How Brandon Johnson spent his first day as mayor-elect – Chicago Tribune

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Good morning, Chicago.

On his first day as Chicago’s mayor-elect, Brandon Johnson echoed his winning promise to rethink the city’s approach to public safety, while his lame-duck predecessor Mayor Lori Lightfoot warned him to show humility to first responders upon the heels of another firefighter death in the city.

Fresh off his narrow victory over Paul Vallas, Johnson began his day at the Cermak-Chinatown CTA station with the customary greeting of commuters and also went on MSNBC, where he was largely asked questions about crime. Noting his West Side roots as an Austin resident, Johnson said he “might be the first mayor ever elected in the city of Chicago that will wake up every single morning in the most violent neighborhood in the city of Chicago.” Then he dug into his overarching philosophy on restoring public safety.

Read the full story from the Tribune’s Alice Yin and Gregory Pratt.

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Ald. Scott Waguespack speaks a press conference about City Council independence March 15, 2023, at City Hall.

A new Chicago mayor always goes through an early courtship/face-off phase with aldermen, but Mayor-elect Brandon Johnson is walking into a particularly turbulent City Council.

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Following four years of often-rancorous legislating under Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s frequently combative leadership and the added pressures of the pandemic, the recent elections may find the 50-member assembly even more polarized thanks to a handful of progressive victories in wards where representatives had been more moderate. And a majority of the council just last week got a jump on the new term by throwing down their own council reorganization plan.

This photo provided by the Missouri State Highway Patrol and taken with a drone as it surveys the damage from a tornado that hit southeast Missouri on April 5, 2023.

A tornado ripped through southeastern Missouri before dawn on Wednesday, killing five people and causing widespread destruction as the third in a series of deadly massive storms over the past two weeks struck the nation’s heartland.

Forecasters are keeping a wary eye out for more extreme weather as this year’s early severe storm season continues. The storms have spawned dozens of tornadoes, mainly in the South and Midwest, that have killed at least 63 people. Just last weekend, confirmed or suspected tornadoes in at least eight states laid waste to neighborhoods across a broad swath of the country.

From left: Larry Cohen, Ari Cohen and David Sager with "Flaget Madonna," a supposed Renaissance painting by the Italian artist Raphael and his studio, on March 24, 2023.

It sounds like something out of a Dan Brown thriller novel: a suburban man stumbles upon a lost masterwork by Raphael in an antique store abroad.

Stranger than fiction, sure — but thanks to a recent artificial intelligence breakthrough, it’s closer to fact than ever before.

Joe Birkett, the 1974, 1975, and 1976 Chicago Golden Gloves light heavyweight champion, sits in the ring at Cicero Stadium on March 28, 2023, in Cicero.

As part of this year’s celebration of the Chicago Golden Gloves’ 100th anniversary and the current series of boxing matches taking place at Cicero Stadium, on April 13 there is an event honoring and inducting the first class of “Titans,” seven men who boxed “before going on to extraordinary success outside of the ring in business, law or the art.”

Patrick and Devri Chism have a date night at The New 400 Theater in Rogers Park, the oldest continually operating movie theater in the Chicago, on March 31, 2023.

Three years after the pandemic closed movie theaters and kickstarted the streaming revolution, the story of The New 400 is now as commonplace as another Marvel film. But it’s also a helpful case study of why your local theater is struggling — it’s a pocket history of small neighborhood movie houses.

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