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 76 degrees. Tonight will be mostly clear with a low around 56. Tomorrow will be mostly sunny with a high near 91.
Following Chicago and Cook County, Illinois has made June 19 — known as Juneteenth — a state holiday.
In addition to signing a bill today commemorating the date the last slaves were freed in Texas in 1865, Gov. J.B. Pritzker said the state will fly a Juneteenth flag to honor the date every year starting Saturday.
“These advancements are yet another essential step in our journey toward justice,” the governor said. “With this new law, no longer can a child grow up in Illinois without learning about Juneteenth in school. With this change, the people of Illinois will have a day to reflect on how the freedom that we celebrate just two weeks later, on the Fourth of July, was delayed to Black Americans and in many ways is delayed still.”
Pritzker urged Illinoisans to learn more about the history of Juneteenth, a 1908 race riot in Springfield and the founding of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People as the holiday approaches.
The governor said he hopes that will help residents understand “the reasons why our beloved dream of freedom and opportunity for all is not yet truly, fully realized.”
Pritzker was joined by Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton and state legislators at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum for the signing of House Bill 3992, which creates the Juneteenth National Freedom Day.
The governor signed the bill near a copy of the Emancipation Proclamation signed by Abraham Lincoln. That 1863 document freed slaves in Confederate states.
Read Rachel Hinton’s full story here.
To say Roshaan Khalid’s had a difficult transition when he moved 7,000 miles to Chicago five years ago from Pakistan is putting it mildly: When Khalid enrolled in eighth grade in Chicago Public Schools, he knew little English and wasn’t sure how he’d be able to learn much.
“The whole [school] system was different. I wasn’t fluent in English, so that was a challenge,” Khalid, 18, says now. “I couldn’t understand my teachers, so I spent more time on my studies.”
Khalid ended up studying so hard that he not only aced his classes at West Ridge Elementary and later Mather High School, he was accepted to the Ivy Leagues. This fall he will head to Princeton University, where he won a full scholarship and plans to major in computer science.
“What’s amazing is that he’s had a very difficult life, and he’s worked so hard to get to this point,” said Paige Stenzel, Khalid’s high school counselor for three years. “The universe is just going to open up for him.”
Khalid graduated Saturday. He is the salutatorian of his class.
From the press box
How do you feel about the city and state making Juneteenth an official holiday?
Email us (please include your first name and where you live) and we might include your answer in the next Afternoon Edition.
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: How did you enjoy the first weekend in Chicago without pandemic restrictions in over a year? Here’s what some of you said…
“Mass Effect trilogy. Nothing has come close for the story, an excellent RPG with FPS elements.” — Daniel Schleier
“Fallout: New Vegas. It’s been out for over a decade, yet I keep returning to it. I swear that it is the one thing that got me through grad school as a coping mechanism. F:NV has some of my favorite, albeit ultra-specific, themes: nostalgia for a time you never existed in, unique and varied interpretations of history’s heroes and villains, and the anxieties of nuclear destruction.” — Colee Wong
“Goldeneye 007 for N64. We used to do bets and play for hours, good ol’ days.” — Kenneth Lopez
“Super Mario World for sure. It is a timeless classic.” — CJ Morgan
“Defender from the early 80s. The whole concept was awesome for the time, flying around and shooting the landers before they picked up the people, or they would turn into mutants!” — Seth Dominick
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