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Chicago Bulls open the season on the road vs Miami HeatVincent Pariseon October 19, 2022 at 4:22 pm

The Chicago Bulls had a very up-and-down season in 2021-22. They were one of the best teams in the NBA in the first half but then things started to fall off a bit. They ended the season as the sixth seed and avoided the play-in series that the NBA has now.

That earned them a date with the then-defending champion Milwaukee Bucks which they lost in five games. It was their first year back in the playoffs with this regime in charge and this new core so there is plenty to build on.

Over the offseason, the big story was the contract of Zach LaVine. He was ready to hit free agency and join whatever team he wanted. Instead, he made the very boring (and amazing) decision to stay with the Chicago Bulls. He wants to be a part of what he has helped build going forward.

Wednesday is the day that they begin their quest to reward him for their loyalty as they have their first game of the season. They are on the road ready to take on the Miami Heat in the first tilt of the season.

The Chicago Bulls have a very hard matchup to open the 2022-23 season.

Of course, Miami came so close to a berth in the NBA Finals last season. They lost in game seven of the Eastern Conference Finals to the Boston Celtics. Now, they are coming into this season hungry to get back there and force a different result.

The Heat are led by former Chicago Bulls star Jimmy Butler. He has been an amazing player in his NBA career and now he is just searching for that championship. It should be a lot of fun to see Butler and the Heat work this season.

We can only hope that the Bulls are one of the teams that slow them down. That starts in this opening game. The Bulls lost all four meetings they had last season and 11 of the last 13 which is a big problem. Overcoming that right off the bat would really set the tone.

It is going to be hard without Lonzo Ball who the Bulls figure to be without for a long time. LaVine along with DeMar DeRozan and Nikola Vucevic is the big three that are going to try to work around that in the early parts of the season.

Unfortunately, LaVine is going to miss the first game of the season. It is his left knee that he is trying to manage this season which is causing him to miss this game and maybe the next one.

Bulls All-Star Zach LaVine (left knee management) will miss tonight’s opener vs. Heat.

— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) October 19, 2022

Sources: Zach LaVine may also miss Friday’s game vs. Wizards, with likelihood the two-time All-Star makes his season debut in Saturday’s home opener vs. Cleveland. https://t.co/YdRRrgua5y

— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) October 19, 2022

Guys like Ayo Dosunmu and Alex Caruso also figure to have a big impact on the team as well. Both of them were impressive in different ways last season and want to carry it forward with another year under their belt in a Bulls uniform.

It is exciting to have the NBA back as it is just another sport to follow in Chicago. With the way the rest of the teams in town have played lately, the Bulls can provide a spark. This is a very important season as they grow with this core.

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Chicago Bulls open the season on the road vs Miami HeatVincent Pariseon October 19, 2022 at 4:22 pm Read More »

REPORT: Chicago Bears actively shopping All-Pro defensive star

The Chicago Bears are active sellers

Following the Chicago Bears’ loss to the Washington Commanders, the team needs to look for ways to unload stars as they continue their rebuild. The Bears’ schedule only gets tougher from here, so playoff hopes are dead at this point. The Bears have a few pieces they could look to trade before the deadline on Nov. 1st. Of course, they mainly involve the defense, as it would be odd for the team to try and trade offensive players to teams in the USFL. A recent report has revealed that the Bears are currently trying to trade a defensive star.

According to Jason La Canfora with the Washington Post, the Bears are trying to trade Robert Quinn before the deadline.

“The Chicago Bears are a mess again, and they are in a rebuild even if they don’t want to admit it, although pawning off Khalil Mack should have been evidence enough. Now, after the Bears told teams through the offseason that they didn’t want to part with Robert Quinn, their other veteran pass rusher, multiple NFL executives (speaking on the condition of anonymity because they are not permitted to discuss players on other rosters) told me Quinn is indeed being shopped around with the trade deadline a few weeks away.

“They want to move him, but they are going to have to eat some of that contract to do it,” one GM said.

Quinn, 32, has just two quarterback hits this season, is probably playing more snaps than he should and carries a $12.8 million salary. He has wanted out since the Bears began purging their defense in the offseason.”

General manager Ryan Poles fails again

According to Dan Pompei of The Athletic, the Bears will sell low on Quinn.

Bears are shopping Robert Quinn, per @JasonLaCanfora . With his lack of production this year, they will be selling low, however. Ineresting notes on the Giants too. https://t.co/Y4vZzo2cQx

When the trade goes through, rookie general manager Ryan Poles will take a huge “L” on the Quinn transaction. In the summer, when Poles traded key veterans away from the Bears, it was evident that Quinn needed to go as well. After he set the Bears’ single-season sack record in the 2021 season, his trade value wasn’t going to be higher after this season started. Many Bears fans at the time gave every amateur excuse in the book to keep the All-Pro defender.

The first main excuse was that the Bears needed his pass rush since Khalil Mack was gone. After six games, the under-motivated 32-year-old pass rusher has just one sack and seven combined tackles. He’s not helping in that department for 2-4 Bears. The second was that he could help prepare youngsters on the team, especially rookie left tackle Braxton Jones, whom he went against in training camp.

The Chicago Bears now have to eat it, again

Where does that leave the Chicago Bears? Poles now has to find a trade partner and will likely have to eat more of Quinn’s salary to make the transaction than he would have had to this summer. Quinn’s value is much lower now, as his dismal performance on the field this year has earned him a 40.4 overall ranking by Pro Football Focus. Quinn is rated over 20 points lower than the tackle he was kept to teach this preseason. However, Jones has managed to give up four sacks and 20 pressures this season. Jones’ pass block rating is a measly 55.6 on PFF.

Hopefully, Poles will learn his lesson on this one. Keeping Quinn in the early season was a costly mistake for the Chicago Bears’ rebuild.

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Wicker Park arts spaces TriTriangle and No Nation face the axLeor Galilon October 19, 2022 at 3:26 pm

On Saturday, October 22, Wicker Park experimental arts space TriTriangle hosts a tenth-anniversary show featuring Chicago electronicist Rush Falknor, local free-jazz and new-music multi-instrumentalist Kyle Gregory Price, and media and performance artist Ryan Dunn, among others. Dunn lives at TriTriangle with his family and curates its performances, but the future of the space is in doubt—ironically because an organization working to keep artists in Wicker Park might buy the building and evict TriTriangle.

TriTriangle opened in 2012 on the third floor of the Lubinski Furniture building at 1550 N. Milwaukee, in the space that formerly housed Enemy. The building has incubated unconventional arts spaces since the 1980s, including Cinema Borealis, Buddy, and Heaven Gallery, founded by David Dobie in the nearby Flat Iron building in 1997 and moved to the second floor of the Lubinski building in 2000. Dobie’s wife, Alma Wieser, is the current director of Heaven Gallery and the founder of Equity Arts, which hopes to buy the building—her long-term plan is to transform it into a community-centric arts hub that supports BIPOC artists and enterprises. 

But TriTriangle doesn’t have a place in this plan. No Nation, a nontraditional arts space that occupies parts of the second and fourth floors of the Lubinski building, has only been offered a role it doesn’t want.

Audio artist Jeff Kolar performs at the opening night of TriTriangle on October 20, 2012. Credit: Ryan Dunn

In late 2019, when the building had just hit the market and the group that would become Equity Arts was still taking shape, Wieser estimated that the purchase and subsequent renovations would cost at least $20 million. A sale still seems distant, but if it happens, the building will be placed in a perpetual purpose trust to ensure that it will remain a community arts asset, protected from any future sale.

If everything pans out, Equity Arts (as the building will likewise be named) will host art studios and organizations in its upstairs lofts. In keeping with the model Wieser has established at Heaven—she opened a small vintage store within the gallery that helps fund it—the ground floor will be filled by two anchor businesses and an incubator for retail entrepreneurs. In May, NewCity reported that Ed Marszewski (founder of Buddy, Lumpen magazine, and the Public Media Institute) and Silver Room owner Eric Williams (a member of the Equity Arts board of directors) have signed letters of intent indicating they’ll operate satellites of Buddy and the Silver Room as the anchor businesses. 

“This is about redeveloping the building to be spaces for arts organizations that are open to the public,” Wieser says. That aspect of the plan—that the spaces be open to the public—presents extra complications for TriTriangle and No Nation, because the people who run them also live in them. And it’s not the only thing Equity Arts wants that they don’t.

Dunn moved into Enemy shortly before it closed in 2012, and he says that at the time he tried to foster community among the tenants in the building—they included Cinema Borealis (which has since moved), Heaven, and exhibit space and online publication LVL3. “I met a lot of resistance immediately with that,” he says. Dunn claims he’s met a lot of resistance specifically from Wieser, in regards to TriTriangle’s current operations and its place in the building. 

“There have been really unfortunate arguments,” he says. “Me being accosted, yelled at, by her, being really dismissed as a venue, as a space that exists. As you can tell from the Equity Arts project website, she doesn’t even include us in the history. She doesn’t include Enemy in the history; she doesn’t include No Nation in the history. There are plenty of other spaces that are not included there. But for her to erase the people who are currently here, who have been here for a decade—I don’t really know how she feels justified in doing that.”

No Nation has occupied space in the Lubinski building since its launch in 2010, and Wieser says she invited cofounder William Amaya Torres to be involved in Equity Arts. “They came to some of our early community development meetings, and they were a part of some of our BIPOC arts leaders committee,” she recalls. “They came to one of our meetings and said they didn’t want anything to do with the project, because they said that this is their home and they would be displaced from living here.” 

Torres and No Nation programmer Aza Greenlee, who both live in the space, say they first heard about Equity Arts just before the pandemic. They claim they crashed a meeting about the project, then still known as Community Arts Wicker Park, and only afterward received any sort of invitation to get involved. “They did offer to include us, but nothing that they were proposing, or about, had any appeal to me personally,” says Greenlee. “And actually it has a direct contradiction to who we are as a space and what we thought that our home is or could be.”

The doorway that leads upstairs to TriTriangle and No Nation Credit: J.R. Nelson

The consumer-oriented aspects of the Equity Arts vision make it a poor fit with the extremely niche experimental music and art hosted at TriTriangle or No Nation. Wieser also doesn’t want artists occupying their spaces. “It’s a different project, because housing is one thing, and we’re really trying to make sure that we have the maximum impact,” she says. 

“I’ve been working on this project for five years to save this building, and we have partner arts organizations that have now signed LOIs [letters of intent] that are almost all by POC,” Wieser says. “When we think about impact and the legacy of the building, it’s more impactful that we actually take this opportunity to make something bigger than ourselves, that we would have something that’s preserving the commons.”

Not everyone currently in the building agrees on Wieser’s definition of “the commons,” though. Torres recalls an Equity Arts meeting where Wieser suggested artists could collaborate with nearby businesses. “That’s not at all what we’re about,” they say. “This is an arts space for experimental stuff. If people want to make businesses, they can make their own business, but that’s different than the cultural production, art-making experimentations.” 

Wieser has offered No Nation’s organizers the opportunity to present in one of the upstairs lofts, provided they move out. But further meetings confirmed their bad early impressions. “I don’t want to do anything with a project that says it’s going to make the art but is trying to front the artists to get deals with the brands who are around,” Torres says. “So I told Alma, ‘We don’t want to be included in this.’” 

Wieser confirms that she didn’t include TriTriangle in the Equity Arts, citing her rocky history with Dunn. “When I did live here, Ryan was very disrespectful of me,” she says. “He’s been very disrespectful to my staff.” Wieser also claims she’s seen Dunn be violent to people—when pressed for an example, she says he kicked a plumber out of the building and threw a toolbox at him. Dunn responds that the plumber became “inexplicably aggressive” with him, and adds that Wieser didn’t witness the incident. “I demanded he leave because of his behavior, but I absolutely did not throw anything at him or anything of the sort,” he says.

Wieser also says Dunn bullied two former roommates out of the TriTriangle space. One of the former roommates in question, noise artist and Enemy founder Jason Soliday, denies this claim. 

“I am not trying to displace anyone,” Wieser says. “I want impactful programming to be happening through this building. I feel like that is the most important thing to us. I almost feel like with all of the labor that I’ve done for the past five years, I should be able to decide what I want to develop.” 

“The Equity Arts project, the boss of it all would be Alma,” Torres says. “We really value our independence. We don’t want to be working under Alma, on her space and under the Equity Arts thing. It doesn’t really represent, at all, what we do.”

Dunn and Torres have reached out to First Ward alderperson Daniel La Spata about their issues with Equity Arts. They don’t believe that an organization devoted to the health and longevity of the Wicker Park arts scene should begin by displacing artists. Torres says La Spata empathizes with No Nation, and corroborated this with a screenshot of a text message allegedly from the alderperson. La Spata did not reply to a request for comment by publication time.

TriTriangle Ttten YyyearsFeaturing xTAL fSCK, Rush Falknor, Kyle Gregory Price, Eric Leonardson, Nathanael Jones (“Études for Synthesizer”), Mirovaya Liniya (aka Gerald Donald and Julia Pello), and Ryan Dunn. 8 PM (doors at 4 PM), TriTriangle, 1550 N. Milwaukee, third floor, free, all ages

If Equity Arts does buy the building, TriTriangle will be out, including Dunn, his partner, and their seven-year-old child. “For us to lose a space that we’ve been able to operate in, like this, is a major blow, not only to us personally but to Chicago,” Dunn says. “DIY spaces come and go, and there are just not that many places that are able to maintain critical approaches to sound, because sound does have the potential to bother people. It does have a politics of its own that can cause conflict. But it can also be used to put voice to conflicts, and to social ills that are otherwise difficult to put voice to.”

The bill at Saturday’s tenth-anniversary TriTriangle concert also includes Soliday (as part of his duo with Jon Satrom, xTAL fSCK) and another former resident of the space, sound artist Eric Leonardson. The celebration begins with a social hour at 4 PM, and performances start at 8 PM. Like all TriTriangle events, it’s free and all ages, but the space will accept donations.

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Wicker Park arts spaces TriTriangle and No Nation face the axLeor Galilon October 19, 2022 at 3:26 pm Read More »

High school basketball: Young’s Dalen Davis ‘shifts the narrative’ and commits to Princeton

Dalen Davis admits he was like every young hotshot basketball prospect. He wanted the bright lights of high-major basketball. The recent Princeton commit dreamed of playing at Kansas.

“I’m going to be honest, I didn’t start thinking about going to an Ivy League school or placing that importance on education until recently,” Davis said. “My whole life I loved Kansas. I was like everyone in that I wanted to play at the highest level. Power five, ESPN, biggest arenas, all of that. That was the goal.”

But it was the Ivy League school – and its interest in him – that began to change his perspective. It was Princeton that made him think differently.

“I started thinking about life and thinking more long term,” Davis said. “They showed and pointed out things to me that I didn’t even see in myself at the time.”

Davis visited the campus in June. He said he immediately felt a pull toward the Ivy League school. There was a “genuine feel” he received while there. His relationship with head coach Mitch Henderson grew. He began to break down the schedule Princeton played, the roster, the academics and the majors it had to offer.

He returned in September for a second visit.

“The vibe and environment still felt right,” Davis said. “And throughout it all, I always felt like Princeton valued me the most.”

The Ivy League is feasting on Chicago area talent.

The recent commitment of Davis to Princeton was the third top prospect in Illinois to commit to an Ivy League school, following New Trier’s Jake Fiegen to Cornell and Lyons’ Nik Polonowski to Penn.

Last year’s Class of 2022 also saw three of the state’s top players, Glenbard West’s Caden Pierce, Glenbrook South’s Cooper Noard and New Trier’s Jackson Munro, land in the Ivy League. Pierce, who won a state title with the Hilltoppers, is a freshman at Princeton, while Munro and Noard are at Dartmouth and Cornell, respectively.

Evanston’s Blake Peters, now a sophomore at Princeton, was a part of an Ivy League championship team a year ago.

Harvard has a pair of area products. Louis Lesmond of Notre Dame averaged 7.9 points a game as a freshman last season, while New Trier’s Sam Silverstein played 20 minutes a game for the Crimson.

Young’s Dalen Davis (3) shoots and hits clutch free throws in the fourth quarter against Barrington.

Allen Cunningham/For the Sun-Times

Former Neuqua Valley star John Poulakidas is a sophomore at Yale. Perry Cowan of DePaul Prep was a key contributor at Brown and returns for his senior year.

The Ivy League has always dabbled in the Chicago area over the years, but it’s become a true hotbed of talent for current programs.

But of all the aforementioned Chicago area names, Davis is the only Chicago Public League product headed to the prestigious league. He understands the rarity of his story and the exclusive, small club he will be a part of when he steps on campus a year from now.

“I think being one of the rare Public League kids to go play in the Ivy League — and the fact that I’m a Black student-athlete who is going to Princeton –is incredible,” Davis said proudly. “I think it shifts the narrative of Chicago Public League kids, and the importance of education and being able to do both, play basketball and go to a place like Princeton. I hope in some way it encourages other kids to be better academically, to help push them as much in the classroom as it does on the court. I want to be the focal point of that shift and a motivation to the others in the city.”

Young coach Tyrone Slaughter has had his share of basketball players who have gone on to play at high-academic institutions in college. He, too, believes the more players that follow that path, the more doors will open for others.

“It speaks to the misnomer of Public League basketball and Whitney Young in particular,” Slaughter said of Davis’ commitment to Princeton.

But he also feels it goes both ways. While he hopes more players will take advantage of unique opportunities like Davis, he also wants those types of schools to actually recruit those players when there is an opportunity to do so.

“My hope is it will shed a light on Ivy League schools for other players and for them to look at those schools in a serious manner,” Slaughter said. “And I also think it’s a matter of getting schools of that nature to look at our players in that manner.”

Like almost all student-athletes who not only attend but decide to play at a prestigious academic university, Davis did his homework before making a decision. He had a lot to weigh.

“It was stressful at times,” Davis said. “It was a long process.”

There were schools with good academic reputations — and maybe a higher level of basketball — and then there was the Ivy League, a basketball conference with elite, world-renowned academics. In Princeton, Davis can reap the benefits of playing Division I basketball while obtaining a first-class education.

The aspirations Davis has beyond college and following his basketball career mattered. And the head start Ivy League graduates have following graduation stood out.

“That definitely mattered,” Davis said of the obvious advantages of an Ivy League degree. “Basketball stops at one point. You can’t play forever. I want to be prepared for life. Those four years at Princeton? That’s going to prepare me for life.

“And it’s just unbelievable the alumni base they have and the alumni I’ve already heard from since committing to Princeton. It really came down to making a mature decision for me.”

Slaughter recognized exactly that in his star point guard as he went through the recruiting process.

“He hasn’t become clouded by the allure of what is perceived to be the right college choice for a player of his magnitude,” Slaughter said. “When you look at him and his talents, I feel his talents are that of a high-major basketball player. But what more can one ask then to play at a place like Princeton with its academic reputation and great basketball history?”

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Chicago Bears Rumors: Robert Quinn is on the trade blockVincent Pariseon October 19, 2022 at 3:18 pm

The Chicago Bears are 2-4 after a tough loss to the Washington Commanders last Thursday night. Now, they have a big Monday Night Football date with the New England Patriots this week which may go exactly how you’d expect. It is not going to be an easy game at all.

2022 was never going to be a season in which the Bears make it to the playoffs or even come close. There simply isn’t enough talent on this roster right now to get anything big done. They work hard and are disciplined which is nice but that won’t truly help until they have better players.

As a result of this, you might see some tradable assets go out the door as they build toward the future. It is important to take advantage of the trade market as much as you can. When people who aren’t a part of the future can help another team win, you add draft picks for them.

That might be the case for Robert Quinn. Quinn seemed to be a disaster of a signing in 2020 when he had a terrible season but he had an all-time great Bears season in 2021. Teams acquiring him in a trade can probably expect something more in the middle for the Super Bowl run.

The Chicago Bears appear to be shopping Robert Quinn ahead of the deadline.

It sounds now like he is officially on the block. Jason La Canfora of The Washington Post confirmed this is a recent article that went up. It is very believable as he was seen as one of the most tradable Bears coming into the season. Now that they are 2-4, it is clearly the right move.

The Bears have already lost some really good pass rushers, Khalil Mack and Akiem Hicks. Losing Quinn would hurt the present-day pass rush but the assets that they get for him can help the team more in the long run. This is a rebuilding team after all.

A lot of teams might be interested in Quinn via a trade. You’d think that one of the elite teams in the league would want to pull the trigger. The Kansas City Chiefs, Buffalo Bills, Philadelphia Eagles, and Minnesota Vikings all come to mind right off the bat. There are plenty of other teams as well.

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Chicago Bears Rumors: Robert Quinn is on the trade blockVincent Pariseon October 19, 2022 at 3:18 pm Read More »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show

Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls. Presented by the Chicago Reader, the show is available by 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays at chicagoreader.com/joravsky—or wherever you get your podcasts. Don’t miss Oh, What a Week!–the Friday feature in which Ben & producer Dennis (aka, Dr. D.) review the week’s top stories. Also, bonus interviews drop on Saturdays, Sundays and Mondays. 

Chicago Reader podcasts are recorded on Shure microphones. Learn more at Shure.com.

With support from our sponsors

Chicago Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky discusses the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty on The Ben Joravsky Show.


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Where to find the Chicago Reader in print every other week

Many Reader boxes including downtown and transit line locations will be restocked on the Wednesday following each issue date.

The next issue

The next print issue is the issue of October 27. It will be distributed to locations Wednesday, October 26, through Thursday night, October 27.

Credit: Yijun Pan

The latest issue

The most recent print issue is this week’s issue of October 13, 2022. It is being distributed to locations today, Wednesday, October 12, through tomorrow, Thursday, October 13.

Download a free PDF of the print issue.

Distribution map

The Chicago Reader is published in print every other week and distributed free to the 1,100 locations on this map (which can also be opened in a separate window or tab). Copies are available free of charge—while supplies last.

Never miss a copy! Paid print subscriptions are available for 12 issues, 26 issues, and for 52 issues from the Reader Store.

Chicago Reader 2022 print issue dates

The Chicago Reader is published in print every other week. Issues are dated Thursday. Distribution usually happens Wednesday morning through Thursday night of the issue date. Upcoming print issue dates through December 2022 are:

10/27/202211/10/202211/24/202212/8/202212/22/2022

Download the full 2022 editorial calendar is here (PDF).

See our information page for advertising opportunities.

2023 print issue dates

The first print issue in 2023 will be published three weeks after the 12/22/2022 issue, the final issue of 2022. The print issue dates through June 2023 are:

1/12/20231/26/20232/9/20232/23/20233/9/20233/23/20234/6/20234/20/20235/4/20235/18/20236/1/20236/15/20236/29/2023

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Where to find the Chicago Reader in print every other week Read More »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon October 19, 2022 at 6:01 am

Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls. Presented by the Chicago Reader, the show is available by 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays at chicagoreader.com/joravsky—or wherever you get your podcasts. Don’t miss Oh, What a Week!–the Friday feature in which Ben & producer Dennis (aka, Dr. D.) review the week’s top stories. Also, bonus interviews drop on Saturdays, Sundays and Mondays. 

Chicago Reader podcasts are recorded on Shure microphones. Learn more at Shure.com.

With support from our sponsors

Chicago Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky discusses the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty on The Ben Joravsky Show.


MAGA flip-flops

Men from Blago to Bolduc are trying to sing a new song.


Just like we told you

The Bears finally make their play for public money to build their private stadium.


The choice is yours, voters

MAGA’s Illinois Supreme Court nominees are poised to outlaw abortion in Illinois—if, gulp, they win.

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Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon October 19, 2022 at 6:01 am Read More »

Where to find the Chicago Reader in print every other weekChicago Readeron October 19, 2022 at 2:41 pm

Many Reader boxes including downtown and transit line locations will be restocked on the Wednesday following each issue date.

The next issue

The next print issue is the issue of October 27. It will be distributed to locations Wednesday, October 26, through Thursday night, October 27.

Credit: Yijun Pan

The latest issue

The most recent print issue is this week’s issue of October 13, 2022. It is being distributed to locations today, Wednesday, October 12, through tomorrow, Thursday, October 13.

Download a free PDF of the print issue.

Distribution map

The Chicago Reader is published in print every other week and distributed free to the 1,100 locations on this map (which can also be opened in a separate window or tab). Copies are available free of charge—while supplies last.

Never miss a copy! Paid print subscriptions are available for 12 issues, 26 issues, and for 52 issues from the Reader Store.

Chicago Reader 2022 print issue dates

The Chicago Reader is published in print every other week. Issues are dated Thursday. Distribution usually happens Wednesday morning through Thursday night of the issue date. Upcoming print issue dates through December 2022 are:

10/27/202211/10/202211/24/202212/8/202212/22/2022

Download the full 2022 editorial calendar is here (PDF).

See our information page for advertising opportunities.

2023 print issue dates

The first print issue in 2023 will be published three weeks after the 12/22/2022 issue, the final issue of 2022. The print issue dates through June 2023 are:

1/12/20231/26/20232/9/20232/23/20233/9/20233/23/20234/6/20234/20/20235/4/20235/18/20236/1/20236/15/20236/29/2023

Related


Enrique Limón named Editor in Chief of Chicago Reader

Limón will start October 3.


[PRESS RELEASE] Baim stepping down as Reader publisher end of 2022


Chicago Reader hires social justice reporter

Debbie-Marie Brown fills this position made possible by grant funding from the Field Foundation.

Read More

Where to find the Chicago Reader in print every other weekChicago Readeron October 19, 2022 at 2:41 pm Read More »

High school basketball: Young’s Skylar Jones commits to Missouri

Skylar Jones is a little ahead of schedule.

The Public League’s top senior and the state’s highest-ranked uncommitted prospect announced her commitment to Missouri on Saturday.

The Tigers were one of five finalists for Jones, who also considered Syracuse, Mississippi State, Illinois and Rutgers.

“What stood out to me is they have the best of both worlds, athletically and academically,” said Jones, who has not decided on a major.

Missouri is coming off an 18-12 season highlighted by an overtime victory against eventual national champ South Carolina.

The 6-foot wing spent the fall taking official visits and had targeted a decision at the end of October.

“Big relief,” Jones said. “When I announced my commitment it was a real good feeling. The recruiting process was real stressful.”

One of the hardest parts was delivering the news to the schools she did not choose.

“I felt a real connection to the staffs and even some of the players,” Jones said of the other finalists.

Jones averaged team bests of 16.8 points, 4.9 rebounds, 4.6 steals and 3.0 assists per game last season for the Dolphins, who won the Public League title and reached the Elite Eight in Class 4A before falling to Benet in the supersectional.

Now she can focus on her senior season as Young looks to gear up for another long postseason run.

“I’m going to be completely honest, we’re struggling [now] because we’re not all on the same page,” Jones said. “But we had that kind of problem last year [also].”

Knowing that everything worked out then gives Jones confidence history will repeat.

“We have a lot of talent across the board,” she said.

Jones leads the way at No. 96 nationally in the espnW/HoopGurlz rankings for the class of 2023.

She was the last of Illinois’ six top-100 players to commit, following No. 62 Jordan Wood of Carmel (Michigan State), No. 73 Janae Kent of Oak Forest (LSU), No. 77 Katy Eidle of Hersey (Michigan), No. 80 Emily Fisher of Libertyville (Maryland) and No. 83 Lenee Beaumont of Benet (Indiana).

Staying close to home

Senior guard Jazelle Young, the top returning scorer and rebounder for Kenwood, has committed to Loyola.

Young averaged 10.2 points and 5.7 rebounds last season for the Public League runner-up and Class 4A regional champ Broncos. She’s the second Kenwood player to commit to Loyola in two years, joining current Ramblers freshman Whitney Dunn.

Rising stars

Three local juniors are ranked in the espnW/HoopGurlz top 60 nationally. Grayslake Central’s Tahj Bloom and Rolling Meadows’ Roisin Grandberry, both 6-3 forwards, are No. 38 and No. 49 respectively. Xamiya Walton, a 5-5 point guard for Butler, is 55th.

No area players are in the espnW/HoopGurlz top 25 for sophomores, but Naperville Central guard Trinity Jones is among the top 25 freshmen.

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