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Man suffers severe injuries in firework explosion in West PullmanCindy Hernandezon July 4, 2021 at 11:33 pm

A 19-year-old man was critically injured after a firework exploded on him Sunday in West Pullman on the Far South Side.

The man was injured after a firework went off about 6 p.m. in the 12900 block of South Eggleston Avenue, Chicago Fire officials said.

He suffered burns to the hand, chest and abdomen, fire officials said. He was transfered in critical condition to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn.

Fire officials said the man will lose his hand as a result of the injury.

No one else was injured, according to police.

No other details were immediately available.

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Man suffers severe injuries in firework explosion in West PullmanCindy Hernandezon July 4, 2021 at 11:33 pm Read More »

Kris Bryant, Craig Kimbrel named to National League All-Star teamRussell Dorseyon July 4, 2021 at 9:58 pm

CINCINNATI – The Cubs will have two players representing the team at this year’s Midsummer Classic as third baseman Kris Bryant and closer Craig Kimbrel were named National League All-Star reserves on Sunday.

Bryant, who will be making his fourth All-Star appearance, has had a bounceback season in 2021 and has led the Cubs offensively during the first half, slashing .272/.355/.511 with 16 homers and leads the team in hits, extra-base hits and doubles.

The Cubs’ third baseman has given the team a major boost with his versatility starting 43 games in the outfield, 23 games at third base and eight games at first base.

“It’s really cool to be recognized by your peers,” Bryant said. “I try to go out there every day and earn the respect of my opponents and my teammates. It definitely does feel really good when you hear that your peers are the ones that voted you in.”

Kimbrel’s return to dominance has been one of baseball’s best stories in 2021. Since September 2020, Kimbrel has been a force in the back of the Cubs’ bullpen and that success has carried over this season.

MLB’s active saves leader is 1-2 with a 0.59 ERA and 20 saves. Kimbrel has seen his velocity return to levels that made him one of the best closers of his generation. It’s the eighth All-Star selection and his first since 2018.

“I gotta thank all the guys that put me in position to get there,” Kimbrel said. “The relievers and starters who pitch before me to give me that opportunity to go in, throw innings that matter and get saves.”

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Kris Bryant, Craig Kimbrel named to National League All-Star teamRussell Dorseyon July 4, 2021 at 9:58 pm Read More »

Chicago Ridge family reunited as son recovers from cancerElvia Malagónon July 4, 2021 at 8:57 pm

On a recent afternoon, Abdulla Omer sat with his two giggling brothers in their new Chicago Ridge living room.

Abdulla, 13, was quiet and hid behind his baseball hat. He had spent the past couple of months without his mother and siblings as he underwent chemotherapy after doctors discovered he had Burkitt leukemia.

Mohsin Omer, the boy’s father, had balanced having the family in the Chicago area and in Yemen until his son’s diagnosis prompted them to apply in January for an expedited humanitarian parole so his wife could join them in the Chicago area.

Omer’s wife, Sanaa Saleh Abdellah Mohammad, and their children lived in Yemen while Omer, a U.S. citizen, worked and lived in the U.S. Their oldest son, Abdulla, moved to Chicago Ridge with his father in February 2020 — just before the coronavirus pandemic hit — to attend American schools.

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services didn’t expedite the application that would have allowed Saleh Abdellah Mohammad to temporarily enter the United States due to an emergency situation.

The family had to wait the typical 90 to 120 days for a decision. By late April, the family got word that her application had been approved. Mohsin Omer flew to Spain, then to Egypt before reaching Yemen to help his wife get the visa.

“I cried at the embassy,” said Omer, recalling the trip and how he had taken numerous documents. He was surprised that the family was able to get the visa the same day. By May, the family was reunited with Abdulla and together in the United States.

Mohsin Omer thinks about a question from the reporters at his home in Chicago Ridge, Illinois, Tuesday, June 22, 2021.
Mohsin Omer thinks before answering a question at his home in Chicago Ridge.
Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

For nearly five years, the family has had a pending “petition for alien relative,” an application through USCIS that would allow his wife to become a permanent U.S. resident through marriage. Omer said he continues to work with an attorney on the application, and he thinks it might be resolved within a couple of months.

The family has spent the past couple of weeks settling into their own apartment in Chicago Ridge, not far from where Omer’s parents live.

In addition to his wife, his 11-year-old daughter, Wafa, 10-year-old son, Mohamed, and 7-year-old son, Ali, also came to the U.S.

Omer used to travel for four or five months to his native Yemen to visit his wife and children. The ongoing conflict in Yemen stemming from a civil war in 2014 had made it more difficult for Omer to travel to his native country. Flights to Yemen are now more limited and traveling there now takes days, he said.

Abdulla’s last chemotherapy session happened in late April, but he still has monthly hospital visits, Omer said. Because of the coronavirus pandemic, the family tries to limit their time outside of the home. Omer said he tries to take the children to the park every couple of days so Abdulla can work on his mobility.

“He’s doing great,” Omer said. “When he stayed five months in the hospital, he had no movements. That’s the only issue. When he walks, he can’t run.”

Mohamed, from left, Abdullah, Ali, and Mohsin Omer relax on the couch at their home in Chicago Ridge, Illinois, Tuesday, June 22, 2021.
Brothers Mohamed, from left, Abdullah and Ali, relax on the couch at their home in Chicago Ridge.
Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

His mother, Saleh Abdellah Mohammad, through translation from Omer, said she barely slept while her son was in the hospital. She now feels relieved that he’s doing better and that her son isn’t far away from her anymore. She misses her life in Yemen as she adjusts to the U.S.

Omer left his job as a truck driver, and he started working at a gas station to spend more time with his family.

An organization reached out to the family, and they might get to travel together sometime next year though they are trying to decide where they would go. Omer would like to take the family to Spain, while Abdulla wants to see Paris and Saleh Abdellah Mohammad wants to travel to Turkey.

“Now I’m relieved,” Omer said sitting next to his sons. “It’s a blessing when you have your kids and wife next to you.”

From left to right, Mohamed, Mohsin, Ali, and Abdullah Omer pose for a portrait at their home in Chicago Ridge, Illinois, Tuesday, June 22, 2021.
Mohamed, from left, Mohsin, Ali, and Abdullah Omer at their home in Chicago Ridge.
Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

Elvia Malagon’s reporting on social justice and income inequality is made possible by a grant from The Chicago Community Trust.

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Chicago Ridge family reunited as son recovers from cancerElvia Malagónon July 4, 2021 at 8:57 pm Read More »

Cubs drop MLB-worst ninth straight game in loss to the RedsRussell Dorseyon July 4, 2021 at 9:25 pm

CINCINNATI — When it rains, it pours and that’s how most of the Cubs’ 10-game road trip has gone. The Cubs have little success going on an eight-game skid and falling out of first place in the NL Central and tumbling to third place in less than two weeks.

And on the final day of the road trip, the Cubs weren’t able to stop the bleeding as their skid continued with a deflating 3-2 loss to the Reds, who completed the three-game sweep.

Nothing has been able to get the Cubs out of what is now the worst losing streak in baseball. It’s like they’ve been playing in quicksand with no branch in sight to get them out of it.

“It’s almost like we have to play a perfect game to get a win right now,” starter Kyle Hendricks said. “Things just aren’t going our way.”

Everything that can go wrong has gone wrong for the Cubs during their recent stretch and not even their stopper on the mound could turn the tide. Hendricks did all he could against the Reds and on a hot and humid day in Cincinnati and gave the Cubs a chance to win, allowing just one run over six innings.

But of the Cubs’ losses during their skid, five of them have come by one run, making little things like walks turn into big things over the course of a game, becoming the difference between a win and a loss.

“You’re gonna have ups-and-downs,” Hendricks said. “This is obviously a big down for us, but all we can do is focus pitch-to-pitch. It’ll turn eventually.”

“We’re too talented to let this go too far,” manager David Ross said after the game.

The game slipped in the seventh inning as right-hander Dan Winkler came on to replace Hendricks. Winkler did not have his command on Sunday and after loading the bases, plunked Jonathan India to tie the game at 2. Jesse Winker’s RBI-fielder’s choice would give the Reds a 3-2 lead and was the game winner.

“We’ve played some tight games. We haven’t played bad baseball. Just not the best execution on the back end.”

While the offense “broke out” with 11 hits in the game, they were still unable to come up with more than two runs – something that has become a common theme.

“We couldn’t come up with a couple big hits here or there,” center fielder Jake Marisnick said. “It’s kind of felt like that over the last couple of weeks. It’s been a grind for us, but you’re not gonna see a lot of guys hanging their heads.”

The Cubs look like a team that could use the All-Star break to reset, but that’s not coming for another week as they will play seven straight games without an off-day entering the break. They finished the brutal road trip with a 1-9 record, dropping nine straight games after the team’s no-hitter against the Dodgers on June 24.

“It’s pretty crazy what this game will dish out in terms of wins, losses, slumps, highs, lows,” third baseman Kris Bryant said. “I think it’s important to realize, yeah this sucks right now, but keep your head up. As quick as it went south, it can go the other way again. You just gotta believe in that and keep going.”

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Cubs drop MLB-worst ninth straight game in loss to the RedsRussell Dorseyon July 4, 2021 at 9:25 pm Read More »

Save the Synapsians and do some math in Tesura Games’ A Tale of Synapses: The Chaos Theories!on July 4, 2021 at 7:04 pm

Jessi’s Media Review – A Chicks Point of View!

Save the Synapsians and do some math in Tesura Games’ A Tale of Synapses: The Chaos Theories!

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Save the Synapsians and do some math in Tesura Games’ A Tale of Synapses: The Chaos Theories!on July 4, 2021 at 7:04 pm Read More »

Cubs activate second baseman Nico Hoerner from injured listRussell Dorseyon July 4, 2021 at 2:42 pm

CINCINNATI – The Cubs are getting a big boost back in their lineup as they activated second baseman Nico Hoerner from the 10-day injured list before Sunday’s series finale against the Reds. Hoerner was in the starting lineup, playing second base and hitting sixth.

“It won’t exactly feel like a normal game,” Hoerner said. [Some] games do feel different. That’s real. I’m excited. I’m ready to go out there.”

Hoerner’s presence has been missed as he missed 35 games while recovering from a left hamstring strain he sustained on May 26. The Cubs’ second baseman was starting to put together a breakout season and was slashing .338/.405/.432 slash line with seven doubles in 21 games.

“When you can’t control what’s happening on the field, it’s a little harder to just kind of make sense of,” Hoerner said. “Because you like to be able to go back to things that you could have been different yourself or things you can learn from. AlI I could really do to help the team was get healthy and I feel really happy with that process.”

“The training staff is really great and they’ve had a tough year just like all teams in baseball, really just dealing with things out of their control. I really appreciate them in this process.”

It’s been a revolving door at second base since Hoerner went down and the Cubs have had very little production from the position. Ian Happ has even had to slide to second in an effort to get the Cubs more offense.

“I think it’ll help,” manager David Ross said Saturday. “We’ve got to do a lot of things better offensively than we’ve been doing, but I think Nico is definitely a high caliber player we’ll be welcoming back. We’re probably on the early side. Making sure he’s all the way healthy. Just make sure, He’ll play some and mix in some off days before the All-Star break.

“It’s an exciting player to have back. I think he was a big part of our offense when we were going good and hope he can come back and kind of fit right in and to continue to contribute like he was before he got hurt.”

The Cubs optioned infielder Sergio Alcantara to Triple-A Iowa to make room for Hoerner on the active roster. Alcantara slashed .179/.282/.403 with three doubles, three triple and two home runs.

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Cubs activate second baseman Nico Hoerner from injured listRussell Dorseyon July 4, 2021 at 2:42 pm Read More »

Come on, Man! Would you do this to your senile father #2 ?on July 4, 2021 at 4:00 pm

Life is a TV Dinner

Come on, Man! Would you do this to your senile father #2 ?

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Come on, Man! Would you do this to your senile father #2 ?on July 4, 2021 at 4:00 pm Read More »

After 15 months of a pandemic, civil unrest and racial awakening; Are we in a new normal?Laura Washingtonon July 4, 2021 at 2:26 pm

Pride 2021 is done. The LGBTQ community has wrapped up its annual June celebration of gay liberation.

This was a Pride month like no other, as we struggle to emerge from a global pandemic.

Last week I moderated a virtual program, “Pride in the Time of COVID-19,” hosted by the Illinois Holocaust Museum. It featured prominent leaders in Chicago’s LGBTQ community.

After 15 months of a pandemic, civil unrest and racial awakening, are we in a new normal?

“I think it’s a return to our old normal,” replied Brian C. Johnson, CEO of Equality Illinois, the statewide LGBTQ civil rights organization. “So much of the fight for LGBTQ civil rights has been led by the most marginalized members of our community, women, people of color, trans and gender nonconforming folks.”

In 1969, New York City police raided the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in Greenwich Village. Its patrons and neighbors resisted and led days of protests. The Stonewall Rebellion spawned the gay rights movement, which “was largely led by trans women of color,” Johnson said.

For state Sen. Mike Simmons, the pandemic has “really ignited that a lot of people across the board who are really pushing for a new, just a new status quo, a new set of ways that we all can survive and thrive.”

In February, Simmons was appointed to Illinois Senate 7th District, becoming the first openly gay senator in the Illinois General Assembly and the first Black senator from Chicago’s North Side.

He pointed to “long overdue” change, like the Jett Hawkins Act, legislation he sponsored that would prohibit schools from issuing rules that discriminate against hairstyles historically associated with race, ethnicity or hair texture.

Simmons, who sports gorgeously elaborate dreadlocks, says the laws would prevent school officials from suspending and expelling kids for how they wear their hair. “I don’t know that 10 years ago, that bill would have made it through the General Assembly.”

It was approved by both houses in May and awaits the governor’s signature.

Johnson noted a recent campaign for House Bill 246, which mandates the contributions of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people in state and national history be taught in Illinois public schools, starting this fall.

Theses treacherous times have opened minds. “What I’ve observed is that people, the pandemic has done something where people want to be on the right side of history,” Simmons said.

But he worries most about complacency.

“Even with people that are progressives and moderates, this sense that, ‘Oh, the pandemic is over.’ That’s the first thing I hear that makes me literally shake with nervousness. ‘Pandemic is over. We’re back to normal.'”

What is normal? Certainly not the time before COVID-19 descended on us. In March 2020, we were a city and nation burdened by inequities in housing, employment, resources, economic development, poverty, public safety and health care, and the systemic racism that led to the police murder of George Floyd. That’s far from normal, then and now.

Today, it seems, everyone and anyone is calling for equity.

I worry about what I call “change fatigue.” I fear the powerful will soon decide, enough. It’s time to get back to “normal.”

“I don’t have a lot of evidence that that is actually what is happening among communities and among people and among voters,” Johnson said. “But I hear a lot of leaders talking about that fear, and I worry about the consequences of that.”

Send letters to [email protected].

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After 15 months of a pandemic, civil unrest and racial awakening; Are we in a new normal?Laura Washingtonon July 4, 2021 at 2:26 pm Read More »

What’s this I hear about July 4th?on July 4, 2021 at 12:53 pm

The Chicago Board of Tirade

What’s this I hear about July 4th?

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What’s this I hear about July 4th?on July 4, 2021 at 12:53 pm Read More »

Man shot to death in WoodlawnSun-Times Wireon July 4, 2021 at 4:28 am

A man was shot to death Saturday night in Woodlawn on the South Side.

The 23-year-old was walking about 9:35 p.m. in the 6200 block of South Eberhart Avenue when someone fired shots, Chicago police said.

He was struck in the shoulder and collapsed to the ground, police said. He was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead.

The Cook County medical examiner’s office identified him as Walter D. Seamster.

No one is in custody as Area One detectives investigate.

Minutes earlier, a 17-year-old boy was critically hurt in a shooting in West Pullman. The teen was in a basement of a home with a group of people about 9:30 p.m. in the 12000 block of South Yale Avenue when someone opened fire, police said. He suffered two gunshot wounds to the head and was taken in critical condition to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn.

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Man shot to death in WoodlawnSun-Times Wireon July 4, 2021 at 4:28 am Read More »