The North Shore Weekend, November 21, 2020

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SUNDAY BREAKFAST

Longtime artist Sally Schoch draws customers to her new nuts and snack shop in Highland Park P26

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INSIDE NEWS Thanksgiving to-go for Northwestern Settlement families P18 FOLLOW US:

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SECOND SKIN: THE ART OF JACLYN MEDNICOV THE INTIMACY OF THE IN-BETWEEN SPACE.

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Mednicov in her studio surrounded by works from her Garden series. PHOTOGRAPHY BY FRANK ISHMAN

Story on PG 10


• Thankful • Grateful • Blessed TH A N K YO U TO A L L O F MY CL IENTS FO R A S UCC E SS FUL 2020

Happy Thanksgiving

N E W T R I E R R E A L E S TAT E . C O M

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NEWS

14 postcard from another world

Evanston resident and member of The Flat Five reflects on the band's new album

18 holiday to-go

Thanksgiving dinner is prepared for takeout for Northwestern Settlement families in need

LIFESTYLE & ARTS

18 north shorts

The "whew, what, and where" of a late-night encounter

22 north shore namecheck

A new book includes some famous haunts and happenings in our communities

LAST BUT NOT LEAST

WITH @SHERIDANRDMAG ON INSTAGRAM

26 sunday breakfast

Meet new Ravinia district nuts and snack shop co-owner Sally Schoch

A Season of Sincere Thanks. From our clients to the surrounding community, we are grateful for every opportunity to help guide you home.

The Matlin Group thematlingroup@compass.com 847.951.4040

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Gratitude changes everything. Thank you to my clients, family, and friends for your amazing support. Wishing you a Happy Thanksgiving filled with togetherness, even from afar.

julie.hartvigsen@compass.com 773.266.9850

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NEWS SECOND SKIN

From PG 1

BY LAURA LAYFER TREITMAN THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND

When artist Jaclyn Mednicov makes art, she seeks to stop time. From nature and changing seasons to special keepsakes or everyday objects, it is the concept of movement and transitions through life that are innate to her creations. “Knowing that beauty will fade, I want to savor the moment,” says Mednicov, who grew up on the North Shore, and moved to Los Angeles and New York, before returning to Chicago where she teaches at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and maintains an art studio. Her mediums range from oil, plaster, and printmaking, to photography. Her canvas can also include people, as she occasionally dabbles as a freelance make-up artist. With each discipline, Mednicov approaches with the same intent of crystallizing a ceremonial passage, an experience, or simply a feeling, past or present, attempting to elevate what is fleeting and portray it as foundational in her oeuvre. As a young girl, Mednicov recalls how in elementary school she was the go-to pick by peers for making the group project poster, and how she always preferred crafts over sports for extracurricular activities. Still, she was initially timid about committing to a future in art. A community center adult painting class solidified her confidence. “It’s funny because it was me, then a teenager, and about ten women, all mostly retirement age,” says Mednicov, “I ended up loving it and felt like I had found what I was meant to do.” She went on to receive a BFA in Visual Arts from the University of Kansas, an MA in Studio Arts from Eastern Illinois University, and an MFA in Painting and Drawing from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. To support herself, Mednicov worked at MAC Cosmetics in Soho and began establishing a client base of well-known New York artists that often invited her to their exclusive gallery openings. This job was subsequent to her post as an art handler at Christie’s, noting that “the auction house behind-the-scenes look at the art market gave me the best opportunity to come in contact with works by some of my favorite artists.” Soon, Mednicov’s own career took off with solo and group shows, and prestigious recognition and awards from the Ragdale Foundation in Lake Forest, and being published in New American Paintings magazine, to a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. Growing up in a large family, Mednicov says she was a doodler and daydreamer content for hours with her wandering mind over playing with toys. “It was a way to escape from the high-energy of my siblings,” she laughs, acknowledging the roots and relationships traced back to her current success. “My paternal grandfather was an artist (and used plaster and floral subject matter, too), my father went to The Culinary Institute of America in New York and opened local suburban pizza and submarine restaurants called Garibaldi’s, and

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Karakami and inkjet print on Japanese washi paper, 2019, 18 x 26 inches. Block printing collaboration with artisans in Kyoto, Japan (Maruni Co., Ltd.) IMAGE COURTESY OF ARTIST

Naoshimia at Night, 2020, oil on canvas, 60 x 48 inches. PHOTOGRAPHY BY STEPHANIE TAIBER

my uncles are both influential and entrepreneurial,” shares Mednicov, “I learned from them, along with the encouragement of my mother, the possibility of a different path and how to make my art a professional endeavor.” She considers her work to be “an investigation through a lens of impermanence and loss.” For example, in Space Between the large-scale painting depicts a base horizon of dark tones that gives way to bursts of pastel pink, yellow, and blue emerging as a bright sunrise sky. Here, it’s not the voids that surface rather the fulfillment of color and contrasts. Whether Mednicov’s viewers are witness to the motion of a weed altering in its shape or asked to independently interact as with her Heal My Head Heal My Heart installation where visitors marked the surface of image transfers with an overlay of chalk, the message conveyed is the only consistent: change is inevitable and should be embraced. In one of Mednicov’s most recent series entitled Garden, she employs a layered technique pulling flora from her backyard and making a mold to cast plaster and acrylic polymer. These “skin paintings” appear as a soft textile or work on paper, yet the illusion further deceives as they are actually dimensional, appearing light and free-flow hanging on metal stands and wall mounts. It was during an extended stay in Japan last summer where Mednicov noted the custom of fabric dividers, known as noren, placed outside homes as a protection from the sun in summer and cold in winter, and decided to apply it to her own presenta-

tion methods. She has a penchant for taking the traditional and modernizing it to her practice. As one of eight fellows at the Spertus Institute of Jewish Learning and Leadership in Chicago, Mednicov at first took to examining the Museum’s collection of objects, owners, and histories for items confiscated by the Nazis during WWII, then switched course. “Finding it a struggle to connect, I asked each of the other fellows in the program to H + L, 2017, screen print on carpet, 19 x 19 inches. bring in a cherished heirloom and then transferred IMAGE COURTESY OF THE ARTIST images of their pieces onto acrylic to make “skins,” says Mednicov. Similar is for cyanotypes, a blue photographic printing to how tissue covering a body takes shape, process she debuted last Spring for participaMednicov presents her surfaces as a protector tion in “ART-IN-PLACE,” an initiative of to a deeper introspection that reveals a story CNL Projects and Terrain Exhibitions, during or stage in the evolution of a person, place, or the early days of the pandemic. “Similar to thing. painting, it becomes less about my hand and Today, Mednicov and her partner, Brian more about chance,” comments Mednicov, of Anderson, an Assistant Professor in the School this chemical-based format that is now a reguof Design at the University of Illinois at Chilar in her repertoire. Spoken like a true artist, cago, are collaborating with Karakami artisans, and a realist, understanding that with risk may Maruni Co., Ltd., and block printing for a fucome opportunity, and if you can capture it, ture line of wallpapers. Additionally, Mednicov long-lasting rewards. is trying to navigate the new ways of the world. “Lately, in this era of uncertainty, I find myself For more information, please visit jaclynmedfluctuating between methods.” Her latest trend nicov.com.

| SATURDAY NOVEMBER 21 | SUNDAY NOVEMBER 22 2020

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IS CLOSING! A s p a r t o f o u r c l o s i n g s a l e we a r e p l e a s e d t o a n n o u n c e a ve r y s p e c i a l eve n t !

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11/10/2020 2:46:33 SATURDAY NOVEMBER 21 | SUNDAY NOVEMBER 22 2020 | PM


NEWS

POSTCARD FROM ANOTHER WORLD EVANSTON’S NORA O’CONNOR OF THE FLAT FIVE SHARES THOUGHTS ON THE BAND’S NEW FULL-LENGTH RECORD. BY GREGG SHAPIRO THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND

As supergroups go, it’s hard to imagine one cooler or better suited for that title than the Chicago quintet known as The Flat Five. Consisting of longtime Evanston resident Nora O’Connor, along with Kelly Hogan, Scott Ligon, Alex Hall and Casey McDonough, The Flat Five effortlessly conjures a sense of nostalgia in the listener, even if you’re too young to remember. That’s due to the band’s songwriter Chris Ligon, whose imaginative wordplay is the vehicle by which we are transported on the albums It’s A World Full of Love (2016) and the band’s new full-length record Another World (Pravda Records). Harmonizing throughout, O’Connor shares the lead vocals with Hogan on the irresistible opener “Drip-A-Drop,” as well as “Butterflies Don’t Bite,” and takes the lead on “This’ll Be the Day” and “House of Foam.” O’Connor spoke to us a few weeks ago in advance of Another World’s release this month. In addition to you, the other members of The Flat Five have connections to Chicago’s legendary alternative country scene. Do you see it as a natural progression, the way that The Flat Five’s self-described “twisted sunshine vocal pop” grew out of alt-country? I'm going to say yes. I also think just because we are more than country. We all have pop roots as well. Maybe Kelly and I were leaning into our country roots. For me, growing up with Irish immigrants, I have a lot of Irish Celtic music background and then started in the bluegrass scene in southern Illinois. So, Kelly and I were leaning into the country music, but we still had all this pop music living inside us. As the band was forming and as we started to pick our song set and find our sound, we leaned into the twisted sunshine pop. We're made up of more than flavor. Two of the best examples of The Flat Five’s “twisted sunshine vocal pop” are “Drip A Drop” from the new album Another World and “Buglight” from 2016’s It’s A World of Love and Hope. Are they as much fun to sing as they sound? Yes! We all got to the studio and Scott said, “How about this song ‘Buglight’? Let’s just do it in this style where I play guitar and we all gather around one microphone.” We recorded it in just a couple hours after a couple takes. “Buglight” just happened really organically and really fast. (Regarding) “Drip A Drop,” Scott sent us an email the night before we were going to the studio (that said), “Chris has a bunch of new songs. Check this one out.” I feel like we've been together so long that we each know our place and fall into our positions quite quickly. “Look at the Birdy” from Another World is a wicked funny recounting of a Sears Portrait Studio experience from the perspective of the photographer. Being the mother of young ones, did you have any amusing episodes at the Sears Portrait Studio, or do you have one you’d care to share from your childhood? I guess I'm not a very good mom because we’ve never done portraits. But we always went to the Lincolnwood Town Center on McCormick and Touhy. We never thought we could afford to take professional pictures, but we always took the boys to see Santa Claus (for a photo).There was nice Santa, creepy Santa, maybe drunk Santa. Some of my favorite photos

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of my kids are the ones where one is smiling, and one is crying. It’s priceless. I've never been into the perfect picture, the perfect outfit and the perfect background. I kind of like the misbuttoned shirt and the crying kid next to the other kid sitting up straight and smiling. Insects figure prominently in the Herb Alpertesque “Butterflies Don’t Bite,” as they did in the aforementioned “Buglight.” Are you an entomophobe or are you a fan of the vast insect world? As you know, all of these songs are written by Chris Ligon. I think he's into all sorts of stuff that he's not ashamed to admit. He's so playful and childlike and deep and serious. It's interesting the way he uses bugs as imagery or as metaphors.

At the moment? It’s hard to say during a pandemic, but in a regular world I would say I'm in about five active bands, including my solo stuff. And I play bass for other people. Then there's some bigger acts that I go on tour with. Such as The Decemberists and Neko Case. Yes, right. In the earlier days of the pandemic, you and Kelly Hogan, two Flat Five members, performed in the socially distanced all-star all-female supergroup BOTO’s (Band Of Their Own) YouTube video, singing the Pat Benatar hit “Shadows of the Night”. Is there more to come? Maybe in the wintertime there might be. I feel like in the beginning of the pandemic we were all

like that for me. When I interviewed you in the pre-COVID-19 year of 2017, we talked about Evanston, where you’ve lived for a dozen years, and the wonderful music venues and the supportive music community. Are there ways in which the Evanston music scene has been able continue supporting its musicians, as well as their fans? Big time! All things considered, how everything just kind of stopped, there's a venue in Evanston called SPACE and they’ve started these “To Go” shows. I've been doing a lot of those. Jason Narducy (another Evanstonian) has also been playing all over. My little town of Evanston has been really supportive. There are a lot of music fans here … a lot of people here who are parents, like me, and about my age, who love going to concerts. So many people have been open to having small socially distanced backyard shows— 10 to 15 people depending on the size, sometimes 30 people. We've done shows with SPACE and we've done fundraising shows. The money that the hosts of the SPACE “To Go” shows are paying support the

scrambling and panicking and mourning and just looking for ways to connect and create content. The Flat Five did “It’s Been A Delight” Hollywood Squaresstyle. I feel like it's kind of calmed down because people have been, maybe, getting off their computers a little. I've been playing outdoor concerts, backyard solo shows, all summer. But that's winding down. I think as we are entering into hibernation or even possibly another lockdown, there might be some more of that stuff. I have been trying to ease up on my screen time. I feel like in the beginning I was watching everybody’s home concerts and videos, trying to stay connected. It got to be a little too much. As we’re going into the winter, maybe there will be more stuff

artist, the venue, and the employees of the venue. It's been a really great thing. There are maybe a dozen artists who are associated with the SPACE “To Go” shows. You can jump on the SPACE website (evanstonspace.com), pick one of the artists and there's a tier of prices for the shows that people can pay. These Evanston moms love me. I've had all sorts of little backyard shows and it's been keeping me really busy. But I think I'm about to hang it up (for now) because it's going to get too cold to play outside. I don't really see getting back indoors to do shows anytime soon. I think when it warms up again next spring and summer, we'll continue to play these outdoor shows until we can get back in the venues.

Nora O'Connor and The Flat Five.

But how do you feel about bugs, personally? Personally, I have no problem with bugs. I don't kill spiders. I love the bees in my backyard all over my flowers. Bugs don’t freak me out. I can sit and watch a caterpillar walk across the floor all day long. Chris Ligon, whom you mentioned, certainly has a way with words and melody. As a songwriter yourself, what do you find most appealing about singing Chris’ songs? I think I just love his stories. For example, the song “Birmingham” from our first record. It kind of sets up the visual right away, where one character is shielding the other character so they can pee outside and no one else can see. Or the lines, “Remember when we went to Tennessee and I loved you and you were kissing me.” I tend to sing more about lost love and relationships. I think Chris can really put a color picture in your head and it's always a vibrant color, and rarely black and white. At last count, including The Flat Five, with how many musical acts are you associated?

| SATURDAY NOVEMBER 21 | SUNDAY NOVEMBER 22 2020

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SATURDAY NOVEMBER 21 | SUNDAY NOVEMBER 22 2020 |

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NEWS

HOLIDAY TO-GO THE TRADITION OF THANKSGIVING DINNER CONTINUES FOR NORTHWESTERN SETTLEMENT FAMILIES, DESPITE THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC. BY KEMMIE RYAN THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND

Each year, Northwestern Settlement hosts its traditional Thanksgiving dinner just before the holiday. This year will be no different … alright, perhaps a little different. The holiday tradition typically brings together Northwestern Settlement families—serving more than 400. But, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the organization has partnered with Catering by Michaels and Associated Bank to feed 2,800 people with a traditional dinner to-go. "For members of the Settlement community, the annual Thanksgiving dinner helps make the holidays bright. While we're unable to gather to physically share a meal this year, our board is

proud of supporting the distribution of 2,800 meals to families served by the Settlement's services,” says Chris Beer, a member of the Winnetka Board of the Northwestern Settlement and co-chair of the group’s upcoming gala. Each Thanksgiving meal box will be packed with delicious herb roasted turkey breast and all the most loved side dishes—turkey gravy, cranberry sauce, cornbread with cranberries and raisins, rosemary herb stuffing, traditional mashed potatoes, and a sauteed autumn vegetable medley. Every dish is made from scratch by the Catering by Michaels culinary team and each box will serve a family of four—plus leftovers. “We have always been committed to giving back and knew it was more important than ever to try and find a way to make our annual Thanksgiving donation happen this year,” says Lisa Ware, director of business development at Catering by

Michaels. Carrying on the idea of the meal boxes, the Winnetka Board of the Northwestern Settlement has pivoted its fundraising efforts during the pandemic. The group typically holds its spectacular annual gala in February, but in 2021 it is plans to host “Gala to Go: A Virtual Benefit for Northwestern Settlement,” providing families boxed meals to enjoy at home along with a virtual program. The Thanksgiving to-go donation has also helped Catering by Michaels bring back more than 15 employees to help prepare the meals. "COVID-19 has destroyed our industry and continues to have a profound impact on our company. We have been hit hard, really hard, but there are so many people that are in need more than us. This donation will help so many, but it will also allow us to bring back more than employ-

ees who otherwise wouldn’t have work, to help us cook and pack all this food. We wouldn’t be able to do this without a very generous donation from the Winnetka Board of the Northwestern Settlement, Associated Bank, the support of the Greater Chicago Food Depository, and personal donations from our loyal clients.” explains Ware. It’s safe to say that despite the many challenges this year, the spirit of giving is alive on the North Shore. Perhaps, Beer says it best,” Together, we’re serving meals and we’re serving hope during a difficult time.” Thanksgiving meal boxes will be distributed to families on Saturday, November 21, in the Northwestern Settlement gymnasium. To support or donate to the Northwestern Settlement, text the word SETTLEMENT to 243725, or visit northwesternsettlement.org.

Traditional Thanksgiving dinner made from scratch by Catering by Michaels PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY OF THE WINNETKA BOARD OF THE NORTHWESTERN SETTLEMENT

LIFESTYLE & ARTS

NORTH SHORTS

WISE GUY THE “WHEW, WHAT, AND WHERE” OF A LATE-NIGHT ENCOUNTER. BY MIKE LUBOW ILLUSTRATION BY KIRSTEN ULVE

You’re walking your dog late on a quiet North Shore lane. You hear an owl. And you just know that old bird is mocking you. He’s in the shadows of a tall tree above, and he’s going, whew, whew-whew. Why would you think this is directed at you? On this very street a few years ago, you were driving along when you suddenly noticed an owl on the pavement, lit up in your headlights. It spread giant wings and rose as you slammed the brakes. He almost crashed into your windshield, but flew over your roof with inches to

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spare, disappearing into the night. Close call! No wonder you shouted, “Whew!” Who could blame you? Now, when you walk your dog on that dark street, you hear this mocking whew! Then, whew-whew! And you know. Owls have great hearing. The one you almost collided with surely overheard your shocked “Whew!” through the open car window. Now he’s playing with you. Owls are known for memory, longevity and wisdom. This one’s not just wise, but a wise guy. This column was adapted by Mike Lubow from his book: Wild Notes: Observations over time about birds and other fleeting things. Available on amazon.com. THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND


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202 Girard Ave, Wilmette

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BUYER 2701 Birchwood Ave, Wilmette

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924 Judson Ave 3E, Evanston

1229 Forest Glen Dr, Winnetka

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With heartfelt gratitude to my clients, friends & family in 2020 and always.

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Thank You and Happy Thanksgiving!

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1720 Northland Ave, Highland Park

777 Walden Rd, Winnetka

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BUYER 935 Valley Rd, Glencoe

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BUYER 841 Sutton Dr, Northbrook

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847.913.3662 chrisveech@atproperties.com 1145 Oak Ridge Dr, Glencoe

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BUYER 117 Old Green Bay Rd, Winnetka

THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND

823 Forest Ave 1E, Evanston

1785 Broadland Ln, Lake Forest

325 Richmond Rd, Kenilworth

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BUYER 464 Dundee Rd, Glencoe

471 Edens Ln, Northfield

421 Lakeside Pl, Highland Park

SATURDAY NOVEMBER 21 | SUNDAY NOVEMBER 22 2020 |

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LAKE FOREST PARKS & RECREATION

program guide

Winter & Spring 2020-2021

Our Winter & Spring Brochure is Online! Our Winter & Spring Program Guide is online only at www.LFParksandRec.com and will be updated frequently with program additions or changes relating to federal and state guidelines. We are looking forward to welcoming the community to our activities and programs this winter and spring! We have been working hard to bring you all of your favorite classes and events, reimagined for 2020/2021 with safety and social distancing limitations in mind. Online registration opens December 1 for residents and December 8 for non-residents.

RESIDENT REGISTRATION OPENS DECEMBER 1 AT 8:30 AM • WWW.LFPARKSANDREC.COM 20

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THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND


FR IENDS OF LAKE F O RE S T P ARK S & RE CRE ATI O N FOU N D A T I O N P R E S E N T S

LAKE F O REST

Lights up the Parks LAKE FOR E ST N E I GH B O RH O O D P A R K S NOVE M B E R 2 7 - J A N U AR Y 1 0 LAKE FOREST TREE LIGHTING CEREMONY IS RE-IMAGINED FOR 2020! •

In addition to the central business district and Market Square holiday decorations, this year eight Lake Forest community and neighborhood parks will be decorated with holiday trees and lights, which will remain on for the entire season. See below for the list of parks.

Watch our website and social media platforms for the announcement of a socially distant, fun, family activity involving all of the listed parks!

ELAWA PARK 1001-1021 Jensen Dr. EVERETT PARK 1191 Everett School Rd. FOREST PARK (at the Belvedere) 801 N. Lake Rd. NORTHCROFT PARK 1365 S. Ridge Rd. SOUTH PARK 150 S. Maywood Rd. TOWNLINE PARK 1555 W. Kennedy Rd. WAVELAND PARK 600 S. Waveland Rd. WEST PARK 850 N. Summit Ave.

WWW.L F P A RKSA N DRE C . C O M THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND

SATURDAY NOVEMBER 21 | SUNDAY NOVEMBER 22 2020 |

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LIFESTYLE & ARTS

NORTH SHORE NAMECHECK A NEW BOOK HIGHLIGHTS THE HAUNTS OF GHOSTS, GANGSTERS, AND CELEBRITIES AROUND CHICAGO AND THE NORTH SHORE. BY MITCH HURST THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND

As a once middle school social studies teacher, Gerry Lekas used to spend a lot of time in the library looking at books. He always thought it would be cool to walk in and find a book that he'd written. So the Glenview resident wrote one. Earlier this year, Black Lyon Publishing, LLC released Where the Tour Buses Don't Go: Chicago's Hidden Sites of the Mysterious, Macabre, Ghostly, & Glamorous. The book is a guide for those who want to learn the real stories and see the places behind ghastly crimes, haunted mysteries, the more notorious antics of the Chicago mob, and the childhood homes of celebrities who grew up in Chicago and the North Shore. "I've always had a bucket list of things I wanted to accomplish and growing up, I was interested in the darker side of things—in ghosts and gangsters," Lekas says. His background as a teacher and experience in honing stories for 11-year-olds with short attention spans made it easier to write the book than he anticipated. "A year-and-a-half ago I actually started to write the book and I thought it was going to be really painful," Lekas says. "But because I had all these

stories built up over the years in my mind, it was actually much easier. I knew the bare bones of the stories and completing the book was mostly stringing them together and nailing down exact addresses and exact dates." In the midst of writing the book, along came the COVID-19 pandemic and, with travel off the table, people began to get desperate for something to do. "The book allows readers to plan these customized trips and see some really odd things and never have to leave the car," Lekas says. "That was a little bit of the inspiration for the book, because if you've ever gone on a ghost or a gangster tour in Chicago, you see the same places over and over. What about the person who really wants something more?" Where the Tour Buses Don't Go is divided into four sections: Ghost hauntings, Chicago gangsters, famous crimes and serial killers, and celebrity homes and haunts. The North Shore is well represented "On the cover of the book is a shot of a section of Sheridan Road up in Lake Forest. Around 1916, there was a death there of a young girl, a romantic problem with the boyfriend," Lekas says. "Her name was Marion Lambert, and she died from poisoning. Her ghost is still seen on that section of Sheridan Road, and people describe seeing a girl in a white dress standing on the side of the road, her mouth horribly burned."

Lekas also mentions H.H. Holmes, the serial killer outlined in Erik Larson's book, The Devil in the White City. While most of Holmes's murders were committed on Chicago's South Side, he maintained a home on 11th Street in Wilmette. Then there's notorious bank robber Baby Face Nelson, who partnered with John Dillinger on a series of notorious crimes. Nelson met his fate in Wilmette, and his body turned up in Skokie. It's the celebrity section, however, that might be of most interest to those on the North Shore. Many noted Hollywood actors were born or raised on the North Shore. Charlton Heston, who Lekas calls

"Moses of the North Shore," was born in Wilmette, and Ann-Margret was raised there. Robert Reed, television's "Mr. Brady," was a native of Highland Park. Bruce Dern (recently featured in The North Shore Weekend) grew up in Kenilworth and attended New Trier Township High School. Especially intriguing for readers might be the old haunts of the Murray brothers, including Bill, who were raised in Wilmette. Bill honed his golf skills, which would come in handy during the filming of Caddyshack at the Winnetka Golf Club. "There's a little park across the avenue from where the Murray family grew up, and I might be the world's biggest nerd, but I like going to this little park and saying, 'All right, the Murray boys, this is where they used to play’," Tekas says. "This is what they saw when they walked out of their house, and then you start thinking about all the roles Bill played and you think, well, this is what he did every day." Where the Tour Buses Don't Go can be purchased from Amazon.com and other online retailers.

Best wishes for good health and happiness this holiday season. Thinking about buying, selling or baking? Happy to talk anytime! Here’s to forward motion in 2021!

8 47.975.4756 chery l wal dstei n@atpro perti es.co m

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THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND


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SATURDAY NOVEMBER 21 | SUNDAY NOVEMBER 22 2020 |

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Thanks and giving

As we pause to give thanks in these extraordinary times, we’ll be supporting the University of Chicago Medicine’s Covid-19 Response Fund. Contributions provide much-needed support for healthcare workers and patients and their families, and are used to purchase essential supplies. There’s a never-ending list of overburdened food pantries, soup kitchens, homeless shelters, first-responder organizations, and medical/research institutions that need help. We encourage everyone to give what they can.

Now, more than ever, we need each other.

CATHY & JULIE DEUTSCH 773.852.3221 | 847.217.1277 | deutschresidential.com cathy@deutschresidential.com juliedeutsch@atproperties.com

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THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND


511 SUNSET LANE GLENCOE 5 BEDROOMS & 4.3 BATHS | $889,000

A MOST-ADMIRED HOME! LISTED AND UNDER CONTRACT IN 5 DAYS! * CLOSED 96% OF LIST PRICE! **

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SATURDAY NOVEMBER 21 | SUNDAY NOVEMBER 22 2020 |

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S U N D AY B R E A K FA S T

SCHOCH AND AWE OCTOGENARIAN SALLY SCHOCH—A WOMAN FOR ALL SEASONS—OPENS A RAVINIA DISTRICT NUTS SHOP JUST IN TIME FOR THE HOLIDAYS. BY BILL MCLEAN ILLUSTRATION BY BARRY BLITT

Tom Cruise’s character in the 1983 movie Risky Business, Joel Goodsen, ate fries in a scene shot at Shelton’s Ravinia Grill in Highland Park. The diner closed in 1993. An 86-year-old mother and her daughter opened a business at the location on November 7, selling considerably healthier fare at 481 Roger Williams Avenue. A risky venture, in these uncertain times? Not if you’re spritely octogenarian Sally Schoch and her industrious daughter, Kari Guhl, along with Schoch’s legions of nuts fans, who had been urging the mother of four and grandmother of six to peddle pecans and almonds and cashews for years. Schoch (pronounced “shock”), of Wilmette, and Guhl, of Highland Park, co-own Sally’s Nuts & Snack Shop. If you’re in awe of Schoch, you’re not alone. A lifelong abstract painter, Schoch generated her first batch of nuts for her first “customers”—family and friends—at her home about 25 years ago and started gifting them aplenty after opting to rent a commercial kitchen in 2017. “It’s a messy and labor-intensive process,” admits Schoch, who spends three to four days a week at her shop. “You’d have to use your entire kitchen space in order to make the nuts, and it takes about three hours to make one batch. “My recipes happened to click and have been well-received. We’re seeing a steady stream of customers. It’s been amazing, every day, since we opened. Delightful. People walk in, smiling, and say, ‘What’s going on in here?’ I love the shop because it keeps me busy and I’m surrounded by good people. I laugh my head off at work each day. You know what’s funny? One of our shop’s landlords is also named Sally. I’m five times older than she is. “I don’t think there’s another shop in the country like ours. We’re more than just nuts.” Schoch’s shop also sells baked goods, salads, simple sandwiches, and cheese boards. Patrons are going nuts over those items, too. The shop plans to vend macadamia nuts in 2021. Start forming a line today. The location also features a row of empty nut jars, alluding to what Schoch’s hungry-for-more gift recipients—usually between holidays in November and De-

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Sally Schoch

cember—presented to the accommodating Schoch before the Sally’s Nuts & Snack Shop launch. “Our No. 1 cheerleader, without a doubt, is Sal, who’s an Energizer Bunny and a dynamo,” gushes Guhl, whose brother Brandon intends to help in the shop’s kitchen at least through the end of the year. “It’s a very happy place, our shop, with a lot of that having to do with the presence of Sal. I can't tell you how many people had said to my mother over the years, ‘These nuts are fantastic, Sally! You’ve got to start a business.’ Well, look what she’s doing now. “The message she’s sending to all of us is, ‘You’re never too old to chase your dreams.’ ” Schoch grew up as Sally Davis in Joliet, the hometown of her future husband, Dick. But their courtship didn’t start until Dick took a night drawing class at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where Sally, a University of Miami graduate, had been studying for her Master of Fine Arts degree after collecting her Bachelor of Fine Arts degree at the school on Wabash Avenue. They connected in the institute’s cafeteria one afternoon. The couple got married in 1962. Their other two sons are Bret and Brad. Dick Schoch joined the Jack Daniel Distil ler y, serving as an executive salesman and becoming vice president of the Midwest Region. He died in 2010. Sally Schoch has lived in Wilmette since 1964, and she might very well hold the record for number of walks to and from Gillson Park. “What do I think about on my walks?” Schoch says with a brief chuckle. “Oh, I pay attention to the gardens more than anything else I do when I’m outside. So fortunate … we’re all so fortunate to live in a beautiful area like this. I’ve been blessed. And now, I get to w o r k with my family members in my shop

| SATURDAY NOVEMBER 21 | SUNDAY NOVEMBER 22 2020

in Highland Park, which is such an open and free and welcoming community. “I fell into a pile of fun.” Gardening is one of Schoch’s many cherished pastimes, along with painting, baking, and knit-

It’s been amazing, every day. Delightful. People walk in, smiling, and say, ‘What’s going on in here?’ I love the shop because it keeps me busy and I’m surrounded by good people. I laugh my head off at work each day.

ting. She does not remain attached to any of her paintings for an extended period of time; her favorite painting every year is the one she’s creating in her mind. “My mother is the most creative person I know, and I was in the field of art (as a wholesaler) for more than 30 years,” Guhl says. “Creativity—it’s one of her strongest traits.” Schoch was a Wilmette Arts Guild featured artist in 2016. Vivid paintings of her subjects, particularly of the floral variety, don’t just pop; they explode. Exhibits A and B: Schoch’s “Flower Tower” and “A Study in Yellow” paintings. “The core of my work is abstract expressionism,” she shares on the Wilmette Arts Guild website. “I enjoy the challenge of realism in subjects but choose to focus on capturing their identity in abstract. There is something exciting about breaking the rules of tradition to create a scene or still-life in blocks of color not true to reality. “Abstract to me,” she continues, “is the marriage of imagination, spontaneity, and color.” Formerly an avid tennis player, Schoch is coming up aces in another realm. It has been quite a match, the can-do Schoch and her appealing shop. “It’s been a wonderful, wonderful life. Period,” the ebullient business owner says. “Keep moving; that’s what I do. That’s also what keeps me happy.” Sally’s Nuts & Snack Shop is located at 481 Roger Williams Avenue in Highland Park’s Ravinia district. Winter hours: Tuesday-Sunday, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Call 847-748-8947 or visit sallysnuts.com for more information. THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND


THANK YOU!

I AM INCREDIBLY GRATEFUL FOR MY 2020 CLIENTS Andrew & Justine Bestler

Dave & Nan Hoff

Dominic Ricci

Nathan & Bobbie-Jo Bogan

Doug & Lee Ann Hoover

Doug Schmidt

Jennifer Brown

Carter & Ashley Jons

Julie Schmidt

Greg Burns

Robert & Reaney Kunkler

David Stafford

Sara Doran

Garrick & Renee Lau

Allison Stein

Noam Dror

Jan & Anne Maitland

Lawrence Stein

Patrick & Keely Duda

Andrew & Bridget McGuire

Justin & Nita Swinsick

Judson & Cece Ely

Chris & Cynthia Milne

Kathy Tucker

Bill & Mindy Fauntleroy

Dr.’s Mok

Josh Warren & Suzanne Bell

Wes & Diane Fisher

Jim & Alyson Naughton

Chris & Ellen Weaver

Matthew & Sydney Francolino

Eileen & Glen Noren

Stephen & Bridget Whisdosh

Christopher & Nicole Getz

Ben & Becca Peters

Luke & Michelle Whitworth

Monty & Sara Hall

Cathy Priest

Taylor & Jessica Wood

Shelly & Laura Hirschtritt

Rob Pritchard & Jill Totaro

H A P PY TH A NKS GIVING!

8 4 7. 2 2 6 . 5 7 9 4 LORINEUSCHEL.COM LO R I . N E U S C H E L @ AT P R O P E R T I E S . C O M

THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND

SATURDAY NOVEMBER 21 | SUNDAY NOVEMBER 22 2020 |

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thankful for love HAPPY THANKSGIVING

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THE NORTH SHORE WEEKEND


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