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Mother Nature speaks: “How many more wake-up calls do you Earthlings need?”John Blumenthalon October 13, 2021 at 8:57 pm

Firefighters extinguish a roadside wildfire in Goleta, California on Oct. 12. | AP Photos

You’ve had decades to clean up the cesspool you’ve made of my once pristine planet. Such a shame. Nice try with windmills, the solar panels, the electric cars, the bans on plastic straws and such.

How dense are you people? Can’t you take a hint from me, Mother Nature?

Because of you, fires are burning out of control, hurricanes have increased in severity, more of my precious wildlife are endangered or extinct, you’re experiencing record-breaking temperatures everywhere, you’re poisoning my fish, and my ice caps are melting so fast that some of your cities will soon be under water. Not to mention that my poor polar bears are wandering around, trying to figure out where to live.

And now you’ve got a plague, thanks to yours truly. Viruses are easy for me, what with the variants and all. Remember 1918?

I hope you don’t think the coronavirus is going away anytime soon. Mutation is why you’re here. And you’ve been very helpful in prolonging it by producing a new phenomenon — anti-vaxxers. Well done. Herd immunity? Maybe for cows and sheep but not for you. LOL. And my goodness, most of you idiots still don’t get it. I, Mother Nature, made the virus.

You’ve had decades to clean up the cesspool you’ve made of my once pristine planet. Such a shame. Nice try with windmills, the solar panels, the electric cars, the bans on plastic straws and such. Composting? That one’s pretty amusing. But sorry folks, it’s just too little too late.

And forget about going to Mars. Do you honestly think I’m going to let you destroy another planet? Hell, I’m surprised you haven’t built casinos on the moon yet.

Frankly, I feel that you just don’t respect me enough, that preserving my creations is just too … inconvenient for you, that you’d rather make oodles of money and leave the clean-up to the next generation. By the way, why do you need so much money?

And don’t make excuses — it’s not about flatulent cows. There have always been flatulent cows and everything was fine. It’s about oil and greed and you know it. If you really think the methane produced from flatulent cows are the problem, spray the fields with a digestive enzyme.

You know what’s interesting? During the pandemic lockdowns, there were clearer skies again in Beijing and Los Angeles. Some of my oceans were starting to look like … well … oceans again. Turtles could lay their eggs in peace on the beaches again.

And can you guess why all this great stuff was happening? Because you humans weren’t going outside for a while.

I suppose I could have done something else to wake you Earthlings up, something really spectacular. I put together a pretty amazing flood for Noah but you have nuclear submarines now. Before you know it, Manhattan will look worse than Venice, the one in Italy. Will that grab your attention? I’m guessing no.

Of course, I could do an asteroid. They’re really spectacular and very effective. Got rid of the dinosaurs in no time. By the way, it was a big mistake making the dinosaurs. I thought bigger would be better than smarter. But smarter hasn’t exactly been a roaring success either. At least the dinosaurs didn’t litter the beach with soda cans and plastic bottles. But, at the end of the day, they were kind of boring.

But in spite of everything, I kind of like you Earthlings. Most of you anyway. You’ve done some amazing things with the raw materials I made for you. I had no clue you could construct skyscrapers or spaceships or the Mona Lisa. And most of you have your hearts in the right place.

It’s the climate change deniers I don’t understand. If your house is floating in the bay because of a hurricane in the middle of a drought while an apocalyptic typhoon is headed your way and it happens every year but it didn’t used to, don’t you think there just might be something wrong with the climate?

John Blumenthal, an author and former magazine editor, has also written for Salon and Huffington Post.

Send letters to [email protected].

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Mother Nature speaks: “How many more wake-up calls do you Earthlings need?”John Blumenthalon October 13, 2021 at 8:57 pm Read More »

White Sox focus shifts to offseason after disappointing postseasonDaryl Van Schouwenon October 13, 2021 at 8:40 pm

Craig Kimbrel prepares to pitch against the Twins at Target Field on August 11, 2021 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images) | Getty

Right field, second base, starting pitching, defensive shortcomings, Kimbrel’s contract under review

White Sox pitchers and catchers report to spring training in exactly four months.

Too soon?

For everyone in the organization and for fans still licking wounds from an ALDS beating from the Astros, who outscored the Sox 26-5 in the three defeats, that reminder could have waited. Everyone needs to decompress after seeing an otherwise entertaining season fueled by ambitious postseason dreams.

But in reality, the Sox can’t get to Glendale, Ariz., soon enough to begin cleaning up the issues that crept up throughout the regular season and were even more glaring during the superior Astros’ three-games-to-one triumph that sent the Sox home well before they could accomplish their goal of a World Series appearance.

There are defensive issues to address, positions to upgrade via free agency or trades, defensive shift positioning to re-evaluate and decisions to be made on contracts of Craig Kimbrel and Cesar Hernandez.

Starting pitching, second base and right field need attention. The Sox could hang their hat on Andrew Vaughn in right field, a position they tried shoring up on the cheap with Adam Eaton last season. Signed for $7 million when better and more expensive options were out there, Eaton was DFA’d on July 7.

Spending more to, once and for all, to put a power hitting option in right shouldn’t be an unreasonable ask for a team with a manageable and nicely cost controlled payroll (15th in the majors at $126 million in 2021, eighth at $143 committed for 2022) for the long term.

Hernandez, acquired at the trade deadline to fill the void left by traded second baseman Nick Madrigal, was benched in favor of Leury Garcia in the first two games of the ALDS. His $6 million team option with no buyout may easily be left alone. Eduardo Escobar, a better, more versatile choice thought to be coming in a trade when Hernandez arrived instead, is a free agent. So is another former Sox, Marcus Semien, who hit 45 home runs for the Blue Jays in 2021.

Starting pitchers Lance Lynn and Rodon faded in the second half, both fighting injuries. Lucas Giolito improved but, like every other Sox starter including Dylan Cease, failed against the Astros. Dallas Keuchel was left off the postseason roster. Rodon is a free agent. The free agent market beckons for a rotation that was one of baseball’s best but didn’t have a clear Lance McCullers-type No. 1.

Then there’s the Craig Kimbrel decision. Acquired in a trade at the deadline for Nick Madrigal and Codi Heuer that looked like a huge score at the time, Kimbrel pitched to a 5.09 ERA for the Sox after a spectacular first half with the Cubs. His option is for 2022 is $16 million. The Sox’ options? Re-sign and bring him back to the bullpen, pick up the big price or sign and explore trade options.

The Sox ranked 26th in defensive runs saved and were anything but air tight defensively in the outfield, infield and behind the plate. Some of the issues are more fixable than others.

The Astros, 27th in the major leagues in stolen bases, swiped four bags in their 10-1 victory in Game 4 because it was easy pickings against a team that didn’t hold runners well. Manager Tony La Russa admitted his team’s defense against the steal was “atrocious” this season and vowed to address it in camp. It needs to be — with results.

It was a season of 93 wins despite an avalanche of injuries to key players, a championship in an easily winnable division and steps forward for young talents such as budding superstar Luis Robert, Vaughn and Gavin Sheets. There is no shame in losing in the postseason in a sport that sees the best team lose, but the Sox were clearly not the best team in the ALDS.

The good thing about that? The front office and La Russa can’t be fooled by what they saw, what they have and what they need. Contention windows, already two years in with two quick knockouts, are precious indeed and to be capitalized on.

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White Sox focus shifts to offseason after disappointing postseasonDaryl Van Schouwenon October 13, 2021 at 8:40 pm Read More »

Racketeering indictment charges five in Gold Coast murder of FBG DuckJon Seidelon October 13, 2021 at 8:19 pm

LaSheena Weekly, mother of slain Chicago rapper FBG Duck, holds a press conference in the first block of East Oak Street in the Gold Coast in August 2020. Weekly asked that there be no retaliatory shootings to her son’s death. | Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-Times

The rapper was shot dead and two others were wounded in the targeted afternoon attack in the first block of East Oak Street. Shoppers were on the sidewalk when a pair of vehicles pulled up and two gunmen got out and opened fire.

A newly unsealed federal racketeering indictment accuses five alleged members of the South Side O-Block street gang of committing last year’s brazen Gold Coast murder of rapper FBG Duck.

Charged with murder in aid of racketeering are Charles “C Murda” Liggins, 30; Kenneth “Kenny” Roberson, 28; Tacarlos “Los” Offerd, 30; Christopher “C Thang” Thomas, 22; and Marcus “Muwop” Smart, 22. The charge carries a minimum of life in prison and a potential death sentence.

The men are also charged with assaulting two additional unnamed victims in aid of racketeering, as well as firearm offenses.

Chicago Police Supt. David Brown and U.S. Attorney John Lausch told reporters they hope the charges send a strong message to other gang members that they will be held accountable to the full extent of the law.

“If this gives pause to them then we’re doing something good,” Lausch said at a news conference at the FBI Chicago Field Office.

Meanwhile, Brown acknowledged concern for retaliation in the form of “street justice” following the charges.

“We are going after gangs in this city,” Brown emphasized several times at the news conference.

Liggins, Offerd, Thomas and Smart were arrested early Wednesday morning and appeared in court later in the afternoon. Their attorneys pleaded not guilty on their behalf, and a Friday detention hearing was set only for Offerd. Attorneys for the other three said they’d likely seek their release at a later time. All four will remain in custody for the time being.

Roberson was already in the custody of the Cook County Department of Corrections. He is charged with murder in the Jan. 30 shooting of Lorenzo Moore in Dolton, according to Cook County court records. They show he’s also facing separate gun possession charges from 2019.

Cook County Sheriff’s Office
Kenneth Roberson

FBG Duck, whose real name was Carlton Weekly, was shot to death the afternoon of Aug. 4, 2020, in the first block of East Oak Street as shoppers milled about. Police said he was on the retail strip around 4:37 p.m. when two vehicles pulled up and four people exited before opening fire. Weekly, 26, was pronounced dead at Northwestern Memorial Hospital.

Another man and woman were also wounded.

The rapper’s mother said he was shopping for a birthday present for his son — one of his four children — when he was killed. She later went to the scene of the murder to ask that no one commit any retaliatory shootings in his name.

On social media, FBG Duck had recently made “derogatory statements toward deceased members of the Black Disciples” — a possible motive for his fatal shooting in the heart of the luxury shopping district on Oak Street, police said.

FBG Duck associated with a faction of the Gangster Disciples street gang called Jaro City, which was based near 62nd Street and Vernon Avenue in West Woodlawn, police said at the time. But on social media, he identified himself as a member of the Gangster Disciples faction called STL/EBT, which is in the same area and mostly friendly with Jaro City.

Police also said last year there was a “high threat level” in an ongoing conflict between those Gangster Disciples and the O-Block faction of the Black Disciples from the Parkway Gardens apartments near 63rd Street and Dr. Martin Luther King Drive.

Odee Perry, a member of a Black Disciples faction in Parkway Gardens, was shot to death in 2011, and the faction was dubbed O Block in his honor. Perry’s killing sparked a series of retaliatory shootings — including the 2014 murder of Gakirah Barnes, who police say was a female gang assassin for a Gangster Disciples faction in the neighborhood.

FBG Duck was also affiliated with the Fly Boy Gang, a group of rappers.

According to a Chicago Sun-Times story in 2017, his brother Jermaine Robinson was a rapper who went by FBG Brick. He and a friend, Stanley Mack, were shot to death in Woodlawn in July 2017.

Contributing: Frank Main and Matthew Hendrickson

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Racketeering indictment charges five in Gold Coast murder of FBG DuckJon Seidelon October 13, 2021 at 8:19 pm Read More »

Adele’s new album due Nov. 19; first single will be released FridayDavid Bauder | Associated Presson October 13, 2021 at 8:42 pm

Adele poses with her awards for “25” in the press room at the Grammy Awards in Los Angeles in 2017. | Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP

With giant hits like “Rolling in the Deep” and “Hello,” both of her previous two albums rank among the 50 biggest-selling in music history.

NEW YORK — Six years after her last album, Adele revealed Wednesday that her new project, “30,” will be released on Nov. 19.

An initial single, “Easy on Me,” is coming out on Friday.

The British singer, who was divorced in 2019, said in a lengthy Instagram post that after “throwing myself into a maze of absolute mess and inner turmoil,” she’s feeling better.

“I’m ready to finally put this album out,” she wrote.

With giant hits like “Rolling in the Deep” and “Hello,” both of her previous two albums rank among the 50 biggest-selling in music history.

The disc “21” (she names her projects for her age while writing most of the music) was released in 2011 and has sold an estimated 31 million copies worldwide. The album “25” came out in 2015, and sold 22 million copies.

With streaming services like Spotify now dominant, there’s no way Adele or anyone will reach those sales figures again. Yet she’s in a stratosphere of popularity that only someone like Taylor Swift can approach in the music business.

She’s also been away for six years from a medium where tastes change from month to month.

In an interview with Vogue recently, Adele said “there isn’t a bombastic ‘Hello.’ But I don’t want another song like that. That song catapulted me in fame to another level that I don’t want to happen again.”

She and her former husband, Simon Konecki, have a 9-year-old son. Adele’s 33 years old now.

“I’ve learned a lot of blistering home truths about myself along the way,” Adele wrote on Instagram. “I’ve shed many layers but also wrapped myself in new ones. Discovered genuinely useful and wholesome mentalities to lead with, and I feel like I’ve finally found my feeling again. I’d go so far as to say that I’ve never felt more peaceful in my life.”

Vogue describes “Easy on Me” as a “gut-wrenching plea of a piano ballad.”

“It’s sensitive for me, this record, just in how much I love it,” Adele told the magazine. “I always say that ’21’ doesn’t belong to me anymore. Everyone else took it in their hearts so much. I’m not letting go of this one. This is my album. I want to share myself with everyone, but I don’t think I’ll ever let this one go.”

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Adele’s new album due Nov. 19; first single will be released FridayDavid Bauder | Associated Presson October 13, 2021 at 8:42 pm Read More »

The White Sox could use some of the fearlessness that the Astros haveRick Morrisseyon October 13, 2021 at 7:11 pm

Jose Altuve (27) and Carlos Correa celebrate after the Astros beat the White Sox 10-1 Tuesday to win their American League Division Series. | Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images

Something was missing in the ALDS for the Sox after a wonderful regular season.

The difference between the Astros and the White Sox, besides a million runs, is attitude.

The Astros don’t care whom they’re playing or where they’re playing. They don’t care who’s pitching against them or what the pitcher is throwing. They don’t care what you’re saying about their past sins or how colorfully you’re saying it.

They don’t give a whit. They just hit.

The Sox could use some of that.

Now, please don’t misunderstand. This is not a plea for the Sox to start cheating to win a World Series, the way Houston did in 2017. No one needs to see or hear Yoan Moncada banging a garbage can in the dugout to tip off Sox hitters about what pitch is coming next.

This is a recognition that the Sox are missing something besides a better right fielder or a more productive second baseman or the reliever who used to be Craig Kimbrel.

They’re lacking steel-reinforced confidence and a complete disregard for opponents’ emotional well-being. The Sox don’t kill for fun. The Astros do, with sadistic hitting. That’s how you separate these two teams. That and a 3-1 American League Division Series triumph for Houston.

You’d be right to ask how one could extrapolate all that from four postseason games. The Sox won 93 games and the AL Central title. Clearly, they did something right during the regular season.

Baseball is weird. We all get that. Trying to understand why one team is hitting and one isn’t is like trying to grab a handful of smoke. All I know is that none of the following Sox had extra-base hits in the series, which is to say, when it mattered: Jose Abreu, Tim Anderson, Eloy Jimenez, Luis Robert and Moncada. You’re not going to win like that. I know, I know: It’s a small sample size. Guess what? That’s what the playoffs are.

Add small sample sizes to the things the Astros don’t care about.

The most fire the Sox showed was when manager Tony La Russa, angry that the Astros had plunked Abreu in Game 4, accused Houston of doing it intentionally. Never mind that it made no sense for the Astros to do such a thing in the eighth inning of a game they were leading 7-1. La Russa had finally found a hair in his soup. He was off to the rages.

I don’t measure a team’s attitude by how many emotional outbursts it has. But something was missing for the Sox. The Astros seemed to take special pleasure in two-strike hits. The Sox couldn’t seem to buy a hit with men on. Both of those situations come with extra pressure. One team reacted well. The other didn’t.

The White Sox showed a lot of heart by coming back from a 5-1 deficit to beat the Astros at home in Game 3, but it’s a lot easier to do that when there are 40,000 of your fans, most dressed in team black, cheering you on. Where was that resolve in Game 4 when Houston was stockpiling runs as if a global shortage was forecast? Or in Games 1 and 2 on the road?

A team that knows it’s good doesn’t care if it’s playing in hostile territory. Maybe all the abuse the Astros have taken from fans since the sign-stealing scandal has hardened them. Nothing about a playoff game in Guaranteed Rate Field concerned them.

The Sox aren’t there yet.

How do they get there?

The best-case scenario for the Sox is that what we saw, or didn’t see, in the ALDS was a result of youth and inexperience. Maybe more veteran leadership is what’s needed here. Simplistic? Not very analytical? All I know is that there’s something about Astros star Jose Altuve that’s contagious, and it goes beyond his ability to hit a baseball.

How does Sox general manager Rick Hahn add something as hard to find as ruthlessness? The Sox clearly have gobs of talent, but is there a store that specializes in leadership? And what’s it going to take to buy some?

Or is he going to wait for the young, extremely talented players on his team to get “it.” Risky business.

After an 11-year absence from the playoffs, the Sox now have played in the postseason two years in a row. Last season was looked upon as a learning experience, a good one. This one, not so much. This one lacked the strides many of us predicted for them.

The next step might be the hardest one. Your move, Mr. Hahn.

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The White Sox could use some of the fearlessness that the Astros haveRick Morrisseyon October 13, 2021 at 7:11 pm Read More »

Man fatally shot in Marquette ParkSun-Times Wireon October 13, 2021 at 7:34 pm

A man was shot dead Oct. 12, 2021, in Marquette Park. | File photo

Marquis Talley, 50, was in his vehicle about 8:41 p.m. in the 7200 block of South Troy Street when someone fired shots from a dark-colored SUV, Chicago police and the Cook County medical examiner’s office said.

A man was killed in a shooting Tuesday in Marquette Park on the South Side.

Marquis Talley, 50, was in his vehicle about 8:41 p.m. in the 7200 block of South Troy Street when someone fired shots from a dark-colored SUV, Chicago police and the Cook County medical examiner’s office said.

Talley was shot in the chest and torso. He was taken to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, where he was pronounced dead, officials said.

No arrests have been reported. Area One detectives are investigating.

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Man fatally shot in Marquette ParkSun-Times Wireon October 13, 2021 at 7:34 pm Read More »

Recovering in intensive care, 14-year-old girl asks gunman who opened fire at Bronzeville high school to surrender to policeDavid Struetton October 13, 2021 at 6:33 pm

Johneece Cobb speaks about gun violence at schools with reporters outside St. Sabina Church in Auburn Gresham, Wednesday, Oct. 13, 2021. | Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

“She said, ‘Tell everybody thank you,'” her grandmother Johneese Cobb said Wednesday morning. “Please tell the shooter to turn himself in.”

A 14-year-old girl shot and seriously wounded at a Bronzeville high school was recovering Wednesday in an intensive care unit, where she thanked well-wishers and called on the shooter to turn himself in.

“She said, ‘Tell everybody thank you,'” her grandmother Johneese Cobb said Wednesday morning. “Please tell the shooter to turn himself in.”

Cobb echoed her granddaughter’s plea during an emotional news conference at St. Sabina’s Church.

“These are babies shooting babies. I’m assuming this baby that shot my baby is crying for help. I want to tell him that God will help you if you ask for it,” she said.

“I understand that maybe you’re in some pain, baby, and maybe you’re hurt, and I understand that,” Cobb said. “I’m hurting too. My grandbaby is in a lot of pain,” she said. “Maybe you feel bad enough to call up here and speak to Father (Michael Pfleger) and say, ‘Help me, I want to make this right.’ I advise you, baby, to do that.”

The gunman was waiting outside Wendell Phillips Academy and opened fire as a security guard opened a door to let students out around 3:15 p.m., according to police.

Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times
Evidence technicians note a mark on a door where it was struck by a bullet after a 14-year-old girl and a security guard were both shot Tuesday afternoon outside Wendell Phillips Academy High School in the 3800 block of South Giles in Bronzeville.

Cobb said her granddaughter was shot twice while in the doorway. “She was inside the school on her way out to meet her mother when the shots rang out,” she said. “They went through the door and they hit her. The door slowed those bullets down and saved my baby’s life.”

The guard was also hit by gunfire and is also recovering. Cobb said she believed he tried to shield the students. “I think that man was trying to save those babies and he took those bullets,” she said.

The girl underwent surgery Tuesday evening at Comer Children’s Hospital, Cobb said. “Her color is back in her face… She’s stabilized, she’s going to make a full recovery. There’s no major damage to her organs.”

A bullet remains lodged in the girl’s lower abdomen, she said.

Cobb described her granddaughter as “a sheltered child, a little bitty fun-loving child. She’s so shy, she’s so innocent, ya’ll. She’s a good kid and helped raise her siblings. Really in the house all the time. So her first year of high school was her way of getting out of the house.

“She was shot at school, where she was supposed to be,” Cobb said. “Right now, I’m so grateful to God that my grandbaby will live and do great things. Keep praying, y’all.”

Pfleger said he and others were putting up a $5,500 reward for arrest of the shooter.

‘Give the city a soul again’

Pfleger also called on Gov. J.B. Pritzker to declare a state of emergency and come up with a plan on “how we’re going to stop this. It just keeps getting worse.”

“Give the city a soul again,” he said, addressing both Pritzker and Mayor Lori Lightfoot. “Let’s rebuild lives, let’s rebuild this city.”

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times
Father Michael Pfleger speaks about reducing crime with a reporter at St. Sabina Church in Auburn Gresham, Wednesday, Oct. 13, 2021.

At least 162 children 15 years old and younger have been shot in Chicago so far this year, a 24% increase over the number of children shot over the same period last year, according to Sun-Times data.

In September, two 15-year-old students from Simeon Career Academy were shot and killed on the same day in separate attacks, one of them not far from the South Side campus.

BRAVE, the violence prevention youth council of St. Sabina, is circulating a petition urging Pritzker to declare a state of emergency.

“How many children, how many lives before we say it’s a state of emergency? We are at a state of emergency now,” Pfleger said. “And I believe that the governor is cautious, doesn’t want to embarrass the city or, you know, overstep the city. I don’t care about feelings anymore.

“I don’t care who’s embarrassed, I don’t care who’s hurt,” he said. “My reality is, is that we are right now at a state of emergency that needs to be called with a plan and a strategy that’s going to be enacted for this city to deal with this violence because it keeps getting worse and worse and worse.”

Pfleger also called on the city to allocate more resources toward mental health programs to help children deal with the trauma of violence.

“Imagine all those kids at Phillips right now, how traumatized they are by one of their freshman being shot at the school, their security guard being shot,” he said. “And this is throughout the South and the West sides. The trauma that’s suffered by families, by whole communities, by whole neighborhoods. We’re not dealing with it.”

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Recovering in intensive care, 14-year-old girl asks gunman who opened fire at Bronzeville high school to surrender to policeDavid Struetton October 13, 2021 at 6:33 pm Read More »

Timuel Black, historian, civil rights activist, dies at 102Maudlyne Ihejirikaon October 13, 2021 at 6:25 pm

Timuel Black in 2018, when he was interviewed on his 100th birthday. | Rich Hein / Sun-Times file

Mr. Black, a political and civil rights activist, educator, historian, prolific author and revered elder statesman and griot of Chicago’s Black community, died Wednesday.

Activist, educator, historian Timuel Black, the revered elder statesman and griot of Chicago’s Black community, was active in every major movement of any notable American era and spent the latter half of his life telling stories from our nation’s blueprint — in oral and literary form.

“I consider Dec. 7, 1918, a famous day in history,” the lifelong labor, political and civil rights activist said of his birth date as he reflected on his storied life at a celebration when he turned 100.

A retired sociology and anthropology professor with City Colleges of Chicago, a former Chicago Public Schools high school history teacher and a pioneer in the independent Black political movement who coined the phrase “plantation politics,” Mr. Black died Wednesday.

“I just can’t imagine life without him. He’s been so supportive and has been my protector, my confidante. I miss him already,” said Zenobia Johnson-Black, his wife of 40 years.

“Tim left his mark on this city, on his friends who knew him and on those who knew of him, and he would like for his legacy to be an inspiration to people who are trying to make this world a better place, because that’s all he tried to do,” his wife said.

The revered community leader and scholar was 102.

“My mother and father were children of former slaves, my great-grandparents, products of the Emancipation Proclamation,” the Chicago treasure said in a Chicago Sun-Times interview when he turned 100. “I came up in a time when African American men — women, too — were being lynched, the racial segregation so terrible, people were fleeing to escape the terrorism.”

Celebrating his becoming a centenarian, the University of Chicago had sponsored “A Symposium on the Life and Times of Tim Black,” followed the next day with the Vivian G. Harsh Society’s “100 Years: Music and Memories, Tim Black’s Bestest Birthday Party,” held at the South Shore Cultural Center.

“I suppose, when you live to 100, it’s worth celebrating,” the World War II veteran said then.

The weekend of celebrations was organized by a Tim Black 100 Committee that included U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., the Rev. Jesse Jackson, the Rev. Michael Pfleger, U. of C. president Robert Zimmer and civil rights attorney James Montgomery.

Jackson, writing a review of Mr. Black’s memoir that came out a month later, said: “For 100 years and counting, Timuel Black has been an eyewitness — and a participant — in the movement for social, racial and economic justice in America. He is a historian and a hero.”

When he heard that Mr. Black was in hospice, Jackson said: “He means so much to me. Tim Black is a giant among us.”

Mr. Black’s memoir “Sacred Ground: The Chicago Streets of Timuel Black” was released on Jan. 15, 2019 — the birthday of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

A prolific author whose sharecropper parents fled Birmingham, Alabama, for Chicago in the Great Migration, Mr. Black made the Chicago Sun-Times’ 2018 list of the 200 most prominent Illinoisans in the state’s 200-year history.

Born on Pearl Harbor Day, he and his family arrived in Chicago — which he called “one of the greatest cities in the world” — just a month after the 1919 race riots during the nation’s “Red Summer.” Racial tensions had exploded in July 1919. White mobs invaded Black neighborhoods — 38 people were killed, 520 injured, 1,000 left homeless.

Mr. Black’s family settled in the city’s densely populated “Black Belt”– now Bronzeville — where Blacks were confined, due to restrictive covenants forbidding them from moving into white neighborhoods.

“There were two waves of Great Migrations. My parents were part of the first wave around World War I, when industrialists enticed African Americans north for cheap labor. The second wave occurred around World War II, when people were pushed off the land by agricultural technology,” said Mr. Black, an authority on the 55-year phenomenon in which six million Blacks left the South for the North and West between 1915 and 1970.

“They fled the South for better opportunities — education, jobs, housing, the right to vote. Instead, they were ghettoized by landlords determined not to rent or sell to Negroes. By the mid-’50s, the population in what was called the Black Belt was 84,000 per square mile — four times the 23,000 density of adjoining white communities,” Mr. Black recounted.

“It wasn’t until 1940, when Carl Hansberry, father of Lorraine Hansberry, fought the restrictive covenants with ‘Hansberry vs. Lee’ — taking it all the way to the Supreme Court — that the barriers of segregation were broken in Woodlawn. ‘Shelley vs. Kraemer’ in 1948 then cleared the way for people to leave the ghetto,” he said, ever the professor.

Mr. Black was author of two seminal volumes of oral histories on the subject. The 2003 “Bridges of Memory: Chicago’s First Wave of Great Migration,” compiled conversations with Great Migration descendants, among them the father of jazz musician Herbie Hancock and the mother of former Obama White House adviser Valerie Jarrett. The 2007 “Bridges of Memory: Chicago’s Second Generation of Black Migration” centered on those who were teenagers during the Civil Rights Movement.

Sun-Times file
Timuel Black giving a historical tour along 35th Street in 2001 outside the old Supreme Life Building.

“Clearly, the most important thing that has happened in this country has been the migration of African Americans from the South into places like Chicago. Timuel Black’s life was shaped by those stories,” Lonnie Bunch, founding director of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture — now secretary of the Smithsonian Institution — told the Sun-Times on Black’s 100th birthday.

“Here is someone who has lived his whole life trying to make Chicago better, working in labor, in education, in civil rights,” Bunch said. “He has dedicated his life to fighting for fairness for the African American community. What is really important to me is that Tim is also the keeper of the flame. He keeps the history of Black Chicago alive, reminding us that civil rights is an ongoing struggle.”

The youngest of three children, Mr. Black attended an integrated Burke Elementary School before graduating in 1935 from all-Black DuSable High, where his classmates included Johnson Publishing Co. founder John H. Johnson, singer Nat King Cole, and Archibald Carey Jr., who was the first African American delegate to the United Nations.

In 1952, Mr. Black obtained his bachelor’s degree in sociology from Roosevelt University, one of the few colleges open to Blacks at the time. His classmates included Harold Washington, who 30 years later would be elected Chicago’s first Black mayor, with the help of the independent, Black political movement Mr. Black pioneered. Mr. Black got his master’s degree in sociology and history from the University of Chicago in 1954.

His life of social activism began as a teenager during the Great Depression.

After high school, he held varied jobs to help his family — from field representative for the Metropolitan Burial Society, to store clerk. The latter job provided his first experience with labor organizing, when he and coworkers seeking better wages formed a chapter of the Retail Clerks Union. He walked his first picket line in 1931.

In 1999, Mr. Black reflected on the year 1937 in an essay for the Sun-Times’ “100 Years in 100 Days” series, writing: “On June 22, I was among thousands packing the 8th Regiment Armory, historic home of an all-Back Illinois National Guard unit, to hear Chicago’s own Benny Goodman band, which included two of America’s greatest Black jazz musicians: pianist Teddy Wilson and vibraphonist Lionel Hampton. Goodman just a year earlier was the first white bandleader to include Black musicians in his ensemble.

“I was a recent DuSable High School graduate working at a jewelry store on 47th Street. My friends and I went without dinner to make it to the Armory in plenty of time for the jazz event. That same evening, just a few blocks away at Comiskey Park, another earthshaking event took place as Black boxer Joe Louis beat Jim Braddock for the heavyweight championship of the world. What a night!

“When we heard that Louis had knocked out Braddock in the eighth round, we went crazy. It was even sweeter because his victory came just a year after Louis’ defeat by Max Schmeling, a product of Hitler’s Germany. That had cast a pall over the entire Black community of Chicago.”

Four years after that memorable experience, on the morning of his 23rd birthday, Japan launched a surprise strike on the U.S. naval base at Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941, triggering America’s entry into World War II. Mr. Black was drafted into a segregated U.S. Army in 1943, serving in the 308th Quartermaster Railhead Company that provided weapons, supplies and food to combat soldiers.

While enduring racism in the military during his two years of service, he’d participate in two of WWII’s decisive battles — the invasion of Normandy and the Battle of the Bulge — as well as the liberation of Paris and of the Buchenwald concentration camp, earning four Battle Stars and the French Croix de Guerre.

“We went all the way from Normandy up onto the front line of the extermination camps,” he said in that interview on his 100th birthday. “At Buchenwald concentration camp, I saw human beings systematically being cremated.”

In a 2012 Sun-Times interview, he had expounded on that experience: “The horror was indescribable. I kept thinking, ‘This is what happened to my people during slavery.’ “

Further reflecting on the impact of seeing the Holocaust camps, Mr. Black told the University of Chicago in October 2014: “I was angry. I made an emotional decision that, when I returned from the Army, that most of the rest of my life would be spent trying to make where I live and the bigger world a place where all people could have peace and justice.”

He returned to civilian life with militant views, working as a social worker, high school teacher and, from 1940 onward, as an organizer — with a prominent role in just about every labor, civil rights and political justice movement of the next six decades.

He worked with activists Paul Robeson and W.E.B. DuBois in the 1940s and 1950s, and alongside King in the 1960s. He helped establish the Congress of Racial Equality and the United Packinghouse Workers of America.

Mr. Black was married three times, with a daughter, Ermetra Black, and son, Timuel Kerrigan, from his first marriage, which ended after 10 years. Kerrigan, a musician, died of AIDS at 29, which saw Mr. Black become an advocate for AIDS victims. His second marriage also lasted 10 years.

He and third wife Zenobia Johnson-Black had been married since 1981, and weathered tragedy as their family fell victim to Chicago’s violence in 2002. That’s when Johnson-Black’s son, Anthony Said Johnson, 31, was shot and killed by robbers on the South Side.

Mr. Black enjoyed friendships with some of the nation’s most iconic leaders, from Dr. King to former President Barack Obama. He first met King in 1955, recalling in that October 2014 U. of C. story that he was watching TV, when he saw “this good-looking young man in Montgomery, Alabama … I thought, he articulates the feelings that I have,” Mr. Black said.

“And I got on a plane and went to Montgomery, which is where I met Martin Luther King. With his courage, charisma and academic training, it was the kind of leader that I would like to follow.”

Sun-Times file
A 1965 photo of Timuel Black (far right) with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. (far left). Black activists demonstrated for open housing with King in Marquette Park.

Mr. Black was among a group from Hyde Park’s First Unitarian Church to invite King for his first major Chicago speech — in 1956, at U. of C.’s Rockefeller Memorial Chapel — and he worked closely with the young preacher as the Civil Rights Movement heated up, becoming a trusted adviser.

In 1960, he helped organized the Rainbow Beach “wade-ins” that succeeded in integrating that public beach a year later. As president of the Chicago chapter of the Negro American Labor Council founded by activist A. Phillip Randolph, he spearheaded Chicagoans’ participation in the Southern Christian Leadership Council’s ’63 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom — leading two “Freedom Trains” of 3,000 Chicagoans to D.C.

It was a watershed moment in America. The largest civil rights rally of that time and the first to be covered live on TV, the march was credited with creating the momentum for passage of both the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

In an August 1993 Sun-Times story, Mr. Black spoke of being at the Lincoln Memorial when King delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech: “The highlight was the almost systematic rise in his voice as he enunciated the grievances. The crowd was pushing him on. Then, of course, when he got to the ‘I have a dream,’ the crowd was just crying.”

When King and the SCLC announced plans to expand their civil rights activities to the North, Mr. Black became heavily involved in the Chicago Freedom Movement. It brought King to the most segregated city in the nation to fight housing discrimination as the Great Migration was ebbing.

“Working with Dr. King was a magnificent experience,” Mr. Black said on his 100th birthday. “This brilliant, articulate young man didn’t have to do this. But he was determined and dedicated to bring change in a way that frustrated the opposition. They didn’t know exactly how to handle it when they beat you up, and you said, ‘God bless you.’ ”

In an August 2016 Sun-Times story marking the 50th anniversary of King’s ’66 march in Marquette Park, he said: “There were people who had been with Dr. King in the South who tried to warn him against going into neighborhoods like Cicero or Marquette Park, knowing what was going to happen. Dr. King said he just had to do it.”

Marching close behind when King was struck in the head by a rock or brick, Mr. Black said. “That’s when I said to myself, ‘If one of them knock me with a brick, this nonviolent movement is over.’ A lot of us said this was the worst darn thing we had ever seen. A lot of people said they couldn’t take the nonviolent movement any more after that.”

Mr. Black spent most of his life working to fulfill King’s dream. For nearly 30 years, he worked as a social worker and teacher at Farragut, DuSable and Hyde Park high schools, fighting segregation and discrimination within the school system, and helping establish the Teachers Committee for Quality Education. He went to work for City Colleges of Chicago in 1969, initially as a dean at Wright College. He was vice president at Olive Harvey from 1971 to 1973, and head of communications systemwide from 1973 to 1979. Then he taught cultural anthropology at Loop College until his retirement in 1989.

Writing about Mr. Black in 1994, Sun-Times columnist Vernon Jarrett wrote: “Tim was of a generation that viewed education not only as a vehicle for personal elevation but also as instrument for a people’s liberation … Whenever there was a good crusade against Jim Crow housing, segregated public beaches, job discrimination or the shortchanging of Black students in public schools, there was Tim Black.

“When Black schoolchildren were being deliberately segregated and denied adequate facilities because of the high-handed actions of school Supt. Benjamin Willis, a group made up mostly of unknowns, such as Tim Black, took the initiative. In 1963, their protest led to a historic one-day school boycott by 250,000 or more students.”

Mr. Black unsuccessfully ran several times for public office. When he took on Mayor Richard J. Daley’s political machine in a run for Fourth Ward alderman in 1963, he got national attention by branding Daley a purveyor of “plantation politics.”

Sun Times file
Timuel Black in 1978.

In 1979, Chicago’s Black community helped oust Mayor Michael Bilandic by overwhelmingly voting for Jane Byrne. By 1982, Byrne had angered that community with what were seen as racially insensitive appointments.

Seeking a Black candidate to run against Byrne, Mr. Black co-chaired the People’s Movement for Voter Registration and Education, leading efforts resulting in the registration of more than 250,000 voters to get Washington to run.

“As a congressman, Harold was well-respected and liked across racial and political lines,” Mr. Black said. “But he wasn’t interested in running. He told us if we registered 200,000 new voters and raised $1 million, he’d consider it. So we did. I called him and said, ‘What are you gonna do now?’ He said, ‘I guess I’m running.’ “

Similarly, Mr. Black was an adviser in the campaigns of many of Chicago’s Black elected officials, including Carol Moseley Braun, elected in 1992 as the first African American woman to serve in the U.S. Senate.

In the wake of the 2000 presidential election, Mr. Black became lead plaintiff in the ACLU’s “Black vs. McGuffage” lawsuit that accused Illinois’ voting system of discriminating against minorities. That led to the ban of punchcard ballots and a uniform voting system in Illinois.

Mr. Black was also a counsel to then-Sen. Obama when he ran for president in 2008. They’d become friends when Obama was a young community organizer in the early 1980s.

In a tribute to Mr. Black on his 100th birthday, Obama wrote: “I met Tim just after I moved to Chicago. We sat across from each other at Medici on 57th — the rookie South Side organizer on one side … and the veteran South Side historian on the other. And it was during that first conversation that I learned of Tim’s deep well of empathy … And I was inspired by that.

Ashlee Rezin / Sun-Times file
Former President Barack Obama greeting Timuel Black during a meeting in 2018 at the Obama Foundation’s headquarters in Hyde Park.

“Because he wanted to talk about how to make life better for people all across the city, how to bring about greater equality,” Obama wrote. “And, perhaps the most important part, after talking about it, he gets out there and does something about it, rolls up his sleeves and gets to work.”

Mr. Black donated a collection of more than 250 boxes of personal photographs, correspondence, manuscripts, speeches, audiovisuals, clippings, programs and other memorabilia to the the Chicago Public Library’s Carter G. Woodson Vivian G. Harsh Research Collection of Afro-American History and Literature, unveiled in 2012.

Mr. Black said he’d learned from his parents never to throw anything away, and that his parents had kept meticulous family records in their Bible, tucking away everything from birth certificates to the schoolwork he and his older brother and sister had done.

The late Michael Flug, Harsh’s senior archivist, said of Mr. Black’s donation: “I think it’s arguably the single best collection of material on Chicago African American history that anybody has ever opened. . . . Tim was involved in hundreds of different organizations in labor rights, civil rights, women’s rights, education initiatives, and he’s a jazz enthusiast, so there is a fabulous jazz collection.”

For decades, Mr. Black lived in the 4900 block of South Drexel Avenue, in the general area where he grew up, and well into his late 90s would conduct tours of his beloved Bronzeville for the U. of C.

Mr. Black remained active in progressive politics well into his late 90s. At 100, his eyes still twinkled behind large-frame glasses, His mustache and goatee were always meticulously trimmed. And he still played his jazz records nightly.

In recent years, he joined the U. of C.-led Community Advisory Board, working to bring the Barack Obama Presidential Library to Jackson Park.

Sun-Times file
Timuel Black recalls the demonstration in Marquette Park for open housing during an interview with the Sun-Times in 2016.

Mr. Black lamented that Black History Month was losing luster with younger generations, telling Sun-Times columnist Mary Mitchell in 2015: “As falling apart as our young people are today, they need information and inspiration more than ever. It frightens me. [But] when I put it on their minds, they are absolutely thrilled. They are excited to go back and talk to their grandparents and great-grandparents. That’s history.”

In 2013, he told the Sun-Times, “Every day that I’m here, I think, ‘What am I going to do tomorrow?’ ”

Of race relations, he wrote in his memoir: “I’d hoped we’d be farther along than we are.

“There are throughout our history examples of disappointment, yet we don’t stop struggling. I have been part of a great social movement. My message is: Do not give up our hopes and dreams, nor the activity that makes them a reality.”

Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-Times file
Timuel Black celebrates his 102nd birthday with family and dozens of friends and well-wishers cheering from a car caravan traveling past his Bronzeville apartment in December last year.

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Timuel Black, historian, civil rights activist, dies at 102Maudlyne Ihejirikaon October 13, 2021 at 6:25 pm Read More »

Racketeering indictment charges five in Gold Coast murder of FBG DuckJon Seidelon October 13, 2021 at 6:04 pm

LaSheena Weekly, mother of slain Chicago rapper FBG Duck, holds a press conference in the first block of East Oak Street in the Gold Coast. Weekly asked that there be no retaliatory shootings to her son’s death. | Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-Times

The rapper was shot dead and two others were wounded in the targeted afternoon attack in the first block of East Oak Street. Shoppers were on the sidewalk when a pair of vehicles pulled up and two gunmen got out and opened fire.

Five alleged members of the South Side O-Block street gang are charged in a newly unsealed federal racketeering indictment with committing last year’s brazen Gold Coast murder of rapper FBG Duck.

Charged with murder in aid of racketeering are Charles “C Murda” Liggins, 30; Kenneth “Kenny” Roberson, 28; Tacarlos “Los” Offerd, 30; Christopher “C Thang” Thomas, 22; and Marcus “Muwop” Smart, 22. The charge carries a minimum of life in prison and a potential death sentence.

The five are also charged with assaulting two additional unnamed victims in aid of racketeering, as well as firearm offenses.

Liggins, Offerd, Thomas and Smart were arrested Wednesday morning and were expected in court Wednesday afternoon. Roberson was already in the custody of the Cook County Department of Corrections.

FBG Duck, whose real name was Carlton Weekly, was shot to death the afternoon of Aug. 4, 2020, in the first block of East Oak Street as shoppers milled about. Police said he was on the retail strip around 4:37 p.m. when two vehicles pulled up and four people exited before opening fire. Weekly, 26, was pronounced dead at Northwestern Memorial Hospital.

Another man and woman were also wounded.

The rapper’s mother said he was shopping for a birthday present for his son — one of his four children — when he was killed. She later went to the scene of the murder to ask that no one commit any retaliatory shootings in his name.

On social media, FBG Duck had recently made “derogatory statements toward deceased members of the Black Disciples” — a possible motive for his fatal shooting in the heart of the luxury shopping district on Oak Street, police said.

FBG Duck associated with a faction of the Gangster Disciples street gang called Jaro City, which was based near 62nd Street and Vernon Avenue in West Woodlawn, police said at the time. But on social media, he identified himself as a member of the Gangster Disciples faction called STL/EBT, which is in the same area and mostly friendly with Jaro City.

Police also said last year there was a “high threat level” in an ongoing conflict between those Gangster Disciples and the O-Block faction of the Black Disciples from the Parkway Gardens apartments near 63rd Street and Dr. Martin Luther King Drive.

Odee Perry, a member of a Black Disciples faction in Parkway Gardens, was shot to death in 2011, and the faction was dubbed O Block in his honor. Perry’s killing sparked a series of retaliatory shootings — including the 2014 murder of Gakirah Barnes, who police say was a female gang assassin for a Gangster Disciples faction in the neighborhood.

FBG Duck was also affiliated with the Fly Boy Gang, a group of rappers.

According to a Chicago Sun-Times story in 2017, his brother Jermaine Robinson was a rapper who went by FBG Brick. He and a friend, Stanley Mack, were shot to death in Woodlawn in July 2017.

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Racketeering indictment charges five in Gold Coast murder of FBG DuckJon Seidelon October 13, 2021 at 6:04 pm Read More »