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 7, 2019 CPS Teacher Shortage Hits Black and Special Needs Students Hardest Each year, hundreds of Chicago Public Schools are having to make do without teachers and substitutes because of a teacher shortage. But according to new reporting from WBEZ, that shortfall does not impact all schools and students equally. Aug 7, 2019 Illinois Sightings Raise Hope for Endangered Rusty Patched Bumblebee It’s been a rough few decades for the rusty patched bumblebee. Once widespread in Illinois and throughout much of the U.S., the species has lost nearly 90% of its population over the past 20 years. Aug 7, 2019 UIC Students Believe Hundreds Kept from Voting in Student Election A new report from a group of UIC students claims at least 450 predominantly international students received incomplete ballots or were erroneously told they were ineligible to vote in April’s student government election. Aug 7, 2019 10 Things to Do This Weekend: Aug. 8-11 A huge South Side parade, food festivals, acrobatic felines and natural wines usher in the weekend. Here are 10 things to do in and around Chicago. Aug 7, 2019 Aug. 7, 2019 - Full Show Watch the Aug. 7, 2019 full episode of “Chicago Tonight.” Aug 7, 2019 Finding Yingying Zhang’s Remains ‘May Be Impossible’ Family Says After New Details Surface After killing the Chinese scholar, Brendt Christensen says he put her body in three separate garbage bags, which he tossed in a dumpster outside his Champaign apartment. Aug 7, 2019 Federal Charges Ramp Up Pressure on R. Kelly to Make Deal The 40 counts R. Kelly faces carry a combined maximum prison sentence of more than 500 years, meaning the R&B star could spend the rest of his life behind bars if he loses badly at trial. Aug 6, 2019 Pot Prohibition in Illinois Will Persist, Even After It’s Legal Marijuana will be legal in Illinois in five months, but a growing number of communities across the state are considering saying “no” to cannabis sales within their borders, including suburban Naperville. Aug 6, 2019 Beyond Good Books, Semicolon Bookstore Aims for Sense of Community As a writer, publisher and general lover of literature, opening a bookstore was never in the plans for Danielle Mullen. But when faced with a tumor, she was forced to answer a question she hadn’t thought much about: her own legacy. Aug 6, 2019 Gun Control Proponents Demand Action in Wake of Mass Shootings After a weekend of mass shootings in El Paso, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio, as well as nearly 60 people shot in Chicago – seven of them fatally – gun control proponents are once again calling for action. Aug 6, 2019 Descendants of John Dillinger Get Permission to Exhume His Body Descendants of the notorious Depression-era bank robber claim they have evidence that the body in his grave in Indiana may not be his. We examine the enduring fascination with the legendary outlaw. Aug 6, 2019 Terra-Cotta Treasures Tell Chicago’s Neighborhood Stories To truly appreciate the charm of a terra-cotta lavished building, Chicago author and photographer Lee Bey says to put on your gym shoes and go for a walk. We join him for a look at some of the city’s early architecture. Aug 6, 2019 Bud Billiken Parade Celebrates 90 Years on the South Side Every second weekend in August, a stretch of Martin Luther King Jr. Drive in Bronzeville is taken over by one of the largest parades in the country. We talk legacy and tradition with parade organizer Myiti Sengstacke-Rice. Aug 6, 2019 Record-High Lake Swallowing Up Chicago Shoreline Joel Brammeier, president and CEO of the Alliance for the Great Lakes, talks about the area’s shrinking and disappearing beaches this year, and why it matters. Aug 6, 2019 Children Don’t Like Nature as Much as Adults, UChicago Study Finds As they set out to learn more about kids’ affinity for nature, a group of psychologists had a strong idea about what they would find. As it turned out, their assumptions were wrong. “We were incredibly surprised,” said the lead author of the study. Load More Thanks to our sponsors: