Landmark 081722

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Follow us rblandmark.comonline! August 17, 2022 Also ser ving Nor th Riverside R IVERSIDE-BROOKFIEL D @riversidebrook eldlandmark @riversidebrook eld_landmark @RBLandmark $1.00 Vol. 37, No. 33 PHOTO BY KYLE BICE North Riverside rec director to leave, hinting at tensions A er 8+ years, Mrozik walking due to increase in ‘situations/issues’ By BOB UPHUES Editor The village of North Riverside will soon be looking for a new recreation director with Teresa Mrozik announcing she’s leaving the post Aug. 25. Mrozik, who has served as the recreation director for the past eight-and-a-half years, submitted her resignation to Village Administrator Sue Scarpiniti on July 19 in a letter that hinted at trouble behind-thescenes. See MROZIK on pa ge 15 As school resumes, few COVID protocols remain PAGE 3 Riverside cannabis dispensary appears back on track PAGE 7 SEE STORY PAGE 2 Brookfield filmmaker shooting documentary about the man behind Galloping Ghost Arcade Doc on Doc Looking to Buy or Sell? Call Me! THE SHEILA GENTILE GROUP LIVE LOCAL • WORK LOCAL 708.220.2174 • www.SheilaGentile.com

The working title for the documentary is “Ghostlord and the Quest for Dark Presence” and tells Mack’s story from the time he conceived of “Dark Presence” as a teenager to the present.According to Bass, the film will illustrate “Doc’s journey to create a live-action digitized fighting game, from the first hint of the game’s idea, through crooked investors, surprise iguanas, nearly assassinated landlords, and two reshoots. But the real question is: will it ever get finished?”

For about a year, Craig Bass has filmed more than two-dozen for mal interviews and has compiled hundreds of pages of notes, immersing himself in the complex, many tentacled Galloping Ghost empire and its muse Doc Mack.

arcadedocumentarFilmmakershootingyonBrookfieldowner

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The “nearly assassinated landlords” reference is about Steve Campbell, the Riverside resident and Ogden Avenue property owner who took a young Doc Mack under his wing, providing him with space to shoot live action sequences and later offering multiple properties along Ogden Avenue to house the arcade and other Galloping Ghost ventures. Campbell in 2012 was the target of a bizarre kidnapping/ extortion plot that was foiled by the FBI, who arrested Camp bell’s would be assailants after being tipped off by a confidential infor mant. The 40-year old Bass and business partner John Scaletta started their company about 15 years ago. Bass is the firm’s creative director “I’ve always wanted to make movies,” said Bass, who knew about Mack for years before approaching him about doing the documentary a little more than a year ago. After talking with Mack for about four hours inside his Galloping Ghost production studio office, Bass was convinced he had a great story to tell. In Brookfield and beyond, Doc Mack is known as the man behind the world’s largest video game arcade, Galloping Ghost Arcade, a place that has received international notoriety. Its 890 – and growing -- machines draw hordes of hardcore and casual arcade game enthusiasts alike to Ogden Avenue But the Ghostlord – the moniker Mack has adopted and which defines his persona – did not set out to be a video game arcade baron. The entire Galloping Ghost empire – which now includes a print shop, pinball arcade, a fitness gym, auto shop and, most recently, a custom Godzilla model “monster workshop” – was created to underwrite Mack’s burning passion, an arcade game called “Dark Presence,” which Mack has been developing for nearly three decades. “Everybody thinks about the arcade when they think about Doc Mack,” said Bass. “The arcade was an outgrowth of the game. … Building the arcade was like, ‘Man, we need a place to showcase this game we’re making and we need a way to fund development of the game. We need to keep this community thriving, because we love it and because we need homes for these games we’re developing.’ “No one really knows that. Everybody thinks of Doc Mack as the arcade guy. Doc Mack is the game designer. He’s the arcade guy, too, but at his core, he is the creator. … he wants to create the experiences for people that he wants to create.”

Bass said he always thought of the documentary as a feature-length film, though he’s open to a multi-part series, if the opportunity presents itself. While he has self-funded the production to date, he’s now looking for investors to help put all of the pieces together and pitch it to distributors.

“I think that it’s a very inspiring story,” said Bass during an interview in his office at the video production company Motion Source on Fairview Avenue in downtown Brookfield “He didn’t have the schooling, he didn’t have the connections, he created his own destiny. He now owns the largest arcade in the world, he’s doing the things he loves and he has done more than many, based on determination and passion. It’s hugely inspiring.”

It will be another year or so before the film is finished, Bass said, but he’s already beginning to pull the story together after filming a few more key for mal interviews – in cluding with Mack himself. “We need that support,” Bass said. “We’re just getting into that now and we’re just finishing up our budget, creating our business plan and we’re looking for people that want to help tell a very significant, very local Brookfield centric story that I think is meaningful to a global audience, but it’s very significant for our own hometown here.”

While Mack is not camera shy – he livestreams a weekly new video game reveal at the arcade and interacts with fans re gularly through livestream video – he’s not a particularly high-profile character outside of that world. But he’s also open, accessible and remarkably transpar ent, as anyone who has approached him for an interview can tell you. And he proved more than willing to let Bass into his life. “It’s definitely been very different than what I was expecting,” said Mack in a phone interview with the Land mark. “[The documentary] encompasses so much. Initially it was about the game, but so much of the game is wrapped around every facet of my life. Telling all the stories about all of the people involved and how things happened opened my eyes to a lot of things. It was therapeutic. Talking about it brought so much clarity.”

PHOTO BY KYLE BICE

Filmmaker Craig Bass (right) and camera operator Anya Kalfus shoot video for Bass’ upcoming documentary about Brook eld video game designer and arcade owner Doc Mack last weekend at Galloping Ghost Arcade’s 12th anniversary celebration.

‘Ghostlord and Quest for Dark Presence’ a deep dive into the world of Doc Mack By BOB UPHUES Editor Is there a Brookfield-centric feature-length documentary on Netflix or some other streaming service in the cards for the future? One local filmmaker thinks it’s possible, and he believes he’s hit upon just the right subject.

Masks a rarity on rst day at RBHS; few districts o er regular testing

ALEX ROGALS/Sta Photographer

By BOB SKOLNIK Contributing Reporter School is getting back to nor mal this year even as the COVID-19 pandemic stubbornly sticks around. As students returned to school Aug. 15 at Riverside-Brookfield High School, only a few students were still wearing face masksAlthough masks are still officially “recommended” at Riverside-Brookfield High School one student estimated that about 95 percent of students and many teachers went maskless on the first day. One student the Land mark talked to said only a few students in each class were wearing masks “At least in my classes, I was one of two or three students that wore a mask,” said the student.Masks were required in Illinois public schools from when students retur ned to school from the pandemic during the 2021-22 school year until March 1, 2022, when Gov. J.B. Pritzker lifted his executive order requir ing them. The mask mandate had become a lightning rod issue in many districts, especially at Ly ons Township High School and Brookfield LaGrange Park District 95. Once the mask requirement was lifted, students and staff gradually started to remove their masks, and it doesn’t seem likely that many students will be wearing masks at school this year. RBHS is the first area school to begin the new academic year School starts on Aug. 18 at Lyons-Brookfield School District 103 and begins next week at most other area school districts, although Komarek School students don’t have to return to school until Aug. 31. At all area school districts, lunch will be back to pre-pandemic protocols, and physical distancing is no longer required anywhere. “Social distancing is no longer a thing,” said Riverside Elementary School District 96 Superintendent Martha Ryan-Toye said. The main requirement remaining from the past two years is that if a student or staff member tests positive for COVID, that person will have to stay away from school for five consecutive calendar days following the posi tiveIntest.District 96, the person retur ning from a positive COVID test will also have to wear a face mask at school for days six through 10 after that positive test. COVID tests will be available for students and staff at RBHS. “We have p lenty of COVID tests here if any staf f member or student needs to be tested,” said RBHS P rincipal Hector FreytasOther preventative measures such as up graded air circulation systems remain in place.“We still have the touchless hand washing stations, the bottle-filling stations, the hand sanitizers, the building’s maximizing HVAC air exchanges with UV filters,” Freytas said. Despite new guidance from the federal Centers for Disease Control last week no longer recommending COVID testing for asymptomatic individuals, two local school districts -- Riverside Elementary District 96 and LaGrange-Brookfield School District 102 -- will again offer optional COVID testing through weekly saliva samples. Those tests will again be collected and analyzed through SHIELD and are offered to schools free of charge by the state of Illinois. But as of Aug. 15, only 43 students in District 96 had been signed up for the saliva testing, although Ryan-Toye said that number will likely grow before school starts Aug. 24. Last year in District 96 families had to opt out of the saliva testing; this year they must opt in. Unlike last year, District 96 students who choose to participate will collect their saliva samples at home and bring them to school in vials to school instead of testing at school.“For now, I think there are families and staff members that feel safer and more secure with this option,” Ryan-Toye said of plans to still offer the saliva testing. Under the new CDC guidance, students who were merely exposed to someone who tested positive for COVID will no longer have to quarantine But school administrators note that all this could change if COVID cases spike and public health guidance changes “All of this could return,” Ryan-Toye said.

© 2022 Growing Community Media NFP

As school year begins, few COVID mitigations remain

e Landmark, August 17, 2022 3 IN THIS ISSUE Calendar 4 Crime . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Classi ed 17 Kosey Corner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Opinion 14 People . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Spor ts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Editor Bob Uphues Director of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Michael Romain Digital Publishing & Technology Manager Briana Higgins Staff Photographer Alex Rogals Design/Production Manager Andrew Mead Editorial Design Manager Javier Govea Designer Susan McKelvey S ales and Marketing Representatives Marc Stopeck, Lourdes Nicholls, Kamil Brady Business & Development Manager Mary Ellen Nelligan Donor Relations Manager/Food Editor Melissa Elsmo Development & Sales Coordinator Stacy Coleman Circulation Manager Jill Wagner EMAIL jill@oakpark.com Publisher Dan Haley Special Projects Manager Susan Walker BOARD OF DIREC TORS Chair Judy Gre n Treasurer Nile Wendor f Deb Abrahamson, Gary Collins, Darnell Shields, Sheila Solomon, Eric Weinheimer HOW TO REACH US ADDRESS 141 S. Oak Park Ave., Oak Park, IL 60302 PHONE 708-442-6739 ■ FAX 708-467-9066 E-MAILONLINEbuphues@rblandmark.comwww.RBLandmark.com The Landmark is published digitally and in print by Growing Community Media NFP. The newspaper is available on newsstands for $1.00. A one -year subscription costs $36 within Cook County and $46 outside the county. Adver tising rates may be obtained by calling our o ce. Periodical rate postage paid at Oak Park, IL (USPS 0019-585). Postmaster send address correc tions to Landmark, 141 S. Oak Park Ave., Oak Park, IL 60302.

Students returned to Riverside-Brook eld High School on Aug. 15 to begin the 2022-23 academic year with few COVID-19 mitigation protocols in e ect despite the disease’s lingering presence. Masks were few and far between among both students and sta All of the area’s schools largely will resume pre-pandemic operations when classes begin in the coming weeks.

Films at local libraries

And more

■ The Brook eld Elks Lodge, 9022 31st St., hosts bingo the second S unday of ever y month. Doors open at 1 p.m. and games star t at 2 p.m. with cash payouts.

erside Garage hosts its nal Cruise Night of the summer in erside on Aug. 18 from 6 to 9 p.m. on East Burlington Street, just east of Longcommon Road, in the village’s downtown.

lassic car owners who would like to show o their wheels do not need to sign up and will be admitted on a rst come, ed basis. No awards will be given out There will be live music and vendors, and there’s no admission fee to come and enjoy the car show.

The Linda Sokol Francis Brook eld Library, 3541 Park Ave., caps its Brook eld Reads initiative with the movie “The Natural,” inspired by the events recounted in the book “The Chicago Cub Shot for Love,” on Aug. 20 at 1 p.m. Register to attend at brook eld evanced.info/signup or by calling 708-485-6917, ext.Nor130.th Riverside Public Library, 2400 Desplaines Ave., will screen the 2004 lm “Around the World in 80 Days” starring Jackie Chan and Steve Coogan on Aug. 23 at 2 p.m. Register to attend at northriversidelibrary.org/events-new.

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Riverside Parks & Rec presents Midwest roots rockers Good Things from 6:30 to 9 p.m. at Guthrie Park in downtown Riverside across the street from the Metra station, 90 Bloomingbank Road Or, you could choose to head over to the band shell at Kiwanis Park, Arden and Brook eld avenues in Brook eld, and catch the Chicago Irish Band, delivering traditional covers to favorites beginning at 7 p.m. Bring a blanket or lawn chair and picnic items. Both concerts are free to attend.

Riverside Cruise Night

The big screen will show the 2012 computer animated, arcade game-themed comedy/adventure lm “Wreck-It Ralph” featuring the voices of John C. Reilly, Sarah Silverman, Jack McBrayer and Jane Lynch. Before the lm starts at dusk don’t miss experiencing arcade game favorites such as Pitfall and Galaga in real life. Bring blankets, chairs, food and drinks and settle in for an evening under the stars.

■ Riverside Public Librar y, 1 Burling Road, invites you to Understanding and Responding to Dementia Related Behavior presented by the Alzheimer’s Association on Aug. 18 at 7 p.m.; All Ages Outside Stor ytime on Aug. 19 at 10 a.m.; and All in the Family genealogy program on Aug. 23 at 7 p.m. To register for programs, visit riversidelibrar y.org/events

■ The Riverside Junior Woman’s Charity invites you to “adopt” a toy swan which will be launched into the Des Plaines River at noon on Aug. 28 near the Hofmann Tower to cap the nonpro t’s inaugural Swan Derby fundraiser. Proceeds bene t the many charities Riverside Juniors sup por t. Visit swanderby.cheddarup.com for more.

BIG WEEK

■ The Riverside Farmers Market operates each Wednesday through Oct. 5 from 2:30 to 7 p.m. in Centennial Park, at Forest Avenue and Longcommon Road The Brook eld Farmers Market returns ever y Saturday through Oct. 15 from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the parking lot of the Brook eld Village Hall, 8820 Brook eld Ave.

Brook eld Parks & Rec invites you to bring the entire family to Ehlert Park, Elm and Congress Park avenues, on Aug. 20 for its nal Movie in the Park for 2022.

■ Nor th Riverside Public Librar y, 2400 Desplaines Ave., invites you to make an appointment to visit the Ancestr y Help Desk on Aug. 19 between 2 and 6 p.m. There’s also Make Your Own Mug (grades 6-12) on Aug. 20 at 1:30 p.m.; Take Charge of Your Health (seniors, vir tual) on Aug. 23 at 10 a.m.; and Stickers and Buttons (grades 6-12) on Aug. 24 at 3:30 p.m. Register for programs at northriversidelibrar y. org/events-new.

August 17-24 Outdoor concer ts in Riverside, Brookfield If you’re looking for live music on Friday night, you have your pick on Aug. 19 with both Riverside and Brook eld hosting outdoor concerts

■ Linda Sokol Francis Brook eld Librar y, 3541 Park Ave., presents Chair Yoga (vir tual) on Aug. 18 at 11 a.m., 20s and 30s: Disney Trivia on Aug. 18 at 7 p.m. and Movie Music: Elvis Presley with John LeGear on Aug. 22 at 7 p.m. Call 708-485-6917 or visit brook eld.evanced info/signup to register for programs.

■ Riverside Ar ts Center, 32 E. Quinc y St., presents “Endless,” featuring the work of Darrell Rober ts, in the outdoor Sculpture Garden through Oct. 29. Galler y hours are Thursday through Saturday from 1 to 5 p.m. There’s also an exhibition featuring the work of Madelyn Roldan and Oakley McCormack in the lobby of the Riverside Township Hall, 27 Riverside Road, through Sept. 29. Regular viewing hours are MondayThursday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Friday 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Visit riversidear tscenter.com for more.

CHIC AG O IRISH BAND AROUND THE WORLD IN 80 DAYS

Libraries in North Riverside and Brook eld o er free in-person movie screenings in the coming week.

Movie in Ehler t Park

Simplified Employee Pension. This is known as a SEP -IRA. An employer can make contributions toward their own retirement and their employees’ retirement. The employee owns and controls a SEP. Rollover IRA. This is when the IRA owner receives a payment from their retirement plan and deposits it into a different IRA within 60 days. SmalltooJob Inc.

RBHS

Traditional IRA. An IRA where contributions may be tax-deductible. Generally, the amounts in a traditional IRA are not taxed until they are withdrawn. Roth IRA. This type of IRA is subject to the same rules as a traditional IRA but with certain exceptions:•Ataxpayer cannot deduct contributions to a Roth IRA. • Qualified distributions are tax-free. • Roth IRAs do not require withdrawals until after the death of the owner. Savings Incentive Match Plan for Employees. This is commonly known as a SIMPLE IRA. Employees and employers may contribute to traditional IRAs set up for employees. It may work well as a start-up retirement savings plan for small employers.

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e Landmark, August 17, 2022 5 By BOB SKOLNIK Contributing Reporter

Riverside-Brookfield High School will spend just over $140,000 to purchase a new security camera system this year. The District 208 school board voted 6-0 to approve the purchase at its Aug. 9 meeting “Our cur rent system is very out of date,” said Assistant Superintendent Kristin Smetana, adding that the existing system is an analo g system that runs on Windows 7, an operating system that is no longer suppor ted. It is also very dif ficult to get spare parts if something breaks. The new system, which the district is purchasing from Chicago-based Skynet Security, is cloud based, which means that video can be viewed from anywhere there is an inter net connection. Administrators can even check out live camera video from their homes. All of the school’s 64 cameras will be re placed. Most of the current cameras have been in service for more than seven years and some for more than 15 years Skynet Security provided the lowest of three price quotes that Smetana received. The contract was not for mally put out to bid. RBHS has used Skynet before and has been happy with the products and service that the company has provided. “Not only do they have the lowest price, but they are a trusted vendor that the dis trict has used over the past 10 years for various projects,” Smetana wrote in a memo to the school board recommending the purchaseInaddition, Riverside Township in May awarded a grant of $7,381.49 to RBHS for the purchase of two additional hallway cameras to eliminate blind spots in the camera coverage, a television with a desk mount for the security of fice where personnel can view the video and a portable vape detector to be used in a school bathroom. In his appearance before the Riverside Township board in May, Assistant Princi pal for Student Af fairs Dave Mannon told the township board that the vape detector can do more than just detect vaping. “It’s much more than that,” Mannon said. “It’s a cloud-based application so it does detect a change in the environment. We’re going to utilize it in one of our bathrooms, and then with that change in environment it does detect noise level and things like that.” Since the vape detector is portable, it can be moved among the bathrooms at RBHS. Mannon said that he wants to see how the vape detector works before the school commits to purchasing more of them. Mannon said re por ts of students vaping in bathrooms was down at RBHS last year.

Township grant will help eliminate blind spots, fund vape detector Y.CO M

SKYNETSECURIT

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“The vapes have been down this year, and a little bit last year as we transitioned back, so that’s a great thing but we do see a little bit of it,” Mannon said. “I wouldn’t say we’re at an alar ming rate at all, but it’s a deter rent. Some of these applications just make our environment more of a safe place for our kids.” OKs spending $140,000 for new security cameras

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In January, Leafly, a Seattle, Washingtonbased company, re ted that le al annabis was supported by ranged from retail struction and even public relations “In community ways interested in said Paul Jensen, vice president of innovation and wo cation at Triton. Wi bis industry, “the really growing,” he added. That’s why based in River ing all of Rive Riverside as well por tion of Brookfield, ulum to include the new cannabis cultiva tion course and a se parate program where students can become cer tified cannabis dispensary technicians Those two courses were added largely due to a statewide effort that sought to launch vocational cannabis pilot programs in Illi nois’ community colleges. Triton College is among about a dozen community colleges licensed by the Illinois Department of Agriommunity College ypes of certificate owing, and then s the dispensing,” Jensen

6 e Landmark, August 17, 2022

Certi cate program gives students chance to nd careers in industburgeoningry

During the pandemic, many Americans came to understand that grocery stores are an essential part of daily life. But there may be more to it than that. Tischler Finer Foods, located at 9118 Broadway in the heart of Brook eld, has long been more than a place for locals to stock their pantries. The store fosters a sense of community.

Business Spotlight Tischler Finer Foods Owners: Dennis

Dennis and Linda Tischler agree that the best part of operating a business in Brook eld is getting to know customers, many of whom have been shopping at the store for years, even decades. “Brook eld is a small town, so we get to watch families grow up,” Dennis Tischler said. Many Tischler’s employees have worked at the store for years, too, allowing connections to form. “Whether you work at Tischler’s, shop here, or are a supplier or vendor, every individual brings something unique to the store and that is what makes us special,” Linda Tischler said. “We truly are homegrown.”Inadditionto o ering grocery standards, Tischler’s partners with local businesses, such as Berwyn-based Vesecky’s Bakery, to o er more specialty fare like houska. Customers can also order cakes for any occasion. And as part of their ever-expanding beer collection, Tischler’s collaborates with Lyon’s-based BuckleDown Brewing to create custom ales, IPAs, and coming soon, a lager. Tischler’s also features a full-service butcher shop with meat cut to order on request, a vast produce section, a bakery, and a deli. “What some of our customers may not know is that we also do a lot of catering,” Dennis Tischler said. “Our deli does a fantastic job and having a special occasion catered can be a great way to relax and enjoy the festivities without having to worry about foodLindapreparation.”Tischlerstressed that the store is constantly evolving. Whether updating the catering menu or expanding the popular Grab n’ Go section, where customers can purchase ready-to-heat meals along with produce cut daily and freshly prepared foods like salsa, guacamole, bruschetta, and a variety of dips and snack trays, the Tischler’s team strives to anticipate and meet customerTischler’sneeds.hasbeen open in Brook eld since 1989 and is a labor of love. “Not only do we love what we do,” Linda Tischler said, “but Dennis and I both love food and cooking more generally. And we look forward to sharing that love with the community for years to come.”

requirefinickychrysanthemumssaid.or,cannabisplants,hesaid.Thetherightcondi-includingtherighthu-andtherightamountdarkness,togrow,flowerControlleden-perfectforcannabis , he told the Landmark.Jensen, is that Triton and many other community colleges are not legally allowed to grow cannabis on campus Though cannabis, or marijuana, is legal for medical and/or recreational use in dozens of states such as Illinois, it remains illegal under federal law. For students taking Triton’s cannabis-related courses, they study other plants simi lar to cannabis plants. The college also part ners with cannabis craft growers in Chicago who offer students tours of their facilities and observe production.

Triton rolls out new cannabis cultivation course

With the start of the fall semester just days away, Jensen said he is excited to see what students will take away from the new cannabis cultivation course and belong to a group of community colleges participating in the state’s vocational pilot program. “When there’s an opportunity for us to participate in a program that will give back to the community, we’re going to jump at the opportunity,” he said. “We’re very excited to be able to get this license, bring this program here and work with the people in the community.”

9118 Broadway Ave,

Triton College students will have the opportunity to lear n how to grow, care and manage cannabis plants through a new course this fall. The course – aptly named cannabis cultivation – is folded into the college’s greenhouse grow operations certificate program where students can lear n about the cultiva tion of cannabis plants, which can be used for recreational and medicinal purposes, as well as high-value crops and or namental plants.The certificate program, which can be completed in five classes or two semesters, allows students to understand the cannabis industry and production of urban food prod ucts or tropical and herbaceous plants, and what career paths are available.

www.tischler708-485-3222 nerfoods.com

“The large cannabis companies have been extraordinarily helpful to all the colleges that are growing and that are trying to train people,” Jensen said. “They’ve bent over backwards to help us develop curriculum and tour facilities and provide experts as speakers to our classes.”

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Mint Cannabis managing director Omar Fakhouri did not respond to the Landmark’s attempts to reach him by phone and Nourahmaditext. said his understanding was the Mint Cannabis was in the process of completing requirements for ob taining approval to operate the Riverside dispensary.According to a July 22 memo to conditional license holders from the IDFPR, the awardees have 180 days to build out the dispensary in order to receive ap proval.That process includes, among other things, providing IDFPR with an address for the dispensary, completing of ficer ap plications, obtaining any zoning approv als, confir ming a floor plan and paying the $60,000 adult-use cannabis dispensary license fee.

Mint Cannabis will not need any additional zoning relief to allow a dispensary at the 2704 Harlem Ave. site When village trustees voted to create zoning rules for dispensaries, they made such businesses permitted by right within Harlem Av enue’s commercial districts All the state will need to do is sign of f on the location, which adheres to the state’s rules, and the dispensary floor plan, conduct backg round checks on Mint Cannabis’ of ficers, and conduct a final inspection of the dispensary before approving the full

State issues conditional license to rm seeking Harlem Ave. location By BOB UPHUES Editor A plan to bring an adult-use cannabis dispensary to Harlem Avenue in Riverside appears to be back on track after the state of Illinois issued 177 conditional cannabis dispensary licenses that had been held up for months due to a lawsuit challenging how the licenses were awarded.OnJuly 22, the Illinois De par tment of Financial and Professional Re gulation (IDFPR) announced the issuance of 149 licenses, among them one for Mint IL LLC, whose owners are looking to convert a commercial property at 2704 Harlem Ave. into a retail cannabis dis pensary.MintIL, also known as Mint Cannabis, had planned on buying the property early in 2022, but the delay in issuing the conditional licenses held up the deal. The sale of 2704 Harlem Ave. was to be part of a transaction that would also involve the village of Riverside selling the property at 2710 Harlem Ave., which is immediately south of the proposed dispensary location, to Dr. Milad Nourahmadi. Nourahmadi presently owns 2704 Har lem Ave. and the strip mall at 2720 Har lem Ave. The village-owned property sits between the two parcels, and Nourahmadi wants to acquire it to increase the size of the strip mall’s parking lot, which will have some parking spots set aside for the dispensary, which has its own park ingRilot.verside plans on using the opportunity to improve the appearance of the streetscape along that stretch of Harlem Avenue, including adding attractive welcome signage to the intersection of Har lem Avenue and Longcommon Road, a busy village gateway. The delay in issuing the conditional licenses led the village in June to extend the deadline of its sales ag reement for 2710 Harlem Ave. with Nourahmadi, who extended his deadline to sell 27014 Har lem Ave. to Mint Cannabis until Sept. 15. Now that Mint Cannabis has its conditional license, Nourahmadi said the wheels are back in motion for the dispensary to become a reality. “That was one of the biggest bar riers,” Nourahmadi said of the conditional li cense delay. “I absolutely am way more optimistic of getting a deal done.”

e Landmark, August 17, 2022 7

Riverside cannabis dispensary appears back on track

On campus

■ Trevor Bork, of Riverside, and Au tumn Rajcevich-Schwer, of Brookfield, were named to the 2022 spring semester dean’s list at Car thage Colle ge in Kenosha. rside resident Haley was named to the 2022 semester dean’s list at York) Colle ge Knowski, of Brooknamed to the 2022 semester dean’s list at University in Decatur attaining a semester GPA of Bowie, of Brookned the distinction of UCP Seguin recognizes Riverside families for generosity

I’d be honored

8 e Landmark, August 17, 2022 PEOPLE

■ Katie Culloden, of Riverside, was named to the 2022 spring semester dean’s list at Emerson Colle ge in Boston. The busi ness creative enter prises major ear ned a semester grade-point average of at least 3.7 on a 4-point scale.

Greg Molinari

VANESSA MORALESNORA DACHO TA

■ Marg aret Collins of the financial services fir m Edward Jones in Nor th Riverside recently ear ned the fir m’s Frank Finne g an Award for her exceptional achievement in building client relationships.

■ Greg Molinari, a circulation assistant at the Linda Sokol Francis Brookfield Library, was reco gnized recently by hisa dent Vanessa Morales Lope marked the launc of her new ventur Rise Wellness Therapy, 15 Spin ning Wheel Road Hinsdale, emonyribbon-cuttingduringinJuly.Lopezisa li censed clinical professional counselor and the clinical director of Rise, which employs three other clinical associates and provides mental health ser vices to trauma survivors. She also serves as secretary of the Illinois Mental Health Counseling Association and was the initial recipient of the Trinidad Ar menta-Aguirre ArtMoreGrant.information about and her new practice is availabl at risewellnessandtherapy.com.

■ Nora Dachota, a graduate of Riverside-Brookfield High School graduated May from the U.S. Air Academy in Colorado Springs Colorado, with a B.S. in science with a focus on military strategic studies and a minor in Ger man. She has been commissioned a second lieutenant in the Air Force and will re port to Vandenberg Air Force Base near Lompoc, California, for missile training prior to receiving her per manent assignment.

■ Augustana Colle ge in Rock Island announced that Brookfield resident Isabella Perez graduated with a bachelor’s de gree in political science and English during the school’s commencement ceremony in May.

■ Triton Colle ge in River Grove announced that several local students had ear ned associate de grees or completed ce rtificate programs in August 2022, including Brookfield residents Bryan Doyle, Joanie Brosnan and Damian Jimenez; Nor th Riverside residents Marlyn Flores, Alejandra Valencia, Nora Okere, Valeria Fuentes and Renato Fuentes; and Riverside residents Tatiana Gryczan, Mia Ruffolo, Grace Garbe and Roxanne Schliep

Jake wanted to use his piggy bank contents to purchase gifts for one the residents, 1,300 gifts for people with disabilities served by UCP Seguin.

UCP Se guin of Greater Chicago in June presented its Life Without Limits Award to tw Riverside Families -- Kelly and Dave Navarro and their sons and to Jake Shevitz and Amy Jacksic their generous contributions to Seguin Secret Santa Holiday program. The Life Without Limits Award is gi those who have made outstanding contributions to UCP Seguin to benefit the children and adults with disabilities. For many participants at UCP Seguin, holidays can be a lonely time. Sixteen ago, Kelly Navarro reached out to UCP guin to ask if there was anyone her could collectively “adopt” to bring some day joy and did so through Seguin’s SantaSinceprogram.then,the Navarro family – Kell husband Dave, their sons and extended ily – have been not-so-Secret Santas for man UCP Seguin participants, often adopting the residents in a UCP Seguin group at Christmas time, bringing them dinner and gifts just before Christmas and celebrating with the entire house In 2014, 9-year old Jake Shevitz told his mom he wanted to give all the money in his piggy bank to someone in the community who needed it more. His mom, Amy Jacksic, showed him some information she had come across about UCP Seguin’s Secret Santa Drive and talked about UCP Seguin residents in Riverside who could benefit from the holiday spirit of giving.

■ Riverside resident Lidija Kutlesa was among the more than 400 candidates re ceiving diplomas during a commencement ceremony in May at Illinois Wesleyan Uni versity in Bloomington. Kutlesa ear ned a bachelor’s de gree in vocal perfor mance.

■ Antonio Varg as, of Brookfield, was named to the 2020 spring semester dean’s list at Champlain Colle ge in Burlington, Ver mont, for achieving a semester GPA of at least 3.5.

SUBMIT TED Amy Jacksic and Kelly Navarro

Grandmaster Jerry Kidd, master instructor of J. Kidd Martial Arts America who has been teaching taekwondo to adults and children through the North Riverside department of Parks & recreation for 16 years, has earned the ultimate honor of ninth degree blackbelt from the World Taekwondo Council. Kidd, 70, of Chicago tested and achieved the high honor during Illinois-Chicago’s Taekwondo Day Poomsae Seminar hosted by The United States National Taekwondo Federation at The Centre at North Park in Franklin Park on July 31. Two for mer American National Champions, Kidd and Robert Nicholls of Port Angeles, Washington, were successful at becoming the first Americans to achieve ninth degree blackbelt status and were awarded a special red jacket only worn by USNTF’s President Kwan Duk Gun, and now, Kidd and Nicholls. The honor also makes Kidd the first African American to achieve ninth de gree black belt in the country. Kidd was previously promoted to eighth de gree Kukkiwon in June 2014 by the Korean Taekwondo Headquarters in Seoul, South Korea. Kidd is the only American to hold both the highest honor in Kukkiwon and World Taekwondo Federation.

Nor th Riverside martial ar ts instructor earns ultimate honor

Happy 50th Diane and Jerry Balin, residents of Riveride for 45 years, celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary recently by renewing their wedding ws at Ascension Lutheran Church with famy, friends from the AAUW Riverside Branch oard and for mer fellow Jaycees in attendance. After a reception at the church following the ceremony, the couple flew to California to continue the celebration with their children, P.J., Brian and Jeff along with their spouses and ven grandchildren. Part three of the anniversary celebration continued back in Riverside where the Balins hosted a backyard party – pollinator garden in full loom -- for family and longtime friends, two of hom were part of the couple’s wedding party 50 years ago.

If your travel plans for the next month or so have you driving in the vicinity of 47th Street and Eberly/East Avenue, you should either plan for an aggravating delay or work out an alternate route.

47th St./East Ave. rail work will close crossings

In April Riverside2023,will elect three Trustees to the Board. The Riverside Community Caucus is seeking residents who are interested in learning more about being a candidate for the Riverside Village Board of Trustees in the next election. 1. Go to www.RCCIL.org and suggest people you think would be a great fit for trustee using the 2023 Prospective Candidate Nominating Form.

3. Email us with questions at recruiting@rccil.org

Members of the Recruiting Committee will reach out to all potential candidates. What you can do: Nominations accepted through Aug. 19!

Beginning Aug. 15 through Sept. 11, one of the two Indiana Harbor Belt Railroad grade crossings will be completely closed to accommodate track repairs. According to the railroad, sections of deteriorating rail are being re placed at each crossing.Thework has nothing to do with the long talked about but never implemented grade crossing upgrade at the complicated intersection that straddles Brookfield, LaGrange and McCook. Last week, the Illinois Harbor Belt Railroad announced that the 47th Street crossing (west of East Avenue) will be closed through Aug. 28. The East Avenue crossing (south of 47th Street) will be closed between Aug. 29 and Sept. 11. Poor weather could lengthen closures. While the intersection won’t be closed down completely at any time, motorists are advised to avoid the area, which at the best of times can be a snarl of traffic, as cars navigate the grade crossings, which are controlled by stop signs. Recommended alternate routes include Plainfield Road, 55th Street, LaGrange Road and Ogden Avenue. The village of LaGrange has said that the Bluff Avenue interconnect and residential side streets will be open to local traffic only, and that police will be enforcing that—policy Bob Uphues Riverside needs someone like YOU on its Board of Trustees!

RCC_quarter_page_ad.indd 1 8/8/22 9:35 PM

2. Ask your friends and neighbors to suggest candidates.

e Landmark, August 17, 2022 9

JERRY AND DIANE BALIN GRANDMASTER JERRY KIDD Faculty Honors for the 2022 spring semester at the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta. The designation is awarded to Georgia Tech undergraduates who have earned a 4.0 academic average for the semester. ■ Elmhurst University announced the names of nearly 900 students who earned dean’s list reco gnition (3.75+ GPA) for the 2022 spring semester, including Brookfield residents Madison Darcy, Amelia Huebner and Cassidy Melone; North Riverside resident Adam Bojovic; and Riverside resident Abigail Salamanca

Zoo has longstanding relationships with our partner Chicago cultural nstitutions,” Chinnadurai said in an email. “We know that every animal can inspire conservation and support education and the advancement of knowledge, even after they have passed away. For that reason, the remains of most deceased animals from the zoo are sent to scientific institutions, such as the Field Museum for fur ther study.”

10 e Landmark, August 17, 2022

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Brookfield Zoo’s gorilla, JoJo, heads to Field Museum

JoJo, 42, spent a decade at Brookfield Zoo and sired three offspring during his time as the collection’s silverback. He was considered a geriatric gorilla and suffered cardiac arrest during surgery to treat an unspecified “acute illness,” according to the Chicago Zoological Society. He previously had spent time at Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago and at the Louisville Zoo. In all, JoJo sired five offspring. The western lowland gorilla is considered a critically endangered species due to poaching, il legal pet trade and loss of habitat. The Field Museum already has a wester n lowland gorilla on display. Bushman, who lived at Lincoln Pa rk Zoo before his death at the age of 22 due to a heart condition, has been part of the Field’s collection since 1951 and is prominently displayed near the museum’s east Accordingentrance.toapiece on Bushman published on the Field Museum’s website, he was the first gorilla to live in Chicago and was such an attraction at Lincoln Park Zoo that “an estimated 100 million people came to see this great ape over the course of his life.”Bushman’s story was part of his attrac tion. As a young gorilla, he was “adopted” by a group of American missionaries in Cameroon in 1928. In 1930, the missionaries sold him to an animal collector who offered the gorilla to Lincoln Park Zoo, where he was dubbed “Bushman” and became something of a local celebrity. When Bushman died on Jan. 1, 1951, according to Field Museum, “thousands of mourners brought flowers to his empty exhibit.”

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By BOB UPHUES Editor JoJo, the silverback gorilla at Brookfield Zoo who died July 31 during surgery to treat an acute illness, is destined to become part of the collection at the Field Museum. The news, first reported by the Chicago Sun-Times last week, was confirmed by of ficials at the Chicago Zoological Society and the Field Museum. It doesn’t appear that JoJo’s remains will be placed on display. “We can confirm that JoJo will be added to the Field Museum’s behind-the-scenes collections so that scientists can study his remains to learn more about how gorillas evolved and how we might be able to help protect them,” a spokeswoman for the museum told the Landmark in an email. No other details were available, said the spokeswoman, because the scientist who would be able to discuss the matter was “out doing fieldwork, so he is currently unavail able.”Dr.Sathya Chinnadurai, senior vice presi dent of animal health and welfare at the Chicago Zoological Society, which operates Brookfield Zoo, said it’s not unusual for the remains of deceased zoo animals to end up at “Brookfieldmuseums.

By PETER HANCOCK Capitol News

Allocation of funds will be based on recommendations from a newly created advisory board, chaired by the state’s chief behavioral health officer and made up of state and local appointees. The board will work with an existing state opioid steering committee led by Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton and the state’s directors of the Illinois Department of Public Health and IDHS.

e Landmark, August 17, 2022 11 Riverside, North Riverside among those reeiving payouts

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“This crisis has reached into urban, subur ban and rural areas, every kind of communi ty,” Stratton said at the news conference. “It’s also true that opioids have disproportionately hurt BIPOC [Black, Indigenous and people of color] communities. In fact, in Illinois alone, the opioid fatality rate for Black communities was 55.3 per 100,000, and that is the highest of allTdemographics.”hesettlement,which was first announced in July 2021, resolves more than 4,000 lawsuits that were filed across the country by state and local gover nments against the drug companiesIn Illinois, Raoul said, 94 counties and 77 municipalities have signed on to the agreement. He also noted that the state stands to receive even more money in the future from other national cases. Illinois is part of a national settlement to resolve opioid claims against drug manufacturer Mallinckrodt. That settlement was finalized in a bankruptcy plan that took effect last month and will bring about $36 million to Illinois over nine years. Raoul also announced in late July that state attorneys general have reached settlements in principle with drug manufacturers Teva and Allegan that will bring as much as $6.6 billion of additional relief to states and local gover nments nationwide “It’s important to highlight the abatement and remediation of the crisis is the primary goal of the settlements and the resources that come from the settlement,” Raoul said. “Unlike major settlements of the past, the vast majority of funds Illinois receives through the settlements will go towards a remediation fund. This fund will be used to pay for abatement programs throughout the state instead of being used to pay for other unrelated initiatives.” Uphues to announces opioid Broker 708-447-9907 - info@karenarndt.realtor 1402 59TH AVENUE • CICERO

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Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Attorney General Kwame Raoul announced plans in late July for how the state will distribute its share of funds from a national settlement with opioid companiesIllinoisexpects to receive approximately $760 million over 18 years from a $26 billion national settlement with three opioid dis tributers – Cardinal, McKesson and AmerisourceBergen – and one opioid manufacturer, Johnson & Johnson. “The opioid crisis will go down as one of the most disturbing examples of corporate greed and medical mismanagement in human history, giving way to an epidemic that has become more deadly almost every year of the last 40 years,” Pritzker said at a news conference in Chicago on July 29. Ter ms of the settlement spell out what percentage of the proceeds each community will receive, and they require that at least 85 percent of the funds be used for programs that will help address the ongoing opioid crisis through treatment, education and prevention efforts.Both Riverside and North Riverside, which were initial participating local gover nments in the lawsuit, will receive a portion of the proceeds as restitution for costs associated with responding to the opioid crisis. According to allocations listed in the agreement, North Riverside would stand to receive about $65,000 in settlement funds while Riverside would receive about $32,000. Brookfield was not an initial participating local govern ment, but earlier this year signed on to the general settlement. It is unclear how much Brookfield stands to receive as part of the settlement.Underan executive order that Pritzker said he would sign, the money will flow through a new Office of Opioid Settlement Administration to be set up within the Illinois Depart ment of Human Services. That agency will also appoint a Statewide Opioid Settlement Administrator to ensure that the funds are used in accordance with the State Overdose Action Plan, which Pritzker announced earlier this year, and that they are used to fund recovery and treatment programs in the counties and municipalities with the most urgent need.

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Riverside Library to digitize its RB Landmark archive

$5,150 township grant funds converting micro lm to searchable online database

12 e Landmark, August 17, 2022

By BOB UPHUES Editor

The Riverside Public Library will digitize about 20 years’ worth of its newspaper archive in the coming months after the Riverside Township Board of Trustees awarded the institution a $5,150 grant for theThoseproject.funds will allow the library to convert its microfilm archive of RiversideBrookfield Landmark newspapers from 1985 through at least 2006 to a database that is fully searchable via keyword. “The digitization is so important for historical and genealogical reasons,” said Janice Foley, Riverside Public Library’s director, who noted the township has now awarded almost $8,000 for newspaper digitization, along with an additional contribution from the Riverside Friends of the Library.Invoting to award the grant, Riverside Township Trustee Tim Heilenbach called the digitization ef fort “an outstanding program.”“Obviously, it’s been a big success for [the library] and it’s less of a headache for [the library] to keep all that microfiche, which tends to get damaged or destroyed,” Heilenbach said. About a year ago, the library launched the first phase of its newspaper digitization project. The township’s grant of $2,735, an amount matched by the Friend of the Library, funded digitization of the thousands of newspaper pages from 1912 through 1976, including the Riverside News and other titles such as the Citizen and Suburban Life. Those databases are available to the general public – not just library card holders – as part of the library’s Community History Archive at riverside publicil.advantage preservation.com.DianeSilva,assistant director at the library who spearheads the digitizing initiative, said that from the day the 1912-76 digital archive went live in January through the end of July, nearly 150 individual users had done searches. “That far exceeded what we thought,” Silva said. “I’ve been at the library for 10 years, and it’s been our dream to have a local history resource, and it’s been really great for us that we have a township that supports that ef fort.”

As with the first phase of the digitization project, Riverside Public Library is employing Iowa-based Advantage Archive to perform the conversion of 32 rolls of microfilm containing 21 years of Landmark newspapers, from its first days when it covered Riverside only – from 1985 to 1997 – to editions covering Riverside, Brookfield and North Riverside from 1997-2006 under its present owner, Growing Community Media.TheLandmark maintains its own digital archive, searchable on its website at RBLandmark.com, from 2005 to the present. The microfilm rolls will be sent of f to Iowa later this month, Silva said, and it will take a few months for Advantage Archive to convert the microfilm into a digital database.Thefirm uses what’s called optical character reco gnition to make the actual newspaper pages searchable by keyword. While it’s not foolproof – yes, sometimes names and words get misspelled – it makes re search much more efficient than having to scroll through hundreds of pages of smalltype“We’newsprint.rehoping to get [the digital database] back by no later than mid-January,” SilvaThesaid.final piece of the digitization puzzle will be converting the library’s collection of Suburban Life newspapers from the years 1976-85, said Silva. Those editions are still available to be viewed on microfilm.

e Landmark, August 17, 2022 13PO LICE REPO RT S

■ A resident of the 2200 block of Burr Oak Avenue, North Riverside, called police on the after noon of Aug. 13 to report that his home had been burglarized by a man posing as village water department employee.

■ Riverside police responded to the 3400 block of Harlem Avenue on Aug. 8 after a resident of an apar tment building called to report that someone had moved items around inside her bedroom.

The victim told police an unknown man car rying a clipboard rang his front doorbell at about 4:10 p.m. The man said he was from the water department and needed to check the water inside the house

The break-in occurred between 6 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., the victim told police. She stated that the doors were locked when she entered her apar tment, but she noticed in her bedroom that a dresser drawer had been opened, items on top of the dresser had been moved, a laundry rack had been moved and a light in the closet had been tur ned on. Police did not observe any signs of forced entry. These items were obtained from police re ports filed by the Riverside, North Riverside and Brookfield police departments, Aug. 8-14, and represent a portion of the incidents to which police responded. Unless otherwise indicated, anybody named in these reports has only been charged with a crime. These cases have not been adjudicated.

Brookfield police charged a 41-year old Brookfield man with driving under the influence of alcohol and cited him for multiple traf fic of fenses after he alle gedly plowed his silver 2016 Kia sedan head-on into an unoccupied Ford SUV parked near the intersection of Fairview and Mor ton avenues on Aug. 10 at about 10:25 p.m. Paramedics transpor ted the alle ged of fender to Loyola University Medical Center for treatment of unknown injurie s and for observation. While the driver’s blood-alcohol content was re por ted to be .28, which is more than three times the leg al limit of .08, police also re por ted recovering a zip-top bag containing four blue and white pills, which were sent to the Illinois State Police Crime Lab for testing. When police ar rived, they re por ted seeing two vehicles in the intersection of Mor ton and Fairview, with a man, who had a cut on his face, unconscious in the driver’s seat of the Kia. Both vehicles had sustained heavy front-end damage. T he owner of the other vehicle involved in the crash told police that his SUV had been parked on the souths side of Fairview Avenue, facing east, about 50 to 75 feet east of the inter section.According to the police crash re port , the Kia was westbound on Fairview Av enue when it struck the SUV. T he impact pushed the SUV up onto the south park way and over a sign pole, which was left was bent over. A speed limit sign that had been af fixed to the pole was lying in the parkway. Both vehicles ended up coming to a rest in the street at the southwest corner of the Fairview/Mor ton intersection. In addition to DUI, police cited the alle ged of fender for failure to reduce speed to avoid a crash, improper lane usage , op erating an uninsured vehicle and damage to village proper ty Bic yclists hur t in crashes ■ Riverside police cited a 75-year old Justice woman for leaving the scene of a crash after she alle gedly drove her blue Lexus into a 14-year old bicyclist who was crossing First Avenue westbound on the south side of 31st Street on Aug. 8 at about 11:30Thea.m.woman initially braked after hitting the boy, according to the police re port, but then continued southbound on First Av enue, followed by a witness who ke pt police infor med on the of fending car’s whereaboutsPolice located the car as it headed southwest on Plainfield Road from First Avenue. The driver re por tedly told police her car did not strike anyone, but the vehicle had damage to the front bumper and g rill, po lice said. Witnesses said the car was tur ning right onto First Avenue from eastbound 31st Street when it struck the bicyclist. The victim, whose injuries were not de scribed in the police re port, was taken by paramedics to Loyola University Medical Center for treatment. Police cited the woman for disobeying a traf fic signal, failure to reduce speed to avoid a crash and failure to re port a crash to police Vehicle break-in Nor th Riverside police responded to the 2400 block of 7th Avenue on Aug. 8 after a resident called to re port that someone had entered his unlocked vehicle, which was parked in the driveway, over the weekend. The of fender removed loose change and two keys from the vehicle. One of the keys was for the vehicle that was burglariz ed; the other was for another vehicle belong ing to the victim.

DUI Riverside police charged a 53-year old Chicago man with driving under the in fluence of alcohol and ag gravated speed ing after an of ficer re por ted the man driving at 62 mph in a 30 mph zone while southbound on Harlem Avenue from 26th Street on Aug. 10 at 1 a.m. T he of ficer pulled the car over at Blackhawk Road and re por ted that the driver’s breath smelled of alcohol, though the driver denied drinking before g etting be hind the wheel. According to police, the driver failed field sobriety tests and re fused to submit to a breath test. Burglar y

The man pushed past the victim into the residence and told him to go down into the basement and tur n on the water The victim did as instructed, but he became suspicious and went back upstairs, at which time the unknown man fled from the residence.

The victim said he then noticed that the main floor of the home had been rummaged through, although he did not notice any items of value missing The of fender was described as a heavyset Hispanic man in his mid-40s and w earing a white T-shirt. A Hispanic man described as in his 60s also was involved, the victim said, as the driver of a white pickup truck with a white bed cover.

— Compiled by Bob Uphues

Driver charged with DUI after crashing into parked vehicle in Brook eld

JOANNEKOSEY Golf club chef got his star t right here in Riverside

KOSEYLETCORNERTERS

OpinionW

Acouple of weeks ago, the Riverside Village Board took the unusual step of voting to approve a resolution urging the state of Illinois to bolster protections for women seeking abortions and for the healthcare providers women seek out to exercise their right to choose one. The Landmark followed up by applaud ing that action. Both actions were not universally praised by Riverside residents and those disagreements played out over social media and in the newspaper’s opinion page today, which is absolutely appropriate and welcome. Thanks to those submitting letters thisWhileweek.we don’t know all of the reasons motivating elected officials in their decision to vote in favor of a resolution that otherwise has little to do with their roles in the typically mundane matters of local gover nance, we can give you insight into what motivated us to write favorably about that action. Typically, our editorial positions – like our news coverage – are hyperlocal. That’s intentional, and it has been our longstand ing policy. It’s rare that we stray past issues pertaining to those living within the boundaries of Riverside, North Riverside and BrookfieldBut,when a Supreme Court ruling overtur ned Roe v. Wade in June, our alar m bells went off. While the resolution in support of reproduction rights passed by Riverside earlier this month was about abortion, it was also about an organized, concerted effort on the part of Republicandominated, anti-democratic state legislatures and a right-wing, ideological judiciary to roll back civil rights in this country.

THE L ANDMARK VIEW About that resolution

hat’s for dinner may have been a familiar cry around the Lannon house, but with budding chef Michael Lannon around, his siblings would never be hung ry. Growing up in the Beverly Park division of Broadview, young Michael took an interest in cooking while attending Komarek School in North RiversideItwasthose home ec classes and practicing his skills at home that led him to a path that now finds him as head chef at the Riverside Golf Club. While at Riverside-Brookfield High School, the 1998 graduate had as his home economics teacher the late Julie Morley, who he credits with the person who helped make him the chef he is. Belonging to the FHA Hero club at the school, he participated in competitions, winning second place in one local competition. While in high school he worked at The Chew Chew restaurant in Riverside, lear ning the restaurant ropes under the tutelage of owner/chef Scott Zimmer, whose kitchen proved to be a good training ground for the burgeoning chef He moved to dif ferent restaurants lear ning all the while, spending seven years at the California Cafe in Schaumberg. He worked in upscale restaurants in the area and downtown Chicago. Before settling in at the Riverside Golf Club, also worked at dif ferent country clubs, which taught the dif ferences from restaurantThoseworking.whohave been for tunate to have any of his meals at the golf club have always been satisfied by an excellent meal. He says all the menus are “100 percent created by me” and particularly enjoys making use of seasonal ve getables. Pastries? Yes, he did the sweets for about two years but prefers preparing savory mealsWhere does he go to eat? Usually someplace downtown, possibly meeting up with some of his chef friends who also attended RBHS. The road he took to becoming chef at Riverside Golf Club star ted nearby and moved around the Chicago area before coming back close to home.

This is not hyperbole. These lawmakers and judges will not stop with abortion. Next they will legislate whether or not you’re entitled to birth control, who you can and cannot marry, who may or may not qualify for healthcare and whether or not they will allow free and fair elections

not reflect the beliefs of Riverside citizens. My strong belief is that the role of the Riverside board is to hire and fire the village manager, af fir m the hiring of the police and fire chief, now the director of public safety, approve the village budget, insure that the infrastructure of the village is serving the citi zens’ needs. In other words, stick to issues within the boundar ies of our village. Drifting into national politics and issues makes me wonder if the village board is forgetting its mission. John Scull y Ri verside

Riverside board should stick to co re mission I disappointed to see that the current village of Riverside Board of Trustees has to waste precious time passing a resolution supporting abor tion rights, and I am even more disappointed that the Landmark had to make it a front-page news story (“Riverside urges state to make Illinois abor tion sanctuary”) in the Aug. 10 issue I did not elect trustees to issue opinions that may

Their efforts to strip Americans of fundamental rights are happening in plain sight, and those advocating for such anti democratic measures are so emboldened they speak openly of their desires. Believe them when they tell you who they are. While Illinois has resisted such demagoguery, a sizable chunk of the nation has embraced it and that is a threat to all of us –here down at the local level as well as elsewhere in the U.S. The resolution passed by Riverside was a resolution in support of the civil rights of women, because those rights are in danger and the rollbacks will expand if people choose to underestimate theThisdangerisnot a drill. American democracy is under attack from within, and we downplay the threat as “just politics” at our own peril.

14 e Landmark, August 17, 2022

Until recently, it had proved difficult to fill the two administrative vacancies, said Scar piniti, due to pay rates the village was offering. That has left village hall short-staffed this summer, with just two full-time clerical employees remaining. At the end of June, the village announced it was shifting to “summer hours” at village hall – with no Wednesday evening or Satur day mor ning front desk service -- and had opted to again use an automated phone attendant to handle incoming calls to village hall. Changes to pay rates have allowed Scar piniti to find new two new clerical staff, both of whom are scheduled to start work Sept. 1. She has also hired the village’s first-ever staff accountant, who was scheduled to start work this week. The accountant position had been approved by the village board for the 2021-22 fiscal year, but that job, too, had proven hard to fill due to the pay being offered. Scarpiniti said she also would soon be advertising a part-time front desk position.

“After the many situations/issues that have transpired during my time here and the in crease over the past year or so, I have decided it is best for me to move on,” said Mrozik in her resignation which the Landmark obtained through a public records “I am grateful for the majorit of my time and experiences however, I want to preser love and passion for my Mrozik wrote. Asked what “situations/is sues” Mrozik was referencing her resignation letter, Scar referred the Landmark to Joseph Mengoni for further comment. Reached by phone Au the Landmark he had not and did not know what cision to leave. That status by the night of Aug. 15, the village board met. Mr tendance.TheLandmark reached out multiple times by text and email to Mrozik, submitting a list of questions about her decision, but Mrozik declined to talk about the matter. It does not appear Mrozik was actively looking for a position outside of North Riverside and does not appear to have a job lined up at this time When the Landmark asked Scar piniti whether Mrozik had lined up a new position, she responded, “[Mrozik] has not indicated to me she does.” Scarpiniti said she was planning to post the job opening this week in the hope of filling the position by the end of September or in early October In addition to the recreation director, the department employs four full-time and one part-time staffers “I’d like to have someone in place very quickly,” said Scarpiniti, who in there may be one or more nal candidates for the job. rying to already map out a transition plan.”

e Landmark, August 17, 2022 15

The recent reversal of Roe v. Wade has understandably taken many by sur prise, and many have passionate feelings on the issue In crafting the Riverside resolution, however, no dissenting opinions were sought, so the board’s decision was made in a self-af fir ming echo chamber. Nor does there appear to be any actionable reason for the resolution. The state of Illinois already af fir ms the elements of the resolution, and the village of Riverside is le g ally bound to follow same. The resolution also proposed Illinois as a “sanctuary state.” What does this mean for the village? Have the policies and specific procedures been addressed in detail in the various village departments? In the future, I wish the board would consult its constituency before promulgating an opinion on such an impor tant topic We cannot assume that national media re por ts about majority opinions on abor tion apply to EvRiversideenshould Riverside mirror these re por ted views, on such a divisive topic, and with no specific impact on Riverside laws, this resolution fails to contribute anything positiveItispainful for me to write this letter, as I respect all of the board members, and I rarely publicly voice my thoughts on lightning rod issues. You will notice, by the way, that I have not disclosed my personal opinion on abor tion or re productive rights. Perhaps you would be sur prised. But then, since the Village Board of Trustees has already concluded that they re present my opinion, I suppose it is moot.

MROZIK Search for replacement from page

Mrozik’s departure is the latest in a series of village hall staffers who have left since April. Pam Foy, who served as Scarpiniti’s executive assistant and was handed some supervisory duties during the pandemic, left in April for a similar position in Bur r Ridge. In June, another administrative employee, Koula Tricoci, also left North Riverside for a similar job in Burr Ridge. Scarpiniti indicated that Tricoci left for higher pay while Foy may have been motivated to leave because her job in Burr Ridge also has some supervisory duties that she lost in North Riverside when the village hired a new finance director early in 2022. Attempts by the Landmark to reach Foy and Tricoci for comment were unsuccessful. Scarpiniti said there’s no link between those departures and Mrozik’s resignation, but in the past couple of years all has not been rosy inside village hall. During a spring 2021 mayoral/trustee election campaign where it was suggested positions and pay might be cut, clerical employees announced they were unionizing.However, after a frustrating year and a half of trying to negotiate a union contract, clerical employees reportedly have disbanded the union and Teamsters Local 705, which had been representing the employees, “have voluntarily disavowed interest in the group,” said“TheyScarpiniti.never wanted to unionize from the get-go, but they felt pressured because of the political pressure,” said Scarpiniti. “But they did demonstrate that the office personnel were underpaid, and the unionization brought that to the forefront.”

Cathy Maloney Ri verside 1

Resolution does not speak for all Riversiders I am disappointed in the Riverside Village Board of Trustees’ decision to adopt their Resolution Supporting Re productive Rights. I personally know many of the members of the board, and know them to be hard-working volunteers, and trust that they thought they were acting in the best interest of Riverside residents In this case, however, the board has acted beyond its remit. By issuing this resolution in the name of the village of Riverside, the board purpor ts to re present and speak for the whole village. It does not. The resolution was introduced and ad opted in a single board meeting. This im petuousness, on a topic that has gar nered thoughtful inter national debate for de cades, is concer ning. To my knowledge, there was no ground swell of public opinion clamoring for this resolution. Nor did the board solicit, in a methodical way, resident input on this very controversial issue. The village has oft stated that it values inclusivity. Did the board not wish to solicit any other opinions from residents who may have more nuanced re actions to the abortion debate?

LET TERS

Third departure this year

TERESA MROZIK

ik helped write a detailed escription, said Scarpiniti, eed to stay on a full month announcing her resignation initially wanting to give eeks’ notice. eresa is going to be missed,” piniti said. “She has been director for the village and has asset to our community She’s recreation department signifitenure and has made a sigontribution to the North Riverside North Riverside in March of a little more than three years in Riverside, where she worked to grow recreation programming. It was that experience that made her attractive to North Riverside, and she delivered. Under Mrozik’s direction, North Riverside Parks & Recreation became a community building organization, offering family fo cused events, including an annual “block party” on Desplaines Avenue, a new holiday season kickoff/tree-lighting celebration and the popular annual Autumn Fest/Chili Cook Off.The department diversified its recreation programming and most recently Mrozik sought to bolster youth programming beyond the department’s preschool/daycamp offeringsShe recently hired a youth coordinator, said Scarpiniti, to “tap into what she saw as an underutilized youth market. She felt there was a lot more programming that we could expand into.”

By BILL STONE Contributing Reporter

RBHS golfers ready to tee up new season

The commitment of the senior-dominated Riverside-Brookfield High School girls volleyball team under new head coach Caitlin Staib-Lipinski already has been loud and clear“This preseason has been awesome They’ve bought into what I’m telling them,” Staib-Lipinski said. “They’re trusting the process. Our gym is vibrating with noise and sound so we’re high energized, which is what I want.”TheBulldogs have seven seniors and five varsity returnees from the 2021 team that fin ished 14-21 and won the Metro Suburban Conference Red Division with a perfect 6-0 mark, their first league championship since 2016. Senior outside/right-side hitter Sophia Cozzone, senior defensive specialist Elise Verdin and sophomore middle hitter Sofia Owens ear ned All-MSC honors. Also back are three seniors -- middle Reagan Mulcrone, outside/right sides Anasofia Zaper and Christina Savaglio and junior setter Annabel Krue ger, who played in five matches. This is Mulcrone’s fourth varsity season and third for Co zzone and Verdin “It’s nice having the majority of seniors on the team, because some of us have played together in the past so we already have some sort of connection,” Cozzone said. “The preseason has started of f really good. We all are trying our best and we want to win.” Last season, Cozzone (147), Owens (109) and Verdin (106) led the Bulldogs in kills and Owens (32) and Mulcrone and Zaper (23) were tops in total blocks Cozzone (452) and Verdin (304) had the most serve receptions, while Verdin (205) and Cozzone (193) were third and fourth in digs. Staib-Lipinski played volleyball at Brad ley University and was a member of Na perville Central’s 2005 state championship team as a junior. Among her goals is “to be the toughest serving team in the confer ence.” Verdin (35) and Zaper (25) were sec ond and third in aces last season. The Bulldogs be gan a new weight training re gimen on Aug. 15. New varsity assistant Amy Frey, a for mer RBHS player, has helped in rejuvenating team traditions like pasta“Thedinners.[preseason] vibe is really good. We’re getting pushed very hard by Coach Staib and I r eally appreciate it,” Zaper said. “I can really feel a connection with the team, even people I haven’t played with for asSeniorslong.” back with the program after oneyear absences are defensive specialist Kira Conroy, who played club beach volleyball in 2021, and outside/right side Sammi Reeze, who improved through club play and clin ics. Junior newcomers are middle Addie Blomg ren, setter Paige Shipley and defensive specialist Kelley Tyler. “I’d say we have a lot of potential as a team,” Verdin said. “Being that this is our senior season for so many people, that just makes it a lot more exciting. If we can lead our team to [winning] re gionals or even sec tionals, that would just make it an even betterTheexperience.”Bulldogs have lost their re gional opener the past two seasons “I’m looking to get a lot farther in the postseason,” Mulcrone said. “Everybody’s more experienced so our skills are at a high er level.”

Senior-laden Bulldogs hoping to be ‘toug hest serving team’ in league

RBHS volleyball looks to improve on 2021 campaign

Behind nine seniors and nine retur ning varsity letterwinners, the Riverside-Brookfield High School boys golf team has high hopes in the Metro Suburban Conference and beyond“[Our goals are a] strong showing in the MSC regular season and conference tour nament and either team or several individu als advancing to sectionals,” said coach Jim Festle.Senior Marc Kaplan and junior Joey Gar vey are co-captains and were two of the Bulldogs’ four 2021 IHSA Class 3A individual sectional qualifiers. Kaplan shot 84 and Gar vey 86 at the Payton Regional to beat the individual cutoff score of 88. Kaplan and Garvey followed with 84 and 85, respectively, at the Lyons Township Sectional. Senior Murphy Regan (98) also retur ns from the regional lineup Other retur ning letterwinners are seniors Will Domanowski, Dan Gilhooley, Aidan Finkle, Jake Tyler, Jake O’Brien and Gus Mendoza. Varsity newcomers are juniors Finn Wambay, Ben Wilkowski and Kevin Cronin and senior Hunter Mc Clintock.TheBulldogs finished sixth at last season’s MSC Blue Division Meet. Garvey (91, tied for 27th) and Kaplan (93, 29th) finished among the top 30. Regan (96) and Domanowski (100) were the team’s No. 5 and 6 scores. This lineup could go even deeper. “[Our strengths are] captains Marc Ka plan’s and Joey Garvey’s leadership, good senior class, and several sophomores and freshman that will play in varsity matches this year,” Festle said. RBHS girls golf

Boys return 2 sectional quali ers, girls program growing By BILL STONE Contributing Reporter

Sports16 e Landmark, August 17, 2022

The continued progress of the RBHS girls golf program has resulted in a second coach.

Fourth-year head coach Doug Schultz now has veteran RBHS coach Jason Rech as an assistant as the Bulldogs’ tur nout has grown to 23 total from 18 with two seniors in 2021. The roster includes 2021 IHSA Class 2A in dividual state qualifier Mayan Covarrubias and 11 “Theynewcomers.’recoming with great talent,” Schultz said. “The girls that are returning re ally put some great effort into their summer rounds so you can see there’s improvement.

It’s a great feeling to see the growth in numbers but also the growth in talent.” Covarrubias, a junior, shot 101 at state after arguably her greatest round with the Bulldogs, a 79 at the Hinsdale South Sectional that shared the final advancing score for the top 10 individuals not among the three ad vancing teams. Covarrubias ear ned All-MSC honors after tying for fourth at the MSC Meet (85) and taking third overall including dual results.Seniors Sophie Swicionis, Ava Storandt, Amelia Gardiner and Abby Roedel, juniors Malia Davis and Kate Newberry and sophomore Ellie Megall also retur n from the postseason lineups. At the Sandburg Regional, Swicionis and Megall (107s) were four strokes from the in dividual sectional-qualifying cutoff score, followed by Storandt (119) and Davis (122). RBHS finished fifth (406). Swicionis (110, tied for 31st), Storandt (112, 35th) and Davis (115, 37th) had counting scores at the MSC Meet. Newberry (119, 42nd), Gardiner (131, tied for 51st) and Roedel (145, 58th) were the team’s No. 6-7-8 scorers. RBHS was fifth (421). Several newcomers strengthen the lineup, including includes freshman Lucia Vazzana and two sisters, sophomore Taryn Schultz, a transfer from Fenwick, and freshman Tali Schultz. They are not related to coach Schultz. “We’d like to get more individuals qualifying for getting into sectionals,” Doug Schultz said. “We’re still going after a real competi tive conference with St. Francis [the favorite], but we really feel like we have the chance to compete with them or maybe for second

• Valid Illinois Professional Educator License with an endorsement in School Psychology

WANTED TO BUY WANTEDITEMS:MILITARY Helmets, medals, patches, uniforms, weapons, flags, photos, paperwork, Also toy soldiers – lead, plastic –other misc. toys. Call Uncle 708-522-3400Gary

Qualifications:

11. Prepare, create and update user/technical solutions.recommendation13.datanetwork,12.computerdocumentationsprocedureandprovidetraining.Assemble,test,andinstalltelecommunicationandequipmentandcabling.Participateinresearchandoftechnology

*To inquire about this job position call the North Riverside Police Department@ 708-762.5414, or Email Commander C. Boenzi cboenzi@northriverside-il.org If you want to fill out a job application for this position visit the North Riverside Police Department -2359 S. Desplaines Ave. North Riverside Illinois 60546.

8. Perform and participate in disaster recovery activities, such as, backup procedures, data recovery, and system recovery 9.planning.Assistend-users with computer problems or queries. Troubleshoot systems as needed and meet with users to analyze specific system 10.needs.Ensure the uniformity, reliability and security of system resources including network, hardware, software and other forms of systems and data.

VB Modernscripts.office procedures, methods and computer equipment. Technical writing, office productivity tools and database packages. Ability to: Maintain physical condition appropriate to the performance of assigned duties and responsibilities, which may include the following: - Walking, standing or sitting for extended periods of time - Operating assigned equipment - Lift 50 pounds of equipment, supplies, and materials without -assistanceWorking in and around computer equipped vehicles Maintain effective audio-visual discrimination and perception needed for: - Making observations - Communicating with others - Reading and writing - Operating assigned equipment and vehicles Maintain mental capacity allowing for effective interaction and communication with others. Maintain reasonable and predictable attendance. Work overtime as operations require. Experience and Training Experience:Guidelines Three years of network/system administration in the public or private sector, maintaining a minimum of 75 Client Workstation computers. AND Training: Possession of a Bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university with major coursework in computer science or a related field. Certifications in Microsoft Server Administration, Networking, Applications and Cisco PossessionNetworking.of a valid Illinois Driver License is required at the time of Vaccinationappointment.against COVID-19 strongly preferred. WORKING CONDITIONS Work in a computer environment; sustained posture in a seated position for prolonged periods of time; continuous exposure to computer screens; work in and around computerized vehicles outdoor and garage facility; lifting heavy equipment, communication cabling and wiring into walls and ceilings.

6. Test, configure, deploy, and support security systems, such as, facility access system, video & audio system.

4 Assist the recreation department in set up, construction, and repair of all special event props. Qualifications: 21 years of age. A valid Illinois State Driver License (Class A). In good physical condition with sufficient strength to lift and hold 50 Interestedpounds.candidates shall submit an application in person or by email: John Beto, Director of Parks 401 Thatcher Avenue River Forest, Illinois 60305 jbeto@rfparks.com708-366-6660x103

• Master’s Degree preferred. Demonstrates knowledge of special education legislation and acts in accordance with those mandates; follows policies and procedures of the District. Develops and implements activities that encourage students to be life-long learners. Identify and assess the learning, development, and needs of individuals and groups, as well as, the environmental factors that affect learning and school success. Uses assessment data about the students and their environments in developing appropriate interventions and programs. Conducts appropriate individual psychoeducational assessments for children who have or are suspected of having a disability and provides written reports of assessment results. Participates in all staff conferences of students having received psychological evaluation or re-evaluation, including hospital discharge. Provide support to special education personnel including assisting staff with development of functional behavioral analysis and behavior intervention plans, modeling “best practices” and assisting special educators with instructional practices. For a complete list of duties, please visit our website at https://www.district90.org/about/employment Interested candidates should complete the online application available at www.district90.org.

Department. This serves the public through enforcement of Village fire & life safety codes and ordinances; through inspections of residential, commercial and industrial properties; and provides consultation and information to residents, architects, attorneys, fire services personnel and builders regarding laws, rules, regulations and policies relating to fire and life safety. Applicants are encouraged to visit the Village of Oak Park’s website Prod.http://www.oak-park.us/jobs.Dev.Associatesought by Amount Inc in Chicago, IL to write effcnt & elgnt cde bsd on sftwre reqs. Tlcmmtng is prmttd. Apply at jobpostingtoday.com Ref# 12991. Quantitative Researcher sought by Magma Capital Funds LLC in Chicago, IL to conduct statistical analysis of mkt data, historical trends, & relationships across multiple assets. Reqs: Master’s Deg in Computational Finance, Fin’l Engg, Maths, Statistics, or a closely rltd field & 1 yr exp in job offd or rltd analyst position. Must also possess exp w/using prgmg langs using Python, C++, R, or Matlab to carry out research & production in quantitative directed envrmt; bldg machine learning, deep learning models, & popular machine learning/statistical packages such as sci-kit learn, PyTorch, or TensorFlow; & etc. Apply online: capitalfunds.com/careers/https://magmaCROSSING GUARD The Forest Park Police Department is seeking qualified individuals for the position of Crossing Guard. This position requires flexible hours during days when schools are in session. A background investigation and drug screening will be conducted prior to consideration for the position. Applications available at Village Hall, 517 Desplaines Avenue or on-line at www. forestpark.net and should be returned to Vanessa Moritz, HR Director, at Village Hall. For additional information, contact Dora Murphy at 708-615-6223 or write dmurApplicationsphy@forestpark.net.accepted until position is filled. EOE.

• Comfortable working outdoors in various weather conditions

7. Communicate effectively both orally

The Village of Oak Park is seeking a qualified candidate for the position of Fire Inspector Part-Time in the Fire North Riverside Police Department (Crossing Guard Application) School Crossing Guard Job Summary

The Village of Oak Park is seeking qualified candidates for the position of Emergency Preparedness and Response Coordinator in the Health Department/Village Manager’s Office. This position will coordinate disaster response, crisis management and medical countermeasure dispensing/ distribution activities for the Village of Oak Park, provide disaster preparedness training, and prepare emergency plans and procedures for natural (e.g., floods, earthquakes), wartime, or technological (e.g., nuclear power plant emergencies, hazardous materials spills, biological releases) or disasters. This single class position is also responsible for the complex administrative duties required for state, federal and local response processes and grant management. Applicants are encouraged to visit the Village of Oak Park’s website http://www.oakpark.us/jobs. Interested and qualified applicants must complete a Village of Oak Park application. First review of applications will be August 5, 2022. Cloud Platform Engineer sought by UncommonX Inc. in Chicago, IL to ensure automation to architect solutions internally & for clients using OpenStack & Public Clouds (AWS & Azure). Reqs: Bach Deg in Comp Sci or rltd field & 3 yrs exp in job offd or rltd systems engg or dev-ops role. Must also possess working exp with/ Kibana, Kafka, Kubernetes, GitHub, Bitbucket, Jenkins, Ansible, Terraform, Kops, Jira, & Confluence; dvlpg s/ware solutions w/ Python, C#, PowerShell, Shell, Ruby, or Perl; Cloud architecture technologies: AWS & Azure; & 2 yrs exp bldg Kubernetes infrastructure resources in private & public clouds & leveraging infrastructure as Code technologies. Apply online at: https://uncommonx.com/ careers/ FIRE INSPECTOR

SUPERVISION RECEIVED AND EXERCISED Reports directly to the Information Technology Services Director. EXAMPLE OF DUTIES: Essential and other important duties and responsibilities may include, but are not limited to, the following: Essential duties and responsibilities

MARKETPLACE GARAGE SALE Forest Park GARAGE SALE 1425 MARENGO FRI – SAT – SUN 8/19 – 8/20 – 8/21 9AM TO 5PM Some furniture, clothing, shoes, tools; some dishes, some jewelry. Rain or shine. Forest Park GARAGE SALE 1244 S MARENGO FRI AUG 19 & SAT AUG 8AM-4PM20 Electrical tubes, clothing items, household items, guitars, DVDs, CDs, and more!

The Village of Oak Park is seeking qualified candidates for the position of Parking Enforcement Officer in the Police Department Field Services Division. This position will perform a variety of duties and responsibilities involved in the enforcement of Village parking regulations; and to provide general information and assistance to the public. Applicants are encouraged to visit the Village of Oak Park’s website http://www.oak-park.us/. Interested and qualified applicants must complete a Village of Oak Park application.

• Assist children, parents, and other pedestrians as they cross the street before and after school

• Availability during the school week/hours

3. Configure, test, and deploy system servers, such as, file, print, Internet, e-mail, database, and application servers.

RIVER FOREST PARK DISTRICTSPECIALISTPARK

Other important responsibilities and duties 1. Train users in the area of existing, new or modified computer systems and procedures.

c. Landscape maintenance: Soil grading and preparation, tree planting, tree trimming, tree spraying, tree watering, mulch bed maintenance, and flower bed maintenance. d. Construction: Installation of park/ playground equipment, park benches, park signage, retaining walls, and drainage systems.

1. Ensure that best in class customer service is provided to both internal and external customers and also embrace, support, and promote the Village’s core values, beliefs and culture.

• High School diploma or GED certificate

• Manage the flow of traffic

• Prefer at least 5 years of successful educational experience in both general and special education; and at least five years of successful experience in evaluating students, collaborating, and problem-solving with school and District teams.

5. Configure, test, and deploy end-user systems, such as, workstations, laptops, mobile devices, printers, and software.

The North Riverside Police Department is looking for a dependable person to fill a School Crossing Guard position. Your job is to ensure the safety of children and other pedestrians as they cross the street before and after school. While wearing your safety vest and holding a light-weight stop sign, you will check for oncoming traffic, step into the road, and direct vehicles to come to a stop before instructing people to cross. You must be comfortable working outdoors in various types of weather. There will be an interview by the Police Chief and/or his designee. You must be able to pass a background and drug test for this position. Rate of pay will be discussed during the interview process.

The Landmark, August 17, 2022 17 Growing Community Media

HOURS: 9:00 A.M.– 5:00 P.M. MON–FRI BY PHONE: (708) 613-3333 | BY FAX: (708) 467-9066 BY E-MAIL: EMAIL@GROWINGCOMMUNITYMEDIA.ORG Deadline is Monday at 5:00 p.m. HELP WANTED HELP WANTED Class specifications are intended to present a descriptive list of the range of duties performed by employees in the class. Specifications are not intended to reflect all duties performed within the job. DEFINITION To perform various network/system administration, computer support, and operational activities for the Village including computer system setup, configuration, and testing.

2. Configure, test, and deploy network systems, such as, firewalls, routers, switches, wireless equipment, network servers and storage arrays.

and in writing. 8. Establish and maintain effective working relationships with those contacted in the course of work. 9. Perform related duties and responsibilities as required. KnowledgeQUALIFICATIONSof: Principals and procedures of computer systems, such as, data communication, hierarchical structure, backups, testing and critical commandandcomputerPrinciplesauto-attendant.PBX,communication,technology,TelecommunicationsandserialCAT5/6,CablingswitchesincludingconfigurationNetworkOS,OSofincludingserversconfigurationHardwareanalysis.andsoftwareof.computers,andmobiledevices,computingenvironmentWindowsServerandDesktopandapplications,Unix/LinuxVMware,iOS/Android.protocols,security,andadministration,firewalls,routers,andwirelesstechnology.andwiring,includingfibernetwork,telephone,communication,termination,punch-down.theoryandincludingVoiP,serialwirelessprotocols,analog,fax,voicemailandandmethodsofprogramming,codingtesting,includingpowershell,scripting,macros,and

PREPAREDNESSEMERGENCYANDRESPONSECOORDINATOR

• Communication Skills

2. Assist with the custodial maintenance of all Park District facilities.

• Report suspicious activity School Crossing Guard Requirements and Qualifications

2. Participate in the preparation of various activity reports. 3. Travel and support remote facilities and partner agencies. 4. Operate, administer and manage the Village and Public Safety computer systems, including E-911 center, in-vehicle computer 5.systems.Prepare clear and logical reports and program documentation of procedures, processes, and 6.configurations.Completeprojects on a timely and efficient manner.

7. Monitor and auditing of networks, systems, and user activities to ensure security and efficiency of systems. Create scripts and reports of detail activities for regular review.

4. Configure, test, and monitor server and end-user systems for security, such as, user accounts, login scripts, file access privileges, and group policy management.

3. Assist with any equipment repairs for the Park District. This includes but not limited to vehicles, tractors, any facility, or program equipment.

School Crossing Guard Duties and Responsibilities

Starting Salary Range: $17.50$20.38/HR plus full benefits Working Hours: The Park Specialist is a full time non-exempt position working 40 hours per week, plus overtime. The scheduled work hours for this position are Monday – Friday, 7:00 AM to 3:30 PM, including ½ hour unpaid lunch. Hours may be shifted occasionally to accommodate specific Summary:tasks. The Park Specialist is responsible for assisting the Director of Parks with the maintenance operations of the Park District grounds, facilities, and equipment. The work includes, but not limited to: 1. Landscape maintenance operations for the Park District. This includes but not limited to: a. Turf maintenance: Mowing, irrigation, fertilizing, seeding, weed control, and trash removal. b. Athletic field maintenance: Baseball diamond infields, soccer fields, football fields, basketball courts, tennis courts, and installation and maintenance of necessary apparatus of each field use.

HELP WANTED • NETWORK SPECIALIST PARKINGOFFICERENFORCEMENT

River Forest Public Schools District 90 is seeking an experienced School Psychologist

PUBLIC COMMENTS Any comments concerning the proposed substantial amendment may be submitted in writing to the Village of Oak Park, 123 Madison Street, Oak Park, IL 60302, via: email to Vanessa Matheny, Grants Supervisor, at vmatheny@oakpark.us, or at the virtual Public Hearing to be held from 1:00PM2:00PM on September 19, 2022. Please send a request to the above referenced email address to attend the virtual hearing. Rea sonable accommodations will be made for persons with disabilities and non-English speaking per sons, as needed.

LEGAL NOTICE

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Parking included. 708-657-4226 CITY RENTALS 3 BEDROOMS 911 N LECLAIR, CHICAGO 60651 3bd, dining room, kitchen, living room, bathroom, closed in back porch. Heat $1150included.per month. 1 month security. Call 773-626-5751 1 RETAIL SPACE FOR RENT/SHOPPING CENTER FOREST PARK, IL. 1,635 Sq. Ft. (END CAP) Excellent Condition. Recently Updated. *Heavy traffic location. Ideal for: CLEANERS, FAST FOOD, RETAIL PRODUCTS, OFFICES, ETC.! (SPACE FOR A DRIVE-THRU BUILD) *Special Rates. If Leave message, Include: Your Name, Phone Number and Type of Business. TEXT or CALL: (708)828-6491 HOME SERVICES ELECTRICALELECTRICAL A&A ELECTRIC Let an American Veteran do your work We install plugs for battery-operated vehicles We fix any electrical problem and do small jobs We install Surge Protectors • Home Re-wiring • New Plugs & Switches Added • New circuit breaker boxes • Code violations corrected Service upgrades,100-200 amp • Garage & A/C lines installed Fast Emergency Service | Residential • Commercial • Industrial Free Home Evaluations | Lic. • Bonded • Ins. • Low Rates • Free Est. 708-409-0988 • 708-738-3848 Sr. Discounts • 30 Yrs. Exp. Servicing Oak Park • All surrounding suburbs • Chicago area Ceiling Fans Installed PUBLIC NOTICESPUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES FLOORS KLIS FLOORING INC. New hardwood flooring installation & pergo. Sanding, re-finishing, staining. Low prices, insured. Call: 773-671-4996 • klisflooring.comwww. RENTALS CEMENTCEMENT MAGANA CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION “QUALITY IS OUR FOUNDATION” ESTABLISHED IN 1987 COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL RESIDENTIAL 708.442.7720 FREE ESTIMATES LICENSED, BONDED & INSURED Mike’s708-296-2060HomeRepair Drywall H Painting H Tile Plumbing H Electric H Floors Windows H Doors H Siding Ask Us What We Don’t Do HANDYMAN 708-488-9411 CURT'S HANDYMAN SERVICE Drywall Repair • Painting Fans Installed • Carpentry Trim Gutter Cleaning • Window Repair Free estimates Excellent References No Job Too Small HAULING BASEMENT CLEANING Appliances & Furniture Removal Pickup & 773-722-6900Delivery. PAINTING CLASSIC PAINTING Fast & Painting/Taping/NeatPlasterRepair Low Cost • 708.749.0011 INVESTMENT SECURITIES ADVICE WHO DO YOU TRUST? • Former Investment Banker, Advisor, and Fund Manager, Now Retired • 50 Years Experience • Education Backgroud: Economics and Law Army Officer, Vietnam Veteran • Residence: Last 15 Years Riverside, over 50 Years in River Forest • Will Advise No More than 5 Accounts • Minimum Account Size Value $500,000 EMAIL CONTACT FOR QUESTIONS AND INFORMATION: mikend7412@gmail.com Published in Wednesday Journal, August 17, 2022 PUBLIC NOTICE PROPOSED 2nd SUBSTANTIONAL AMENDMENT TO THE VILLAGE OF OAK PARK COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT • PROGRAM YEAR 2021 ACTION PLAN Date of Publication: August 17, 2022 Village of Oak Park 123 Madison Street Oak Park, IL 60302 (708) 383-6400 A revised Public Notice is hereby given of a proposed Substantial Amendment to the Community De velopment Block Program (CDBG) Program Year (PY) 2021 Action AdditionalPlan. funding allocations us ing $136,000 in returned CDBG PY2020 funds to the following CBDG Infrastructure projects car ried out by Village of Oak Park Public Works to be completed in PY2021: An additional $136,000 for street resurfacing for the al ready approved PY2021 project. These projects will be completed in Low to Moderate Income Areas. On October 25, 2004, the Vil lage of Oak Park granted a loan through its CDBG-funded Revolv ing Loan Fund to Oak Park Resi dence Corporation in the amount of $135,663 that was secured by a mortgage against the title to 7 Van Buren St., Oak Park, IL. On Octo ber 25, 2024, The Village of Oak Park is scheduled to forgive the entirety of the loan amount with no future payment owed, and the Village of Oak Park shall record a release of mortgage for said loan at the Cook County Recorder of TheDeeds.proposed substantial amend ments are on file at the Village of Oak Park, 123 Madison Street, Oak Park, IL 60302 and is avail able for public examination and copying weekdays from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. CST from August 17, 2022 5.p.m. to September 16, 2022.

Published in Wednesday Journal August 17, 2022

The Village of Oak Park will re ceive sealed proposals from qualified companies at the Public Works Center, 201 South Boule vard, Oak Park, Illinois 60302 Monday through Friday, 7:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. local time until 3:00 p.m. on Thursday, Septem ber 15, 2022 for the following: Village of Oak Park Water Distribution Leak Detection System Project Number: 22-124 Proposal documents may be obtained from the Village’s web site at http://www.oak-park.us/ bid. For questions, please call Public Works at (708) 358-5700 during the above hours.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON 2022-2023 BUDGET PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN by the Board of Education of Oak Park Elementary School District Number 97, Cook County, Illinois, that it will hold a public hearing on its proposed budget for the 20222023 school year on the 27th day of September, 2022, at 7:00 p.m. The hearing will be held at the District Office, 260 Madison Street, Oak Park, Illinois, 60302. Such proposed budget shall be on file conveniently available for public inspection from and after August 17, 2022, in the Business Office of Oak Park Elementary School District 97, between the hours of 8:00 am and 4:30 pm. The Board of Education intends to adopt the proposed 2022-2023 budget following the public hearing.

CALENDAR NUMBER: 19-22-Z APPLICATION: The Zoning Board of Appeals (“Board”) will conduct a public hearing on a special use permit application filed by the Applicant, H & H Legacy, Inc. dba It Takes a Village in Oak Park, LLC, to operate a day care facility pursuant to Section 8.3 (“Table 8-1: Use Matrix) of the Oak Park Zoning Ordinance at the property located at 6139-6147 North Avenue, Oak Park, Illinois, Property Index Number 16-05-103-002-0000 in the NA North Avenue Zoning ADistrict.copy of the application and applicable documents are on file and are available for inspection at Village Hall, Development Customer Services Department, 123 Madison Street, Oak Park, Illinois 60302, Monday through Friday between 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 Thep.m. Board will conduct the public hearing remotely with live audio available and optional video. The hearing will be streamed live and archived online for on-demand viewing at www.oak-park.us/ commissiontv as well as cablecast on VOP-TV, which is available to Comcast subscribers on channel 6 and ATT U-Verse subscribers on channel 99. The remote public hearing is authorized pursuant to Section 7(e) of the Open Meetings Act. The Village President has determined that an in-person public hearing is not practical or prudent due to the COVID-19 outbreak during Governor JB Pritzker’s current disaster proclamation. It is also not feasible to have a person present at the public hearing due to public safety concerns related to the COVID-19 Alloutbreak.interested persons will be given an opportunity to be heard at the public hearing. Interested persons may provide written evidence, testimony and public comment on the application by email to Zoning@oak-park.us or by drop off in the Oak Park Payment Drop Box across from the entrance to Village Hall, 123 Madison Street, Oak Park, Illinois, to be received no later than 5:00 p.m. on September 7, 2022. An individual’s name and their testimony or comment will be read aloud into the record at the public hearing if received no later than 30 minutes prior to the start of the public hearing. Interested persons may also sign up to participate in-person in the hearing to cross examine the applicant and its witnesses, present evidence, testimony or public comment by emailing Zoning@oak-park.us before 5:00 PM on the day prior to the public hearing. Individuals who sign up to participate in-person will receive an email from Village staff with information about how to join the hearing online through Zoom web-conference means or by Thephone.public hearing may be adjourned by the Board to another date without further notice by public announcement at the hearing setting forth the time and place thereof.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE representation as to quality or quantity of title and without recourse to Plaintiff and in “AS IS” condition. The sale is further subject to confirmation by the court. Upon payment in full of the amount bid, the purchaser will receive a Certificate of Sale that will entitle the purchaser to a deed to the real estate after confirmation of the sale. The property will NOT be open for inspection and plaintiff makes no representation as to the condition of the property. Prospective bidders are admonished to check the court file to verify all information. If this property is a condominium unit, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale, other than a mortgagee, shall pay the assessments and the legal fees required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/9(g)(1) and (g)(4). If this property is a condominium unit which is part of a common interest community, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale other than a mortgagee shall pay the assessments required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/18.5(g-1). IF YOU ARE THE MORTGAGOR (HOMEOWNER), YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO REMAIN IN POSSESSION FOR 30 DAYS AFTER ENTRY OF AN ORDER OF POSSESSION, IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 15-1701(C) OF THE ILLINOIS MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE LAW. You will need a photo identification issued by a government agency (driver’s license, passport, etc.) in order to gain entry into our building and the foreclosure sale room in Cook County and the same identification for sales held at other county venues where The Judicial Sales Corporation conducts foreclosure sales. For information, contact HEAVNER, BEYERS & MIHLAR, LLC Plaintiff’s Attorneys, 601 E. William St., DECATUR, IL, 62523 (217) 422-1719. Please refer to file number 402910. THE JUDICIAL SALES CORPORAOneTION South Wacker Drive, 24th Floor, Chicago, IL 60606-4650 (312) 236SALE You can also visit The Judicial Sales Corporation at www.tjsc.com for a 7 day status report of pending sales. HEAVNER, BEYERS & MIHLAR, LLC 601 E. William St. DECATUR IL, 62523 thatlectionNOTE:TJSC#:CaseAttorneyAttorneyE-Mail:Fax217-422-1719#:217-422-1754CookPleadings@hsbattys.comFileNo.402910Code.40387Number:18CH0834841-2137PursuanttotheFairDebtCol-PracticesAct,youareadvisedPlaintiff’sattorneyisdeemedtobe a debt collector attempting to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. Case # 18 CH 08348 INI3199894THECIRCUIT COURT OF COOK COUNTY, ILLINOIS COUNTY DEPARTMENT - CHANCERY DEUTSCHEDIVISIONBANK NATIONAL TRUST COMPANY, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE REGISTERED HOLDERS OF MORGAN STANLEY ABS CAPITAL I INC. TRUST 2007-HE7 MORTGAGE PASSTHROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES Plaintiff,2007-HE7

The real estate is improved with a residence. Sale terms: 25% down of the highest bid by certified funds at the close of the sale payable to The Judicial Sales Corporation. No third party checks will be accepted. The balance, including the Judicial Sale fee for the Abandoned Residential Property Municipality Relief Fund, which is calculated on residential real estate at the rate of $1 for each $1,000 or fraction thereof of the amount paid by the purchaser not to exceed $300, in certified funds/or wire transfer, is due within twenty-four (24) hours. No fee shall be paid by the mortgagee acquiring the residential real estate pursuant to its credit bid at the sale or by any mortgagee, judgment creditor, or other lienor acquiring the residential real estate whose rights in and to the residential real estate arose prior to the sale. The subject property is subject to general real estate taxes, special assessments, or special taxes levied against said real estate and is offered for sale without any representation as to quality or quantity of title and without recourse to Plaintiff and in “AS IS” condition. The sale is further subject to confirmation by the court. Upon payment in full of the amount bid, the purchaser will receive a Certificate of Sale that will entitle the purchaser to a deed to the real estate after confirmation of the sale. The property will NOT be open for inspection and plaintiff makes no representation as to the condition of the property. Prospective bidders are admonished to check the court file to verify all information. If this property is a condominium unit, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale, other than a mortgagee, shall pay the assessments and the legal fees required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/9(g)(1) and (g)(4). If this property is a condominium unit which is part of a common interest community, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale other than a mortgagee shall pay the assessments required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/18.5(g-1). IF YOU ARE THE MORTGAGOR (HOMEOWNER), YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO REMAIN IN POSSESSION FOR 30 DAYS AFTER ENTRY OF AN ORDER OF POSSESSION, IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 15-1701(C) OF THE ILLINOIS MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE LAW. You will need a photo identification issued by a government agency (driver’s license, passport, etc.) in order to gain entry into our building and the foreclosure sale room in Cook County and the same identification for sales held at other county venues where The Judicial Sales Corporation conducts foreclosure sales. For information, examine the court file, CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C. Plaintiff’s Attorneys, 15W030 NORTH FRONTAGE ROAD, SUITE 100, BURR RIDGE, IL, 60527 (630) THE794-9876JUDICIAL SALES CORPORAOneTIONSouth Wacker Drive, 24th Floor, Chicago, IL 60606-4650 (312) 236SALE You can also visit The Judicial Sales Corporation at www.tjsc.com for a 7

PUBLIC

7472022DefendantsCH00988SOUTHHUMPHREY AVENUE OAK PARK, IL 60304 NOTICE OF SALE PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the above cause on May 13, 2022, an agent for The Judicial Sales Corporation, will at 10:30 AM on September 19, 2022, at The Judicial Sales Corporation, One South Wacker, 1st Floor Suite 35R, Chicago, IL, 60606, sell at a public sale to the highest bidder, as set forth below, the following described real estate: Commonly known as 747 SOUTH HUMPHREY AVENUE, OAK PARK, IL 60304 Property Index No. 16-17-122-034-0000

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING VILLAGE OF OAK PARK ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS

-v.GARY HOLMAN, ILLINOIS HOUSING DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY

/s/ Jung OakBoardPresidentKimofEducationParkElementary School District Dated:97 August 17, 2022 Published in Wednesday Journal August 17, 2022

Published in Wednesday Journal, August 17, 2022

NOTICE OF SALE PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the above cause on June 7, 2022, an agent for The Judicial Sales Corporation, will at 10:30 AM on September 9, 2022, at The Judicial Sales Corporation, One South Wacker, 1st Floor Suite 35R, Chicago, IL, 60606, sell at a public sale to the highest bidder, as set forth below, the following described real estate: Commonly known as 405 S HOME AVE, #202, OAK PARK, IL 60302 Property Index No. 16-07-323-048-1009 The real estate is improved with a residence. Sale terms: 25% down of the highest bid by certified funds at the close of the sale payable to The Judicial Sales Corporation. No third party checks will be accepted. The balance, including the Judicial Sale fee for the Abandoned Residential Property Municipality Relief Fund, which is calculated on residential real estate at the rate of $1 for each $1,000 or fraction thereof of the amount paid by the purchaser not to exceed $300, in certified funds/or wire transfer, is due within twenty-four (24) hours. No fee shall be paid by the mortgagee acquiring the residential real estate pursuant to its credit bid at the sale or by any mortgagee, judgment creditor, or other lienor acquiring the residential real estate whose rights in and to the residential real estate arose prior to the sale. The subject property is subject to general real estate taxes, special assessments, or special taxes levied against said real estate and is offered for sale without any representation as to quality or quantity of title and without recourse to Plaintiff and in “AS IS” condition. The sale is further subject to confirmation by the court. Upon payment in full of the amount bid, the purchaser will receive a Certificate of Sale that will entitle the purchaser to a deed to the real estate after confirmation of the sale. The property will NOT be open for inspection and plaintiff makes no representation as to the condition of the property. Prospective bidders are admonished to check the court file to verify all information. If this property is a condominium unit, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale, other than a mortgagee, shall pay the assessments and the legal fees required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/9(g)(1) and (g)(4). If this property is a condominium unit which is part of a common interest community, the purchaser of the unit at the foreclosure sale other than a mortgagee shall pay the assessments required by The Condominium Property Act, 765 ILCS 605/18.5(g-1). IF YOU ARE THE MORTGAGOR (HOMEOWNER), YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO REMAIN IN POSSESSION FOR 30 DAYS AFTER ENTRY OF AN ORDER OF POSSESSION, IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 15-1701(C) OF THE ILLINOIS MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE LAW. You will need a photo identification issued by a government agency (driver’s

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE day status report of pending sales. CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C. 15W030 NORTH FRONTAGE ROAD, SUITE 100 BURR RIDGE IL, 60527 thatlectionNOTE:TJSC#:CaseAttorneyAttorneyAttorneyE-Mail:630-794-5300pleadings@il.cslegal.comFileNo.14-22-00302ARDCNo.00468002Code.21762Number:2022CH0098842-1923PursuanttotheFairDebtCol-PracticesAct,youareadvisedPlaintiff’sattorneyisdeemedto be a debt collector attempting to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. Case # 2022 CH 00988 INI3199376THECIRCUIT COURT OF COOK COUNTY, ILLINOIS COUNTY DEPARTMENT - CHANCERY DIVISION FIFTH THIRD BANK, NATIONAL ASPlaintiff,SOCIATION; vs. CARLA L. NIETO AKA CARLA NIETO; ALVARO M. NIETO AKA ALVARO NIETO; PORTFOLIO PUBLICNOTICE20Defendants,ASSOCIATESRECOVERYLLC;CH1035OFSALENOTICEIS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the above entitled cause Intercounty Judicial Sales Corporation will on Monday, September 19, 2022 at the hour of 11 a.m. in their office at 120 West Madison Street, Suite 718A, Chicago, Illinois, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, as set forth below, the following described mortgaged real estate: P.I.N. Commonly16-17-322-023-0000.knownas1113 South Humphrey Avenue, Oak Park, IL 60304. The mortgaged real estate is improved with a single family residence. If the subject mortgaged real estate is a unit of a common interest community, the purchaser of the unit other than a mortgagee shall pay the assessments required by subsection (g-1) of Section 18.5 of the Condominium Property Act. Sale terms: 10% down by certified funds, balance, by certified funds, within 24 hours. No refunds. The property will NOT be open for inspection. For information call Sales Department at Plaintiff’s Attorney, Manley Deas Kochalski, LLC, One East Wacker Drive, Chicago, Illinois 60601. (614) 220-5611. 20-001990 ADC INTERCOUNTYF2 JUDICIAL SALES CORPORATION intercountyjudicialsales.com I3200592

PUBLIC NOTICES NOTICES

The Landmark, August 17, 2022 19 CLASSIFIED BY PHONE: (708) 613-3333 BY FAX: (708) 467-9066 BY E-MAIL: EMAIL@GROWINGCOMMUNITYMEDIA.ORG REAL ESTATE FOR SALE license, passport, etc.) in order to gain entry into our building and the foreclosure sale room in Cook County and the same identification for sales held at other county venues where The Judicial Sales Corporation conducts foreclosure Forsales.information, examine the court file, CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C. Plaintiff’s Attorneys, 15W030 NORTH FRONTAGE ROAD, SUITE 100, BURR RIDGE, IL, 60527 (630) 794-9876 THE JUDICIAL SALES CORPORAOneTION South Wacker Drive, 24th Floor, Chicago, IL 60606-4650 (312) 236SALE You can also visit The Judicial Sales Corporation at www.tjsc.com for a 7 day status report of pending sales. CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C. 15W030 NORTH FRONTAGE ROAD, SUITE 100 BURR RIDGE IL, 60527 NOTE:TJSC#:CaseAttorneyAttorneyAttorneyE-Mail:630-794-5300pleadings@il.cslegal.comFileNo.14-22-01316ARDCNo.00468002Code.21762Number:2019CH0811742-2262PursuanttotheFairDebt Collection Practices Act, you are advised that Plaintiff’s attorney is deemed to be a debt collector attempting to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. Case # 2019 CH 08117 INI3199280THECIRCUIT COURT OF COOK COUNTY, ILLINOIS COUNTY DEPARTMENT - CHANCERY DIVISION NEW RESIDENTIAL MORTGAGE, LLC Plaintiff, -v.SARA DANKER, CORNERSTONE CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, THE CORNERSTONE CONDOMINIUM, CITY OF OAK PARK 84618DefendantsCH08348WESLEY AVE APT 2 OAK PARK, IL 60304 NOTICE OF SALE PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the above cause on February 13, 2020, an agent for The Judicial Sales Corporation, will at 10:30 AM on August 29, 2022, at The Judicial Sales Corporation, One South Wacker, 1st Floor Suite 35R, Chicago, IL, 60606, sell at a public sale to the highest bidder, as set forth below, the following described real estate: Commonly known as 846 WESLEY AVE APT 2, OAK PARK, IL 60304 Property Index No. 16-18-226-036-1012 The real estate is improved with a residential condominium. The judgment amount was $125,856.02. Sale terms: 25% down of the highest bid by certified funds at the close of the sale payable to The Judicial Sales Corporation. No third party checks will be accepted. The balance, including the Judicial Sale fee for the Abandoned Residential Property Municipality Relief Fund, which is calculated on residential real estate at the rate of $1 for each $1,000 or fraction thereof of the amount paid by the purchaser not to exceed $300, in certified funds/or wire transfer, is due within twenty-four (24) hours. No fee shall be paid by the mortgagee acquiring the residential real estate pursuant to its credit bid at the sale or by any mortgagee, judgment creditor, or other lienor acquiring the residential real estate whose rights in and to the residential real estate arose prior to the sale. The subject property is subject to general real estate taxes, special assessments, or special taxes levied against said real estate and is offered for sale without any IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF COOK COUNTY, ILLINOIS COUNTY DEPARTMENT - CHANCERY DIVISION US BANK TRUST NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, NOT IN ITS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY BUT SOLELY AS OWNER TRUSTEE FOR VRMTG ASSET Plaintiff,TRUST -v.ROSE M. BARRACO, BANK OF AMERICA, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, OAK CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, INC. 4052019DefendantsCH08117SHOMEAVE, #202 OAK PARK, IL 60302

HEARING DATE: September 7, 2022 TIME: 7:00 p.m. or as soon thereafter as the Agenda permits

STATE OF ILLINOIS, COUNTY OF COOK, ssCircuit Court of Cook County, County Department, Domestic Relations Division In re the Marriage of: Tequilla S. Liddell, Petitioner, and Albert Jamon Henry, Respondent, No. 2022 D The002785.requisite affidavit for Publication having been filed, notice is hereby given to you, Albert Jamon Henry, Respondent, that a Petition has been filed in the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois, by the Petitioner, Tequilla S. Liddell, for Dissolution of Marriage and that said suit is now pending. Now, therefore, unless you, the said Respondent file your Appearance and Response electronically to said Petition with the Office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois, on or before August 31, 2022, default may be entered against you at any time after that day, and a Judgment for Dissolution of Marriage Entered in accordance with the prayer of said Petition. IRIS Y. MARTINEZ, Clerk. Published in Wednesday Journal August 10, 17, 24, 2022

LEGAL NOTICE

20 e Landmark, August 17, 2022 84 Riverside Rd, $1,475,000Riverside 2620 Halsted St, #2, Chicago $610,000 When it comes to selling and buying homes... experience, results and ties to the community make all the difference. Curious about the current real estate market and the impact on your home’s value? Thinking about selling, but need to find your next home first? Can’t find your dream home in this competitive market? Contact one of our local market experts for a free, confidential consultation. 410 N Stone Ave, LaGrange Park $625,000 1527 Cleveland Ave, La Grange Park $329,000 838 Wesley Ave, #3, Oak Park $175,000 1813 Elmwood Ave, Berwyn $339,000 151 Barrypoint Rd, Unit A, Riverside $2,950/mo 3303 Grove Ave #408, Berwyn $214,000 302 River Oaks Dr, Calumet City $325,000 2522 6th Ave, North Riverside $400,000 1213 Forest Rd, LaGrange Park $424,900 4534 Arthur Ave, Brookfi eld $169,900 VACANTLOT 359 Longcommon Rd, Riverside $450,000 242 Delaplaine Rd, Riverside $879,000 9841 S Hoyne Ave, Chicago $510,000 NEWLISTING

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