RIVERSIDE-BROOKFIELD Also serving North Riverside $1.00
Vol. 34, No. 1
January 2, 2019
The year in sports A look at local highlights in the world of athletics PAGE 14
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Semi jackknifes in Ogden Avenue crash PAGE 3
@riversidebrookfield_landmark @RBLandmark
Six vie for three spots on D95 board
Riverside thrift hitched its wagon to man named Skar, and paid the price
Field includes local activists, veteran board members, parent group president, social worker
By BOB UPHUES
D
@riversidebrookfieldlandmark
District 103 teachers get 4-year deal PAGE 5
Bright lights, big ambition Editor
espite temperatures hovering around zero, Marshall Savings and Loan was packed with people. For two weeks in early January 1963, crowds thronged to the savings and loan at the corner of Ogden and Harlem avenues in Riverside to join in the celebration of Marshall’s “100 Million Dollarversary” and catch a glimpse of some of entertainment’s big names — singers like Vic Damone and Tony Martin and comedians like Shecky Greene, Jack E. Leonard and George Jessel. In the parking lot The Rise and Fall of out back, those harMarshall Savings dy enough to brave PART 1 the frigid tempera-
rblandmark.com
By BOB SKOLNIK Contributing Reporter
PHOTO COURTESY LIZ FARON COLLECTION
HEADLINER: Tony Bennett belts out a song to climax Marshall Savings and Loan’s “100 Million Dollar-versary” celebration on Jan. 15, 1963. A parade of stars were part of the Riverside institution’s two-week long victory lap, which would all come crashing down within two months. tures could watch the Casey Twins — Judy and Trudy, who later were featured in the Ice Follies — twirl in unison on the small ice rink hauled in for the occasion. “We called it the World’s Largest Ice Cube,” Judy Zack, who told the Landmark that as late as 2010, she was still teaching figure skating in the northern suburbs. “We
were hired for every tank show.” Throughout the day small crowds gathered to watch the ice shows and then got warm inside the bank, sipping coffee and gawking at the shelves of raffle prizes and premiums for opening new accounts. See MARSHALL on page 10
A pair of local political activists are teaming up to run for two seats on the school board in Brookfield-LaGrange Park School District 95. Christopher Ryan Crisanti, the founder and chairman of the Brookfield Democratic Organization, and Meaghan McAteer, one of the founders of the Indivisible Brookfield group, are running a joint campaign for the April 2 school board race. They will face four other independent candidates in a six-person race for three spots on the school board. Incumbent Joe Ivan is running for another term and former school board See D95 ELECTION on page 9
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