SORT Order Oldest FirstNewest First Has Video - Any -YesNo FILTER Date Range Start date End date Category - Any -Arts & EntertainmentBusinessCrime & LawEducationHealthPoliticsScience & NatureSports Keyword(s) Feb 19, 2024 Joffrey Ballet Soars in Bravura Study of the Human Condition: Review The Joffrey Ballet demonstrated both the technical brilliance and emotional boldness of its dancers as the company opened its 2024 season on the Lyric Opera House stage with “Studies in Blue,” a fascinating program of three modern ballets. Feb 19, 2024 Southern Illinois Home of Paul Powell, the ‘Shoebox Scandal’ Politician, Could Soon Be Sold For more than half a century, a Powell-established $250,000 trust sustained his legacy, for better or worse. But the account that maintained his birthplace as a museum will soon run dry. The fate of the home in Vienna, a town of 1,300 about 140 miles southeast of St. Louis, is uncertain. Feb 19, 2024 Early Voting Downtown to Resume Wednesday After Judicial Candidate Removed From Ballot The Chicago Board of Elections offices on the sixth floor of 69 W. Washington St. and its Loop Supersite at 191 N. Clark St. will reopen for early voting on Wednesday at 9 a.m. Feb 19, 2024 Program Tries To Reach Homeless ‘Where They’re At’ — On CTA Trains The program has connected dozens of people to housing or shelter, but officials say it needs more funding and time to make a bigger impact. Feb 19, 2024 CPS Shows Strong Academic Recovery After COVID-19 Pandemic, Study Finds District officials are lauding the findings from Harvard and Stanford researchers, which showed CPS was first in reading recovery following the COVID-19 pandemic among large school districts across the country. Feb 17, 2024 FDA Expands Use of Asthma Drug Xolair to Treat Severe Food Allergies An estimated 17 million people in the U.S. have the type of food allergies that can cause rapid, serious symptoms, including severe, whole-body reactions that are potentially deadly. Feb 17, 2024 Are Early Birds a Sign of Climate Change, Weird Weather, Neither, Both? It’s All of the Above, Experts Say Red-winged blackbirds, American robins, and sandhill cranes are among the species of birds Chicagoans have spotted in recent days on the leading edge of spring migration. But wait — according to the calendar, it’s still winter. Feb 16, 2024 Johnson Inks Extension With ShotSpotter Until September, Hours Before Contract Expires Chicago first entered into a contract with ShotSpotter in 2017. The controversial technology relies on microphones and sensors to identify the sound of gunfire and alert law enforcement. Feb 16, 2024 Early Voting Temporarily Paused in Chicago to Remove Candidate From Illinois Primary Ballot Voting machines must be updated after a local judicial candidate was knocked off the ballot by an appellate court. Feb 16, 2024 Week in Review: Johnson Dismisses Questions Over ShotSpotter Cancelation; Madigan’s Former Right-Hand Man Sentenced Confusion over the end of the city’s ShotSpotter contract. State and county leaders agree to spend millions more in migrant care — but did Johnson renege on his commitment? Feb 16, 2024 Autopsy Reveals Sepsis, Other Viruses Caused Death of 5-Year-Old Migrant Boy Who Fell Ill at Pilsen Shelter Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office records indicate Jean Carlos Martinez Rivero’s death was ruled “natural” and attributed to sepsis and other viruses, including COVID-19, adenovirus and rhinovirus/enterovirus. Feb 16, 2024 Johnson Promises to Spend All of Chicago’s Federal COVID-19 Relief Funds, With Focus on ‘Disinvested’ Communities “I’m going to spend all that money, I can assure you of that,” Mayor Brandon Johnson said. Feb 16, 2024 Donald Trump Fraud Verdict: $364 Million Penalty in New York Civil Case Judge Arthur Engoron issued his decision after a 2½-month trial that saw the Republican presidential front-runner bristling under oath that he was the victim of a rigged legal system. Engoron concluded that Trump and his co-defendants “failed to accept responsibility” for their actions and that expert witnesses who testified for the defense “simply denied reality.” Feb 16, 2024 In Illinois, Customers Pay for Utilities’ Lawyers and Corporate Donations. Advocates Want to Change That Consumer advocates are pushing for a change to state law that would bar utilities from collecting money from customers for those expenditures, liability insurance covering executives and for the cost associated with filing rate cases. Feb 16, 2024 Car Headlights Are Blinding Us. Here’s Why It’s Mostly an American Problem US auto safety regulations enacted in 2022 were supposed to finally allow ADB headlight, something for which the auto industry and safety groups had long been asking for. But, according to automakers and safety advocates, the new rules make it difficult for automakers to add the feature. Load More Thanks to our sponsors: