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How to Spend $500 at The Wilson StoreLynette Smithon September 10, 2021 at 1:56 pm

Chicago’s 108-year-old athletic equipment manufacturer — which got its start making tennis racket strings and leather footballs using byproducts of the South Side stockyards — just opened its first retail store. The 2,200-square-foot Rush Street locale offers all the athletic fare you’d expect. “We consider this our heritage store, so our history is showcased throughout,” says Wilson sportswear president Gordon Devin. Fitting rooms are papered in catalog images and retro ad campaigns, and leather ottomans bear the same W’s that adorn the classic pigskins. Shop for eco-friendly activewear, or pop in for athlete meet-and-greets. Devin says, “It’s a space for discovery, inspiration, and nostalgia in the city we call home.” 932 N. Rush St., Gold Coast, wilson.com

Photography: Courtesy of Wilson Sporting Goods

$68

Men’s Millennium sweatshirt in Tennis Ball Yellow

$88

Women’s Essex polo in Bright White

$219

Blade 98 18×20 V7 tennis racket

$78

Men’s Metro track pants in black

$58

Limitless skirt in Bright White

$44

Lakeshore tank top in Club Navy

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How to Spend $500 at The Wilson StoreLynette Smithon September 10, 2021 at 1:56 pm Read More »

Ask a Budtender: All About TerpenesLynette Smithon September 10, 2021 at 1:19 pm

Datrianna Meeks Photograph: Lisa Predko

I keep hearing about terpenes. What are they, and how do they affect my high?

That’s awesome! This means you’re learning about the plant and evolving your consumption. Terpenes, or terps, are compounds in the essential oils of cannabis that influence aroma, flavor, and effects.

Myrcene, linalool, and limonene are some of the most common. Myrcene, which is also in hops and mangoes, often has a relaxing effect. The same can be said for linalool, which boasts a lavender scent. And limonene, which smells like citrus, can be energizing.

These are just three examples. Once you figure out which terps meet your needs — do you want to reduce inflammation? get relief from anxiety? treat insomnia? — you can better determine which strains of cannabis to try. The more you know …

Datrianna Meeks is a cannabis writer and educator.

Have a question for our budtender? E-mail [email protected].

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Ask a Budtender: All About TerpenesLynette Smithon September 10, 2021 at 1:19 pm Read More »

Chicago Cubs: Kris Bryant is finally back at Wrigley FieldVincent Pariseon September 10, 2021 at 12:00 pm

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Chicago Cubs: Kris Bryant is finally back at Wrigley FieldVincent Pariseon September 10, 2021 at 12:00 pm Read More »

Former Niles Mayor Andrew Przybylo wonders how niece, a 9/11 victim, might have changed the worldManny Ramoson September 10, 2021 at 11:30 am

sFor Andrew Przybylo, it started like any normal morning. His kids were racing to get ready for school. He was preparing to head out to the family business in Niles. And the TV was on, though no one was paying attention to it.

Then, he got a call from his sister Vivian Kolpak.

They owned the White Eagle, a banquet hall and restaurant on Milwaukee Avenue, and usually got there around the same time to open up.

But not today. This was Sept. 11, 2001, and she was calling, worried about her daughter, his niece, Vanessa Kolpak. The 21-year-old St. Ignatius College Prep grad had been living in New York for just three months after landing a job with the investment firm Keefe, Bruyette & Woods. And she was in the firm’s 89th-floor office in the south tower of the World Trade Center when a jet struck the north tower that morning.

“I got a call from her saying she wasn’t coming in,” says Przybylo, who is a former mayor of Niles. “She told me that Vanessa was in the south tower, and she was told not to evacuate. The south tower didn’t fall at that point, and she was really worried about Vanessa.”

In an interview with the Chicago Sun-Times on the one-year anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, Vivian Kolpak said her daughter told was told not to leave the office even as people just two floors below hers were allowed to evacuate.

“Vanessa called me after the first building was hit, and she just told me, ‘Mommy, I’m alive.’ . . . She started crying and saying she was seeing people falling, and I said, ‘Find someone you know, and get to a safe place.’ I thought she was on the ground looking up. … I didn’t even suspect she was still in the building.”

Vivian Kolpak told the Sun-Times in 2011 that her daughter was brilliant and had plans to make a fortune on Wall Street and then donate her money to fight breast cancer and to help fund school music programs. She also said she was relieved when President Barack Obama announced that the architect of 9/11, Osama Bin Ladin, had been hunted down and killed, but she wasn’t happy.

“It’s a little bit of closure,” Vivian Kolpak said at the time, something she said her family had lacked because her daughter’s remains never were found. “We never found her, so we have been lingering, sort of in a limbo.”

In the 20 years since the World Trade Center attacks, Vanessa Kolpak’s family has tried to keep her memory alive — and even hold onto hope that somehow she might still be alive.

Former Niles Mayor Andrew Przybylo says his niece Vanessa Kolpak’s death on Sept. 11, 2001, still leaves him wondering how she might have changed the worldKevin Tanaka / Sun-Times file

“I think to this day she keeps hope alive,” Przybylo says of his sister. “They’ve kept Vanessa’s car and keep it in their home in Arizona.”

“Why keep your daughter’s car?” Przybylo says. “We do know that she is gone. Nonetheless, hopes springs eternal.”

The Sun-Times couldn’t reach Vanessa Kolpak’s parents. They’ve made it a tradition to travel on the anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks, to never be in the home where Vanessa Kolpak grew up.

Instead, they use the day to celebrate the life of their daughter, Przybylo says, believing she is traveling with them in spirit and seeing different parts of the country.

Przybylo remembers his niece as highly intelligent, witty and caring.

“She had a lot of sympathy for people, and I think her upbringing and schooling had a lot to do with it,” Przybylo says.

Kolpak graduated with high honors from St. Ignatius and then Georgetown University in Washington, D.C.

Przybylo wonders how his niece might have changed the world if she’d had the chance.

Over the years, it has gotten easier to face her loss, he says, and the family has come to appreciate life just a little bit more perhaps than they had.

“There are days where I don’t think about 9/11 or the failing of Afghanistan and how profoundly pointless that military debacle was,” Przybylo says. “The fact is life is a gift, and you need to live it to the fullest and do as much good and as much as you can before you leave it.”

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Former Niles Mayor Andrew Przybylo wonders how niece, a 9/11 victim, might have changed the worldManny Ramoson September 10, 2021 at 11:30 am Read More »

‘Wouldn’t have done anything different,’ says one of a legion of Chicago firefighters, cops who went to NYC after 9/11 and now sufferFrank Mainon September 10, 2021 at 11:15 am

For 20 years, Jim Maloney has carried a terrifying memory: running for his life when alarms went off, warning that a hotel might collapse near the destruction of the World Trade Center towers.

He carries something else, too: an emergency inhaler.

Like other Chicago cops and firefighters who volunteered to go to New York and help search for victims of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Maloney is haunted by what he saw there. He’s also dealing with medical problems he believes were caused by breathing the talcum-like dust that blanketed Lower Manhattan like a snow storm.

“I never had asthma issues before,” says Maloney, who retired from the Chicago Police Department as a lieutenant.

Maloney says he developed a persistent cough after 9/11 and is now in the World Trade Center Health Registry, a research group created by New York City and the federal government.

“They sent me to a pulmonologist, and I got a regular inhaler and an emergency inhaler,” says Maloney, who arrived in New York on Sept. 15, 2001, two days after his brothers Pat and Tom, both Chicago firefighters, arrived.

About three-quarters of the nearly 100,000 people enrolled in the federally funded World Trade Center Health Program were rescue workers and other responders. The rest are described as survivors.

Maloney says he decided not to go to the 20th-anniversary memorials in New York and not to watch on TV, either.

“It’s emotional,” he says. “I think about my own family. My kids were young, and they were so worried. I plan to do a meditation weekend for myself.”

Jim Maloney (right) hugs his brother Pat Maloney on Sept. 15, 2001, after they found each other near the site of the World Trade Center’s collapse. Jim Maloney was a Chicago police officer. Pat Maloney was a Chicago firefighter.Robert A. Davis / Sun-Times file

His brother Pat Maloney, a retired Chicago Fire Department battalion chief, has been treated for cancer, which he thinks was caused by his time in New York. He also is in the national 9/11 health registry.

Still, he says, “I wouldn’t have done anything different. Maybe wear my mask a little more.”

He was planning to go to New York this weekend with his sons — a Marine and a Skokie firefighter. He was there for the 10th and 15th anniversaries of 9/11, too.

When Maloney retired from the fire department last year, some of the New York firefighters he met during 9/11 came for a ceremony at the Engine 14 fire house in West Town. They’ve been friends for 20 years, having bonded through the grief and horror of digging for victims at Ground Zero.

Now-retired Chicago Fire Department Battalion Chief Pat Maloney at the World Trade Center site in 2001.Robert A. Davis / Sun-Times file

“I will never forget the guys from New York’s Ladder 18,” Maloney says. “We saw the rig just demolished. I see a guy’s helmet, and it says Ladder 18. I ask, ‘How many guys you lose?’ He says, ‘We did OK.’ He says an engine company also ran to the scene. He says, ‘We went left, they went right, those guys got killed, and we didn’t.’ I said I am grateful for you and sorry for the loss of your brothers.”

Chicago firefighters worked grueling hours on top of The Pile, using their hands and heavy equipment to remove rubble in bucket brigades. Every time a New York police officer or firefighter was found, the Chicago firefighters would solemnly trek back to their encampment, some with tears streaking down their dirty faces, allowing their brethren to carry the remains away.

Chicago police officers searched the dangerously tilting office buildings nearby for survivors.

Accompanied by a New York cop who survived the collapse of the twin towers, Chicago cops were getting ready to enter one building when laser monitors triggered an alarm warning that the structure of the nearby Millennium Hilton Hotel had shifted.

“Everybody ran,” Jim Maloney recalls.

The officers sprinted and didn’t stop till they got about three blocks away. But the hotel, though leaning dangerously to one side, remained intact. It reopened in 2003.

Former Chicago police Sgt. Kenneth Boudreau in Bridgeport, where he was recently in charge of security on a movie set.Pat Nabong / Sun-Times

Kenneth Boudreau, a since-retired Chicago police sergeant, remembers searching the battered American Express building near the fallen towers. Giant pieces of twisted steel that fell from the towers were lodged against the 52-story building. The lobby was deep with fluffy, white powder — pulverized concrete, glass, ceiling tiles, you name it.

The floors tilted like the deck of a rocking ship.

The police officers, in helmets and face masks, huffed up the stairwells. They used yellow flashlights to scour floor after floor, looking for people. They didn’t find any.

They did find a half-eaten pie on a desk and purses and cups full of cold coffee.

“It was like time stood still, and all the people were gone,” Boudreau says.

Boudreau has remained friends with retired New York police Sgt. Mike Stefanovich, who continued to experience the devastation long after the Chicago cops left.

Ground Zero in Lower Manhattan after 9/11.Robert A. Davis / Sun-Times file

‘They were still recovering body parts over a year later. There were funerals every week. It was overwhelming.’

“They didn’t put out the fire until December,” Stefanovich says. “No lights or power. It’s what it must have been like in Japan when they bombed it, to a smaller degree. You were reminded of it daily. They were still recovering body parts over a year later. There were funerals every week. It was overwhelming. It seemed like it would never end.”

Stefanovich, who retired two years ago as a sergeant in midtown Manhattan, says that, because of 9/11, the New York Police Department developed informants in the city and overseas in an effort to prevent more terrorist attacks. He says it’s been successful, though many of those successes haven’t been made public.

“I think we stopped a lot more than they committed,” says Stefanovich, who was on duty when a man tried to blow up Times Square with a car full of gasoline and fireworks.

Stefanovich says he suffers from respiratory problems, too.

“I’m still sick from it,” he says.

Kevin Gyrion, now the police chief in Clinton, Iowa, was a Chicago police lieutenant who went to New York after 9/11.Clinton police department

Kevin Gyrion, a retired Chicago police lieutenant, was planning to spend Saturday, the 20-year anniversary of the attacks, speaking at a 9/11 memorial service in Clinton, Iowa, where he’s now the police chief.

He knew it would be tough for him to talk about even now. Like a lot of his fellow cops who were in New York, he won’t even watch the latest documentaries about 9/11.

“It brings back too many memories,” Gyrion says. “When we got there, everything was still smoking. I remember walking past empty firehouses with candles. They lost their whole fire house. I saw firefighters crawling through the rubble.”

Chicago police Officer John Paskey directs traffic outside St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York on Sept. 17, 2001.Robert A. Davis / Sun-Times file

He also remembers standing outside St. Patrick’s Cathedral, directing traffic in blue jeans and a Chicago police shirt.

Uniformed New York police officers and firefighters were there for a funeral.

Jim Maloney remembers then-New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani walking up and thanking him and the other Chicago cops. Maloney says he gave Giuliani a Chicago Police Department patch.

“People on the streets were cheering for us,” Gyrion says. “New York policemen were walking up, hugging us. That’s what I want to remember.”

Then-New York Gov. George Pataki thanks Chicago police officers for coming to New York after 9/11.Robert A. Davis / Sun-Times file

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‘Wouldn’t have done anything different,’ says one of a legion of Chicago firefighters, cops who went to NYC after 9/11 and now sufferFrank Mainon September 10, 2021 at 11:15 am Read More »

1 killed, 2 teens among 10 wounded in citywide shootings ThursdaySun-Times Wireon September 10, 2021 at 11:49 am

One person was killed and 10 others wounded in shootings in Chicago Thursday.

A man was fatally shot while sitting in a parked car Thursday afternoon in Burnside on the South Side.

The man, 22, was sitting in a parked car when someone approached and shot him in the head around 1:45 p.m. in the 600 block of East 90th Place, Chicago police said.

He was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center where he was pronounced dead, police said. He was identified as Charles Alexander by the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

About an hour later, a 15-year-old girl was shot in the leg inside a Fernwood home on the South Side Thursday afternoon.

The girl was shot around 2:45 p.m. in the 10000 block of South Lafayette Avenue by someone who approached her, pulled out a gun and fired, police said.

She was transported to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn in good condition, police said.

Detectives were questioning a person of interest.

A 17-year-old female was among two shot Thursday night following an altercation at a gas station on the South Side.

A man, 40, was pumping gas in the 400 block of East Pershing Road when he began arguing with occupants of a black Infiniti sedan and someone inside fired shots, striking the man in the leg, police said.

He then returned fire, striking a 17-year-old inside the Infiniti in the arm, police said.

He self-transported to the University of Chicago, where he was listed in critical condition, police said.

The teen was driven by a friend to Provident Hospital of Cook County, where she was listed in fair condition, police said.

Seven others were wounded in citywide gun violence Thursday.

Eight people were shot, two fatally, in shootings in Chicago Wednesday.

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1 killed, 2 teens among 10 wounded in citywide shootings ThursdaySun-Times Wireon September 10, 2021 at 11:49 am Read More »

Chicago Bears: A wild rumor about NFC quarterbacks, Matt NagyRyan Heckmanon September 10, 2021 at 11:00 am

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Chicago Bears: A wild rumor about NFC quarterbacks, Matt NagyRyan Heckmanon September 10, 2021 at 11:00 am Read More »

A visit to Joseph Stalin’s hometown is quite the reminder what a complicated place the world isMark Brownon September 10, 2021 at 10:15 am

GORI, Republic of Georgia — We live in a complicated world.

That’s never been more evident to me than in this country and in this city, where the ruthless Soviet leader Joseph Stalin is still honored as a hometown hero.

The Soviet Union fell 30 years ago this December. Stalin has been dead for 68 years. Georgia, a former Soviet socialist republic, is now a West-leaning country that sent troops to fight alongside the United States in Afghanistan and Iraq and has aspirations to join the European Union.

But the Joseph Stalin State Museum remains very much a shrine to its namesake, from the statue out front to the souvenir shop where you can buy T-shirts, buttons, refrigerator magnets and wine bottles bearing the likeness of the dictator who sent a million or more of his countrymen to their deaths as he turned the Soviet empire into a police state.

Wine bottles bearing the likeness of the dictator whosent a million or more of his countrymen to their deaths are sold in the gift shop at the Joseph Stalin State Museum. Mark Brown / Sun-Times

Stalin was still Joseph Dzughashvili when he was growing up here. Stalin is a pseudonym he adopted. It translates to man of steel.

The museum has a photo of him in the school choir, in case you never thought of Stalin as a choirboy.

Our driver Edgar tells us almost apologetically that older Georgians still revere Stalin as the war hero who beat Hitler and built the Soviet Union into a great power. The tour guide brushes off the Great Terror as 800,000 people Stalin “punished.” She says they were “mostly intellectuals,” as though that might make them count less.

Later, we visit the museum’s newest addition, a mockup of a Siberian prison cell and interrogation room. The tour finishes with a more upbeat walk through Stalin’s air-conditioned private rail car. He was afraid of flying.

I’m here as a tourist, drawn by the food and wine, the rugged beauty of the Caucasus Mountains, the allure of the Black Sea and remnants of an ancient civilization unknown to me before this trip.

It’s a beautiful, friendly, interesting place. Soon after I return home, I’m sure I’ll head to Aragvi Georgian Bakery and Restaurant in Buffalo Grove to compare its versions of the local specialties, khachapuri and khinkali.

If you’d asked six months ago, I might have said Georgia’s main contribution to the people of Chicago was University of Illinois basketball player Giorgi Bezhanishvili, who unfortunately decided to turn pro after the Fighting Illini were prematurely ousted from last season’s NCAA tournament.

Even now, my knowledge of Georgia is only enough to be dangerous, tidbits from reading and conversations with drivers, guides and hosts.

But a person can’t visit a place like this without having larger thoughts about the transitory nature of nations and the endurance of the tribes of man. This is a land that has been overrun by everyone from Alexander the Great to Genghis Khan. It’s found itself under the thumb of the Romans, Mongols, Ottomans, Persians and Russians, first the czars and later the communists. Each tried to erase that which came before.

Yet a Georgian national identity and spirit somehow endured, leaving Georgia to begin anew even under the threat of Russia’s Vladimir Putin possibly trying to put the band back together again.

Putin bombed Gori in 2008 during a brief war between Georgia and Russia to which most Americans paid no attention.

There’s a major street in the capital Tbilisi named after former President George W. Bush, part of a mutual courtship that might have soured somewhat when the United States could do nothing to prevent the bombing or stop Russia from occupying two breakaway Georgian territories in the name of defending the local populace.

A cab driver in seaside Batumi proudly told us he was in the Georgian army and worked with American troops in Afghanistan. I asked what he thought about the American pullout, but the language barrier got in the way. An English-language paper worries the U.S. embarrassment in Afghanistan could make Americans less likely to stick up for allies such as Georgia should the need arise.

Just what a complicated world we live in has never been more clear to me than it was when visiting the city where Joseph Stalin grew up. This bust at the Joseph Stalin State Museum in Gori is just one symbol of how revered the ruthless Soviet dictator remains even now, 68 years after his death.Mark Brown / Sun-Times

The most exciting part of the trip was the drive along the Georgian Military Highway through the spectacular Caucasus toward the Russian border.

The twisting, bumpy, two-lane road would be a challenge under any circumstances but doubly so with the miles-long backup of semi-trailer trucks parked at roadside, awaiting their chance to cross into Russia. Most are actually parked on the narrow highway itself, which means drivers must play a high-speed game of chicken with oncoming traffic to get past.

Oh, and cattle roam freely — and unpredictably — on all of Georgia’s roads, grazing alongside and even in the median of the rare four-lane highways.

You’d think Georgia would build a better road to what is perhaps its greatest tourist attraction. Then, you remember the road leads to Russia — and it runs both ways.

The world is already complicated enough for Georgia.

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A visit to Joseph Stalin’s hometown is quite the reminder what a complicated place the world isMark Brownon September 10, 2021 at 10:15 am Read More »

Two wounded in shootout at Bronzeville gas station, including 17-year-old girlSun-Times Wireon September 10, 2021 at 10:26 am

A 17-year-old girl and a man were wounded in a shootout at a gas station in Bronzeville on the South Side.

A man, 40, was pumping gas in the 400 block of East Pershing Road when he began arguing with people in a black Infiniti sedan, police said.

Someone in the car fired shots, striking the man in the leg, police said. He returned fire and hit a 17-year-old girl inside the Infiniti in the arm.

He went to the University of Chicago Medical Center, where he was listed in critical condition, police said.

The teen was driven by a friend to Provident Hospital of Cook County, where she was listed in fair condition, police said.

No one from the Infiniti was in custody as of early Friday morning.

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Two wounded in shootout at Bronzeville gas station, including 17-year-old girlSun-Times Wireon September 10, 2021 at 10:26 am Read More »