RICJ Racial Justice Writers’ Room Launches

The Racial Justice Writers’ Room is part of RICJ’s Racial Justice Reporting Hub and Writers’ Room is funded by the Joseph and Bessie Feinberg Foundation. DePaul University’s Center for Communication Engagement is donating resources for the group’s in-person meetings.

The project was launched under former Chicago Reader co-publisher Karen Hawkins, who will be among eight mentors to support the first cohort. Reader editor in chief Enrique Limón will also serve as a mentor. Each applicant proposed a story for a project of their choice, and they will receive guidance and mentorship from other journalists throughout the reporting process. They will keep the rights to their work, and will be able to pitch their stories to any media outlet upon completion.

Judith McCray

Writers’ Room coordinator McCray is a multiple Emmy Award-winning broadcast journalist, documentary filmmaker, and media activist with more than 30 years of experience in television and media production. She has previously worked both full time and as an independent producer for public broadcasting stations WNET/New York, WTTW/Chicago, WBEZ/Chicago, WYCC/Chicago, WSIU/Carbondale, and on a weekly radio series on world affairs called Common Ground. She’s also written, directed and produced independent documentaries for PBS Primetime and national public television.

She is the Senior Professional in Residence in DePaul University’s journalism program, teaching documentary production, social justice reporting, media ethics, and broadcast writing.

Meet the  eight participants in the first Racial Justice Writers’ Room cohort, which starts Feb. 13.

Justin Agrelo

Justin Agrelo is a reporter from the northwest side of Chicago. He works as the Chicago community engagement reporter at The Trace, where he covers community-led responses to gun violence. In 2019, he earned his master’s from Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism with a special focus on social justice and investigative reporting. 

Corli Jay

Corli Jay is a general assignment reporter for Crain’s Chicago Business. Corli also takes on the labor union and media beats for the legacy publication. Before coming to Crain’s in April, she was a part-time reporter at the Hyde Park Herald, Chicago’s oldest neighborhood newspaper, and a freelancer for various publications. Corli graduated from Chicago State University in 2018 where she majored in media arts.

Dilpreet Raju

Dilpreet Raju is a student journalist specializing in health, environment, and science reporting at Northwestern University Medill’s MSJ program. He came to graduate school from a varied background, with a B.S. in biochemistry and three-plus years of editorial experience at American University’s largest campus newspaper, The Eagle. There, he covered a variety of stories and fell in love with journalism as a mechanism for storytelling and a means to connect to one’s community, big or small.

Cam Rodriguez

Cam Rodriguez is a data and graphics reporter at Chalkbeat, a nonprofit newsroom covering education. Cam has worked as a Dow Jones News Fund intern with USA Today‘s national data team, as a Hearken ElectionSOS data fellow with the Detroit Free Press during the 2020 election cycle, and has chased down historical oddities with WTTW. Cam recently completed grad school at DePaul University, during which she worked as managing editor for the school’s online magazine 14 East, helping to develop hyperlocal news solutions for DePaul and Chicago while studying data journalism, investigative and community engagement reporting, and geography.

Reema Saleh

Reema Saleh is a writer, researcher, and multimedia producer. She writes for South Side Weekly and produces the Root of Conflict podcast for the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts. At the University of Chicago, she studies public policy and specializes in race, immigration, and human rights.

Tajah Ware

Tajah Ware is a multi-hyphenate creative based in Chicago. She is deeply passionate about human connection and behavior. Whether she’s writing scripts, working as a journalist, creating films, or capturing moments on her film camera, Ware always looks for moments of realness, authenticity, and connection, and it shows in her work.

Wendy Wei

Wendy Wei is a Chicago-based journalist and writer exploring migration, diaspora, and solidarity between communities of color. Wendy’s work is informed by her lived experience as a migrant and former career evaluating humanitarian programs that serve forcibly displaced populations. Most recently she produced a Change Agents podcast episode about tackling anti-Blackness within immigrant communities on the south side. Wendy received her undergraduate degree in political science at the University of Chicago and her master’s degree in international development from Sciences Po Paris.

Chelsea Zhao

Chelsea Zhao is a graduate student of health, environment, and science journalism at Northwestern University. She is passionate about covering topics of environmental racism, health equity, and social justice in Chicago neighborhoods.

For more information on RICJ and the Chicago Reader, visit our about page.

Join the team! For current career openings visit our careers page.

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Magic Mike’s Last Dance

Alright, let’s talk about the evolution of the Magic Mike franchise. The original film, directed by Steven Soderbergh, was a deceptively dark, even tragic look at the lives of a group of male strippers who party hard and get hit by the Great Recession even harder. It’s about the American Dream, it’s about addiction, it’s about finding out Channing Tatum is freakishly athletic. Three years later, Soderbergh handed off the directorial reins to Magic Mike’s assistant director Gregory Jacobs for Magic Mike XXL, a feature-length chill session with the bros that ditches any semblance of conflict to deliver a liberating, radically joyful vision of masculinity.

Now Soderbergh returns as director to inject eroticism back into the multiplex with a sort of “Magic Mike’s European Vacation.” Splitting the difference between the tightly structured drama of the original and the looser, feel-good energy of the sequel, Magic Mike’s Last Dance continues to embody the series’ central thesis that a lap dance has the power to change lives. 

This time around, Channing Tatum’s Mike Lane is lured out of retirement by wealthy theater owner Max Mendoza (Salma Hayek), who flies him to London to direct a theatrical production of his striptease routine starring an Ocean’s Eleven-style group of the most talented strippers in the western world. If that sounds suspiciously like a 110-minute ad for the real Magic Mike stage show, which itself debuted in London in 2018, that’s because it is. This is pretty openly a fictionalized Magic Mike Live origin story, and because of that most of the dance numbers are performed by Channing’s ragtag squad of strippers rather than by Channing himself, who with two notable exceptions is here as a rom-com lead rather than as a dancer. Disappointing as that may be for the Tatum-heads in the audience, it hardly ends up mattering by the time we reach the main event: a nearly half-hour sequence of showstopper striptease choreo capped off by the titular last dance that successfully bridges the gap between Swan Lake and Hustlers. If it all ends up feeling like a backpedal from the ambition of XXL, it’s only a baby step in the wrong direction: in a decidedly sexless era of American cinema, Steven Soderbergh is still the only man brave enough to deliver proudly horny movies to the public. R, 112 min.

Wide release in theaters


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Chicago band Anatomy of Habit explore dark moods on Black Openings

Chicago band Anatomy of Habit have been around in various forms since 2008, sporadically releasing music that hammers together metal, industrial, postrock, avant-garde composition, and more. Originally a sort of floating supergroup with no fixed lineup, in the past few years they’ve solidified into a steady quintet around founder and front man Mark Solotroff. The band’s new fourth full-length, Black Openings (due February 24), recorded with Sanford Parker, features the same lineup as its predecessor, 2021’s Even If It Takes a Lifetime: guitarist Alex Latus, drummer Skyler Rowe, percussionist Isidro Reyes, and bassist and lap-steel player Sam Wagster. 

The moody 18-minute title track starts the record with a slinky, rolling pulse. Rowe’s drums and Reyes’s percussion drive a buildup that sets the stage for the first appearance of Solotroff’s vocals. From there, it’s a long, lovely journey that you can settle into, trusting that you’ll be alternately unsettled, soothed, creeped out, pummeled, and exalted, but never bored. In its harrowing climax, Solotroff screams, ”Remaining faceless / Slipping into a persona,” against militant percussion that sounds as if it’s beating his voice into a pulp.

The second and third tracks are both more than nine minutes long, allowing the band space to explore the full potential of each composition. “Formal Consequences” provides a bit of respite with its dreamy, gothic feel and slightly askew atmosphere of ominous melancholy. Sheets of shimmering guitars appear like torrential rains, giving way to a quiet interlude and a sinister sense of ritual catharsis. The bitter, biting “Breathing Through Bones,” the first song released from the album, evokes the loss and grief of a doomed romance, ending with a heavy slam of sound that’s drawn out to a clanging quiet. This show is a release party for Black Openings, and it features opening sets from dreamy local darkwave outfit Kill Scenes and Indiana goth project Twice Dark.

Anatomy of Habit Kill Scenes and Twice Dark open. Sat 2/11, 7 PM, Cobra Lounge, 235 N. Ashland, $14.84, 17+

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RICJ Racial Justice Writers’ Room Launches

The Racial Justice Writers’ Room is part of RICJ’s Racial Justice Reporting Hub and Writers’ Room is funded by the Joseph and Bessie Feinberg Foundation. DePaul University’s Center for Communication Engagement is donating resources for the group’s in-person meetings.

The project was launched under former Chicago Reader co-publisher Karen Hawkins, who will be among eight mentors to support the first cohort. Reader editor in chief Enrique Limón will also serve as a mentor. Each applicant proposed a story for a project of their choice, and they will receive guidance and mentorship from other journalists throughout the reporting process. They will keep the rights to their work, and will be able to pitch their stories to any media outlet upon completion.

Judith McCray

Writers’ Room coordinator McCray is a multiple Emmy Award-winning broadcast journalist, documentary filmmaker, and media activist with more than 30 years of experience in television and media production. She has previously worked both full time and as an independent producer for public broadcasting stations WNET/New York, WTTW/Chicago, WBEZ/Chicago, WYCC/Chicago, WSIU/Carbondale, and on a weekly radio series on world affairs called Common Ground. She’s also written, directed and produced independent documentaries for PBS Primetime and national public television.

She is the Senior Professional in Residence in DePaul University’s journalism program, teaching documentary production, social justice reporting, media ethics, and broadcast writing.

Meet the  eight participants in the first Racial Justice Writers’ Room cohort, which starts Feb. 13.

Justin Agrelo

Justin Agrelo is a reporter from the northwest side of Chicago. He works as the Chicago community engagement reporter at The Trace, where he covers community-led responses to gun violence. In 2019, he earned his master’s from Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism with a special focus on social justice and investigative reporting. 

Corli Jay

Corli Jay is a general assignment reporter for Crain’s Chicago Business. Corli also takes on the labor union and media beats for the legacy publication. Before coming to Crain’s in April, she was a part-time reporter at the Hyde Park Herald, Chicago’s oldest neighborhood newspaper, and a freelancer for various publications. Corli graduated from Chicago State University in 2018 where she majored in media arts.

Dilpreet Raju

Dilpreet Raju is a student journalist specializing in health, environment, and science reporting at Northwestern University Medill’s MSJ program. He came to graduate school from a varied background, with a B.S. in biochemistry and three-plus years of editorial experience at American University’s largest campus newspaper, The Eagle. There, he covered a variety of stories and fell in love with journalism as a mechanism for storytelling and a means to connect to one’s community, big or small.

Cam Rodriguez

Cam Rodriguez is a data and graphics reporter at Chalkbeat, a nonprofit newsroom covering education. Cam has worked as a Dow Jones News Fund intern with USA Today‘s national data team, as a Hearken ElectionSOS data fellow with the Detroit Free Press during the 2020 election cycle, and has chased down historical oddities with WTTW. Cam recently completed grad school at DePaul University, during which she worked as managing editor for the school’s online magazine 14 East, helping to develop hyperlocal news solutions for DePaul and Chicago while studying data journalism, investigative and community engagement reporting, and geography.

Reema Saleh

Reema Saleh is a writer, researcher, and multimedia producer. She writes for South Side Weekly and produces the Root of Conflict podcast for the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts. At the University of Chicago, she studies public policy and specializes in race, immigration, and human rights.

Tajah Ware

Tajah Ware is a multi-hyphenate creative based in Chicago. She is deeply passionate about human connection and behavior. Whether she’s writing scripts, working as a journalist, creating films, or capturing moments on her film camera, Ware always looks for moments of realness, authenticity, and connection, and it shows in her work.

Wendy Wei

Wendy Wei is a Chicago-based journalist and writer exploring migration, diaspora, and solidarity between communities of color. Wendy’s work is informed by her lived experience as a migrant and former career evaluating humanitarian programs that serve forcibly displaced populations. Most recently she produced a Change Agents podcast episode about tackling anti-Blackness within immigrant communities on the south side. Wendy received her undergraduate degree in political science at the University of Chicago and her master’s degree in international development from Sciences Po Paris.

Chelsea Zhao

Chelsea Zhao is a graduate student of health, environment, and science journalism at Northwestern University. She is passionate about covering topics of environmental racism, health equity, and social justice in Chicago neighborhoods.

For more information on RICJ and the Chicago Reader, visit our about page.

Join the team! For current career openings visit our careers page.

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Just last week, Brooklyn Nets star guard Kyrie Irving formally requested a trade, and days later, he got it. Now, the Chicago Bulls could be impacted by the deal.

Chicago’s front office has maintained the fact that they are unlikely to move guard Zach LaVine, who is in the first of a 5-year deal signed last summer. But, the way this roster has played, the Bulls don’t appear to be gearing up for a title run anytime soon.

If Chicago was willing to listen to offers for LaVine, Brooklyn just might be a dark horse landing spot.

There is a new rumor in regards to the Bulls and LaVine that has the guard being shipped off to Brooklyn, and it suggests a package involving the following players.

Trade Number 1 sending Zach LaVine from the Chicago Bulls to the Brooklyn Nets

Bulls Get
F Joe Harris, F Royce O’Neale,
G Patty Mills,
2027 1st Round Pick, 2029 1st Round Pick
Two 2nd Round Picks
Nets Get
G Zach LaVine

In this first deal, the Nets would be giving up forwards Royce O’Neale and Joe Harris, along with veteran guard Patty Mills. The biggest part of the deal would include Brooklyn sending a first-round pick in 2027 and 2029 to Chicago in exchange for LaVine.

These three players are hardly worth anything, and would be included mostly due to salary concerns. In order to match LaVine’s salary, Brooklyn would have to get creative and add a few players into the deal, assuming Chicago isn’t interested in Ben Simmons.

The above deal likely wouldn’t be enough to move LaVine, who started slow and is now playing good ball this year. For a player of LaVine’s caliber, there are a couple of other trades the Nets could try, but only one of them would end up getting the attention of the Bulls’ brass.

Let’s dig into a couple more trade scenarios.

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The Chicago Blackhawks sent Seth Jones to All-Star Weekend. He did a great job representing himself, the city, and the organization. Now, he is back with the team as they get set to finish out this 2022-23 season.

We know that this season is not going to end with them competing for a postseason spot but that is by design. A successful season would be seeing them land in the top four of the draft so they can help their rebuild take another step at the 2023 NHL Draft.

Obviously, they want to have the best odds at winning the lottery so they can select Connor Bedard. Nothing is guaranteed but that would change the franchise for a long time. Adam Fantilli, Matvei Michkov, and Leo Carlsson aren’t half bad either so getting into the top four is big.

The Hawks are back at it as the 31st team in the league out of 32. They will be hosting the 30th-ranked team in the Anaheim Ducks in this one. Both of these teams would love to win the lottery but there is a lot of hockey to be played.

The Chicago Blackhawks are finally back in action after All-Star Weekend.

Jonathan Toews won’t be playing in this one as he is dealing with a non-COVID-related illness. We don’t know if Toews is going to be traded (he is on an expiring contract) but this is how the Hawks might look in the not-so-distant future. Obviously, other players are in the same boat.

Chicago is actually tied with the Columbus Blue Jackets for the least amount of points in the league but they are in second to last instead of dead last because they have fewer games played. They will catch that number as the Blue Jackets finish out their bye-week this week.

Obviously, guys like Patrick Kane, Seth Jones, and Max Domi amongst others have made some big plays this year despite the team’s lack of winning success.

The Anaheim Ducks can say the same thing about some of their players. Guys like Trevor Zegras and Troy Terry have been a joy to watch but their team just isn’t winning behind them.

Each franchise is hoping to see things get turned around sooner rather than later. That is why this game is so important for the tank wars but neither team is going to see their players care much about that. Everyone outside of the front office wants to win so it will be interesting to see what happens.

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High school basketball: Five breakout juniors in the midst of big seasons

Hyde Park coach Jerrel Oliver thought the new player in the program, Homewood-Flossmoor transfer Jurrell Baldwin, would be a “glue guy.”

Even after watching Baldwin in fall open gyms, the first-year coach says he had no idea or expected the 6-5 junior to be doing the things he’s doing for the Thunderbirds this season.

“I did not expect this,” Oliver admits. “I saw some things in the fall, but I did not see it trending this way.”

What Baldwin has done after playing on the sophomore team last year at Homewood-Flossmoor is become the go-to player for a top 25 team. The do-it-all threat who can play any perimeter position is averaging 18.1 points a game while hitting 57 three-pointers on the year and regularly posting double-doubles.

“To do what he’s done while playing in the league we play in?” Oliver said. “It’s mind-boggling. And his upside is just huge.”

Baldwin has a vintage offensive game. Whether it’s showcasing a soft jumper, facilitating with outstanding passing skills or turning into an isolation scorer, Baldwin has a knack for impacting in a big way on the offensive end.

Baldwin is one of several breakout players in the Class of 2024. Here are four other juniors who are in the midst of big, breakout seasons.

Jack Stanton, Downers Grove North

The 6-1 combo guard has proven to be a spark-plug scorer, thanks in large part to his perimeter shooting and his ability to get his shot off. He thrives both off the dribble with pull-up jumpers, in transition and with catch-and-shoot threes in the halfcourt.

Stanton, who remains widely under-the-radar, has been terrific. He’s putting up a team-high 15.9 points a game for a team that’s 23-3. A deadly sniper, Stanton is shooting an impressive 46 percent from beyond the arc while making a heavy dose of them with 79 threes made on the season.

Luke Williams, Naperville North

There are very few players who are more important and do more for their team than what Williams does for coach Gene Nolan’s Huskies. He’s a tone-setting player.

The numbers are impressive for the 6-1 guard — 21 points, 4.2 rebounds, 2.2 assists and 3.1 steals a game — but more importantly he’s an energizer at both ends of the floor.

A top-flight football prospect as a wide receiver, Williams is not only a strong, compact guard who is an absolute load when attacking downhill in the open court, but he’s a threat shooting the basketball as well.

Connor May, Palatine

An argument could be made that May “broke out” a year ago when he averaged 11 points and 4.8 rebounds. Those are impressive numbers for a sophomore.

But the 6-6 swing forward has put a charge into those numbers this season to the tune of 18.4 points, 8.3 rebounds and 1.4 blocks a game. May scores in a variety of ways, whether it’s at the basket, with mid-range jumpers or knocking down one of his 32 three-pointers on the year.

May has been instrumental in leading Palatine to 20 wins and to the top of the Mid-Suburban League West.

Stefan Cicic, Riverside-Brookfield

Big men come along slowly. Nearly every single one of them. Yet there is always the danger of heaping too much responsibility or expectations on young, promising big men.

But Cicic, the quintessential developmental big man, has taken a big step forward in his junior season. Cicic, who is pushing towards a legit 6-11, has seen his production skyrocket. He’s averaging 16.3 points, 9.6 rebounds and two assists a game while blocking 29 shots.

Cicic, a mountain of a presence inside, is converting 66 percent from the field and with his mechanics and touch shows plenty of promise shooting the basketball for a 5-man.

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Wrigley Field will host Iowa-Northwestern football game

Wrigley Field will host a college football game for the third time since 2010 when Iowa plays Northwestern next season.

Northwestern and the Cubs announced Tuesday that the Wildcats’ home game would be played Nov. 4.

Northwestern played Illinois at Wrigley in 2010 in the MLB ballpark’s first college football game since 1938, and the Wildcats hosted Purdue there in 2021.

Wrigley Field has a long history of hosting football games. The Bears played there from 1921 to 1970 before moving to Soldier Field. The old Chicago Cardinals also played at Wrigley, as well as DePaul until its program folded in 1939.

Northwestern had been scheduled to play Wisconsin at Wrigley in 2020, but the game was moved to Ryan Field in Evanston because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

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High school basketball: Seeding the Class 4A and Class 3A sectionals

We will all find out the early state tournament matchups and pairings later this week. Coaches throughout the state will seed their respective sectionals by Thursday at noon.

The hope here is the coaches — all of the coaches — find the time to do a little homework in preparing to seed their sectional. We’re here to offer a little help.

It’s fun to project and analyze. This is the annual City/Suburban Hoops Report’s sectional seed forecast, where each local Class 3A and Class 4A sectional is broken down. There is research done and reasons why that are provided.

The seeds are based on all that has transpired since the season tipped off Thanksgiving week. There is a lot to take into consideration. It’s more than just the win total when you have head-to-head play, schedule strength, quality wins, how a team is currently playing and the eye test to include.

Here is how I see the sectional seed breakdown.

Class 4A: Barrington

1. Libertyville (21-5)

2. Stevenson (19-5)

3. Palatine (20-6)

4. Prospect (16-10)

5. Barrington (17-4)

6. Fremd (15-8)

7. Warren (15-13)

8. Hersey (16-11)

Overview: What’s tricky in this sectional is the top three teams have all played each other and beaten each other. Then there is a fourth team lurking with wins over a couple of the top three.

Let’s sort it all out.

Since a 3-3 start to the season, Libertyville has gone an impressive 18-2, including a win over Stevenson. The Wildcats won the Wheeling Hardwood Classic and beat talented Glenbrook North along the way. Despite being absolutely throttled in its last game to Rolling Meadows, they have earned the top seed.

Palatine is also a hot team. And it beat Libertyville way back in early December. But Stevenson knocked off Palatine at Thanksgiving. Palatine’s overall r?sum? isn’t quite as strong, particularly with hiccup losses to sectional teams Fremd and Lake Zurich. Stevenson has beaten Lake Zurich twice.

Stevenson gets the second seed and Palatine is third. But hold on …

Want to throw a wrench into the whole thing? Prospect has beaten both Palatine and Stevenson — by a combined two points. And the Knights are smoking hot since the calendar turned to 2023. Prospect has just two losses in its last 12 games. Prospect had a shot at the buzzer to win both of those games.

There are few sectional seeds that will or should change over a Tuesday-before-seeds result. But could this be one of them?

Prospect plays Hinsdale Central Tuesday night. If the Knights find a way to beat one of the hottest teams in the state, it might be time to move Prospect up. That would be wins over Stevenson, Glenbrook South and highly-ranked Hinsdale Central in the last two weeks. They are too hot and playing too well not to reward them. Bump them up a seed or two if it beats Hinsdale Central.

It’s been a nice, surprising season for Barrington. The Broncos settle in as the fifth seed.

Fremd has some very good wins over sectional opponents. The Vikings split two games with Barrington, beat both Prospect and Palatine and knocked off Warren.

Then it’s Warren, Lake Zurich and Hersey rounding out the seventh, eighth and ninth seeds. Warren beat Lake Zurich in late January and Hersey pounded Lake Zurich earlier this season.

Class 4A: New Trier

1. New Trier (25-4)

2. * Rolling Meadows (23-4)

3. * Glenbrook North (23-3)

4. Glenbrook South (20-8)

5. Evanston (20-7)

6. Loyola (20-8)

7. Niles North (22-6)

8. Taft (17-9)

Overview: This loaded sectional has sorted itself out in recent weeks. Despite so many 20-win caliber teams, there are really only a couple of seeds that still need to be figured out.

New Trier is very much deserving of the No. 1 seed. The body of work the Trevians have put in with non-conference wins over Rolling Meadows and Loyola — and being on top of a conference that features the three other top teams in this sectional — is impressive.

The No. 2 and No. 3 seeds should be determined Tuesday night. Rolling Meadows and Glenbrook North play one another with the winner getting the two seed, the loser dropping to the third line.

The quandary is in the four through six seeds among Evanston, Glenbrook South and Loyola, teams with similar r?sum?s and records.

Glenbrook South and Evanston have both lost to New Trier twice. They’ve both lost to Rolling Meadows. And they’ve split the two games they’ve played each other this season. But GBS won the most recent game in early January and gets the edge between two teams with similar schedules and records.

Loyola, which has lost to Taft and De La Salle in the past two weeks, lands at No. 6. The Ramblers have a heck of a win over Brother Rice to pump themselves up, but they fell to Evanston in overtime back in December. And that recent Taft loss is lurking.

The only question remaining that would throw things back up in the air a little is if Glenbrook South loses to Conant on Tuesday night. That would be a loss to a lower-seeded team in this sectional — and the fifth loss in the last seven games. The Titans need that win Tuesday night to solidify the No. 4 seed.

Niles North has the wins but just hasn’t played the schedule the six teams ahead of it have played.

Taft, Conant and Niles West will all be jockeying for seeds 8-10. Taft has 17 wins and a quality sectional victory over Loyola and has also beaten Niles West.

Class 4A: Bartlett

1. Benet (25-1)

2. Wheaton-Warrenville South (22-4)

3. Geneva (22-5)

4. Metea Valley (19-8)

5. Lake Park (18-8)

6. Naperville North (16-11)

7. Bartlett (17-10)

8. York (12-15)

Overview: The top two seeds are easy. Benet is a clear top pick. Wheaton-Warrenville South checks in at No. 2.

Geneva has lost a couple of late. But the Vikings have done enough to secure the third seed, while Metea Valley lands the four seed. Metea Valley has the win total and took care of Bartlett, Naperville North and Lake Park during the regular season.

Lake Park is playing its best basketball of the season with eight wins in its last nine games.

Bartlett has 17 wins but has scuffled in the second half of the season. The Hawks are just 4-7 since Christmas tournament time. But Bartlett’s wins over Hinsdale Central and Geneva back in December keeps the Hawks in the top seven.

Class 4A: St. Rita

1. Kenwood (21-5)

2. Brother Rice (24-4)

3. St. Rita (16-10)

4. Marist (22-5)

5. Bloom (16-8)

6. Oak Lawn (18-8)

7. Homewood-Flossmoor (16-11)

8. Thornwood (17-10)

Overview: Kenwood is the obvious No. 1 seed.

St. Rita has played an outstanding schedule. And it did beat Brother Rice. But it was way back in December and we’ve learned a lot about these two teams over the past two months.

Brother Rice has just been too consistent and edges ahead based on that consistency and wins over ranked teams in Curie, Bloom, Bolingbrook, Marist, Rolling Meadows and Mount Carmel. The expectation is for St. Rita and Brother Rice to meet in a rematch in the sectional semifinals.

Bloom suffered recent losses to Proviso East, Homewood-Flossmoor and Thornwood but played shorthanded with injuries. The schedule the Blazing Trojans have played, which also includes wins over H-F and Thornwood, pushes them to the No. 5 seed. Bloom has beaten Mount Carmel and New Trier while losing to Kenwood, Lincoln-Way East and Hillcrest.

It’s Oak Lawn and Homewood-Flossmoor with the fifth and sixth seeds, respectively. H-F has played a tougher schedule. But Oak Lawn has some wins that resonate, including a victory over Mount Carmel, beating Lemont and losing to highly-ranked Hinsdale Central in overtime.

Thornwood’s late January wins over Rich and Kankakee gives the T-Birds the No. 8 seed.

Class 4A: Hinsdale Central

1. Young (20-5)

2. Hinsdale Central (24-3)

3. Curie (18-9)

4. Downers Grove North (23-3)

5. Lyons (21-4)

6. Proviso East (19-6)

7. Riverside-Brookfield (20-5)

8. Lincoln Park (9-15)

Overview: This will be interesting as there are highly-ranked teams and high win totals up and down this sectional.

Young has still lost to just two in-state opponents: Kenwood by two points and to Joliet West. The Dolphins have beaten St. Rita, Kenwood and a host of out-of-state teams. Young gets the top seed.

Hinsdale Central is rolling and is without question the No. 2 seed with a 16-game winning streak.

Then it’s between Curie and Downers Grove North for the third seed. If these seeds hold up, the fourth seed would get top-seeded Young in the semifinals and the third seed would face Hinsdale Central on the Red Devils’ home floor. Pick your poison.

Curie’s loss total will jump out. But the Condors have played a brutally tough schedule and still earned some high-quality wins. Curie’s win over Simeon in late January was a major signature win, along with wins over New Trier, Riverside-Brookfield, Oswego East and Joliet West. That’s enough ammunition to give the Condors the edge and the third seed.

Downers Grove North has won nine straight with impressive wins over Glenbrook South and Bolingbrook during that stretch. DGN split with both Hinsdale Central and Lyons. But the most recent LT matchup went DGN’s way in late January.

Lyons has beaten Glenbrook South, Proviso East and Riverside-Brookfield in recent weeks and locks up the fifth seed.

With nearly identical records, it’s a toss-up between Proviso East and Riverside-Brookfield for the sixth and seventh seeds. But Proviso East has played the tougher schedule and has beaten St. Rita and Bloom while playing Benet and Lyons very tough.

Lincoln Park, Oak Park and Lane are all hovering around the No. 8 seed with similar records. Lincoln Park has played the best schedule and has beaten Lane while Oak Park has sputtered, losing six of its last eight.

Class 4A: Bolingbrook

1. Joliet West (22-5)

2. Bolingbrook (21-6)

3. Oswego East (22-5)

4. Lincoln-Way East (21-4)

5. Romeoville (19-10)

6. Neuqua Valley (21-7)

7. Andrew (15-11)

8. Lockport (16-10)

Overview: There is a clear top four in this sectional with similar records that will all be expected to advance to the sectional semifinals. This is going to be a fun sectional with four teams that have played and beaten one another and in close games.

Joliet West built a schedule loaded with high-profile, highly-ranked teams. Thus, the record the Tigers have heading into sectional week stands out.

There was a loss to Oswego East. But Joliet West’s slate is long and impressive with wins over St. Rita, Metamora, Rolling Meadows and Young. And there is no shame in losing to the likes of Kenwood, Benet Curie and Oswego East.

Bolingbrook is playing very well and has a tight win over Oswego East and two victories over Lincoln-Way East. The Raiders land the second seed with Oswego East and Lincoln-Way East to follow neatly in line.

Romeoville and DuPage Valley Conference leader Neuqua Valley are next in line. Neither has a true statement win on the r?sum?. But Romeoville has definitely played the tougher schedule with losses to Joliet West (twice), 3A power Springfield Sacred Heart-Griffin, Brother Rice, Bolingbrook and 22-win Yorkville.

There is a glut of teams with 14, 15 or 16 wins that will land somewhere between the seventh seed and the 11th seed. Take your pick among Lockport, Plainfield North, Waubonsie Valley, Andrew and West Aurora.

We’ll rule out West Aurora as a top eight seed; the Blackhawks have bottomed out with seven losses in their last eight games. Plainfield North has lost to sectional teams West Aurora, Romeoville and Lockport.

So the No. 7 and No. 8 seeds go to Andrew and Lockport, respectively, the two teams with the best records among the remaining bunch. Plus, Andrew beat Lockport while Lockport knocked off Waubonsie Valley.

Class 4A: Rockford Jefferson

Sub-Sectional A

1. DeKalb (19-9)

2. South Elgin (17-9)

3. Hampshire (13-14)

4. Larkin (13-14)

Sub-Sectional B

1. Huntley (19-7)

2. Rockford Guilford (19-7)

3. Rockford Auburn (16-11)

4. Rockford East (17-10)

Overview: DeKalb has played the better schedule and has the most wins in Sub-Sectional A and receives the No. 1 seed. With two wins over Larkin, it’s South Elgin with the No. 2 seed.

Hampshire has quietly put together some nice wins — and played some quality non-conference opponents in losses — to inch past Larkin. The Whip-Purs just beat Huntley and have played a host of 20-win teams and conference champs.

Huntley’s holiday tournament win in December over Rockford Guilford was an important one. With a win over NIC-10 leader Guilford, Huntley gets the top seed in the sub-sectional.

Guilford, fresh off a nice win over Stevenson, has victories over both Rockford Auburn and Rockford East, while Auburn has played a quality schedule and beat Rockford East in late January.

Class 3A: De La Salle

1. De La Salle (18-9)

2. St. Ignatius (17-9)

3. Fenwick (16-12)

4. Westinghouse (17-10)

5. Payton (15-10)

6. Perspectives-MSA (12-15)

7. Prosser (3-20)

8. Bulls Prep (15-13)

Overview: The top seed comes down to two teams whose arrows have been pointing in different directions.

A month ago it was a foregone conclusion St. Ignatius would be the top seed and heavy favorite in this 3A sectional. However, the Wolfpack have struggled mightily in the past month, losing seven of its last 12 games.

De La Salle, meanwhile, has been on the rise. The Meteors are also fresh off a win over Loyola, a team that beat Ignatius last month.

The two teams do meet very soon in the regular season. But while St. Ignatius plays in the much tougher Catholic League Blue — De La Salle leads the Catholic League White — there is no denying which team is playing better basketball right now. De La Salle gets the nod.

Fenwick’s schedule gets them the No. 3 seed while Westinghouse, which doesn’t have a marquee win, earns the No. 4 seed while playing in the Public League’s Red-West/North.

Payton beat Bulls Prep this season and leads the Public League’s White-West.

Yes, Prosser’s paltry record gets them in the top eight. Prosser, which plays in the Red-North/West, is simply better than the other contenders.

Class 3A: Grayslake Central

1. Lake Forest (16-10)

2. Deerfield (20-5)

3. Grayslake Central (22-3)

4. St. Patrick (14-9)

5. Notre Dame (13-13)

6. St. Viator (11-15)

7. Antioch (13-12)

8. Fenton (20-7)

Overview: Lake Forest has played the toughest schedule of teams contending for the No. 1 seed. Plus, the Scouts buried Grayslake Central 55-34 and beat Deerfield in January. Yes, records matter. But so does head-to-head and schedule strength.

After Deerfield and Grayslake Central, it’s a quagmire among several teams.

St. Patrick has the most impressive wins among a bunch of teams vying for a top four seed, beating Loyola, Marist and Marian Catholic. The Shamrocks split with Notre Dame this season and get the No. 4 seed.

St. Viator will be overlooked in this seeding process by many. But they battled injuries early in the year. When the Lions lost to Antioch at Thanksgiving, their top player and scorer, Eli Aldana, was out with an injury. St. Viator has played a very good schedule in the East Suburban Catholic Conference and non-conference games with Libertyville, Evanston, Niles North and Sttevenson.

With seven wins in its last nine games, Antioch is playing the best among the rest. Plus, the Sequoits own a win over Deerfield. They split with Lakes but won the most recent matchup between the two.

Where do you seed Fenton? The wins are there. But the quality wins aren’t and they’ve lost three of their last five heading into Tuesday. But the Bison fall somewhere in that 7-9 range.

Lakes (16-7) has a nice record but has not fared well against sectional foes with losses to Antioch, Grayslake Central, Carmel and Deerfield.

Class 3A: Hillcrest

1. Hillcrest (25-2)

2. Marian Catholic (21-7)

3. Lemont (22-6)

4. Kankakee (18-9)

5. TF North (17-5)

6. Thornton (12-10)

7. Brooks (12-12)

8. Evergreen Park (15-13)

Overview: This sectional has an overwhelming choice at the top and breaks down quite easily. Hillcrest is the prohibitive favorite and easy top seed.

Marian Catholic has played a very strong schedule, owns some quality wins and has put together a good record over the past month (12-2 in its last 14 games). The Spartans get the No. 2 seed.

Lemont recently knocked off Brother Rice and TF North while Kankakee split with Thornton this year but won the most recent matchup.

Class 3A: Glenbard South

1. Simeon (23-3)

2. Mount Carmel (22-5)

3. Hyde Park (22-5)

4. St. Laurence (18-10)

5. Lindblom (17-14)

6. Bogan (14-10)

7. Glenbard South (14-11)

8. Nazareth (11-15)

Overview: Simeon is a clear top seed while Mount Carmel and Hyde Park, likely to meet in the sectional semifinals, settle in at two and three.

Hyde Park did beat Kenwood — and Mount Carmel has lost three straight — but it’s the Caravan with more quality wins over the course of the season. Mount Carmel has beaten Curie, Loyola, Moline and St. Rita.

St. Laurence is young, keeps getting better and has been sneaky good against some quality teams.

Bogan beat sectional foe Kennedy by double digits and has played both Kenwood and Hyde Park tough this year.

Nazareth’s record may not be impressive, but the Roadrunners do play in the East Suburban Catholic Conference and recently beat St. Ignatius.

Class 3A: Burlington Central

Sub-Sectional A

1. Burlington Central (22-5)

2. Marmion (17-9)

3. Kaneland (23-5)

4. Wauconda (12-11)

Sub-Sectional B

1. Crystal Lake South (20-7)

2. Rockford Boylan (18-9)

3. Freeport (11-14)

4. Prairie Ridge (12-13)

Overview: There shouldn’t be too much drama in seeding these two sub-sectionals.

Burlington Central beat Marmion. Marmion beat Kaneland. Those are your top three seeds in sub-sectional A.

It is a bit debatable at the top in sub-sectional B, though it really shouldn’t make a whole lot of difference at the end of the day.

There are very few common opponents between Rockford Boyland and Crystal Lake South. They both handled Jacobs. However, one solid team they both played is Huntley. Boylan lost to Huntley in January while Crystal Lake South is 2-1 against Huntley, including a win last Friday.

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Five days after ‘The Day the Music Died,’ the tour played the Aragon

Today is Feb. 8, 2023, probably, if you are reading this in a physical, ink and wood pulp newspaper on Wednesday, and not stumbling across it on the internet some other day in the tractless span of time before, or after.

Whatever day it is, were I to ask you what significant event occurred on Feb. 8, you might be stumped.

Now the third of February might be easier. On Feb. 3, 1959, in what would be widely remembered as the “Day the Music Died,” pop stars Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, J.D. “Big Bopper” Richardson, along with young pilot Roger Peterson, died in a plane crash the morning after playing the Surf Ballroom in Clear Lake, Iowa. The on-this-day-in-history vignette usually ends with Don McLean penning his homage, “American Pie,” a cryptic, 8 minute and 42 second hit song released in 1971.

A shame to stop here. Because this is where the story starts to get interesting.

The music did not die Feb. 3. Only the musicians did, and then just the top stars of the 24-date “Winter Dance Party Tour” of the Midwest. The rest of the performers went by balky, cold, broken-down bus. Where the Big Bopper, singer of “Chantilly Lace,” was supposed to ride. But he had a cold, and asked 21-year-old Waylon Jennings, Holly’s bassist, for his seat on the airplane, and the two swapped. Valens won his fatal seat in a coin toss.

The surviving musicians, shocked and grief-stricken, performed the day of the crash, in Moorhead, Minnesota.

They played Sioux City the day after the crash. And Des Moines the day after that. Cedar Rapids the day after that. Spring Valley, Illinois the day after that.

The next night, Feb. 8, was the Aragon Ballroom in Uptown.

Two observations:

First, as a nation we are more sensitive — or, if you insist, soft, though I prefer “humane.” Under those same circumstances today, I can’t imagine a musical tour would continue. Contrast the Winter Dance Party to what happened when Damar Hamlin collapsed of a cardiac arrest in the first quarter of a Monday Night Football game — the game was canceled, the fans sent home. And he survived.

Second, the youth culture that would dominate society in the 1960s had not yet flexed its grip. We forget how marginal kids used to be. Children were seen and not heard. Especially their music. The Tribune ran a brief item on the crash on page 12. The Daily News and the Sun-Times ran the stories on their front pages, the Times noting that at first the surviving musicians were too sad to do the show that night in Moorhead, “but they changed their minds and remained true to the ‘show must go on’ tradition.

Actually, tour promoter, Irv Feld, of Chicago, refused to pay them unless they continued.

Neither the Daily News or the Tribune so much as mentioned Holly’s name the rest of the year. The Sun-Times noted the Civil Aeronautics Board blaming the inexperienced pilot for the crash in a brief squib on page 61, under the obituary of a cheese expert. Seven months after the crash.

I was uncertain whether the scheduled Feb. 8 Aragon concert really occurred. Documentary filmmakers spent five years tracking down fans who attended Winter Party Dance Tour gigs without locating anyone claiming to have seen the Aragon show. I had to dig a little to reassure myself the Aragon concert probably took place, striking paydirt in the autobiography of Waylon Jennings, who went on to become a country music star. Jennings had to step up and sing Holly’s songs.

“I was out there all alone, lost and scared to death. I had no clue. It seemed to take forever, crawling through Ohio and Iowa and Illinois,” he wrote. “In Chicago, we played the Aragon Ballroom and a girl named Penny took me under her wing.”

Jennings was shocked that the promoter forced them to play, and that venues tried to steal their share of the gate.

“I couldn’t believe people would act so unfeeling,” he wrote.

For years, Jennings also felt responsible for the crash, because of some innocent bandmate needling. Holly wasn’t happy that his bassist wouldn’t be accompanying him on the plane ride.

“You’re not going with me tonight, huh? Did you chicken out?” Holly asked, just before the chartered Beechcraft Bonanza took off. “I hope your damn bus freezes up again.”

“Well,” Jennings replied. “I hope your ol’ plane crashes.”

The wreckage of the plane that crashed near Clear Lake, Iowa, in February 1959, killing musicians Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and J.P. Richardson (“The Big Bopper”).

Hulton Archive/Getty Images

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