Overprescribed and underfunded: Illinois’ surge in overdose deaths

Naloxone

By Jack Adams, Talia Beechick and Madison Hopkins Chris Nielsen’s future looked bright. A senior in high school, he played catcher on his school’s baseball team in a Chicago suburb and was offered a full scholarship to play the sport at Michigan State University. But at age 17, after his first knee surgery, he was […]

Lowe’s revenue jumps on hot housing market and warmer winter

Lowe's

By Poroma Pant Lowe’s Cos. Inc. fourth quarter operating earnings showed a solid increase, as the retailer of home-improvement and building products profited from the recovering housing market and favorable weather conditions. For the quarter ending Jan 29, the North Carolina company reported net earnings of $11 million, or a penny per diluted share, down […]

Brains and blood can’t overshadow classic love story

By Tim Rosenberger You need to ask yourself one important question if you’re thinking about seeing “Pride and Prejudice and Zombies,” the newest film by director/writer Burr Steers that opened on Feb. 5. Do you like or even care about Jane Austen’s classic 1813 story, “Pride and Prejudice?” If your answer is a resounding “no” […]

Calling funding cuts wrong approach, panel says higher ed should be a right

By Thomas Vogel Mariane Magbanua fought back tears as she described the positive effect of higher education on her life. The daughter of immigrant parents, Magbanua is a first-generation college student, working toward a bachelor’s degree in public policy at DePaul University. “I grew up thinking I only had one path,” Magabanua said. “Higher education […]

Wildcats foul up against Michigan in home finale

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By Michelle R. Martinelli The Northwestern women’s basketball team didn’t need to do anything crazy to beat Michigan. It didn’t need a buzzer-beater or a miraculous run in the last two minutes. It just needed to hit its free throws scattered throughout the game. Instead, the Wildcats made 9-of-15 at the line, and those six […]

Students Cooking Competition Reimagines Healthy Menus in Chicago Schools

George Washington High School Students

By Anna Boisseau Public school students across Chicago had special choices on their lunch menu last Thursday: a Cajun chicken lettuce wrap, roasted corn relish, and peach and yogurt pizza, all invented by four peers in the culinary program at George Washington High School. The young chefs won the city-wide Cooking Up Change competition put […]

Christ the King gets a jumpstart on college (video)

By Jasmine Cannon Students at Christ the King Jesuit College Preparatory School had a packed day on Tuesday with a college fair, ACT practice test and college visits. The Mid-American Catholic Colleges fair gave students the opportunity to learn more about its colleges and universities, and college life. At the same time, some students were […]

Artist aims for radical visibility with new clothing line for queer people with disabilities

Sew

By Rebekah Frumkin Sky Cubacub, who uses the personal pronoun “they,” runs excitedly around this Lakeview studio, retrieving various chainmaille garments in the process. The bounty includes a chainmaille vest, a halter dress and bands of “metamaille,” or chainmaille that has itself been woven into a chainmaille pattern. “I’m super drawn to chainmaille because of […]

Charlotte Moorman: Shattering barriers between art and technology

By Elizabeth Bacharach Can a television and a topless cellist wearing a pair of them be art? To Charlotte Moorman—the Julliard-trained cellist commonly known as the “topless cellist”— a television is art. This is evident in the first major Moorman exhibition. “A Feast of Astonishments,” open through July 17 at Northwestern University’s Mary and Leigh […]

Japanese Americans commemorate the 74th anniversary of World War II internment

japanese internment day of remembrance

By Jenny G. Zhang Jean Mishima was 6 years old when she and her family were forced to leave their home in California and relocate to an internment camp 600 miles away in Gila River, Arizona. “My parents, they lost everything,” Mishima recalled. Their five acres of farmland, their livelihoods, their dignity – all of […]