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Countering the Naysayers: Benefits of Taking College Classes from Homeon December 16, 2020 at 1:03 am

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Countering the Naysayers: Benefits of Taking College Classes from Home

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Countering the Naysayers: Benefits of Taking College Classes from Homeon December 16, 2020 at 1:03 am Read More »

Woman dies days after Englewood fireon December 15, 2020 at 11:53 pm

A woman who was pulled from a house fire last week in Englewood has died of her injuries.

The 70-year-old was pronounced dead at 4:40 p.m. Tuesday at the University of Chicago Medical Center, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

She was identified as Doretha Bowdry, the medical examiner’s office said. Autopsy results found she died of smoke inhalation and ruled her death an accident.

Bowdry, along with a 62-year-old man and a 41-year-old woman, were pulled out of a house fire about 8:20 p.m. Dec. 7 in the 5800 block of South Peoria Street, Chicago police and the medical examiner’s office said.

The man was in critical condition and the other woman was listed in good condition at the University of Chicago Medical Center, police said.

The cause of the fire appears to be accidental, police said.

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Hello, my name is Patrick and I’m a recovering alcoholic.on December 15, 2020 at 7:00 pm

Comedy, Tragedy or Me?

Hello, my name is Patrick and I’m a recovering alcoholic.

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Hello, my name is Patrick and I’m a recovering alcoholic.on December 15, 2020 at 7:00 pm Read More »

Defending Joe Epsteinon December 15, 2020 at 7:05 pm

The Barbershop: Dennis Byrne, Proprietor

Defending Joe Epstein

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Defending Joe Epsteinon December 15, 2020 at 7:05 pm Read More »

League punishes Texas high school football player who hit officialon December 15, 2020 at 7:20 pm

The Texas high school player who was ejected from a game, went back on the field and hit an official has received more stern penalties.

As have his coach and school.

During an at-times tense hearing on Monday, the University Interscholastic League voted unanimously to suspend Edinburg High School defensive lineman Emmanuel Duron from all UIL activities for the rest of his senior academic year, The Monitor in in McAllen, Texas, reported.

Duron’s coach, JJ Leija, received a one-year probation period beginning at the start of the 2021-22 academic year. Additionally, Edinburg High’s athletic programs will go on a probationary period that will begin immediately and conclude at the end of the 2022-23 school year.

“I’d like to say that I’m sorry for what happened to my coaches, my family and to the UIL,” Duron said Monday.

Duron already faces assault charges from the Dec. 3 incident in which he knocked an official to the field after the player received a personal foul and ejection from a District 31-6A zone play-in game against Pharr-San Juan-Alamo High.

The 18-year-old was charged with class A assault during an arraignment and booked into Hidalgo County jail before posting a $10,000 bond.

According to the San Antonio Express-News, Duron was suspended from school for three days and he will attend weekly counseling sessions as part of a behavioral intervention plan.

This was not the first incident for Duron.

In a soccer match against Edinburg Vela during the 2019-20 academic year, Duron slapped a red card out of an official’s hand and shoved the official’s chest with both hands before being removed from the field by coaches.

Duron was suspended from participating in soccer for the remainder of the 2019-20 season.

Read more at usatoday.com

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League punishes Texas high school football player who hit officialon December 15, 2020 at 7:20 pm Read More »

Richard’s Bar in River West Stays Ignoring the Rules, Just How They Like Iton December 15, 2020 at 7:20 pm

Richard’s Bar doesn’t care for your state-ordered shutdown. In fact, Richard’s Bar doesn’t care much about anything, and hasn’t, since it opened in 1926 and the COVID-19 pandemic has shown that with a large, shining, spotlight.

Richard’s Bar is a River West landmark. Hell, it’s a Chicago landmark. It’s known for a lot, sought out by a few, tends to be rough around the edges in the classic Chicago kind of way. Almost as if Shameless the TV show was turned into a popular bar. You can buy cigarettes by the pack behind the bar, hard-boiled eggs are served sometimes, someone always has an opinion, it may or may not still be mafia-associated, and it’s cash only. The funny part about Richard’s Bar is the fact that it’s located between two of the city’s top Italian restaurants and at a corner in the city (Milwaukee/Grand/Halsted) where just about everything has modernized around it.

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So it should come as no surprise that despite a statewide ban on indoor dining and drinking that Richard’s is continuing to operate as if there was nothing going on outside its four walls. They’re even openly combating the city saying that it “will not comply” should the city try and come in and shut it down with a large sign on their front entrances. You can’t make this up. Per Block Club Chicago, the sign included:

“If you are asking us to shut down our business, we will not comply as that request is unlawful according to the law identified below…We have legal counsel … representing us and we’re happy to provide any notices or citations to him if that’s necessary.”

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This is just an additional notch in the Richard’s Bar belt of not giving a damn about anything. Ever since the city banned indoor smoking in bars more than 10 years ago Richard’s has been known as the place where you can just light up right at your seat. In February of this year, there was a stabbing right outside of the joint after two men had spent the night drinking and now Richard’s finds themselves in the middle of a wrongful death lawsuit alleging that the accused was over-served.

While Richard’s certainly takes the cake for brazen lack of compliance, this seems to be par for the course for a lot of the city’s tavern ownership. Many can’t afford to shut down or lose the business of indoor dining so their thought process has been serve them now and deal with the fine later and hopefully the business covers that cost. Certain suburbs have found themselves in a battle against the state government willingly not complying with state ordinances and restrictions during the pandemic.

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It just never seems to end for Richard’s. I’m not sure they want it to, honestly, as they’re going with the all press is good press depending on who you talk to adage; a sentiment I’m sure resonates with their standard patronage. I can recall a time I went to Richard’s Bar with a few co-workers after a holiday party. I left in the middle of the party on the account of a dare to go and get myself a tattoo. If I came back with one, one of the directors said he’d cover my drinks for the night. So I did, they left the bar across the street and headed to Richard’s and when I met them there afterwards, showed them the ink and said pay up, the guy behind the bar told me to shut the f*ck up or go somewhere else. That’s Richard’s Bar for you.

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You can read the transcript of the public notice that was posted on the doors to their entrance and read it for yourself:

Dear Patrons: 

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Our establishment is presently open and we are taking extra precautionary measures to make sure that our employees, customers, or anyone that enters our building, understands that safety is our [number] one priority! As currently required by IDPH rule 690.50, please keep your face mask on while walking inside the premises at all times.

Dear Government Agencies: 

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If you are asking us to shut down our business, we will not comply as that request is unlawful according to the law identified below. We have legal counsel (Thomas DeVore – Silver Lake group, LTD. #618 223-0737) representing us and we’re happy to provide any notices or citations to him if that’s necessary. Thank you and we understand you are just doing your job, as we are also just doing our job, by providing a safe environment for our employees and patrons.

Illinois Department of Public Health act 20 ILCS 2305(c)

Except as provided in this section, no place may be ordered to be closed and made off-limits to the public except with the consent of the owner of the place, or upon the prior order of a court of competent jurisdiction. The Department may, however, order a place to be closed and made off-limits to the public on an immediate basis without prior consent or court order if, in the reasonable judgment of the Department, immediate action is required to protect the public from a dangerously contagious or infectious disease.

In the event of an immediate order issued without prior consent or court order, the Department shall, as soon as practical, within 48 hours after issuing the order, obtain the consent of the person or owner or file a petition requesting a court order authorizing the closure.

To obtain a court order, the Department, by clear and convincing evidence, must prove that the public’s health and welfare is significantly endangered by a place where there is a significant amount of activity likely to spread a dangerously contagious or infectious disease.

For what it’s worth, the air inside Richard’s Bar might be the only place in the city where COVID-19 couldn’t live. But that’s Richard’s Bar for you. And it’s just exactly how they like it.

Featured Image Credit: Richard’s Bar on Facebook

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Richard’s Bar in River West Stays Ignoring the Rules, Just How They Like Iton December 15, 2020 at 7:20 pm Read More »

Chicago Public Schools Students Learn about Responsible Reporting from Accomplished Journalistson December 15, 2020 at 6:09 pm

The White Rhino: A Blog about Education and Latino Issues

Chicago Public Schools Students Learn about Responsible Reporting from Accomplished Journalists

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Chicago Public Schools Students Learn about Responsible Reporting from Accomplished Journalistson December 15, 2020 at 6:09 pm Read More »

Chicago’s 25 most-searched items of 2020 on Googleon December 15, 2020 at 6:28 pm

ChicagoNow Staff Blog

Chicago’s 25 most-searched items of 2020 on Google

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Chicago’s 25 most-searched items of 2020 on Googleon December 15, 2020 at 6:28 pm Read More »

The winningest high school basketball programs of the decade: No. 49 Lake Parkon December 15, 2020 at 5:02 pm

When high school basketball fans think back to the 1980s, programs like Quincy, Providence St. Mel, East St. Louis Lincoln and the arrival of city powers King and Simeon are easy to think back on.

The 1990s brought us memorable basketball giants in Peoria Manual and Thornton, a few steamrolling Proviso East teams and the continued dominance of King.

The first 10 years of the 2000s included Glenbrook North, Peoria High and the beginning of a Simeon juggernaut.

Now, with the calendar inching closer to wrapping up an unforgettable 2020, the end of this month closes out another decade. And it’s another high school basketball time period to look back on.

Earlier this year we broke down the decade’s best teams and best players. Now, with every season of the past decade complete, it’s time to look at the Chicago area programs who won the most.

This list is comprised of the 50 winningest programs over the past 10 years, starting with the 2010-11 season and concluding with the 2019-20 season. Every team in every class throughout the Chicago area will be broken down in a variety of ways. But total wins, with winning percentage used as tie-breaker, determined the rankings.

We present No. 49 today and will add one program a day going forward.

49. LAKE PARK: 181-117

Decade’s biggest storyline: The deepest postseason run in program history included the first and only sectional championship in 2015. The Lancers, who won 25 games and a DuPage Valley Conference title, beat Palatine and St. Viator in the sectional before falling to Geneva in double overtime in the super-sectional.

Underrated decade highlight: The program won holiday tournaments at Wheeling and Pekin, along with five regional titles and a sectional championship without producing a single scholarship player at the Division II or Division I level.

Player of the Decade: Dominique Spencer (2012)

All-Decade Team: Dominique Spencer (2012), Garrett Fant (2017), Marcus McDaniel (2015), Luke Sgarbossa (2020) and Trevor Montiel (2020)

Lake Park's Marcus McDaniel (30) passes the ball up court against Wheaton-Warrenville South.
Lake Park’s Marcus McDaniel (30) passes the ball up court against Wheaton-Warrenville South.
Sun-Times file photo

Other decade news and highlights:

The Lancers played the role of Cinderella well throughout the decade. In three of the five regional championships, the Lancers beat higher-seeded teams in the regional final: No. 7 Lake Park over No. 2 Benet in 2019; No. 11 Lake Park over Prospect in 2017; and No. 5 Lake Park over No. 4 York in 2012.

-The decade produced two of the top five scorers in school history as Dominique Spencer is third all-time with 1,096 points and Luke Sgarbossa is fifth with 1,053 points.

-The decade included a change at the top as Billy Pitcher, who had a successful run at Lake Zurich, took over as coach at Lake Park in 2018. He replaced Josh Virostko, who resigned following the 2017-18 season and after leading the Lancers to their first sectional title in 2015.

Winningest Chicago area high school basketball programs over the past decade:

50. Thornwood
49. Lake Park
48. Revealed tomorrow

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