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Biz Markie, hip hop staple known for ‘Just a Friend,’ diesAssociated Presson July 17, 2021 at 12:33 am

LOS ANGELES — Biz Markie, a hip-hop staple known for his beatboxing prowess, turntable mastery and the 1989 classic “Just a Friend,” has died. He was 57.

Markie’s representative, Jenni Izumi, said the rapper-DJ died peacefully Friday evening with his wife by his side. The cause of death has not been released.

“We are grateful for the many calls and prayers of support that we have received during this difficult time,” Izumi said in a statement. “Biz created a legacy of artistry that will forever be celebrated by his industry peers and his beloved fans whose lives he was able to touch through music, spanning over 35 years. He leaves behind a wife, many family members and close friends who will miss his vibrant personality, constant jokes and frequent banter.”

Markie, who birth name was Marcel Theo Hall, became known within the rap genre realm as the self-proclaimed “Clown Prince of Hip-Hop” for lighthearted lyrics and a humorous nature. He made music with the Beastie Boys, opened for Chris Rock’s comedy tour and was a sought-after DJ for countless star-studded events.

Biz Markie attends the 20th Century Fox press line on Day 2 of Comic-Con International on July 25, 2014, in San Diego.
Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP

The New York-native’s music career began in 1985 as a beat boxer of the Juice Crew, a rap collective he helped Big Daddy Kane join. Three years later, he released his debut album “Goin’ Off,” which featured underground hits “Vapors” and “Pickin’ Boogers.”

Markie broke into mainstream music with his platinum-selling song “Just a Friend,” the lead single on his sophomore album “The Biz Never Sleeps.” The friend-zone anthem cracked Rolling Stone’s top 100 pop songs and made VH1’s list of 100 greatest hip-hop songs of all time.

Markie, who released five total studio albums, consistently booked more than 175 shows a year, according to the rapper’s website. He’s appeared on television shows including “In Living Color” and the 2002 movie “Men in Black II,” which had him playing an alien parody of himself in the film starring Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones.

Markie also taught the method of beatboxing in an episode of the children’s show “Yo Gabba Gabba!”

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Biz Markie, hip hop staple known for ‘Just a Friend,’ diesAssociated Presson July 17, 2021 at 12:33 am Read More »

It’s M-Day: A Look Back at Chicago Coverage of the Apollo 11 Launchon July 16, 2021 at 10:59 pm

Cosmic Chicago

It’s M-Day: A Look Back at Chicago Coverage of the Apollo 11 Launch

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It’s M-Day: A Look Back at Chicago Coverage of the Apollo 11 Launchon July 16, 2021 at 10:59 pm Read More »

The International Playboy Bunny Reunion, 60th anniversary of The Playboy Club and meon July 16, 2021 at 11:51 pm

Candid Candace

The International Playboy Bunny Reunion, 60th anniversary of The Playboy Club and me

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The International Playboy Bunny Reunion, 60th anniversary of The Playboy Club and meon July 16, 2021 at 11:51 pm Read More »

Having a hard time getting a response to non-emergency calls in Chicago? Here’s a big reason why.Frank Mainon July 16, 2021 at 10:15 pm

One reason that Chicagoans might be having problems getting a response to their non-emergency calls to the city is that officers in the Chicago Police Department’s non-emergency call center have been having trouble meeting their bosses’ performance expectations.

That’s according to records obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times that show the officers’ “average service level” — the percentage of calls answered within the police department’s “goal response time” — was just 38% during a sample period of April 19 to April 30.

Asked whether top police officials are satisfied with that performance, a department spokesman said the unit is “continuously being evaluated to identify areas of improvement.”

The Alternate Response Section is staffed by cops who’ve been stripped of their police powers and others not medically cleared for full duty. They work in a building on the Near West Side.

Last month, the Sun-Times reported that callers to the city’s non-emergency 311 lines have experienced long delays at times this year getting through to someone there. One woman, Kiama Doyle, said she made at least 20 calls and four hours or more on the phone trying to file a non-emergency report that her Nissan Rogue was stolen in March.

Doyle said she made most of her calls to 311. It’s unclear from her phone records whether her delays occurred at the 311 call center — which is staffed by civilian city employees — or after she was transferred to the police-run Alternate Response Section.

People can call 311 to request city service like garbage pickup and complain about things like airport noise and rat infestation.

People who call to fill out a non-emergency police report get transferred to the Alternate Response Section — either by the 311 operators or by pressing “7” on their phones to be automatically transferred there. Or they can bypass that process by calling the Alternate Response Section directly at (312) 746-6000.

Citizens also can fill out non-emergency police reports online or have officers in the field or at police stations take their reports.

Doyle said her mother tried to file a report at a South Side police station but was told she couldn’t because she didn’t own the vehicle. Doyle said she filed her report on the phone because she now lives in Arizona.

According to the records the city released for the last 12 days of April:

  • The average wait time for an officer to pick up the phone was two minutes and 46 seconds. The biggest delay for an officer to pick up the phone was more than 29 minutes — on April 20.
  • More than 12,000 calls were made to the Alternate Response Section in that period, including those transferred from the 311 center and those made directly to the unit.
  • About 9,300 calls were picked up by cops answering the phones. About 2,760 people hung up rather than wait after being put on hold.
  • The 311 call-takers transferred about 1,500 calls to officers. Callers pressed “7” to bypass a live 311 operator more than 5,760 times.

The majority of the calls to the Alternate Response Section don’t result in a police report being taken because many are for information that doesn’t require one, according to police officials.

Theft was the No. 1 type of report filed by the unit. Slightly more theft reports — 1,394 — were filed by Alternate Response Section officers than by cops in the city’s 22 districts, who took 1,382 theft reports in that period.

Alternate Response Section officers also took slightly more vehicle theft reports than district cops: 383 to 335.

Officers in the Alternate Response Section don’t take reports about traffic accidents.

The entrance to the building where 311 operations and the Alternate Response Section are headquartered at 2111 W. Lexington.
The entrance to the building where 311 operations and the Alternate Response Section are headquartered at 2111 W. Lexington.
Ashlee Rezin Garcia / Sun-Times

Launched more than 20 years ago, the 311 center — and the Alternate Response Section — were supposed to take pressure off the 911 operators who handle life-and-death calls.

In 2013, the police department under then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel decided to send alternate response a greater share of citizen’s calls for police service. Cops were no longer supposed to respond in person to 911 calls about vehicle thefts, garage burglaries or crimes in which the victim is “safe, secure and not in need of medical attention” and the suspect is “not on the scene and not expected to return immediately,” according to the 2013 policy.

Those calls would be transferred from 911 to the Alternate Response Section — a change the police said would free 44 officers a day to respond to the most serious crimes.

From April 19 to April 30, Alternate Response Section officers filled out 19% of the police department’s non-emergency reports. District cops in the field and in police stations handled the other 81%.

Asked whether they’d like to see the Alternate Response Section officers taking a bigger share of non-emergency reports, police officials answered only, “ARS was designed to maximize the ability of the department to readily respond to serious criminal acts and emergency situations and focus on crime and disorder problems on the beat level.”

More than 230 officers were assigned to the unit in late April and May, including 95 officers on limited duty.

Some officers have remained in the Alternate Response Section for years, getting their full police pay.

Officer Thomas Sherry leaves the Cook County criminal courts building at 26th Street and California Avenue after a 2006 court appearance.
Officer Thomas Sherry leaves the Cook County criminal courts building at 26th Street and California Avenue after a 2006 court appearance.
Brian Jackson / Sun-Times file

One officer, Thomas Sherry, was on desk duty in the unit for more than a decade until the department moved to fire him and suspended him without pay Feb. 10. He was accused of doing illegal searches and filing false reports in 2004, court records show.

Between 2002 and 2006, Sherry had worked for the now-disbanded Special Operations Section, a citywide unit that made drug and gun arrests. Some officers in the unit were convicted in a federal corruption investigation, but criminal charges against Sherry were dropped in 2009.

Former police Cmdr. Jacob Alderden, who ran the Central District downtown until he was demoted to captain in early June, is now in charge of the Alternate Response Section. He got the department’s highest honor in 2018 for his actions following a hospital shooting. Police officials won’t say why he was demoted, saying that’s a “personnel matter.”

Kiama Doyle’s odyssey to report her SUV stolen.

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Having a hard time getting a response to non-emergency calls in Chicago? Here’s a big reason why.Frank Mainon July 16, 2021 at 10:15 pm Read More »

Two, including teen who worked for violence prevention group, charged with murder for alleged attack during carjacking attemptMatthew Hendricksonon July 16, 2021 at 9:00 pm

When 73-year-old Keith Cooper had his car key snatched away from his hand by two teenagers while he ran errands in Hyde Park, he repeatedly asked for it back.

He got hit instead, Cook County prosecutors said Friday. The Marine veteran ended up dying after he was accosted by Frank Harris, 18, and 17-year-old Dushawn Williams Wednesday afternoon in the 5300 block of South Kimbark Avenue.

The senior citizen survived wars, “but didn’t manage to survive his encounter” with Harris and Williams, Assistant State’s Attorney James Murphy told Judge Charles Beach.

Harris, who was involved with the violence prevention youth group Good Kids Mad City in the recent past, allegedly was the the one who punched Cooper once in the head while trying to run off with the older man’s Hyundai SUV that was in the parking lot of a shopping center.

When Harris and Williams were not able to get inside the vehicle, they allegedly ran off.

Cooper, meanwhile, collapsed to the ground two minutes later.

Frank Harris
Frank Harris
Chicago police

An off-duty paramedic started chest compressions on Cooper before Chicago police and firefighters arrived and took Cooper to the University of Chicago Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead.

The Cook County medical examiner’s office has not yet ruled on the cause and manner of Cooper’s death.

Harris and Williams were arrested about a half-mile away after they were spotted changing out of their clothing in a synagogue parking lot, Murphy said.

While in custody, Harris allegedly admitted to taking part in the carjacking attempt, but denied hitting Cooper. Surveillance cameras, however, captured the attack and two people in the shopping center’s parking lot identified Harris as the man who struck Cooper, Murphy said.

Beach told Harris Friday that it was “painful” to see a young man with “his whole life in front of him” in his courtroom.

But the judge also noted that Harris was on probation for another carjacking when he attacked Cooper. Harris, who was a juvenile during the carjacking several months before, used a replica handgun in that incident, Murphy told Beach.

“I do believe you are a threat to the community,” Beach told Harris before ordering him held without bail for first-degree murder.

Harris, who was going to be a high school senior in the fall, had been enrolled in a Chicago Public Schools summer program and had a paid position with Good Kids Mad City, an assistant public defender said.

Harris had received a stipend from the organization when he helped to distribute food and care packages to the community during the early months of the pandemic last year, according to Kofi Ademola, an adult advisor for Good Kids Mad City.

Before that, Harris had also been involved in helping run a basketball program for youth, Ademola, 40, said Friday.

Unfortunately, members of the organization had not seen Harris in about a year, Ademola said.

“It’s so disheartening,” Ademola said. “We lost Mr. Cooper, who should still be here to be with his family, and we lost another young person to the criminal legal system.

“Until we address the real root causes of violence … this isn’t going to end.”

A vigil was scheduled at the crime scene Friday evening to honor Cooper who served in the Marines and did two tours in Vietnam, according his family. Cooper loved jazz, Star Trek, reading and horror movies, his loved ones added.

Harris is expected back in court Aug. 4.

Williams, who also has been charged with murder as an adult, is expected to appear at a bond hearing Saturday.

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Two, including teen who worked for violence prevention group, charged with murder for alleged attack during carjacking attemptMatthew Hendricksonon July 16, 2021 at 9:00 pm Read More »

‘He was our eye’: Reuters photographer killed in AfghanistanAssociated Presson July 16, 2021 at 9:15 pm

LONDON — A Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer for the Reuters news service was killed Friday as he chronicled fighting between Afghan forces and the Taliban near a strategic border crossing amid the continuing withdrawal of U.S. and NATO troops.

Danish Siddiqui, 38, had been embedded with Afghan special forces for the past few days and was killed as the commando unit battled for control of the Spin Boldak crossing on the border between southern Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Siddiqui was part of a team that won the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for feature photography for their coverage of Rohingya refugees fleeing Myanmar. More recently, he had captured searing images of India’s struggle against COVID-19 and protests against new farming laws.

Farhat Basir Khan, a professor of mass communications at Jamia Millia Islamia University in New Delhi, lauded his former student’s sense of empathy and his determination to go after difficult and complex stories.

“He was our eye. He gave voice and agency to thousands whose suffering might have been lost,” Khan said in a statement. “If a picture is worth a thousand words, his were worth millions.”

Siddiqui and a senior Afghan officer were killed as the special forces unit fought to retake the main market area in Spin Boldak, Reuters reported, citing the army.

The Taliban have turned over Siddiqui’s body to the International Committee of the Red Cross, Indian authorities said.

Reuters said it was seeking more information about how Siddiqui was killed, describing him as a “devoted husband and father, and a much-loved colleague.”

“It is so devastating for me to imagine that I won’t be talking to Danish anymore,” said Ahmad Masood, Asia Editor for Reuters Pictures. “A kind-hearted human being. … He was the best of the best, as a person and a professional. His work speaks volumes of his bravery and his passion in photojournalism. He cared.”

Deputy State Department spokeperson Jalina Porter expressed U.S. condolences, saying Siddiqui was “celebrated for his work often in the world’s most urgent and challenging news stories and for creating striking images that conveyed a wealth of emotion and the human face behind the headlines.”

“Siddiqui’s death is a tremendous loss, not only for Reuters and for his media colleagues but also for the rest of the world,” she said.

The fighting around Spin Boldak comes as the U.S. and NATO forces complete the final phase of their withdrawal from Afghanistan, opening the door for the Taliban to take control of large swaths of territory. District after district has fallen to the Taliban and the insurgents have in past weeks seized several key border crossings, putting more pressure on the Afghan government and cutting off strategic trade routes.

A native of New Delhi, Siddiqui was a self-taught photographer who had been a defense correspondent for one of India’s leading television networks before he decided to change careers.

Siddiqui said he became frustrated because television news focused only on the big stories, not the small features from the interior of India that he wanted to explore, according to a 2018 interview with Forbes India. He left his well-paid TV job in 2010 to become an intern at Reuters.

A montage of his best work compiled by Reuters includes photos of traditional Indian wrestlers covered in mud, Hindu priests praying in a cave above the River Ganges and a man covered in lint feeding cotton into aging machinery by hand.

“While I enjoy covering news stories – from business to politics to sports – what I enjoy most is capturing the human face of a breaking story,” he wrote in a profile on the Reuters website. “I really like covering issues that affect people as the result of different kind of conflicts.”

Siddiqui and his colleagues were honored with 2018 Pulitzer Prize for what the judges called “shocking photographs that exposed the world to the violence Rohingya refugees faced in fleeing Myanmar.”

One of his prize-winning images shows an exhausted woman crumpled on the sand, while in the background men behind her unload the boat that carried them to safety in Bangladesh.

Capturing the images was difficult, as the photographers had to walk barefoot for up to four hours through rice fields to reach the border area, Siddiqui told Forbes.

“It’s an emotional thing too,” he said. “I am the father of a two-year-old and to see kids drowning is terrible. But, as a journalist, you’ve got to do your job. I’m happy I was able to … balance profession and emotion and know when to drop my camera to save kids left in water by fishermen.”

Siddiqui covered the conflict Iraq, earthquakes in Nepal and demonstrations in Hong Kong. But in recent months he turned his lens on the COVID-19 pandemic in India, offering searing images of those who suffered and died without adequate medical care and oxygen.

“I shoot for the common man who wants to see and feel a story from a place where he can’t be present himself,” he wrote.

Included among the social media tributes to Siddiqui was one of his posts from the Pulitzer Prize ceremony in New York. It showed a closeup of the name tag that identified him as the “2018 Pulitzer Prize Winner Feature Photography.”

“For Sarah and Yunus,” he wrote above the image, remembering his children as he received the prestigious award.

___

Gannon reported from Islamabad. Associated Press writers Rahim Faiez in Kabul, Afghanistan, Matthew Lee in Washington, and Krutika Pathi and Ashok Sharma in New Delhi contributed to this report.

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‘He was our eye’: Reuters photographer killed in AfghanistanAssociated Presson July 16, 2021 at 9:15 pm Read More »

3 shot and wounded within 4 hours on West Side FridayMohammad Samraon July 16, 2021 at 9:25 pm

Three men were wounded in shootings within four hours Friday on the West Side.

In the latest shooting, a man was seriously wounded in the Lawndale neighborhood.

The man, 20, was standing on the sidewalk in the 3600 Block of West Douglas Avenue when the shooter stepped out of a light-colored vehicle and fired around 1:30 p.m., Chicago Police said. The man was shot several times and taken to Mount Sinai Hospital.

About 20 minutes earlier, a man was shot in West Garfield Park. The 29-year-old was standing in the 3900 Block of West Gladys when he was shot in the thigh and taken to Mount Sinai in good condition, police said.

Around 9:30 a.m., a man was shot and wounded in Lawndale, about a block from the Douglas shooting. The man was walking in an alley in the 1300 block of South Homan Avenue when gunfire rang out from a dark-colored SUV, police said. The man was grazed in the leg and shoulder, but refused medical attention.

Police reported no arrests in any of the shootings.

Both shootings in Lawndale occurred in the 10th police district, which has seen more shootings and murders so far in 2021 than during the same period last year. Shootings are up 16% while murders are up 3%, according to police statistics.

However, gun violence in the 11th district, which covers West Garfield Park, has declined slightly over last year. Shootings are down 4% while murders are down 15%, according to police.

Read more on crime, and track the city’s homicides.

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3 shot and wounded within 4 hours on West Side FridayMohammad Samraon July 16, 2021 at 9:25 pm Read More »

Support Youth Entrepreneurs at #YBKDay Marketplaces on July 17on July 16, 2021 at 9:21 pm

Go 2 Mommy

Support Youth Entrepreneurs at #YBKDay Marketplaces on July 17

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Support Youth Entrepreneurs at #YBKDay Marketplaces on July 17on July 16, 2021 at 9:21 pm Read More »

Henchpeople is a satisfying amuse-bouche for the return of live theaterKerry Reidon July 16, 2021 at 6:30 pm

I went to a play a few days ago. In the Before Times, that would have been like saying “I took a shower.” (I’m still showering regularly. Don’t get it twisted.) Prior to the shutdown last March, like most theater writers, I spent at least three to four nights a week at shows. Then it went down to “zero.” (Have you heard about this thing called “bingeing a TV series?” It’s wild!)

Just to simply sit in the dark with other people watching other people pretend to be other people had a little bit of magic to it after 18 months of impersonating Miss Havisham in pajamas. I thought about Trudy, the unhoused tour guide for the space aliens in Lily Tomlin’s 1980s solo show The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe (written by Tomlin’s spouse, Jane Wagner). She takes the aliens to the theater, but they get goose bumps from watching the audience, because they think that’s the real show.

Henchpeople, the new comedy by Ross Compton at Rogers Park’s Theatre Above the Law, may not leave you with intergalactic goose bumps. But if you’re looking for an endearing and goofy way to let you dip your toes back into the storefront scene (the company’s Jarvis Square venue is one of the smallest in the city), it might fill the bill. (Just be prepared to show proof of COVID-19 vaccination at the box office and wear a mask, per the house rules.)

There’s certainly a whiff of contemporary relevance to a story about a small pod of people trapped in a tiny space, getting on each other’s nerves and wondering when the world is finally going to change for the better. In Compton’s play (directed by TATL artistic director Tony Lawry), the title characters are a semi-clueless duo in thrall to a Villain, bent on destroying a nameless city from a bunker hideout. (Charlotte Lastra and David Hartley’s set is filled with low-budget retro switches, lights, and panels, giving a delightful Ed Wood-esque effect to the physical environment.)

Oona (Stephanie Stockstill) is a wannabe Mini-Me to Julia Rowley’s preening Villain, while Jarlath (Travis Shanahan) is a tech nerd. Both have their own reasons for hating the mayor of the town and joining up with the Villain. As is so often the case, the revolutionary becomes the gaslighting tormentor, taunting Oona and Jarlath for their shortcomings and reminding them of their place in the pecking order. “I’M the Voice of the Commoner. I’ll speak for both of us. Understand?” But when the shit is about to hit the fan, the Villain is happy to remain an armchair activist. (Not that I can think of anyone in recent history who stayed behind in a secure location while urging their disciples on to violent insurrection. Heavens no!)

Rowley also plays the Heavy (a rogue general at the head of the rebel army) and the Hero, a smarmy caped crusader (their cape festooned with logos for local businesses such as the R Public House) in cahoots with the status quo. Since all three characters seem like aspects of the same narcissistic persona, the casting makes sense. (On opening night, some of the dialogue in the video feed was hard to catch, even in the small space, but generally Compton’s sound design and Stina Taylor’s lighting work well at suggesting subterranean depths.)

By contrast, Oona and Jarlath are sincere, if befuddled. When Oona tries to impersonate the suddenly-deceased Villain for an address to the rebel troops, it’s like watching Good Janet try to mimic Bad Janet in The Good Place. (I mentioned bingeing TV shows, right?) It’s obvious that, while she’s operating from a place of genuine pain brought on by a childhood of neglect, she’s still got the empathy chip the solipsistic Villain/Heavy/Hero triumvirate lacks.

Lawry’s staging lets the cast show off some admirable physical comedy chops, and Compton’s script has several epigrammatic nuggets of wisdom, including the so-true-it-hurts line “There’s nothing more dangerous than a rich person with hurt feelings.” Stockstill and Shanahan win us over as Oona and Jarlath figure out that the real path to freedom and release from the past comes from learning to trust themselves and each other, not grandiose authority figures whose solution is to burn it all down, consequences be damned.

And I have to say that hearing the sounds of other people around me laughing at silly sight gags and well-timed double takes was tonic for the soul. As the aliens tell Tomlin’s Trudy (inspired by her attempts to explain the appeal of Andy Warhol), “The play was soup. The audience, art.” Henchpeople isn’t a full-meal kind of play, but it’s a nifty amuse-bouche as the banquet of live performance gears up in theatrical kitchens across the city. v

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Henchpeople is a satisfying amuse-bouche for the return of live theaterKerry Reidon July 16, 2021 at 6:30 pm Read More »

Afternoon Edition: July 16, 2021Matt Mooreon July 16, 2021 at 8:00 pm

Good afternoon. Here’s the latest news you need to know in Chicago. It’s about a 5-minute read that will brief you on today’s biggest stories.

This afternoon will be cloudy with a chance of showers and a high around 74 degrees. Tonight will be mostly cloudy with a low around 65. Tomorrow will be partly sunny with a high near 77 and Sunday will be mostly sunny with a high near 82.

Top story

‘Big mystery box’ revealed South Side man’s long-secret World War II near-death odyssey

As the B-17 bomber lumbered toward the west coast of France, Jim Wilschke crouched in the plane’s plexiglass nose, preparing to drop a 5,000-pound payload on a pen of Nazi U-boats — including one that would become a star attraction at the Museum of Science and Industry.

The Flying Fortress was at the rear of the U.S. air squadron. It was a precarious position to be in even in the best of times because it made it an easy target for German fighter planes.

Then, one of the aircraft’s four engines died. The plane began to lag behind.

Like jackals pouncing on a wounded antelope, the Germans swooped in. Machine-gun fire and cannon shells tore through the fuselage, the plane filled with smoke, and soon the bailout alarm sounded.

Wilschke, a native South Sider, grabbed his parachute. He squeezed through an escape hatch. And he jumped.

The story of what happened during the next six months — of Wilschke’s and another American airman’s life on the run in Nazi-occupied France — was one that almost no one heard. These were Wilschke’s secrets, tucked away in a “big mystery box” and rarely spoken of, maybe for the same reason it took him nearly 40 years to board another plane.

Now, that long-secret story has been turned into a book, “Bud’s Jacket,” written by his niece Barbara Wojcik, originally from Hinsdale and now living in Minnesota.

Stefano Esposito has more on Wilschke’s life and the journey to tell his story here.

More news you need

  1. Housing advocates are pushing to preserve two-flat buildings, which they say provide affordable apartments and generate wealth for homeowners in Black and Latino neighborhoods. Their initiative comes as residents are still reeling from the pandemic and weeks away from the eviction moratorium’s end.
  2. City Council today again put off a showdown vote on a civilian oversight board, this time until Tuesday. It’s been 26 months since Mayor Lightfoot promised to empower a board to fire the police superintendent and have the final say on police spending and policy.
  3. An off-duty Chicago Police officer who struck and killed a 9-year-old boy on a bike in West Rogers Park Wednesday has been issued a citation. Police said that the investigation is still ongoing.
  4. Two teenagers have been charged with killing a 73-year-old Marine veteran during an attempted carjacking in Hyde Park on Wednesday. The man was out running errands when the teens punched him in the head in an attempt to steal his SUV.
  5. The Chicago Police Board voted yesterday to fire Officer Jamie Jawor for brazenly pursuing an off-duty cop before he was involved in a high-speed crash that left him and another driver dead in 2017. She and her partner were pursuing Clark because his vehicle matched the description of another vehicle linked to an earlier carjacking.
  6. A summer edition of the Chicago Auto Show kicked off yesterday and will run until Monday at McCormick Place’s West Building. This year features an outdoor space for test driving, vehicle demonstrations and a street festival.
  7. A team of about 10 students is taking on NASA’s Vascular Tissue Challenge to create heart tissue that will help find solutions to the weakening of the heart muscle during space travel. Their findings could also help people with heart conditions on Earth, including organ transplants and stem cell regeneration of the heart.

A bright one

Brookfield Zoo welcomes — finally — three baby wallabies

Brookfield Zoo is finally getting around to announcing the arrival of three of its newest residents — one of which was born eight months ago.

That’s because Wallaby mothers don’t proudly display their newborn infants — called joeys — which come into the world at about the size of a bumble bee.

“We always have to end up sort of estimating the actual day of birth because we don’t see it. They come out weighing about a gram, climb their way up into the pouch and attach onto one of the teats, and then stay in that pouch as they continue to grow and develop for several months after that before we ever really see them,” said Michael Adkesson, Brookfield’s vice president of clinical medicine.

The three joeys were, based on estimates, born between late October 2020 and early December, staff say.

Maggie Chardell, a lead animal care specialist for the Chicago Zoological Society, feeds Whitney, a Bennett’s wallaby born at Brookfield Zoo on November 12, 2020.
Jim Schulz/CZS-Brookfield Zoo

Like their close relative, the larger kangaroo, wallabies are marsupials native to Australia and hop from place to place. The joeys each currently weigh about 2 1/2 pounds. They can weigh up to 60 pounds and reach a height of about 3 feet when fully grown, Adkesson said.

In the wild, wallabies inhabit coastal regions, woodlands and grasslands in Australia. The population is not currently endangered, according to zoo staff. But they are sometimes killed as an “agricultural pest” or hunted for their meat.

Brookfield’s wallabies — the zoo has a total of 29 — can be found in the Australia section and in the Wild Encounters area.

Stefano Esposito

From the press box

Your daily question ?

What’s the best song about Chicago? Tell us why.

Reply to this email (please include your first name and where you live) and we might feature your answer in the next Afternoon Edition.

Yesterday, we asked you: What do you think of the latest push by Democrats in the U.S. Senate to legalize cannabis nationwide? Here’s what some of you said…

“The real question is why it took so long.” — Jamie Gump

“The prohibition on marijuana should have ended long ago. It’s time to end the farce.” — Dale Johnson

“Might as well. People gonna use it anyway. A drunk stooge can still get liquored up and go to work the next day. It’s no different.” — Dave Bowers

“Possibly the only smart thing they’ve suggested in the last several years.” — Mitch Abrams

“No. Too many already drive while smoking pot. Their reaction times are causing issues on the road, not to mention the stench coming from their cars.” — Helen Rogers

“Won’t happen. The police and prison guard unions need easy targets. They don’t want to deal with violent criminals when they can pick on potheads.” — Christo Stefan

“Focus on more important things please.” — April Weller

Thanks for reading the Chicago Afternoon Edition. Got a story you think we missed? Email us here.

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Afternoon Edition: July 16, 2021Matt Mooreon July 16, 2021 at 8:00 pm Read More »