Browsing: Local

Nish was identified by a colored star marking given to last year’s chicks to represent the Chicago flag. He and two female plovers from Pennsylvania were spotted at Maumee by late May, but some birders believed he was stopping in Ohio on his way to another locale, perhaps Michigan. The young plover, taking after his parents, decided to go for a first, settling down along the Lake Erie shore at a halfway point between Chicago and Presque Isle, where his mate hatched.

“This pandemic isn’t over and there are many, many people who have not been vaccinated yet,” Pritzker said Wednesday. “I talked a little bit about the fact that more than two thirds of people in Illinois have been vaccinated, but that leaves a third and we are not at herd immunity, where we need to get to. So we’re doing everything at the state level to try to incentivize people to go get vaccinated.”

“It’s an issue I have seen no data on — none whatsoever,” Evers said. “In addition, we had trouble finding people to come to work before the pandemic, during the pandemic, and after the pandemic so I think this is an issue around making sure we have the best quality of life in the state of Wisconsin so we actually encourage people to move here — I think those are things we need to take a look at. But I am concerned we are seeking a solution to a problem that may not exist.”

Theodore Hilk, 30, was found in his seventh-floor apartment, at 240 E. Illinois St., March 24, after a relative — unable to reach Hilk for several days — called police to request a well-being check, Chicago police said at the time. A death investigation was launched to determine how the Massachusetts Institute of Technology graduate had died, but initial autopsy results were inconclusive, the medical examiner’s office said.

“Virtually all of the Chicagoland area is running a precipitation deficit for the calendar year, and most of that deficit has come in the past 90 days. The deficits are much worse in the northern half of the area. For example, stations in Elgin, Mundelein and Barrington are running 8- to 9-inch deficits since Jan. 1, but around 90% of that deficit (7 to 8 inches) is only in the last 90 days.” Trent Ford, Illinois state climatologist

As the looting spread into other parts of the city, all manner of businesses were hit — shoe stores, clothing stores, nail salons, restaurants, auto dealerships, dollar stores, furniture stores, banks, cellphone stores, jewelry stores, auto parts stores, convenience stores, big-box retailers and grocery stores. Arsonists set fire to at least 71 buildings.