58
ECRWSS LOCAL POSTAL CUSTOMER PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID PERMIT NO. 91 HIGHLAND PK, IL NEWS Continued on PG 12 VOTE NO to 30 years of borrowing that does not fix our finances. VOTE NO to a mega-middle school and massive traffic. VOTE NO for neighborhood schools on both sides of Route 41. SATURDAY MARCH 12 | SUNDAY MARCH 13 2016 FIND US ONLINE: DailyNorthShore.com DailyNorthShore.com NO. 179 | A JWC MEDIA PUBLICATION FOLLOW US: Continued on PG 12 BY STEVE SADIN DAILYNORTHSHORE.COM D emocratic voters in the 10th Congressional Dis- trict will decide in the March 15 primary election if they want to nominate their former Congressman or a suburban mayor to unseat Rep. Robert Dold (R-Kenilworth) in the November 8 general election. Former Rep. Brad Schneider (D-Deerfield) and Highland Park Mayor Nancy Rotering have been running against each other for the job of representing the district for nearly a year with growing intensity since January. Early voting for the primary began February 29. Mailboxes and the airwaves have been filled with advertising, some of it negative, to distinguish themselves to the voters. ey agree on many issues. Schneider spent most of his career before running for Con- gress in 2012 as a management consultant primarily helping family businesses. He also owned and operated a life insurance business. He has an engineering degree and a MBA from North- western University. Dold was first elected in 2010 in a close contest with Dan Seals ILLUSTRATION BY BARRY BLITT SPORTS David Shapiro paced the Highland Park Giants hockey team in scoring this season. P46 SOcial Scene Gorton Community Center held its Back to the 80’s Bash. P21 Sunday bReakfaST We profile Lake Forest oncology doctor Dean Tsarwhas. P54 Nancy Rotering and Brad Schneider face off in 10th District Democratic primary. PHOTOGRAPHY BY JOEL LERNER 10 th District showDown BY JULIE KEMP PICK H IGHLAND PARK—As the March 15 referendum ap- proaches, residents are still divided about consolidating three middle schools into a three-story building which would accommodate up to 2,000 fifth through eighth grade stu- dents on the Sherwood/Red Oak site in southwest Highland Park. While Moving 112 Forward supports the North Shore School District (NSSD) 112 plan, CARE  (Citizens Against 112 Referendum) opposes the $198 million plan that would include renovating the six remaining schools. Voters will have the final say March 15. Former Superintendent’s Citizen Finance and Facilities Advisory Committee (SCFFAC) Co-Chair Dan Littman spoke out against the referendum at the Feb. 28 CARE Meeting: “There’s a misconception that d-112 fate in Voters’ Hands Index_3.12_East_LL.indd 1 3/8/16 10:04 PM

The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

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The North Shore Weekend East Zone is published weekly and features the news and personalities of Wilmette, Kenilworth, Winnetka, Northfield, Glencoe, Highland Park, Evanston, Lake Forest, and Lake Bluff, Illinois.

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Page 1: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

ECRWSSLOCAL POSTAL CUSTOMER

PRSRT STdU.S. POSTAgE

PAIDPERMiT nO. 91

HigHLAnd Pk, iL

NEWS

Continued on PG 12

VOTE NO to 30 years of borrowing that does not fix our finances.VOTE NO to a mega-middle school and massive traffic.VOTE NO for neighborhood schools on both sides of Route 41.

SATURdAy MARCH 12 | SUndAy MARCH 13 2016 Find us online: dailynorthShore.com

DailyNorthShore.com

nO. 179 | A JWC MEdiA PUbLiCATiOn Follow us:

Continued on PG 12

By steve sadindailynorthshore.com

Democratic voters in the 10th Congressional Dis-trict will decide in the

March 15 primary election if they want to nominate their former Congressman or a suburban mayor to unseat Rep. Robert Dold (R-Kenilworth) in the November 8 general election.

Former Rep. Brad Schneider (D-Deerfield) and Highland Park Mayor Nancy Rotering have been running against each other for the job of representing the district for nearly a year with growing intensity since January.

Early voting for the primary began February 29.

Mailboxes and the airwaves have been filled with advertising, some of it negative, to distinguish themselves to the voters. They agree on many issues.

Schneider spent most of his career before running for Con-gress in 2012 as a management consultant primarily helping family businesses. He also owned and operated a life insurance business. He has an engineering degree and a MBA from North-western University.

Dold was first elected in 2010 in a close contest with Dan Seals

IllustratIon by barry blItt

SPORTSDavid Shapiro paced the Highland Park Giants hockey team in scoring this season. P46

SOcial Scene Gorton Community Center held its Back to the 80’s Bash. P21

Sunday bReakfaSTWe profile Lake Forest oncology doctor Dean Tsarwhas. P54

nancy rotering and brad schneider face off in 10th District Democratic primary. photography by joel lerner

10th District showDown

By julie kemp pick

highlanD park—As the March 15 referendum ap-proaches, residents are

still divided about consolidating three middle schools into a three-story building which would accommodate up to 2,000 fifth through eighth grade stu-dents on the Sherwood/Red Oak site in southwest Highland Park.

W h i l e   M o v i n g 1 1 2 Forward  supports the North Shore School District (NSSD) 112 plan,  CARE    (Citizens Against 112 Referendum) opposes the $198 million plan that would include renovating the six remaining schools. Voters will have the final say March 15.

Former Superintendent ’s Citizen Finance and Facilities A d v i s o r y C o m m i t t e e (SCFFAC)  Co-Chair Dan Littman spoke out against the referendum at the Feb. 28 CARE Meeting:

“There’s a misconception that

d-112 fate in Voters’ Hands

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spring forwardmarch 13th

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the north shore weekend saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 | 3

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[ NEWS ]

11 winnetka’s choice Caucus-backed candidates face three independents in trustee race.

12 10th district showdown Nancy Rotering and Brad Schneider will face off in Democratic primary March 15.

12 fate decided Residents to vote on $198 million D-112 referendum.

[LIFESTYLE & ARTS ]

14 standout student Kai Kasprzak is framing his own narrative.

15 north shorts The latest musing from Mike Lubow.

18 film review We review Knight of Cups, the latest from director Terrence Malick.

19 north shore foodie Taco Lago joins the Wilmette food scene.

[ REAL ESTATE ]

26 ��open houses Find out — complete with map — what houses you can walk through for possible purchase on the North Shore on Sunday.

27 �houses of the week Intriguing houses for sale in our towns are profiled.

[ SPORTS ]

43 the ryan factor Scouts receive a big lift from resurgent Kitchel postseason play

[ LAST BUT NOT LEAST ]

54 sunday breakfast Profile of Dr. Dean Tsarwhas, the Medical Director of Cancer Services for Northwestern Medicine’s Lake Forest Hospital and Grayslake Outpatient Center.

INDEX

IN THIS ISSUE

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10 | saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 the north shore weekend

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Page 11: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

the north shore weekend saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 | 11 the north shore weekend saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 | 11

NEWS

John Conatser founder & publisherArnold Klehm general manager

[ EDITORIAL ]Brian Slupski executive news & digital editor

Bill McLean senior writer/associate editorKevin Reiterman sports editorKatie Ford editorial assistant

[ DESIGN ]Linda Lewis production manager

Samantha Suarez account manager/graphic designerKevin Leavy graphic designer

Bill Werch graphic designer

[ CONTRIBUTING WRITERS ] Sheryl Devore Scott Holleran Jake Jarvi Angelika Labno

Simon Murray Julie Kemp Pick Steve SadinGregg Shapiro Jill Soderberg Emily Spectre

[ PHOTOGRAPHY AND ART ]Joel Lerner chief photographer

Larry Miller contributing photographerRobin Subar contributing photographer

Barry Blitt illustrator

[ SALES ]Jill Dillingham associate publisher

Gretchen Barnard, M.J. Cadden, Courtney Pitt, Jill Rojas, Matt Stockert

All advertising inquiry info should be directed to 847-926-0957 & [email protected] us online: DailyNorthShore.com

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By emily spectre dailynorthsore.com

W INNETKA – Three indepen-dent candidates and three Win-

netka-Caucus endorsed candi-dates will square off for village trustee March 15. The top three vote getters among the six can-didates will win.

Running as independents, Kristin Ziv and incumbents Marilyn Prodromos and Carol Fessler support the revitaliza-tion of Winnetka’s struggling business districts and One Winnetka’s role in that trans-formation.

At a candidate forum hosted by the Rotary Club of North-field-Winnetka on Feb. 11, incumbent Fessler noted One Winnetka developer Stones-treet Partners’ responsiveness when it agreed to lower the building’s height from seven

stories to five and one-half. “I think we can honor our past and treasure our historically significant buildings without destroying our future,” Fessler was quoted by the  Chicago Tribune.

Caucus-backed candidates Louise Holland, Penny Lan-phier and Chris Rintz also seek to revitalize Winnetka’s down-town, but they have treaded lightly on the issue of One Winnetka. Candidate Rintz wrote in an opinion letter pub-lished on February 19 on Dai-lynorthshore.com:  “One Win-netka presents a great opportunity to provide a badly needed facelift to East Elm and could prove to be catalytic for further efforts — both private and public.” But Rintz also expressed the need to move forward carefully, noting the developer seeks a “significant financial subsidy from the tax-payers.”

The independent candidates have joined forces, encouraging voters to elect all three candi dates, with lawns signs as well as a website www.winnetkain-dependents.com.

Meanwhile, Caucus-backed candidate Holland already has voted against One Winnetka in September as a member of the Plan Commission. “It is painful. There is nothing in these rec-ommendations I can vote for,” she said at the commission’s Sept. 30 meeting.

As the village looks to solve its storm-water problems, the Caucus-endorsed candidates support consultants Strand As-sociate’s plan to route storm water westward. But they have criticized the council’s use of taxpayer money to pay hundreds of thousands in consultant fees on a proposed storm-water tunnel that was abandoned due to run-away costs.

Concerning the storm water

tunnel project the candidates state on their website  www.yourwinnetka.org:

“March, 2014, the Village Council and its present leader-ship ignored the results of a non-binding referendum in which 55% of voters and 8 of 10 precincts concerned about the cost, disruption to the village, and uncertainty as to the success of the project, voted against moving the project forward.”

The Caucus candidates also propose a limit on the village’s spending on capital projects, requiring a referendum for proj-ects that are $10 million or greater. They have also criti-cized the village’s storm water utility fee.

While the independent can-didates also support solving the village’s flooding problems, they question any constraints on financing for capital improve-ments. “The  Caucus plat-

form constrains financing for capital improvements within the village.  Their candidates are likely to find excuses to postpone work on storm-water solutions,” their website states. And all three independent can-didates said at the Rotary Club February 11 meeting, that the village’s storm water fee was a fair and appropriate way to generate revenue, according to a Chicago Tribune article.

The independent candidates have also voiced strong opposi-tion to the Winnetka Caucus, an organization they view as irrelevant and backwards think-ing. “People are done with the drama and dysfunction of the caucus. I am too,” Prodromos is quoted as say ing on their website.

Soon enough it will be the residents turn to weigh in, as they vote next week to elect trustees that will lead the village on these critical issues.

“People are

done with the

drama and

dysfunction of

the caucus. I

am too.”—Marilyn

Prodromos

winnetka Voters’ choice: caucus Vs. inDepenDents

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and lost the seat to Schneider by a percentage point two years later. Dold won it back over Schneider in 2014 in another narrow race.

Rotering, currently in her second term as mayor of High-land Park after serving two years on the City Council there, pre-pared herself for elective office serving on commissions in High-land Park as well as being active in the community while raising her children.

Before “stepping off the cor-porate ladder,” Rotering worked in finance at General Motors and practiced health care law. She earned an undergraduate degree from Stanford University, like Schneider and Dold a MBA from Northwestern and a law degree from the University of Chicago.

Schneider Lists economy, education and gun violence as priorities

Schneider said his three pri-orities for the people of the dis-trict are growing the economy to strengthen the middle class, in-suring quality education for every child and reducing gun violence.

“We need to grow our economy from the middle out,” Schneider said. “If our economy is growing in a robust, sustainable way, we will be better able to tackle the other issues we face as a nation. If our economy is less strong, these other challenges become all the more daunting.”

Rotering also lists economic development and education among her top three priorities for the district along with infra-structure and transportation.

“Congress needs to provide

impactful incentives for our many businesses to stay in the U.S., not to mention Illinois, and ensure that a broad range of jobs are available, paying a fair wage for a full day’s work,” Rotering said.

Adequate school funding is an important part of her education agenda, Rotering said. “We must address the inequities in our educational system with federal and state resources to ensure that all children have educational op-portunities that will allow them to succeed,” Rotering said.

Tied to economic develop-ment, Schneider said a quality education ensuring youngsters the ability to get a good 21st century job or achieve college success is what will assure pros-perity for future generations. He also expressed concern over the cost of college.

“We have to address the high cost of higher education so that our young people don’t graduate with dream-crushing debt,” Schneider said.

Rotering said the country needs a long-term approach to improving transportation and infrastructure. She said the 10th District is a microcosm of the nation’s problems of getting around.

“Traveling east to west and vice versa in the 10th District is an exercise in daily frustration,” Rotering. “In addition to lost employee productivity, busi-nesses also feel the impact as inadequate roads, rail systems and ports slow down the transport of supplies and manufactured goods.”

Gun violence is the third prong of Schneider’s top issues.

He wants to ban assault weapons and large capacity magazines, close the gun show loophole, require universal background checks and make gun trafficking across state lines a federal offense. He said he also wants to address mental health related aspects.

“We have to look no further than the City of Chicago where more than 100 people have been killed by gun violence in the first two months of the year,” Schnei-der said. “Nationwide, it is 90 a day with two thirds taking their own lives.”

Though not among her first three issues for the district, Ro-tering said she is proud of the way she led the Highland Park City Council to pass a ban on assault weapons and high capac-ity magazines. She said it is a top national priority.

Schneider said he is proud of some of his legislative accom-plishments too. He introduced legislation to sanction Hezbollah and assure Israel maintains its qualitative military edge over its neighbors. The first passed 404-0 and the second 399-0.

“Passing these bills started long before the legislation was drafted,” Schneider said. “Build-ing personal relationships with my colleagues was a huge part of these successes, when I intro-duced the bills they already trusted me and respected my expertise on these issues and it went a long way to the legislation passing in a bipartisan fashion.”

The 10th District includes all of Lake Forest, Lake Bluff, High-land Park, Deerfield and High-wood as well as parts of Glenview and Northbrook.

1OTH diSTRiCT Cont. from PG 1

NEWS

a two middle school solution is more expensive,” he said. “Self-imposed constraints include elementary schools that enroll the same number of stu-dents, and having 100 percent air conditioning need to be relaxed. In reality there’s a lot of ways to build two schools for less.”

Another SCFFAC member chimed in from the audience. “We don’t have to build the new middle school. It will destroy the community. To allow “YES’ to prevail, you can kiss Highland Park goodbye,” said Jerry Meister.

However, Highland Park resident Beth Goshen sup-ported the referendum, but wanted to learn more about CARE’s views. “I’m even more of a ‘YES’ person than I was before the meeting began,” said Goshen. “I’m very frustrated, because I feel like the ‘NO’ side is more concerned about fi-nances, and tax issues. I’m concerned about the kids’ ben-efits. This is a broken system.”

In the event of a failed ref-erendum, the district plans to close Lincoln, Green Bay, Elm Place and Ravinia schools.

This would result in an es-timated annual savings of $5 million f rom dismissing 74 teachers and staff. In addition, savings of $6.5 million of life safety costs in the near term and over $45 million in long-term capital costs would be achieved.

Building closures would occur in the 2017-2018 school year.

Supporters and critics have been placing  “Vote YES” and “Vote NO” yard signs through-out Highland Park. The op-position is concerned about lower property values; increased traffic, and having one “big box” school.

While others are in favor of full-day kindergarten, dual language programs, and in-creased safety features that the proposed plan would offer.

The proposed middle school would have two separate en-trances: one for fifth and sixth graders and another for seventh and eighth grade students.

Len Tenner former co-chair of District 112’s SCFFAC, and Moving 112 Forward steering committee member, explained his role in the reconfiguration process at the March 1 Com-mittee of the Whole Meeting.

In 2014, he suggested the board consider three alterna-tives. These were taken to the community in a series of meet-

ings and in an online survey. The majority of respondents favored six elementary schools and two middle schools. “This is exactly what is proposed in the referendum,” said Tenner. “Never was there any discus-sion of where these buildings had to be located.”

In July of 2015, the school board narrowed it down to two options: a single 5-8 middle school campus on the Sher-wood/Red Oak site with six feeder schools, or two separate middle schools at Edgewood and Olson Park with six feeder schools.

But the Park District decided against utilizing Olson Park for the District 112 mid-dle-school reconfiguration plan in August 2015.

Park District Board Presi-dent Scott Meyers, ex-plained,  “Olson Park is more complicated because we share it. Our mandate is to facilitate more open and green space, so the prospect of converting more open green space where there is no construction and developed property right now would be inconsistent with our mission.”

At the Sept. 15 district meeting, the board joined in support of the one middle school model. Jennifer Ferrari, assistant superintendent of teaching and learning, ex-plained the concept of the single middle school campus. Students would be divided into teams of six teachers where each teacher would work ex-clusively with 150 students.

“That’s 25 kids per teacher just like a fifth grade class-room,” she said. “This creates a feeling of a small school, but in a setting that offers the re-sources and opportunities of a large one.”

In December 2015, District 112 voted in favor of placing a $198 million bond on the March 2016 ballot in support of the proposed school recon-

figuration plan.Some of the proposed ben-

efits of the reconfiguration plan would include; full day kinder-garten, renovations, air condi-tioning, and security vestibules, to Braeside, Ravinia and Indian Trail elementary schools, as well as Edgewood and North-wood Junior High, which would be converted to elemen-tary schools.

Under this plan, Elm Place Middle School would close, along with Red Oak, Sher-wood, Lincoln and Wayne Thomas elementary schools. The average age of the facilities is 74 years old

When the League of Women Voters endorsed the D-112 referendum  on Jan. 20, 2016,  Davis Schneiderman, CARE steering committee member responded to Daily North Shore:

“CARE will only endorse a plan that solves our financial challenges without compromis-ing our education excellence. This referendum–$198 million plus $150+ million in interest for a single-middle school of 1900+ students–ignores com-munity recommendations and imperils our district. We’ll keep working for a better plan that respects the community ’s values,” he said.

League of Women Voters, and Moving 112 Forward member, Rick Heineman fore-warned:

“The future of our commu-nity depends on this passing,” he said. “If it fails, we’ll have one of the worst schools in the northern suburbs. As public officials they have to take action even if they think another referendum will pass. They can’t risk the district going bankrupt. Funding from the state will go down over $400,000 a year. There are no idle threats.”

To learn more about the ref-erendum visit 112information.org.

d-112 fATE Cont. from PG 1

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the north shore weekend saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 | 13 the north shore weekend saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 | 13

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Healthcare for what’s next.

Index_3.12_East_LL.indd 13 3/8/16 10:05 PM

Page 14: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

14 | saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 the north shore weekend

By jake jarvi

Many seniors in high school are planning their next four years at college, Kai

Kasprzak, a senior at Lake Forest High School (LFHS), has not only been planning for his career after college, but he’s already been paid to work in that field.

Students who excel in the LFHS New Media video-mak-ing curriculum have the oppor-tunity to work with a program called Scout Stories, which hires student producers to make pro-fessional videos for local busi-nesses and organizations for a fee.

“It could be as simple as a 30-second to one-minute com-mercial for a business, or it could be more of a narrative, up to three or four minutes, depending on what the project is,” says Kasprzak. “It teaches you how to work with a client and how to produce something that

meets their standards. Going through processes of rough drafting and critiquing helps you make something that’s not only yours, but that the client wants as well. Most people aren’t used to making a video for someone else. They’re very excited to make their own videos, but they don’t know how to work with a client.”

The Scout Story videos for local businesses are very much like commercials you’d see on television, with product inserts and a quick look at the service they offer. The videos for local organizations and institutions are presented much more like human interest stories you’d see on the news, with documentary-style interviews with subject and nicely composed panning shots of the institution or the indi-viduals at work.

Kasprzak’s skill for these human interest-style stories can be seen in videos found on lfh-snewmedia.com, like his profiles on social studies teacher Stephen

Dunn or woodworker Mike Jarvi. Both display his ability to whittle interviews down into an involving narrative and pair them with a steady stream of well-photographed footage of the subject in action. Those were earlier videos he made for New Media class credit. Since then, he’s put those abilities to use making Scout Story videos for the LFHS booster organization Applause and Cherokee Middle School. He’s currently at work building a video for Montessori School of Lake Forest for their website.

When someone wants a video done, they contact New Media teacher Steve Douglass, who pairs the right storyteller with the project. The school handles the monetary aspects with the client, supplies all of the gear for production and post-production, and the student producer gets paid based on the amount of hours logged on the project.

“It ’s definitely more than

mowing your neighbors lawn,” Kasprzak says. “It’s comparable to a part-time job. It gives you a professional standpoint and a look at a career path you could take in the future, which is awesome.”

Though he was originally drawn to making videos in middle school through action sports photography, filming his friends on the ski slopes or at the skate park, he saw an op-portunity developing as more and more companies wanted video for their websites.

“Everyone wants that 30-second commercial that’s really appealing and will get them attention,” he says. “There are more and more companies hiring kids like me to do these kinds of videos for them. Scout Stories really puts you in the right direction for making cli-ent-based videos that could potentially be a career in the future.”

STandOuT STudenT

Framing his own narrativeKai Kasprzak

LIFESTYLE & ARTS

European Country Estate1205 Acorn Trail, Lake Forest, IL 60045

For more information, please visit www.1205acorn.comPrime location offered at $2,999,000

New Construction

R. M. Swanson Architects847-757-3975

Index_3.12_East_LL.indd 14 3/8/16 10:05 PM

Page 15: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

the north shore weekend saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 | 15

SJNMA is located on a 110-acre campus in Dela� eld, Wisconsin,35 minutes west of Milwaukee, adjacent to US I-94.

Five-week academic program for young men in grades 7-12. Hands-on, project-based learning in academic areas and unique opportunities:

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Summer School

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Session 3: July 17-23Session 4: July 24-30

1-800-752-2338www.sjnma.org/summer-programs

LIFESTYLE & ARTS

Musings by Mike Lubow

north shorts

“Keeping it Short”

after sitting through a performance at a North Shore playhouse last

week, you felt, “that was wayyyy too long.” It’s not the first time you’ve noticed this antsy feeling recently. And it makes you muse...

Was it really the show? Or is your attention span shrinking? Maybe it’s a result of the quick-moving digital culture in which we’re immersed.

In a relatively short time, the mental environment has become all too comfortable with short stuff: texts, posts, emails, tweets,

pop-ups, even shorthand head-lines that crawl on the bottom of TV screens while you’re trying to watch the big picture.

If you send someone an email with more than, say, three lines, you’ve learned they might not read the bottom one. So you don’t put anything really impor-tant down there.

If someone starts telling you a long story, you might feel like spinning your hand in the air to signal “yeah, yeah, then what?” You don’t do this, but you get the urge.

Attention span deficit?A movie with a concept that

sounds like fun might be

scratched off your list when you hear it runs three hours. You loved watching baseball once, but now it seems draggy. A play with two acts sounds better than one with three. And a non-in-termission shorty is better yet.

Kids who grew up tweeting and texting from birth under-stand this. Adults born before all that are in a transitional stage. But humans are adapt-able. Could be that people are slowly (or kinda quickly) evolv-ing into a new species of human. Call it, maybe, homo twitterus.

Enough. Point made. Your smartphone just vibrated. Time to move along.

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Index_3.12_East_LL.indd 15 3/8/16 10:05 PM

Page 16: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

16 | saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 the north shore weekend

NEW PRICE

1025 Ash, Winnetka1025Ash.info $1,589,000

‘Like New’ Construction on Manicured Lot

66 Fox, Winnetka66Fox.info $4,695,000

True English Country Estate

1092 Cherry, Winnetka1092Cherry.info $1,899,000

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Page 17: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

the north shore weekend saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 | 17

l u x u r y c o l l e c t i o n

480 Oak Street,WinnetkaTrue Treasure on the Lake

Designed by the Great Chicago Architect, Benjamin Marshall * This French Regency Villa home was extensively renovated over a three year time frame * With interiors restored and redone with

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Page 18: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

18 | saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 the north shore weekend

Knight of CupsBy jake jarvi

Terrence Malick doesn’t respect our time. That’s the only conclusion I can draw

after a press screening of Knight of Cups. Even when his movies are critically lauded, such as with The Tree of Life, I think most of us in the general public emerge at the end wondering why critics tricked us into sitting through it. We’re probably supposed to simply stare in wonder at the hodgepodge quilt of scenic imagery and beautiful movie stars to which he points his wan-dering wide-angle lenses, but, mostly, I’m just bored.

In Knight of Cups, Rick (Christian Bale, The Big Short) works in Hollywood. The people around him tell him he’s success-ful, that he’s the guy. They never actually mention what he does in the industry and we never see him doing any of it. Instead, we watch as he walks through a variety of environments: the dessert, a movie studio backlot, a torn down house, Las Vegas, a museum, a string of gorgeous modern houses with surpris-ingly bare walls, and colorful parties full of pretty people. Oc-casionally, Ben Kingsley (Self/less), who never appears in the movie, but is credited as narrator, whispers narration ripped from

the pages of the 1678 Christian allegory The Pilgrim’s Progress. His reading sounds properly Shakespearean and lends an air of importance to the proceed-ings, but never provides the thread necessary to turn the film into a narrative of any kind.

Instead, it’s just a layer of anti-quated metaphor piled on top of Malick’s disconnected visual tone poem.

The one thing the film seems interested in exploring is Rick’s prolific romantic history with a variety of women. Halfway

through the running time, I came to understand why none of his amorous relationships had any staying power. Every time Rick is alone in a room with a woman, instead of having a conversation, they walk around the room posing for each other for awhile,

then they either chase each other around the room and roll around on the bed or slowly touch each other’s faces. Each relationship is interesting for about a minute and a half.

Each of the actresses portray-ing his love interests bring at

least a bit of new energy to their tiny sections of the film, espe-cially Natalie Portman (Thor: The Dark World) and Imogen Poots (She’s Funny that Way).

Cate Blanchett (Carol) shows up for 10 minutes to trick us into caring about Rick for a second by giving us the only hint of backstory and character explora-tion in the whole movie. She actually manages to say a few lines of dialogue on camera as well, an impressive feat when Malick prefers to have most of the characters dialogue run over images of them walking around and projecting moodiness at each other.

All things considered, this is not a particularly fun way to spend two hours. With no nar-rative story in sight there’s no way of telling where you are in the movie, making it feel hope-lessly endless. Each scene seems to start with a aimless Bale trying to get his bearings and figure out where he is now and what he should be doing. Like Malick drove a couple recognizable faces to some fantastic location, gave them no direction or sense of what they were trying to accom-plish, and told them to “Explo-ooore. But no words. Just physi-cality.” The whole thing feels like an interminable acting class exercise. One I wish I’d skipped.

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Page 19: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

the north shore weekend saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 | 19

By emily spectredailynorthshore.com

WINNETKA – A new restaurant called Taco Lago has opened in

Wilmette in the Spanish-style shopping center Plaza de Lago on

Sheridan Road. With the tag line “locally sourced crafted with love,” the taqueria is a welcome addition to the Wilmette food scene.

When the Moss Family, owners of Plaza de Lago, approached restaurant owner Tim Lenon

about opening a restaurant in the storefront formerly occupied by Artisan he was immediately in-terested. “I had been wanting to do a taqueria and being Plaza de Lago it fit with the motif,” he said.

Lenon is no stranger to the Wilmette restaurant scene. He opened the popular restaurant Fuel in downtown Wilmette six years ago and was also a partner in Nick’s Neighborhood Bar & Grill before selling his share. Lenon brings to this new venture his passion for local, fresh and farm-to-table food that continues to draw customers to Fuel.

Chef Armondo Esquivel — who is also a chef at Fuel — created a menu that is authentic Mexican food and incorporates his own family recipes. “He is probably the most talented chef on the North Shore. He is amazing,” Lenon said.

The menu offers a variety of soft corn tacos that include among others marinated pork shoulder, strip steak or marinated fish, as well as soups and salads. Every-thing from the salsa, chips and tortillas are made fresh on site. The menu is also primarily gluten and dairy free, with gluten free cupcakes for sale from the Wil-mette’s new bakery, Gigi’s Cup-cakes. The restaurant also offers beer, wine and house made mar-

garitas and cocktails.“The food is healthy but taste-

ful sticking with that theme of what I do. If you are going to go out to eat, why not do it better than at home?” Lenon said.

Lenon described the restaurant as a “fast casual,” where customers order from a large counter at the front of the restaurant and food is delivered to the table. The at-mosphere may be best described as industrial with a cool Latin vibe. The concrete floor is dyed while the ceiling is completely exposed.

All of the furniture was re-purposed from when Artisan occupied the space, with spacious tables in the front of the restaurant and small square tables surround-ed by colorful metal stools situ-ated in the back. Succulents are planted into each of the tables, a unique feature that was created by Lenon’s mother, who is landscape designer.

Perhaps most striking is a large graffiti mural that was done by Chicago artist Mario Miramontis, who has shown his art across the country. Another wall features silhouettes of all of the investor’s children with the words Taco Lago done in Miramontis’ graf-fiti lettering.

Lenon is excited to see Wil-mette’s business community evolve as more restaurants con-

tinue to open. He’s observed how the Wilmette business commu-nity is becoming more cohesive and working together. And while he thinks there is more work to be done, he’s pleased to see some progress. “There is now a sense of community outside of sports and education [in Wilmette],” Lenon said.

Lenon envisions Taco Lago as the perfect spot for anyone to enjoy a bite to eat. With a varied yet healthy menu that ranges in price from $6 to $12, he seeks to

appeal to most people. And he also thinks it is a good place for kids to eat something healthy, instead of processed food.

“It has been super well received. I knew it was a niche that was needed in the area,” Lenon said.

Taco Lago is located in Plaza de Lago, 1545 Sheridan Road, Wil-mette. It is open Monday – Thursday 11:00 am – 9:00 pm, Friday and Saturday 11:00 am – 10:00 pm and Sunday 11 a.m. – 7 p.m.

For more information go towww.tacolago.com.

TaCo LagoJoINS WILMETTE Food SCENE

nORTH SHORe fOOdie

owner tim lenon and chef armondo Esquivel.photography by joel lerner

LIFESTYLE & ARTS

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Index_3.12_East_LL.indd 19 3/8/16 10:06 PM

Page 20: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

20 | saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 the north shore weekend

Griffith, Grant & Lackie reaLtorsA Tradition of Trust Since 1903

LAKE FOREST: 847.234.0485 | LAKE BLUFF: 847.234.0816 | WWW.GGLREALTY.COM

280 E. DEERPATH, LAKE FOREST, ILLINOIS 60045 | 8 E. SCRANTON AVENUE, LAKE BLUFF, ILLINOIS 60044

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327 N Mayflower road, lake forest$5,495,000

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221 s ridge road, lake forest$2,995,000

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650 lake road, lake forest$2,800,000

www.650Lake.info5 Bedrooms, 4.1 Baths

1055 woodbiNe Place, lake forest$2,495,000

www.1055Woodbine.info4 Bedrooms, 4.1 Baths

693 sPruce aveNue, lake forest$2,450,000

www.693Spruce.info4 Bedrooms, 3.1 Baths

461 saddle ruN, lake forest$1,795,000

www.461SaddleRun.info6 Bedrooms, 4.2 Baths

OPEN SUNDAY 12 - 2 PM

340 Hilldale Place, lake forest$1,549,000

www.340Hilldale.info5 Bedrooms, 6.1 Baths

1831 w salisbury laNe, lake forest$1,549,000

www.1831Salisbury.info5 Bedrooms, 5.2 Baths

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455 butler drive, lake forest$1,399,000

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39 suNset Place, lake bluff$1,250,000

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1105 N greeN bay road, lake forest$1,099,000

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520 e NortH aveNue, lake bluff$899,000

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630 acadeMy woods drive, lake forest$859,900

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971 w deerPatH road, lake forest$795,000

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951 carroll road, lake forest$789,000

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681 edgecote laNe, lake forest$729,900

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1763 Hackberry laNe, lake forest$699,000

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Index_3.12_East_LL.indd 20 3/8/16 10:06 PM

Page 21: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

LIFESTYLE & ARTS

SOcialSBACk TO THE 80S BASH AT GORTON COmmUNITY

CENTERPhotography by Larry Miller

Gorton Community Center came alive during their recent Back to the 80s event, held in honor

of the Drop-In Center’s 30th Anniversary, as well as John Hughes’ popular films created in

the 80s. Guests came in radical costumes, with Miah and Kelley Armour walking away with the top prize for their portrayal of Run DMC

and Boy George. Local favorite Sixteen Candles performed on the John & Nancy Hughes The-ater stage. Guests enjoyed food from Froggy’s and cocktails from Schaefers, and were blown away with an appearance by a Michael Jackson impersonator. Guests were entertained by an

80s montage, put together by Lake Forest High School senior Tucker Strang, along with a short film about the history of Gorton, produced by

MK Films. Co-chaired by Sam and Barrett Davie and Kristin and Jamie Wildman, the night

was full of nostalgia, big hair, and even bigger laughs.

gortoncenter.org

AmY kREBS, JULIE VALENTI, COLLEEN kOVAS

kATE & GEOFF HANSON kELLEY & mIAH ARmOUR

DINA & CARTER LAmBERSO

JENNIFER JANOWIAk, AmY WELLS

the north shore weekend saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 | 21

100 North Waukegan Road Suite 100 | Lake Bluff

www.legacych.com847-283-9595

Historic Restoration | New Construction | Renovation

For professional advice from an experienced Realtor, call Jean Wright at (847) 217-1906 or email at [email protected]

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

TeChnO LuxuryThe homebuyer of today is definitely concerned with keeping up—not with the Joneses, perhaps, but with the ever-changing face of technology. A fully appointed den or media room used to be an important selling point in a home—today, these things are de rigueur, standard in nearly every home on the market. In order to increase the market appeal of your home and be competitive with other homes of comparable structure, size and amenities for sale in your area, the new key selling point of a property is the home office. Once a rarity, the home office has evolved into the home’s hub and center of operation and activity, often controlling every technological amenity of the house from one room. Modern home automation systems link lighting, heating and air conditioning systems, as well as audio-visual equipment, security systems and the scheduling of television, recording systems, stereo equipment and lighting fixtures. The modern home office isn’t just for business professionals, technological connoisseurs, or the higher-earning set, either. Today’s home technology features are high-end home amenities that are available across a wide range of budgets, turning an average home into an above-average home when it hits the market, giving tech-savvy dwellings a competitive market edge. Take a look at your home’s wiring, routing and see what simple upgrades you could implement that would simplify your day-to-day living while you’re in the home, and that could add top-dollar value to your home when it comes time to put it on the market. Ask yourself: Is your home techno-ready?

Index_3.12_East_LL.indd 21 3/8/16 10:07 PM

Page 22: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

22 | saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 the north shore weekend

THIS IS HOME

26 Meadowood Ln, Northfield $1,149,000Constance Browne 847-724-5800

1034 Pontiac Rd, Wilmette $1,200,000SFC Team 847-446-4000

621 Woodland Ln, Northfield $779,000Linda Martin 847-446-4000

566 Willow Rd, Winnetka $2,649,000Emily LeMire 312-943-1959

531 Buena Rd, Lake Forest $879,000Mary Kay Brunner-Dasse 847-234-8000

179 Fuller Ln, Winnetka $1,150,000Anne Malone 847-446-4000

385 Palos Rd, Glencoe $1,850,000Jann Tyler 847-446-4000

505 Hoyt Ln, Winnetka $6,850,000Maryann Burke 847-446-4000

1839 Wedgewood Ct, Lake Forest $974,000Patricia Carter 847-234-8000

619 Greenleaf Ave, Wilmette $1,125,000SFC Team 847-446-4000

524 Maple Ave, Wilmette $1,175,000Valerie Whiteside 847-866-8200

2541 Hybernia Dr, Highland Park $999,999Lida Zrecny 847-835-6000

2744 Sheridan Rd, Highland Park $2,300,000Jamie Roth/ Liz Whatley 847-433-5400

743 Bluff St, Glencoe $1,850,000Noah Levy 847-433-5400

1356 Fairway Dr, Lake Forest $929,000Mary Kay Brunner-Dasse 847-234-8000

2930 Greenwood Ave, Highland Park $725,000Jamie Roth/Judith Weiner 847-433-5400

2895 Parkside Dr, Highland Park $639,000Albena Miluchev 847-272-9880

612 Vernon Ave, Glencoe $685,000Beverly & Marshall Fleischman 847-256-7400

832 Greenwood Ave, Wilmette $1,125,000Jacquie Lewis 847-433-5400

854 Woodbine Rd, Highland Park $709,999Maxine Goldberg/Mark Goldberg 847-433-5400

413 Central Ave, Wilmette $1,610,000Claire Sucsy 847-866-8200

399 Jackson Ave, Glencoe $689,000Rene Firmin 847-835-6000

37 W Quail Dr, Lake Forest $899,000Suzanne Myers 847-234-8000

147 Avon Ave, Northfield $645,000Connie & Nick Snyder 847-945-7100

2300 Colfax St, Evanston $650,000Martin Winefield 847-866-8200

411 Brier St, Kenilworth $769,000Maureen Mohling 847-446-4000

901 Thackeray Dr, Highland Park $769,000Nancy Abzug/Shelly Benjamin 847-945-7100

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ColdwellBankerHomes.com©2016 Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker and the

Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor sales associates and are not employees of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage.

Index_3.12_East_LL.indd 22 3/8/16 10:07 PM

Page 23: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

the north shore weekend saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 | 23

1236 Chicago Ave 708, Evanston $338,000Patricia DeNoyer 847-866-8200

860 Forest Ave C, Evanston $340,000Barbara Kramer 847-866-8200

835 Ridge Ave 204, Evanston $79,000Andrea Seeley 847-866-8200

388 Chestnut St, Winnetka $1,225,000Maryann Burke 847-446-4000

385 E Westminster Rd, Lake Forest $1,125,000Jean Royster 847-234-8000

636 Washington Pl, Glencoe $1,295,000Maureen Mohling 847-446-4000

2551 Wilmette Ave, Wilmette $469,000Beverly & Marshall Fleischman 847-256-7400

821 Forest Ave 2W, Evanston $275,000Merle Kirsner-Styer 847-433-5400

56 Coventry Rd, Northfield $1,650,000Patricia Skirving 847-446-4000

549 Earlston Rd, Kenilworth $1,399,000Linda Martin 847-446-4000

244 Mary St, Glencoe $1,350,000Jody Dickstein 847-835-6000

1925 Lake Ave 209, Wilmette $247,000Susie Raffel & Israel Friedman 847-945-7100

815 Greenbay Rd, Highland Park $420,000Erin Rutman 847-945-7100

1011 Dodge Ave, Evanston $419,900Martin Winefield 847-866-8200

631 Exmoor Rd, Kenilworth $475,000Emily Link 847-446-4000

860 Pleasant Ave, Highland Park $599,000Julie Deutsch 847-835-6000

1875 Cavell Ave, Highland Park $599,900Scott Rose 847-945-7100

616 Michigan Ave 1W, Evanston $200,000Helen Madden 847-866-8200

21 Salem Ln, Evanston $535,000Candace Kuzmarski 847-866-8200

443 Ridge Ave 1, Evanston $145,000Margee Gustin 847-272-9880

231 E Center Ave, Lake Bluff $299,000Phyllis Hollander 847-945-7100

711 Oak St 408, Winnetka $489,000Kathy Almond 847-446-4000

1012 Illinois Rd, Wilmette $485,000Claire Sucsy 847-866-8200

1328 Monroe St, Evanston $510,000Debra Guillod 847-446-4000

949 Rollingwood Rd, Highland Park $570,000Mac DuBose 847-446-4000

664 Melody Ln, Highland Park $559,000Noah Levy 847-433-5400

235 Ridge Rd 2G, Wilmette $198,000Suzanne Martin 847-446-4000

151 E Laurel Ave 102, Lake Forest $375,000Jean Royster 847-234-8000

127 Callan Ave 3, Evanston $110,000Karen Renella 847-866-8200

9521 lincolnwood Dr, Evanston $349,000Dee Dee Maloney 847-866-8200

New ListingNew Listing New Listing New Listing

New ListingNew Listing New Listing New Listing

New Listing

New Listing

New Listing New ListingNew ListingNew Listing

New Listing

Open Sun 12-2

Open Sun 2-4

New Listing

New Listing

New Listing

New Listing

ColdwellBankerHomes.com©2016 Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker and the

Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor sales associates and are not employees of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage.

Index_3.12_East_LL.indd 23 3/8/16 10:07 PM

Page 24: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

22 | saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 the north shore weekend

( hand)made in HP

Learn everything from the basics of working a sewing machine to macrame and jewelry making.

Classes for adults and for kids. Makers, doers, and dabblers all welcome.

No experience required.

Sign up for a series, try a single workshop, or plan your next birthday party with us.

Doors open April 1st.

1929 Sheridan Road Highland Park, IL 60035

Sign up for our spring session today! www.workshophp.com

RealEstate_3.12_East_LL.indd 1 3/8/16 10:04 PM

Page 25: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

the north shore weekend saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 | 23

Northshore Dermatology Center

www.northshorederm.biz

Lake BLUFF 925 Sherwood Drive

847.234.1177

WiLmette3612 W. Lake Ave., 2nd Floor

847.853.7900

tiNa C. VeNetOS, m.D.amy C. BrOWNLee, mS, Pa-C

Dr. Venetos is a Board Certified DermatologistOn Staff at Evanston,Glenbrook, & Lake Forest Hospitals

Procedure by Leyda Bowes, MDResults and patient experience may vary. Ask us if CoolSculpting is right for you.In the U.S. and Taiwan, non-invasive fat reduction is cleared only for the flank (love handle) and abdomen. CoolSculpting, the CoolSculpting logo and the Snowflake design are registered trademarks of ZELTIQ Aesthetics, Inc. © 2013. All rights reserved. IC1385-A

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

BEFORE8 WEEKS AFTERCOOLSCULPTING®

TREATMENT(-6 pounds)

TRANSFORM YOUR BODYWITHOUT SURGERY OR DOWNTIME.

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

Practice Name Goes Here123 Anystreet Avenue, Suite 456

Anytown, ST 12345 (123) 456-7890

www.practicewebsite.com

Procedure by Leyda Bowes, MDResults and patient experience may vary. Ask us if CoolSculpting is right for you.In the U.S. and Taiwan, non-invasive fat reduction is cleared only for the flank (love handle) and abdomen. CoolSculpting, the CoolSculpting logo and the Snowflake design are registered trademarks of ZELTIQ Aesthetics, Inc. © 2013. All rights reserved. IC1385-A

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

BEFORE 8 WEEKS AFTERCOOLSCULPTING®

TREATMENT(-6 pounds)

TRANSFORM YOUR BODYWITHOUT SURGERY OR DOWNTIME.

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

Practice Name Goes Here123 Anystreet Avenue, Suite 456

Anytown, ST 12345 (123) 456-7890

www.practicewebsite.com

march in and put the spring back in your neck

For the month of March spring into a new you....call today for your complimentary

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New Saturday Hours!

UltherapyLunchtime Face Lift

Dualsculpting/CoolsculptingNeograft Hair restoration: no

scars, no plugsCutera Pearl Laser resurfacing

and rejuvenationLaser Hair removal

Botox® , Dysporttm & XeominFillers

(Belotero, Bellafill, Radiesse, RestylaneTM, Perlane, Juvederm, Sculptra, Voluma)

Facial Chemical Peels

microdermabrasionNew Laser for Stretch marks

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RealEstate_3.12_East_LL.indd 2 3/8/16 10:04 PM

Page 26: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

24 | saturday march 5 | sunday march 6 2016 the north shore weekend

THIS IS HOME

26 Meadowood Ln, Northfield $1,149,000Constance Browne 847-724-5800

1034 Pontiac Rd, Wilmette $1,200,000SFC Team 847-446-4000

621 Woodland Ln, Northfield $779,000Linda Martin 847-446-4000

566 Willow Rd, Winnetka $2,649,000Emily LeMire 312-943-1959

531 Buena Rd, Lake Forest $879,000Mary Kay Brunner-Dasse 847-234-8000

179 Fuller Ln, Winnetka $1,150,000Anne Malone 847-446-4000

385 Palos Rd, Glencoe $1,850,000Jann Tyler 847-446-4000

505 Hoyt Ln, Winnetka $6,850,000Maryann Burke 847-446-4000

1839 Wedgewood Ct, Lake Forest $974,000Patricia Carter 847-234-8000

619 Greenleaf Ave, Wilmette $1,125,000SFC Team 847-446-4000

524 Maple Ave, Wilmette $1,175,000Valerie Whiteside 847-866-8200

2541 Hybernia Dr, Highland Park $999,999Lida Zrecny 847-835-6000

2744 Sheridan Rd, Highland Park $2,300,000Jamie Roth/ Liz Whatley 847-433-5400

743 Bluff St, Glencoe $1,850,000Noah Levy 847-433-5400

1356 Fairway Dr, Lake Forest $929,000Mary Kay Brunner-Dasse 847-234-8000

2930 Greenwood Ave, Highland Park $725,000Jamie Roth/Judith Weiner 847-433-5400

2895 Parkside Dr, Highland Park $639,000Albena Miluchev 847-272-9880

612 Vernon Ave, Glencoe $685,000Beverly & Marshall Fleischman 847-256-7400

832 Greenwood Ave, Wilmette $1,125,000Jacquie Lewis 847-433-5400

854 Woodbine Rd, Highland Park $709,999Maxine Goldberg/Mark Goldberg 847-433-5400

413 Central Ave, Wilmette $1,610,000Claire Sucsy 847-866-8200

399 Jackson Ave, Glencoe $689,000Rene Firmin 847-835-6000

37 W Quail Dr, Lake Forest $899,000Suzanne Myers 847-234-8000

147 Avon Ave, Northfield $645,000Connie & Nick Snyder 847-945-7100

2300 Colfax St, Evanston $650,000Martin Winefield 847-866-8200

411 Brier St, Kenilworth $769,000Maureen Mohling 847-446-4000

901 Thackeray Dr, Highland Park $769,000Nancy Abzug/Shelly Benjamin 847-945-7100

New Listing

New Listing

New Listing

New Listing Open Sun 1-4

Open Sun 1-3

New ListingOpen Sun 1-3

New Listing

New Listing

New Listing New Listing New Listing

New Listing

New Listing New Listing New Listing Open Sun 1-3

New Listing New Listing

ColdwellBankerHomes.com©2016 Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker and the

Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor sales associates and are not employees of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage.

RealEstate_3.12_East_LL.indd 3 3/8/16 10:04 PM

Page 27: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

the north shore weekend saturday march 5 | sunday march 6 2016 | 25

1236 Chicago Ave 708, Evanston $338,000Patricia DeNoyer 847-866-8200

860 Forest Ave C, Evanston $340,000Barbara Kramer 847-866-8200

835 Ridge Ave 204, Evanston $79,000Andrea Seeley 847-866-8200

388 Chestnut St, Winnetka $1,225,000Maryann Burke 847-446-4000

385 E Westminster Rd, Lake Forest $1,125,000Jean Royster 847-234-8000

636 Washington Pl, Glencoe $1,295,000Maureen Mohling 847-446-4000

2551 Wilmette Ave, Wilmette $469,000Beverly & Marshall Fleischman 847-256-7400

821 Forest Ave 2W, Evanston $275,000Merle Kirsner-Styer 847-433-5400

56 Coventry Rd, Northfield $1,650,000Patricia Skirving 847-446-4000

549 Earlston Rd, Kenilworth $1,399,000Linda Martin 847-446-4000

244 Mary St, Glencoe $1,350,000Jody Dickstein 847-835-6000

1925 Lake Ave 209, Wilmette $247,000Susie Raffel & Israel Friedman 847-945-7100

815 Greenbay Rd, Highland Park $420,000Erin Rutman 847-945-7100

1011 Dodge Ave, Evanston $419,900Martin Winefield 847-866-8200

631 Exmoor Rd, Kenilworth $475,000Emily Link 847-446-4000

860 Pleasant Ave, Highland Park $599,000Julie Deutsch 847-835-6000

1875 Cavell Ave, Highland Park $599,900Scott Rose 847-945-7100

616 Michigan Ave 1W, Evanston $200,000Helen Madden 847-866-8200

21 Salem Ln, Evanston $535,000Candace Kuzmarski 847-866-8200

443 Ridge Ave 1, Evanston $145,000Margee Gustin 847-272-9880

231 E Center Ave, Lake Bluff $299,000Phyllis Hollander 847-945-7100

711 Oak St 408, Winnetka $489,000Kathy Almond 847-446-4000

1012 Illinois Rd, Wilmette $485,000Claire Sucsy 847-866-8200

1328 Monroe St, Evanston $510,000Debra Guillod 847-446-4000

949 Rollingwood Rd, Highland Park $570,000Mac DuBose 847-446-4000

664 Melody Ln, Highland Park $559,000Noah Levy 847-433-5400

235 Ridge Rd 2G, Wilmette $198,000Suzanne Martin 847-446-4000

151 E Laurel Ave 102, Lake Forest $375,000Jean Royster 847-234-8000

127 Callan Ave 3, Evanston $110,000Karen Renella 847-866-8200

9521 lincolnwood Dr, Evanston $349,000Dee Dee Maloney 847-866-8200

New ListingNew Listing New Listing New Listing

New ListingNew Listing New Listing New Listing

New Listing

New Listing

New Listing New ListingNew ListingNew Listing

New Listing

Open Sun 12-2

Open Sun 2-4

New Listing

New Listing

New Listing

New Listing

ColdwellBankerHomes.com©2016 Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker and the

Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor sales associates and are not employees of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage.

RealEstate_3.12_East_LL.indd 4 3/8/16 10:04 PM

Page 28: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

26 | saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 the north shore weekend

REAL ESTATE

Glenview Wilmette

Kenilworth

Winnetka

NorthbrookGlencoe

HighlandParkDeerfield

Lake Forest

Lake Bluff

Northfield

Skokie Hwy

N Green Bay Rd

Skokie Valley Rd

N. Waukegan Rd

N. Sheridan RdGreen Bay Rd

Buckley Rd

E Park Ave

E Townline Rd

Everett Rd

Half Day Rd

Dundee Rd

Willow Rd

Shermer Rd

Sunset Ridge Rd

Tower Rd

Lake Ave

OPEN HOUSES

5-32

1-4

59-76

77-80

85-9881-

84

49-54

43-48

55-58

33-39

40-42

1. 39 Sunset PlaceLake BluffSunday 1-3 PM$1,250,000Marie Colette, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors®847.234.0816

2. 404 E. Center Ave.Lake BluffSunday 1-3 PM$1,399,000Marie Colette, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors®847.234.0816

3. 730 Garfield AveLake BluffSunday 1-3$575,000Daria Andrews, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.477.3794 4. 400 Arbor DrLake BluffSunday, 1-3$1,495,000Jean Royster, Coldwell Banker

847.234.8000 5. 29 E Alden Lane Lake Forest SUNDAY 1-3 $995,000 Carole S. Rosenberg, @properties 847.881.0200

6. 1763 Hackberry LaneLake Forest$699,000Sunday 12-3Debbie Hepburn, The Hudson Company847.867.5825

7. 630 Academy WoodsLake ForestSunday 2-4PM$859,900Lisa Trace, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors®847.234.0485

8. 951 CarrollLake ForestSunday 1-3PM$789,000Elizabeth Wieneke, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors®847.234.0485

9. 681 EdgecoteLake ForestSunday 1-3$729,900Lisa Trace, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors®847.234.0485

10. 461 Saddle RunLake ForestSunday 12-2 pm$1,449,000Lisa Trace, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors®847.234.0485

11. 650 Lake RoadLake ForestSunday 1-3PM$2,800,000Brad Andersen, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors®847.234.0816

12. 441 Rockefeller RoadLake ForestSunday 2-4$899,000Lori Glattly, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.922.6200 13. 670 Rockefeller RoadLake ForestSunday 1-3$925,000Mona Hellinga, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.814.1855 14. 383 Washington RoadLake ForestSunday 1-3$999,000Joe Pasquesi, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.615.5023 15. 1895 Bowling Green DriveLake ForestSunday 1-3$895,000Lori Glattly & Suzie Hempstead, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.910.8465 16. 1730 Wimbledon CourtLake Forest         Sunday 12-3$1,197,263Jeff Folker, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.504.6182 17. 1179 Grandview LaneLake ForestSunday 2-4$879,000Ann Jones, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices

KoenigRubloff847.460.5445

 

18. 1451 N. Sheridan RoadLake Forest         Sunday 12-2$1,499,900Tracy Wurster Team, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff312.972.2515

19. 140 Franklin Pl. E #305Lake ForestSunday, 12pm-2pm$289,000Chris Yore, Baird Warner847-804-2879

20. 1515 Minthaven Rd.Lake ForestSunday, 1pm-3pm$949,000Joan Maxwell, Baird & Warner847-404-7763

21. 1079 Jensen Dr.Lake ForestSunday, 1pm-3pm$1,395,000Elizabeth Rasmussen, Baird & Warner847-721-3481

22. 990 W DeerpathLake ForestSaturday, 1-3 $839,500Jan Mason, Baird & Warner312-560-3081

23. 1516 N. Western Ave.Lake Forest Sunday,11:30am-1:30pm $890,000Jan Mason, Baird & Warner 312-560-3081

24. 871 Longwood Dr.Lake ForestSunday, 2pm-4pm$549,000Brunhild Baass, Baird & Warner847.804.0092

25. 945 Pinecroft Ln.Lake ForestSunday, 11:30am-1:30pm$ 995,000Brunhild Baass, Baird & Warner847.804.0092

26. 2025 Amberley CtLake ForestSunday, 11-4$1,999,995Michele Wilson, Coldwell Banker847.234.8000

  27. 2035 Amberley CtLake ForestSunday, 11-4$1,249,995Mary Pat Lundgren, Coldwell Banker847.234.8000 28. 1490 S Ridge RdLake ForestSunday, 2-4$1,195,000Houda Chedid, Coldwell Banker847.234.8000 29. 120 S Basswood RdLake ForestSunday, 2-4$1,150,000Houda Chedid, Coldwell Banker847.234.8000 30. 1480 Kurtis LnLake ForestSunday, 2-4$1,295,000Vera & Pat Purcell, Coldwell Banker847.234.8000 31. 438 Heather LnLake ForestSunday, 1-3$599,000Gaye Sodke, Coldwell Banker847.234.8000

32. 1839 Wedgewood CtLake ForestSunday, 2-4$974,000Pat Carter, Coldwell Banker847.234.8000

33. 1881 Lawrence Lane Highland Park Sunday 1-3 $899,000 Barb Hondros, @properties 847.432.0700

34. 410 Oakland Drive Highland Park Sunday 1-3 $795,000 Debbie Scully, @properties 847.432.0700

35. 242 Aspen Lane Highland Park Sunday 1-3 $575,000 Pickus/ Schulkin, @properties 847.432.0700

36. 904 Judson Ave.Highland ParkSunday 1-3$699,000Rubenstein Fox Team, Baird & Warner847.565.6666

37. 1366 Sheridan RdHighland ParkSunday 1-3$799,000

Debbie Glickman & Amy Antonacci, Baird & Warner847.687.4332

38. 2895 Parkside DriveHighland ParkSunday 1-4$639,000Albena Miluchev, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage847-962-6499

39. 127 Leonard WoodHighland ParkSunday, 2-4$995,000Anne West, Coldwell Banker 847.446.400040. 840 WoodwardDeerfield$859,000Sunday 2-4Emily Berlinghof, The Hudson Company847.404.5098

41. 900 King Richards CourtDeerfieldSunday 1:30 - 3:30$599,900Laura Kerstein Baird & Warner847-209-1131

42. 424 Castlewood Lane DeerfieldSunday 11:30-1:00$599,000Karen Skurie, Baird and Warner847.361.4687

43. 1972 PenfoldNorthbrookSunday 1-3$999,900Alicja Skibicki, Baird & Warner847.446.1855

44. 2580 Woodland Drive Northbrook Sunday 1-3 $625,000 Claire Schwab, @properties 847.432.0700

45. 1280 Rudolph Road, Unit 4NNorthbrookSunday 1-3$235,000Margee Gustin, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage847-828-8065 46. 838 Laurel RoadNorthbrookSunday 2-4$349,900Bryce Fuller, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage847-208-7888 47. 22 Court of Island PointNorthbrookSunday 1-3$529,000

Camille Bass & Millie Weinberg, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage847-272-9880

48. 1127 Briarwood Ln.NorthbrookSunday, 11-1$589,000Debra Guillod, Coldwell Banker 847.446.400049. 1183 Terrace Court Glencoe SUNDAY 2-4 $1,025,000 Logli/Downing, @properties 847.998.0200

50. 300 VernonGlencoe$749,000Sunday 1-3Howard & Susan Meyers, The Hudson Company847.778.1394 / 847.778.1395

51. 564 DrexelGlencoeSunday 11am-1pm$1,395,000Bree Misiak, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.420.1214 52. 560 Drexel Ave.GlencoeSunday, 1-3$499,000Hilde Wheeler Carter, Coldwell Banker 847.446.4000 53. 570 Drexel Ave.GlencoeSunday, 1-3$789,000Jessica Rosien, Coldwell Banker 847.446.4000

54. 385 Palos Rd.GlencoeSunday, 1-3$1,850,000Jann Tyler, Coldwell Banker847.446.400055. 56 Coventry RoadNorthfield Sunday 1-3 $1,650,000The Skirving Team, Coldwell BankerPatti: 847-924-4119 Greg: 847-863-3614

56. 1887 Winnetka AveNorthfield3/13/16, 1-3pm$605,000Betsy Burke, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.565.4264

57. 1060 Arbor Ln.NorthfieldSunday, 1-3$479,000

Colleen Remsberg, Coldwell Banker 847.446.4000 58. 6040 Arbor Lane #100NorthfieldSunday 12-2$224,900Dene Hillinger, Jean Wright Real Estate847.275.9143

59. 433 LocustWinnetkaSunday 1-3$1,475,000Peg O’Halloran, Baird & Warner847.446.1855

60. 160 Woodley Road Winnetka Sunday 1-3 $2,250,000 Hambleton/Hazlett, @properties 847.763.0200 61. 882 Elm Street Winnetka Sunday 1-4 $1,465,000 Alla Kimbarovsky, @properties 847.432.0700

62. 893 Elm Street Winnetka Sunday 1-3:30 $1,465,000 Alla Kimbarovsky, @properties 847.432.0700

63. 1138 Scott Avenue Winnetka Sunday 1-3 $949,000 Susan Ringel Segal, @properties 847.881.0200

64. 1212 Cherry Street Winnetka Sunday 12-2 $949,000 Elizabeth Voris, @properties 847.881.0200

65. 630 RosewoodWinnetka$1,949,000Sunday 2-4Paige Dooley, The Hudson Company847.609.0963

66. 955 Tower ManorWinnetka$1,199,000Sunday 2-4Joanne Hudson, The Hudson Company847.971.5024

67. 4 Golf LaneWinnetkaSunday 1-3$3,475,000The Skirving Team, Coldwell Banker Patti: 847-924-4119 Greg: 847-863-3614

RealEstate_3.12_East_LL.indd 5 3/8/16 10:04 PM

Page 29: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

the north shore weekend saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 | 27

REAL ESTATE

Housesof tHe week

$1,799,000430 Prospect Ave.Highland Park5 Bedrooms,4.1 Baths

ExclusivelyPresented By:Beth Wexler and Joey [email protected]@[email protected]

Incredible classic home fully renovated in the heart of East HP! Hardwood floors, crown molding and casings through-out. Professionally landscaped yard with deck off family room. Front porch with bead board ceilings and outdoor fans. Walk to town, train, shops, schools and lake.

$2,295,0001100 N. Green Bay RoadLake Forest5+1 Bedrooms/6.1 Baths Elizabeth WienekeGriffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors847 234 0485

This one owner French Normandy has been beautifully de-signed and maintained, and features exquisite millwork, hardwood floors, high ceilings, large rooms and great layout.  Richly appointed cherry library, chefs kitchen with a huge cen-ter island, separate breakfast room and butlers pantry, lovely screeened porch, large family room with vaulted ceilings and center fireplace, formal dining room and living room with fire-places.  Two staircases and finished lower level with 6th bed-room and full bath. Quality Orren Pickel construction.

$935,0001930 Watercress WayHighland Park, 3 Bedrooms /2.5 Baths

Marla MarcusBaird & [email protected]

Large foyer, living room with soaring ceilings and walls of windows. First floor master bedroom/bathroom suite with a closet to die for! Formal dining area and first floor den/office. Sun-filled kitchen with a breakfast room surrounded by windows overlooks newer tired deck and lake. Upstairs has two huge bedrooms that share Jack & Jill bathroom. Ad-ditional features include hardwood flooring, ceiling fans, un-derground sprinklers and 3 car garage.

Glenview Wilmette

Kenilworth

Winnetka

NorthbrookGlencoe

HighlandParkDeerfield

Lake Forest

Lake Bluff

Northfield

Skokie Hwy

N Green Bay Rd

Skokie Valley Rd

N. Waukegan Rd

N. Sheridan RdGreen Bay Rd

Buckley Rd

E Park Ave

E Townline Rd

Everett Rd

Half Day Rd

Dundee Rd

Willow Rd

Shermer Rd

Sunset Ridge Rd

Tower Rd

Lake Ave

OPEN HOUSES

68. 1183 Scott Ave.Winnetka Sunday, 2-4pm$1,895,000Sherry Molitor, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.204.6282 69. 331 Walnut StWinnetka3/13/16, 2-4pm$940,000Julie Hartvigsen, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff773.266.9850 70. 1261 Ash St.Winnetka3/13/16, 1-3pm$650,000Chris Downey, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.340.8499  71. 1258 PineWinnetka3/13/16, 1-3pm$739,000Chris Downey, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.340.8499  72. 574 OrchardWinnetka3/13/16, 1-3pm$575,000Claudia Schmidt, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff914.310.9729

73. 989 Elm St.WinnetkaSunday 1-3pm$799,000Muggsy Jacoby & Carol Grant, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.924.3811 / 847.421.7501  74. 90 Indian Hill RoadWinnetkaSunday 2:15-4:15$2,575,000Dinny Dwyer, Jean Wright Real Estate847-217-5146

75. 443 ChestnutWinnetkaSunday 12-2$1,795,000

Sarah Dwyer, Jean Wright Real Estate847-727-461

76. 456 Elder Ln.WinnetkaSunday, 1-3$2,399,900Marina Britva, Coldwell Banker 847.446.4000

77. 645 Melrose Avenue Kenilworth Sunday 12-2 $875,000 Annika Valdiserri, @properties 847.881.0200

78. 326 OxfordKenilworth$1,369,000Sunday 2-4Joanne Hudson, The Hudson Company847.971.5024

79. 650 Park Dr.KenilworthSunday 12-2pm$847,000Sherry Molitor, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.204.6282 

80. 411 Brier St.KenilworthSunday, 1-3$769,000Maureen Mohling, Coldwell Banker 847.446.4000

81. 1410 Magnolia Street Glenview Sunday 12-2 $895,000 Mary Marcus, @properties 847.881.0200

82. 845 Queens Lane Glenview Sunday 1-2 $849,000 Karin Zawaski, @properties 847.881.0200

83. 323 N. Branch RoadGlenviewSunday 1-3$775,000Ronna Wisbrod, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage

847-910-4377

84. 1136 Longvalley Rd.GlenviewSunday, 1-3$1,249,000Monica Corbett, Coldwell Banker 847.446.4000

85. 2616 WilmetteWilmetteSunday 1-3$484,000Margaret Goss, Baird & Warner847.446.1855

86. 1625 Sheridan Unit 208WilmetteSunday 1-3$259,000Kevin Rutherford, Baird & Warner847.446.1855

87. 530 Forest Avenue Wilmette Sunday 12-2 $1,750,000 Lori Neuschel, @properties 847.881.0200 88. 2221 Kenilworth Avenue Wilmette Sunday 12-2$1,189,000 Monica Childs, @properties 847.881.0200

89. 915 Pawnee Road Wilmette Sunday 1-3 $849,000 Cummins/McDonald, @properties 847.881.0200

90. 749 12th StreetWilmette$779,000Sunday 2-4Coco Harris, The Hudson Company847.372.3324

91. 1217 LakeWilmette$775,000Sunday 2-4Coco Harris, The Hudson Company847.372.3324

92. 1022 PawneeWilmette$1,795,000Sunday 1-3Julie Bradbury Miller, The Hudson

Company847.751.2619

93. 724 Ashland WilmetteSunday 1-3pm$1,325,000Linda Wolff, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.917.5544

94. 2229 Crestview LaneWilmetteSunday 1-4$1,250,000Carrie Healy, Jean Wright Real Estate847-507-7666

95. 2015 Lake Ave.WilmetteSunday, 1-3$1,593,000Tem Van Horn, Coldwell Banker 847.446.4000 96. 1047 Miami Rd.WilmetteSunday, 2-4$1,300,000Pam & Jim McClamroch, Coldwell Banker 847.446.4000

97. 1112 Elmwood Ave.WilmetteSunday, 2-4$1,020,000Bettye Raglin, Coldwell Banker 847.446.4000 98. 2115 ThornwoodWilmetteSunday 2:30-4$1,399,000Dene Hillinger, Jean Wright Real Estate847.275.9143

99. 1328 Monroe St.EvanstonSunday, 2-4$510,000Debra Guillod, Coldwell Banker 847.446.4000

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28 | saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 the north shore weekend

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Page 31: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

impressivenoun | having the power to command

attention. Making a marked impression

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SPECIAL REAL ESTATE SECTION fOR ThE NORTh ShORE wEEkENd | 3/12 - 3/13/16

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1481 WEDGEWOOD DRIVE LAKE FOREST

4 bedroom/4.1 bath $969,000

1481Wedgewood.info

insert call out

1281 KIMMER COURT LAKE FOREST

5 bedroom/4.1 bath $1,099,000

1281KimmerCt.info

insert call out

ANDRA O’NEILL

Mobile: 847.650.9093 Office: 847.295.0700

[email protected] atproperties.com

SPECIAL REAL ESTATE SECTION fOR ThE NORTh ShORE wEEkENd | 3/12 - 3/13/16

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1090 HIGHLAND AVENUE LAKE FOREST

5 bedroom/3.1 bath $749,500 1090HighlandAve.info

insert call out

501 RYAN PLACE LAKE FOREST

3 bedroom/2 bath $499,000 501ERyan.info

insert call out

ANDRA O’NEILL

Mobile: 847.650.9093 Office: 847.295.0700 [email protected] atproperties.com

SPECIAL REAL ESTATE SECTION fOR ThE NORTh ShORE wEEkENd | 3/12 - 3/13/16

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Page 34: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

KATIE TRAINES

Mobile: 847.751.0516 Office: 847.881.0200 [email protected] katietraines.com

505 SUNSET ROAD WINNETKA

4 bedroom/3.1 bath $999,000 505SunsetRd.info

insert call out

SPECIAL REAL ESTATE SECTION fOR ThE NORTh ShORE wEEkENd | 3/12 - 3/13/16

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Page 35: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

TED PICKUS

Mobile: 847.417.0520 Office: 847.432.0700 [email protected] atproperties.com

1190 CROFTON HIGHLAND PARK

4 bedroom/4.2 bath $775,000 1190CroftonAve.info

new listing!

116 CENTRAL AVENUE HIGHLAND PARK

6 bedroom/5.1 bath $1,400,000 116CentralAve.info

lakeviews!

SPECIAL REAL ESTATE SECTION fOR ThE NORTh ShORE wEEkENd | 3/12 - 3/13/16

RealEstate_3.12_East_LL.indd 12 3/8/16 10:05 PM

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14730 WEST IMPERIAL DRIVE LIBERTYVILLE

5 bedroom/4 bath $1,275,000

insert call out

13675 LUCKY LAKE DRIVE LAKE FOREST

7 bedroom/7.1 bath $2,490,000

13675LuckyLake.info

insert call out

JOANNA KOPERSKI

Mobile: 847.668.0096 Office: 847.295.0700

[email protected] atproperties.com

SPECIAL REAL ESTATE SECTION fOR ThE NORTh ShORE wEEkENd | 3/12 - 3/13/16

RealEstate_3.12_East_LL.indd 13 3/8/16 10:05 PM

Page 37: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

1094 FISHER LANE WINNETKA

5 bedroom/5.2 bath $2,395,000

1094FisherLn.info

open house, sunday march 13, 1-3 pm

LESLIE MAGUIRE

Mobile: 847.899.9420 Office: 847.881.0200

[email protected] atproperties.com

SPECIAL REAL ESTATE SECTION fOR ThE NORTh ShORE wEEkENd | 3/12 - 3/13/16

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400 LINCOLN AVENUE LAKE BLUFF

3 bedroom/1.2 bath $459,000 400Lincoln.info

perfectly maintainedand...under contract!

13 MAYFAIR LANE LINCOLNSHIRE

5 bedroom/5.1 bath $699,999 13Mayfair.info

spacious brick and cedar cape cod on stunning half acre!

MIKE & MARCIA VECCHIONE

Mobile: 847.804.9432 Office: 847.295.0700 [email protected] mikenmarciahomes.com

SPECIAL REAL ESTATE SECTION fOR ThE NORTh ShORE wEEkENd | 3/12 - 3/13/16

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823 LEYDEN LANE WILMETTE

4 bedroom/2.1 bath $845,000

charming four bedroom

welcome home!

MEREDITH SCHREIBER

Mobile: 847.828.6622 Office: 847.763.0200

[email protected] atproperties.com

ANNE BRANNING

Mobile: 847.309.2223 Office: 847.881.0200

[email protected] atproperties.com

SPECIAL REAL ESTATE SECTION fOR ThE NORTh ShORE wEEkENd | 3/12 - 3/13/16

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Page 40: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

197 OXFORD ROAD KENILWORTH

6 bedroom/4.3 bath $3,750,000

197Oxford.info

open house, sunday march 13, 2:30-4:30 pm

BARBARA MAWICKE

Mobile: 847.917.7345 Office: 847.881.0200

[email protected] atproperties.com

JOHN MAWICKE

Mobile: 312.342.4278 Office: 847.881.0200

[email protected] atproperties.com

M’LIZ MAWICKE SIMONDS

Mobile: 847.571.5214 Office: 847.881.0200

[email protected] atproperties.com

SPECIAL REAL ESTATE SECTION fOR ThE NORTh ShORE wEEkENd | 3/12 - 3/13/16

RealEstate_3.12_East_LL.indd 17 3/8/16 10:05 PM

Page 41: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

626 WARWICK ROAD KENILWORTH

6 bedroom/5.3 bath $2,995,000 626WarwickRoad.info

open house, sunday february 28, 12-2 pm

BARBARA MAWICKE

Mobile: 847.917.7345 Office: 847.881.0200 [email protected] atproperties.com

JOHN MAWICKE

Mobile: 312.342.4278 Office: 847.881.0200 [email protected] atproperties.com

M’LIZ MAWICKE SIMONDS

Mobile: 847.571.5214 Office: 847.881.0200 [email protected] atproperties.com

SPECIAL REAL ESTATE SECTION fOR ThE NORTh ShORE wEEkENd | 3/12 - 3/13/16

RealEstate_3.12_East_LL.indd 18 3/8/16 10:05 PM

Page 42: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

127 BERTLING LANE WINNETKA

6 bedroom/4.2 bath $1,895,000

127BertlingLane.info

open house, sunday march 13, 2:30-4:30 pm

215 RIDGE AVENUE WINNETKA

6 bedroom/4.1 bath $1,299,000

215RidgeRd.info

open house, sunday march 13, 12-2 pm

BARBARA MAWICKE

Mobile: 847.917.7345 Office: 847.881.0200

[email protected] atproperties.com

JOHN MAWICKE

Mobile: 312.342.4278 Office: 847.881.0200

[email protected] atproperties.com

M’LIZ MAWICKE SIMONDS

Mobile: 847.571.5214 Office: 847.881.0200

[email protected] atproperties.com

SPECIAL REAL ESTATE SECTION fOR ThE NORTh ShORE wEEkENd | 3/12 - 3/13/16

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428 CUMNOR ROAD KENILWORTH

4 bedroom/2.2 bath $1,495,000 428Cumnor.info

insert call out

711 PARK DRIVE KENILWORTH

4 bedroom/2.1 bath $1,099,000 711ParkDr.info

open house, sunday march 13, 12-2 pm

BARBARA MAWICKE

Mobile: 847.917.7345 Office: 847.881.0200 [email protected] atproperties.com

JOHN MAWICKE

Mobile: 312.342.4278 Office: 847.881.0200 [email protected] atproperties.com

M’LIZ MAWICKE SIMONDS

Mobile: 847.571.5214 Office: 847.881.0200 [email protected] atproperties.com

SPECIAL REAL ESTATE SECTION fOR ThE NORTh ShORE wEEkENd | 3/12 - 3/13/16

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Page 44: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

RICK RICHKER

Mobile: 773.909.9962 Office: 847.881.0200

[email protected] atproperties.com

MELISSA RICHKER

Mobile: 773.505.9962 Office: 847.881.0200

[email protected] atproperties.com

610 DREXEL AVENUE GLENCOE

4 bedroom/3.1 bath $799,900

610Drexel.info

insert call out

354 ADAMS AVENUE GLENCOE

5 bedroom/4.1 bath $1,100,000

354Adams.info

under contract in two days!

SPECIAL REAL ESTATE SECTION fOR ThE NORTh ShORE wEEkENd | 3/12 - 3/13/16

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Page 45: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

sports Follow us on twitter: @tnswsports

the north shore weekend saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 | 43

Follow us on twitter: @tnswsportsFollow us on twitter: @tnswsports

So this is the other Ryan Kitchel.

The animated one.The emotional one. The hardly recognizable one.The usually mild-mannered

Lake Forest High School senior showed his other side in last week’s Class 4A Glenbrook North Re-gional. He flipped the switch.

This was a different Ryan Kitchel.

This was the (pick one) hyped-up, fired-up and charged-up version of Ryan Kitchel.

“It was the playoffs,” Kitchel said. “I didn’t want the season to end.

“I fed off the crowd,” he added. “Everyone did.”

The well-put-together 6-foot-2, 190-pound forward, who is best know as a defensive ace, arguably came up with his best two games of the season. He scored a career-high 15 points in a thrilling 58-55 regional semifinal victory over the host Spartans on March 1.

Then, on March 4, in the re-gional final — a heart-breaking, punch-in-the-gut 50-49 loss to Deerfield — Kitchel was on his game again.

He was a factor. He made you take notice.

“I’d have to say that I’ve always been an emotional player,” said Kitchel. “But I really don’t know how to explain what got into me in those last two games.”

“His adrenaline picked up,” Lake Forest head coach Phil LaScala said.

Kitchel was fiercely competi-tive. And he did it without losing any of his dignity.

His No. 1 responsibility in the title game was guarding one of the best point guards in the state: Jordan Baum. He defended him brilliantly.

“I wasn’t looking to get into his head or anything like that,” Kitchel said. “I wanted it only to be about basketball.”

Thanks to Kitchel’s tight marking, the Scouts pretty much held Baum in check. The 6-4 guard, who had put up 25 points in a regional semifinal win over Maine East on March 1, was limited to 11 points on 4-for-12 shooting.

The secret to Kitchel’s success? Knowing him. The two players are former club basketball teammates with Fundamental U.

“We’re friends,” said Kitchel. “I’ve played with him. I’ve played against him. And prior to this game, I watched a lot of film on him.”

Kitchel managed to handcuff Baum most of the night.

The 6-foot-4 Baum, who plays the game with style and elegance, didn’t make a three-pointer, while several of his patented drives to the basket were disrupted by Kitchel.

A standup guy, Baum, who will play collegiately at the University of Chicago next year, didn’t hold back after the game. He gave props to Kitchel.

“Credit him. Great defense,” Baum said. “He’s a physical player. He took me out of my game.”

But Baum, as he usually does, found a way — in the end.

With his team trailing LF 49-47 with 7.1 seconds left in regulation, Baum and his fellow Warriors came out of a timeout with a master(ful) plan.

Baum, a lefty, received an in-bounds pass out on top, drove to his left, drew a double team and then rifled a cross-court, against-the-grain pass to Jeremy Sernick, who was lurking beyond the three-point line in the right corner.

Sernick, who also hit a buzzer-beating, game-winner in Deer-field’s 60-59 win over Evanston in the Central Suburban League championship on Feb. 24, calmly buried a three as the horn sounded.

“Coach (Dan McKendrick) drew it up,” said Baum. “I was supposed to come off a ball screen and make a decision.”

Instead of shooting, Baum chose to put the onus on Sernick.

“We’ve got five shooters on the floor,” he said. “Besides, my shots weren’t falling tonight.”

For the Scouts (18-10), Ser-nick’s clutch three was a dagger in the heart.

“He [Baum] made a nice play,” said LaScala. “And the kid [Sernick] hit a big shot.”

“It’s never good to have the season end that way,” Kitchel added.

Putting Kitchel on Baum was an equally masterful plan, which probably took LaScala less than a five-second call to make.

Besides, there was precedence.On Dec. 12, in the Scouts’

44-38 regular-season win over the visiting Warriors, Kitchel held Baum to six points.

“Ryan’s our defensive stopper,” said the LF coach. “He loves those kind of challenges.

“He guarded the other team’s best player 99 percent of the time this year,” LaScala added.

Concentrating on the ‘D’ might have affected his ‘0’.

And so did this: Kitchel under-

went shoulder surgery (labrum) last spring and was out of com-mission for six months.

“I was back to full go in August,” he said. “Thankfully, the injury never flared up during the season.”

But losing all that court time in the summer didn’t do Kitchel any favors. He had to rebuild his confidence — especially on the offensive end.

“I think I was just starting to be less one-dimensional,” said Kitchel.

Against GBN, he took the ball to the rim hard. Six of his 15 points came on drives, including a key reverse layup in the fourth quarter. He also went 5-for-5 from the foul line.

Then, in the Deerfield game, he opened the night by nailing a 16-footer from the left corner on a feed from Justin McMahon. He followed that up with a scoop layup in the lane 29 seconds later.

“Coming off the GBN game, I was pretty confident,” said Kitchel, who ended the game with six points, four steals and two assists.

One missed shot — a three-point attempt from the top of the key, which fell half way down the cylinder before popping out — in the first half will haunt him for a while.

“Not getting a shot like that to fall happens to everyone,” said Kitchel. “But, in hindsight, looking at the final score, we [really] could’ve used those three points.”

Now that he’s healthy, Kitchel, who will attend either Illinois or Indiana next year, plans to rejoin the school’s lacrosse team this spring.

A midfielder, he’ll get a chance to team up with his twin brother Daniel, a defenseman.

“I don’t know what to expect,” said Kitchel. “Basketball is my main sport, but I do like the physical [nature] of lacrosse. I like all that contact.”

Just ask Jordan Baum.

Notable: The Scouts (18-10) put themselves in a position to beat Deerfield by going 6-for-6 from the field in the fourth quarter. Free throws by Justin McMahon and Lorenzo Edwards put LF ahead 49-47 with 11 seconds left in regulation. … Edwards started slowly but had an amazing finish. The 6-foot-7 senior had eight points, three assists, two rebounds, one block and one steal in the final eight minutes. He finished the game with 19 points, nine rebounds and four assists. Four of his second-half points came on dunks… McMahon was LF’s second-leading scorer with eight points to go along with four assists. … In the GBN game, Edwards tallied 18 points, 13 rebounds and five blocks. McMahon finished with 13 points. The LF guard was 6-for-6 from the foul line. For the game, the Scouts made 17 of 19 free throws. … Junior guard Michael Parsky advanced in the Three-Point Showdown. He’ll shoot again at the GBS Sec-tional on March 11.

BY kevin reiterman, [email protected]

The Ryan FacToR scouts receive a big lift from resurgent Kitchel in postseason action

hERE’S RyAN: Lake forest high School senior Ryan kitchel exudes confidence during player introductions at the Glenbrook North Regional. photoGraphY BY JoeL Lerner

Sports_3.12_East_LL.indd 2 3/8/16 10:04 PM

Page 46: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

SPORTS

44 | saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 the north shore weekend

Ramar Evans gripped the ball and threw a right-handed fastball. It also could have

passed for a football pass, tight-spiraling to a wideout crossing the middle of a field.

What Evans, a Loyola Academy junior guard, chucked was a bas-ketball in a big basketball game on March 1. The ball, after traveling about half the length of a court, landed in the hands of junior Julian DeGuzman, who plopped it in for an easy bucket in a Class 4A re-gional semifinal at Loyola Academy. The field goal on hard-wood gave LA a 51-42 lead against visiting New Trier, with 55 seconds left in the fourth quarter. It turned out to be a crucial deuce, since NT would score the final seven points in the final 53 seconds of a 51-49 Loyola Academy victory.

“Second half of the season, Ramar has been a fantastic guard for us, a fantastic basketball player,” Ramblers coach Tom Livatino said. “He has, essentially, put the team on his shoulders.”

Evans’ shoulders are part of a 6-foot-2, 180-pound frame. They hanger-support sculpted arms that would look perfectly normal on the cover of this month’s Men’s Fitness magazine. Or any month’s. Loyola Academy football coach John Holecek would like nothing more than to see those shoulders under football pads on Game Days in the fall. How often does Holecek attempt to lure Evans to a football field?

“Every time I see him at the school,” a smiling Evans said.

Evans poured in three touch-downs worth of points against fifth-seeded New Trier (17-10), with 10 of his 18 coming in the first half. He tallied four of 12th-seeded Loyola’s points in a 14-0 run at the outset of the second half, helping the hosts secure a 36-23 lead. It took the Ramblers three minutes and 46 seconds to score 14 points. That’s one unanswered point every 16 seconds. Fantastic and fun and frenetic. The run transformed Loyola’s student cheering section into a pulsating mass of happiness, all lathered up.

“We made big plays,” Evans said, his explanation serving as the equivalent of a shrug.

NT got back in it at the start of the fourth quarter, netting seven free throws in an 11-2 spurt. What

was once a sit-back-and-relax 43-27 score became a ten-hut! 45-38 margin, 3:05 remaining in regulation. A DeGuzman (six points) basket put LA up by nine points, Evans hit two free throws, and Evans unleashed that baseball/football pass, the delivery of the night. LA survived. Next up: fourth-seeded Notre Dame, for a regional title on March 4.

LA had to play that tilt without starting senior guard Eddie Trapp,

a three-point threat and a reliable defender. Illness ensnared Trapp and refused to let him go. Ram-blers senior shooting guard Will Plodzeen figured somebody had better elevate his game to make up for the loss of Trapp. That somebody: Plodzeen. The 6-2, 185-pounder from the School of St. Mary in Lake Forest con-nected for 12 points, all of them coming from three-point real estate. The 12 points were 12 more

than his point total in the re-gional semifinal. Plodzeen played with steadfast urgency in the final, striking for six of LA’s 10 points in the first quarter.

“Will kept us in the game in the first half. He played fantastic basketball,” Livatino said.

The Ramblers trailed 20-19 at the break and then dropped five treys on the Dons in the first six minutes of the third quarter, a pair of the triples originating from the

hands of senior guard Brandon Danowski. Evans (14 points, five rebounds), Plodzeen and freshman guard Andre White Jr. (11 points, two steals) each drained a three-pointer in a stretch that gave the hosts a 38-31 advantage.

ND produced a 9-0 run at the start of the fourth quarter and weathered a steely trey from White Jr., with seven ticks left, to earn a 52-50 victory. The Dons (23-6) advanced to a sectional

semifinal.“Great high school game, tre-

mendous environment, champion-ship atmosphere,” Livatino said. “I am really, really proud of how we played, battled. I feel for the guys, especially our seniors who played tonight. Will [Plodzeen], what he did out there as a shooter; [senior forward] Matt Manella was … Matt Manella, giving it his all; and Brandon Danowski guarded, didn’t turn the ball over, made shots.

“The guys, all our guys, took on adversity this year, on and off the court,” the coach added. “There’s no shame in our record [16-15].”

Plodzeen stood near a balcony rail in the home gym after the loss, he and his teammates having just descended a steep stairway follow-ing a post-game confab in Liva-tino’s spacious hoops office. The senior looked around. Reflected. Looked around some more.

“It’s going to be weird, not playing basketball at this level again,” he said. “Maybe I’ll play some CYO basketball.”

Notable: Ramblers coach Tom Livatino, on what his team’s record was after it defeated New Trier 51-49 in a Class 4A Loyola Academy Regional semifinal on March 1: “We’re 16-14, a robust 16-14.” … Ramblers senior guard Brandon Danowski finished with 13 points (three treys), and fresh-man guard Andre White, Jr. tossed in 11 against the Trevians in the regional semifinal. … LA senior guard Will Plodzeen, on junior guard Ramar Evans, a chiseled product of Walt Disney Magnet School in Chicago: “He came here built that way. Hard worker … that’s what he is. Ramar turned himself into a knock-down shooter. All season he was solid for us, really solid.” … Evans, on White, Jr., who averaged 11 points in the last two playoff games of his freshman season: “I’m proud of him, proud of the [way he handled life on varsity]. Off the court, 50 percent of what he talks about is hoops. The other half? Jokes.”

New Trier: Tino Malnati tallied a team-high 16 points in the loss to Loyola. Teammate Colin Win-chester came up with 14 points and 10 rebounds, while Spencer Boehm had eight points and seven rebounds.

BY BiLL mcLean, [email protected]

heady RamaRstrong, smart Evans nearly wills ramblers to regional championship

Pitch PerFect: Loyola Academy’s Ramar Evans beats the double team of New Trier’s Tino Malnati and Michael hurley and fires a pass to Julian deGuzman late in the regional semifinal game on March 1. deGuzman turned the pass into a key score.photoGraphY BY tracY aLLen

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SPORTS

46 | saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 the north shore weekend

David Shapiro was four years old, maybe five, skating around the

outdoor Sunset Ice Rink in Highland Park. He did not want to be anywhere else in the world. That all changed after he had generated serious momen-tum on the slick surface and had no idea where the emergency brake was located on his little body.

Shapiro, careening, headed straight for a bundle of hay, an ice rink’s safety net.

“I couldn’t stop,” Shapiro, a forward/center, recalls. “I crashed. That made me cry.”

Five minutes later, his face dry again, Shapiro returned to the ice.

David Shapiro’s prep hockey career ended on Feb. 21. High-land Park High School’s Giants lost 6-4 to visiting Naperville Central in the first round of the Amateur Hockey Association Illinois (AHAI) varsity state playoffs on that date. Shapiro, a senior co-captain with class-mate/winger Kieran Jagadeesh, scored on the first shift of the first period at Centennial Ice Arena. He scored again two shifts later. The 6-foot-4, 230-pounder scored his third goal in the third period. Hat trick. Final game.

Not a bad way to exit.“I love moving on the ice,

moving a puck, picking up speed,” Shapiro, a tight end/defensive end when he played football in high school, says. “In football, everybody has a job to do, an assignment each play. In hockey, every play is different. You’re never involved in the same play twice, and that’s what I love most about hockey.”

Shapiro struck for two goals in his first organized hockey game. He got to keep a game puck. The puck found its way underneath Shapiro’s bed at home, and Shapiro, while clean-ing his room one day, grabbed it and put it on a shelf in his room. It rests there today with another puck, signed by former Blackhawks great Bobby Hull. Back in his post-crash-into-hay days, Shapiro’s favorite player to watch was Joe Sakic, a star forward for the Colorado Ava-

lanche and a two-time Stanley Cup champion. Sakic retired from the NHL in 2009, right about the time Shapiro’s shot was the last thing an opposing goaltender wanted to face. A shot off Shapiro’s stick started to resemble a black bean then.

“He was the player I fol-lowed, the player I liked to watch more than anybody else,” Shapiro says. “Colorado used to be my favorite team. Watching ESPN, I’d always see highlights of Sakic, and I’d think, ‘Wow, I’d like to be like him, play like he does.’ He seemed like a great guy.”

Shapiro scored a team-high 49 goals and provided 24 assists for the Giants in his junior season. His 73 points ranked second among teammates behind classmate Gavin Proeh’s 80 (41 goals, 39 assists). The squad went 35-11-4. Shapiro made the all-state team. This past winter, during a 20-20-5 season, Shapiro led the Giants again in goals (36) and played in a mid-winter all-star game in Rolling Meadows.

“David’s size … he’s physi-cally imposing, a big mountain of a man,” Giants coach Sean Freeman says of the four-year

varsity player. “You could bathe a newborn in one of his skates. That’s how big is feet are. I’m guessing his skate size is 13, which means his shoe size is probably 14 or 15. David’s shot … it’s an NHL shot, incredible velocity. When I was younger, I got to play with about 25 guys who made it to the NHL. David’s shots were like their shots, the way they propelled off his stick. He’s got a laser shot, mid-90s (mph), maybe as high as 100.”

Shapiro visited the Univer-sity of Illinois last weekend. A friend of his older brother, Alec,

showed him around the campus in Champaign. Alec, a student at the University of Indiana, played hockey for the Giants. David Shapiro is also consider-ing Indiana and the University of Miami in Ohio. His probable major is either business or mar-keting, with an eye toward landing on sports-oriented career path in one of those fields. In the meantime he’s a happy and normal teen, enjoy-ing his final weeks as a senior in high school, playing in the occasional pickup basketball game with hs friends, watching TV shows and movies on

Netflix. Mention J.J. Watt, the defensive end for the Houston Texans, and watch Shapiro light up.

“He’s an animal,” Shapiro says. “He goes hard, every single play. Awesome. Awesome player. A role model. He played a little hockey when he was young.”

It seems so long ago, a little David Shapiro experiencing an abrupt meeting with a bale of hay along the rim of an outdoor rink. Shapiro can laugh about it today. It’s a typical piece in the fabric of an athlete’s life, isn’t it? Boy gets upset in a sports endeavor. Boy ends up enjoying the sport, excelling in games.

“I get players as kids when they start playing for me,” Freeman says. “I get to see them grow into young men. To me, there has not been a player, in my coaching career, better pre-pared for manhood than David is. He has matured incredibly through the years, persevered. David, no question, he could be doing anything after college. If you were to tell me, years from now, he’s a trial attorney, that wouldn’t surprise me. A come-dian on “Saturday Night Live”? Wouldn’t surprise me. An ex-ecutive with a company like Target? I’d think, ‘OK, that makes sense.’

“What I liked, really liked about David, was what I noticed before the start of every prac-tice. David was always smiling when he showed up.”

Notable: Senior co-captain Kieran Jagadeesh, a wing, paced the 2015-16 Giants in assists (31) and points (50). Senior co-captain David Shapiro ranked second in points (43), just ahead of senior alternate captain Garrett Collopy (42 points — 21 goals, 21 assists). … High-land Park’s top goaltender, Ty Jablonski (four shutouts), fin-ished 18-15-5, with a 2.95 goals-against average and a save percentage of .902. … Collopy scored twice in HP’s 6-3 defeat of visiting Mount Carmel in an exhibition game on March 6. Other Giants goals came from Jagadeesh, Jake Mandel, Dylan Abt and Aaron Hope.

BY BiLL mcLean, [email protected]

mounT ShapiRoAffable senior provided a huge presence — and scoring punch — for Giants hockey team

4 SCORE: david Shapiro capped his career by scoring a hat trick in a 6-4 playoff loss last month. he led the team in scoring in his last two seasons. photoGraphY BY GeorGe pfoertner

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the north shore weekend saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 | 47

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Page 50: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

SPORTS

48 | saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 the north shore weekend

BoYsPlayer of The yearLorenzo Edwards (Lake Forest) Sr.

fab fiveC: Lorenzo Edwards (Lake Forest) Sr.G: Ramar Evans (Loyola Academy) Jr.F: Jimmy Martinelli (Glenbrook South) Sr.F: Michael Stachnik (Glenbrook North) Sr.F: Colin Winchester (New Trier) Sr.

SecoNd fiveG: Brandon Danowski (Loyola Academy) Sr.F: Zach Fleischer (Highland Park) Sr.G: Chris Harris (LF Academy) Jr.G: Tino Malnati (New Trier) Sr.F: Kellen Witherell (Glenbrook North) So.

Third fiveG: Matt Giannakopoulos (Glen-brook South) Jr.C: Daniel Joseph (LF Academy) Sr.

G: Zach Hoffman (Glenbrook North) Sr.G: James Karis (Glenbrook North) Jr.G: Justin McMahon (Lake Forest) Jr.

fourTh fiveC: Spencer Boehm (New Trier) Fr.G: Dan Jenkins (Glenbrook South) Sr.F: Ryan Kitchel (Lake Forest) Sr.G: Ziv Tal (Highland Park) So.G: Andre White Jr. (Loyola Academy) Fr.

all-rookie TeamC: Spencer Boehm (New Trier) Fr.G: Evan Myers (Glenbrook North) Fr.G: Ziv Tal (Highland Park) So.G: Andre White Jr. (Loyola Academy) Fr.F: Kellen Witherell (Glenbrook North) So.

rookie of The yearKellen Witherell (Glenbrook North) So.

uNSuNg heroJoey Saslow (Highland Park) Sr.

beST off The beNchReed Thomas (Lake Forest) Jr.

beST ShoT blockerLorenzo Edwards (Lake Forest) Sr.

chairmaN of The boardSLorenzo Edwards (Lake Forest) Sr.

SPiriT awardEddie Trapp (Loyola Academy) Sr.

GIrLsPlayer of The yearJeannie Boehm (New Trier) Sr.

fab fiveC: Jeannie Boehm (New Trier) Sr.G: Caitlin Morrison (Glenbrook South) Sr.G: Kathryn Pedi (New Trier) Sr.C: Liz Satter (Loyola Academy) Sr.G: Carie Weinman (Glenbrook South) Jr.

SecoNd fiveG: Haley Greer (New Trier) Sr.G: Autumn Kalis (New Trier) Sr.G: Sarah McDonagh (Glenbrook South) Sr.F: Tessy Onwuka (LF Academy) Sr.G:Delaney Williams (Lake Forest) Jr.

Third fiveF: Kaci Burden (Highland Park) Sr.F: Ilana Malman (Glenbrook North) Sr.

G: Colleen Palmer (Regina Do-minican) Jr.F: Maeve Summerville (Lake Forest) So.F: Miranda Weber (Glenbrook North) Sr.

fourTh fiveG: Kirby Bartelstein (Highland Park) So.C: Mary Cormier (Loyola Academy) So.G: Kelly French (Regina Do-minican) So.G: Lizzy Shaw (Glenbrook South) So.F: Brianna Sturkey (LF Academy) Sr.

all-rookie TeamG: Jordan Davison (Glenbrook North) So.G: Sydney Ignoffo (Highland Park) Fr.G: Julia Martinez (Loyola Academy) Fr.G: Mikayla Stadler (Glenbrook

South) Fr.F: Grace Tirzmalis (Lake Forest) Fr.

rookie of The yearGrace Tirzmalis (Lake Forest) Fr.

uNSuNg heroMadison Kane (Loyola Academy) Jr.

beST off The beNchErin Dowdle (Loyola Academy) Sr.

beST ShoT blockerJeannie Boehm (New Trier) Sr.

chairwomaN of The boardSJeannie Boehm (New Trier) Sr.

SPiriT awardDahlia Cohen (Highland Park) Sr.

New Trier’s Jeannie Boehm photoGraphY BY JoeL Lerner.

SupReme couRTNorth shore Weekend selects 2015-16 All-Area Basketball teams

Lake forest’s Lorenzo Edwards photoGraphY BY JoeL Lerner.

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thlete of the Month

charliegentzkow

new trier boys swimming

The maximum number of medals an indi-vidual can collect at a state swimming and diving meet is four. Charlie Gentzkow, a New Trier senior, owns 16 career state swimming medals. Another maximum number.The Trevian ended his decorated prep career with a flourish at the state meet last month at Evanston Township High School, setting state records in two events for athletes with disabilities and silvering in two others. He established Illinois marks in the 200-yard freestyle (2:11.92) and 100 free (58.63).Take a look at that time in the 200 free again. Three years ago, as a freshman at the state meet, Gentzkow clocked a 2:39.16 in the event.

For his sensational efforts, Charlie Gentzkow will receive a special

gift from @Properties

Sports_3.12_East_LL.indd 7 3/8/16 10:05 PM

Page 51: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

©2016 Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor sales associates and are not employees of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage.

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50 | saturday march 5 | sunday march 6 2016 the north shore weekend

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Page 54: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

52 | saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 the north shore weekend

228 Raleigh Road, KenilworthTimeless elegance was the focus during the exceptional renovation of this extraordinary East Kenilworth home. Set on one of Kenilworth’s most sought after streets and one block from the lake, this 5 bedroom, 4.1 bath home has been thoughtfully expanded on every level. A grand foyer, with dramatic bridal stairway, leads to gracious living and dining rooms both with 10.5 ft ceilings. A spectacular sunroom opens to a private bluestone patio. The heart of the home is a custom kitchen with top of the line appliances along with a generous eat in area. Adjoining is an expansive family room with French doors leading on to the secluded patio. An elegant master suite on the first floor is separated from the main living space and includes a marble bath. The second floor boasts 4 large bedrooms-2 with en suite baths and two sharing a “Jack and Jill” with a convenient second floor laundry and office. Lower level rec room, mudroom & exercise room. Walk to Sears (JK-8), New Trier, Metra and beach. OFFERED AT $2,295,000

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the north shore weekend saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 | 53

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New Trier, which finished 26-5 this winter, placed four players — Jeannie Boehm, Kathryn Pedi, Haley Greer and Autumn Kalis — on the 2016 Illinois Basketball Coaches As-sociation (IBCA) Class 3A/4A all-state team.

Senior Jeannie Boehm was named to the First Team for the second year in a row. The 6-foot-3 Harvard University recruit is now a four-time IBCA all-stater. She was a Second Team selection in 2014, and she made Special Mention in 2013.

Boehm, who earned Mc-Donald’s All-America honors earlier this year, averaged 19.9 points, 10.7 rebounds and 3.4 blocks per game this winter.

Her career numbers are im-pressive: 1,872 points, 1,169 rebounds, 374 blocks and 249 assists. The Trevians came up with 100 wins and four re-gional titles during her four-year stint.

Pedi, who will play college hoops at Holy Cross, claimed Second Team recognition. Last year, the NT senior wing was a Third Team pick. This winter, the four-year varsity performer averaged 12.2 points and 5.2 rebounds per game. She shot 45 percent (62-139) f rom three-point range and 82 percent (50-61) from the foul line.

For the second year in a row, Greer, who is headed to Colgate, made the IBCA Third Team. The veteran point guard, who missed 13 games due to a back injury, averaged 4.9 assists per game. She scored 7.8 points per game.

Senior guard Autumn Kalis was NT’s fourth honoree. She earned Special Mention all-state honors after averaging 7.8 points, 2.4 assists and 2.5 assists per game.

Glenbrook South, which won 25 games this season, had two all-state selections: senior forward Caitlin Morrison and junior guard Carie Weinman.

Valparaiso-bound Morrison was named to the Second Team after averaging 15.6 points per game. She led her team in re-bounds (190 and blocks (47).

Weinman was a Fourth Team choice. She finished the season averaging 15.1 points per game. She shot 40 percent f rom three-point territory. She was the Titans’ team leader in steals (125) and assists (95).

Loyola Academy standout Liz Satter, who will play her college basketball at the Uni-versity of Pennsylvania, capped off her prep career by claiming Special Mention all-state ac-colades. The 6-2 post ended up with a 17.0 scoring average. She also pulled down 7.9 rebounds per game.

aRea STaRS make all-STaTe

SPORTS

LOyOLA ACAdEMy’S LIz SATTER.photoGraphY BY GeorGe pfoertner

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SUNDAY BREAKFAST

54 | saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 the north shore weekend

By BILL MCLEAN

The doctor’s tranquil, confident bedside manner is apparent at a booth in a restaurant.

Dean Tsarwhas, MD, has an easy smile, every hair in place, a runner’s trim build. He orders coffee and oatmeal (with blueberries and blackberries) and an English muffin at Egg Harbor Café in Lake Forest, his hometown since 2001.

The tone of his order puts the waitress at ease. He makes eye contact with the employee, nods, returns the menu. His order puts his booth companion at ease as well. Dr. Tsarwhas listens to a question. His resting-heart-rate demeanor is part placid, part welcoming. If there ever comes a time when a doctor has to inform you of a cancer diagnosis, you would want to hear it from Tsarwhas.

“The hardest part of my day,” Tsarwhas, 52, says of revealing such news to a patient. “As soon as I walk into the room, the patient is looking for clues from me, clues to what I am about to say. One of the first things I ask, after telling the patient, is, ‘Who is on your team?’ You have to have a team in place to support you every step of the way. That team could be the family or other loved ones or friends, or every-body in that person’s life.”

Tsarwhas’ team is based at Northwestern Medicine’s Lake Forest Hospital. He was named captain of one of the hospital’s

groups in January, or Medical Director of Cancer Services at the hospital and Grayslake Out-patient Center. His specific teammates are surgeons, radia-tion doctors, nurse navigators, social workers, dieticians, hospi-tal administrators. Northwestern Medicine’s Lake Forest Hospital also provides its patients a pathway to research and clinical trials conducted in Chicago.

“It’s important to stay up with up-to-date findings in oncology, to stay connected with our Northwestern Medicine col-leagues in Chicago,” Tsarwhas says. “We use a strong multidis-ciplinary approach. I am excited about the hospital, about what’s going on there, about its growth and connection to Northwestern Medicine. There’s nothing like it, Northwestern Medicine aligning with a community hos-pital, sharing resources, integrat-ing. Lake Forest Hospital is an asset in Lake Forest … along the whole North Shore, really.

“The people in this area are medically sophisticated,” he adds. “People here want the best care, and they’re getting it.”

Tsarwhas grew up in Canton, Ohio, a punt, pass and kick away from that town’s Pro Football Hall of Fame. The future doctor, a son of a kindergarten teacher mom and a school administrator dad, wanted to be a crack debater at GlenOak High School, not a crack defensive back. Tsarwhas tackled assignments and aced

classes, paving his way to admis-sion at Northeastern Ohio Uni-versity and a medical degree. He completed his residency at the University of Michigan and at-tained fellowship status at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute at Harvard Medical School.

Tsarwhas met a woman, Amy, on a blind date in Michigan. Amy worked for Chrysler at the time. Tsarwhas is Greek. Amy is Greek. Eerily, several years before the two had met, Amy’s mother, Christine, read about the success of a man named Dean Tsarwhas in a 1987 edition of the Orthodox Ob-server, a newspaper. Christine cut the article out and placed it in a jar.

“Amy,” Dr. Tsarwhas recalls, “called her mom up and said, ‘Hey, I’m going on a blind date tonight.’ Later in the conversa-tion, her mom said, “I know what he looks like.’ ”

Dean and Amy got married in 1991. They lived in Liber-tyville for eight years before moving to Lake Forest 15 years ago. They have three children, ranging in age from 18 to 23.

“My wife gives me balance, keeps me grounded,” Dr. Tsarwhas says. “I have m o r e adminis-

trative duties now [because of his new position], but I still see patients. The number of hours I work … they’re long, yes. I get calls f rom patients on the weekend, from doctors. This field

can be consuming. It’s also a calling. You have to love it, and I do. Every day I see strength and courage from my cancer patients. I see optimism and resiliency.”

One of his patients had Stage 4 cancer. The patient ran in the Chicago Marathon one year and decided to run in it nine more

times. The patient ran in the Boston Marathon three times. The patient is alive today, still refusing to exit life’s stage. Tsarwhas was in a restaurant

when he recognized another former patient of his, a Hodgkin’s lym-phoma survivor. The survivor is now the father

of a couple of kids.“I form strong relation-

ships with my patients,” Tsar-whas says. “Many of my pa-tients are friends for life. I

think often of what my patients are going

through, like a mother in her 30s with breast cancer,

with young kids. I think of what she’s doing to be there for her kids, of how she’s r a l l y ing each day. I am in awe

of her.”A year

ago he spent

two weeks at the largest referral hospital in Uganda, teaching student residents and represent-ing the American Society of Hematology. The hospital con-tains 1,500 beds. Some 3,000 patients had been admitted to the same hospital when Tsar-whas arrived. How big was the shoehorn that was used to pull off that feat?

“The worst hospital in the United States would be the best hospital in Uganda,” Tsarwhas, also the vice chief of the Lake Forest Hospital medical staff and a faculty member of the North-western University Feinberg School of Medicine, says. “There is such a disparity in resources. It made me appreciate what we have here. It was an unbelievable experience, spending time over there, seeing the challenges that country faces in patient care. The students there impressed me. They’re bright and eager, willing to learn.”

The students asked questions. The students got answers. Tsar-whas, stateside, occasionally fields a question that has nothing to do with diagnoses or treat-ments. And everything to do with his state of mind. The ques-tion: Do you get depressed doing what you do?

“I don’t,” Tsarwhas says. “It’s a privilege to come to work every day and help my patients live the longest and best life possible. The people I see, my patients, inspire me. I get inspired every day.”

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Dean Tsarwhas, M. D. | Illustration by Barry Blitt

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Sports_3.12_East_LL.indd 13 3/8/16 10:05 PM

Page 57: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

©2016 Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Oper-ated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker, the Coldwell Banker Logo, Coldwell Banker Previews International and the Coldwell Banker Previews International logo are registered and unregistered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor sales associates and are not employees of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage.

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Working With the Best Matters

ColdWell Banker

©2016 Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor sales associates and are not employees of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage.

479.685.8513 (c) 847.835.6000 (o)

[email protected]

Proudly Welcomes Back

Kathy hartsig

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Page 58: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 179

893 ELM STREET, WINNETKA, $1,465,000 ALLA KIMBAROVSKY, 847.208.7212

THE #1 LUXURY BROKERAGE FIRM IN THE CHICAGO AND NORTH SHORE MARKETPLACE.

Source: MRED $1 million+ sales, Chicago and North Shore, 1-1-2015 to 12-31-2015.

saturday march 12 | sunday march 13 2016 | the north shore weekend

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