SORT Order Oldest FirstNewest First Has Video - Any -YesNo FILTER Date Range Start date End date Category - Any -Arts & EntertainmentBusinessCrime & LawEducationHealthPoliticsScience & NatureSports Keyword(s) Aug 17, 2020 Crain’s Headlines: Will Prudential Plaza Get a New Name? Crain’s Chicago Business Editor Ann Dwyer joins us with the stories behind the headlines. Aug 17, 2020 Durbin Backs Pelosi’s Move to Recall Congress Amid Postal Service Standoff A political convention unlike any other is underway as Democratic leaders step up their fight against President Donald Trump and his attacks on mail-in voting. We discuss that and more with U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin. Aug 17, 2020 August 17, 2020 - Full Show Watch the Aug. 17, 2020 full episode of “Chicago Tonight.” Aug 17, 2020 Illinois Health Officials Launch COVID-19 Travel Map To help Illinois residents make informed decisions about travel, the Illinois Department of Public Health on Monday launched a COVID-19 travel map, which indicates states and countries with increased risk based on COVID-19 case rates. Aug 17, 2020 4 Chicago Restaurants, Nightclub Shut Down for Violating COVID-19 Restrictions Among the businesses shut down by officials for violating rules designed to slow the spread of the coronavirus was Barba Yianni Greek Tavern in Lincoln Square and Juanita’s Restaurant #2 in Clearing. Aug 17, 2020 Brown Defends Officers’ Handling of Downtown Protests That Sparked Clashes Facing criticism from aldermen and progressive groups, Chicago Police Superintendent David Brown on Monday defended the department’s handling of a protest downtown Saturday evening after officers and demonstrators clashed. Aug 16, 2020 Pelosi to Call House Back Into Session to Vote on USPS Bill Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Sunday she is calling the House back into session over the crisis at the U.S. Postal Service, setting up a political showdown amid growing concerns that the Trump White House is trying to undermine the agency ahead of the election. Aug 16, 2020 Coronavirus Hasn’t Devastated the Homeless as Many Feared In a country that’s surpassed 5 million identified cases and 169,000 deaths, researchers don’t know why there appear to be so few outbreaks among the homeless. Aug 16, 2020 COVID-19 Weekend Update: 1,562 New Cases, 18 Additional Deaths A Cook County woman in her 30s was among the 18 deaths reported Sunday by the Illinois Department of Public Health, as Gov. J.B. Pritzker announced new mitigation efforts in the Metro East region of the state. Aug 16, 2020 After 68 Years, Curtain Closes on Miss Geri’s Dance Studio in Chicago For decades, students learned to pirouette, tumble, tap and twirl at Miss Geri’s School of Dance. But last month, owner Geri Mroz Panicko decided to hang up her dance shoes and close the studio permanently because of the pandemic. Aug 16, 2020 Chicago Police Release Video of Clash With Protesters on Michigan Avenue Clashes between police and protesters Saturday in the Loop started peacefully but turned violent, leading to 24 arrests and 17 officers treated for non-life-threatening injuries, according to police Superintendent David Brown. Aug 16, 2020 Taller Cubicles, One-Way Aisles: Office Workers Must Adjust Around the U.S., office workers sent home when the coronavirus took hold in March are returning to the world of cubicles and conference rooms and facing certain adjustments, including daily questions about their health. Aug 15, 2020 Protesters Attempting to Shut Down Expressway Confronted by Counterprotesters, Redirected by Police Protesters against police brutality were turned away by a line of police officers as they tried to make their way Saturday to the Dan Ryan Expressway to flood it with people and shut it down. Aug 15, 2020 Civil Rights Activist Ruby Bridges Writes Children’s Book Civil rights activist Ruby Bridges has written a children’s book with a candid telling of the past and positive message for the future, inspired by the Black Lives Matter protests. Aug 15, 2020 Former Illinois Gov. James Thompson, ‘Big Jim,’ Dies at 84 Former Illinois Gov. James R. Thompson, whose prosecutions of public officials — including a predecessor — helped catapult him to become the state’s longest-serving chief executive, has died. He was 84. Load More Thanks to our sponsors: