championship 400 free (280.5). watching that relay and then pionship 400 free relay (schoolof the relay] we were pretty con- relay. record 3:27.05) as a junior. “I’ve been very happy with seeing [anchor Grace Tierney’s] “What Maria brings is a lot of fident,” Kyle, a member of Lake “A great experience, a good Maria’s butterfly splits in the finish, seeing the ‘1’ [on the scoreexperience,” Hengelmann says. Forest-based Scout Aquatics, break,” Maria Kyle says. “We did medley relay,” Hengelmann says. board]. “I was so proud, so happy.” “Freshmen, at state meets, some- recalls. “We’re all pretty much get the chance to swim over there. “She’s a strong swimmer, with a times get rattled, sometimes have thinking, ‘One last swim, don’t We swam in some big body of really good dolphin kick, a kick a tough time handling the pres- DQ.’ ” That’s a part of my routine water.” that translates well to her freestyle. Notable: Ramblers Olivia Andrew sure-cooker atmosphere of a meet at meets, getting ready for relays. Maria swam in chlorinated She has a very good rhythm to her and Cassidy Coughlin were threelike that. Not Maria. Maria has I’m a pretty calm competitor. I water at Barrington High School butterfly stroke, an efficient time winners at the Barrington always relished the big meets, and don’t show a lot of emotion at big on Oct. 10, topping the 100 but- rhythm.” Invite on Oct. 10. Andrew clocked she doesn’t mind the big-meet meets. I’d competed at age-group terfly field with a time of 1:00.02 Kyle today is nothing like Kyle, a first-place 53.36 in the 100 free, atmosphere. meets, at JO [ Junior Olympics] and helping all three relays (200 the freshman, in 2012, Hengel- Coughlin a 24.77 in the 50 free. “I wanted her [in the lead-off meets. I was familiar with what medley, 200 free, 400 free) earn mann notes. Kyle uttered, in a Each swam on two winning relays. spot] on the 400 free relay at state the high school state meet is all first-place points. The victorious typical day at practice and at Other Ramblers victors: Kearney last year, because of her experience about, but, I have to admit, no times, in order: 1:48.78, 1:39.19, meets, a few more words than (100 backstroke, 58.93); Voss (100 and because of her consistency. So other meet comes close to reach- 3:34.71. The medley quartet of Charlie Chaplin did in movies in breaststroke, 1:08.5); Ella Tierney much was riding on that relay.” ing the intensity of the high school sophomore Shannon Kearney, the silent era. Sophomore year, (400 free relay member); and senior Claire Voss, Kyle and junior year, this year, the number sophomore Margaret Guanci (400 That relay had to finish in sixth state meet.” Kyle took a break from com- sophomore Cassidy Coughlin beat of audible words from Kyle in- free relay member). … Loyola place in a six-relay heat in order to clinch the first state team title petitive swimming this past the runner-up quartet, from Bar- creased, increased, increased. Her Academy’s effort at Barrington in program history. Easy, right? summer, opting instead to visit rington, by nearly four seconds, or teammates welcomed the outgo- last weekend was its third invite Not quite. Each of the four Ram- Greece and Italy on a school- the equivalent of a 56-0 victory in ing Kyle. Her head coach got a championship this fall.
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44
| SATURDAY OCTOBER 17 | SUNDAY OCTOBER 18 2015
THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND
SPORTS
THE EARLY SHOW
Taylor kick-starts Ramblers in Week 7 victory BY KEVIN REITERMAN, SPORTS@NORTHSHOREWEEKEND.COM
IN A RUSH: Devin Murphy of the Trevians chases Maine South quarterback Brian Collis. The senior had six tackles, including a QB sack and two tackles for loss. PHOTOGRAPHY BY TING SHEN
IMITATION GAME
New Trier’s Murphy personifies ex-teammate in tough loss to Hawks BY KEVIN REITERMAN, SPORTS@NORTHSHOREWEEKEND.COM
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evin Murphy, mild mannered most of the time, aggressively tore into the Maine South backfield in the waning seconds of the first half. He came with force and resolve — resulting in a seven-yard quarterback sack. He was — at that point — being … the “other” Devin Murphy. It was an Andrew Hauser moment for the New Trier senior defensive end. “Just trying to mimic the big boy, Andrew Hauser,” said the 6-foot-2, 210-pound Murphy, following his team’s gut-wrenching 24-21 loss to the visiting Hawks on Oct. 9. Trying to impersonate a blast from New Trier’s not-so-distant past — the 6-4, 230-pound Hauser, now playing at Brown University, amassed 21 tackles for loss in 2015 —is a good thing. Murphy’s sack of Maine South quarterback Brian Collis belongs in the angry category. “We needed to change the momentum,” said Murphy, who wears jersey No. 82 (Hauser’s old number). “And I was going for the ball. Our D-line coach [Robert Spagnoli] is always telling us to try to [strip] the ball from the QB.”
This was arguably Murphy’s best defensive game — ever. He had the Hawks going backwards on three of his six tackles, including two tackles for loss on Maine South running back Fotis Kokosioulis. “He’s been playing pretty well for us,” said Spagnoli. “Real proud of him.” Last fall, Murphy basically was a special-teamer and backup to Hauser. “Murph gets it,” Spagnoli said. “He never complained last year. Not once. He understood his role. And when you play behind a kid named Andrew Hauser, you’re not going to get a lot of playing time. But he learned a lot from Hauser, and it’s paying dividends now.” Murphy, who came into the Maine South game with modest numbers (32 tackles, 2 sacks and 3 tackles for loss), also contributed on the offensive side of the ball. Lining up at tight end, he caught two passes for 21 yards against the Hawks. Murphy admits that he’s getting a kick out of being a two-way starter. His offensive skills never were revealed until this season. “I love being in the [offensive] huddle,” said Murphy, who played
exclusively on the line even during his days in junior football with the Wilmette Eagles. “I never touched the ball until this year.” Murphy hasn’t exactly been a prime target. In the first six games of the season, he had two catches for a grand total of six yards. “I’m trying to stay under the radar,” he quipped.
with 2:40 left in the game, when Matt Holbrook intercepted a pass at the New Trier one-yard line on third-and-eight. Up until that point, NT quarterback Clay Czyzynski (11-26-1, 120 yards) had been engineering a potential winning drive. The Trevians went from their own 15 to the Maine South 35 on 11 plays. Czyzynski opened the game Notable: New Trier was in a posi- with a 44-yard TD toss to Eric tion to knock Maine South off its Nicholas (7-86). In the second “pedestal.” quarter, he connected with But the host Trevians (6-1, 2-1) Francis Fay on a six-yard scoring committed a few “too many mental strike. errors,” which kept them from NT’s other TD came on a ending Maine South’s amazing run four-yard run by Colin Casas, in the Central Suburban League capping a 19-play, 80-yard drive South.The Hawks (5-2, 3-0) rallied early in the fourth quarter. from an early 14-3 to claim their New Trier finished the game 73rd straight win against divisional with 300 total yards. Thanks to foes. some hard running by Czyzyn“Too many mental errors on our ski (14-63) and Max Rosenthal part,” NT head coach Brian Doll (17-81), the Trevians out-rushed said. “You can’t beat a team like that, Maine South 180-108. when you make so many mental Defensively, NT was led by errors. Casas (8 tackles, 8-yard QB sack, “I’m proud of our effort,” the 2 tackles for loss), Nicholas (5 coach added. “But I’m disap- tackles, interception), Rosenthal pointed. This loss hurts. They’ve (5 tackles), Charlie Stimson (12 been on top [of this league] for tackles, 1 for loss), Devin Murphy a long time. We wanted to knock (6 tackles, 1 sack, 2 tackles for them off their pedestal.” loss), Christian Miller (7 tackles) Maine South sealed the win and Lucas Bartzis (7 tackles).
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on’t arrive late to a Loyola Academy football game. You might miss something like this: LA senior Sam Taylor opened the game on Oct. 10 against visiting DePaul Prep in Devin Hester fashion, when he took the opening kickoff to the house. His 90-yard kick return paved the way for another easy victory for the Ramblers, who rambled to a 42-0 victory to improve their overall mark to 7-0. “Sam’s [return] was phenomenal. Unbelievable,” LA head coach John Holecek said. “Sam’s explosive. He’s tough, and he’s got some speed.” Taylor, a sprinter on LA’s track and field team, broke new ground with the runback. “It’s the first time that I’ve ever run one back [at any level],” said Taylor. Besides using sprinter’s speed, Taylor also had to use some late ingenuity. He made a cross-field move at the DePaul 10-yard line, which sprung him into the end zone. “They were trying to push me to the sidelines, so I cut back (to the middle of the field),” said the 5-foot-5, 165-pound Taylor, who also starts at cornerback. The runback, according to Taylor, was a little premeditated. Last year, teammate Jonah Isaac ran one back against DePaul. “Before the game, our coaches said, ‘Let’s go out and get a TD right away,’ ” said Taylor, more than happy to accommodate. Taylor’s TD was followed up by another major special-team play a little more than two minutes later, when LA senior outside linebacker Frank
Doherty came up with the big two-for-one play. He not only blocked Gary Anish’s punt, but he also gobbled it up and raced 40 yards into the end zone to give the Ramblers a 14-0 lead. Doherty has a knack for this sort of thing. He also blocked a punt in a Week Two victory at Maine South. DePaul (5-2) was limited to a grand total of 11 yards (2 rushing, 9 passing) by LA’s firstteam defense in the first half. The Rams had 48 yards during the running-clock portion of the game. LA’s defensive leaders were Doherty (tackle for loss, ½ sack), Jack Hough (1/2 sack), Mickey Kane (3 tackles, 2 tackles for loss), Anthony Romano (4 tackles, 2 tackles for loss), Justin Somuah (tackle for loss), Cross Daffada (11-yard QB sack) and Graham Repp (sack). Offensively, the Ramblers were led by their two quarterbacks: senior starter Emmett Clifford (7-9-0, 99 yards, 3 TDs) and sophomore backup Quinn Boyle (9-12-0, 100 yards, TD). Eric Eshoo had the most spectacular catch of the day, when he grabbed a Clifford toss over the middle and raced 58 yards into the end zone. Thomas Smart was on the other end of Clifford’s other two TD throws (13 and 9 yards). Boyle capped the scoring with nine seconds left in the second quarter, when he fired a seven-yard strike to Jack Martinus (2 catches, 41 yards). David Terrell ended up with a team-best four catches (36 yards), while Jake Marwede caught three passes for 31 yards.
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46
| SATURDAY OCTOBER 17 | SUNDAY OCTOBER 18 2015
THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND
SPORTS
STEADY & READY For Press Box and roundups, go to
Highland Park’s Abt, Sacks set to combine efforts in postseason play
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point in a tennis match, involving Highland Park High School senior Jordan Abt and a doubles partner, ends. Abt jumps. It’s a quick move, nothing too demonstrative. Abt jumps after winning points; chats with her partner. Abt jumps after losing points; chats with her partner. “I do that to stay loose,” the Giant, in her third season of varsity tennis, says. “Jumping keeps me motivated, helps me stay focused. Tennis … it’s such a mental sport.” Some tennis players adjust their strings in between points. Some execute a casual racket twirl. Abt jumps. It’s her thing. Look for Abt to pop near her partner and nearly lifelong friend, senior Phoebe Sacks, at this weekend’s sectional on the home courts. Highland Park tennis coach Steve Rudman chose to pair them for a variety of sound reasons — after both had played with other partners at the Central Suburban League North Meet at Niles North Oct. 9-10. Abt and sophomore Devin Davidson lost in the final at No. 1 doubles; Sacks and junior Emily Langsam lost in the final at No. 2 doubles. “Their friendship for so many years, that’s important, helpful,” Rudman says. “They also complement each other on the court. Jordan is steady, keeps the ball in play. Phoebe is powerful, hits big. Phoebe goes for everything … and then some. They’re good kids, really competitive.” Abt/Sacks solved a strong pair from Lockport this fall. Another significant win to date came against Lake Forest High School’s No. 2 duo. Abt/Sacks faced sturdy New Trier foes twice this fall, battling fiercely — and impressing Rudman — in losses. “It’s nice having Phoebe as my partner,” Abt says. “She pumps me up. She goes for shots. I like her killer shots, her up-themiddle shots, and her onehanded backhand volley is
BY BILL MCLEAN, SPORTS@NORTHSHOREWEEKEND.COM
another strong shot.” Abt and Sacks first met either in the first or the second grade. They often got together for tennis lessons, Fridays after school, at various clubs for years. They get together these days to finish points in doubles matches and serve as mentors to quite a young varsity squad. The only other senior in Rudman’s CSL North Meet lineup last weekend was No. 3 doubles player Sammi Lowy. Thirty-nine freshmen came out for tryouts this fall. Seven made the varsity. “Jordan and Phoebe,” Rudman says, “are like sorority moms for the team … den moms. They’re good with the younger ones, supporting them and reminding them of the traditions of our program and other things like that.” Some tennis players, as soon as the school year ends each spring, enter tennis tournaments all summer long. Camps that have nothing to do with tennis, internships, trips to other states and countries — all take a backseat, sometimes a trunk seat, for a voracious tennis player determined to hit the summer circuit hard and earn a hard-earned ranking, in singles, in doubles or in both. Abt isn’t that kind of netter. She is all about balance, and not just because she has been a dancer (lyrical, hip-hop, modern) since the age of five. “Jordan, to me, is what a high school tennis player should be, acts like a high school tennis player should act,” Rudman says of Abt, a granddaughter of the late Bob Abt, who served as CEO of Abt Electronics. “She’s dedicated to tennis during the season, gives it her all, either in singles or in doubles. She has been a tremendous asset for our program. She has won big matches, so many big matches, for us in her career. I can’t tell you what the exact number is. All I do know is that it’s a big number.” Sacks, currently in her second season on varsity, teamed with
Langsam last fall at the CSL North Meet. They finished runner-up to a Glenbrook North pair at No. 3 doubles, in a match that took a little longer than forever to complete. Sacks, like Abt, knows there’s more to life than gripping a racket and smacking a yellow ball over a net. There’s family, for one. There’s travel. Her two sets of grandparents — George and Roberta Mann of Highland Park, Lee and Elise Sacks of Winnetka — are regulars at Highland Park tennis meets. She has traveled to South Africa, England and Israel. Other countries fascinate her. “Bora Bora,” Sacks, a counselor for a recent summer camp in Eagle River, Wisconsin, says of a place she’d like to visit in the near future. “There’s good weather there. “Good tennis weather,” she adds. Notable: Highland Park High School (40.5 points) finished runner-up to reigning champion Glenbrook North (48) at the Central Suburban League North Meet at Niles North Oct. 9-10. All three of the Giants’ varsity singles entrants are freshmen: Caitlin Goldberg (No. 1), Monique Brual (No. 2) and Lily Tiemeyer (No. 3). Tiemeyer skipped to a 6-0, 6-0 defeat of a Deerfield Warrior in the No. 3 final, and Brual dismissed another Deerfield entrant 6-1, 6-1 in the match for third place at No. 2. Goldberg fell to Niles North’s Michelle Bacalla in the championship match at No. 1. Bacalla reached the sixth round of the consolation round at the state meet last fall. Giants senior Sammi Lowy and junior Erin Lothan finished second at No. 3 doubles, and the HP duo of junior Sammi Beermann and freshman Nina Barbieri took second at No. 4 doubles. … HP tennis coach Steve Rudman’s niece, Tatum Rudman, played for the Giants’ JV tennis team this fall. Steve’s brother, Peter, texted Steve with updates from
FOREHAND THINKING: Phoebe Sacks (top) of the Giants prepares to hit a touch volley during CSL North doubles action. PHOTOGRAPHY BY JOEL LERNER RACKET STEERING: Using a Western grip, HP’s Jordan Abt (bottom) smacks a groundstroke in No. 1 doubles play at the CSL North tourney. PHOTOGRAPHY BY JOEL LERNER
the JV CSL North Meet last weekend. Peter Rudman (HPHS, ’86) averaged more than 30 points per game in his senior year as a Giants basketball player, before dribbling and shooting, as a two guard, for the men’s basketball team at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. He earned the team’s Scholar-Athlete Award in 1990. … Highland Park’s girls tennis team vies for state berths at its sectional Oct. 16-17. Other schools in the field include Deerfield (fourth at last weekend’s CSL North Meet), Lake Forest High School, Woodlands Academy and Libertyville High School.
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VISIT THE FOLLOWING COLDWELL BANKER PRESENTS
500 deerField rd • $819,000 • 12:00 - 3:00 • Shannon towSon • (847) 514-2144 1262 arBor vitae rd • $839,000 • 1:30 - 3:30 • alan Berlow • (847) 940-2767 1057 Central ave • $949,500 • 1:30 - 3:30 • marSha SChwartz • (847) 217-9599 1146 oxFord rd • $999,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Jodi tauB • (847) 962-7738 1020 oSterman ave • $1,044,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • Judith Simon • (847) 507-1924 1032 warrington rd • $1,075,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • donna oeSterreiCher • (847) 814-8013 1322 warrington rd • $1,150,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Jodi tauB • (847) 962-7738
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1856 illinoiS St • $199,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • diane mehlman • (847) 641-8312
evAnston
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2033 Sherman ave 403 • $179,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • helen madden • (847) 1111 ChurCh St 201 • $190,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • SuSan Cooney • (847) 1224 elmwood ave 1e • $250,000 • 2:00 - 3:30 • andrea Seeley • (773) 2141 ridge ave 3e • $250,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • Sophie hoegen • (312) 848 ForeSt ave 1 • $330,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • BarBara Kramer • (847) 8835 ForeStview rd • $350,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • emily mCClintoCK • (847) 9311 CrawFord ave • $410,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • andrea wiCh • (847) 2761 groSS point rd • $415,000 • 4:00 - 5:00 • CandaCe KuzmarSKi • (847) 1729 waShington St • $420,000 • 11:30 - 1:30 • Barry mann • (847) 829 Sherman ave • $449,000 • 2:30 - 4:00 • Beverly Curry • (847) 814 hinman ave 5 • $450,000 • 3:00 - 5:00 • BarBara Kramer • (847) 3321 hayeS St • $518,000 • 2:30 - 4:30 • pamela mCClamroCh • (847) 916 miChigan ave 2 • $575,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • BradFord Browne • (847) 642 Sheridan Sq 1 • $625,000 • 11:30 - 12:45 • CandaCe KuzmarSKi • (847) 9450 linColnwood dr • $820,000 • 2:30 - 3:45 • CandaCe KuzmarSKi • (847) 2514 harriSon St • $875,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • timothy ShaKer • (847)
1925 halF day rd • $1,399,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • alan Berlow • (847) 940-2767 2600 telegraph rd • $2,999,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • miChele vold • (847) 712-0061
glencoe
Arlington HeigHts 3300 n Carriageway dr 312 • $140,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Sharon dolezal • (847) 753-6158
BuffAlo grove 195 old oaK Ct • $269,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • reina diamond • (847) 425-3786 884 Knollwood dr • $389,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • phylliS hollander • (847) 507-8084
cHicAgo 1338 w BirChwood ave 3 • $175,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Sharon KozaK • (847) 4851 n pulaSKi rd • $224,900 • 11:00 - 1:00 • marie hirSChle • (773) 2462 w eSteS ave 1 • $225,000 • 12:00 - 3:00 • BarBara Kramer • (847) 5538 n glenwood ave d • $375,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • BarBara Kramer • (847) 4698 n KaSSon ave • $389,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • ChriStopher StephenS • (847) 561 w Cornelia ave • $899,000 • 2:30 - 4:30 • Jenni gordon • (847)
316-8044 592-3107 316-8047 316-8047 425-3877 778-0359
DeerfielD 362 KelBurn rd 321 • $174,900 • 11:00 - 1:00 • BarBara pepoon • (847) 438 Swan Blvd • $289,900 • 12:00 - 2:00 • FranCine Shapiro • (847) 89 greenBriar dr • $425,000 • 2:30 - 4:00 • alan Berlow • (847) 1195 w oaKwood pl • $439,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • Shannon towSon • (847) 735 Central ave • $499,500 • 2:00 - 4:00 • marSha iCKo pariS • (847) 1254 woodland dr • $575,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • harry gold • (847) 670 ConStanCe ln • $589,999 • 1:00 - 3:00 • viCKi tenner • (847) 855 heather rd • $599,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Jodi tauB • (847) 1126 Country ln • $619,000 • 1:00 - 4:00 • linda antoKal • (847) 1680 portage paSS • $629,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • miChele vold • (847) 1725 weSt Summit Ct • $699,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • marla Fox • (312) 1480 northwoodS Cir • $724,900 • 1:00 - 3:00 • JoyCe Falanga • (847)
DEERFIELD 847.945.7100
EVANSTON 847.866.8200
GLENCOE 847-835.6000
GLENVIEW 847.724.5800
962-5537 542-9111 940-2767 514-2144 681-4127 436-4321 946-4000 962-7738 940-2722 712-0061 388-0456 224-5880
550 560 965 551 514 563 123 254 550 560
greenleaF ave • $7,000 • 11:00 - 1:00 • deBorah BartelStein • (847) drexel ave • $525,000 • 2:30 - 4:30 • hilde wheeler Carter • (847) ForeSt way dr • $569,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • Jody diCKStein • (847) dundee rd • $749,000 • 11:00 - 1:00 • maC duBoSe • (312) monroe ave • $969,500 • 2:00 - 4:00 • marCia Biordi Brown • (847) oaKdale ave • $1,050,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • rene Firmin • (847) euClid ave • $1,099,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • Carma BaKer • (847) mary St • $1,185,000 • 2:30 - 4:30 • Carma BaKer • (847) greenleaF ave • $1,549,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • deBorah BartelStein • (847) greenwood ave • $2,150,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Cheryl waldStein • (847)
845-8805 425-3765 593-6994 401-8131 316-8047 425-3734 425-3767 977-4010 425-3817 316-8012 316-8047 772-4211 971-7002 977-4010 977-4010 910-8566
624-5826 533-4533 835-6014 505-7407 940-2782 835-6006 691-1883 691-1883 624-5826 975-4756
glenview 606 Carriage hill dr • $239,000 • 12:30 - 2:30 • Judy huSKe • (847) 989-5582 921 harlem ave 13 • $284,900 • 2:30 - 4:30 • Juanita Soong • (847) 254-9188 2116 Central rd • $329,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • paul CionCzyK • (312) 433-9931 1509 winnetKa rd • $379,500 • 12:00 - 2:00 • anne duBray • (847) 657-3747 3089 lexington ln 3089 • $385,000 • 11:00 - 1:00 • marSha SChwartz • (847) 217-9599 1137 pFingSten rd • $385,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • vienna JaCoB • (847) 657-3735 1900 Central rd • $398,000 • 11:00 - 12:30 • Judy huSKe • (847) 989-5582 2521 Bel air dr • $427,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • marla SChneider • (847) 657-3790 2114 warrington Ct • $499,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • anne duBray • (847) 657-3747 637 Fairway dr • $499,900 • 2:30 - 4:30 • Judy huSKe • (847) 989-5582 4232 linden tree ln • $529,900 • 1:00 - 4:00 • BarBara Singer • (847) 421-1134 1739 deweS St • $539,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • lena Bondar • (847) 630-7020 924 Burnham Ct • $549,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • peter maloney • (630) 873-0222 914 revere rd • $569,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • anne duBray • (847) 657-3747 2301 maliK Ct • $579,000 • 1:30 - 3:30 • rita maSini • (847) 404-0797
HIGHLAND PARK 847.433.5400
LAKE FOREST 847.234.8000
NORTHBROOK 847.272.9880
WILMETTE 847.256.7400
WINNETKA 847.446.4000
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OPEN HOUSES THIS SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18 1728 riverSide Ct • $589,000 • 2:15 - 4:00 • anne duBray • (847) 2300 linden leaF dr • $589,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • elizaBeth van horn • (847) 416 huBer ln • $649,900 • 11:30 - 1:30 • peter maloney • (630) 2220 greenwood rd • $659,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • Cindy Fine • (847) 2718 BraSSie dr • $683,000 • 1:30 - 3:30 • BryCe Fuller • (847) 1508 BlaCKthorn dr • $699,000 • 2:15 - 4:00 • anne duBray • (847) 1318 glenview rd • $699,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • margaret ludemann • (847) 2543 oSage dr • $775,000 • 12:00 - 3:00 • paula mCgrath • (847) 825 Surrey ln • $799,900 • 12:00 - 2:00 • anne duBray • (847) 1801 SunSet ridge rd • $849,000 • 2:30 - 4:30 • anne duBray • (847) 323 n BranCh rd • $849,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • ronna wiSBrod • (847) 1400 Kaywood ln • $899,000 • 11:00 - 1:00 • anne duBray • (847) 829 lenox rd • $949,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • Cheryl o’rourKe • (847) 900 lenox rd • $995,000 • 2:30 - 4:30 • ConStanCe Browne • (847) 2014 deweS St • $1,299,965 • 12:00 - 2:00 • marla SChneider • (847) 926 linden ln • $1,575,000 • 2:30 - 4:30 • marla SChneider • (847) 828 glenview rd • $1,599,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • ConStanCe Browne • (847) 632 Chatham rd • $1,699,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • anne duBray • (847)
657-3747 702-9686 873-0222 832-2147 208-7888 657-3747 401-1802 707-9208 657-3747 657-3747 832-2955 657-3747 657-3731 922-2037 657-3790 657-3790 922-2037 657-3747
grAyslAke 1155 hummingBird ln • $285,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • harry gold • (847) 436-4321
gurnee 4081 old grand ave • $189,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • marSha nuSSloCK • (847) 735-7615 3486 Kenwood ave • $292,000 • 1:00 - 3:30 • Stella Cordero wagner • (847) 219-4063
HigHlAnD PArk 1502 ConCorde Cir 1502 • $350,000 • 2:30 - 4:00 • alan Berlow • (847) 940-2767 2938 Summit ave • $375,000 • 3:00 - 5:00 • ronna wiSBrod • (847) 832-2955 523 green Bay rd • $399,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • marCia lyman • (847) 926-1747 849 Burton ave • $400,000 • 12:30 - 2:00 • alan Berlow • (847) 940-2767 2927 Summit ave • $429,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • pam devendorF • (847) 681-4143 85 aCorn ln • $449,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • miChael hope • (847) 323-9517 1296 golF ave • $449,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • miChael hope • (847) 323-9517 2021 St JohnS ave 1h • $479,900 • 11:00 - 1:30 • Cindy Fine • (847) 832-2147 61 hiawatha trl • $489,000 • 1:00 - 2:30 • glo matlin • (847) 835-6058 611 ridge rd • $499,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • Sonia Cohen • (847) 337-6005 188 BraeBurn • $599,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • marla pierSon • (847) 753-6258 1875 edgewood rd • $659,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • maxine goldBerg • (847) 926-1723 2000 green Bay rd 307 • $665,000 • 2:30 - 4:00 • linda BarBera- Stein • (847) 926-1727 2000 green Bay rd 107 • $669,000 • 1:00 - 2:30 • linda BarBera- Stein • (847) 926-1727 167 laKewood pl • $695,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • maxine goldBerg • (847) 926-1723 846 Stonegate dr • $725,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • Joan Field • (847) 624-8500 880 SpyglaSS Ct • $749,000 • 12:30 - 2:00 • deBra hymen • (847) 681-4113 1015 green Bay rd • $785,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • JaCquie lewiS • (847) 858-2155 2501 auguSta way • $835,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • erin rutman • (312) 545-4814 326 Central ave • $850,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • eve tarm • (847) 716-0063 515 BeeCh St • $995,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Julie deutSCh • (847) 835-6086 1177 glenCoe ave • $1,100,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • eve Bremen • (847) 373-6091 2541 hyBernia dr • $1,100,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • lida zreCny • (847) 772-8430 89 S deere parK dr • $1,175,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • FranCie pinKwater • (847) 432-3861 1672 ryderS ln • $1,299,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • Jamie roth • (847) 219-6400 1475 SunSet rd • $1,425,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • Janet Borden • (847) 833-3171 1706 SunnySide ave • $1,950,000 • 2:30 - 4:30 • peggy gliCKman • (847) 212-4610 1940 w parK ave • $2,200,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • paula Simon • (847) 274-1404
kenilwortH 555 earlSton rd • $1,369,000 • 2:30 - 4:30 • BarBara mawiCKe • (847) 549 earlSton rd • $1,399,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • daverille Sher • (773) 138 aBingdon ave • $1,695,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • BlanChe romey • (847) 154 Kenilworth ave • $2,449,000 • 11:00 - 1:00 • BarBara mawiCKe • (847) 126 aBingdon ave • $2,595,000 • 2:30 - 4:30 • BarBara mawiCKe • (847) 74 tudor pl • $2,700,000 • 3:00 - 4:30 • glo matlin • (847)
917-7345 230-7346 209-6106 917-7345 917-7345 835-6058
lAke Bluff 325 138 325 650 711
ravine ForeSt dr • $4,350 • 12:00 - 2:00 • linda landSell • (847) e Sheridan rd • $749,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • Suzanne myerS • (847) ravine ForeSt dr • $798,500 • 12:00 - 2:00 • linda landSell • (847) maple ave • $1,399,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • Suzanne myerS • (847) moFFett rd • $1,699,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • lori BaKer • (847)
302-5654 421-4635 302-5654 421-4635 735-7637
lAke forest 75 w quail dr • $395,000 • 1:00 - 4:00 • donna merCier • (847) 746 greenview pl • $428,500 • 1:00 - 3:00 • mary pat lundgren • (847) 438 heather ln • $619,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • gaye SodKe • (847) 1918 haCKBerry ln • $649,900 • 1:00 - 3:00 • lori BaKer • (847) 555 Beverly pl • $710,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • patriCia Carter • (847) 1579 Conway rd • $749,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • Sarah rowland • (847) 950 Symphony St • $749,900 • 1:00 - 3:00 • mary pat lundgren • (847) 890 oaK Knoll dr • $948,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • SuSan Baxter Blum • (847) 1665 oaK Knoll dr • $995,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • mary pat lundgren • (847) 301 roSe ter • $999,000 • 1:00 - 5:00 • anne mitChell • (847) 2015Berley Ct • $999,995 • 11:00 - 5:00 • miChele wilSon • (847) 2025Berley Ct • $1,019,995 • 11:00 - 5:00 • miChele wilSon • (847) 2035Berley Ct • $1,059,995 • 11:00 - 5:00 • mary pat lundgren • (847) 1490 S ridge rd • $1,195,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • houda Chedid • (847) 568 greenway dr • $1,199,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • vera purCell • (847) 350 Bridle ln • $1,229,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • lori BaKer • (847) 1480 KurtiS ln • $1,295,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • vera purCell • (847) 1475 S ridge rd • $1,449,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • vera purCell • (847) 815 S Southmeadow ln • $1,495,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • vera purCell • (847) 385 w onwentSia rd • $1,940,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Carol ruSS • (847) 640 w old elm rd • $1,990,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • mary pat lundgren • (847) 1670 alexiS Ct • $2,500,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • houda Chedid • (847) 1000 e illinoiS rd • $4,399,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • houda Chedid • (847)
735-7657 208-9049 234-8000 735-7637 401-0554 735-7666 208-9049 945-2602 208-9049 735-7652 217-1760 217-1760 208-9049 987-8517 372-6721 735-7637 372-6721 372-6721 372-6721 254-4044 208-9049 987-8517 987-8517
long grove 23697 n matthew Ct • $269,000 • 10:00 - 5:00 • marla pierSon • (847) 753-6258
Morton grove 6948 BeCKwith rd • $228,900 • 12:00 - 2:00 • Juanita Soong • (847) 254-9188
MunDelein 2081 ChadwiCK way • $415,000 • 2:30 - 4:30 • nanCy aBzug • (847) 899-0818
niles 6700 w alBion ave • $444,900 • 2:00 - 4:00 • BarBara Kramer • (847) 316-8047
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Open HOuse extravaganza VISIT THE FOLLOWING OPEN HOUSES THIS SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18 nortHBrook
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321 BaSSwood Ct • $419,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • viCKi tenner • (847) 946-4000 485 anthony trl • $433,125 • 12:00 - 2:00 • BryCe Fuller • (847) 208-7888 2746 the mewS • $449,000 • 11:00 - 1:00 • BryCe Fuller • (847) 208-7888 3540 merle ln • $449,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • marla SChneider • (847) 657-3790 3495 merle ln • $499,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Joan papadopouloS • (847) 308-2390 89 andover Cir • $519,900 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Katie marx • (847) 525-6254 2806 Farmington rd • $539,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • irit JaCoBSon • (847) 753-6166 2 the Court oF Chapel wood • $574,900 • 12:00 - 2:00 • BarBara pepoon • (847) 962-5537 4024 Brittany Ct • $589,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • BryCe Fuller • (847) 208-7888 3765 teChny rd • $598,000 • 1:30 - 3:30 • BarBara pepoon • (847) 962-5537 2027 Butternut ln • $598,900 • 2:00 - 4:00 • BarBara pepoon • (847) 962-5537 3205 river FallS dr • $619,900 • 2:00 - 4:00 • SuSan may levy • (847) 738-3736 3357 old mill rd • $769,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • marSha SChwartz • (847) 217-9599 2527 melanie ln • $819,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • marla SChneider • (847) 657-3790 2432 the Strand • $850,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • anne margoliS • (847) 226-5028 2553 greenview rd • $875,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Steven SimS • (847) 567-9000 3900 oaK ave • $950,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • dorina Botezatu • (847) 707-5448 1200 hillSide dr • $1,175,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Bridget Fritz • (847) 331-0456 3141 huntington ln • $1,199,965 • 2:30 - 4:30 • marla SChneider • (847) 657-3790 2985 walterS ave • $1,939,000 • 4:00 - 6:00 • viCKi nelSon • (847) 962-3739
1928 potomaC Ct • $299,900 • 2:00 - 4:00 • marK SChrimmer • (847) 764-5532 41 northField ter • $319,900 • 2:30 - 4:00 • deBra hymen • (847) 681-4113 18 legaCy ln • $349,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Janie BreSS • (847) 217-7144
nortHfielD 358 eaton St • $745,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • gretChen aKe • (312) 385-0244 621 woodland ln • $789,999 • 2:30 - 4:30 • linda martin • (847) 784-7315 18 regent wood rd • $890,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Claire SuCSy • (847) 409-3737
ProsPect HeigHts 404 meadow ridge ln • $549,000 • 2:00 - 5:00 • maC duBoSe • (312) 505-7407
riverwooDs 6 Big oaK ln • $495,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • Janet Borden • (847) 2360 legendS Ct • $724,500 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Suzanne Beu • (773) 8 Julie ln • $725,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • miChael woldorF • (847) 1835 Strenger ln • $749,000 • 1:30 - 3:30 • Cynthia horowitz • (847) 2920 orange BraCe rd • $874,500 • 12:00 - 4:00 • Kim CampBell • (312) 2680 gemini ln • $1,119,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • nanCy aBzug • (847) 385 thornmeadow rd • $1,349,000 • 12:00 - 3:00 • Kim CampBell • (312) 6 timBerline ln • $1,549,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • miChael mitChell • (847)
833-3171 495-4835 209-5730 921-2317 434-9372 899-0818 434-9372 910-0146
skokie 9715 3845 4115 7718 9445 4606 8321 7528 8321 4401
woodS dr 705 • $305,000 • 11:00 - 1:00 • Joan Field • (847) CliFFord ter • $340,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • Carmen CorBett • (847) SKoKiana ter • $349,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • eSther KapetanSKy • (847) KoStner ave • $398,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Sophie hoegen • (312) lorel ave • $449,900 • 12:00 - 2:00 • thomaS garr • (847) elm ter • $529,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Sunny maSur • (847) Karlov ave • $699,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • Julie malmed • (847) KeyStone ave • $725,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Joanne toyama • (847) Kolmar ave • $770,000 • 1:00 - 2:15 • CandaCe KuzmarSKi • (847) madiSon St • $959,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • annie Flanagan • (847)
624-8500 989-8276 425-3722 401-8131 425-3761 425-3798 677-0515 425-3713 977-4010 867-9236
wilMette 205 ridge rd 406 • $175,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Jin qi • (224) 217-1016 628 hiBBard rd • $299,900 • 1:00 - 3:00 • donna gritton • (847) 212-5479 2547 wilmette ave • $478,000 • 11:00 - 1:00 • JaCKie thom • (847) 853-6455 2551 wilmette ave • $504,900 • 11:00 - 12:00 • Beverly FleiSChman • (847) 217-0494 2347 laKe ave • $521,000 • 11:00 - 1:00 • viCKi nelSon • (847) 962-3739 445 Cove ln • $529,900 • 12:00 - 2:00 • Kathy lerner • (847) 302-2399 210 SunSet dr • $550,000 • 2:30 - 4:00 • Beverly FleiSChman • (847) 217-0494 111 4th St • $575,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • donna wieland • (847) 846-7704 350 oaK Cir • $599,000 • 1:00 - 4:00 • John gridley • (847) 730-9296 1500 Sheridan rd 9B • $599,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • pamela mCClamroCh • (847) 772-4211 1630 Sheridan rd 6F • $650,000 • 2:30 - 4:30 • Julie dowdle rogerS • (847) 401-4005 3204 wilmette ave • $699,000 • 11:30 - 1:30 • Sarah rothSChild • (847) 361-9057 2245 BirChwood ave • $725,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • pamela mCClamroCh • (847) 772-4211 2114 laKe ave • $729,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • marla SChneider • (847) 657-3790 2120 wilmette ave • $790,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • Beverly FleiSChman • (847) 217-0494 1228 gregory ave • $899,000 • 2:30 - 4:30 • FranK Capitanini • (847) 652-2312 2037 pioneer ln • $934,900 • 2:30 - 4:00 • Beverly FleiSChman • (847) 217-0494 3209 SpruCewood rd • $1,049,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Sue hertzBerg • (847) 826-5206 1420 Sheridan rd 1C • $1,085,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • BlanChe romey • (847) 209-6106 2722 old glenview rd • $1,099,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • Beverly FleiSChman • (847) 217-0494 2217 CheStnut ave • $1,125,000 • 1:00 - 3:30 • viCKi nelSon • (847) 962-3739 1921 SChiller ave • $1,175,000 • 1:30 - 4:00 • Judy huSKe • (847) 989-5582 921 Sheridan rd • $1,199,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • Bettye raglin • (847) 903-3717 925 aShland ave • $1,199,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • Sue hertzBerg • (847) 826-5206 1220 maple ave • $1,249,000 • 2:30 - 4:30 • FranK Capitanini • (847) 652-2312 1062 linden ave • $1,250,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Julie JenSen • (847) 409-4282 2117 wilmette ave • $1,499,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • Julie dowdle rogerS • (847) 401-4005 2600 Kenilworth ave • $1,699,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • patriCia SKirving • (847) 924-4119
winnetkA 739 walden rd • $6,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • deBorah BartelStein • (847) 624-5826 1099 merrill St 2 • $115,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • hilde wheeler Carter • (847) 533-4533 77 ChurCh rd • $799,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • BarBara mawiCKe • (847) 917-7345 139 Bertling ln • $969,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Beth groeBe, • (847) 650-5073 1185 elm St • $969,000 • 1:00 - 4:00 • mary BurKe • (847) 682-4785 95 ChurCh rd • $969,000 • 1:30 - 3:00 • roBin Bentley-gold • (847) 826-7784 341 woodland ave • $1,278,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • patriCia SKirving • (847) 924-4119 1235 SCott ave • $1,335,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • ellen Collar • (847) 525-6232 808 linColn ave • $1,349,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • Claudia gaynor • (847) 441-1047 1183 tower rd • $1,479,000 • 2:00 - 4:00 • annie Flanagan • (847) 867-9236 484 Cedar St • $1,725,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • maureen mohling • (847) 363-3018 181 apple tree rd • $1,729,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • harold nationS • (847) 226-8768 1200 SunSet rd • $1,745,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • FranK Capitanini • (847) 652-2312 349 Sheridan rd • $1,950,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • BlanChe romey • (847) 209-6106 1149 laurel ave • $2,349,000 • 12:00 - 2:00 • Sue hertzBerg • (847) 826-5206 4 golF ln • $3,475,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • patriCia SKirving • (847) 924-4119
wADswortH 16398 w Foxglove ln • $429,000 • 1:00 - 3:00 • miChele wilSon • (847) 217-1760
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54
| SATURDAY OCTOBER 17 | SUNDAY OCTOBER 18 2015
THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND
SUNDAY BREAKFAST
HIGHLAND PARK PLAYERS TACKLE SALACIOUS AVENUE Q BY SIMON MURRAY
A
utumn was in the air as dusk fell on a late September day at the West Ridge Center in Highland Park. The smell of a newly made fire wafted from a nearby chimney— crisp and inviting, much like fall itself. A football team practiced under the glare of field lights; the dull blows of pads and grunts and a shrill whistle every now and then punctuating the still silence. Inside the Center was much livelier. Middle-aged men in high socks and knee braces stalked the halls in the direction of the basketball court. Highspirited “hiyas” echoed from a karate class. And in a classroom with the door shut and the windows covered, cute, furry, Muppet-like puppets were singing about sex. (As Big Bird would sing, with didactic emphasis: “One of these things is not like the others.”) But this is no Sesame Street. Or rather it’s the X-rated, adultonly, salacious and hilarious and unapologetic in its political incorrectness, version: the Tony Award Winning musical, Avenue Q. Who would have the guts to put on a show that the New Yorker called “Mayhem and Madness;” and the New York Times described as “unfailingly tuneful and disgustingly irresistible”? The Highland Park Players, that’s who. A majority of the cast and crew had arranged themselves around the classroom. Those that weren’t standing were sitting down on plastic chairs a couple sizes too small for adults. In the back, two actors had Trekkie Monster—Cookie Monster’s porn-addicted doppelgänger— propped up on a miniature blackboard easel that, come show time, would be a second-story window. (Trekkie requires two actors: one to work the arm
movements, the other to work the head and mouth.) Puppets and actors were walking through “The Money Song,” with a point of hammering home the minutia and nailing down the details. Director Catherine Davis was giving direction to her cast, who were also being directed by two puppet directors. (Prior to this musical, none of the aforementioned actors had ever worked with puppets. Five straight days of puppet boot camp helped change that.) As I watched, Executive Producer and President of the Highland Park Players, Brad Rose, leaned over and whispered, “Look at the puppets that aren’t talking.” When we spoke prior to watching the rehearsal, this had been a point Rose had made a few times. Though we weren’t able to meet for breakfast—Rose quipped he would’ve ordered a lox omelet with side of French toast—the president of the Players spoke with me at length. Mainly, about the challenges a nonprofit theatre company faces when putting on a Tony “Triple Crown” Winner for Best Musical, Best Score, and Best Book. “Challenge accepted: let’s try and pull off a show that people stay away from because, quite frankly, it’s very difficult,” said Rose. “Think about just two people in a scene, sans puppets—like right now, how about this interview: I’m talking right now but you still have life, you’re shaking your head, you’re engaged, you’re
“I think there’s only so many times you can go back to the well and do a Music Man, or an Oliver. It’s been done” –Brad Rose
danced. The Players have spared no expense for this s h o w. They ’ve licensed the original logo. They’ve spent extra money to re n t the original Broadw ay p u p p e t s (higher quality than even the ones they were using for rehearsal.) They have a screen built into the stage to show the original transitional videos between acts, (which will resonant with Brad Rose | Illustration by Barry Blitt anyone who has seen Sesame Street). “I think there’s only so many listening, you’re moving,” noted Watching Trekkie move, one Rose. “Well if you’re a puppet, got an idea of what Rose was times you can go back to the well and you’re not talking, you just talking about. He chuckled. He and do a Music Man, or an can’t hold the puppet there and raised the roof. He wagged his Oliver,” said Rose. “It’s been be dead. You gotta have life; it’s finger with emphasis. And, done.” gotta always be in the moment.” maybe most impressive of all, he When other local theatre
troupes have shuttered their doors, the Players have experienced a revival of sorts; and Rose has been an integral part of overseeing that redirection. Rose got his start with the theatre company after auditioning for a pirate in their production of Peter Pan and landing the part. He would go on to play the lead in Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, which solidified his love for the troupe. After the original board split on a decisive decision to cancel a struggling Fiddler on the Roof only five weeks out from opening night, Rose volunteered to fill the vacant role of president. Since then he has overseen bold choices and, on the surface at least, difficult productions— starting in 2002 with Big: The Musical, which featured a largerthan-life floor keyboard that they rented from a regional theater. More recently, the Players’ Cats was met with critical acclaim—winning BroadwayWorld Chicago’s awards for Best Actress and Best Choreographer for non-equity. Rose even met his wife, Hannah, through the Players. Hannah will be playing the character Christmas Eve—one of the human characters—in Avenue Q. (Rose assures me she still has to audition like everyone else; no spousal favoritism.) The Players are looking forward to their first performance tonight. But maybe no one is more excited than Rose himself. “Every time I come to a rehearsal in this community center, I make sure the doors are shut. I’ve been a little nervous. I can’t wait to get to the theater before someone complains.” Avenue Q will be performed at the Northbrook Theatre, 3323 Wa l te r s Avenue, f rom October 16th through October 25th. To purchase tickets, please go to highlandparkplayers. com or call the Northbrook Theatre at 847-291-2995.
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