Good afternoon. Here’s the latest news you need to know in Chicago. It’s about a 5-minute read that will brief you on today’s biggest stories.
This afternoon will be sunny with a high near 80 degrees. Tonight will be mostly clear with a low around 66. Tomorrow will be sunny again with a high near 86.
A 16-year-old girl died after she was electrocuted while walking along CTA tracks in Evanston early Wednesday.
Samantha Cerrone, a sophomore at New Trier High School, was walking with another teenage girl near the Purple Line Central Street station around 2 a.m., according to Evanston Fire Department Chief Paul Polep.
Cerrone, of Winnetka, was electrocuted and taken by paramedics across the street to Evanston Hospital, where she was pronounced dead an hour later, Polep and the Cook County medical examiner’s office said. The other girl was uninjured.
Autopsy results have not been released.
David Struett has the full story.
Some of Chicago’s largest museums will stay open late tomorrow night to celebrate the city reopening for the first time in nearly 15 months.
Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced the one-night commemoration yesterday as the city readies itself for tomorrow, when the city enters what’s called Phase 5 — the lifting of capacity restrictions that had been in place since last spring.
Under Phase 5, all sectors of the economy will reopen. With no capacity limits, festivals, weddings, conferences, sporting events and museums are making a return in full force.
Participating museums — including Shedd Aquarium, Field Museum, DuSable Museum and the Museum of Science and Industry — will extend their closing time by several hours.
Get the full schedules for tomorrow at each museum in Manny Ramos’ story.
With Chicago set to fully reopen tomorrow, how do you think the city handled the pandemic over the last 15 months?
Reply to this email (please include your first name and where you live) and we might feature your answer in the next Afternoon Edition.
Yesterday, we asked you: What is the best part about your neighborhood? Tell us why. Here’s what some of you said…
“Our subdivision is filled with caring people we are proud to call neighbors. We are of all ethnicities, our own melting pot! As it should be in the USA.” — Donna Schraeder
“Brynford Park is a perfect spot. Quiet neighborhood, but still urban. Near the North Park Village Nature Center and the North Branch Bike trail. 94’s backed up? Take Lake Shore Drive downtown. Our neighbors look out for one another but aren’t nosy. We have beautiful community gardens on every corner, too.” — Elizabeth Brown
“My corner of Edgebrook — Wildwood — is surrounded by forest preserves. We get deer, raccoons, foxes and opossums visiting us, woodpeckers and hawks and chipmunks, too. We live in a forest in the city!” — Jason Betke
“Kenwood. Close Proximity to shopping, transportation, lakefront, parks, museums, hospitals.” — Norman Littlejohn
“Our neighborhood is the most ethnically diverse among all of heavily segregated Chicago’s neighborhoods — the whole world lives in West Ridge.” — Michael R. Butz
“I live next to a cemetery all my neighbors are quiet.” — Joseph Dennis Steele
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