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Michael O’Brien’s Super 25 high school football rankings for March 21, 2021on March 21, 2021 at 6:19 pm

New additions to the Super 25

DeKalb (1-0): The Barbs put up 58 points in their Week 1 win against Metea Valley.

Dropping out

Bolingbrook (0-1): Maybe it is a little harsh to drop a team out after losing to Lincoln-Way East in Frankfort. That pretty much happens to every team. But the 42-14 margin was too large and knocks the Raiders out for now.

Week 2’s Super 25

With record and last week’s rankings

1. Loyola (1-0) 1

Saturday vs. No. 2 Mount Carmel

2. Mount Carmel (1-0) 2

Saturday at No. 1 Loyola

3. Lincoln-Way East (1-0) 3

Friday at No. 8 Homewood-Flossmoor

4. Batavia (1-0) 4

Friday vs. St. Charles North

5. Brother Rice (1-0) 5

Friday at No. 7 Marist

6. Glenbard West (1-0) 6

Friday at York

7. Marist (1-0) 7

Friday vs. No. 5 Brother Rice

8. Homewood-Flosssmoor (1-0) 8

Friday vs. No. 3 Lincoln-Way East

9. St. Rita (0-1) 9

Friday vs. No. 20 Montini

10. Naperville Central (1-0) 10

Friday vs. No. 22 Neuqua Valley

11. Warren (1-0) 11

Friday vs. Stevenson

12. Nazareth (0-0) 13

Saturday vs. St. Laurence

13. Maine South (1-0) 14

Friday at Evanston

14. Prairie Ridge (1-0) 15

Friday vs. Crystal Lake South

15. Hinsdale Central (1-0) 16

Friday at Downers Grove North

16. Wheaton Warrenville South (1-0) 17

Friday at Glenbard North

17. Joliet Catholic (1-0) 18

Sunday at Fenwick

18. Cary-Grove (1-0) 19

Saturday vs. McHenry

19. Montini (0-1) 20

Friday at No. 9 St. Rita

20. Oswego (1-0) 21

Friday at Plainfield North

21. Neuqua Valley (1-0) 22

Saturday at Naperville Central

22. Phillips (0-0) 23

Saturday vs. Raby

23. Fremd (1-0) 24

Friday vs. Schaumburg

24. Huntley (1-0) 25

Friday vs. Burlington Central

25. DeKalb (1-0) NR

Saturday at Naperville North

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Michael O’Brien’s Super 25 high school football rankings for March 21, 2021on March 21, 2021 at 6:19 pm Read More »

13 shot, 3 fatally in Chicago since Friday eveningon March 21, 2021 at 6:31 pm

Three people were killed and at least 10 others have been wounded in shootings across Chicago so far this weekend, including a 10-year-old boy who was shot Friday in East Garfield Park on the West Side.

The boy was sitting in a vehicle with two other people when someone walked up and fired shots at them about 6:50 p.m. in the 3100 block of West Lake Street, Chicago police said.

A man, 24, was struck in the side and pronounced dead on the scene, police said. The Cook County medical examiner’s office identified him as Marquel Robinson of East Garfield Park.

The boy was shot in the leg, while a 25-year-old woman was struck in the thigh and ankle, police said. Both were taken to Stroger Hospital in good condition.

On Sunday, a man was fatally shot in an apartment in West Town.

About 6:30 a.m., the 39-year-old was inside of a 3rd floor apartment in the 1500 block of West North Avenue when someone he knew shot him in the abdomen, police said.

The man was taken to Illinois Masonic Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead, police said.

Saturday afternoon, two men were shot, one fatally, in Douglas on the South Side.

About 3:05 p.m., the men, 27 and 31, were in the 3400 block of South Prairie Avenue when they heard shots and felt pain, police said.

The 27-year-old was struck in the back and torso, and was brought to the University of Chicago Medical Center where he was pronounced dead, police said.

The Cook County medical examiner’s office identified him as Darrell Holiday Jr.

The 31-year-old was struck in the neck and taken to the same hospital in good condition.

In nonfatal attacks, a Chicago police SWAT team arrested a man suspected of shooting a police officer Saturday afternoon in Austin on the West Side.

Officers saw cars speed away as they responded to a ShotSpotter alert earlier in the morning near Lake Street and Cicero Avenue, Chicago Police Supt. David Brown said. While investigating the initial report of gunfire, a gunman fired shots at the officers, striking an officer in the left hand.

She was taken in a squad car to Mount Sinai Hospital, police said. Her wound was not considered life-threatening.

Saturday morning, a 17-year-old boy was shot and seriously wounded by a person who then stole his vehicle in Austin.

The teen was sitting in his vehicle about 2:55 a.m. in the 5400 block of West Race Avenue when a person shot him and took his vehicle, Chicago police said. He suffered a gunshot wound to the abdomen and leg and was transported to Loyola Medical Center in Maywood in serious condition.

A man was grazed in a shooting Saturday afternoon in Avalon Park on the South Side.

He was on the sidewalk about 1:16 p.m. in the 8000 block of South Woodlawn Avenue when someone opened fire, Chicago police said. A bullet grazed the 38-year-old in the elbow, and he was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center in good condition.

At least five others were wounded in shootings since 5 p.m. Friday.

Forty people were shot, 5 fatally, last weekend in Chicago.

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13 shot, 3 fatally in Chicago since Friday eveningon March 21, 2021 at 6:31 pm Read More »

Man charged with attempted murder after shooting CPD officer, sparking West Side SWAT standoff: policeon March 21, 2021 at 4:18 pm

A man is facing five attempted murder charges after allegedly shooting at Chicago police officers, striking one, and barricading himself in a building Saturday in Austin on the West Side.

The officers were investigating reports of shots fired about 11:30 a.m. near Lake Street and Cicero Avenue when Tracey Thomas Jr., 29, allegedly opened fire on them, Chicago police said.

When more units arrived to search for the shooter, Thomas allegedly fired again from an elevated first-floor window of a building in the 200 block of North La Crosse Avenue, police said.

A female officer was struck in the hand and taken to Mount Sinai Hospital, police said. Her wound was not life-threatening and she was released later that day.

Officers returned fire but did not strike Thomas, who holed himself up in the apartment building, police said. A SWAT team was called to the scene and Thomas turned himself in without incident about 2:20 p.m.

The officer is the third from the police department to be shot in a week.

On Monday, an off-duty officer was ambushed by two gunmen at a red light in Calumet Heights on the South Side. And last Sunday, an on-duty Chicago police sergeant was shot while standing in the parking lot of the Gresham District police station, 7808 S. Halsted St.

Thomas was charged with five felony counts of attempted murder and is expected to appear in bond court Sunday.

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Man charged with attempted murder after shooting CPD officer, sparking West Side SWAT standoff: policeon March 21, 2021 at 4:18 pm Read More »

About that magical commission that would solve Chicago’s policing problemson March 21, 2021 at 3:41 pm

The easiest way to make a farce of democracy — the power of the people to call the shots — is to generate too much of it, to create so many elected councils, boards and commissions that nobody knows who anybody is or holds them accountable.

How many voters in Cook County really have a clue when they’re voting for the dozens of judges who come up for election or retention? How many voters know who’s best when choosing commissioners for the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District?

How many voters make informed decisions when picking township school trustees in some townships? How many voters — let’s be honest — even know there are township school trustees?

And yet, when it comes to one of the most important functions of government in Chicago, the running of the Chicago Police Department, a coalition of would-be reformers is calling for the creation of an elected commission — yet another layer of semi-anonymous and only distantly accountable government — to make even the biggest policing decisions, including the hiring and firing of the police superintendent.

Wishful thinking versus reality

They are dreaming. They are kidding themselves.

They imagine a noble reinvention of the police department via direct and complete grassroots control, and who can argue with that? Sounds great. But in reality, Chicago could easily end up with a two-headed monster of an elected police board, one controlled by over-the-top “defund” activists on the left and see-no-evil cop apologists on the right.

Who, then, would be in charge? Who would step up, take responsibility and be held accountable the next time our city rises up in outrage because of a police shooting of another Laquan McDonald, Rekia Boyd, Quintonio LeGrier or Bettie Jones?

As things stand now, as we wrote last month, the buck stops with the mayor’s office. As it should. The mayor is elected and anything but anonymous. And the buck stops, secondarily, with Chicago’s 50 aldermen, who also are elected and not exactly strangers to the voters.

But, as Fran Spielman of the Sun-Times reported on Thursday, activist groups are calling for Chicago voters to approve a binding referendum to create a commission that would have complete powers overs the police department. The mayor and City Council would be sidelined.

The new commission — with nine elected members and only two appointed by the mayor — would have the power to hire and fire the police superintendent, negotiate contracts with the Fraternal Order of Police and other unions, and write the department’s budget.

There is a naivete in this. A kind of wishful thinking. There is an unwarranted confidence that the new commission, like the folks pushing for it, would be politically progressive, leaning heavily left.

As if other interest groups with other agendas would not or could not prevail instead.

Dominating interest groups

A majority-elected police commission is a bad idea, as we wrote in February, for the same reason a majority-elected school board is a bad idea. In addition to the diffused accountability that comes with diffused responsibility — the buck stops nowhere — organized interests groups could readily gain control, leaving the best interests of the average Chicagoan out in the cold.

We can well imagine an elected Chicago school board dominated by charter school interests and the Chicago Teachers Union. Exactly that dynamic — charters versus teachers — has resulted in a highly dysfunctional elected school board in Los Angeles.

And, in the same way, we can well imagine an elected Chicago police commission that is dominated not by forces for reform, however reform is defined, but by the Fraternal Order of Police. Some 13,000 uniformed Chicago police officers and their families live and vote in the city.

Chicago’s contract with the FOP is already an embarrassment. It is full of indefensible protections for bad cops. Imagine how much worse that contract might become if the FOP were to gain control of both sides of the collective bargaining table.

The mayor’s job

We strongly support a federally-monitored effort, initiated after the killing of McDonald in 2014, to reform and even reinvent the training, practices and culture of the Chicago Police Department. We’re as frustrated as anybody that this change is coming so slowly.

We also share the general view of critics of traditional policing practices that law enforcement is about more than locking up bad guys. It’s about meeting the needs of a community and making folks safer in myriad ways. Sometimes a crisis counselor can do more good than a uniformed cop with a gun.

But Chicago hired a mayor, Lori Lightfoot, to do that job. She ran on a promise to do her best to fix the police department, beholden to neither the “defund the police” movement nor the FOP, and the voters of Chicago signed on to that promise.

We intend to hold the mayor to it.

Because we sure can’t buy the argument that yet another layer of government — a commission made up of folks who might well do somebody else’s bidding instead of yours — is the key to solving Chicago’s policing problems.

Send letters to [email protected].

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About that magical commission that would solve Chicago’s policing problemson March 21, 2021 at 3:41 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears 2021 NFL Draft: Late round quarterback possibilitieson March 21, 2021 at 2:00 pm

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Chicago Bears 2021 NFL Draft: Late round quarterback possibilitieson March 21, 2021 at 2:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears Rumors: Akiem Hicks sticking around, after allon March 21, 2021 at 12:31 pm

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Chicago Bears Rumors: Akiem Hicks sticking around, after allon March 21, 2021 at 12:31 pm Read More »

Horoscope for Sunday, March 21, 2021on March 21, 2021 at 5:01 am

Moon Alert

Avoid shopping or making important decisions from 7 to 7:45 a.m. Chicago time. After that, the moon moves from Gemini into Cancer.

Aries (March 21-April 19)

You will be precise and careful when talking to others today even though you are full of clever, new ideas. Perhaps quiet research or a chance to ponder something will be the source of something fresh and new for you to consider? This is a strong day for you.

Taurus (April 20-May 20)

A discussion with someone younger, or a friend or a member of a group might introduce a new way of looking at something. You have a lot of energy to work to earn money. You might also work to take care of something that you own.

Gemini (May 21-June 20)

You will be prepared for surprises or unexpected news from parents and bosses. You might not know what’s coming: nevertheless, you will react calmly because you’re in control of things today. You’re in a groove — and you’re confident!

Cancer (June 21-July 22)

A sudden chance to travel or perhaps a sudden cancellation of travel plans might occur. You might also unexpectedly learn something new or decide to attend a school or sign up for a course. News from afar might surprise you.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)

Whether you work with a friend or a member of a group, you will make slow and steady progress dealing with issues related to shared property, or something to do with inheritances. It might also pertain to something to do with someone else’s values, especially if those values differ from yours.

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

People are impressed with your diligence and perseverance as you go about doing something that you want to get done today. You won’t stop or give up. This might surprise a friend or a partner; or perhaps, your friend or partner will surprise you?

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)

Your ability to study, write or explore new areas is steady and productive today. This is an excellent day for someone who needs to finish a paper or a manuscript. New ideas and new ways of doing something might occur to you; nevertheless, you will be persevering all the way.

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)

If you encounter opposition or have a dispute about shared property, very likely, you will succeed in getting what you want because your efforts will prevail. You won’t let up until you get what you want. Meanwhile, an unexpected social invitation might please you.

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)

If a partner or close friend opposes you today, this opposition could be relentless. Don’t get involved in a fight if it’s for nothing. Meanwhile, surprising changes or unexpected news on the home front might also catch you off guard. It’s a tricky day!

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)

You will accomplish a lot today because you will find it easy to work hard. You will be persevering and do whatever you do with great endurance. However, surprising news might trigger an unexpected short trip. You might also meet someone new who is different.

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)

This is a strong day for those of you in sports because you will be relentless in using your strength and focus to achieve what you want to get done. However, keep an eye on your money and possessions because something unexpected might occur. You might find money; you might lose money.

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)

A few surprises are likely today. For starters, you might have a clever idea. Meanwhile, you will work to create a situation at home that you want because you’re determined to create order out of chaos.

If Your Birthday Is Today

Actor Matthew Broderick (1962) shares your birthday. You are charming, easygoing and multitalented. People like you. You work hard because you want security in your life. This year will be a more easygoing year. Your smart choice will be to cooperate because your relations with others will benefit you, even business and personal relationships. Grab every chance to practice kindness and be helpful.

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Horoscope for Sunday, March 21, 2021on March 21, 2021 at 5:01 am Read More »

Illinois Fighting Illini Basketball: Big Loyola matchup is so funon March 21, 2021 at 11:00 am

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Illinois Fighting Illini Basketball: Big Loyola matchup is so funon March 21, 2021 at 11:00 am Read More »