By Michael Heinley | Community Contributor By now everybody has had the opportunity to see the South Loop transform rapidly into the epicenter of Chicago’s

By Dan Patton | Managing Editor The best way to experience a Chicago Bears game without actually buying a ticket is to watch it in a bar next to Soldier Field.
By Corey Bealeart | Community Contributor Chicago has had its fair share of tragedy, both past and present. Massive fires that razed the city, gang violence and ship disasters. According
By Dan Patton | Managing Editor The South Loop is less than a year away from welcoming hundreds of new residents and two new retailers into a tower of curved glass
By Dan Patton | Managing Editor For nearly a decade, a number of disagreements that started within Columbia College have grown to affect the entire community. It began in 2006, when
By Dan Patton | Staff Writer Printers Row resident Larry Crost considers himself one of the luckiest educators in the city. For more than twenty years, the registered art therapist has helped
By Dan Patton | Managing Editor On December 5, 1853, Constable James Quinn became the first Chicago police officer killed in the line of duty when he sustained fatal injuries during
The Motor Row Craft Beer & Wine Festival — a celebration of food, music, beverages and classic cars — transformed Wabash Avenue into a multigenerational playground of outdoor recreation between 16th and 18th Streets
By Michael Heinley | Community Contributor By now everybody has had the opportunity to see the South Loop transform rapidly into the epicenter of Chicago’s
By Dan Patton | Managing Editor Chicago’s 1st Police District, together with representatives of the Chicago Alternative Policing Strategy (CAPS) and soldiers from the Illinois National