The North Shore Weekend EAST, Issue 77

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No. 77 | A JWC Media publication

saturday march 29 | sunday march 30 2014

sunday breakfast

socials

Bedside Manor celebrates new space. P.27

Stolen Nazi artwork is subject of debut novel. P.15

sports

New Trier captures state hockey crowns. P.32

local news and personalities of Wilmette, Kenilworth, Winnetka, Northfield, Glencoe, Highland Park, evanston, Lake Forest, Mettawa & Lake Bluff

Each of the Pasquesi brothers of Highland Park — Lou and Frank (front, left to right) along with Joe and Mark — attended a Big Ten university on an Evans Scholarship.

Carrying on

LOCAL POSTAL CUSTOMER

Evans Scholars Foundation — golf’s favorite charity — rewards caddies with college education. P8

The North Shore Weekend © 2014 JWC MEDIA, Published at 445 Sheridan Road, Highwood, IL 60040 | Telephone: 847.926.0911

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THe North shore weekend

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3/29 – 3/30/14


3/29 – 3/30/14

THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND

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THe North shore weekend

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GLENVIEW

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3/29 – 3/30/14

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index

THe North shore weekend

3/29 – 3/30/14

Inside This Interiors

Limited

North Shore Weekend News

Sports

08 In the swing The Evans Scholars Foundation helps more than 800 caddies — most of them local teens — attend universities.

506 N Western Ave., Lake Forest 847-295-3800 Store Hours: Monday–Friday 9 – 4 Saturdays 10 – 2

31 United they stand New Trier boys and girls hockey teams capture state titles at United Center.

p8 12

C lassic touch Former Evanston resident Lisa Flynn has entertained audiences for decades on WFMT.

Design For Your Family

Lifestyle & Arts 15

p31

Sunday Breakfast North Shore resident Lisa Barr has written a novel about Nazi art heists.

27

Take a look at some of the top parties attended by North Shore residents recently.

Real Estate 28 Kashian Bros’ hardwood floor refinishing services feature our Atomic Dust Containment System. This unique system allows us to collect the dust before it gets airborne. No dust in your house. No expensive clean up required when we leave. Watch the video at www.kashianbros.com/refinishing.

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Last but not least…

Social whirl

North Shore Offerings T wo intriguing houses in our towns are profiled.

28 Open Houses Find out — complete with map — what houses you can walk through for possible purchase on the North Shore on Sunday.

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Perfect Weekend Mark and Candus Suppelsa find much to like in Bigfork, Montana.

Correction: In an article in the March 15-16 North Shore Weekend about Whole Beauty Institute, Andrea Knox-Hochstedt was misidentified. She is a lead medical aesthetician there, not a doctor. Andrea Knox-Hochstedt and Dr. John Q. Cook


3/29 – 3/30/14

first word

THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND

Dream in color.

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discover our fine linens, furniture and more.

Some may consider this a fool’s errand

B

eyond The Onion, I’ve always believed publications should be imbued with a better sense of humor. All that black type and articles filled with gravitas can sometimes enervate the reader. And there’s no better time to inject levity than on April Fool’s Day, which occurs next Tuesday. The gold standard, in my mind, occurred within the April 1, 1985 issue of Sports Illustrated. “The Curious Case of Sidd Finch” detailed, over many pages, a one-shoed pitcher who hurled a 168-mph fastball who was trying to make the New York Mets squad. Written by George Plimpton, it was believed by many — including this writer — until the magazine admitted it was a hoax a full two weeks later. Such a serious, respected magazine, who would think Sports Illustrated would foist a piece of obvious fiction on its readers? When I ran a daily sports section in the Los Angeles area, I tried to pull off a similar feat, running a dead-serious story that the local high school was changing its long-beloved nickname in an April 1 issue. I received at least one call from an aghast subscriber asking how the students could have voted to become the Bananas (to be honest, I

John Conatser, Founder & Publisher Jill Dillingham, Vice President of Sales TOM REHWALDT, General Manager David Sweet, Editor in Chief Bill McLean, Senior Writer/Associate Editor Kevin Reiterman, Sports Editor Kendall McKinven, Style Editor KATIE ROSE MCENEELY, Online Content Editor Valerie Morgan, Art Director Eryn Sweeney-Demezas, Account Manager/Graphic Designer sara bassick, Graphic Designer September Conatser, Publishing Intern abby wickman, Editorial Intern Find us online: issuu.com/JWCMedia Facebook.com/TheNorthShoreWeekend

© 2014 The North Shore Weekend/A publication of JWC Media

don’t recall which absurd nickname I chose, but it’s probably similar to the yellow fruit). At Pioneer Press, I twice tried to launch an April Fool’s Day piece in the weekly papers (given the publication schedule, it meant an April 1 edition appeared every five years or so). Twice I was shot down. Given The North Shore Weekend is a weekly that debuted in 2012, it’s no surprise I haven’t had the chance to pull off an April Fool’s piece yet —my first opportunity will be the Saturday/Sunday edition in 2017. Will a story report that Market Square’s chicago name will be sponsored by Wal-Mart to raise 773 404 2020 revenue? That Wilmette will allow cruise-ship docking by its harbor? That Glenbrook North boasts a one-shoed pitcher who fires 168-mph fastballs? As the cliché goes, the possibilities are endless.3.21.14 BSM NSW Dream in color.indd I’ll need three years to figure out the best one. Enjoy the weekend.

David Sweet Editor in Chief david@northshoreweekend.com twitter: @davidafsweet

Contributing Writers Joanna Brown Bob Gariano Jake Jarvi Angelika Labno jenna schubert jill soderberg

T.J. Brown Scott Holleran Arthur miller kevin beese gregg shapiro

Joel lerner, Chief Photographer Larry Miller, Contributing Photographer BARRY BLITT, Illustrator ALLISON STEINBACK, Advertising Account Executive COURTNEY PITT, Advertising Account Executive M.J. CADDEN, Advertising Account Executive All advertising inquiry info should be directed to 847-926-0957 & info@jwcmedia.com

Telephone 847-926-0911

hinsdale 630 655 0497

lake forest 847 295 8370

winnetka 847 441 0969

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3/13/14 1:12 PM


8 | news

The brothers Pasquesi — Mark, Lou, Frank and Joe — caddied at Northmoor Golf Club to help earn college scholarships.

photography by joel lerner

They’re not left holding the bag More than 800 caddies a year enjoy having college tuition covered as Evans Scholars ■ by bill mclean Zoe Sundstrom was at a varsity basketball practice 27 years ago when her mother, Barb, entered the Oak ParkRiver Forest High School gym holding an unopened letter. The hoops coach was not pleased. “My mom said, ‘I can’t wait any longer,’ recalls Sundstrom, now a Glenview resident, mother of three and part-time speech pathologist. The coach noticed the letter was from the Western Golf Association and allowed Zoe to open it. Moments later she found out she’d been selected to receive an Evans Scholarship, a full college tuition and housing award for caddies. The coach started to cry. “He had been an Evans Scholar,” Sundstrom says. “I had no idea, and he had no idea that I’d been a caddie for years [at Riverside Golf Club]. “It was a life-changing thing, being an Evans Scholar,” she adds. “For all of us.” A total of 840 lives at 19 universities (mostly in the Midwest) are undergoing positive alterations as Evans Scholars, thanks to a foundation started in 1930 by the late Charles “Chick” Evans, a career amateur golf great who won the U.S. Open and U.S. Amateur in 1916. More than 9,800 caddies have graduated from college as Evans Scholars, including the two inaugural North Shore honorees who received $300 each to cover the tuition at Northwestern in 1930. Says Western Golf Association/Evans Scholars Foundation chairman Dennis O’Keefe, a Winnetka resident, “this year we awarded nearly $15 million for the 840 students who are enrolled in college. Our aim is to increase that number to 1,000 scholars per year before the end of the decade. “Presidents of universities love us because we’re sending them highly qualified students [with an average GPA of 3.25] and outstanding people.”

Evans Scholars are selected based on candidates’ academics, financial need, leadership, character and caddie record. The Evans Scholars Foundation is considered golf’s favorite charity, with more than 100,000 contributors, including 26,000 Evans Scholars Foundation Par Club members. Evans Scholars alumni donate more than $6.2 million annually, and the average grant is valued at $70,000 over four years. Annual proceeds from four prestigious golf tournaments run by the Western Golf Association, including the PGA’s BMW Championship, are also donated to the Evans Scholars Foundation. An Evans Scholarship enabled Sundstrom to major in communication studies and linguistics and reside in an Evans Scholarship Foundation chapter house at Northwestern University, where she met her future husband, Matt, a New Trier High School graduate who also happened to be an Evans Scholar. Sundstrom, a 1991 NU graduate, caddied for former Chicago Bears Mike Ditka and Bob Avellini and former Chicago Blackhawk Doug Wilson, among other members and guests, at Riverside Golf Club before “spending 10 more years under the straps” as a caddie at Skokie Country Club. Four Highland Park High School graduates and brothers — Frank, Lou, Mark and Joe Pasquesi — each earned an Evans Scholarship after riding their bikes three miles to work and caddying for years (often six days a week in the summers) at Northmoor Golf Course in Highland Park. Their father, Evo, worked as a carpenter, and their mother, Pia, worked as a seamstress at the Pasquesi home on Bloom Street. The brothers’ heroes never earned a cent on the PGA Tour. They were too busy raising four sons and Joe Pasquesi’s twin, Caroline. “Our parents also were our role models while we were growing up,” says Lou Pasquesi, 45, an Indiana evans scholars >> page 17


3/29 – 3/30/14

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THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND

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1/28/14 2:31 PM


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THe North shore weekend

3/29 – 3/30/14

WFMT program host offers classic touch

Lisa Flynn

■ by les jacobson At 9:50 a.m. Lisa Flynn, midday voice of classical music station WFMT, enters the studio, adjusts the microphone and eases into her preferred chair, different from the one vacated by departing host Carl Grapentine. “We’ve all got our favorites,” she laughs. The program host and producer unloads the collection of CDs she’ll be playing on today’s program and lines them up, where she can feed them easily into the CD player. At the top of the hour, she launches into her broadcast.

“We’ll travel to the streets of Madrid in just a moment,” she says in her dulcet tones. This is her 23rd year at WFMT, one of the nation’s leading classical music stations with an average weekly listenership of 300,000 — of which a significant portion is in the North Shore. Flynn has “the perfect voice for classical music,” says WFMT General Manager Steve Robinson. “It’s the voice of an angel, calm and soothing. She also has a tremendous knowledge of music. And in her quiet way, she’s very passionate about what she plays. “Put it all together,” he concludes, “and

she’s the perfect classical music announcer.” She’s actually much more than an announcer. There are no writers, producers or engineers in the studio with her. She combines all those roles, cueing up selections in advance, preparing and announcing the weather and news stories, reading commercials (all station commercials are read by the announcers) and giving listeners some information on each piece she plays. It keeps her busy for the four-hour length of her show. Part of her job includes picking the pieces she plans to play. Selections are made six weeks in advance, so they can be included in the station’s monthly Program Guide. But there’s enough flexibility in the schedule to allow her to broadcast other works, such as when conductor Claudio Abbado died. “That gives us room to play tributes,” she notes. “We have guidelines, of course, but within them the announcers have a lot of freedom to pick the pieces we play. There’s the core repertoire. We also will program works by artists coming to town [she’s interviewed dozens on the air, from soprano Renee Fleming to composer John Adams]. And I like to feature new releases. It’s really about making sure the selections are judicious, that they flow, and that we keep things interesting for the listener.” After the “Musical Nocturne on the Streets of Madrid,” she continues the “warm weather” theme with more Spanish music, including works by Manuel de Falla and Joaquin Rodrigo. Then it’s time for a commercial. “Did your knives and cleavers help you party hearty last year?” she announces

jauntily. Later she asks, with a note of concern, “Are you fed up with your tired, rundown bathroom?” The commercial spots may seem incongruous, but they don’t bother her. “I like to read them. It helps maintain the sound of the station. It’s more personal than playing pre-recorded jingles. “But we do have to change gears in a way. One moment I’m talking about music, the next I’m promoting some product. There’s a little bit of acting to it.” She’s been at it a long time. Her dad worked in the computer industry and moved frequently, so she lived in different places — Florida, Virginia, South Carolina and even Munich for several years. She grew up playing violin, “which fired my love for classical music.” When her folks relocated to Florida she attended Brevard County Community College and University of Central Florida in Orlando, where she worked at the college radio station. After college she worked at the local PBS station and “learned on the job.” In 1989 she moved to Columbus, Ohio, and worked two years there before being encouraged to audition for an opening at WFMT. She started in 1991. Since then she’s seen a world of changes, from LPs and reel-to-reel tapes to CDs and now, more and more, digital. But despite the new technologies, one thing remains constant: she loves her job. “I’m very happy here. We’re given such freedom to program and play what we want. Hopefully we’re providing a breadth of music with intelligent commentary that listeners can enjoy.” ■

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3/29 – 3/30/14

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THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND

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12

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news

THe North shore weekend

3/29 – 3/30/14

NEWS DIGEST REVIEW Evanston

Highland Park

Jim and Lesley Anixter celebrated the 105th birthday of former employee Max Fabian at the Northmoor Country Club earlier this month. Fabian started working for the Anixter family in 1958 as an administrative assistant and warehouse traffic manager at the Anixter Bros. facility in Evanston. “Loyalty is No. 1,” Fabian says. “If you have that, you are a good worker and make friends for life.”

Lake County

Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) Lake County expanded its board of directors with the election of two businesswomen, Noga Villalon, 53, of Winnetka and Joanna Lynn, 60, of Riverwoods. Lynn is manager of third-party assurance in the Internal

PREVIEW Highland Park

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NorthShore University HealthSystem Center for Simulation and Innovation received a $500,000 donation from the Jane R. Perlman Trust. This will establish an Advanced Practice Provider residency program to teach nurse practitioners and physician assistants how to further improve patient care and clinical outcomes while reducing healthcare costs through medical scenario simulation. “Simulation will be used extensively in training candidates who participate in this program in order to accelerate their learning curve,” said Dr. Ernest E. Wang, medical director of NCSI and the Alvin H. Baum Family Fund Chair of Simulation and Innovation.

Audit Department at Aon Hewitt where she has worked for 33-years after starting her career as a special education teacher. Villalon, a graduate of the J.L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management at Northwestern University, Evanston, most recently was co-founder and partner of Cubitt Consulting, a financial public relations and investor relations consultancy.

All new and prospective residents are invited to a new resident breakfast at City Hall, sponsored by @Properties, Coldwell Banker and Baird & Warner, on Saturday, April 12 at 9:30 a.m. The speakers at the breakfast include the Mayor, Park District, Library, School District 112, School District 113, Moraine Township, Chamber of Commerce and Ravinia Festival. Gift baskets will be raffled off, and entertainment will be available for kids. For more information, please contact the City Manager’s Office at (847) 926-1000.

Kenilworth

The Kenilworth Park District is taking applications for the following positions: Counselor in Training (13 Years Old) Counselor in Training (14-15 Years Old) Camp Counselor (16 Years Old and Up) To apply for one of these positions, please visit the Kenilworth Park District website at villageofkenilworth.org/ park_district.

Lake Forest

A Parks and Recreation Board Visioning Workshop will take place at the Municipal Services Building, 800 N. Field Drive, from 8 a.m.-10:30 a.m. on Saturday, April 12. Park & Recreation board members and Friends of Parks & Recreation Foundation executive board members will help identify and prioritize new, large recreation projects for the community. For more information, please call 847-234-2600. ■

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3/29 – 3/30/14

THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND

Social Media

news

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13

Exercise firm fits the bill for mom of triplets ■ by katie rose mceneely

Dana Pieper is a blogger and fitness entrepreneur living in Highland Park. Reading: I would like to say that I am an avid reader and that I have time to read. But mostly I’m reading magazines — Fitness, Shape, Health. I’m staying up-to-date in that area because that’s what I write about.

“You can be super fit and get an incredible workout, or you can be a beginner and the workout can grow with you.” | Dana Pieper

Dana Pieper Ravinia North Shore 3-28 Plumbing ad_Layout 1 3/19/14 8:54 AM Page 1

Listening: I’m a huge music person, and so is my husband. On the radio I listen to a lot of pop, because that’s what I use in my classes. But in the house, we listen to all kinds of alternative stuff. My kids are having a poms-themed birthday party, and one of our favorite songs is Inner Ninja by Classified. Watching: I watch both the Chicago shows that are filmed here, “Chicago Fire” and “Chicago PD,” and I started watching “True Detective,” an HBO show. I’m a big “Modern Family” addict. Following: I try to stay on top of anything, any new type of workout technique. Be it something I can implement or something I want to research. But also just general things about nutrition and the body, what’s beneficial, how to make things more efficient. Activity: I’ve been teaching group exercise for probably around 15 years. When I moved here from

PL055-003586

California, the Highland Park Recreational Center was just opening, and I was able to get on their schedule. I developed a bunch of classes for their program and got quite a nice following. About two years ago I decided to take what I do in the gym and try to reach people outside of Highland Park, and I started this company, Everybody Fitness, workouts for everybody and every body. You can be super fit and get an incredible workout, or you can be a beginner and the workout can grow with you as you become more skilled. I made an exercise DVD two years ago, and it was very successful. Last year I decided to do another one geared towards people who are travelers or who don’t have a lot of time. I’m contemplating another one. I just have to find the exact thing I want to do —I want to do something innovative and different. I’m a mom and I live the life I preach about, so I try to make sure everyone knows I don’t just talk the talk; I walk the walk. I wouldn’t give advice I wouldn’t take myself. Eating: I’m a very healthy eater. Lean protein, I don’t indulge in carbs like chips or crackers, but I’ll eat whole grains. And I can’t get enough vegetables. My kids get home and want chips, and I just pull out sugar snap peas. What is your favorite mistake? We moved back from California because I had triplets, and my husband wanted to be closer to family in the Midwest. I did not really want to move — the weather is a big thing for me. But moving here, I’ve met amazing people, I’ve built my business here, I’ve been able to do all the things I wanted to do, and that maybe wouldn’t have been possible in California. But with this winter we’ve been having, I still think, “Why did we do this?” For more information, visit every-body-fitness. com. ■


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THe North shore weekend

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3/29 – 3/30/14

Lake Forest: 847.234.0485 Lake Bluff: 847.234.0816

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425 E. Illinois Road Lake Forest, Illinois

25 Aberdeen Court Bannockburn, Illinois

1110 N. Sheridan Road Lake Forest, Illinois

The best private beach in Lake Forest! Van Doren Shaw’s first work recently restored & renovated. Historic gardens & grounds. STUNNING! 7 BRs, 7.2 baths $7,995,000 | www.255MayflowerRoad.com

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Exquisite Shaw home in outstanding east location. One acre of professionally landscaped grounds + gardens, this home has been meticulously restored. 5 BRs, 4.2 baths $2,299,000 | www.1110SheridanRoad.com

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276 Kimberly Lane Lake Forest, Illinois

1004 N. Western Avenue Lake Forest, Illinois

950 Ashley Road Lake Forest, Illinois

Stately brick Georgian home with gracious gated entry, on 1.62 wooded acres. New Shackleton kitchen. Luxurious pool & spa. 5 BRs, 4.1 baths | $2,295,000 | www.289Fosterplace.com

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Beautifully appointed townhome, like new. Gorgeous living spaces with southern light. Formal dining rm, kitchen & great room on 1st floor. 3 BRs, 3.2 baths $1,525,000 | www.1004NWestern.com

Handsome custom East side home, beautifully maintained. Stunning library, inviting family rm, eat-in kitchen w/new appliances. Gorgeous yard and deck. 4BRs, 3.3 baths | $1,495,000 | www.950Ashley.com

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108 Heron Road Lake Forest, Illinois

502 E. North Avenue Lake Bluff, Illinois

2400 W. Old Mill Road Lake Forest, Illinois

Charming two story Cape in Arbor Ridge! Meticulously maintained & upgraded providing a truly move in ready home. Brick paver terrace & fire pit. 5 BRs, 5 baths $1,250,000 | www.1210Fairway.com

Stunning Oren Pickell English Tudor w/ stone walkways. 2 story foyer, 4 stone fireplaces, 2 master suites w/luxury baths & outdoor living room. 5 BRs, 3.1 baths $1,199,000 | www.108Heron.com

Exquisite Arts & Crafts style home just two blocks from lake. Old world craftsmanship with modern convenience. Custom kitchen, finished lower level. 4 BRs, 3.1 baths | $989,000 | www.502NorthAvenue.com

Enchanting brick & stucco English Tudor in immaculate condition with gated entry & wrought iron fence on gorgeous 1.19 acre property. 3 car garage. 4 BRs, 3.1 baths | $825,000 | www.2400OldMill.com

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350 Signe Court Lake Bluff, Illinois

501 Oakwood Avenue #3E Lake Forest, Illinois

1700 Virginia Avenue Libertyville, Illinois

New construction townhome with 3600 SF of high end finishes: tall ceilings, wide plank brazilian cherry floors and detailed millwork! Gourmet kitchen. 4 BRs, 3.1 baths | $699,000 | www.1034Mar.com

Rambling ranch on idyllic 1 acre wooded setting. Sun filled southern exposure. Immaculately maintained w/updated kitchen/baths. 2 fireplaces. 4 BRS, 2.1 baths | $669,000 | www.350SigneCourt.com

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678 N. Western Avenue | Lake Forest, Illinois 60045 | 8 E. Scranton Avenue | Lake Bluff, Illinois 60044 | www.gglrealty.com |

®

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Information herein deemed reliable, but not guaranteed.


lifestyle & arts | 15

sunday breakfast Author raises the Barr with debut novel

Lisa Barr

illustration by barry blitt ■ by jenna schubert For Lisa Barr, writing has always come naturally. “In my first-grade essay, I said that I wanted to be a writer,” says the Northbrook native who lives in Deerfield. Now, as a published author with an extensive background in journalism, Barr has achieved what her first-grade self could only dream of. Early in her writing career, Barr spent seven years in Jerusalem, where she covered politics, lifestyle and terrorism for The Jerusalem Post. In 2002, she returned to the United States to work for a magazine in Washington, D.C. for several years before coming back to the Chicago area. At that time, she launched the women’s section (called “Lifestyles”) for the Chicago Sun-Times. Barr’s journalistic background — which includes a masters degree from the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University — exposed her to a variety of topics. So when it came to deciding on the topic of her first book, Fugitive Colors, Barr had a lot of inspiration to choose from. The novel, published in October, follows the story of three young artists in Europe on the eve of World War II. At that time, the Nazis stole, hid, sold, and destroyed avant-garde paintings and artwork from artists of the Expressionism movement. “It was wild, chaotic, and dramatic art that didn’t fit with the Nazis very organized, disciplined, and classical approach to art,” Barr says. Although the topic of Nazi-confiscated art during the Holocaust has only recently emerged in the public spotlight (it was the focus of this year’s film “Monuments Men”), the subject has intrigued Barr for years. In 1991, she was working as the managing editor for Today’s Chicago Woman when she was assigned to cover the “Degenerate Art” exhibit at the Art Institute of Chicago. “When I walked in, it was an ‘a-ha moment.’ I had never known about this part of Holocaust history — how the Nazis confiscated avant-garde artwork,” Barr says. “Paintings were taken, museums were shut down, curators were fired, and art supply stores were closed. The artists’ hands were basically tied.”

Years later, Barr researched the topic thoroughly, visiting Europe and conducting numerous interviews to use as background for her book. “I wanted to make the history feel very real,” she says. “For me, it was crucial to give an accurate perspective.” As Barr describes, the paintings created by skilled and famous artists were sold anonymously by the Nazis to fund their war efforts, while artwork created by amateur artists was hidden or destroyed. Now, many of the stolen paintings are beginning to resurface, as they are found in homes and museums around the world. “But the question is: Will the rightful owners be able to claim those paintings?” Barr says. After the successful debut of Fugitive Colors — whose 400-page hardcover was published by Arcade Publishing — Barr is beginning work on another book. Her new novel — in which the central character, a mother and journalist, stumbles upon the story of her career but may be unable to publish it — will be more contemporary than Fugitive Colors but will still be packed with intrigue and suspense. Barr also launched a blog called GIRLilla Warfare, which she describes as a racy and provocative blog for moms. And, when time permits, she works on freelance assignments for various magazines and publications. Almost all of her writing is done at the Deerfield Starbucks – which she considers to be her “office.” Deerfield is also the place she calls home. “It’s funny, I’ve traveled the world, and the last place I thought I’d end up was my own backyard, where I grew up,” Barr says. “But for raising kids, this is a fabulous community. It has everything: it’s comfortable, it’s safe, and it has lots of interesting people who came from different careers in the city. I love the vibe.” When she’s not writing, Barr enjoys taking cardio-boxing classes with her husband and spending time with her three daughters (Noa, Maya, and stepdaughter Maya). To her, leading a normal life with family is a top priority. “When you’re writing, you go into extraordinary circumstances,” Barr says. “So it’s nice when life has ordinary circumstances.” ■


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THe North shore weekend

3/29 – 3/30/14

love & marriage

It’s never easy to reveal — or hear — a secret

I was riding the train home from work when I finished Liane Moriarty’s novel The Husband’s Secret and was struck by the final words in the epilogue: “None of us know all the possible courses our lives could have and maybe should have taken. It’s probably just as well. Some secrets are meant to stay secret forever. Just ask Pandora.” I quickly flipped back to the front of the book and found in the prologue a retelling of the Greek myth of Pandora’s Box. When Pandora is sent off to marry Epimetheus with a covered jar, she can’t help but open it. She inadvertently releases evil into the world, leaving only hope in the jar she brought to her marriage. If you’ve read the book (no spoilers here for those who haven’t) you know that the title refers to only one of the secrets in the story. Readers find most every character is keeping something from their mother, child, cousin, friend or self. Moriarty told many reporters during her publicity tour that the book was inspired by the concept of deathbed confessions; people use their lasts breaths to reveal that they plagiarized someone else’s work or committed some other transgression. They wait until their final moments to find relief from their guilt. When I told her about the book (she hasn’t read it, and

I didn’t spoil it for her either), Highland Park clinical social worker and therapist Anna Marcolin explained to me that secrets can be toxic. She believes in complete transparency for the emotional and mental health of any couple. “The energy that goes into holding secrets can make us physically ill – we’re just not wired for it as humans,” she said. “It’s a real bother to our conscience, but people can and do hold on to secrets all the time.” There are, of course, degrees of secrets and their possible effects on a marriage. Infidelity, debt, substance abuse and criminal histories are deal-breakers for many, but Marcolin said that issues of personal health and safety, like one partner’s eating disorder, also impact the marriage. “That’s a big secret because it affects your health, and your spouse needs to know about it,” she said. “Or if your father was addicted to pornography, you might not ever bring it up with your spouse until your friend’s husband gets caught with it and you have a really strong reaction and nobody understands why.” To keep these revelations away from the deathbed, I asked Marcolin how local couples can best reveal and

robert mankoff/the new yorker collection/www.cartoonbank.com

■ by joanna brown

receive a long-held secret. “We keep secrets because we fear losing the people around us, so it’s best to find some you trust — a friend or sister, a therapist or a member of the clergy, to start an open and honest dialogue in a safe place,” she encouraged. “Hearing a secret from you partner can be really hard, but do your best to listen with an open heart and an open mind, and then get the help you need to process your feelings, again with a good friend or therapist or clergyman. “Processing it together is great, but oftentimes you need to step away to process it.” Her advice took me back to the novel, one page before the story of Pandora’s Box. The author offered Alexander Pope’s quote: To err is human; to forgive, divine. Love & Marriage columnist Joanna Brown can be reached at Joanna@northshoreweekend.com ■

Let’s Talk Real Estate by Jean Wright, President/Broker Owner Crs, GrI

YOur CredIt sCOre What impacts your credit score? Most of us know that the credit score is important, but few think about it until it’s time to ask for that loan, apply for a credit card, and even nowadays, get that dream job. Today’s employers are choosing their people more carefully than ever, and running a credit check on them is one of the ways they do it. That’s why it’s important to know what can affect your credit score and how to improve it should the need arise. Whether you want to buy a car, a house or even a cell phone, your credit is going to be checked and while you might be able to get a phone, with a low credit score, it’s going to limit your home buying or even renting capability. If you’re trying to purchase a home, find a lender who is willing to work with you to help raise your score, clear up debts and prepare for the future. If you don’t know which lender would be best for you, contact your Realtor®-they work closely with mortgage companies and after going over your needs, your Realtor® can help guide you to the company that can best assist you.

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Open 7 Days Mon–Fri 10–8, Sat 10–6, Sun 12–5


3/29 – 3/30/14

THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND

matter of taste

lifestyle & arts

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17

Veteran Chicago restaurateur lands in North Shore ■ by katie rose mceneely Erwin Drechsler is the culinary director of prepared foods at Artisanal in Wilmette. How did you start cooking? I’m fortunate to come from a foodie family. My mother was a great baker and a great cook, and my dad was in the meatpacking industry — he was a butcher. There was always freshly-prepared, seasonal foods on the table.

“It’s like being in a candy store for me, to have access to the product and the support of the ownership.” | Erwin Drechsler

Erwin Drechsler

photography by joel lerner

Recipe: Butternut Squash Bisque

Melt 1 tablespoon butter in a large stockpot with cover. Add 2 peeled and dice carrots; 2 diced celery stalks; 2 diced yellow onions; 3 peeled, cored and diced Granny Smith apples; and 8 cups peeled and diced butternut squash. Sweat, covered, over low heat for 20 minutes. Heat 12 cups seasoned chicken stock in a separate pan. Add simmering stock to vegetables and continue to cook, uncovered, until squash is soft. Which in 1 teaspoon cinnamon; 1 teaspoon ground nutmeg; 3 tablespoons brown sugar; and 2 cups apple cider. Remove from heat and cool 1 hour. Puree soup with an immersion blender, reheat, and serve with dollops of sour cream and thin slices of Granny Smith apple.

I have been owning and operating restaurants in Chicago for about 30 years prior to coming here; my first restaurant was called “Metropolis Café” in Old Town in 1983. We were one of the first gourmet food prepared concepts at the time — we did our own baking, we made our own pastry, soups, sides, to go. We went on to open Metropolis 1800. That’s where we really made our mark, as far as having a seasonally driven menu. We started the whole farm-to-table thing before it was fashionable. It was a cool place — unfortunately, it was retail development and we were way ahead of our time, and the place went under and we vacated and took some time off, did some traveling looking at restaurant concepts in California and New York. We stumbled across a place in Lakeview and it seemed like a good fit, so we opened that up in 1993. That year, Bon Appetit Magazine voted us one of the top ten new restaurants in the U.S. We drew the curtain on that in 2012 and

I had been doing some consulting. I was trying to figure out what to do, and one day stumbled into Artisanal. I met the owners — they knew me and my background and asked me if I would be interested in taking over the prepared food. They also have a store in Andersonville called Urban Orchard; plans are to provide food for that location. I started working here mid-November, and it’s kind of back to where I started: seasonal, locally sourced, high-quality prepared foods to go. Since Artisanal has a whole animal-butchering department, the materials are high quality. It’s like being in a candy store for me, to have access to the product and the support of the ownership. Years cooking? 30 years. Best recipe tweak? Using a lot of fresh — not dried herbs — has broadened my palate. Not necessarily cooking with the herb but finishing with it. Favorite cuisine to make? We use a lot of Mediterranean overtones in what we do. We’re starting to integrate more Middle Eastern spices and ingredients. What do you like to eat at home? I like to eat very simply — fresh pasta with some garlic parsley, extra virgin olive oil, maybe a fried egg. Worthwhile gadget? A microplane for grating everything from nutmeg to lemon zest. Favorite vegetable? Brussels sprouts. Most memorable kitchen incident? We were running venison for a special and one customer ordered it — and when it came out, they told us they didn’t want it because they didn’t eat fish. Which was kind of weird. Artisanal is a family-owned grocery and butcher shop located at 414 Linden Avenue in Wilmette. For more information, visit artisanalwilmette.com or call 847-512-3155. ■

evans scholars >> from 8

University graduate who lives in Highland Park and is an employee benefits consultant at the VITI companies in Highwood. Lou, Mark, 42, and Joe, 39, caught the caddie bug when their older brother Frank, 48, completed loop after loop at Northmoor, brought home some serious earnings and plopped the money in a coffee can, a makeshift piggy bank provided by Pia. “The incredible experiences my brothers and I shared as caddies had a profoundly powerful and positive impact on our lives,” says Frank, a Northwestern graduate, Lake Forest resident and senior vice president/attorney for CVS Caremark Corporation. “We learned at a very young age the power of perseverance and how fortunate we were to work with and be mentored by so many generous and caring members.” Lake Forest resident and Northwestern graduate Mark Pasquesi is the managing broker at Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff Realty Group-Lake Forest. Evanston resident and University of Illinois graduate Joe Pasquesi is a broker for the same realty group. “Education was always important to all us,” Mark says. “To do well in school — that drove us. We worked just as hard as caddies and learned so much on the golf course, interacting with adults and watching how well they treated clients during rounds.” Glenview resident and Evans Scholar alumnus Joe Haffner carried a bag for an attorney in a foursome of attorneys every Saturday for three summers at Beverly Country Club in Chicago. One day an attorney sought advice from Haffner about the way a putt would likely break, and Haffner happily obliged. The attorney missed the putt and shot a glare at Haffner. “Don’t look at me,” Haffner responded. “You putted it.” All four lawyers enjoyed a good laugh and one of them later encouraged Haffner to become a lawyer. A Mount Carmel High School graduate who studied as an Evans Scholar at Marquette University, Haffner took the advice and ran with it — all the way to the degree he bagged at John Marshall Law School in Chicago. “All four of those guys were great guys and they treated me like a son,” recalls Haffner, 48, the son of a retired truck driver, Charlie, and a brother of 14 siblings who all somehow grew up in a three-bedroom home. “I caddied for people from all walks of life. I asked

questions and had great discussions with golfers while working at the club. “I’ll never forget the day I got the news I’d received an Evans Scholarship. The letter came on my mom’s [Patricia’s] birthday in December [1982]. What a unique and fantastic program, the Evans Scholarship Foundation. It gave me a wonderful opportunity to pursue an education and it continues to do that every year for caddies.” Marquette junior and Northbrook native John McPike played football in autumns and wrestled in winters at Loyola Academy. The 2011 graduate practically lived at Sunset Ridge Country Club in Northfield during his summers, working as a caddie who’d travel to the club at 6:30 a.m. and return home near sundown up to six days a week. “Being a caddie matures you in a hurry,” says McPike, an Evans Scholar and economics/ criminology and law studies double major who resides in MU’s co-ed, 62-student Evans Scholars Foundation chapter house. “The job helped me develop communication skills. It got nerve-racking at times, trying to give golf advice to people 30 years older. But I got a lot out of the experiences on the course, which led to receiving an Evans Scholarship. “I will always be thankful for all of the support from everybody at Sunset Ridge and for my parents [Tom and Kate] for all the times they drove me to the club.” Near the end of her second career loop as an eighth-grade caddie, Sundstrom was grateful for the way her golfer reacted to a rather embarrassing incident on the 15th hole at Riverside Golf Club. Wearing sneakers and lugging a big leather golf bag, Sundstrom slipped on a mossy patch of concrete and fell — right into a creek. The owner of the big leather golf bag immediately stopped what he was doing to look behind him. “Because he’d heard the splash I made,” Sundstrom recalls. “Then he started laughing, which was a good thing because he wasn’t angry. I got out of the water, covered in pond scum. Those last three holes, they were manageable because all of the men in the group were great to me, nice to me. “My golfer said to me, ‘The only thing I’m really upset about now is that I don’t have a camera to take a picture of you.’ ” ■


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lifestyle & arts

THe North shore weekend

3/29 – 3/30/14

Heart Ball chairs aim to raise record amount to fight diseases ■ by stacy flannery

Janet and Paul Burt.

photography by jim prisching

Paul and Janet Burt of Lake Forest know about matters close to the heart. Diagnosed with a congenital heart defect at birth, their daughter Sophia underwent open-heart surgery shortly after her seventh birthday. Now 11, she is active and healthy. “We are grateful to the American Heart Association and their many programs that save children’s lives like Sophia’s,” says Janet. “It was easy to say ‘yes’ to chairing the Heart Ball this year.” The Burts will be hosts to the 800-person plus Heart Ball at Navy Pier on April 12, sponsored by the American Heart Association (AHA). Serving as a black-tie fundraiser featuring live and silent auction, dinner, and dancing, there will be hundreds of stories of triumph over tragedy when it comes to dealing with heart disease. Congenital heart defects affect eight out of every 1,000 infants born each year, and the AHA funds more research on children’s heart disease than any organization outside of the federal government. In 2013, the AHA funded more than $13.6 million for new research

related to children’s heart disease. The AHA played a crucial role most recently in Illinois, passing legislation to ensure a pulse oximetry test — a way of measuring the concentration of oxygen in the blood that is used to evaluate various medical conditions that could affect the function of the heart and lungs — to be administered to all newborns. While the AHA has made great strides for children, heart disease is the number one killer for adults. More than 4,600 will have a heart attack or stroke today, and by tonight, half will lose their fight. Cardiovascular disease accounts for 32 percent of all deaths in Illinois. The Burts are looking to turn around these numbers with awareness events like the Heart Ball. “We have an attainable goal of raising $3 million,” says Paul. “If we reach it, the Chicago Heart Ball will be the most successful in AH A history.” T h e Amer i can Heart Association’s Heart Ball is on Saturday, April 12 at Navy Pier. For tickets and information, call 312-476-6624. ■

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3/29 – 3/30/14

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THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND

19

Welcome to the Coldwell Banker Family! The North Shore’s #1 Brokerage, is thrilled to have partnered with these exceptional Brokers in the first quarter of 2014.

DEERFIELD 847.945.7100

alice berger

betH grafstein

Debbie guilloD

geneVieVe guran

betty HolMes

stan Janusz

(847) 609-8480 Wilmette

(224) 610-6797 Highland Park

(303) 807-5719 Winnetka

(847) 331-6282 Evanston Central

(773) 255-4151 Northbrook

(224) 636-0037 Evanston Central

catHerine kolb

eMily laM

aMy larsen

Hui lin liM

Debra loarie

Daniel lukaszewicz

(773) 720-1772 Glenview

(630) 885-1925 Glenview

(773) 720-8041 Wilmette

(312) 590-3360 Wilmette

(847) 707-9519 Wilmette

(847) 704-0850 Northbrook

Victor Martinka

stacy rosenberg

Mark scHriMMer

claire scHwab

MorVariD sepeHrnia

Min sHin

(224)766-6376 Glenview

(773) 848-6092 Highland Park

(847) 764-5532 Northbrook

(312) 576-0048 Glencoe

(626) 233-6637 Evanston Central

(708) 218-6605 Northbrook

aManDa stauffer

linDa sugar

cecilia teitell

Hyat turan

brooke warren

nicole zarinebaf

(208) 599-2124 Evanston Central

(847) 650-1360 Northbrook

(203) 253-9700 Glencoe

(773) 230-7066 Northbrook

(708) 668-2755 Northbrook

(847) 612-3484 Northbrook

EVANSTON CENTRAL 847.866.8200

EVANSTON DOWNTOWN 847.864.2600

GLENCOE 847.835.0236

GLENVIEW 847.724.5800

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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THe North shore weekend

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3/29 – 3/30/14

Here's to little league and everything that makes the North Shore home

Lake Forest 210SouthRidgeRoad.info $16,500,000

Houda Chedid

Lake Bluff

847-234-8000

360BelleForet.com

Ann Lyon

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847-234-8000

Glencoe Jody Dic

Kenilworth 211Leicester.com $3,250,000 Barbara Mawicke 847-446-4000

Lake Forest 580Woodland.info $6,200,000 Marcia Rowley 847-234-8000

Glencoe

Winnetka 31IndianHill.com $2,700,000 Maureen Spriggs 847-446-4000

Lake Forest 545Crabtree.info $2,599,000 Suzanne Myers 847-234-8000

Northfield Arlyn Tratt

2390Dorina.info

Lake Forest 111Evergreen.info $1,890,000 Marcia Rowley 847-234-8000

Lake Forest Lori Baker

950James.info

494sheridan.info

Jody Dickstein

$3,950,000

847-835-0236

$2,299,999 847-945-7100

Highland Park Julie Deutsch

$1,595,000 847-945-7100

Wilmette 2418Iroquois.info $1,398,000 Blanche Egan Romey 847-446-4000

Northfield Shaun Raugstad ABR

Lake Forest Houda Chedid

Kenilworth

1014sheridan.info

$2,995,000 847-835-0236

Northfie Maureen

New Listing

$1,020,000 847-724-5800

Evansto Cathy Ko

New Listing

Wilmette Barbara Mawicke

Lake Forest

703Greenwood.com

535Mayflower-UnitB.info

Keri Cook Falls

$790,000

847-234-8000

Evanston Gloria Matlin

$2,195,000 847-446-4000

8827ewing.info

$765,000 847-835-0236

Kenilworth 628Abbotsford.com $899,000 Barbara Mawicke 847-446-4000

Lake Forest

Winnetka

Highwood 770Lyster.info $699,000 Mary Pat Lundgren 847-234-8000

1520Tower.info

Joan Forrest

$739,000

847-945-7100

www.1359Estate.info

Joan Forrest

$850,000

847-940-2780

$850,000 847-234-8000

647Kenilworth.com

Barbara Mawicke

$825,000

847-446-4000

Evansto Alan May

New Listing

Highland Park 211Maple.info $680,000 Judy Weiss 847-433-5400

Deerfield 847-945-7100

Highland Park 2079OldBriar.info $650,000 Allison Silver 847-433-5400

Evanston - Central 847-866-8200

Evanston - Downtown 847-864-2600

Wilmette Janie Bress

2340Meadow.info $609,000 847-835-0236

Glencoe 847-835-0236

Evanston Mike Guetle

Glenview 847-724-5800

Highland Park 847-433-5400

$600,000 312-943-1959

Lake Forest Ann Lyon

Lake Forest 847-234-8000

881Jennifer.com

Northbrook 847-272-9880

Wilmette 847-256-7400

$1,890,000 847-234-8000

Winnetka 847-446-4000

Lake Fo Lori Bake


3/29 – 3/30/14

|

THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND

21

New Listing

Glencoe Jody Dickstein

391madisonave.info

$1,399,000 847-835-0236

Lake Forest Marcia Rowley

881McCormick.info

$1,329,000 847-234-8000

Wilmette Nancy Powers

808Greenwood.info

New Listing

New Listing

995,000 35-0236

Northfield Maureen Mohling

4RollingRidgeRd.info

$1,295,000 847-446-4000

Highland Park 800Woodbine.info $599,000 Noah Levy 847-433-5400

Highland Park 1470ridgerd.info $550,000 Linda Jacobson 847-835-0236

New Listing

New Listing

Highland Park

517Pleasant.info

Robert Bailey

$459,000

847-446-4000

Evanston

Evanston Cathy Kozlarek

$399,900 847-866-8200

Lake Forest Andrea Seeley

$450,000

847-724-5800

Wilmette 1500SheridanUnitLJ.info $439,000 Blanche Kishner 847-835-0236

$825,000

,890,000 34-8000

tka -4000

Evanston Alan May

826Judson-6.info $248,900 847-866-8200

Highland Park Patricia Furman

$432,900 847-724-5800

New Listing

$338,000 847-864-2600

Highland Park 737Orleans.info $299,000 Linda Antokal 847-945-7100

Evanston 942Grey.info $250,000 Reina S. Diamond, CRS, ABR 847-866-8200

New Listing

46-4000

Northfield 1633Elder.info $524,900 Marla Schneider 847-724-5800 New Listing

602Hinman-1N.info

Marthe Nelson

Lake Forest 1090Waukegan.info $525,000 Lori Baker 847-234-8000

New Listing

,020,000 24-5800

$1,299,000 847-446-4000

New Listing

Highland Park 1015DeerfieldPl.info $235,000 Corky Kooperman 847-433-5400

Lake Bluff Mary Jo Fiore-Posterli

$232,000 847-234-8000

Wilmette 1616sheridanunit9h.info $229,000 Gloria Matlin 847-835-0236

Lake Forest Marcia Rowley

New Listing

710Waveland.info

$1,295,000 847-234-8000

New Listing

Highwood 338Ashland.info $225,000 Carol DeGrazia Santi 847-433-5400

Evanston Celeste Johnson

$214,000 847-864-2600

Lake Bluff Mary Jo Fiore-Posterli

$177,000 847-234-8000

Highland Park 1373Division.info $165,000 Michael Hope 847-433-5400

Evanston Patricia DeNoyer

$100,000 847-866-8200

Evanston Noah Seidenberg

$78,500 847-864-2600

Evanston Andrea Seeley

New Listing

Lake Forest Lori Baker

1151Deerpath.info

$1,199,000 847-234-8000

Evanston 1230Elmwood-G.info $155,000 Kelley Hughes 847-864-2600

ColdwellBankerOnline.com Š2014 Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor sales associates and are not employees of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage.

$76,400 847-864-2600


22

THe North shore weekend

|

3/29 – 3/30/14

Simply Outstanding

2746 Euclid Park Place|Evanston|$2,200,000

1324 Forest Avenue|Evanston|$1,850,000

Simply The Best

Emily McClintock, Claire Sucsy and Sandra Sucsy Alguire

847.425.3737 | 2929 Central Street | Evanston, IL 60201 | TheClaireSucsyGroup.com


3/29 – 3/30/14

lifestyle & arts

THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND

|

23

Rabbis, others to shave heads to fight pediatric cancer ■ by angelika labno

Am Shalom Rabbi Steven Stark Lowenstein already had his head shaved for 36 Rabbis Shave for the Brave, while fellow Am Shalom rabbi Phyllis Sommer and her husband, Rabbi Michael Sommer, are having their heads shaved at the April 1 event.

photography by joel lerner

When Highwood resident and Am Shalom Rabbi Phyllis Sommer conceived 36 Rabbis Shave for the Brave, her son, Sammy, was in remission from leukemia. It was the end of October. Two weeks later, leukemia hit again. In December, it claimed his life. He was 8 years old. The effect of Sammy’s death rippled through the faith community, catapulting Shave for the Brave to an endeavor bigger than Sommer could have ever imagined. The initial goal of $180,000 was reached in the week following Sammy’s death. It was doubled, then tripled, and is currently three-fourths of the way to $540,000. The numbers of the monetary goal and original rabbi count have significant meaning, as they are multiples of 18. In Hebrew letters, Sommer explains, the number 18 spells life. “I can’t bring back my son, but I believe that I have a responsibility to react to what has happened in my life,” said Sommer. Pediatric cancer receives four percent of the U.S. funding for cancer research, as is stated on the St. Baldrick’s Foundation website (the California nonprofit fights childhood cancer). The figure includes the dozen forms of childhood cancers. A main concern is not just finding a cure but uncovering pediatric-specific treatments that involve fewer side effects. The National Cancer Institute recently published findings on the late effects of treatment for childhood cancer. These effects are physical, including the risk of second cancers, and psychological, affecting learning and memory. It was found that 60 to more than 90 percent of adult survivors will develop one or more chronic health conditions, and up to 80 percent will have severe or life-threatening complications during adulthood.

“So many kids die from treatment alone, and we need to give everyone a fighting chance,” Sommer notes. With the current goal, Shave for the Brave could fund five years of research through St. Baldrick’s. The foundation is the largest funder of pediatric research and disburses grants to more than 300 institutions across 20 countries. Sommer’s decision to partner with the foundation came from an “off-the-cuff” conversation with friend and fellow rabbi, Rebecca Schorr. “We wanted to do something as a faith community — maybe by joining together as religious leaders, that would be the impetus to make someone pay attention,” said Schorr, who resides in Pennsylvania. They thought that shaving one’s head would lead to discussion and further awareness on childhood cancer. “We live in a society that makes a lot of judgment based on how people look, so to do something that disfigures takes an incredible amount of passion and compassion.” The climax of the initiative is set for Tuesday, April 1, when an estimated 50 rabbis and rabbinic students will gather in Chicago for a headshaving event. Another two dozen are shaving their heads in their respective communities around the country and Canada, and several more have opted to raise funds instead of shave. Schorr believes the event will be “exhilarating,” adding, “There’s a sense of hope that is generated by all these people fighting the same fight. “To have my female colleagues stand with me and be bald — it’s going to be a pretty powerful experience,” said Sommer. Her male colleagues have joked that they didn’t have “much to lose.” Those interested in donating can look to the 36 Rabbis Shave for the Brave’s Facebook page for a link to its St. Baldrick’s page. ■

y d a e r l a s ' t i A R S S N t a Here

? n u f e h t n i o J u o y Why don't bs

o j / g r o . A R S S N . w w w : Y A D O T Apply 3105 Macarthur Blvd, Northbrook, IL 60062 (847) 509-9400 www.nssra.org


THe North shore weekend

|

3/29 – 3/30/14

NO RT H S H O R E

5bed/5.1ba

790Bryant.info 847.881.0200

glencoe $2,550,000 5bed/6.2ba

glencoe $1,989,000

6bed/5.2ba

735greenWood.info

535oldgreenBayrd.info

Traines/Maman 847.881.0200

Rick and Melissa Richker

kenilWortH $1,895,000

4bed/5.1ba

121roBSartroad.info 847.881.0200

Radnay/Jordan

847.881.0200

N EW !

Cummins/McDonald

N EW !

Winnetka $2,895,000

N EW !

N EW !

featured liStingS | all of our listings feature their own website. visit their personalized domain for more details.

glencoe $1,595,000

4bed/4.1ba

160WentWortHavenue.info

Wilmette $939,000

greenlakeS $1,275,000

4bed/3.1ba

W1063illinoiS.info 847.881.0200

lake foreSt $1,200,000

3bed/3.1ba

275SoutHSHore.info

Mike Golden

312.491.0200

Megan Jordan

847.295.0700

N EW !

Susan Maman

N EW !

24

5bed/3ba

HigHland Park $929,000 4bed/3.1ba

Wilmette $874,000

4bed/4ba

HigHland Park $849,000

918illinoiSroad.info

304WHiStler.info

908Seminole.info

126edgecliffdrive.info

Natasha Miller

Elisabeth Geltz

Monica Childs

Goldblatt/Pickus

847.881.0200

nortHfield $575,000

847.295.0700

3bed/2.1ba

15landmark.info Fran Stein Fryman

847.881.0200

lake foreSt $550,000

4bed/2.1ba

Lisa Hathaway

HigHland Park $750,000

4bed/3.2ba

565countylinerd.info 847.432.0700

1120Waveland.info 312.254.0200

6bed/3.2ba

Karen Mason

HigHland Park $400,000

847.881.0200

4bed/2.1ba

2637Summit.info 847.295.0700

Alan Meyerowitz

847.432.0700

Well this is one way to view the city. Check out this video of the Hancock's newest tourist attraction the "Tilt". Visit @properties on twitter for the full story.

atproperties.com | 847.881.0200


3/29 – 3/30/14

|

THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND

N EW !

CITY

NORTH SHORE

Wilmette $1,695,000

4bed/5.1ba

338greenleaf.info 847.881.0200

HARBOR COUNTRY

N EW !

Lori Neuschel

HigHland Park $1,200,000 5bed/5.1ba

HigHland Park $969,000 3bed/3.1ba

Winnetka 98Woodley.info Jena radnay

2121cHurcHillct.info

1656mcgovern.info

Carole Rosenberg

Ted Pickus

847.432.0700

4bed/3.1ba

lake foreSt $699,000

N EW !

N EW !

847.881.0200

$5,649,000 5bed/6.3ba 847.881.0200

HigHland Park $739,000 175ravine.info

145eStone.info

N EW !

847.881.0200

N EW !

Mindy Shea

nortHfield $325,000 3bed/2ba

Wilmette $264,950

2bed/2ba

1925lakeave212.info

Kati Spaniak

Elizabeth Voris

847.881.0200

Winnetka $635,000

5bed/3ba

1071WilloW.info

Elisabeth Geltz

195frontage.info 847.998.0200

5bed/2.1ba 847.295.0700

nileS $1,379,000

4bed/4.2ba

3145coPP.info Mark Wortman 269.876.2929

Robin Wilson

neW Buffalo $329,000 3bed/3.1ba 94diamondPt.info The Zarantenellos

312.835.4433

atproperties.com | 847.881.0200

847.881.0200

lake Bluff $585,000

3bed/2.1ba

765evanSton.info Megan Jordan

847.295.0700

• 807 ProSPect | Winnetka 6bed/5.1ba $2,875,000 • 576 maPle | Winnetka NEW 6bed/6.1ba $3,495,000 • 884 HigginSon | Winnetka 6bed/6.3ba $4,375,000 • 970 eaStWood | glencoe 5bed/5.1ba $2,575,000 • 509 WaSHington | glencoe 6bed/6.2ba $2,675,000 • 231 WoodlaWn | glencoe 6bed/6.3ba $3,175,000 lakEfroNt 347 surfsidE | glENcoE • 185 old greenBay | glencoe 6bed/6.2ba $3,975,000 4bEd/3.1ba $3,099,000 • 164 oxford | kenilWortH 6bed/6.1ba $3,175,000 • 229 eSSex | kenilWortH heritageluxury.com 6bed/6.2ba $3,575,000

25


26

THe North shore weekend

|

3/29 – 3/30/14

Meet your North Shore Mortgage Team. 32 Years of Mortgage Expertise.

Whether it’s purchasing a new home or refinancing your current, it helps to have an industry expert on your side. KEN PERLMUTTER, Founder & President 773.413.6234 Office | ken@perlmortgage.com perlmortgage.com/kperlmutter BEN GLAZER, Assistant to the President & Mortgage Advisor 773.413.6237 Office | bglazer@perlmortgage.com perlmortgage.com/bglazer

PERL Mortgage is an Illinois residential mortgage licensee (MB0004358) and equal housing lender. Licensed by Department of Corporations under the California Residential Mortgage Lending Act. NMLS #19186 - Arizona License - Perl Mortgage, Inc. – 460 West Johnson Drive, Gilbert , AZ., 85233 Mortgage Banker License # 0904956 - California License # 4130865 - Licensed by the Department of Corporations under California Residential Mortgage Lending Act - Colorado License # 19186 - To check the license status of your mortgage loan originator, visit the Colorado Division of Real Estate Website - Connecticut License # 19728 - Florida License # MLD379 - Illinois Residential Mortgage Licensee- Office of Banks and Real Estate, Mortgage Banking Division, 122 South Michigan Avenue, Suite 1900, Chicago, Illinois, 60603, (312) 793-3000, 2936 W Belmont Ave, Chicago, IL 60618 MB0004358, NMLS #: 19532; IL:031.0001776; AZ: 0913139; CA: CA-DOC19532; CT: LO-19532; FL: LO11778; IA: 19983; MA: MLO19532; MI: 19532; NE: NE19532; WI: 18571, NMLS #: 192568; IL:031.0007758


3/29 – 3/30/14

lifestyle & arts

THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND

Bedside Manor Open House photography by larry miller Winnetka retailer Bedside Manor recently relocated its offerings to a new space within the Hubbard Woods Design District and held a ribbon cutting and open house to honor the occasion. Owner Meg Carroll was on hand to mingle with well-wishers before cutting the ribbon with store manager Nancy Laatsch. The new space has allowed them more area in which to meet with clients to discuss design ideas for bed, bath, tabletop, home décor, and much more. Guest enjoyed cocktails, hors d’oeuvres, and prizes. bedsidemanor.com

SHEILA BLANCHFIELD, MARY EDMAN, NANCY LAATSCH

AMANDA, BILL, EMILY & ETHAN SMAHA

NATAIE BIRK, GENE GREADLE

PILAR SAIKI, ANGELICA BURNS

CAROLYN CAREY, ANN SMITH

MEG & MICHAEL CARROLL

|

27


28 | REAL $1,475,000 150 Thackery Northfield Exclusively Presented By: John Baylor & Barbara Shields @properties John: 847.502.7471, john@atproperties.com Barbara: 312.613.9802, barbara@ atproperties.com Like-new, sprawling ranch on a landscaped and secluded acre parcel.

1

36 28

Chicago Magazine just named Lake Bluff one of its top 12 suburbs, with this home representing one of the

12 |

02 |

1293 Kimmer Court Lake Forest Sunday 1-4 $1,299,000 Yarbrough & DuToit, Koenig & Strey 847.615.5050

07 |

514 Locust Wilmette Sunday 1-3 $569,000 Jeanne Stogin, Koenig & Strey 847.441.6300

373 Sunset Road

08 |

1250 Hill Road Winnetka Sunday 12-1 $998,000 Joan Conlisk, Koenig & Strey 847.441.6300

1630 Sheridan Road Unit 10 L Wilmette Sunday 1-3 $650,000 Julie Dowdle Rogers, Coldwell Banker 847.446.4000

1123 Chatfield Road Winnetka Sunday 1-3 $1,699,000 Carol Hunt, Baird & Warner 847.446.1855

09 |

1218 Glendenning Wilmette Sunday 2-4 $1,040,000 Peter Lipsey, Koenig & Strey 847.441.6300

654 Pine Winnetka Sunday 2-4 $2,445,000 Sherry Molitor, Koenig & Strey 847.441.6300

10 |

529 Earlston Kenilworth Sunday 12-2 $1,375,000 Beth Groebe, Koenig & Strey 847.441.6300

11 |

430 Cedar Wilmette Sunday 1-3 $1,195,000 Connie Coll, Koenig & Strey 847.441.6300

$949,000 Mary Anne Perrine, Baird & Warner 847.446.1855

04 |

13 12 19 6

4 35 5 15 8 10 3

40 16

Exclusively presented by: Kristen Esplin Griffith Grant & Lackie Realtors® 847.234.0485 kesplin@gglrealty.com

565 Washington Glencoe Sunday 1-3 $1,895,000 Chris Downey, Koenig & Strey 847.441.6300

25 38 22

37

500 E. North Avenue Lake Bluff

06 |

39 05 |

26

$724,900

318 Winchester Court Lake Bluff Sunday 1-4 $825,000 Jean Anderson, Prudential Rubloff 847.460.5412

Winnetka 03 | Sunday 1-3

34 32 27 18 2 23 29 30 24

Stunningly renovated, this home has formal spaces, open kitchen/ family room area, handsome library, screened porch and a master suite. First floor “recreation room” and interior staircase to attic replace the need for a lower level. 3-car attached garage and resort-like pool complete this home. PRESENTED By @properties.

01 | 33 31

ESTATE

21 17 7

11

1020 Woodbine Lane Northbrook Sunday 1-3 Maxine Nethery, Koenig & Strey $759,000 847.612.1403

13 |

14 |

645 Hill Road Winnetka Sunday 12-2 $1,345,000 Maureen Mohling, Coldwell Banker 847.446.4000

15 |

1841 Prairie Unit A-1 Glenview Sunday 12-2 $469,500 Bev & Marshall Fleischman, Coldwell Banker 847.217.0494

918 Illinois Road Wilmette Sunday 12-2 $939,000 Natasha Miller, @properties 847.881.0200

26 |

215 Lancaster Lake Bluff Sunday 2-4 $1,199,000 Pat Carter, Coldwell Banker 847.234.8000

20 |

1770 Ridgelee Road Highland Park Sunday 12-3 $1,450,000 Lyn Wise, @properties 847.432.0700

27 |

660 Northmoor Lake Forest Sunday 2-4 $525,000 Pat Carter, Coldwell Banker 847.234.8000

21 |

721 Rockefeller Lake Forest Sunday 1-3 $979,000 Brunhild Baass, Baird & Warner 847.804.0092

28 |

845 Forest Hill Lake Forest Sunday 2-4 $559,000 Pat Carter, Coldwell Banker 847.234.8000

22 |

546 Timber Lake Forest Sunday 1-4 $925,000 Laura Henderson, Baird & Warner 708.997.7778

29 |

811 Carroll Lake Forest Sunday 2-4 $729,000 Pat Carter, Coldwell Banker 847.234.8000

19 |

4340 Terri Lyn Lane Northbrook Sunday 12-2 2525 Wilmette Avenue Wilmette $589,900 Sunday 2:30-4 Marsha Schwartz, Coldwell Banker 847.21.9599 $599,000 Bev & Marshall Fleischman, Coldwell Banker 4325 Oak Knoll Court 847.217.0494 Northbrook Sunday 1-3 1293 Kimmer Court $599,000 Irit Jacobson, Coldwell Banker Lake Forest Sunday 1-4 847.323.6200 $1,299,000 Jane Yarbrough, Koenig & Strey 700 Mayflower 847.615.5050 Lake Forest Sunday 1-4 1743 Happ Road $5,499,000 Vera Purcell, Coldwell Banker Northbrook Sunday 1-3 847.234.8000 $434,999 Beverly Smith, @properties 847.881.0200

16 |

9

NORTH SHORE OPEN HOUSES 33 |

630 Maple Winnetka Sunday 1-3 $1,770,000 Carrie Healy, Jean Wright Real Estate 847.507.7666

34 |

128 E. Woodland Road Lake Bluff Sunday 1-3 $649,000 Karen Cunniff, Koenig & Strey 847.510.5000

35 |

2240 Farnsworth Lane Northbrook

Sunday 1-3

$449,900 Barb Pepoon, Coldwell Banker 847.962.5537

23 |

30 |

39 S. Sheridan Road Lake Forest Sunday 1-4 $2,745,000 MaryPat Lundgren, Coldwell Banker 847.234.8000

24 |

31 |

150 Heathrow Lake Bluff Sunday 1-4 $1,275,000 Linda Rosenberg, Coldwell Banker 847.234.8000

25 |

32 |

108 Heron Road Lake Forest Sunday 12-2 body contouring treatment 1849 Prairie $1,199,000CoolSculpting is the non-surgical Glenview Lisa Trace, Griffith, Grant & Lackie eliminates fat from your body. No needles, no surgery and b Sunday 12-2 847.234.0485 $449,000 CoolSculpting is FDA-cleare Developed by Harvard scientists, Carol Prieto, Jameson Sotheby’s International Realty proven. We will develop your customized plan so you can say g 847.778.1960

17 |

18 |

14

best values in local real estate! This residence was once used as the Lake Bluff Camp Meeting Association headquarters in 1876. Fast forward to 2014 and you’ll find this home has been updated and restored to maintain its charm. Fantastic location - walk to town & beach! PRESENTED By GGL realtors.

36 |

596 Clavey Lane Highland Park Sunday 1-3 $2,395,000 Keith Estrada, Jameson Sotheby’s International Realty 312.543.1147

TRANSFORM YOUR

WITHOUT SURGERY OR D 37 |

2480 Sheridan Highland Park Sunday 1:30-3:30 $2,980,000 Keith Estrada, Jameson Sotheby’s International Realty 312.543.1147

Reveal the real you with CoolSc 38 |

Call us today at (xxx) xxx-xxxx to schedule your consu

Practice

123 Anyst Any (1

Call us today to schedule your free consultation!

BEFORE

8 WEEKS AFTER COOLSCULPTING TREATMENT

®

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(-6 pounds)

Procedure by Leyda Bowes, MD Results and patient experience may vary. Ask us if CoolSculpting is right for you.

In the U.S. and Taiwan, non-invasive fat reduction is cleared only for the flank (love handle) and abdome CoolSculpting is the non-surgical body contouring treatment that freezes the CoolSculpting logoand and the naturally Snowflake design eliminates are registered trademarks of ZELTIQ Aesthetics, Inc. fat from your body. No needles, no surgery and best of all, no downtime. Developed by Harvard scientists, CoolSculpting is FDA-cleared, safe and clinically proven. We will develop your customized plan so you can say goodbye to stubborn fat!

Northshore Dermatology CeNter, s.C. TINA C. VENETOS, M.D. BOARD CERTIFIED DERMATOLOGIST

TRANSFORM BODY TRANSFORMYOUR YOUR BODY

lake Forest: 800 N. Westmoreland Rd. Suite 100C | 847.234.1177 Wilmette: 3612 W. Lake Ave 2nd Floor | 847.853.7900

WITHOUT SURGERY OROR DOWNTIME. WITHOUT SURGERY DOWNTIME.

www.northshorederm.biz CoolSculpting is the revolutionary new body contouring treatment that freezes fat. Patients are seeing undeniable and lasting results in as little as one treatment. There are no needles, no special diet, no supplements and no surgery. It’s FDA-cleared, safe and proven effective. Call us today to schedule your consultation.

TRANSFORM YOUR BODY

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CoolSculpting is the non-surgical body contouring treatment that freezes and naturally CoolSculpting is the non-surgical body contouring treatment that freezes and naturally eliminates fat from your body. No needles, no surgery and best of all, no downtime. eliminates fat from your body. No needles, no surgery and best of all, no downtime. Developed by Harvard scientists, CoolSculpting is FDA-cleared, safe and clinically Developed by Harvard scientists, CoolSculpting is FDA-cleared, safe and clinically proven. We will develop your customized plan so you can say goodbye to stubborn fat! proven. We will develop your customized plan so you can say goodbye to stubborn fat!

WITHOUT SURGERY OR DOWNTIME.

Call us today at (xxx) xxx-xxxx to schedule your consultation.

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3/29 – 3/30/14

|

THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND

COUNT ON CHRISTINE TO FIND YOUR PERFECT HOME. Christine found us our home before it was listed and helped us negotiate a great deal in a tight time frame. She has a great background in remodeling older homes & knew the ins and outs: what would be major or minor work, costly & not, & had creative ideas to help us achieve the just what we were looking for. Christine knows her stuff.

Christine Anderson Broker AssoCiAte

30 Green Bay Rd Winnetka, IL 60093

- SUSAN & BEN, EAST WILMETTE -

847.804.5512 christine@atproperties.com

atproperties.com

is proud to welcome Margaret Spaan

MARGARET SPAAN broker associate Mobile: 312.953.3785 margaretspaan@atproperties.com 30 Green Bay Rd, Winnetka, IL 60093

Stop looking, start finding® atproperties.com

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30

THe North shore weekend

|

3/29 – 3/30/14

Winnetka Gem! 576 Maple

New construction in the best location in town! Six bedrooms, 6.1 baths, gourmet kitchen with top-of-theline appliances. Cherry wood library. Timeless elegance with exquisite finishes and craftsmanship. Lower level includes fully equipped sport court, movie theater, wine cellar. Third floor loft. Superb interior design! Must see.

Offered at $3,495,000

807 PROSPECT, WINNETKA 6 bedrooms, 5.1 baths, $2,875,000

884 HIGGINSON, WINNETKA 7 bedrooms, 7.3 baths, $4,375,000

970 EASTWOOD, GLENCOE 5 bedrooms, 5.1 baths, $2,575,000

509 WASHINGTON, GLENCOE 6 bedrooms, 6.2 baths, $2,675,000

231 WOODLAWN, GLENCOE 6 bedrooms, 6.3 baths, $3,175,000

185 OLD GREEN BAY, GLENCOE 6 bedrooms, 6.2 baths, $3,975,000

347 SURFSIDE PL, GLENCOE 4 beds + den, 3.1 baths, $3,099,000

164 OXFORD, KENILWORTH 6 bedrooms, 6.1 baths, $3,175,000

229 ESSEX, KENILWORTH 6 bedrooms, 6.2 baths, $3,575,000

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sports | 31

Fine 59: New Trier Green’s Jack Junge makes a glove save against Glenbrook North’s Alexander Merritt during the state championship at the United Center. Junge was the Player of the Game.

Dazzlin' Dozen ■ by kevin reiterman

sports@northshoreweekend.com On the ice, Brent Segvich was dressed to thrill. And he did. Wearing jersey No. 9, the New Trier Green junior forward broke the ice — and a scoreless tie — by poking in the game’s first goal in the opening period of the Amateur Hockey Association Illinois (AHAI) state championship game at the United Center on March 20. It was Segvich’s 36th goal of the season. Scoring first, he said, was a “confidence booster” for the No. 1 seed, which wound up beating Glenbrook North 3-1 to win their 12th state title in program history. Off the ice, the bearded Segvich oozed confidence. While doing various interviews outside the locker room, he looked like a character in a popular 1980 Harold Ramis film about a variety of antics at an exclusive golf club. His pants were plaid: green, yellow with a touch of pink. His tie was lime green. “ ‘Caddyshack,’ right?” said Segvich. “I love shopping for clothes at outlet malls,” he added. On the other side of the fashion spectrum, New Trier Green head coach Bob Melton looked downright dapper in a dark three-piece suit with a green “New Trier” tie. “The only time this tie comes out of the closet is for this game,” said Melton. He was, if you will, dressed to the … tens. With Melton at the helm, New Trier Green (37-9-1) captured its 10th state title in 17 years. This one will go down as extra special. “I was just happy to beat Sandburg to get to the Final

photography by joel lerner

NT Green sews up 12th state hockey title

Four,” said Melton. “Yes, we were seeded No. 1. But in hockey land, I don’t think we were favored to win this year. A lot of things had to happen for it to work out this way.” For NT Green, it all started with goalie Jack Junge. The junior all-stater was his nearly impenetrable self once again, making 28 saves and being named the “Player of the Game.” In the third period, the unrelenting Spartans (61-14-1) bombarded Junge with a vast array of black saucers. He was shot at 14 times. Only one — John McNally’s goal with 43.3 seconds left on the clock — got by him. Junge, a Jack of trades, now has won three state titles: two hockey, one golf. “I’ll cherish this for about a month or so,” said the youthful looking Junge, completely enjoying the moment. “I also have golf to worry about. [He was scheduled for a golf lesson with renowned instructor Todd Soens on March 22].” Junge was hardly a one-man spectacle. “Our defense did an incredible job,” the goalie said. “It was an extreme team effort.” One of the plays of the game came with 3:30 left in the second period. With a loose puck sitting just outside NT’s doorstep following a Junge save, Sam Weinstein sprung into action and swatted it away just in the nick of time. The junior defenseman cleaned up the mess to keep it a 1-0 score. “The puck was sitting right there in the crease. Nobody was around it. I went in there and hit it away as hard as I could,” said Weinstein. “I was happy to do it. Coaches were pretty happy, too. “I’m not out there to score,” he added, “but to shut the door on the other team.” Weinstein, who played for NT Blue last year, is one of the

unsung heroes on this team. “He was a forward at the start of the year, and we moved him to defense,” said Melton. “Wherever you put him, he’ll find a way.” The same goes for many others on this team, including Matt Boscow and Kevin Marren. Boscow, a junior defenseman who sat out last year with a knee injury, was ready to rock ‘n’ roll. In the opening period, No. 47 lost his stick in the New Trier Green zone and played without it for a full 30 seconds. He made a couple of courageous blocks — body and blade — before eventually coming out. “One of the toughest guys we’ve got,” said Melton. “He does whatever it takes.” Meanwhile, it wasn’t hard for Melton to direct praise Marren’s way. The junior forward scored what proved to be the gamewinner, when his redirect whistled past GBN goalie Nathan Berger with 7:09 left in the third period. Grahman Soman set it up, when he ripped a canon shot from the right point. “We got contributions from everyone,” said Melton. Segvich and senior Matt Solberg were the scoring leaders for NT Green. Segvich finished with 59 points (36 goals, 23 assists), while Solberg, who was credited with an assist on Segvich’s game-opening goal, ended up with a team-high 72 points (38 goals, 35 assists). Forwards Brad Glass (16 goals, 21 assists) and Jason Kuker (19 goals, 15 assists) and all-state defensemen Jack Dolby (3 goals, 26 assists) also supplied the firepower. “People didn’t believe we could win this year,” said Segvich. “It was awesome to prove them wrong.’’ ■


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sports

THe North shore weekend

The eyes of March

3/29 – 3/30/14

State title is a vision quest for Dynek, NT ■ by bill mclean

sports@northshoreweekend.com All of New Trier’s girls hockey players found themselves in the dark near the end of the state championship game. But none of them panicked and the one who had triggered the temporary darkness ended up lighting the lamp for the clinching goal at the United Center in Chicago. “She [NT junior forward Ivy Dynek] told us to close our eyes before the start of overtime and visualize a gamewinning goal,” New Trier junior forward Becca Lindblad recounted after Dynek’s goal secured a 3-2 double-overtime defeat of Loyola Academy for the Amateur Hockey Association Illinois (AHAI) state championship on March 20. Lindblad dished the key assist on a set play that started behind NT senior goaltender Nicole Diesing and ended with Dynek’s power-play goal at the other end of the Chicago Blackhawks’ home rink in the fifth minute of the second seven-minute OT session. Lindblad, a University of Connecticut recruit, sped down the middle of the ice and directed a right-on delivery to Dynek, skating swiftly to the left of Lindblad. Dynek’s laser shot terminated the thriller and upped Lindblad’s team-leading assist total to 18. “What a beautiful pass from Becca,” said Dynek, who led NT (25-3-2) in goals scored this winter with 27. “It was an honor to get a pass like that in a game like this.” Dynek must have felt right at home at the United Center, since she’d attended the St. Louis Blues-Blackhawks game the previous night. That was news to NT coach Nelson Forsberg. “She didn’t tell me that,” Forsberg, half-smiling, said after guiding the program to its second state title in three years and third since he was named coach. “I would not have wanted her to go. I would’ve told her, ‘Get some rest instead.’ But I’ll let it slide.” The first tally of the championship was the result of a Mia-a-Mia battle. NT sophomore forward Mia Solberg beat Loyola senior goaltender Mia Rascia at the 11:34 mark of the second period. Solberg alertly wristed a rebound, inches in

Piling on: New Trier’s Rebecca Lindblad (No. 7) joins the celebration of her team’s double-overtime win over Loyola Academy in the state title game.

photography by joel lerner front of a Rascia pad, through the five hole. Senior forward Jackie Kingdom got credit for the assist. Sophomore forward Johanna Glaaser’s unassisted goal made it 2-0 at 9:58 of the second period. LA (13-13-5) scored nearly three minutes later and then tied it at 2-2 with 2:21 left in the third period. “Loyola always plays us tough and it helped that we’d seen them so many times this season,” said Forsberg, alluding to NT’s 5-0-1 record against the Ramblers before the championship tilt. “Loyola,” he added, “made it a game there late.” A tripping penalty on Loyola late in the second OT set the stage for the memorable Lindblad-Dynek sequence. Diesing had an ideal view as it unfolded. “When Becca and Ivy are skating fast like that, it’s great to watch,” said Diesing, named the AHAI Player of the Year. “As soon as Ivy got the puck, I thought, ‘This is it.’ ” The UC’s deafening horn blared as Dynek’s goal settled down behind Rascia. Diesing (15 saves) then threw her hands up jubilantly, NT’s players enveloped Dynek and in

Rascia’s return vital to Loyola’s success

Crease job: Loyola Academy goalie Mia Rascia makes a save on a shot taken by NT’s Ivy Dynek in the state title game at the United Center.

photography by joel lerner

minutes most of the victors had donned red Blackhawks caps above their broad smiles. “These girls made my year,” said first-year NT assistant coach Carla Pentimone, who played hockey for Loyola Academy. “It’s an amazing organization with an amazing head coach. What a special group of girls. Everybody came together as a unit and they left it all out there on the ice.” Notable: Dynek, Lindblad and Diesing, along with New Trier senior defenseman Molly Klare, senior forward Carla Zalesky and freshman defenseman Taylor Munson, made the AHAI all-state team. Diesing and Dynek were Blackhawk Alumni All-Star team picks. … NT outshot Loyola 27-17 in the state championship, including 7-2 in the OT sessions. … Lindblad, on what the outcome would be if she raced Dynek on skates: “She’d kill me. She’s the fastest player in the state.” … Klare, also a member of New Trier’s state championship team two years ago, was a four-year defender for the school’s field hockey team and helped that program win the state title as a sophomore in 2011. She will play field hockey at Colgate University. ■

■ by kevin reiterman

sports@northshoreweekend.com Two years ago, Loyola Academy senior goaltender Mia Rascia made a hard decision. She quit hockey. Mia … Missing in Action. “A huge regret,” said Rascia, in a postgame interview at the United Center on March 20. She had to come back. “(At the time) I didn’t realize how much I loved the sport,” said Rascia. “How much I missed it.” She also might have forgotten how good she was at stopping pucks. Rascia was one of the topics of conversation following her team’s 3-2 double overtime loss to New Trier in the Amateur Hockey Association Illinois (AHAI) state championship game. “We wouldn’t have made it here without her,” said LA head coach Conor Sedam. “And tonight, we couldn’t have asked her to do anything more,” the coach added. “New Trier has a lot of speed, a lot of skill. And she was ready every second (of the game).” It was a gold-glove performance by Rascia, who was credited with 24 saves against New Trier’s high-powered offense. “I’m proud of our (team) effort, especially since there had been such a big gap between us,” said Rascia, who finished the season with 226 saves for the 13-13-5 Ramblers. New Trier (25-3-2), which held a 5-0-1

record against LA during the regular season, entered this showcase game as the prohibitive favorite. “I don’t think anyone thought we’d take them to two overtimes,” said LA senior superstar Erin O’Connor. “But we went into this game pretty pumped. I think it hit us that this was our last chance.” After making three brilliant saves in the second OT, Rascia was unable to do anything with New Trier’s final shot of the game. The sudden-victory goal by junior all-stater Ivy Dynek was just a little too dynamic. Off a feed from Connecticut-bound junior Becca Lindblad, Dynek was perfectly situated to slap in a top-shelf goal with 2:09 left. “I knew at the time that I went down too early,” said Rascia, who backed up goalie Claire Kennedy last year after sitting out her sophomore season. “By the time I stood up, it was too late.” O’Connor and Tess Dettling, who made all-state honors along with teammates Maggie Cusick, Courtney Cheevers and Emma Wright, also turned in standout performances. O’Connor was the last player to leave the LA locker room, and she was doing a balancing act. She awkwardly carried out not one, not two but four sticks — a sure sign that she was helping out a couple of forgetful teammates. “ W hose sticks are these? ” said rascia's return >> page 33


3/29 – 3/30/14

sports

THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND

With Kevin Reiterman & Bill McLean

At the Shoot-Around

Boys Basketball Lake Forest: The Associated Press announced their all-state selections last week. Junior forward Evan Boudreaux earned honorable mention honors. He averaged 25 points and 14 rebounds per game. Loyola: He was trey-iffic. Sophomore Brandon Danowski didn’t win, but he did put on a show as the Class 4A representative in the IHSA Three-Point Showdown. The sharp-shooting Rambler fired in nine shots to share second place in the King of the Hill competition at Peoria’s Carver Arena on March 22. Junior Will Schaufelberger, who plays for Class 2A Greenville, connected on 13 threes to win the crown. After hitting 11 in the 4A preliminary round on March 20, Danowski made 12 in the final round on March 21 to edge Collinsville’s Bret Langley (11). Maine South’s Caleb de Marigny made eight shots in the four-man final. Loyola: Neither Loyola Academy coach Tom Livatino nor Ramblers senior guard James Clarke chose to dwell on the here and now after a playoff loss. LA bowed 58-32 to eventual Class 4A state champion Whitney Young at the Chicago State University Supersectional on March 18. “We won’t let one evening define this team,” Livatino insisted. “This was a special, special, special team.” The 6-foot Clark echoed the sentiment, noting the 2013-14 team captured league, regional and sectional titles. “Great season, fun season,” he added after scoring nine points and grabbing three rebounds. Loyola shot a frosty 18 percent from the field against 6-foot-11, Duke-bound Jahlil Okafor and the Dolphins (26-5). Okafor (24.3 ppg) was more facilitator than scorer for most of the game and finished with 12 points and 12 rebounds. The Ramblers trailed 19-3 after one quarter and 32-12 at the break. “We weren’t as crisp and sharp as usual,” Livatino said. “The tale of the first half was our failure to execute offensively.” LA’s Griffin Boehm (5 points, 4 rebounds), a 6-foot-4 forward, hit a three-pointer in the first frame and had the challenging task of guarding Okafor for most of the night. “Griffin,” Livatino said, “was an absolute warrior. He competed the whole game and was utterly impressive to watch.” The Ramblers showed some life early in the third quarter, getting consecutive treys from Clarke and senior guard Jack Morrissey (11

rascia's return >> from page 32

O’Connor, as she prepared to talk to reporters. It was a fitting scene. O’Connor had to wear many hats — use many sticks — in this title game. In an effort to slow down New Trier’s dangerous offense, Sedam shifted his prized forward to the defensive side. It was a risk-reward move. “We needed her more there,” said the LA coach. “It was a sacrifice for her.” O’Connor, who will play college hockey at Harvard, has made “her living” pelting goalies. In 25 previous games, she had 30 goals and 13 assists. “I was fine with it,” said O’Connor, who was named to the Blackhawk Alumni All-Star Team earlier this season.

points, 3 boards). But Young answered with a 6-0 run and opened the fourth quarter with another 6-0 spurt. This season’s LA crew (25-6) amassed the third most wins in program history. Clarke, Morrissey and senior point guard Kevin Kucera (3 rebounds each played three seasons of varsity ball and served as captains in 2013-14. Morrissey earned Illinois Basketball Coaches Association (IBCA) all-state honors (second team), while Clark was a special mention pick. Kucera was an honorable mention. “Amazing captains, amazing guys,” Livatino said. “Their future success is guaranteed on and off the court.”

The Rundown

Boys/Girls Track Highland Park: The Giants took top honors in the CSL North Indoor Championships on March 21 at Glenbrook North. Top efforts were turned in by Griffin Bojan (1st, 800, 2:05), Ben Casey (1st, 1600, 4:35), Eddie Smoliak (1st, pole vault, 13-6) and Benjy Rogin (1st, 55 hurdles, 7.5). HP’s girls also claimed an league indoor title on March 20 at GBN. Vanessa Griffin (1st, long jump, 16-3) and Kiera Thorpe (1st, triple jump, 34-5) led the way. Loyola: The Ramblers boys squad scored 121 points to win the Chicago Catholic Indoor Championships on March 22 at the University of Chicago. Christian Swenson placed first in the 3200 (9:33.04). Meanwhile, the LA girls earned runnerup honors. Two days after competing in the state hockey tournament at the United Center, sophomore Kathryn House ran a 12:10.57 to win the 3200 meters. Sarah Kelly (2:26.92) and Jackie McDonnell (2:27.04) went 1-2 in the 800 meters. Kelly also was first in the 1600 (5:18.40), while Francesca LaToracca won the shot put (33-4 ½). New Trier: The girls team tallied 388 points to win the CSL South Indoor Championship on March 20. Rose Gorski was a double winner in the 50 (7.07) and 200 (27.63). The Trevians also had top showings from Tara Smart (1st, 400, 1:02.21), Kelli Schmidt (1st, 1600, 5:19.33), Mimi Smith (1st, 3200, 11:08.98), Nicole Karabas (1st, pole vault, 10-0) and Alison Borsotti (1st, shot put, 35-7 ½). The New Trier boys scored 212 points to take second in the indoor league championships at Niles West on March 21. Senior Peter Cotsirilos won the 1600 in 4:29.39. Senior Chase Silverman ran a 9:31.11 to win the 3200. Senior John Polydoris took first in the shot put (47-3 ¼).

Besides, she added, “I could rush the puck anytime I wanted.” And … she did. Set up nicely by freshman forward Valerie Caldwell, O’Connor tallied her 31st goal of the season in the second period (7:16) to cut New Trier’s 2-0 lead in half. Eventually, Dettling, who could become the “next Erin O’Connor,” sent the game to overtime. She flicked in a wrist shot with 2:21 left in regulation. Assists were awarded to junior Nicole Matouske and sophomore Lindsay Getz. “Tess has got some good years ahead of her,” said Sedam. The same could be said about the Ramblers. Their roster listed only two seniors: O’Connor and Rascia. ■

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perfect weekend

THe North shore weekend 3/29 – 3/30/14

For Candus and Mark, Big Sky’s the limit

The place that we call our home away from home is in Bigfork, Montana, in the Flathead Valley. We started going there when our now19-year-old son Matt was five months old. Matt and Ava (16) have really grown up there. Sometimes we’ve been there all summer long.

“At night we take the pontoon to the middle of the lake and gaze at the stars. It’s very much a family haven.”

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We’re on a little lake, Echo Lake — it’s one of the warmest in the area. We can swim without wetsuits. We hang out on the deck, which is bigger than the inside of our cabin. We go kayaking and canoeing in the summer. In the winter, we go ice skating on the lake and cross country skiing. We can sit by the fire and play BigforkOpoly — we’ve had it so long that most (of the board game's) places are out of business. We love hiking at Jewel Basin Hiking Area, which is absolutely beautiful. We also hike at Glacier National Park. When Matt was a baby, we hiked Glacier deep into the woods — and we came across a black bear and her cubs. My (Candus) legs were shaking. When we walked by, Mark said, “High five; we saw a bear!” I said, “I’m not going to high five until we get into the car.” Every hour of the day, the mountains change their personality, from sunrise to when there’s a storm to when they’re purple. It’s absolutely beautiful. At night we take the pontoon to the middle of the lake and gaze at the stars. It’s very much a family haven. Candus and Mark Suppelsa, as told to David Sweet ■

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the north shore weekend | saturday march 29 2014 | sunday march 30 2014

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