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Deaths rise as Palestinians flee Israeli fire in GazaAssociated Presson May 14, 2021 at 3:47 pm

A Palestinian relative mourns over the bodies of four young brothers from the Tanani family who were found under the rubble of a destroyed house following Israeli airstrikes in Beit Lahiya, northern Gaza Strip, Friday, May 14, 2021.
A Palestinian relative mourns over the bodies of four young brothers from the Tanani family who were found under the rubble of a destroyed house following Israeli airstrikes in Beit Lahiya, northern Gaza Strip, Friday, May 14, 2021. | AP

The Gaza Health Ministry says the toll from the fighting has risen to 119 killed, including 31 children and 19 women, with 830 wounded.

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — Palestinians grabbed their children and belongings and fled neighborhoods on the outskirts of Gaza City on Friday as Israel unleashed a heavy barrage of tank fire and airstrikes. Israel said it was clearing a network of militant tunnels.

Separately, in the West Bank, Palestinian health officials said seven Palestinians were killed by Israeli army fire in several locations.

Israel has massed troops along the border and called up 9,000 reservists as fighting intensifies with the Islamic militant group Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip. Palestinian militants have fired some 1,800 rockets, and the Israeli military has launched more than 600 airstrikes, toppling at least three high-rise apartment buildings, and has shelled some areas with tanks stationed near the frontier.

As Israel and Hamas plunged closer to all-out war despite international efforts at a cease-fire, communal violence in Israel erupted for a fourth night. Jewish and Arab mobs clashed in the flashpoint town of Lod, even after Israel dispatched additional security forces.

The Gaza Health Ministry says the toll from the fighting has risen to 119 killed, including 31 children and 19 women, with 830 wounded. The Hamas and Islamic Jihad militant groups have confirmed 20 deaths in their ranks, though Israel says that number is much higher. Seven people have been killed in Israel, including a 6-year-old boy and a soldier.

Of the seven Palestinians killed in the West Bank, most were killed in stone-throwing clashes in several locations, although one was killed while trying to stab an Israeli soldier, the health officials said. About 100 were injured, most by live fire, they said.

The protests took place in several locations across the West Bank, signaling a new wave of unrest there as part of the escalation of fighting between Israel and Gaza’s Hamas rulers.

Before dawn Friday, Israeli tanks and warplanes carried out an intense barrage on the northern end of the Gaza Strip.

In the darkness, Houda Ouda and her extended family ran frantically inside their home in the town of Beit Hanoun, trying to find shelter as the earth shook for two and half hours, Ouda recalled.

“We even did not dare to look from the window to know what is being hit,” she said. When daylight came, she saw the swath of destruction outside: streets cratered, buildings crushed, their facades torn off, an olive tree burned bare, dust and powered concrete covering everything.

Among the dead was a family of six. Rafat Tanani, his pregnant wife and four children, aged 7 and under, were killed after an Israeli warplane reduced their four-story apartment building to rubble in the neighboring town of Beit Lahia, residents said.

Four strikes hit the building at 11 p.m., just before the family was going to sleep, Rafat’s brother Fadi said. The building’s owner and his wife were also killed.

“It was a massacre,” said Sadallah Tanani, another relative. “My feelings are indescribable.”

Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus, an Israeli military spokesman, said the operation involved tank fire and airstrikes, aimed at destroying a network of tunnels beneath Gaza City that the military refers to as “the Metro,” used by militants to evade surveillance and airstrikes.

“As always, the aim is to strike military targets and to minimize collateral damage and civilian casualties,” he said. “Unlike our very elaborate efforts to clear civilian areas before we strike high-rise or large buildings inside Gaza, that wasn’t feasible this time.”

When the sun rose, residents streamed out of the area in pickup trucks, on donkeys and on foot, taking pillows, blankets, pots and pans and bread. “We were terrified for our children, who were screaming and shaking,” said Hedaia Maarouf, who fled with her extended family of 19 people, including 13 children.

Thousands crowded into 16 U.N.-run schools for shelter, said Adnan Abu Hasna, a spokesman for UNRWA, the U.N. relief agency for Palestinians.

Mohammed Ghabayen, who took shelter in one school with his family, said his children had eaten nothing since the day before, and they had no mattresses to sleep on. “And this is in the shadow of the coronavirus crisis,” he said. “We don’t know whether to take precautions for the coronavirus or the rockets or what to do exactly.

The strikes came after Egyptian mediators rushed to Israel for cease-fire talks that showed no signs of progress. Egypt, Qatar and the United Nations were leading the truce efforts.

An Egyptian intelligence official with knowledge of the talks said Israel rejected an Egyptian proposal for a yearlong truce with Hamas and other Gaza militants, which would have started at midnight Thursday had Israel agreed. He said Hamas had accepted the proposal.

The official said Israel wants to delay a cease-fire to give time to destroy more of Hamas’ and Islamic Jihad’s military capabilities. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the press.

The fighting broke out late Monday when Hamas fired a long-range rocket at Jerusalem in support of Palestinian protests there against the policing of a flashpoint holy site and efforts by Jewish settlers to evict dozens of Palestinian families from their homes.

Since then, Israel has attacked hundreds of targets in Gaza, causing earth-shaking explosions in densely populated areas. Of the 1,800 rockets Gaza militants have fired, more than 400 fell short or misfired, and most of the rest have been intercepted by missile defense systems, according to the military.

Still the rockets have brought life in parts of southern Israel to a standstill, and several barrages have targeted the seaside metropolis of Tel Aviv, some 70 kilometers (45 miles) from Gaza.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to continue the operation, saying in a video statement that Israel would “extract a very heavy price from Hamas.”

In Washington, U.S. President Joe Biden said he spoke with Netanyahu about calming the fighting but also backed the Israeli leader by saying “there has not been a significant overreaction.”

He said the goal now is to “get to a point where there is a significant reduction in attacks, particularly rocket attacks.” He called the effort “a work in progress.”

The fighting has, for the moment, disrupted efforts by Netanyahu’s political opponents to form a new government coalition, prolonging his effort to stay in office after inconclusive parliamentary elections. His rivals have three weeks to agree on a coalition but need the support of an Arab party, whose leader has said he cannot negotiate while Israel is fighting in Gaza.

Israel has come under heavy international criticism for civilian casualties during three previous wars in Gaza, which is home to more than 2 million Palestinians. It says Hamas is responsible for endangering civilians by placing military infrastructure in civilian areas and launching rockets from them.

Hamas showed no signs of backing down. It fired its most powerful rocket, the Ayyash, nearly 120 miles into southern Israel on Thursday. The rocket landed in the open desert but briefly disrupted flight traffic at the southern Ramon airport. Hamas has also launched two drones that Israel said it quickly shot down.

A spokesman for Hamas’ military wing said the group was not afraid of a ground invasion, which would be a chance “to increase our catch” of Israeli soldiers.

The current eruption of violence began a month ago in Jerusalem. A focal point of clashes was Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa Mosque, on a hilltop compound revered by Jews and Muslims. Israel regards all of Jerusalem as its capital, while the Palestinians want east Jerusalem, which includes sites sacred to Jews, Christians and Muslims, to be the capital of their future state.

The violent clashes between Arabs and Jews in Jerusalem and other mixed cities across Israel has added a new layer of volatility to the conflict not seen in more than two decades.

The violence continued overnight into Friday. A Jewish man was shot and seriously wounded in Lod, the epicenter of the troubles, and Israeli media said a second Jewish man was shot. In the Tel Aviv neighborhood of Jaffa, an Israeli soldier was attacked by a group of Arabs and hospitalized in serious condition.

Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said some 750 suspects have been arrested since the communal violence began earlier this week.

___

Krauss reported from Jerusalem. Associated Press writer Isabel DeBre in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and Samy Magdy in Cairo contributed.

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Deaths rise as Palestinians flee Israeli fire in GazaAssociated Presson May 14, 2021 at 3:47 pm Read More »

Man charged with attempted murder in Austin neighborhood shootingon May 14, 2021 at 2:02 pm

A man has been charged with attempted murder in connection to a shooting last month in Austin on the West Side.

Clifford Jones, 27, was arrested Thursday in the 5600 block of West West End Avenue after investigators identified him as the shooter in the April 29 attack, Chicago police said.

He allegedly opened fire on the 31-year-old victim shortly before 7 p.m. as the man got out of a vehicle in the 200 block of South Lotus Avenue, police said.

The man was shot in his neck and taken to Stroger Hospital in serious condition, police said.

Jones also faces a count of aggravated battery with a firearm. He was expected to appear for a bail hearing later Friday.

According to Sun-Times records, the last shooting in the 200 block of South Lotus was on April 21, 2018, when two women were shot, one of them fatally, during a robbery.

Chicago police’s 15th District, which covers much of Austin, has reported 43 shootings this year through May 21, according to police statistics. That’s a 9% decrease in shootings compared with the same time last year, when the district had 47 shootings.

The district, however, has seen an increase in murders. Thirteen people have been murdered in the district so far this year, a 63% increase compared with the eight murders during the same period in 2020.

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

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Man charged with attempted murder in Austin neighborhood shootingon May 14, 2021 at 2:02 pm Read More »

Chicago Homes With Barson May 14, 2021 at 2:00 pm

The inner-ring suburban tradition of the downstairs bar seems to be fading. Newer high-end homes might have wet bars for entertaining; new renovations might include a man-cave; but the tiny bar—I mean an actual bar, which one could stand behind to mix drinks for one’s friends—seems to be increasingly uncommon.

This might be a good thing. Bars are a nice place to meet people and they’re an important part of the fabric of the community, which is being knit back together after most people have been stuck inside for a year. And actually getting behind a tiny little bar to mix drinks for your friends, well, it’s a bit gimmicky. And yet… they create some cool spaces, typically from a particular era and frozen in time. Here are five.

This late-Midcentury Modern ranch, built in 1971, has the Prairie-style stone to match (and of-its-era orange). It’s also, clearly, quite a beer time capsule as well. The rest of the house — four beds, four baths, 2,750 square feet—is exactly what you’d hope from the basement bar, preserving some wonderful period details: spectacularly mod wooden light fixtures in the bedrooms, an adorable little hot tub on the three-season porch, and lots and lots and lots of wood paneling.

Built in 1971—sensing a theme?—this ranch hides its five beds, four baths, and 3,880 square feet under a thick mansard roof. But inside it’s nice and bright, with very ’70s stained glass and lots of cream wallpaper and carpet. The sunny raised study, with its own fireplace, is a nice place to chill. Outside features a lush green garden for quiet, but if you really want to get away, it’s got a good-sized tiki-ish basement bar.

Dating to 1978, this classic far Northwest side late bungalow has a more modest basement bar that befits the house’s lower price and smaller size — although it does get three beds and three bathrooms into its 1,300 square feet. It lacks the fine finishes of the ones above, but the semicircle is hard to beat. The rest of the home has been mostly updated with contemporary details, save for some good choices like the patterned bathroom tiles and sliding closet doors, but the basement tells some tales.

A modest mansion in the small village of Summit just outside the city, its 3,130 square feet encompasses four beds, six bathrooms and two bars—but the really impressive space is the not-quite-bar on the top floor under a high mid-century modern ceiling. The rest of the house… doesn’t quite reflect the same style, or its 1914 date of construction. There’s some late ’80s, some early ’90s, some questionable decisions. But it’s a lot of grand space for not a lot of money.

Here’s another big (five beds, three baths, 3,605 square feet), old (1888) house that’s been updated with a very 1970s top-floor bar, this one in the architecturally dignified suburb of Riverside. The entrance is contextually appropriate: an elegant porch, a beautifully preserved main stair, lots of old woodwork with tasteful updates. There’s a generous sunroom, and on the second floor, vintage floors and a handsome fireplace. Upstairs? That’s right: knotty wood paneling, skylights, teal leather, and a parquet floor.

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Chicago Homes With Barson May 14, 2021 at 2:00 pm Read More »

Worst Things Chicago Politicians Have Said on a Wiretap, Rankedon May 14, 2021 at 2:30 pm

5. “If you’re wired or not wired that’s your business. … The only thing, if I go to jail, you’d have to go under witness protection.” — James L. Laski, 2003

4. “Of all the African Americans that I can think that are sort of like qualified … the one that’s least offensive and maybe gets you the most … is Jesse White.” — J.B. Pritzker, 2008

3. “If two fucking schemers like you and I can’t figure this out, then we got a problem.” — Edward Vrdolyak, 2008

2. “You know as well as I do, Jews are Jews and they’ll deal with Jews to the exclusion of everybody else unless there’s a reason for them to use a Christian.” — Ed Burke, 2016

1. “I fucking bust my ass to give your fucking grandma a free ride on the bus. Your fucking baby has health care. What do I get for that? Only 13 percent think I’m doing a good job. So fuck all of you!” —  Rod Blagojevich, 2008

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Worst Things Chicago Politicians Have Said on a Wiretap, Rankedon May 14, 2021 at 2:30 pm Read More »

Daily Cubs Minors Recap: Abbott and 3 relievers strike out 16 for Iowa; Myrtle Beach rallies late to winon May 14, 2021 at 2:34 pm

Cubs Den

Daily Cubs Minors Recap: Abbott and 3 relievers strike out 16 for Iowa; Myrtle Beach rallies late to win

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Daily Cubs Minors Recap: Abbott and 3 relievers strike out 16 for Iowa; Myrtle Beach rallies late to winon May 14, 2021 at 2:34 pm Read More »

Twin Chicago MDs working to eliminate entrenched racism in the medical professionon May 14, 2021 at 1:00 pm

The inseparable sisters always stood out — identical twins from Twinsburg, Ohio, whip-smart students from the side of town with unpaved streets and no sidewalks, excluded from the gifted track because they were Black.

Their friends were white and a classmate’s comment still stings: “‘I don’t even think of you as Black.’ I said, ‘Thank you.’ And I felt pride,” Brittani James recalls, shuddering.

“I believed we were special. I believed other people in our neighborhood weren’t as good as us,” she said.

The twins were indeed special — they won free rides to the Ivy League, earned medical degrees at prestigious universities, and have thrived in a profession where they are vastly outnumbered by virtue of their skin color.

But their mission now is to dismantle the entrenched bigotry behind that classmate’s backhanded remark.

At 33, James and her twin, Brandi Jackson, have taken on the medical establishment in pioneering work to eliminate racism in medicine.

“We’re teaching how to see it and how to undo it,” Jackson said.

James, a family medicine doctor, and Jackson, a psychiatrist, have developed anti-racist coursework used in two Chicago medical schools. They’ve co-founded the Institute for Antiracism in Medicine, where physicians can earn continuing medical education credit for taking classes on how their profession has made Black patients sicker.

There’s more. They’re seeking federal legislation to require hospitals to reveal outcomes by race, with penalties for those where Black patients consistently fare worse. They’ve helped created an online support group to help like-minded, stressed-out Black doctors heal and strategize.

They’ve even hatched a plan to create black coats for doctors. That’s not as radical as it might sound — black coats were the tradition in the 19th century.

Their latest achievement? Helping lead a charge against the American Medical Association and the influential research journal it publishes.

The twins are riding a wave and they got there by ”learning to breathe underwater.” That’s how Jackson describes adapting to “this constant oppressive pressure” of racism.

“I remember being young and being told in school that I can’t be smart, because of where I’m from, being told your hair is ugly,” she said. “You learn to live with the kind of pain that comes just for being. Just for walking down the street. You can’t name it when you’re that young. It does something to your psyche.”

It can break you, and Jackson and James have had fragile moments of self-doubt. But the pandemic year has fueled their resolve. They say the relentless toll on people of color from the coronavirus and video-documented police violence have laid bare the damage caused by structural racism.

”It is literally killing us,” James said.

In recent steps that critics labeled mostly symbolic, the AMA has made an effort to come to grips with its racial history. The group excluded Black doctors from its ranks for over 100 years, and even today, just 5% of all U.S. physicians are Black.

Within the past few years, the nation’s largest doctors’ group hired Dr. Aletha Maybank as its first chief health equity officer and declared racism a public health threat. In February, it removed a statue displayed at its Chicago headquarters of Dr. Nathan Davis, AMA’s founder, who promoted racist policies.

But later that month, a podcast hosted by the AMA’s flagship medical journal caused a stir. The tweet promoting the podcast read, ”No physician is racist, so how can there be structural racism in health?”

It was, Maybank said, “a gut punch.”

The sisters’ institute started a petition in response, demanding that the journal diversify its mostly white editorial staff and ensure that medical research relating to race and racism gets published. The effort has garnered more than 8,800 signatures so far.

AMA suspended the journal’s chief editor and a deputy editor resigned.

AMA also agreed to meet last month to hear demands for change from several Black physicians, including James and New York cardiologist Dr. Raymond Givens, another leading AMA critic.

The doctors will be looking to hear how AMA plans to address their concerns at a second meeting, but James says the AMA’s anti-racism plan — in the works long before the sisters’ activism — makes her optimistic. In an 83-page document released Tuesday, AMA vowed to dismantle structural racism inside its own ranks and within the U.S. medical establishment with steps that include diversifying its own staff and collaborating with outside groups.

The group reached out to James and other physicians to discuss the plan — a hopeful sign, she said.

“We still have to hold their feet to the fire,” she said.

Part of the problem is doctors’ deeply embedded identity as healers and “good people,” Jackson said. “It’s hard when you’re indoctrinated in that culture to stop and say, ‘Are we really doing good?”’

A racial imbalance in medical leadership perpetuates the problem, James said — those making decisions and policies don’t look like the populations they serve.

James treats patients at a clinic on Chicago’s South Side and teaches at the University of Illinois-Chicago. Jackson has taught at Rush Medical College and is the behavioral health director at a Chicago health network that treats LGBTQ and other underserved patients.

Working with students, medical residents and colleagues, they strive to highlight the harm caused by the disproven idea that there are biological differences in Black people that contribute to health disparities.

Some examples:

–The longstanding myth that Black people somehow have a higher tolerance for pain, perpetuated during slavery times, has often led to undertreatment.

–Medical school instruction on skin diseases typically shows how they appear on white skin, not Black or brown, leading to missed diagnoses.

–In psychiatry, impulsive, disruptive behavior in white children is often labeled attention deficit disorder, a diagnosis that often guarantees classroom accommodations. Identical behavior in Black kids is more often labeled conduct disorder, leading to detention rather than accommodations “unless they have a really sharp parent who advocates the hell out of it,” Jackson said.

–A commonly used algorithm for kidney function gauges it differently in Black patients, potentially leading to undertreatment of kidney disease. Rush University Medical Center is among several U.S. health systems that recently stopped using that algorithm.

The sisters’ message isn’t new, said Dr. David Ansell, a physician at Rush who has worked with their institute. But their timing is uncanny — coming at the convergence of a deadly pandemic that has highlighted racial health inequities, a rise in white supremacism, and civil unrest over police brutality.

At such a moment, he said, the sisters can make a difference.

Their curiosity in science and medicine started young. James remembers taking ”field notes” while spying on people. Jackson remembers turning their mother’s blue bead case into a bug hospital.

“We emptied it and would go under rocks in search of potato bugs, worms. We gave each their own compartments … then would examine them and took notes when they appeared sluggish.” Once, they sprinkled salt on a snail to dry it out when it seemed “too moist. He just curled up and died. I still feel bad about the snail,” Jackson said.

Their parents were hard-working and supportive, but the twins didn’t tell them when they were accepted at Cornell University, knowing the cost was prohibitive. They broke the news when they landed full scholarships.

It was during a college summer program that James for the first time saw a Black doctor. She stared. “It was like a unicorn,” but it planted a seed.

They separated for medical school — Northwestern for Jackson, University of Michigan for James. Surrounded by rich white kids and professors, James struggled.

“It was this huge feeling like I don’t belong here. None of the professors look like you, what you’re learning about people like you is racist and you’re getting tested on it.”

She left school for a year and sank into a deep depression until getting involved in volunteer community health work. Colleagues there encouraged her to go back. In low moments, James says she draws on the strength of ancestors.

“I’m not being bombed. I’m not being hosed,” she said. ”You have to keep getting up.”

Now, she and her sister serve as mentors to other medical students from nontraditional backgrounds.

Medical resident Shan Siddiqi is a Canadian Muslim whose parents are from Pakistan. He works under James’ guidance at a clinic where James says “the sickest of the sick” go for treatment, patients with chronic illnesses worsened by poverty, stress from living in violent neighborhoods and now COVID-19. Siddiqi said he’s impressed by her compassion, taking the time to treat them as humans and helping them overcome challenges to getting medication or specialty care.

Jordan Cisneros, a third-year medical student who Jackson has mentored at Rush Medical College, says her guidance has helped him get through a tough year. His father died from COVID-19 in January and George Floyd’s televised death last May felt personal.

“I’ve had run-ins with police. I’ve had run-ins with racism. I’ve seen things firsthand,” he said.

In a Zoom class last year, Jackson brought up Floyd’s death and broke down crying. “It’s very taboo to cry in medicine,” but Jackson made it seem OK to show emotion and vulnerability, he said.

The sisters are extremely close, often finishing each other’s sentences, but there are differences too.

James is married to a white physician, a guy she thought was a math nerd when they met but is now her partner in battle. She tears up when asked what she wishes for their 1 1/2 -year-old daughter, Lillian.

“I don’t want her to have to live in a box like I did,” James said. “I want her to raise her voice so she knows it’s OK to be everything that she is, especially when the world is trying so hard to make Black and brown girls small and not heard.”

Jackson is single, loves to cook in her spare time and thinks like a scientist in the kitchen, marveling at how a humble carrot can transform into something sublime with just a little butter and brown sugar.

James wears her passion on her sleeve and pours her soul into Twitter, calling out racism every time she sees it. Jackson says she has no appetite for Twitter wars and “tries to be the one who is grounding. I want to come at it with a loving, calm energy,” she said.

The sisters are hitting their stride in 2021; Jackson calls it the year of Black women: Michelle Obama helped pave the way, now there’s Vice President Kamala Harris.

“It moves me to tears that all of my ancestor Black women who never got to see the day … that they were in vogue and their voice was listened to,” she said. “It is Black women’s lives that survive and keep surviving.”

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Twin Chicago MDs working to eliminate entrenched racism in the medical professionon May 14, 2021 at 1:00 pm Read More »

Starting a Business From Your Garage: What You Need to Knowon May 14, 2021 at 1:06 pm

Small Business Blog

Starting a Business From Your Garage: What You Need to Know

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Starting a Business From Your Garage: What You Need to Knowon May 14, 2021 at 1:06 pm Read More »

Studio-born midwestern rockers Cumbie introduce their music to the world with their debut EPLeor Galilon May 14, 2021 at 11:00 am


Cumbie front man Aaron O’Neill says his three-piece isn’t a “real band”—they’ve only ever performed publicly once—but on their new self-released debut, EP, they rock like road-tested veterans. O’Neill started writing the record’s sleek, rowdy songs a couple years ago, when he lived in Saint Louis (he played in several bands there, including Shady Bug, a touring indie-rock group on respected indie label Exploding in Sound).…Read More

Studio-born midwestern rockers Cumbie introduce their music to the world with their debut EPLeor Galilon May 14, 2021 at 11:00 am Read More »

Chicago Cubs: Three key factors in series with Detroit TigersRyan Sikeson May 14, 2021 at 11:00 am

The Chicago Cubs and Tigers are set for a three-game series over the weekend. Here are three key factors to keep close tabs on throughout the series. After a tough series in Cleveland, the Chicago Cubs are back on the horse in the Motor City facing the Detroit Tigers for three games. The Tigers enter […]

Chicago Cubs: Three key factors in series with Detroit TigersDa Windy CityDa Windy City – A Chicago Sports Site – Bears, Bulls, Cubs, White Sox, Blackhawks, Fighting Illini & More

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Chicago Cubs: Three key factors in series with Detroit TigersRyan Sikeson May 14, 2021 at 11:00 am Read More »

18 shot, 2 fatally, in Chicago ThursdaySun-Times Wireon May 14, 2021 at 10:19 am

Chicago police work the scene where an 8-year-old boy was shot in the knee while playing outside near 18th and Kildare, in the Lawndale neighborhood, Thursday, May 13, 2021. | Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times
Chicago police work the scene where an 8-year-old boy was shot in the knee while playing outside near 18th and Kildare, in the Lawndale neighborhood, Thursday, May 13, 2021. | Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times | Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times, Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times

An 8-year-old boy was wounded in a shooting in Lawndale on the West Side.

Eighteen people were shot, two fatally Wednesday in Chicago, including a 25-year-old man killed in Chatham.

Two men, both 25, were standing on the sidewalk about 4:30 p.m. in the 700 block of East 79th Street when someone came out from the alley and began firing shots, Chicago police said.

One man was shot in the abdomen and arm and was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead, police said. The Cook County medical examiner’s office hasn’t identified him.

The other was struck in the neck, leg and back and was taken to the same hospital in critical condition, police said.

Another man was killed in a shooting Thursday night in Bronzeville on the South Side.

The 34-year-old man was standing on the sidewalk about 9 p.m. in the 400 block of East 48th Street when someone fired shots police said.

He was shot in the face and leg and was transported to the University of Chicago Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead, police said. The Cook County medical examiner’s office hasn’t released his identity.

In non-fatal attacks, one child and four teenagers were wounded in shootings across the city.

— An 8-year-old boy was wounded in a shooting in Lawndale on the West Side.

The boy was in the street about 6 p.m. in the 1800 block of South Kildare Avenue when someone began firing shots, police said. He was shot in the knee and was taken by citizens at the scene to Mount Sinai Hospital where his condition was stabilized, police said.

The boy was not the intended target, according to police.

— Two teenage boys were shot in West Englewood on the South Side.

The boys, 15 and 16 were walking about 6:40 p.m. in the 7200 block of South Wood Street when they heard gunshots, police said.

A 16-year-old was struck in the abdomen and the other, 15, was shot in the arm, police said. The boys walked to Holy Cross Hospital and were transferred to a nearby trauma center where their conditions were stabilized, according to police.

— A 16-year-old boy was shot in Gresham on the South Side.

The teen boy was getting into his vehicle about 1:45 p.m. in the 8600 block of South Wallace Avenue when a male suspect approached him and began firing shots, police said.

He was struck in the heel and self-transported to Holy Cross Hospital, where his condition was stabilized, police said.

— Another 16-year-old boy was shot in the West Englewood neighborhood.

The teen boy was standing outside about 10 p.m. in the 5900 block of South Paulina Street when he heard gunshots and felt pain, police said.

He was struck in the thigh and was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center in good condition, police said. Officers said the gunshot wound appeared to be self-inflicted, according to police.

Other shootings:

— A 31-year-old man was shot driving in Logan Square on the Northwest Side.

About 11:15 p.m., the man was in the 2100 block of North Kedzie Avenue when a sedan pulled alongside him and someone inside fired shots, police said. He was struck in the back and taken to Illinois Masonic Hospital in fair condition, police said.

— A 50-year-old man was shot in a home Thursday in West Englewood on the South Side.

The man was shot in the leg inside a residence about 6:55 p.m. in the 6400 block of South Honore Street, police said.

—A 23-year-old man was hurt in a drive-by shooting in Grand Crossing on the South Side.

The man was walking about 6:40 p.m. in the 900 block of East 79th Street when a vehicle drove by and someone from inside fired shots, police said. He suffered a graze wound to the hand and was treated on the scene by Chicago Fire paramedics, police said. He was released after his condition was stabilized.

— A 33-year-old man was shot in Ashburn on the Southwest Side.

The man was driving about 5:10 p.m. in the 3000 block of West Columbus Avenue when he heard shots and felt pain, police said.

He was shot in the abdomen and suffered graze wounds to his leg and back, police said. He was taken to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn where his condition was stabilized.

— A 25-year-old man was wounded in a shooting in Grand Crossing on the South Side.

He was walking about 2:30 p.m. in the 6700 block of South Blackstone Avenue when someone opened fire, striking him in the leg, police said. He was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center, police said.

— A man was wounded in a shooting in Englewood on the South Side.

He was walking about 10:40 a.m. in the 5900 block of South Carpenter Street when a white Dodge Durango drove by and someone inside fired shots, police said. The 34-year-old was struck in the abdomen and taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center in good condition, police said.

— A 47-year-old man was shot in Back of the Yards on the South Side.

About 12:40 a.m., he was sitting in a vehicle at a gas station in the 800 block of West Garfield Boulevard, when two men got out of a white sedan and fired shots, police said. The man was struck in the left leg and brought to the University of Chicago Medical Center in fair condition, police said.

— Two women were shot in Austin on the West Side and one of them returned fire but did not hit the gunman, according to police.

The two, 24 and 25, were standing on the sidewalk in the 4800 block of West Quincy Street when someone they knew walked up and fired, police said. The 24-year-old, a concealed carry cardholder, returned fire.

The 25-year-old was struck in the right buttocks and taken to Mt. Sinai Hospital in serious condition, police said. The younger woman was struck in the right leg and taken to the same hospital in good condition.

— A 49-year-old woman was shot in Chicago Lawn on the Southwest Side.

About 12:25 a.m., she was walking in the 2700 block of West 62nd Street, when she heard shots and felt pain, police said. The woman was struck in both legs and brought to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn in fair condition, police said.

Five people were shot, one fatally, Wednesday in Chicago.

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18 shot, 2 fatally, in Chicago ThursdaySun-Times Wireon May 14, 2021 at 10:19 am Read More »