Trevs get their groove back after unusual start to already unusual year

The Trevians were due. 

The New Trier boys volleyball team had a rough go to start the 2021 season, battling a two-week COVID-related quarantine and then a powerhouse early schedule to begin 0-4.

The below-.500 record is unusual for a program that has made six consecutive trips down state, so it took out its frustrations on host Evanston Monday, May 3.

“This team has a lot of potential,” Trevs coach Sue Ellen Haak said. “We were in quarantine for two weeks after tryouts, so we are short on practice. But these guys have potential. They are workhorses. I have total confidence that it’s onward and upward from here.”

New Trier brought home a state trophy three out of the past four years, finishing third in 2019, and were ready to bring back an experienced unit for a run at a 2020 state title. 

But those hopes were dashed by the COVID-19 pandemic, which cut short the 2019-20 school year and spring athletics. 

With a long layoff made longer by its quarantine, New Trier is still shaking off the rust with five seniors and 11 juniors, none of whom have commingled on a varsity court. 

Evanston took advantage of the inexperience for the first two-thirds of the first set. 

Setter Stefan Gjaja meets the pass for the Trevians, who won their first match of the year May 3.

The ‘Kits cruised to a 17-11 lead before New Trier’s Nathan Zoloto took the ball behind the serving line. With back-to-back aces, Zoloto put his team on the comeback trail.

Zoloto said serving runs are a big momentum boost — and so is an energized bench.

“Our bench is huge right now,” he said. “Every point, they are getting up and being loud. It makes a big difference.”

From there, the Trevs nibbled at the ‘Kits lead until an Andrew Chamberlain kill gave New Trier its first lead of the set at 22-21. 

Chamberlain had another of his team-high 9 kills as the Trevs pulled out the 26-24 victory. 

The momentum pushed open the floodgates. While Evanston had an early 6-2 lead in the second set, it was short-lived. New Trier went on a 12-2 run to take a significant lead that was only extended thereafter.

The key, according to both Haak and Zoloto, was hanging on to the ball after earning a sideout. 

“I thought our servers really settled in,” Haak said. “That was actually one of our goals today, to serve for multiple points, not just one and done. We started to do that.”

New Trier’s Nathan Zoloto (17) shoots the ball past an Evanston blocker.

The second set featured another serving run by Zoloto, who finished with 4 aces, and one from Trevs setter Stefan Gjaja, who added 25 assists. 

New Trier finished the second set in short order with a 25-14 victory to complete the Central Suburban South sweep.

Max Mazur added 8 kills and Scott Hopkins 9 digs in the Trevs’ first win of the young season.

“We had a rough start,” Zoloto said. “But we’ve hustled and played hard. We took (Glenbrook North) to three sets. This is a big win for us. I’m hoping it will be an upward trend and a turning point for the team.”

Cancer survivor Erika Hlavacek is living her #bestlife and helping others do the same

Erika Hlavacek came out fighting after she was diagnosed with cancer.

The Wilmette resident not only battled her disease, but she also fought to build an innovative fundraising effort that has collected more than $30,000 for lung cancer research.

In 2017, Hlavacek was admitted to the hospital with a persistent cough, followed by back pain that became unbearable. 

The mother of two was released 10 days later with a Stage IV lung cancer diagnosis.

Doctors found a tumor and began genomic testing and discovered a gene abnormality that led to a specific lung-cancer diagnosis called ALK-positive

“I was devastated,” Hlavacek said. 

Hlavacek was put on a chemotherapy medication called Alecensa, a drug that was approved a few months before her diagnosis thanks to advances in lung cancer research.

“It was chemo, but it was in the form of a pill, and it stopped the cancer from growing,” Hlavacek said. 

The chemo effectively shrank her tumors and although she suffered side effects, she returned to relative normalcy. 

Just 18 months after her diagnosis, a second shock came into the Hlavacek family when Erika’s husband, Jeff, was diagnosed with colorectal cancer.

While he was undergoing chemotherapy, Erika’s first targeted treatment became ineffective, and the cancer spread to her brain, she said.

“I had hundreds of brain tumors in my head,” Hlavacek said.

She again benefitted from a newly approved treatment.

“Luckily for me, another treatment for ALK-positive was approved again just months before I needed it,” Hlavacek said. 

She started her second targeted treatment called Lorbrena, and three weeks later, her brain scans were clear. 

“These pills are amazing and they’re because of advances in lung cancer treatments,” Hlavacek said. “I’m alive because of research.”

Erika Hlavacek (second from right) gathers with friends (left to right) Amy Shirar Malelo, Cindy Carey and Jennifer Lister, all of whom are donning their best life shirts.

Now she is still on Lorbrena and continues to live her “best life” — a message she hopes to share with others. 

Living with a terminal disease has given Hlavacek a new outlook on life. 

“Time is a gift. We need to make the most out of every day,” she said. 

Hlavacek’s friends surprised her on a group trip with a special “Best Life” T-shirt. The surprise gave Hlavacek the idea to create team T-shirts for a cancer walk. 

With the help of Shari Gottlieb, a Wilmette mother and graphic designer, and Lisa Cohen, a Wilmette business owner of humanKIND, she created a team shirt that sparked a movement. 

“I started showing people the shirt, and they wanted to buy it,” Hlavacek said. “We turned it into a fundraiser, and we wound up raising a lot of money for lung cancer research.” 

Hlavacek always wanted to raise money to fight the disease, which is the most common form of cancer worldwide, with more annual cases than breast, colon and prostate cancers combined. 

“I’ve always participated in walks and raising money,” Hlavacek said, “but I wanted to be able to control the funds myself, raise the money, and have my own nonprofit that could support research year-round.” 

In just over a year since yEAHbestlife began, the nonprofit has donated upwards of $30,000 to lung cancer research.

In April 2020, Hlavacek’s created yEAHbestlife — the “EAH” representing her name: Erika Arquilla Hlavacek — with a mission to inspire others to live their life with no reservations and to also raise money for lung cancer research.

“Don’t wait for a cancer diagnosis to happen to you to really start living,” she said.

Her nonprofit has raised $30,000 in donations since April 2020, and $10,000 of it was just in merchandise sales.  

The nonprofit sells yEAHbestlife T-shirts, as well as hats, tank tops, bags and accessories through Cohen’s website, humanKIND. 

“My goal is always to have people I don’t know posting pictures in our apparel and hash tagging #bestlife,” she said.

“That’s the biggest gift for me. Just seeing how far it’s reached and how many people it’s touched.”


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Stephanie James, a clerk at Kenilworth’s post office, is back on the Food Network

Stephanie James is trying to be the best. Well, “Best of the Worst.” 

James, a Kenilworth Post Office clerk, returned to the small screen last Sunday, April 25, on the Food Network’s “Worst Cooks in America: Best of the Worst.” 

The Chicago resident was one of 14 contestants who competed in the 21st season of “Worst Cooks in America,” which premiered in early January of this year. The best of the worst spin-off features eight returning contestants for “an all-star showdown,” according to the network. 

James’ first appearance on the show earlier this year was short-lived as she was eliminated on the second episode. 

But James is back to prove that she has more to offer. No aspiring chef was eliminated on the first episode of the new show. James was one of the first candidates deemed “safe.”

The best of the worst is hosted by notable chefs and Food Network stars Anne Burrell and Michael Symon. The two help guide the contestants through an attempt for redemption and the chance at a grand prize of $25,000. 

James competed on the “Worst Cooks in America” in early 2021.

“I saw glimmers of hope in each one of you and that is why you are back here,” Burrell told the eight recruits during the opening of the April 25 episode.

James told The Record in January that she filled out an application to be on the “Worst Cooks in America” because “first and foremost I am a fan,” she said.

“I want to learn some skills and I felt like this was the show that could teach me,” she added, “but never in a million years did I think I would be selected.”

James lives with her mother and 13-year-old son in Edgewater, she previously told The Record.

Episodes of “Worst Cooks in America: Best of the Worst” will premier at 8 p.m. CST on Sunday nights. For more information about the show, visit foodnetwork.com.