The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

56
SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 26 | SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 27 2015 FIND US ONLINE: DailyNorthShore.com DailyNorthShore.com ECRWSS LOCAL POSTAL CUSTOMER PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID PERMIT NO. 91 HIGHLAND PK, IL NO. 155 | A JWC MEDIA PUBLICATION FOLLOW US: SUNDAY BREAKFAST A Talk With SNL Alum Tim Kazurinsky. P54 ILLUSTRATION BY BARRY BLITT PREVIEW Excerpt from the Sheridan Road Fashion issue! P.17 SPORTS Eamonn Moore plays valuable role for Highland Park High School boys soccer team. P37 NORTH SHORE STYLE &SUBSTANCE SEPTEMBER 2015 Dress shabbily and they remember the dress; dress impeccably and they remember the woman. COCO CHANEL THE SNAP GALA Exposing philanthropy Photographer WARREN GUTHRIE Finds the light in the everyday GOWN & COUNTRY Glamour in the garden Welcomes New York Times Best Selling Authors DR. MICHAEL THOMPSON For a lecture on “The Pressured Child: Helping Navigate Success” TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29 | 10:00 a.m. A co-educational independent school for students age 2 through Grade 8. Graduating students of strong character with a passion for learning since 1888. Please RSVP to (847) 234-2350 or www.lfcds.org/speakerseries | 145 S. Green Bay Road, Lake Forest, IL 60045 | www.lfcds.org DR. NED HALLOWELL For a lecture on “The Childhood Roots of Adult Happiness” WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21 | 10:00 a.m. Free and Open to the Public BY BRIAN SLUPSKI DAILYNORTHSHORE.COM T he Cars & Stars fund- raiser in Northbrook will feature Bentleys, Bears and a chance to address hunger. e Oct. 8 Northern Illinois Food Bank event is in its third year and its honorary chairman is Brian McCaskey, who also serves on the board of directors of the Chicago Bears. McCaskey said the event is a chance to have a great time, while addressing an important issue. “Most people do not realize NEWS Continued on PG 12 Continued on PG 12 Fundraiser To Feature Bears, Bentleys and Chance To Fight Hunger BY BILL MCLEAN F resh images of refugees fleeing war-torn countries continue to appear each day. On television. On the internet. In print. Some of the faces express hope, others fear and uncertainty. e face and lifeless body of a three-year-old, sadly, is an image that haunts. And lingers. Aylan Kurdi, a Syrian Kurdish refugee from Kobani, washed ashore in Turkey after a boat holding more than 20 people and heading to the Greek island of Kos — had capsized early this month. More than 380,000 people have crossed the Mediterranean this year in search of safety, an editorial notes in e Nation. At least 2,850 have drowned or are missing at sea. Germany expects 800,000 migrants this year. “It’s a terrible tragedy, what is unfolding,” Ahmad Sadri, a native of Iran and professor of Islamic World Studies at Lake Forest College, says. “My interest [as an academic] is the society of reli- gions in the world. Old religions, such as Christianity and Judaism, have acclimated to the modern world. Another old religion, Islam, … it gets complicated. ere is prosperity in [Muslim- majority countries] Indonesia, Turkey, Malaysia. ese countries have acclimated to modernity. “Fundamentalism and auto- cratic forms of government, in other countries, lead to isolation,” he adds. “ese refugees, these migrants, are voting with their feet.” Sadri, a professor of sociology in the sociology and anthropol- ogy department at LFC since 1988, is scheduled to speak at an “Our Changing World” seminar Oct. 3 (8:30 a.m.-1 p.m.) at North Shore Senior Center in Northfield. e title of his pre- sentation is, “Good News and Bad News from the Islamic World: Islam in Transition and Turmoil.” Tough news greeted Sadri, 61, shortly after he arrived in Tehran, Iran, in the summer of 2014. e University of Tehran graduate was interrogated for eight hours and jailed for signing a petition calling for the release of a Toronto professor, who had been detained. Fourteen others also signed it. Sadri was charged with propa- ganda against the state and col- laborating with the enemy. e first crime carries a prison term of one year, the latter a prison term of five years. “I had just expressed myself,” Sadri says. He was released on bail, but if he were to return to Iran he would be arrested upon landing at an airport. e administration at Lake Forest College fully sup- ported Sadri, who, in 1978, earned his PhD in sociology from OUR CHANGING WORLD Ahmad Sadri. PHOTOGRAPHY BY JOEL LERNER Free from an Iranian jail, local professor looks for hope in refugee crisis

description

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.

Transcript of The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

Page 1: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

saturday sEPtEMBEr 26 | sunday sEPtEMBEr 27 2015 Find us online: dailynorthshore.com

DailyNorthShore.com

ECRWSSLOCaL POstaL CustOMEr

Prsrt stdu.s. POstagE

PAIDPErMit nO. 91

HigHLand Pk, iL

nO. 155 | a JWC MEdia PuBLiCatiOn Follow us:

sunday breakfastA Talk With SNL Alum Tim Kazurinsky. P54IllustratIon by barry blItt

PreviewExcerpt from the Sheridan Road Fashion issue! P.17

sPOrtsEamonn Moore plays valuable role for Highland Park High School boys soccer team. P37

NORTH SHORE STYLE & SUBSTANCESEPTEMBER 2015

“ Dress shabbily and they

remember the dress; dress

impeccably and they remember

the woman.”–COCO CHANEL

THE SNAP GALAExposing philanthropy

Photographer WARREN GUTHRIE Finds the light in the everyday

GOWN & COUNTRY

Glamour in the garden

SR_0915_cover_final.indd 1 8/20/15 3:04 PM

Welcomes New York Times Best Selling Authors

Dr. MichAel ThoMpSon For a lecture on “The pressured child: helping navigate Success” TUeSDAY, SepTeMBer 29 | 10:00 a.m.

A co-educational independent school for students age 2 through Grade 8. Graduating students of strong character with a passion for learning since 1888. Please RSVP to (847) 234-2350 or www.lfcds.org/speakerseries | 145 S. Green Bay Road, Lake Forest, IL 60045 | www.lfcds.org

Dr. neD hAlloWellFor a lecture on “The childhood roots of Adult happiness”WeDneSDAY, ocToBer 21 | 10:00 a.m.

Free and open to the public

by brian slupskidailynorthshore.com

The Cars & Stars fund-raiser in Northbrook will feature Bentleys, Bears

and a chance to address hunger.The Oct. 8 Northern Illinois

Food Bank event is in its third year and its honorary chairman is Brian McCaskey, who also serves on the board of directors of the Chicago Bears.

McCaskey said the event is a chance to have a great time, while addressing an important issue.

“Most people do not realize

NEWS

Continued on PG 12Continued on PG 12

Fundraiser To Feature Bears, Bentleys and Chance To Fight Hunger

by bill mclean

Fresh images of refugees fleeing war-torn countries continue to appear each day.

On television. On the internet. In print. Some of the faces express hope, others fear and uncertainty.

The face and lifeless body of a three-year-old, sadly, is an image that haunts. And lingers. Aylan Kurdi, a Syrian Kurdish refugee from Kobani, washed ashore in Turkey after a boat holding more than 20 people and heading to the Greek island of Kos — had capsized early this month.

More than 380,000 people have crossed the Mediterranean this year in search of safety, an editorial notes in The Nation. At least 2,850 have drowned or are missing at sea.

Germany expects 800,000 migrants this year.

“It’s a terrible tragedy, what is unfolding,” Ahmad Sadri, a native of Iran and professor of Islamic World Studies at Lake Forest College, says. “My interest [as an academic] is the society of reli-gions in the world. Old religions, such as Christianity and Judaism, have acclimated to the modern world. Another old religion, Islam, … it gets complicated. There is prosperity in [Muslim-majority countries] Indonesia, Turkey, Malaysia. These countries have acclimated to modernity.

“Fundamentalism and auto-

cratic forms of government, in other countries, lead to isolation,” he adds. “These refugees, these migrants, are voting with their feet.”

Sadri, a professor of sociology in the sociology and anthropol-ogy department at LFC since 1988, is scheduled to speak at an “Our Changing World” seminar Oct. 3 (8:30 a.m.-1 p.m.) at North Shore Senior Center in Northfield. The title of his pre-sentation is, “Good News and Bad News from the Islamic World: Islam in Transition and Turmoil.”

Tough news greeted Sadri, 61, shortly after he arrived in Tehran, Iran, in the summer of 2014. The University of Tehran graduate was interrogated for eight hours and jailed for signing a petition calling for the release of a Toronto professor, who had been detained. Fourteen others also signed it. Sadri was charged with propa-ganda against the state and col-laborating with the enemy. The first crime carries a prison term of one year, the latter a prison term of five years.

“I had just expressed myself,” Sadri says.

He was released on bail, but if he were to return to Iran he would be arrested upon landing at an airport. The administration at Lake Forest College fully sup-ported Sadri, who, in 1978, earned his PhD in sociology from

OUr changing wOrld

ahmad sadri. PhotograPhy by Joel lerner

Free from an Iranian jail, local professor looks for hope in refugee crisis

Page 2: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

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Page 8: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

INDEX

[ NEWS ]

12 searching for hope Freed after being jailed in Iran last year, Lake Forest College professor Ahmad Sadri reflects on the ongoing refugee crisis.

12 cars and stars! Fundraiser to combat hunger..

14 it’s in the hole! Bill Murray and brothers inducted into caddie hall of fame.

[LIFESTYLE & ARTS ]

18 ordinary people Theater Review: Powerful performances drive “Ordinary People”

20 north shore foodie Check out a delicious recipe from a top chef on the North Shore.

[ REAL ESTATE ]

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

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

[ SPORTS ]

44 rock solid Lake Forest High School senior Emily Young continues to card sparkling scores on the local links.

[ LAST BUT NOT LEAST ]

54 sunday breakfast Interview with Evanston resident and SNL alum Tim Kazurinsky.

12IN THIS ISSUE

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Page 9: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

American Home Maintenance Service & Repairs, LLC.

Phone : 847-626-4149 847807-1583 | Fax: 847-562-1958 | www.americanhomemaintenance.net

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Page 10: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

NEWS

10 | saturday september 26 | sunday september 27 2015 the north shore weekend

[email protected]

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 ]Joanna Brown Sheryl Devore Sam Eichner Bob Gariano Scott Holleran Jake Jarvi Angelika Labno Simon Murray

Gregg Shapiro Jill Soderberg

[ PHOTOGRAPHY AND ART ]Joel Lerner chief photographer

Larry Miller contributing photographerRobin Subar contributing photographer

Barry Blitt illustrator

[ SALES ]Jill Dillingham vice president of sales

Gretchen Barnard, Brandon Batt, M.J. Cadden, Courtney Pitt, Mary Ellen Sherman

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

Like us on Facebook!© 2015 The North Shore Weekend/A publication of JWC Media

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There’s a point in the indie romantic comedy “People Places Things” when a

haggard looking, sad-sack, wholly jaded graphic artist (played by New Zealand actor Jemaine Clement of “Flight of the Con-chords”) asks his students at the liberal arts college where he teaches, “Why does life suck? Double underline so hard.” He sits on his desk and allows the young class of pen-holding artists to soak in the middle-aged angst.

“Because people are selfish and petty,” states one girl, matter-of-factly.

Such lessons however are lost on the Gorton Community Center; which relies on the gen-erosity of residents and businesses to help fund its myriad programs, services, and building improve-

ments. For the first time, the historic

building in Lake Forest will be showing critically acclaimed in-dependent films one Thursday each month from October through May. “People Places Things,” a 2015 Sundance Film Festival darling, is the first film in the series. And it never would’ve hap-pened without a partnership with the Gene Siskel Film Center, hours of volunteers’ time, and a sizable endowment from the widow of a famous filmmaker.

The Gene Siskel Film Center has a long-standing mission of presenting significant world cinema in a non-commercial context. Established as the Film Center of the School of Art Insti-tute of Chicago more than 40 years ago, it was renamed in 2000 to honor the late film critic (and Chicago native) who his longtime “At the Movies” partner, Roger

Ebert, described as “formidably well-informed.”

From its inception, Siskel championed the Film Center. (When asked by a journalist to list his three favorite things about Chicago, he named Michael Jordan, Mayor Daley, and the Film Center.) He urged public funding and audience support. And maybe above all, he applauded the dis-tinctive programming.

Continuing his legacy, the Gene Siskel Film Center has pre-sented world-class independent, international, and classic cinema. And now those films will be coming to the Gorton Center.

“We’re planning on showing a range of films that would best represent the [Gorton Center],” said Executive Director, Gene Siskel Film Center, Jean de St. Aubin. According to Aubin, these movies will be screened at the Siskel Film Center six weeks prior

to their debut at the Gorton. In that way, “we’ll have a sense of what the box office was like, what public interest was like.”

With the inaugural screening of “People Places Things” on Oct. 1, it will be the first time the Gene Siskel Film Center has ever over-seen public screenings outside of the city.

The two organizations landed on each other’s radars fairly re-cently. (The finalizing agreements were inked only two weeks ago.) This, after Nancy Hughes (the widow of John Hughes), made a $2 million donation to Gorton’s Community Spirit Transformed capital campaign to raise money, without which none of this would’ve been possible.

Out of her generous donation, $1.5 million went to the newly renovated theater, which has been named The John & Nancy Hughes Theater in her honor.

(Another $500,000 went to endow another film series in John Hughes’ name, which will launch next year.)

It was around that time, late 2014, after Mrs. Hughes made her donation, when the Gorton Center’s Board started to reach out to other independent movie theaters in and around Chicago. At first it was to get an idea about the behind-the-curtain practices of the industry, such as distribu-tion and reporting. But as the theater was being renovated, the Board knew a partnership with the Gene Siskel Film Center would be integral.

“If we could get into a partner-ship with them, they could take us by the hand and educate us, as far as how to deal with distribu-tors, how to deal with reporting issues,” said Gorton Board Member Al Lerner, who was largely responsible for the part-

nership. Not to mention “they have two people that do nothing but curate films.”

Added Lerner, “We’re very excited to be working with the Gene Siskel Film Center because they’re a well established name and I think provide us with high quality films that will appeal to our audience.”

On a recent trip to the Gorton Center, Marlene Iglitzen (Siskel’s wife) and de St. Aubin toured the newly renovated facility. “We were really impressed,” said de St. Aubin. “We are delighted to share our eclectic programming through this film series.

“Films are the single greatest art form for expressing the human condition,” she added. “They have the power to not only entertain us but they transport us to other places and times, providing us with a better understanding of ourselves and our world.”

At the MovIes

Page 11: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

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Page 12: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

NEWS

12 | saturday september 26 | sunday september 27 2015 the north shore weekend

how much hunger affects our communities,” McCaskey said. “One in five children are im-pacted by hunger [in the U.S.]”

The Northern Illinois Food Bank serves a 13-county area, although this fundraiser will specifically target Lake County. The bank provides food to a wide network of more than 800 food pantries and feeding programs.

“For every $1 that gets donated we are able to purchase $8 worth

of food because of our buying power,” said Monica Marr, a staff member at Northern Illinois Food Bank.

The event will be held at Steve Foley Motors of Northbrook-Cadillac, Rolls-Royce, Bentley, 100 Skokie Blvd. Attendees will be able to enjoy fine food from some of the areas best chefs.

Although the star guest list has not been finalized, the previ-ous two events have featured former and current Chicago Bears, as well as a silent auction

featuring team memorabilia.“I think it’s a wonderful cause

and a fun event,” McCaskey said. “There will be some terrific food from area chefs. It’s a fun envi-ronment and people should drop in and be a part of it as a company

or an individual.”McCaskey noted that the food

bank helps more than 71,000 people each week.

Tickets for an individual cost $200. Sponsorship opportunities for groups range in price from

$2,500 to $15,000. Fifth Third Bank already has signed up to be a primary sponsor of the event.

Artist Elliot From will speed paint a Chicago Bears and a Chicago Blackhawks-themed work. The two paintings will then

be auctioned off. The event also will feature a DJ and plenty of opportunity to mingle.

“[Guests] can expect an excit-ing event that also is a great op-portunity to network and make some new contacts,” Marr said.

aHMad sadri Cont. from PG 1

FundraisEr Cont. from PG 1

the New School for Social Re-search in New York City. He resumed teaching at LFC last December.

“I am grateful for what the college did for me, and I do hope the charges will be dismissed,” Sadri says. “The college used its influence to help me. The college saw to it that my classes were taught [in the fall term] in my absence.”

Mohammad Khatami, the President of Iran from 1997-2005 and a Reformist politician, spoke at LFC nine years ago. Sadri was instrumental in secur-ing the engagement.

“A liberal arts education is pure learning,” he says. “It expands students’ minds. Good citizens who think on their feet are here, and they will be ready to meet the challenges of tomorrow. My job, this job on this campus, is a dream job. It’s a great gig if you can get it. I am constantly stimu-lated, interacting with my stu-dents in the classroom.”

Ever the optimist, Sadri ac-knowledges the horrors of the refugee crisis but sees the poten-tial for good news to emerge from it. He sees the United States’

nuclear deal with Iran as a good thing, as an opportunity to end tensions between the countries and break the “logjam of distrust” that has existed for 35 years.

“I see silver linings. I like to

look for silver linings,” says Sadri, adding a similar wave of refugees fled after the 2003 invasion of Iraq. “Yes, it is bad news, terrible news, seeing what we’re seeing [during the refugee crisis]. But it

is also evidence … evidence that extremism, or fundamentalism, is not working. Evidence such as what we’re seeing is an opportu-nity for reformists to declare, ‘Look, open your eyes. Is this

what you want?’ ” The “Our Changing World”

seminar at the North Shore Senior Center (161 Northfield Road in Northfield), in partnership with Common Ground, starts Oct. 3 with

check-in and a continental breakfast at 8:30 a.m. The keynote presentation begins at 9 a.m. The cost to attend for NSSC members is $79; $99 for non-members. The phone number at the NSSC is (847) 784-6000.

“Yes, it is bad news, terrible

news, seeing what we’re seeing

[during the refugee crisis]. But

it is also evidence … evidence that

extremism, or fundamentalism,

is not working. evidence such

as what we’re seeing is an

opportunity for reformists to

declare, ‘Look, open your eyes.

Is this what you want?’”

–Ahmad Sadri

ahmad sadri. PhotograPhy by Joel lerner

What? cars and Stars fundraiser for northern illinois Food Bank

Where? Steve Foley Motors of northbrook-cadillac, rolls-royce, Bentley, 100 Skokie Blvd.

When? Oct. 8

Who to Contact? Space is limited. For more information contact Monica Marr at 847-336-3663, ext. 748 or email her at [email protected]

Page 13: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

12 Rooms, 5 Beds, 2.2 Baths625 Oak Street, Winnetka 625OakSt.KoenigRubloff.com

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Page 14: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

NEWS

14 | saturday september 26 | sunday september 27 2015 the north shore weekend

dailynorthshore.com

Actor Bill Murray and his five brothers – whose ex-periences as caddies at

Indian Hill Club in Winnetka inspired the 1980 comedy classic, “Caddyshack” – were inducted into The Caddie Hall of Fame on Wednesday night at the 2015 BMW Championship following their participation in the Gardner Heidrick Pro-Am at Conway Farms Golf Club in Lake Forest.

Administered by the Western Golf Association since 2007, The Caddie Hall of Fame highlights the tradition and importance of caddying by recognizing indi-viduals who have devoted their lives to the game of golf through caddying or by supporting the role of caddies.

During the induction ceremo-ny, the six brothers discussed their caddie days, their family and golf. Moderator Jimmy Roberts of NBC Sports asked the brothers what makes a good caddie.

“A good caddie makes a member feel like part of a team and like you’re trying to accom-plish something together,” said Ed Murray, the only of the Murray brothers to earn the Evans Scholarship.

Bill Murray said, “It’s an ability to look at a player when he hits a bad shot and go ‘ehhhh….. it happens.’ And when he hits a good shot, you go, ‘well, that’s really who you are.’”

The Murray Brothers join the likes of Tom Watson, Chick Evans and Jack Nicklaus in The Caddie Hall of Fame.

“What an honor to be includ-ed with Old Tom Morris, Frances Ouimet, Fluff Cowan and all that crowd,” Ed said.

“I’m just afraid they’re going to make me caddie again,” Bill joked.

Bill’s portrayal of Bushwood Country Club’s hapless greens-keeper, Carl Spackler, in “Cad-dyshack” helped immortalize the film, which was co-written by his older brother, Brian Doyle-Mur-ray, who also played caddie master Lou Loomis in the movie.

“We are honored and excited to welcome the Murray brothers to the 2015 BMW Championship and to induct them into The

Caddie Hall of Fame,” said Vince Pellegrino, Senior Vice President of Tournaments for the Western Golf Association, which conducts the BMW Championship.

“The Murray brothers’ experi-ences coming of age in the caddie yard – including the quest for an Evans Scholarship – are what have made “Caddyshack” a favor-ite, not just of golfers and sports fans but of movie lovers across the world.”

Brian based a key plot element of “Caddyshack” on the eldest Murray brother Ed’s pursuit of a caddie scholarship. Ed was awarded an Evans Scholarship to attend Northwestern University in 1963.

The Murray brothers and their three sisters – Nancy, Peggy and Laura – grew up in Wilmette. Their father, Edward Murray, was a lumber salesman and their mother, Lucille, was a home-maker.

The InducteesEd Murray, 71, retired in 2010

as senior vice president with

Morgan Stanley after a 27-year career as a financial consultant. The first of the Murray brothers to work at Indian Hill, Ed caddied for the likes of evangelist Billy Graham, Bob Hope and Charles “Chick” Evans, a U.S. Open champion and founder of the Evans Scholarship. He re-ceived the Evans Scholarship in 1963, but four years in the Air Force delayed his graduation until 1971. He played a bit part in Cad-dyshack, earning $35 a day as an extra. He and actor Michael O’Keefe, who played Noonan, played golf together during

filming. Ed is still an avid golfer.Brian Doyle-Murray, 69, has

had a 43-year career as an actor, comedian, voice-actor and screen-writer, earning three Emmy nominations for Outstanding Writing in a Comedy in 1978, ’79 and ’80 for his work on Saturday Night Live, NBC’s trailblazing sketch comedy and variety show. He has appeared in a number of movies – including Caddyshack, Scrooged, Ghostbusters II, the Razor’s Edge and Groundhog Day – and TV shows. He cur-rently has a recurring role as auto dealership owner Don Ehlert in the sitcom The Middle on ABC. He got his start at Chicago’s Second City improvisational sketch comedy theater. Brian also is an avid golfer.

Bill Murray, 64, followed his brother Brian to Second City and joined the cast of Saturday Night Live in 1976, eventually becom-ing a leading member of the cast and earning an Emmy Award. He parlayed his comedic genius into starring roles in such box off ice hits as Caddyshack,

Stripes,  and Tootsie. He later starred in Ghostbusters, also a massive hit. In recent years, Murray has turned to more dra-matic roles, winning a Golden Globe Award for his work in Lost in Translation. Throughout his career, Murray’s love of golf has been a constant. He has been a regular at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro Am, where his crazy outfits and occasionally outra-

geous crowd interactions delight live and TV audiences alike.

Andrew Murray, 61, is a chef, and is co-founder and co-chari-man of the Murray Bros. Cad-dyshack restaurant in St. Augus-tine, Florida. The restaurant, located in the World Golf Village, opened in 2001. Andy usually can be found either in the kitchen or greeting customers at the front door.

John Murray, 57, is an actor, writer and producer. He has ap-peared in a number of films, in-cluding  Starting Over, Cad-dyshack, They All Laughed, Moving Violations and Scrooged.He also has appeared in several TV roles on such programs as Northern Exposure and theE-leventh Hour.

Joel Murray, 52, has been in show business since 1986, includ-ing a stint at Second City early in his career. He recently played the recurring character of advertising

c o p y w r i t e r Freddy Rumsen in 15 episodes of the mammoth hit series  Mad Men. He starred in the 1990 TV seriesGrand, the 1991 comedy ser ies  Pacif ic Station  and the 19 9 2 A B C series Dharma & Greg. He has made guest appearances on such shows as The Nanny, Joan of Arcadia, Two and a Ha l f Men, Malcom in the Middle, Criminal Minds and Blossom. In the 2012 film God Bless America  he portrays Frank, a man whose contempt

for the superficiality and mean-ness of America society sends him over the edge and into a killing spree. In the 2013 film Monsters University, he played the voice of Don Carlton, a middle-aged monster. He recently joined the improve-comedy troupe Whose Live Anyway?

Submitted by the Western Golf Association.

murray brothers hall of fame

Murray brothers. Charles Cherney PhotograPhy

“I’m just afraid

they’re going

to make me

caddie again.”

–Bill Murray

Page 15: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

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Page 16: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

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Page 17: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

the north shore weekend saturday september 26 | sunday september 27 2015 | 17

LIFESTYLE & ARTS

These photos are pulled from the spectacular September fashion issue of Sheridan Road. The next issue of the magazine

arrives the first week of October.

SHERIDAN ROAD fAll fASHION ISSuE

NORTH SHORE STYLE & SUBSTANCESEPTEMBER 2015

“ Dress shabbily and they

remember the dress; dress

impeccably and they remember

the woman.”–COCO CHANEL

THE SNAP GALAExposing philanthropy

Photographer WARREN GUTHRIE Finds the light in the everyday

GOWN & COUNTRY

Glamour in the garden

SR_0915_cover_final.indd 1 8/20/15 3:04 PM

the grass is always greener: Dress by Maticevski, available at Chalk, earrings from Neapoliton, necklace by Oscar de la Renta at Neiman Marcus

garden stroll: Dress by J. Mendel, bracelet and necklace by Christian Dior, all f rom Neapolitan

baa baa black sheep: Dress by Kay Unger, earrings and ring available at Neiman Marcus

Page 18: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

LIFESTYLE & ARTS

18 | saturday september 26 | sunday september 27 2015 the north shore weekend

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SEPTEMBER 25-27, 2015Chicago Botanic Garden

Powerful Performances Drive ‘Ordinary People’By Jill SoderBerg

The story of “Ordinary People,” Citadel Theatre’s current production, is heartbreaking,

but the emotional journey is one well worth taking largely because of the powerfully affecting perfor-mance of Matt Ronzani as Conrad Jarrett, the troubled young man at the center of the play. Judith Guest’s book, dramatized by Nancy Gilsenan, explores the af-termath of loss through the Jarrett family, whose son Buck died in a sailing accident. Following his older brother’s death, Conrad at-tempted suicide and has returned home after a prolonged hospital stay.

Home is Lake Forest, emblem-atic of a traditional, affluent town, which is where Guest set her book and where Robert Redford filmed his 1980 movie, casting commu-nity members, including the Lake Forest High School swim team (Buck and Conrad were swim-mers), and creating a celebrity-driven stir here 35 years ago. The movie, starring Timothy Hutton, Mary Tyler Moore, and Judd Hirsch, won that year’s Academy Award for Best Picture. The story, about a family of “ordinary people” coping with tragedy and a child challenged by depression, is as resonant now as it was then, perhaps especially so in the wake of the high school suicides in our community three years ago.

Director Scott Phelps has as-sembled a solid cast and effec-tively uses projections to locate the

action—as the play opens, familiar images of Market Square, the train station, the Lantern—and to add texture, especially evocative when Conrad, wrestling with survivor’s guilt, relives the trauma of the day when the waters of Lake Michi-gan, projected over the entire set, claimed his brother’s life.

As the Jarrett family endeavors to return to normalcy, Conrad’s father, Cal, a successful lawyer, played by Jeff Gamlin, tries to bring his family back together but is thwarted by his wife, Beth, who is remote, impenetrable, and overly concerned with appearances. As Conrad says, “She wants every-thing to be perfect.” Julie Stevens’s perfectly groomed Beth looks remarkably like Mary Tyler Moore, but the underwritten script doesn’t allow her to develop as the sympathetic character that was revealed in the film, but merely as an antagonist in the household dynamic, more concerned with her country club activities than with the emotional landscape of her family. Cal insists that Conrad “stick with the plan” and meet with the hospital-recommended psy-chiatrist, and Chuck Quinn III as Dr. Berger brings authenticity to the role of the unkempt but astute therapist.

Ultimately, this is a play whose success hinges on the role of Conrad; and whether deflecting dialogue with a quip or evoking the agony of a nightmare, Matt Ronzani is masterful in exhibiting Conrad’s full range of emotions. His wrenching breakthrough

meeting with Dr. Berger captures the intense anguish of his desper-ate struggle, and that anguish permeates the theatre.

The ensemble also includes Julia MacMillan, whose mature bearing hampers her believability as Jean-nine, Conrad’s classmate and ro-mantic interest, as well as Danielle Mohrbach playing Karen, the severely depressed girl Conrad met in the hospital, who asks, “Do you ever worry you’re going to slip?” Rounding out the able cast are Chris Westbrook as Joe Lazenby, a fellow swim team member, sym-pathetic to Conrad; Chuck Quinn IV as Stillman, the jock who con-siders Conrad “a flake”; and Andy Clifton as the hard-nosed swim coach.

Although the shortcomings of the adaptation result in several snapshot scenes incompletely in-tegrated into the narrative, Cita-del’s “Ordinary People” is at times gripping—the audience is rooting for Conrad’s rehabilitation—as it portrays the complexities of love in a compelling story about char-acters struggling to be in control. The emotional turmoil is unset-tling, but the reward is satisfying when a couple of these characters learn, grow, and ultimately connect.

“Ordinary People” runs through October 18 with performances pre-sented Thursday through Sunday on the Citadel Theatre stage at the west campus of Lake Forest High School, 300 South Waukegan Road. Mati-nees are on Sundays at 3 PM. For tickets and information, call 847-735-8554 or visit citadeltheatre.org.

Matt Ronzani (Conrad) and Julia MacMillan (Jeannine) in “Ordinary People” at Citadel Theatre.

Page 19: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

the north shore weekend saturday september 26 | sunday september 27 2015 | 19

LIFESTYLE & ARTS

About the same time that my friends and neighbors (and me) were posting to Face-

book and Instagram photos of our kids on the first day of school, a Canadian couple was making headlines with their photo from the end of their marriage.

Chris and Shannon Neuman photographed themselves grin-

ning from ear to ear outside of the Calgary Courts Center moments after they divorced. She explained when she posted the photo to Facebook that they were not smiling about their divorce — but rather that they ended their 11-year marriage without ending their relationship.

“We have done something

extraordinary (we think anyway!),” Shannon Neuman wrote. “We have respectfully, thoughtfully and honorably ended our marriage in a way that will allow us to go forward as parenting partners.”

They fully intend to be a united front for the rest of their days, even the most stressful (their two chil-dren’s wedding days was the example Shannon Neuman gave to one newspaper). They admit that they mourned their marriage during their four years separated but felt good about their decision when the agreement was made final. Her Facebook post invited others to share the message that it’s “possible to love your kids more than you hate/distrust/dislike your ex.”

I asked Chicago-based attorney Michael Ian Bender to weigh in on this possibility. Bender, of Lincolnshire, has practiced family law in the Chicago area since 1993, except for the six years that he served as a Cook County Circuit Court judge. He told me

without a doubt that a peaceful divorce is possible.

This is 2015, I reminded him. Married people not only have children together — they might also be business partners or work in the same professional field and therefore cross paths frequently. Can anybody do that well after a divorce, or are these Canadians unique?

“It’s important that you reach an agreement, finalize it, and move on quickly,” Bender explained. “If it goes on too long, it leads to hard feelings. People and their attor-neys say things that can be mis-construed and insulting. Tension and anxiety rise.” He recom-mended working with a mediator before getting to the courtroom.

“Mediation helps people to see all their options,” Bender ex-plained. “In divorce, people have fears that need to be talked about and addressed, but there is no reason you can’t move forward together. A mediator will help you

have a discussion about what the future looks like and what the possibilities are. Divorce isn’t something you plan for, but it doesn’t have to be a miserable War of the Roses.”

Toward that end, Bender advised being honest about finan-cial matters.

“There is no need to hide assets, because the court will always find out anyway,” he explained. “Be honest when you talk about what all there is and work out what’s fair. That’s where mediation can be win/win, where both people can be happy with the agreement that is reached. But that can’t happen without several hours of communication, and that’s not going to happen in the court-room.”

When divorce ultimately does get to the courtroom, Bender advised leaving the children out of it. Divorcing parents expect their children to have questions, but this is one time when honesty is not necessarily the best policy. Explain that both parents have decided to end the marriage (not that “Your father wanted a divorce, not me”), but that the children will always be lo ved by both parents and well cared for. Don’t make the children choose sides, Bender said, because there’s just no reason to open the door to that later tension.

If you and your former spouse did something to make your divorce peace-ful, I want to hear about it at [email protected]

Is peaceful dIvorce an

oxymoron or a possIbIlIty?

Joanna Brown

love & marriage

“Divorce isn’t something you plan for, but it doesn’t have to be a miserable

War of the Roses.”

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Page 20: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

LIFESTYLE & ARTS

20 | saturday september 26 | sunday september 27 2015 the north shore weekend

o’neIl’s features tasty artIstry

By Simon murray

The denizens of O’Neil’s 500-gallon salt-water tank have seen it all.

Excited little hands pointing and prodding at the glass. Chefs diligently working behind an exposed kitchen, putting together plate upon plate of creative cuisine. Waiters carrying inventive cocktails to spirited, chatting groups of families and friends. Columns

upon columns of . . . bubbles.It’s too bad then, that fish

memories can only be measured in ephemeral seconds. Or that the best response they could hope to give would be blub, blub, blub.

Good thing O’Neil’s chef Ramiro Velazquez has a steel trap, and a mind for culinary masterpieces. Velazquez comes to O’Neil’s by way of Carlos’ Restaurant in Highland Park (now Nieto’s). Velazquez worked there for 23 years, helping res-taurateur Carlos Nieto open the new restaurant before embark-ing for Partrick O’Neil’s flagship in Winnetka.

O’Neil’s also has undergone a recent transformation. Still casual to the core, the décor has been enlivened. The quaint, family-owned restaurant with wood paneling has turned into a contemporary, family-owned restaurant with an open concept and kid-friendly dining. And the cuisine—under the watchful eye of Velazquez—has been transformed as well.

The thing you have to know about the soft-spoken

Velazquez, like most artists with a vision, he lets his artistry speak for itself. He’s very modest. But he could have an ego as in your face as the spice from his smoked paprika skirt steak, or as inflated as his slow roasted herbed chicken that he brines for 24 hours before serving. The food is that good.

“He spends his whole weekend thinking of what he’s going to do,” says a pleasantly dumbfounded Josh Keating—executive chef of O’Neil’s—smiling and shaking his head in equal parts mock-and-real disbelief. “He’s amazing like that.”

No matter the season, the slow roasted herbed chicken is one of Velazquez’s favorites. But will it be on the menu for all of fall and winter?

Thinking of the many things he’s looking forward to adding to the menu, Velazquez laughs. “We’ll see,” he says, with an air of mystery. Either way, here’s a recipe for you to enjoy at home whether Velazquez’s brined birds are on the menu or not.

2 whole chickens (place in brine and refrigerate for 24 hours)serVes: 4

Brine2 cups salt1 cup sugar1 star anise3 bay leaves2 tablespoons whole black pepper corn2 stalks rosemary1 lemon, juiced4 quarts water

Marinade1 clove garlic, minced1 tablespoon oregano, dried1 tablespoon rosemary, dried1 lemon, juiced4 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil

1. Remove chicken from brine and rinse under cold water.

2. In a large bowl, place the chicken and rub with marinade allowing it to rest for 1-2 hours refrigerated.

3. Preheat oven to 450 degrees. Place chicken on sheet tray with an oven rack to collect the juices. Cook chicken for 15-20 minutes until the skin starts reaching a golden brown.

4. Lower oven temperature to 350 degrees, allowing it to cook slowly another 30-45 minutes until the chicken has reached 165 degrees. Allow to rest for 10-15 before gently slicing the chicken in half starting at the top next to the breast meat, discarding the rib and back bones.

5. Reserve liquid from cooking and strain any impurities, pouring over chicken prior to serving and enjoy.

o’Neil’s 24-Hour Brined Slow-roasted Chicken

Chef Ramiro Velazquez

O’Neil’s of Winnetka’s roasted chicken. PhotograPhy By Joel lerner

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Page 21: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

the north shore weekend saturday september 26 | sunday september 27 2015 | 21

LIFESTYLE & ARTS

Musings by Mike Lubow

North Shorts

Some of us are burdened with wandering ears. Well, maybe it’s not exactly a

burden. It’s a distraction, sure. But there are benefits, especially if you live on the North Shore.

Wandering ears pick up random sound bites from those not in your company. In restau-rants and coffee hangouts, theater lobbies, trains, wherever groups are talking and you can’t help overhearing.

North Shore sound bites are like the people who live here: amusing, erudite, creative, icon-oclastic, diverse, stimulating, interesting and fun.

The other night in a restau-rant, your wandering ears picked up a man saying to his friends, “We are defined by the stories we tell”

Don’t worry. He doesn’t actu-ally talk that way. He went on to clarify that he was describing a quote from a PBS special about history. Wherever he got it, he said it, you heard it, and it made you think. It even hit kinda close to home.

But North Shore sound bites aren’t always literary. Sometimes they’re simply fun ideas with a typical, locally grown, self-con-fident spin.

In a fast food joint recently you heard a guy with enthusi-asm saying to a friend that the best drink to accompany a great meal shouldn’t be fine wine. It should be a chocolate malt. Be honest, he said, wine’s an elitist affectation. Nothing that’s both sour and bitter can compare to a delicious malt.

Hmm. You gotta smile. The guy’s unafraid of his own un-varnished truth. A brave and funny thinker. Later, while sipping the first chocolate malt you’ve had in years, you think: thank you, wandering ears.

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Page 22: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

LIFESTYLE & ARTS

22 | saturday september 26 | sunday september 27 2015 the north shore weekend

ThE ART OF FAShIOn

Photography by Mary Carol Fitzgerald

Neiman Marcus Northbrook hosted the luxury retailer’s ever-popular “Art of Fashion” show on September 10, much to the delight of their fashionably-frocked guests. The music pulsated as models took to the atrium-encompassing runway, all draped in the latest fall looks. Guests enjoyed trendy sips and nibbles as they soaked in all the fall season has to offer.

neimanmarcus.com

SoCialS

ALExIS STARk, BETh hOFFmAnn STAcY LITOw, JOAn cARdIn LESLIE mARTIn, cARRIE wILSOn

kAITLIn & LATIF hAmzAhTRAcEY TARAnTInO, BRIdgET hALAnzkI, nAncY LOngEmILY wYnER, PAuLA SmITh, dEE FORTSOn

WINNETKA-Impressive home on over 1/2 acre in East Winnetka featuring incredible plantings, an expansive deck and covered porch. Entry foyer includes leaded glass windows, storage benches and handsome staircase. Spacious living room enhanced by attractive built-ins and fireplace. Banquet size dining room is perfect for any occasion. Family room with three exposures opens to deck and landscaped yard. Fabulous custom kitchen with access to covered porch is highlighted by wood cabinets, island, granite counters, and breakfast area. Master suite is complete with dressing area, walk-in closet, and updated master bath with steam shower. Second floor library features lattice windows and built-ins. Terrific third

floor includes loft area, bedroom with sitting area and built-ins, exercise room and full bath. Oversized garage with storage. This home has been extensively renovated and maintained.13 Bedrooms, 3 ½ Baths. $1,495,000

TAKE THE WRIGHT PATH TO THE NORTH SHORE

JEAN WRIGHT REAL ESTATE559 CHESTNUT STREET • WINNETKA • 847-446-9166 • jeanwrightrealestate.com

Dinny Brennan DwyerListing [email protected]

www.196ScottAvenue.com

OPEN SUNDAY 12-2INCREDIBLE VALUE ON ½ ACRE IN EAST WINNETKA

100 North Waukegan Road Suite 100 | Lake Bluff

www.legacych.com847-283-9595

Historic Restoration | New Construction | Renovation

Page 23: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

the north shore weekend saturday september 26 | sunday september 27 2015 | 23

LIFESTYLE & ARTS

TASTE OF ThE FIRST TEE

Photography by Mary Carol Fitzgerald

Held in celebration of the BMW Championship at Conway Farms Golf Club in Lake Forest, the First Tee of Greater Chicago paired with Luke Donald for a night of wine tasting and fundraising. Held on the 18th green, the evening featured gourmet wine tasting of exclusive wines from Terlato Wine Group’s global portfo-lio, including the wines of the Luke Donald Collection. After dinner, Donald took the stage with fellow professionals Rickie Fowler and Keegan Bradley for a lively Q&A session with Cara Robinson and Gary Williams of the Golf Channel.

thefirstteegreaterchicago.org

SoCialS

BRIAn cOFFmAn, chRIS OEhLERkIng, ROB dAuPhInAISALEx & LESLIE cALdER

JAY ThOmPSOnk, dEBBIE STAnTOn, LYn dIckInSOn

JuLIE gISh, JOhn cImAROLIAnnE gALLAghER O’mALLEY, mARIAnnE hARknESSmIchELLE kRYScIO, dOug & PATTY SuTTOn

www.birkenheier.com

Page 24: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

REAL ESTATE

24 | saturday september 26 | sunday september 27 2015 the north shore weekend

Glenview Wilmette

Kenilworth

Winnetka

NorthbrookGlencoe

HighlandParkDeerfield

Lake Forest

Lake Bluff

NorthfieldSkokie 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

1-6

7-26

42-46

68

47-67

69-83

4135-40

27-33

34

1. 15 E WashingtonLake BLuffSaturday 11:00-1:00$349,900Laura Henderson, Baird & Warner708.997.7778

2. 130 PembrokeLake BLuffSaturday 1:00-3:00$2,150/monthLaura Henderson, Baird & Warner708.997.7778

3. 605 Moffett RoadLake BLuffSunday 11-1$497,000Jennifer Moreland, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors®847.234.0816

4. 502 E. Scranton AvenueLake BLuffSunday 1-3$589,000Elizabeth Keepper, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors®847.234.0816

5. 325 Ravine ForestLake BLuffSunday 1-3$818,000Linda Landsell, Coldwell Banker847.234.8000 6. 51 Wimbledon RoadLake BLuffSunday 2-4$899,999Julian Harkleroad, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff224.456.5019

7. 1350 N Western Avenue, #306 Lake forest Sunday 1-4

$349,500Jonathon Nagatani, @properties

847.295.0700

8. 1350 N Western Avenue, #207 Lake forest

Sunday 1-4 $398,000

Jonathon Nagatani, @properties

847.295.0700

9. 945 Pinecroft LaneLake forest

Sunday 1-3 pm$ 1,155,000

Brunhild Baass, Baird &

Warner847.804.0092

10. 716 Kendler CourtLake forestSunday 1-4pm$ 1,055,000Brunhild Baass, Baird & Warner847.804.0092

11. 327 BasswoodLake forestSunday 11:00-1:00$1,099,000Laura Henderson, Baird & Warner708.997.7778

12. 495 S McCormickLake forestSunday 1:00-3:00$1,250,000Laura Henderson, Baird & Warner708.997.7778

13. 1297 Edgewood RoadLake forestSunday 1-3$749,000Flor Hasselbring, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors®847.234.0816

14. 145 Washington CircleLake forestSunday 1-3$939,000Elizabeth Wieneke, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors®847.234.0485

15. 292 Sussex LaneLake forestSunday 1-3$1,089,000Catherine McKechney, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors®847.234.0816

16. 870 Timber LaneLake forestSunday 1-3$1,169,000Katherine Hudson, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors®847.234.0485

17. 443 W. Deerpath RoadLake forestSunday 1-3$1,675,000Jack Comerford, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors®847.234.0485

18. 165 MarionLake forestSunday 2-4pm$769,000Leslie Dhamer, Coldwell Banker847.234.8000 19. 880 Gage LaneLake forestSunday 1-3 pm$1,295,000Donna Oesterreicher, Coldwell Banker847.234.8000 20. 130 WinstonLake forestSunday 2-4pm$499,000

Pat Carter, Coldwell Banker847.234.8000

21. 1030 Oak Grove LaneLake forestSunday 2-4$775,000Vicki Wheary, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.275.5440 22. 1680 Trillium LaneLake forestSunday 2-4$1,675,000Tracy Wurster Team, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff312.972.2515 23. 461 Saddle RunLake forestSunday 1-3$1,995,000Roberta Miller, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.275.2725 24. 1470 S. Ridge RoadLake forestSunday 2-4$1,145,000Joanne Marzano, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.809.8156 25. 736 E. Old Elm RoadLake forestSunday 2-4$625,000Kelly McInerney & Kiki Clark,  Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.826.6800

26. 840 SymphonyLake forestSunday, 1 – 3pm$875,000Susan Updike, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.533.9636

27. 239 Leonard Wood NorthHigHLand Park Sunday 1-3 $779,000Becky Dolin, @properties 847.295.0700 28. 991 Carlyle Terrace HigHLand Park Sunday 12-2 $725,000Claire Schwab, @properties 847.432.0700 29. 677 Euclid Avenue HigHLand Park Sunday 1-3 $550,000Pickus/Schulkin, @properties 847.432.0700

30. 726 Lorraine Circle HigHLand Park Sunday 1-3 $378,000Jane Pickus, @properties 847.432.0700

31. 174 Leonard Wood South Unit 210HigHLand ParkSunday 1-3$399,000Lisa Trace, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors®847.234.0485

32. 827 Timber HillHigHLand ParkSunday 1:00 - 3:00$659,000Linda Waldman, Baird & Warner, 847.691.1044

33. 771 Judson AvenueHigHLand ParkSunday 2-4   $1,375,000Mona Hellinga, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.814.1855

34. 840 WoodwarddeerfieLdSunday 12-2$924,900Emily Berlinghof, The Hudson Company847.404.509835. 2780 ShannonnortHBrookSunday 1-3$735,000Shawn Gavin, Baird & Warner847.446.1855

36. 3165 Keystone Road nortHBrook Sunday 1-3 $532,500Connie Nadia Dornan, @properties 847.998.0200

37. 1749 SunnysidenortHBrookSunday 1-3$525,000Sarah Dwyer, Jean Wright Real Estate847.727.4619

38. 1851 Mission Hills LanenortHBrookSunday 2-4pm$379,000Peggy Cahill, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage847.707.3366 39. 2476 The MewsnortHBrookSunday 1:30-3:30pm$465,000Bryce Fuller, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage847.208.7888 40. 3765 Techny RoadnortHBrookSunday 11am – 1pm$629,000Barb Pepoon, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage847.962.5537

41. 551 OakdalegLencoeSunday 12-3$695,000Peg O'Halloran, Baird & Warner847.446.1855

42. 591 ThornwoodnortHfieLdSunday 2-4$2,295,000Roxanne Quigley & Emily Berlinghof, The Hudson Company847.826.8866 & 847.404.5098

43. 2124 Middlefork Road nortHfieLd Sunday 12-2 $1,149,000Susan Corley Turk, @properties 847.998.0200

44. 273 Eaton Street nortHfieLd Sunday 1-3 $475,000Laura Cross Collyer, @properties 847.881.0200 45. 3010 Arbor Lane, #302 nortHfieLd Sunday 1-3 $293,000Beverly Smith, @properties 847.881.0200

46. 1623 EldernortHfieLdSunday 12-2$259,900Suzy Thompson, Jean Wright Real Estate847.542.4132 

84-85

23

Page 25: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

the north shore weekend saturday september 26 | sunday september 27 2015 | 25

REAL ESTATE

Houses of tHe week

$1,899,000155 Church RoadWinnetka6 Bedrooms, 4.2 BathroomsExclusively Presented By: Maria [email protected]@atproperties.com

From the moment you enter, you'll know this is a special home. The large living room with floor-to-ceiling windows opens to the bright sunroom. The DeGuilio kitchen features a sunny breakfast room. The extra-large family room with fireplace opens to the 2-car attached garage. The master suite is a retreat, with spa-like bath and walk-in closet.

$1,299,000767 Bronson Ln Highland Park2 Bedrooms / 4 1/2 BathsExclusively Presented By: Margie Brooks, Baird & [email protected]

Spacious ranch on private street in East Highland Park. Set on a large lushly landscaped 3/4 acre property, this 2 bedroom, 4.1 bath home features soaring ceilings, abundant oversized windows, and tons of natural light. Large kitchen with granite, high end appliances, and table space opening to brick paver patio and yard. Luxury master suite with generous closet space and his and her bathrooms.

$799,000951 Carroll RoadLake Forest5 Beds/4.1 BathsExclusively Presented By:Elizabeth Wieneke, Griffith, Grant & Lackie Realtors847 [email protected]

Enjoy easy low maintenance living in this light and bright colonial with 11 ft ceilings and open floor plan, set on one of the largest lots in the subdivision. The home is move in ready with neutral décor, freshly painted interior, fine moldings and gleaming hardwood floors. Features convenient laundry room and 3 car garage. Convenient location. 13 room, 5 bedrooms, 4.1 baths.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 HOUSES47. 720 Green Bay 3AWinnetkaSunday 2-4$665,000Mary Anne Perrine, Baird & Warner847.446.185548. 385 ProvidentWinnetkaSunday 1-3$1,149,000Meg Sudekum, Baird & Warner847.446.185549. 557 WinnetkaWinnetkaSunday 12-2$499,000Frank Nash, Baird & Warner847.446.1855

50. 433 LocustWinnetkaSunday 1-3$1,550,000Peg O'Halloran, Baird & Warner847.446.1855

51. 341 Woodland AvenueWinnetkaSunday 12-2:00PM$1,278,000The Skirving Team, Coldwell Banker847-924-4119  /847-863-3614

52. 4 Golf LaneWinnetkaSunday 2:30-4:30PM$3,475,000The Skirving Team, Coldwell Banker847-924-4119 /847-863-3614

53. 1518 EdgewoodWinnetkaSunday 12-2$665,000Sara Sullivan, The Hudson Company847.525.1905

54. 640 Winnetka Mews Unit 207WinnetkaSunday 1-3$385,000Julie Bradbury Miller & Mary Bradbury, The Hudson Company847.751.2619 & 312.607.3760 55. 925 Forest Glen EastWinnetkaSunday 1-3$1,299,000Joanne Hudson, The Hudson Company847.971.5024 56. 1121 AshWinnetkaSunday 12-2$1,015,000Rene Nelson, The Hudson Company847.338.4001

57. 247 Chestnut Street Winnetka Sunday 1-3 $1,995,000Grinstead/Richwine, @properties 847.881.0200 58. 155 Church Road Winnetka Sunday 2-4 $1,899,000Maria Kernahan, @properties 847.881.0200 59. 1102 Oak Street Winnetka Sunday 1-3 $1,649,000Cheryl Chambers, @properties 847.881.0200 60. 882 Elm Street Winnetka Sunday 1-3 $1,495,000Alla Kimbarovsky, @properties 847.432.0700

61. 579 Hill Terrace Winnetka Sunday 12-2 $1,475,000Maria Kernahan, @properties 847.881.0200

62. 1314 Sunview Lane Winnetka Sunday 1-3 $900,000Sofranko/Dunn, @properties 847.881.020063. 1161 LaurelWinnetkaSunday 2-4$1,549,000Paige Dooley, The Hudson Company847.609.0963

64. 625 OakWinnetkaSunday, 1 – 4pm$1,095,000Betsy Burke, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.565.4264 65. 1183 ScottWinnetkaSunday, 1 – 3pm$1,765,000Sherry Molitor, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.204.6282

66. 196 ScottWinnetkaSunday 12-2$1,495,000Dinny Dwyer, Jean Wright Real Estate847.217.5146 67. 90 Indian HillWinnetkaSunday 2:15-4:15$2,795,000Dinny Dwyer,Jean Wright Real Estate847.217.5146

68. 138 Abingdon Ave.keniLWortHSunday, 1-3$1,695,000Blanche Egan Romey, Coldwell Banker Winnetka847.446.4000

69. 320 Central ParkWiLmetteSunday 1-3$836,000Betty Finn, Baird & Warner847.446.1855

70. 1523 WalnutWiLmetteSunday 1-3$615,000Debbie McCurrie, Baird & Warner847.446.1855

71. 2616 WilmetteWiLmetteSunday 1-3$489,000Margaret Goss, Baird & Warner847.446.1855

72. 2600 Kenilworth AvenueWiLmetteSunday 12-2:30PM$1,699,000The Skirving Team, Coldwell Banker847-924-4119 /847-863-3614

73. 744 Sheridan RoadWiLmetteSunday 1-3$1,995,000Paige Dooley, The Hudson Company847.609.0963 

74. 1355 Chestnut Avenue WiLmette Sunday 1-3 $1,049,000Mary Grant, @properties 847.881.0200

75. 1947 GreenwoodWiLmetteSunday, 1 - 3pm$1,295,000Sherry Molitor and Sandy Clifton, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.204.6282 and 847.212.3981

76. 1535 GreenwoodWiLmetteSunday, 1 – 3pm$649,000Jeanie Moysey, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.800.8110

77. 226 LindenWiLmetteSunday, 1 – 3pm$739,000Crystal Tran, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff312.404.5994

78. 2130 IroquoisWiLmetteSunday, 1 – 3pm$925,000James Davis, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.744.0747

79. 2217 Chestnut Ave.WiLmetteSunday, 12-2:30$1,175,000Vicki Nelson, Coldwell Banker Winnetka847.446.4000 80. 3204 Wilmette Ave.WiLmetteSunday, 12-2$735,000Sarah Rothschild, Coldwell Banker Winnetka847.446.4000 81. 2142 Elmwood Ave.WiLmetteSunday, 12-2$645,000Ann George, Coldwell Banker Winnetka847.446.4000

82. 2347 Lake Ave.WiLmetteSunday, 3-5$521,000Vicki Nelson, Coldwell Banker Winnetka847.446.4000 83. 1220 Maple Ave.WiLmetteSunday, 12-2$1,249,000SFC  Team, Coldwell Banker Winnetka847.446.4000

84. 2300 Sherman Avenue, #4C evanston Sunday 1-3 $199,000Beth Morgan, @properties 847.763.0200

85. 1519 Monroe, #AevanstonSunday, 1 – 3pm$390,000AG Krone, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices KoenigRubloff847.732.3055

Page 26: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

N O RT H S H O R E#1 in Winnetka

HIGHLAND PARK 6bed/5.1ba $3,450,000

999SHERIDAN.INFO Geri Emalfarb 847.432.0700

GLENCOE 8bed/8.4ba $5,995,000

443SHERIDANROAD.INFO Christine Ashmore 847.295.0700

WINNETKA 6bed/6.2ba $3,375,000

519WILLOWRD.INFO Milena Birov 847.881.0200

GLENCOE 5bed/5.2ba $3,295,000

238MARY.INFO Milena Birov 847.881.0200

WINNETKA 5bed/4.1ba $1,649,000

1102OAK.INFO Cheryl Chambers 847.881.0200

WINNETKA 5bed/4.1ba $1,895,000

1159CHATFIELDRD.INFO Jodi Serio 312.506.0200

WINNETKA SUN 2-4 6bed/4.2ba $1,899,000

155CHURCH.INFO Maria Kernahan 847.881.0200

HIGHLAND PARK 4bed/3.2ba $1,395,000

177SDEEREPARKDRIVE.INFO Wendy Friedlich 847.881.0200

WINNETKA 4bed/3.2ba $1,475,000

579HILLTERRACE.INFO Maria Kernahan 847.881.0200

WILMETTE NEW 4bed/3.2ba $1,490,000

1720WALNUT.INFO Louise Eichelberger 847.881.0200

BANNOCKBURN 6bed/5.1ba $1,099,000

3DUNSINANELANE.INFO Susan Teper 847.998.0200

LAKE FOREST 4bed/5ba $1,199,000

525GOLF.INFO Andra O’Neill 847.295.0700

HIGHLAND PARK 4bed/2ba $525,000

1293RIDGEWOOD.INFO Kim Kelley 847.432.0700

HIGHLAND PARK 3bed/2.1ba $378,000

726LORRAINE.INFO Jane Pickus 847.432.0700

WILMETTE 4bed/2ba $724,900

1330GREGORY.INFO Lori Neuschel 847.881.0200

NEW!

NEW!

NEW!

NEW!

NEW!

SUNDAY 1 - 3

SUNDAY 12 - 2

SUNDAY 2 - 4

Page 27: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

N O RT H S H O R E#1 in Winnetka

OTTAWA, WISCONSIN $6,850,000W375S2385GRAMLINGCIR.INFO 5BED/5.2BA JIM TREIS 262.853.0225

heritageluxury.com

519 WILLOW| WINNETKA 6BED/6.2BA $3,375,000

WILMETTE 5bed/5ba $1,499,900

338GREENLEAFAVE.INFO Mary Baubonis 847.881.0200

WILMETTE 5bed/5.1ba $2,225,000

1000CHESTNUT.INFO Mary Baubonis 847.881.0200

WINNETKA 5bed/5.2ba $1,495,000

882ELMST.INFO Alla Kimbarovsky 847.432.0700

HIGHLAND PARK 4bed/3.1ba $769,000

854WOODBINE.INFO Weissman/Nissen 847.432.0700

LAKE FOREST 4bed/3.1ba $1,050,000

525DOUGLASDR.INFO Rachel Perl 847.881.0200

HIGHLAND PARK 5bed/2.1ba $725,000

991CARLYLETERRACE.INFO Claire Schwab 847.432.0700

WILMETTE 5bed/4.1ba $1,050,000

3148TEMPLELANE.INFO Lisa Finks 847.881.0200

LONG BEACH, IN 7bed/5ba $525,000

2829LAKESHOREDR.INFOLori Osmanski 312.391.4878

ST JOSEPH, MI3bed/2.1ba $725,000

912LIONSPARK.INFOMary/Mark Wortman 269.208.1753

NEW BUFFALO, MI 4bed/4ba $549,000

12620TURTLECREEK.INFODebbie Jacobson 305.790.9876

LAKE GENEVA, WI5bed/2.1ba $475,000

920GENEVAST.INFOMartha Cucco 262.949.4493

• 193 CHESTNUT | WINNETKA 6 BED/6.3BA $3,975,000

• 745 GREENWOOD | GLENCOE 6 BED/6.2BA $3,875,000

• 770 GREENWOOD | GLENCOE 6 BED / 6.2 BATH $3,875,000

• 164 OXFORD | KENILWORTH 6 BED/5.1BA $3,275,000

• 238 MARY ST | GLENCOE 5 BED / 7.5 BATH $3,295,000

SUNDAY 1 - 3

SUNDAY 12 - 2

NEW PRICE

NEW!

NEW!

Page 28: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

bridging construction knowledge with real estate expertise

TED PICKUS847.417.0520 [email protected]

LISA SCHULKIN847.602.1112 [email protected]

996 PARK AVE, HIGHLAND PARK $799,000Like new, 2009 built open floor plan home. Located across

from golf course and on parameter of Sunset Park.

996PARK.INFO

618 BURTON AVE, HIGHLAND PARK $525,000Located in the Heart of Ravinia! Sit on front porch and view

wonderful park or sit on back deck and listen to Ravina Festival.

618BURTON.INFO

385 OAKLAND DR, HIGHLAND PARK $1,299,000Inviting 5,000 sq/ft sophisticated Braeside home. Wonderful flow

with many windows bringing in lots of natural light.

385OAKLAND.INFO

2725 PRICILLA AVE, HIGHLAND PARK $799,000 Rare find! Updated brick home with large private back yard

and big deck. One block away from school and park

2725PRICILLA.INFO

LOVE WHERE YOU LIVEHIGHLAND PARK

co-listed by Jane Pickus

NEW LISTING

Page 29: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

Broker, GRI, SRES | 847.542.5747 | [email protected]

Build New!1327 NYODA PLACE, HIGHLAND PARK

Value is in the land! 11,000+ square foot corner lot on wooded lane!

Great opportunity to build a dream home up to 3,600 square feet on

a large piece of property!

1327Nyoda.info | $268,888

617 Hunter, WilmetteQuality newer (2001) custom built two story brick home. Enjoy three floors of spacious living; hard wood floors, Mahogany built ins, hand carved limestone fireplace. Custom cook’s kitchen with top line appliances. 4 bedrooms/3 baths on 2nd floor; including gracious master suite with fireplace, window seats, 2 large closets. Full finished basement recreation room, bedroom + bath. 2 car attached garage, mud room. 2nd floor laundry. 617Hunter.info | $1,299,000

Page 30: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

Licensed Managing [email protected]

312.804.6464

525 DOUGLAS, LAKE FOREST 4 Bedrooms | 3.1 Baths | 525Douglas.info

Stunning curb appeal draws you into this remarkable French Colonial home on beautiful acre lot. Enjoy evenings in your shaded back yard on the hammock with built in Fire pit, 4 hole putting green, and patio. Large living room with tray ceiling, Stone fireplace and hardwood floors. The Open Family room Kitchen concept with fireplace makes a perfect setting for entertaining. All high end

appliances and marble/granite counter-tops. Spacious master with great large newer bath and walk-in closet. Move right in and enjoy!!

Offered at $1,050,000

just listed!

OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, SEPT. 27TH · 2-4PM

The first 20 people to sign in will receive a FREE pashmina scarf!

On-site lender for easy pre-approvals!

Page 31: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

Successfully representing discerning buyers and sellers on the North Shore for over 20 years

MOBILE: 847.337.9265 OFFICE: 847.295.0700 [email protected]

Price upon request– contact me for private viewings

Fall in love with these homes!

1262 Deerpath, Lake Forest

open house sunday, sept. 27th 12-2pm

price reduced!

435 North King Muir Road, Lake Forest556 Meadowood, Lake Forest

open house sunday, sept. 27th 12-2pm

price reduced!

academywoods

1750 Princeton, Lake Forest

open house sunday, sept. 27th 2-4pm

maintenancefree

living!

Page 32: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

847.809.8096 ∙ [email protected] janicegoldblatt.com

NORTHSHORECONNECTED.COM

53 MARTINS, HIGHLAND PARK53MartinsLane.info ∙ $1,999,000

1351 RIDGE, HIGHLAND PARK1351Ridge.info ∙ $300,000

673 BROADVIEW, HIGHLAND PARK673Broadview.info ∙ $315,000

1584 ROBIN HOOD, HIGHLAND PARK1584RobinHoodPlace.info ∙ $365,000

415 GREEN BAY, LAKE BLUFF415GreenBay.info ∙ $375,000

178 INDIAN TREE, HIGHLAND PARK178IndianTree.info ∙ $799,000

205 HARBOR, GLENCOE205Harbor.info ∙ $1,025,000

867 BROADVIEW, HIGHLAND PARK867Broadview.info ∙ $1,069,000

310 HASTINGS, HIGHLAND PARK310Hastings.info ∙ $699,000

943 CENTRAL, HIGHLAND PARK943CentralAve.info ∙ $549,000

831 ROSEMARY, LAKE FOREST831Rosemary.info ∙ $799,000

939 CENTRAL, HIGHLAND PARK939Central.info ∙ $675,000

Page 33: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

QUINTESSENTIAL RED BRICK COLONIAL HOME

614 Essex Rd. Kenilworth

Originally built in 1924 and masterfully renovated in 2001, this new

again home has all of the charm and character of the 20’s craftsman

combined with the vision and expertise of Paul Konstant to transition it

for today’s buyers. Perfectly located close to grammar school, high school

and transportation. It is one of the most convenient and exceptional

offerings. The park like back yard, wonderful screened porch and

spacious rooms will make this one that you will want to call home.

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Page 34: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

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Page 35: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

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Page 36: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

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Page 37: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

the north shore weekend saturday september 26 | sunday september 27 2015 | 37

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

When a few Highland Park High School soccer players took

turns imitating one of head coach Blake Novotny’s halftime team talks recently, one phrase came up repeatedly — “Just get the ball to Eamonn’s foot.”

“I guess I do say that a lot,” Novotny acknowledged about the statement, which refers to senior center midfielder Eamonn Moore. “When the ball is bouncing or moving, I say get the ball on his foot. Eamonn is settling for us in terms of keeping the ball, not turning it over and controlling the pace of the game. He helps get us settled.”

A third-year varsity player and returning all-league per-former, Moore has been a calming presence for the inex-perienced Giants this season. After battling some early growing pains and going 1-2 to start the campaign, Highland Park entered this week with a 3-0-2 record in its last five games.

Novotny said Moore, whom he nicknamed “Possession-monger,” has been a major reason for the team’s success thus far. Moore also was a key cog last fall, as his cultured mid-field play and timely goals helped Highland Park win the CSL North title and reach a Class 3A sectional final.

Though Novotny admits Moore does not have the build or quickness of a classic No. 10 playmaker, he said the 6-foot 200-pounder finds ways to get the job done.

In addition to using his size, strength and touch to keep the ball, Moore also is a fine dis-tributor, calling upon his vision and an uncanny ability to an-ticipate what will happen next.

An accomplished high school chess player, Moore said there are clear parallels between the two games, specifically the im-portance of thinking several steps ahead.

“In chess, you have to think

five or 10 moves ahead,” said Moore, a member of HP’s chess team, which finished 11th in the state last February. “I try and bring this to soccer and try to anticipate what teammates and the other team will do. Then, I try to put the ball in good posi-tions and create space for my teammates.”

Moore’s family also appears to be major factor in his devel-oping what Novotny calls “a soccer brain.”

Eamonn is the fourth Moore brother to play at Highland Park. The family also has a daughter, the oldest of the chil-dren, and an eighth-grade son. Eamonn’s older brother, Fran-

cesco, who played two varsity seasons for the Giants, cur-rently is a redshirt freshman midfielder/defender at power-house Indiana.

The boys grew up surrounded by the soccer thanks in large part to their father, also Francesco, a native of Ireland who coached the boys and regaled them with

stories about his beloved Leeds United and the former Man-chester United and Northern Ireland superstar George Best.

“He had a big impact since we were little,” Eamonn said about his father. “He was our first AYSO coach, and he even set up a goal in the house. We had a whole room to play in.

He’d play with us and have us watch games. We’d watch the English Premier League to-gether every Saturday.”

An Arsenal fan, Eamonn said the family viewing usually led to good banter in the house, especially because there are brothers who support Manches-ter United, Chelsea and Liver-pool respectively.

Watching older brothers Eoin, Aiden and Francesco play over the years, and playing with them, appears to have been in-valuable for Eamonn’s develop-ment as a soccer player.

“Ever since I was young, I’d watch their games, and because of that I always looked forward to playing for the high school,” Eamonn said. “When I was younger, we’d play two-on-two, we’d play a lot together and I learned a lot from them. I learned how to play from them.”

Having been so well-educat-ed in the sport by his older brothers, all of whom have gone off to college, Eamonn said he now takes seriously his role as mentor to younger brother Ronin, himself a precocious soccer talent.

As for Eamonn’s game, Novotny said it most resembles that of older brother Eoin, also an intelligent player and good at keeping the ball.

Eoin’s post-high school path also may serve as a roadmap for Eamonn. Eoin currently attends college in Ireland and plays for a small soccer club there.

Eamonn said he is looking at colleges in Ireland, Spain and Switzerland and hopes to study international business. He would like a career that allows him to use his linguistic skills; he’s fluent in Spanish and also speaks some Chinese.

Of course, Eamonn said he’ll also look to make soccer an im-portant part of an overseas phase of his life, both attending matches and playing at the highest level possible.

No doubt, he’ll be a “Posses-sion-monger” abroad.

BY DAN SHALIN, [email protected]

Wealth of talent ‘possession-monger’ Moore owns a plethora of soccer skills

eamonn, the man: Highland Park High School’s Eamonn Moore looks to push the ball upfield during earlier action this season. pHotoGrApHY BY JoeL LerNer

Page 38: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

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Page 39: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

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Page 40: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155
Page 41: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

the north shore weekend saturday september 26 | sunday september 27 2015 | 41

SPORTS

Chip Savarie.Loyola Academy boys

varsity coach Tim Kane had heard a lot about the incom-ing freshman in the summer of 2014. A golfer named Chip. That had to be a good thing, right? Savarie, hopeful and talented, showed up for the first day of tryouts last August. Upperclass-men and sophomores and other freshmen, also hopeful and tal-ented, showed up.

Unlike athletes in other sports, golfers attempt to conquer objects (holes) in tryouts, not peers.

Savarie, a Winnetka resident, made Kane’s team. He then proved he belonged, swinging and chipping and putting as the Ramblers’ fourth or fifth golfer. But his play dipped a bit near the end of the season. He did not make Kane’s state series team, which placed ninth at the Class 3A state meet in Bloomington.

“He was,” Kane recalls, “a freshman.”

The freshman is a 15-year-old sophomore today, a 5-foot-11, 185-pounder. Taller than last year. Lengthier off the tee than last year. Savarie usually shoots the best or second-best score among Ramblers at meets. One of his classmates, Glenview resident John Kryscio, is capable of shooting LA’s best or second-best score at meets. Kryscio made the Ramblers’ state series team last fall.

“Chip doesn’t make many mistakes,” Kryscio says. “Keeps the ball in play. He scores well; his worst scores are 76, 75. His iron play is really good.”

Savarie got off to a shaky start at the 12-team Deerfield Invita-tional at Twin Orchard Country Club in Long Grove on Sept. 12. He then used one of his strengths — refusal to dwell on anything remotely negative — at the back half of his final nine holes. He birdied three of his last four holes to card a two-over 72, good enough for third place behind Glenbrook South junior Charlie Nikitas (69). Nikitas, in his debut round at the 6,410-yard course,

beat Deerfield High School senior Jacob Krugman in a one-hole playoff for medalist honors.

LA (299 strokes) finished runner-up to Nikitas and other GBS Titans (294).

“You can go from having your worst day to your best day on a golf course, in a flash,” Savarie says of one of golf ’s many appeals. “My dad [Andy, a soccer player in high school] has given me good advice on playing with the right temperament, on how to best handle myself while com-peting. It has helped me. I have good bounce-back ability.”

He has quite a love for the sport. At Loyola Academy prac-tices, Savarie, a big Dustin Johnson fan because of Johnson’s power at PGA Tour events, talks golf with anybody, to anybody. He chats about clubs, courses, grips, pro players, shots, anything golf-related. If he saw something on the Golf Channel, on the night before a practice, and it’s worth describing during practice on the next day, he shares it with his teammates.

“You should hear him,” Kane says. “Nonstop. At times I have to tell him, ‘Stop talking.’ On the

course, though, he doesn’t talk golf. He plays, and he loves to play. I like his iron play. You have to have feel, a good tempo and confidence [to hit accurate iron shots]. You especially have to have that confidence, that feeling of, ‘This shot is going to go where I want it to go.’

“Chip,” the coach adds, “has that kind of confidence.”

Savarie recorded a hole-in-one earlier this month, his second in three years. It occurred at the Glen View Club in Golf, his home course. The second ace shocked Savarie. Kryscio wit-

nessed both aces.“He remained calm [after the

recent hole-in-one],” Kryscio recalls. “I could tell he was excited, but he didn’t show too much excitement.

“Such a nice kid, a great kid,” the Rambler adds. “He always has a smile going.”

Savarie, surprisingly, had frowned on golf before the age of seven. He preferred hockey and lacrosse. After turning seven years old, her turned to links for his sports fix.

“It started to click for me, I guess,” says Savarie, runner-up

(by a stroke) at the Buffalo Grove Invite on Sept. 5, after shooting a 70 (33 on the back nine) at the Buffalo Grove Golf Course to pace LA’s runner-up showing (288) to New Trier (287). “I still loved hockey and lacrosse, and I still like to play in the occasional pickup hockey game.

“A couple of years ago golf became my focus.”

His favorite golf course in Chicagoland is Medinah Country Club. It is his favorite because it is challenging. The good golfers savor the chance, any chance, to tame green monsters, especially those that had been traversed by the best professionals in the world. Medinah CC has hosted six major events: three U.S. Opens (1949, 1975, 1990), two PGA Championships (1999, 2006) and the Ryder Cup in 2012. It will be the setting for the BMW Championship in 2019.

“Chip works hard on his game, practices a lot, loves the game,” Kryscio says. “He hangs in there when he plays, and he has such a good attitude.”

Notable: A pair of LA squads competed at separate invites on Sept. 19. One topped the North Shore Country Day Invite field with a score of 312, while the other placed fifth (309 strokes) at the Wheeling Invite. Junior Connor Prassas (76) led the way for the Ramblers at the former, sophomore Chip Savarie (75) at the latter. Senior Luke Lynch (77), junior Reb Banas (79) and senior Matt Jacobson (80) con-tributed to the championship effort; sophomore John Kryscio (77), senior Michael Banas (77) and junior Kevin Meehan (80) shot rounds at Traditions at Chevy Chase Golf Course in Wheeling. … In addition to Sa-varie’s third-place 72 at the Deer-field Invite at Twin Orchard CC on Sept. 12, LA counted scores from Prassas (74, tie for sixth place), Meehan (75, tie for 10th) and junior Jack McGuire (78). … Kryscio (79-84) and Jacobson (82-81) tied for 67th place at the Class 3A state meet last fall.

BY BILL mcLeAN, [email protected]

Ironclad skIlls Loyola Academy’s tough-minded savarie has a firm grip on his game

what a wallop: Loyola Academy’s Chip Savarie watches the flight of his ball during recent action at the Deerfield Invite. pHotoGrApHY BY JoeL LerNer

Page 42: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

SPORTS

42 | saturday september 26 | sunday september 27 2015 the north shore weekend

It is Game Day in the life of New Trier junior quarterback Clay Czyzynski. School ends on a

Friday afternoon. The QB heads home for a 25-minute nap. He awakes. He then waits for his ride from NT junior running back/linebacker Max Rosenthal.

Rosenthal, behind the wheel of a 2007 Toyota FJ Cruiser, arrives at Czyzynski’s house. He had already picked up Francis Fay, another classmate, another running back.

“Our starting backfield, to-gether, in one car,” Czyzynski said last weekend.

Rosenthal drives the trio and parks the FJ Cruiser in the parking lot across the street from New Trier’s home football field in Northfield. He finds a spot, his spot, the same spot. It is always available. Rosenthal parks the vehicle. The three Trevians pile out of the SUV and head to the team’s locker room to don gladi-ator attire.

It is comfortable and reassur-ing, sticking to a routine — along-side teammates — on a football player’s favorite day of the week. Check. Check. Check. But Czyzynski applies something to his 6-foot, 190-pound frame that his backfield mates do not. The QB writes “g-ma” and “g-pa” and “R.I.P.” on pieces of adhesive tape and wraps them around his wrists. Czyzynski’s late grandma was Elizabeth “Betsy” Gibbons. Czyzynski’s late grandpa was Eugene “Gene” Gibbons, an NCAA champion and All-Amer-ican wrestler at Michigan State University. Elizabeth died in 2011, Eugene this past April. They lived in Fairview Park, Ohio.

“It helps me before games, looking at my wrist tape, thinking about them and praying,” the grandson said. “They saw me play football only once.”

What spectators witnessed during New Trier’s home game against Highland Park High School on Sept. 19: Czyzynski passing well, Czyzynski running well, Czyzynski leading well. A shortstop on baseball fields in the spring, he was a show-stopper on a football field in the fall, throw-ing for 239 yards and three touch-downs and running for 56 yards

in a 40-13 victory. He connected on 18 of 21 passes, and he aver-aged 5.6 yards per carry for a team that improved to 4-0.

“A big breakout game for Clay,” Trevians coach Brian Doll said. “It was a good time for it, too, heading into our game against Evanston [Sept. 25, in a Central Suburban League South opener]. He ran the ball effectively, com-pleted a high percentage of passes, extended plays. He’s getting better and better at running with the ball. Clay danced a little, scooted, made guys miss him. Everything he did today … solid, consistent.”

Czyzynski’s first two TD passes against the Giants (1-3) covered 50 yards and two yards.

Senior wideout Christian Miller (five receptions, 129 yards) grabbed the lengthy one, execut-ing a nifty curl move to start his sprint past a defensive back and into the end zone in the first quarter. Junior wideout Eric Nicholas caught the short one — on an audible. Czyzynski, before taking the snap on the play, looked to his right and noticed Nicholas would be an easy target. Nicholas, wide open after taking a couple of steps forward, caught the QB’s fastball to up NT’s lead to 23-0 at 5:50 of the second quarter.

“I liked what Clay did on that play,” Doll said. “In our first three games, I don’t think he would

have recognized that option because he tended to be so focused on the play that was called. That pass, that TD, was a stepping stone for him, a big one.”

Senior tight end Devin Murphy caught Czyzynski’s third TD pass, a one-yarder, early in the fourth quarter.

“Clay played well today,” said Rosenthal, who motored, without a seatbelt, for 26 yards on eight carries, including a two-yard TD in the third quarter. “He made good decisions.

“He’s confident in the huddle, takes charge,” the RB/LB added. “He definitely knows what he’s doing, and that helps. His confi-dence helps his teammates.”

The son of a former Ohio State University linebacker (Richard) and a former OSU gymnast ( Jackie), Clay Czyzynski is an “old” junior. Last weekend’s game was his 16th varsity football game. He steered the Trevians to a 10-2 record and a Class 8A state quar-terfinal berth in Doll’s first NT season last fall. The vast majority of sophomore quarterbacks watch from a sideline, learn, wait. Many get to develop during the opening acts, aka sophomore football games, on Game Days.

Czyzynski grew up in a hurry in 2014 … had to grow up in a hurry. Among older teammates and bigger boys. And in big games.

“Clay is pretty modest,” Doll

said. “He doesn’t walk around saying, ‘Look at me; I’m the guy.’ He has a sensitive side, and he cares about his teammates, his coaches, his family. Those are good traits to have.”

Czyzynski put his right arm to good use last spring. His bat, too. The starting shortstop on varsity hit .309 and finished with an on-base average of .356 and an on-base-plus-slugging percentage of .737. He ripped seven doubles and scored 19 runs.

Before the start of the second half against Highland Park last weekend, Czyzynski, with his team ahead 27-0, hopped on the stationary bike on his team’s side-line and pedaled for a couple of minutes. He wasn’t hurt. He wasn’t sore. Maybe it was another thing to check off on his list of Game Day routines.

“Just trying to get the legs going, the blood pumping,” he would say after the victory, his team’s 14th in 16 games since the start of the 2014 season.

“The game,” he added, “is slowing down for me. Today (Sept. 19) felt slower than the first three games did. I was able to make better reads. I felt composed.”

Notable: Last weekend’s HP-NT football game, originally sched-uled for Sept. 18, was postponed until the next day because of in-cessant lightning. Trevians senior Jake Paschen blocked a Giants punt and classmate Charlie O’Malley secured the ball in the end zone for a touchdown in the second quarter of the 40-13 victory on Sept. 19. NT senior Nick Endre kicked field goals of 45 and 27 yards. Trevians senior wideout Christian Miller made the move of the game after making a catch near the NT side-line in the second quarter. He turned, took a couple of quick steps and stopped suddenly, making a couple of flying, would-be tacklers miss him. Sideline mates oohed and aahed. The 14-yard reception was the top play in a 52-yard scoring drive (Endre’s 27-yard FG). … New Trier visits Evanston Township High School (3-1) on Sept. 25 (7:30 p.m.). The Wildkits routed Maine East’s Blue Demons 50-0 on Sept. 18.

BY BILL mcLeAN, [email protected]

clay-maker Inner drive, great mobility make New trier’s Czyzynski a multiple threat

mr. elusive: New Trier quarterback Clay Czyzynski (No. 2), seen here in earlier action this fall, had a “breakout game” against Highland Park.

Page 43: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155
Page 44: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

SPORTS

44 | saturday september 26 | sunday september 27 2015 the north shore weekend

Emily Young was eight years old, a novice golfer, when she received a challenge from her

father, Jim. It went something like this: Ace that upcoming spelling test at school, all 20 words, and I’ll buy you a golf bag and a starter set of clubs.

Young took the test. Young cor-rectly spelled all 20 words on the test. Nailed it. Jim Young picked up his daughter at school on the same day. Emily, test and super news in her hands, climbed into her father’s car. A proud dad drove his ecstatic daughter home.

Emily would soon get to yank a brand-new driver from a brand-new golf bag and c-r-u-s-h a golf ball.

“I remember watching my dad hit golf balls,” Emily, now a 5-foot-8 senior ace on Lake Forest High School’s girls golf team, recalls. “I’d stand behind him and think, How does he do that? The shots he hit … they were flying, flying so far. I wanted to hit shots like that.

“I love playing golf. I love just being on a golf course, sunrise to sundown on summer days. Sure, it’s a frustrating sport; it has brought me to my knees at times. But when you’re out there, playing a game you love and things are going well, there’s not a better feeling in the world.”

Her best feat to date, on a golf course? Easy. Last fall, at a Class AA regional meet at the Scouts’ home track, Deerpath Golf Course. Young shot at 76. So did Bar-rington High School’s Reena Sulkar. A playoff would decide the medalist.

“I had been in the lead for the longest time, waiting for the rest of the field to finish,” Young says. “I don’t even think I had my golf shoes on when I found out I’d have to play in a playoff. I shook Reena’s hand before the playoff. Everybody was watching, so many were watch-ing, but I wasn’t nervous. I remem-ber wanting to win so badly.”

Young parred the playoff hole; Sulkar (eighth at state last fall) bogeyed it.

Young, a team captain last fall and a fourth-year varsity member this fall, would go on to tie for third place at a sectional meet and then

finish 25th (85-77) at the Class AA state tournament at Hickory Point Golf Course in Decatur.

“Emily was really composed in a super-stressful situation,” Lake Forest senior golfer Sarah Calcutt says of her teammate’s profes-sional approach during the re-gional playoff. “She’s competitive. She brings competitive energy to the team. She’s kind of a rock on our team, and she wants everybody to get along and do well.”

Three freshmen play regularly for Lake Forest’s varsity this fall. Young made the varsity as a fresh-man, back in 2012. She remembers the season vividly, from tryouts to team bus rides to invites to the state meet, where she tied for 56th place. Inclement weather on the second day at state reduced the tourna-ment to an 18-hole event.

“That was hard, being a fresh-man on varsity,” Young, outgoing and loquacious and fun-loving, admits. “A senior teammate that year told me, ‘You didn’t say a word to anybody until October.’ (Golf seasons start in mid-August). I love the freshmen on our team this year. I talk to them, drive them around. I drove some of them to our tryouts. A part of me is [envious] of them because they have so much to look forward to for the rest of this season and for the next three seasons.

“It’s starting to hit me that I’m a senior. A senior. That can’t be true. I’m going through my ‘last’ of ev-erything; I’m trying to take it all in, enjoy every moment. It’s been great, being a part of Lake Forest High School golf teams, experienc-ing the things I’ve experienced with my teammates. Golf is a huge part of my life.”

Her 2015 summer season of tournament golf was a steady one; she reached the quarterfinals of the Chick Evans Junior Amateur Championship at Itasca Country Club, and she finished fifth (80-77) at the State Junior Championship at the University of Illinois Orange Course in Champaign. Her senior season of high school golf has been a steady one.

“Steady one” is a newly accepted synonym for “Emily Young” in golf circles.

Last month she shot a personal-best 33 for nine holes at Deerpath GC in tryouts. She toured the Bonnie Dundee Golf Course in 77 strokes to place third at the Lake County Invitational in Carpenters-ville on Aug. 25. Young, a member at Merit Club in Libertyville, carded nine-hole scores of 37, 37, 35 at three dual meets in a seven-

day stretch in late August. Her 35 lifted LFHS (4-4 through Sept. 19) to a 187-217 defeat of visiting Vernon Hills High School on Aug. 31.

“Emily is super consistent, solid in all aspects of the game,” Scouts coach Steve Johnson says. “She doesn’t get too up or too down, and she doesn’t have any real weak-

nesses. Emily loves the game. No matter where she goes to college, she told me, ‘I’m taking my clubs.’ She’ll play golf her whole life. She’s also a good role model and very approachable. Sometimes seniors can seem intimidating to freshmen. Sometimes the best player on varsity can seem in-timidating to freshmen. Emily

isn’t like that. She talks, loosens up everybody on the team.”

Young follows golfers on the professional tours. Reigning Masters and U.S. Open cham-pion Jordan Spieth is 22 years old. Young turns 18 on October 18.

“He is so well-liked, isn’t he?” Young says. “And he’s gracious. I love him. I love the way Jordan plays and the way he carries himself.”

Young is also a big Stephen Young fan. Stephen is Emily’s younger brother, a 6-foot eighth-grader, a golfer, a basketball player. Basketball is his main sport. He plays power forward for his travel basketball team.

“We get along great. We’re really close,” Emily says.

Emily Young took the ACT on Sept. 12, a Saturday. It meant she would have to miss a golf invitational at Bonnie Brook Golf Course in Waukegan. Her reac-tion to the imminent break from competitive golf, days before the invite: “I’m bummed.”

Well into the back nine of her high school years, Young hasn’t pinned down her intended major field of study in college. She is not alone. She is 17, remember. All she knows for sure is her love for learning is right up there with her love for shooting a string of birdies on any course, on any day.

“I love to read,” Young says. “I know, when I get to college, I’ll fall in love with something and I’ll major in that something. I’ll figure it out. It might be cool to get into marketing or journalism.

“I am,” the crack speller adds, “an Englishy person.”

Notable: LFHS beat visiting Lakes and host Lake Zurich High School on consecutive days last week and finished 12th at the 22-team Rockford Guilford Invite on Sept. 19. Emily Young’s round of 39 and junior Lena Benjakul’s 40 paced the Scouts’ 177-214 defeat of LZHS at Village Green Golf Course on Sept. 16. Young carded a ninth-place 79 at the invite, held at Ingersoll Golf Course. Benjakul shot an 86.

BY BILL mcLeAN, [email protected]

cool under p-r-e-s-s-u-r-e

Battle-tested Young having another rock-solid season for scouts

spellBounD: Emily Young of the Scouts follows through on her swing during earlier action this fall. pHotoGrApHY BY JoeL LerNer

Page 45: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

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Page 46: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

SPORTS

46 | saturday september 26 | sunday september 27 2015 the north shore weekend

Julian Hilpusch heard Nick Goschi’s pitch last winter and thought, Why not?

Goschi wanted Hilpusch, a Loyola Academy soccer player, to play ping pong for the club team at the school. The good friends, paddles in hands, had battled often in basements.

Hilpusch joined the club and swung away at No. 3 singles and No. 3 doubles. Goschi cracked winners at No. 5 singles. They were sophomores then.

“Nick convinced me,” Hil-pusch, a Wilmette resident, recalls. “I had played ping pong at least once a week, usually on the weekend, with friends.”

Recruiter of the Year has to go to Goschi, paddles down. Goschi and Hilpusch, blessed with a vicious forehand, and the rest of the team competed at the state ping pong tournament last winter.

All they did was … win it.Loyola Academy is now

getting a lot of mileage out of Hilpusch’s legs. The 6-foot-1, 150-pound junior midfielder has been an integral contributor during the Ramblers’ 5-4-2 start under first-year boys soccer coach Baer Fisher. LA’s final record last fall: 3-14.

LA surpassed last year’s win total this year when it thumped St. Francis de Sales 7-0 on Sept. 10.

“His ability on the ball, his skill on the ball — Julian is a differ-ence-maker for us,” Fisher says. “He strikes the ball better than a lot of kids do. He really knows how to crack it. He’s got good vision.”

Hilpusch ranks in the top two among teammates in points (goals and assists). The Ramblers’ other top scorers are junior forward Sean Hickey, a captain, and freshman midfielder David Gripman. Hilpusch, on an assist from Hickey, booted the goal in LA’s 1-0 defeat of Mount Carmel on Sept. 12. The shot originated from the top of the 18-yard box.

The shot was a left-footed shot.Hilpusch is right-footed.“Julian,” Hickey says, “controls

the ball really well. He works hard, and he can create a lot of [scoring] opportunities. His ball skills are very good.”

Hilpusch played half of last season, the second half, on varsity, serving as an attacking center-midfielder. He is more of an or-ganizer this year, a stabilizing presence. A program with a sturdy midfield is a program with a healthy heartbeat. Hilpusch is Loyola Academy’s aorta.

“I distribute the ball more, keep the defense intact and try to find ways to get the ball to our forwards,” Hilpusch says.

Hilpusch’s father, Ralf, played prep soccer in his native Germany. Julian was five years old when he first introduced his feet to a soccer ball. His interest in the sport surged, paving the way to spots on FC United club teams. One of his club teams placed third at a regional tournament.

Everybody needs an escape from the demands of rigorous, jam-packed weeks. Soccer is the state champion ping pong player’s primary escape.

“Playing soccer clears my

mind,” Hilpusch says. “It’s what I really like about the sport. This is a big year, my junior year. There’s a lot going on: school, homework, soccer, being with friends, and I’m looking into playing college soccer.”

Notable: LA tied visiting Niles North 0-0 on Sept. 18. A shot from a Rambler hit a crossbar with seven minutes left in the match. LA senior goalkeeper Nick Troiano stopped five shots. “It was a great game,” Ramblers coach Baer Fisher noted. … Loyola Academy (5-4-2) will face De Smet Jesuit High School in St. Louis on Sept. 26. LA was scheduled to play Christian Academy on Sept. 25 in the first contest of its two-day trip to Mis-souri. … Visiting Mather High School edged LA 1-0 on Sept. 16, scoring the goal in the third minute of the first half. “We had trouble connecting passes,” Fisher said. “We played better in the second half. Our shape was better in the second half. Christian [ Jimenez, a freshman midfielder] and Julian [Hilpusch] covered more ground, David [Gripman, a freshman midfielder] and Sean [Hickey, a junior forward] were more dangerous, and we created a couple of chances. Our backs did a better job of communicat-ing.” … Fisher was an assistant men’s soccer coach at the Univer-sity of Chicago. He is in his fourth year as the director of the boys program (U12-U18) at FC United. … Fisher, on what Hil-pusch is like off the soccer pitches: “Witty.”

First came the downpour. The deluge came the next day.

As far as Lake Forest High School football coach Chuck Sp-agnoli was concerned, the cleanup was to begin immediately after the Scouts’ 42-7 loss at Libertyville ended.

“They’re obviously a very good team, but our team didn’t show up

and that’s the bottom line,” Spag-noli said. “Our problems are our own internal problems that need to get corrected.”

A thunderstorm on the night of Sept. 18 forced the game to be moved to an afternoon start on Sept. 19, reminiscent of the rivalry back when neither school had lights.

The Scouts’ defense had trouble slowing star quarterback Riley Lees (135 rushing, 138 passing yards) and fullback Noah Moderwell (15-77).

The Scouts provided reason for optimism on the opening drive when Matthew Clifford forced a Moderwell fumble that sophomore John Deering recovered on the

Lake Forest 9-yard line. Clifford led the team with seven tackles, while Andrew Athenson added five tackles.

Lake Forest (2-2, 0-2) also was unable to sustain many drives against a stout Libertyville (4-0, 2-0) defense.

“We never had any rhythm,” Spagnoli said. “We got into too

many long-yardage situations, and when you get into those situations, it makes it difficult to execute.”

Quarterback Danny Carollo completed 15 of 32 passes for 127 yards. He tossed a 30-yard touch-down to Quinn Julian late in the third quarter. Julian caught five passes for 48 yards. He rushed for 59 yards on 10 carries.

Libertyville, a 7A semifinalist last year, might be a state title con-tender this year. The Scouts still have playoff hopes, though.

“We’re going to be OK,” Spag-noli said. “We’re going to get a lot better.”

The Scouts will look to rebound against visiting Mundelein on Sept. 25 (7:30 p.m.).

BY BILL mcLeAN, [email protected]

BY t.J. BrowN, [email protected]

smooth In transItIon Hilpusch proves to be a critical thread for resurgent ramblers

scouts look to bounce back agaInst mustangs

heaD-turner: Julian Hilpusch of the Ramblers directs the ball during a match against Mather. The Ramblers have already won five matches, surpassing last year’s total by two. pHotoGrApHY BY GeorGe pFoertNer

Page 47: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

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Page 48: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

SPORTS

48 | saturday september 26 | sunday september 27 2015 the north shore weekend

Inside the Press Box

ROaming The SidelineS | fOOTball

Highland Park: New Trier special-teams units scored 10 points — 45-yard field goal, punt block recovered in the end zone for a touchdown, extra point — in a 1:39 span in the second quarter, highlighting the Trevians’ 40-13 defeat of the visiting Giants last weekend.

HP scored its first points on a seven-yard TD run by senior running back Cristian Volpentesta (10 rushes, 64 yards) at 2:59 of the third quarter on Sept. 19. Giants junior running back D.J. Penick (20 rushes, 89 yards) added a one-yard TD burst in the final minute of the fourth quarter.

HP backup quarterback David Adelstein, a junior, rushed five times for 43 yards and hit senior wideout Jet Mendes for a 37-yard completion in the fourth quarter. Senior starting QB Toby Tigges connected with senior tight end Samuel Gordon for a 22-yard gain in the third quarter, following a 15-yard Giants penalty and a one-yard loss on a run. Vol-pentesta scored his TD 10 plays later.

Sophomore Justin Goodman finished with a team-high four receptions (24 yards) for the Giants (1-3).

NT improved to 4-0.The game was originally scheduled for Sept. 18. Incessant lightning

forced the postponement of the night game.Loyola: The Ramblers improved to 4-0 with a 54-17 victory over host

Fenwick on Sept. 19 at Concordia University. It was a milestone game for coach John Holecek. He now has 100

career victories at the school.Trends continued for LA. The Ramblers received another first-class

performance from their first-team defense. In four games, the starters have yet to allow a point.

LA’s ‘O’ once again shined. The Ramblers amassed 517 yards and 26 first downs. Senior quarterback Emmett Clifford completed 11 of 15 passes for 197 yards. He came up with TD tosses to Thomas Smart (71 yards) in the first quarter and Eric Eshoo (16 yards) and David Terrell (11 yards) in the second quarter.

LA also scored four touchdowns on the ground, two by Dara Laja (54 and 18 yards) and two by Kyle Rock (2 and 22 yards). Chris Novo added a 4-yard TD run in the third quarter.

Laja finished with 103 yards on five carries, while Rock rushed the ball 12 times for 87 yards.

In addition to Smart (2 catches, 84 yards), Eshoo (2-20) and Terrell (3-35), the other leading receivers were Paul Escalante (4-65) and Jonah Issac (4-43).

ChiP ShOTS | bOyS gOlf

Wheeling Invite: Sparked by Connor Polender’s fourth-place finish (73), Lake Forest took top honors (300 points) in the 25-team meet at Chevy Chase on Sept. 19. Scott Frevert and Jason Folker shot 75s to finish in a six-way tie for 10th.

Loyola placed fifth as a team (309), while Highland Park came in 10th (319). Chip Savarie led the Ramblers with a 75, while John Kryscio and Michael Banas added 77s. Noah Fishbein (75) and Ben Udell (76) led the Giants.

Mundelein Invite: Led by medalist Andrew Huber (72), New Trier claimed the team title with a 298 at Steeplechase on Sept. 19. The team had four other players shoot 77 or better in Connor Hansen (74), Nick Iserloth (75), Matt Murlick (77) and Justin Choi (77).

The RundOwn | bOyS CROSS COunTRy

Libertyville Invite: Lake Forest’s Mark Myers took first in comfortable fashion. The senior was eight seconds better than Prospect’s Sean Sanaghan in the Libertyville Invite at Adler Park on Sept. 19. His winning time was 16:01.37. The Scouts, who finished seventh as a team with 169 points, also received a solid effort from junior Etienne Najman (14th, 16:52.50).

Meanwhile, New Trier (69 points) and Highland Park (87) took second and third respectively behind Prospect (23) in team standings. NT placed all seven of its runners in the top 25, including senior Alex Burck (4th, 16:21.50), senior Will Taylor (13th, 16:51.20), junior Matt Burke (16th, 16:58.60), senior Jarod Meyer (17th, 17:02.50), senior Tommy Eberle (19th, 17:07.75), senior Ben Rakestraw (20th, 17:07.99) and senior Jeremy Glickman (25th, 17:16.55).

HP was led by junior Jonathan Rosenfeld (11th, 16:46.75), freshman Jose Reyes (15th, 16:54.40), sophomore Alec Glazier (18th, 17:03.60), junior Charlie Skurie (21st, 17:12.47), junior Matthew Casey (22nd, 17:12.81) and junior Nate Amster (24th, 17:13.60).

Richard Spring Invite: In a race which featured 554 competitors, Loyola’s Paolo Tiongson finished 14th in the Richard Spring Invite at

Peoria’s Detweiller Park on Sept. 19. He was clocked in 14:52.1. The winner was Oakwood’s Jon Davis, who finished the three-mile course in 14:10.9. The Ramblers finished 14th in the team standings.

Warren Invite: Glenbrook South ended up fourth (113 points) in the 24-team Warren Invite on Sept. 19. Glenbrook North came in seventh (242). The host Blue Devils took first with 91 points.

GBN senior Jason Golden turned in solid work, finishing 14th overall in 15:48.94.

GBS placed four runners in the top 23: sophomore Jordan Theriault (16th, 15:50.31), junior Alec Sanchez (17th, 15:50.66), sophomore Matt Jortberg (21st, 15:53.48) and Jack Whetstone (23rd, 15:56.70).

RundOwn | giRlS CROSS COunTRy

Libertyville Invite: Led by junior Caroline Fix, New Trier claimed the team title with 37 points at Adler Park on Sept. 19. The host Wildcats took second with 76 points.

Fix cruised the three-mile layout in 19:09.05 to finish third overall behind Prospect’s Brooke Wilson (18:27.37) and Libertyville’s Melissa Manetsch (17:59.10). The Trevians put five runners in the top 14: junior Grace Fagan (5th, 19:18.15), sophomore Savannah Noethlich (7th, 19:29.51), senior Kelli Schmidt (8th, 19:31.37) and sophomore Rachel Weix (14th, 19:48.87).

Highland Park placed two runners — seniors Celia Margolin (11th, 19:39.21) and Charlotte Nawor (24th, 20:23.73) — in the top 24 to end up eighth in the 16-team field with 216 points.

Woodstock Bryne Festival: Lake Forest sophomore Emma Milburn claimed runner-up honors in the Flight 1 race at the Woodstock Bryne Festival at Emricson Park on Sept. 19. Her time was 18:51. The winner was Vernon Hills’ Vivian Overbeck (18:31).

In Flight 2, LF freshman Lauren Garriques raced to a second-place finish (19:56), while senior Katie Condon was the Flight 3 champ (19:28).

Sophomore Brett Chody also came up a winner, taking Flight 4 in 19:28. Senior Callie Schmidt was second in Flight 5 (20:52), while fresh-man Courtney Schmidt was second in Flight 7 (20:38). Senior Kelsey Schmidt added a fifth in Flight 6 (22:07).

VOlleyS | giRlS VOlleyball

Lake Forest: Highlighted by Ashley Williams (15 kills), Emma Patlov-ich (33 assists), Maren Douglass (6 blocks) and Brigid Brennan (11 digs), the host Scouts (15-5) edged Loyola 25-18, 14-25, 25-23 on Sept. 16.

On Sept. 21, LF gave visiting Libertyville a battle before dropping a 25-18, 26-24 decision. The team was led by Brennan (9 digs), Patlovich (15 assists) and Williams (7 kills).

Meanwhile, at the Maine East Invite on Sept. 18-19, the Scouts finished with a 3-2 mark. They claimed wins over Regina Dominican, Maine East and Riverside-Brookfield. They fell to Stevenson and De La Salle.

Loyola: The Ramblers (10-2) defeated Fenwick in two sets 25–21, 25–15 on Sept. 15. Melanie Fyda led the team with six kills and three blocks. Katie Randolph had 24 assists, while Lauren Stadler came up with 10 digs.

In the loss to Lake Forest, LA was led by Christina Reed (19 kills, 10 digs), Melanie Fyda (10 kills), Lauren Stadler (13 digs) and Katie Rudolph (32 assists, 11 digs).

fOOTnOTeS | bOyS SOCCeR

Lake Forest: Matthew Mick and Cameron Litzsinger scored goals in LF’s 3-2 loss to visiting Round Lake on Sept. 21.

On Sept. 19, the team came up short against host Glenbrook South 3-1. Jack Kelner found the net following a corner kick by Keegan Kullby.

New Trier: Down 2-0 early, the Trevians battled back to tie visiting Waukegan 2-2 on Sept. 21 on goals by Cameron Zwick and Ryan Krueger (PK). Danny Ladik had an assist.

In PepsiCo Showdown action, the Trevians (5-4-4) lost to Wheaton Academy 3-2 on Sept. 18 and Washington 3-0 on Sept. 19. The news was better on Sept. 15. Goalkeeper Sam Rutherford made some amazing saves as the Trevians topped visiting Wheaton-Warrenville South 1-0 on penalty kicks.

STiCk naTiOn | field hOCkey

Loyola: The Ramblers evened their record to 6-6 with a 4-1 victory over Francis Parker on Sept. 17. The goals were scored by Katie Finnegan, Brennan O’Malley and Lindsay Getz.

On Sept. 14, LA used goals by Getz, Jane Totaro and Gabby Parac-cini to beat Elgin Academy 5-1.

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Page 49: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

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Page 50: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

Eye bag removal with no visible incision is just one of the cosmetic procedures performed at the skillful hand of Dr. Anthony Geroulis. Dr. Geroulis is an artistic/sculptor and thus considers each patient’s face an art form.

Known as ‘the surgeon who teaches surgeons’, Dr. Geroulis, a clinical professor of surgery at the University of Chicago hospitals, is nationally recognized as a ‘Top Doctor’ in U.S. News & World Report. His North Shore Center for Cosmetic Surgery is a state-of-the-art surgical facility.

Dr. Geroulis performs facial plastic surgery and cosmetic procedures that provide longer lasting, natural looking results. His unique methods dramatically shorten a patients’ recovery time.

Cosmetic procedures include upper and lower eyelid enhancement, forehead/brow lift, face and neck lift, lip and nose enhancement and laser wrinkle reduction.

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Eye bag removal with no visible incision is just one of the cosmetic procedures performed at the skillful hand of Dr. Anthony Geroulis. Dr. Geroulis is an artistic/sculptor and thus considers each patient’s face an art form.

Known as ‘the surgeon who teaches surgeons’, Dr. Geroulis, a clinical professor of surgery at the University of Chicago hospitals, is nationally recognized as a ‘Top Doctor’ in U.S. News & World Report. His North Shore Center for Cosmetic Surgery is a state-of-the-art surgical facility.

Dr. Geroulis performs facial plastic surgery and cosmetic procedures that provide longer lasting, natural looking results. His unique methods dramatically shorten a patients’ recovery time.

Cosmetic procedures include upper and lower eyelid enhancement, forehead/brow lift, face and neck lift, lip and nose enhancement and laser wrinkle reduction.

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North Shore:North Shore Center for Cosmetic Surgery330 West Frontage Rd.Northfield, IL 60093

Downtown:Olympia Center (Neiman Marcus Building)737 North Michigan Ave., Suite 1045Chicago, IL 60611

Northwest:St. Alexius Medical Center1555 Barrington Road, Suite 3350Doctor’s Building ThreeHoffman Estates, IL 60169

Eye bag removal with no visible incision is just one of the cosmetic procedures performed at the skillful hand of Dr. Anthony Geroulis. Dr. Geroulis is an artistic/sculptor and thus considers each patient’s face an art form.

Known as ‘the surgeon who teaches surgeons’, Dr. Geroulis, a clinical professor of surgery at the University of Chicago hospitals, is nationally recognized as a ‘Top Doctor’ in U.S. News & World Report. His North Shore Center for Cosmetic Surgery is a state-of-the-art surgical facility.

Dr. Geroulis performs facial plastic surgery and cosmetic procedures that provide longer lasting, natural looking results. His unique methods dramatically shorten a patients’ recovery time.

Cosmetic procedures include upper and lower eyelid enhancement, forehead/brow lift, face and neck lift, lip and nose enhancement and laser wrinkle reduction.

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Downtown:Olympia Center (Neiman Marcus Building)737 North Michigan Ave., Suite 1045Chicago, IL 60611

Northwest:St. Alexius Medical Center1555 Barrington Road, Suite 3350Doctor’s Building ThreeHoffman Estates, IL 60169

Eye bag removal with no visible incision is just one of the cosmetic procedures performed at the skillful hand of Dr. Anthony Geroulis. Dr. Geroulis is an artistic/sculptor and thus considers each patient’s face an art form.

Known as ‘the surgeon who teaches surgeons’, Dr. Geroulis, a clinical professor of surgery at the University of Chicago hospitals, is nationally recognized as a ‘Top Doctor’ in U.S. News & World Report. His North Shore Center for Cosmetic Surgery is a state-of-the-art surgical facility.

Dr. Geroulis performs facial plastic surgery and cosmetic procedures that provide longer lasting, natural looking results. His unique methods dramatically shorten a patients’ recovery time.

Cosmetic procedures include upper and lower eyelid enhancement, forehead/brow lift, face and neck lift, lip and nose enhancement and laser wrinkle reduction.

Call or email to schedule a consultation today. Let Dr. Geroulis restore the youth that still lives within you!

TRUST YOUR FACE

to the FACE EXPERT

Dr. Anthony Geroulis Email: [email protected]: 847.441.4441 www.geroulis.com

North Shore:North Shore Center for Cosmetic Surgery330 West Frontage Rd.Northfield, IL 60093

Downtown:Olympia Center (Neiman Marcus Building)737 North Michigan Ave., Suite 1045Chicago, IL 60611

Northwest:St. Alexius Medical Center1555 Barrington Road, Suite 3350Doctor’s Building ThreeHoffman Estates, IL 60169

Eye bag removal with no visible incision is just one of the cosmetic procedures performed at the skillful hand of Dr. Anthony Geroulis. Dr. Geroulis is an artist/sculptor and thus considers each patient’s face an art form.

Known as ‘the surgeon who teaches surgeons’, Dr. Geroulis, a clinical professor of surgery at the University of Chicago hospitals, is nationally recognized as a ‘Top Doctor’ in U.S. News & World Report. His North Shore Center for Cosmetic Surgery is a state-of-the-art surgical facility.

Dr. Geroulis performs facial plastic surgery and cosmetic procedures that provide longer lasting, natural looking results. His unique methods dramatically shorten a patients’ recovery time.

Cosmetic procedures include upper and lower eyelid enhancement, forehead/brow lift, face and neck lift, lip and nose enhancement and laser wrinkle reduction.

Call or email to schedule a consultation today. Let Dr. Geroulis restore the youth that still lives within you!

TRUST YOUR FACE

to the FACE EXPERT

Dr. Anthony Geroulis Email: [email protected]: 847.441.4441 www.geroulis.com

North Shore:North Shore Center for Cosmetic Surgery330 West Frontage Rd.Northfield, IL 60093

Downtown:Olympia Center (Neiman Marcus Building)737 North Michigan Ave., Suite 1045Chicago, IL 60611

Northwest:St. Alexius Medical Center1555 Barrington Road, Suite 3350Doctor’s Building ThreeHoffman Estates, IL 60169

1292 ridgewood, highland parkPERFECT REHABBED HOME SITUATED ON BEAUTIFULLY PROFESSIONALLY LANDSCAPED PROPERTY. STUNNING DETAILS INCLUDE HARDWOOD FLOORS, FAB COOKS KITCHEN AND ADJACENT FAMILY ROOM, LUXURIOUS MASTER SUITE W/SPA, NEW BATHS, FINISHED LOWER LEVEL AND FINISHED BONUS SPACE ABOVE GARAGE.GREAT LOCATION NEAR PARKS, TRANSPORTATION AND SCHOOLS.

[email protected]

©2015 Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the prin-ciples 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.

GLORIA MATLIN847-951-4040

aSking priCe $865,000

Page 51: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor sales associates and are not employees of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. ©2015 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.

When you’re ready to buy or sell, simply pick the best

Claire Sucsy (847) 425.3737 • Emily McClintock (847) 280.5367Emily McClintock, Claire Sucsy and Sandra Sucsy Alguire

TheClaireSucsyGroup.com

Fusion is a revolutionary place where positive, constructive relationships unlock academic potential. We’re a totally unique private middle and high school providing one-to-one education for kids from grades 6-12. But we’re so much more than that. We’re a community of learning dedicated to creating a supportive campus environment where every kid can flourish – emotionally, socially and academically.

Fusion Lake Forest866.448.7843FusionLakeForest.com

For students who need an alternative to traditional.

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1009 Sheridan Road Glencoe

©2015 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.

Luxury Rental

15 Beautiful Rooms5 Bedrooms on 2nd Floor1 Bedroom in Lower Level5 Full Baths | 2 Half BathsUpper Bracket

Linda Jacobson, GRI [email protected]

Merle [email protected]

New Price

Page 52: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

GRIFFITH, GRANT &LACKIEREALTORS®

Griffith, Grant & Lackie reaLtors A 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

www.gglrealty.com

®

®

griffith, grant & lackie

1051 meadow lane, lake forest$6,995,000

www.1051Meadow.info7 Bedrooms, 6.2 Baths

520 rosemary road, lake forest$2,950,000

www.520Rosemary.info5 Bedrooms, 4.2 Baths

443 w deerpath road, lake forest$1,675,000

www.443Deerpath.info5 Bedrooms, 5.2 Baths

OPEN SUNDAY 1 - 3 PM

630 meadowood drive, lake forest$1,549,000

www.630Meadowood.info4 Bedrooms, 3.1 Baths

OPEN SUNDAY 1 - 3 PM

1745 w Broadland lane, lake forest$1,450,000

www.1745Broadland.info3 Bedrooms, 4.1 Baths

NEW LISTING!

870 timBer lane, lake forest$1,169,000

www.870Timber.info5 Bedrooms, 4 Baths

OPEN SUNDAY 1 - 3 PM

292 sussex lane, lake forest$1,089,000

www.292Sussex.info4 Bedrooms, 3 Baths

OPEN SUNDAY 1 - 3 PM

145 washington circle, lake forest$939,000

www.145Washington.info4 Bedrooms, 4.1 Baths

OPEN SUNDAY 1 - 3 PM

630 academy woods drive, lake forest$899,000

www.630Academy.info4 Bedrooms, 4.1 Baths

NEW LISTING!

333 e center avenue, lake Bluff$749,000

www.333center.info4 Bedrooms, 3.1 Baths

NEW LISTING !

1297 edgewood road, lake forest$749,000

www.1297Edgewood.info3 Bedrooms, 3 Baths

OPEN SUNDAY 1 - 3 PM

235 green Bay road, lake Bluff$614,000

www.235GreenBay.info4 Bedrooms, 2.1 Baths

OPEN SUNDAY 1 - 3 PM

1021 mar lane drive, lake forest$565,000

www.1021Mar.info4 Bedrooms, 2.1 Baths

605 moffett road, lake Bluff$497,000

www.605Moffett.info4 Bedrooms, 2.1 Baths

OPEN SUNDAY 11 AM - 1 PM

174 leonard wood s, #210, highland park

$399,000www.174Leonard.info

2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths

OPEN SUNDAY 1 - 3 PM

The Real Estate Industry has been my business for the last 36 years, and my family has been actively involved in real estate brokerage since 1903. My great uncle, grandfather and father have all served as President, as have I since 1993. It is a privilege to help lead this company which is comprised of some of the finest industry professionals in all of Lake County.

Lake Forest is a wonderful community and I am blessed to be able to work and live in such a beautiful town. All of us at Griffith, Grant and Lackie believe in giving back to their community. I currently serve

as President of the Lake Forest - Lake Bluff Lions Club, one of the largest service organizations in the world. I also serve as Chairman of Professional Standards for the North Shore Barrington Association of Realtors. My wife Lura and I have three grown children and one very special granddaughter.

MEET OUR AGENTS

Scott Lackie, President & Co-Owner847.234.0816 (o) | 847.542.6136 (c) | [email protected]

Page 53: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

Before

after

Multi-Colored TattoosBlack TattoosPreviously Treated Tattoos

Learn more at picosure.com

Removing tattoos just got faster.

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UltherapyLunchtime Face Lift

Dualsculpting/CoolsculptingNeograft Hair Restoration: no

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Fillers (RestylaneTM, Perlane, Juvederm,

Sculptra, Voluma)

Facial Chemical PeelsMicrodermabrasion

New Laser for Stretch MarksPicosureTM

tattoo removal

Leg Spider Vein TreatmentSun & Age Spots

Skin Surgery Moles & Skin Cancer

General Dermatology for All Ages

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

SeRViCeS

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

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!

Call us today to schedule your consultation!

Reveal the real you with CoolSculpting

BeFORe 8 WeekS aFteR

COOLSCULPtiNg tReatmeNt(-6 pounds)

CHANGE

THE WORLD

E M P O W E R E DG I R L S

WOODLANDSACADEMY.ORG

760 East Westleigh Road

Lake Forest, IL 60045 |

AT WOODLANDS ACADEMY

It’s no surprise that our students are so successful. After all, studies show an all-girls educational environment empowers girls to participate more and excel in STEM. That’s one reason why we were ranked 6th best private school in Illinois in a 2015 Niche ranking.

Empower your daughter today. Call (847) 234-4300 for your

personal tour and register online to attend our Open Houses

Sunday, Nov. 8, and Tuesday, Nov. 10.

Page 54: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

SUNDAY BREAKFAST

54 | saturday september 26 | sunday september 27 2015 the north shore weekend

Evanston resident and former Saturday Night Live star Tim Kazurinsky finds humor starring in Northlight Theatre’s Funnyman about an aging comedian trying to find his second act. Yet for him, the curtain has never really closed.By Selena FragaSSi

"F unny man” is a title that’s often been re-served for actor Tim

Kazurinsky, but starring in the new production with the name Funnyman at Skokie’s North-light Theatre gives it a whole new spin. In the story, written by playwright Bruce Graham, Ka-zurinsky stars as the agent of a maturing comedian (played by pal George Wendt) trying to find his second act in the hopes of reclaiming the infamy he once had. It’s loosely inspired by the careers of Buster Keaton and Bert Larr, but as Kazurinsky would admit, it also mirrors himself.

“It definitely resonates,” he admits. “Here I am in my 60’s and still working and doing in-teresting new projects.” In the ‘80s, Kazurinsky was unmissable

as Carl Sweetchuck in the Police Academy films and as one of the regulars on Saturday Night Live. His trademark characters, like Madge the Chimp’s Husband on the soap opera sketch “I Married A Monkey” and the grimacing pun doctor Jack Badofsky on “ Weekend Update” gave him wattage in an en-semble that also produced stars Eddie Murphy, Joe Piscopo, and J u l i e - L o u i s Dreyfus.

Though the ’81-’84 seasons he was on were considered some of SNL’s overcast years, the time when producer Dick Ebersol ran the ship after Lorne Mi-chael’s temporary depar-ture, Kazurinsky made a name for himself and was recently ranked by Rolling Stone as number 32 of all 141 cast members upon the show’s 40th anniversary this past spring.

“It shocked the hell out of me,” he admits. At the time of publication he was touring with the musical Wicked in the role of the Wizard of Oz and some of the cast members taped the article to his dressing room door. “I got some new found respect

with the kids on the tour who hadn’t even been born yet when I left the show.”

In recent years, live theatre has become a newfound passion for the actor and former screen-writer, one that has given him considerable new cred. Encour-aged by his actress wife Marcia and after first getting the bug

starring with Wendt in The Odd Couple several years ago, Kazur-insky made his Broadway debut in an Act Of God alongside Jim Parsons last May and says “I forgot how much fun it was.”

The trade puts him back to his roots as an improv actor and alumnus of Second City where he was more or less discovered

by John Belushi after some hap-penstance circumstances. A native of Australia, Kazurinsky moved to the States by himself a week after his 16th birthday.

He worked for a time as a young reporter for the

Johnstown Tribune-Democrat and eventu-ally found his way to Chicago in 1968 at

the height of the Dem-ocratic National Con-vention, which was

“the center of the universe and an ex-citing place to be. I never left,” says the now settled Evan-

ston resident. His early love for

reporting was the catalyst f o r t h e

“Salute To J o u r n a l i s m”

sketches on Sat-urday Night Live, that

mocked executive Rupert Murdoch, and which are curi-ously now absent from the show’s archives. His work in journalism soon turned into a copywriting position for Leo Burnett, where a fear of present-ing ad pitches led Kazurinsky to seek out improv classes.

“It was nerve wracking to play Don Draper and get up there and sell your commercials, so I thought I’d take class at Second City, hoping that would get me over my nervousness,” he recalls.

“They offered me a job to actu-ally be in front of people so I overcame my fear pretty well I guess.”

Kazurinsky is the first to admit that his story, rare as it is, is all about “luck … if you told today’s young actors that I did not have to audition for Second City or Saturday Night Live they would freak out and want to strangle me.” Yet much like re-turning to the fold in Funnyman has reminded him, comedy is all about the timing, he says. “When opportunity knocks, it doesn’t hurt to be prepared.”

Funnyman plays at Northlight Theatre through October 18. For tickets, visit northlight.org.

FUNNY MAN

Tim Kazurinsky | Illustration by Barry Blitt

“Here I am in

my 60’s and

still working

and doing

interesting

new projects.”

–Tim Kazurinsky

Page 55: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

778 N. WESTERN AVE | LAKE FOREST KoenigRubloff.com

© BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchise of BHH Affiliates, LLC Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.®

Ann Lyon 847.828.9991

Jeanne Martini 847.909.8085

Joanne Marzano 847.809.8156

Incredible value at $325 per square foot. Magnificent estate 2 blocks to town. This luxurious home includes the finest finishes throughout 4 levels of living with exquisite plaster and wood moldings, an amazing walk-out lower level with an en-suite office, studio, exercise room, guest suite and custom finishes! Fabulous De Giulio kitchen. Exquisite lighting. Swimming pool and spa, large gazebo and stunning landscaping. A 10++!

8 Bedrooms | 11 Full Baths | $3,650,000

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CONTACT THE Lyon Martini Group, YOUR REAL ESTATE PROFESSIONALS!

Let us lead you home!

This stunning custom designed home has been beautifully updated by Megan Winters. Located east of Sheridan Road, it is perfectly situated on over 1 acre with lovely ravine views. Updated bathrooms, a huge sunlit family room, 4 fireplaces, incredible architectural detail, newer gourmet kitchen, hardwood floors and intricate molding throughout. 3.5 car garage. Impeccably maintained and ready to thoroughly enjoy. Perfection!

5 Bedrooms | 4 Full and 1 Half Baths | $3,195,000

905 Illinois Road, Lake Forest

Fabulous 6 bedroom, 5 full, 2 half bath home designed by architects Granger and Frazier set on 2 acres down a private lane. Beautiful bluestone terraces overlook the pool and formal boxwood gardens designed by Peter Cummin. Spacious, elegant rooms, high ceilings, intricate architectural detail, hardwood floors, family room addition. Lovely master bath renovation. Convenient to schools and train in east Lake Forest.

6 Bedrooms | 5 Full and 2 Half Baths | $2,495,000

1280SheridanRd.com This fabulous Cape Cod in East Lake Bluff embodies privacy and sophistication. Recently renovated and expanded by J Lynch, this stunning sun-drenched home offers a wonderful floor plan, spacious rooms, incredible attention-to-detail, a huge fenced back yard with lush landscaping and beautiful views. Features include a gourmet kitchen, custom baths, hardwood floors, vaulted ceilings and 2 fireplaces. 3 blocks to town and Lake Michigan.

5 Bedrooms | 3 Full Baths | $1,060,000

227Woodland.com

Exempt

Page 56: The North Shore Weekend East, Issue 155

Since @properties was born in April 2000, we’ve been focused on one goal – to provide

the very best brokerage experience in Chicagoland real estate. Through it all, we’ve remained

an independent company that continues to grow and is committed to the local communities

and clients we’re fortunate enough to serve every day.

market share growth since 2007*

250%

200%

150%

100%

50%

-50%

2007 2008 2009 2010

KoenigRubloff Coldwell Banker Baird & Warner

* MRED Chicagoland data 1-1-2007 – 9-15-2015

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015

0%

15 YEARS. STILL GROWING.

leader...follow

the