Chicago Sun-Times

IVANKA’S CHICAGO GLEAM TEAM

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Ivanka Trump has her own business connection to Chicago, separate from her father Donald Trump’s Trump Internatio­nal Hotel & Tower.

She sells her jewelry line through Marshall Pierce & Co. at the north end of theMag Mile. It’s the only independen­t jewelry store in Chicago to sell the high- end collection.

The business relationsh­ip came about through the efforts ofMarshall Pierce owner Jerry Bern, who remembers watching constructi­on of Trump Tower. Bern had a store at Michigan Avenue andWacker Drive, which offered a clear view of the level- by- level progress as the highrise went up.

Bern knew Ivanka Trump was a stylemaven with an up- and- coming jewelry line, so he set out to get her jewelry in his store.

He wrote to her office, went to visit her representa­tives in New York and by coincidenc­e, he says, bumped into her once as she walked through O’Hare Internatio­nal Airport.

Ivanka Trump visited Chicago often in those days as she helped with the tower’s design; she’s been credited, for example, with the elegant wine presentati­on in Sixteen restaurant.

Bern was impressed that she wasn’t surrounded by “people” when she got off the plane that day. She was even pulling her own luggage, he says.

His persistenc­e worked, and in 2010 Trump teamed with Marshall Pierce to showcase her sophistica­ted diamond rings, necklaces and onyx earrings.

“Her jewelry is a great fit for our customers,” says Bern, whose family has been runningMar­shall Pierce for 48 years. His father, a watchmaker, bought the store fromthe original owner, Pierce, who opened the store in 1898.

For decades, it was located in the Heyworth Building in the jewelry district. It opened a second shop at Michigan andWacker about 10 years ago, and then last year consolidat­ed both stores into one location at Michigan and Oak.

Ivanka Trump is scheduled to attend a cocktail partyWedne­sday in Chicago to raise money for her billionair­e father’s presidenti­al campaign.

Bern doesn’t expect she’ll stop by the store. “She has before,” he says. “But she’s busy these days.”

Will there be pop at Preckwinkl­e’s fundraiser?

Supporters of Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e will gather Sept. 29 for the “Women for Toni” political fundraiser.

Tickets range from $ 100 to $ 5,000; checks can be made out to “Preckwinkl­e for President.”

I wonder if soft drinks will be on themenu given Preckwinkl­e’s mulling a tax on the sugary drinks? This old- school Democratic crowd may prefer somethingm­ore old- school, anyway. How about an Old Fashioned?

Among organizers are RoulaAlaki­otou, Family Focus founder Bernice Weissbourd and Christy Webber Landscapes owner ChristyWeb­ber.

Deborah Quazzo’s impact on education

DeborahQua­zzo stepped down from Chicago Public Schools a few years ago, but she hasn’t left the education space.

This week, she’ll be honored by the Golden Apple Foundation, which mentors college students going into teaching and trains current teachers. The group was founded by retired businessma­n MikeKoldyk­e. Quazzo will receive the inaugural impact award for her work, which spans beyond Chicago.

She’s managing partner of GSV Accelerati­on, a venture capital fund that invests in entreprene­urs and companies focused on education. It recently teamed up, for example, with a firm that uses Angry Bird- like graphics to teach math. Quazzo calls it “stealth learning.”

Her company also puts on a wonky talkfest in California for entreprene­urs and education leaders. Khan Academy founder SalKhan, billionair­e Bill Gates and Common, the hip- hop artist who runs Common Ground Foundation, have all taken part.

In Chicago, Quazzo, an avid Soul Cycler and theater- goer, works behind the scenes in funding charter schools and other nonprofits. She’s also helped raise funds to help care for TavonTanne­r, the 10- year- old shot while standing on his front porch last summer. “We don’t want him to be forgotten,” she says.

A former rugby player says boardwork can be brutal

Chanel Coney played rugby for Princeton University— a cakewalk, she says, compared with the hard work required to lead a nonprofit board.

That, Coney says, is “a full- court press, full- energy type of commitment every day,” especially for a small organizati­on like Congo Square Theatre, which just a few years ago was drowning in debt.

Coney, a business developmen­t associate at GCM Grosvenor financial company, is board chair of Congo Square and has helped turn the theater around financiall­y.

On Wednesday it will honor Hollywood actor and Chicago native Harry Lennix ( costar of “The Blacklist”) and LayshaWard, an executive vice president at Target and graduate of the University of Chicago.

Coney is a familiar name in town. Her father is LesConey, the Mesirow Financial execwho serves on several cultural boards andwas a founding boardmembe­r of Congo Square Theatre. He’s shared insights with his daughter, but she’s been the force behind Congo Square’s transforma­tion.

Along with starting an annual gala last year, the younger Coney beefed up the board from four to 15 members. With a nearly $ 40,000 debt erased, there’s a renewed emphasis now on the craft of staging plays.

 ?? | PROVIDED PHOTO ?? Ivanka Trump with Jerry Bern, owner of Marshall Pierce & Co.
| PROVIDED PHOTO Ivanka Trump with Jerry Bern, owner of Marshall Pierce & Co.
 ?? SHIA KAPOS/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES ?? Deborah Quazzo
SHIA KAPOS/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES Deborah Quazzo
 ?? PROVIDED PHOTO ?? Chanel Coney
PROVIDED PHOTO Chanel Coney
 ?? | FILE ?? Toni Preckwinkl­e
| FILE Toni Preckwinkl­e

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