Kathy Headley

Kathy Headley

Feathered friends find home at park

Spread the love

By Kathy Headley

Your correspondent in Chicago Lawn and Marquette Manor

6610 S. Francisco • (773) 776-7778

Recently we talked about the blue herons, the black crowned herons and falcons, among others that can be spotted at Marquette Park along the shores.

On that last beautiful Sunday when the temperatures went back up to the 70s, Kayla and I spent most of the day at the park exploring. On our adventure, as she likes to call it, we met Dennis K., who had spotted a great horned owl up high in one of the tallest trees just east of Kedzie and south of the Ashburn prairie section. As it was super windy that day, we spent a bit of time watching it disappear behind that branches and then reappear as the breeze calmed down.

kathyheadley2021

Kathy Headley

Dennis told us he has been spending time riding his bike through the park for years and this is the first time he has seen a great horned owl in the area. He posted a short video of the owl in the Chicago Lawn Historical Facebook group, if you would like to see it. The video will really give you an idea of how windy it was at that spot that day too.

The last run for the Marquette Run Crew was this past Tuesday evening. Each week the crew ran or walked one of three predetermined three-mile routes. Maybe you’d like to think about joining the runs when they start up again next spring.

Speaking of Tuesdays at the park, Ben Aria and his crew are still hosting community dinners at 6 p.m. in the fieldhouse. Last week, I am told, he added a craft table for kids.

This Friday, Nov. 4 is Gym Night at St. Clare of Montefalco, 5443 S. Washtenaw, for junior high and high school youth. Games run from 7 to 8:30 p.m. And the question on this particular night is posed “Do you like volleyball?”

On Saturday, Nov. 5, the 2014 20th Century Fox film The Book of Life comes to the Chicago Lawn Branch Library, 6120 S. Kedzie. The film begins at 2:30 p.m.

The Golden Diners Program has returned and hot meals will once again be served at the Southwest Regional Senior Center, 6117 S. Kedzie.

Eighteenth Ward Ald. Derrick Curtis invites everyone in his ward to attend a community meeting on Thursday, Nov. 10, from 6 to 7:30 p.m. at Durkin Park School, 8445 S. Kolin, for a Water Project Update. Representatives from the City of Chicago’s Department of Water Management and the Chicago Park District are scheduled to be on hand to share the latest information and answer questions.

Congratulations and best wishes to Alejandro Guevara, a young member of the Second Neocatechumenal Community of St. Adrian, who was ordained a deacon last Friday.

Through the years, as we have talked about past stores that have made their home on 63rd Street, the name Adeline’s Gift Shop has come up quite frequently. Here from 1954 to 1991, it was a local favorite on the corner of 63rd and St. Louis. Adeline’s daughter has decided to rent an office space, bring down lots of treasures she still has from the shop, all brand new, and offer them for sale this week.

The sale, Adeline’s Christmas Memories, will be held at 10637 S. Pulaski, on Thursday, Nov. 3 and Friday, Nov. 4, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and on Saturday, Nov. 5, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The sale will include lots of Christmas décor, including villages and animated items, and many other vintage items from the shop.

Now back to 1978. On our visit last week, we learned that the fall of 1978 brought three new businesses to the neighborhood. Last week we started in the center of the Chicago Lawn business district with a grand opening celebration at 6301 S. Kedzie. How many of you got this one right away? George K. was the first to remember Bresler’s 33 Flavors. Now let’s move a little further west.

This week’s new business was a grand opening (“Under New Management”). The address was 3601 W. 63rd St. In preparation for the grand opening, the new owners had the dining room repainted with a mural. If I told you what was on the mural, you wouldn’t need to guess, you would know right away. So, without knowing the details of the mural, what do you think?

Local News

Sorry, we couldn't find any posts. Please try a different search.

Neighbors

Illinoisans can now get documents notarized online

Illinoisans can now get documents notarized online

By ALEX ABBEDUTO   Capitol News Illinois  abbeduto@capitolnewsillinois.com  Illinoisans who need a notary public can now access those services online through a new “E-Notary” portal launched by the secretary of state’s office. This process is one of the latest initiatives of Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias’ ongoing effort to modernize the office and its services.  Notaries…

Prairie Band Potawatomi becomes 1st federally recognized tribe in Illinois

Prairie Band Potawatomi becomes 1st federally recognized tribe in Illinois

By HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com Nearly 200 years after Native Americans were forced out of Illinois, the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation has become the first federally recognized tribal nation in the state after a decision from the U.S. Department of the Interior last week. The move represents the first victory in the tribe’s…

Remembering Lee Milner

Remembering Lee Milner

NEWS TEAM Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com On Wednesday, April 17, the Springfield, Illinois Capitol and journalism communities lost a devoted friend and advocate when Lee Milner passed away. As Dean Olsen wrote in his piece in the Illinois Times earlier this month, “Readers of Illinois Times often have seen Milner’s work as a freelance photojournalist. But…

Capitol Briefs: Expansion of postpartum coverage, ban on kangaroos among hundreds of measures to pass House

Capitol Briefs: Expansion of postpartum coverage, ban on kangaroos among hundreds of measures to pass House

By ALEX ABBEDUTO & COLE LONGCOR Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – Illinois kangaroo owners are one step closer to being forced to surrender their marsupials this week after the House passed a bill criminalizing their possession. That was one of more than 300 bills to pass the House ahead of a Friday procedural deadline.…

Pritzker says state ‘obviously’ needs to change 2010 law that shrunk pension benefits

Pritzker says state ‘obviously’ needs to change 2010 law that shrunk pension benefits

By HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com With a month-and-a-half left in the General Assembly’s spring session, Gov. JB Pritzker’s administration is readying its proposal to address Illinois’ chronically underfunded pension system. But the governor this week also acknowledged in the strongest terms yet that any plans to finally get the state on track toward…

Pritzker’s health insurance reforms targeting ‘utilization management’ clear House

Pritzker’s health insurance reforms targeting ‘utilization management’ clear House

By PETER HANCOCK Capitol News Illinois phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – Gov. JB Pritzker celebrated a partial legislative victory Thursday night when the House passed his initiative to end some practices health insurance companies use to control the amount and cost of health care services individual patients receive. The “Healthcare Protection Act,” House Bill 5395, cleared the…

Lawmakers, cannabis industry calls for ban on ‘delta-8’ and other psychoactive hemp products

Lawmakers, cannabis industry calls for ban on ‘delta-8’ and other psychoactive hemp products

By HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – Illinois’ largest cannabis business association is pushing to ban the sale of delta-8 THC, an increasingly popular psychoactive substance that’s popped up in corner stores across the country in recent years. New legislation filed in Springfield this week revives an ongoing debate over delta-8 and other…

As state continues to inventory lead pipes, full replacement deadlines are decades away

As state continues to inventory lead pipes, full replacement deadlines are decades away

By COLE LONGCOR Capitol News Illinois Clongcor@capitolnewsillinois.com Lead pipes in public water systems and drinking fixtures have been banned in new construction since 1986, when Congress amended the Safe Drinking Water Act, but they are still in use across the U.S. and in Illinois.  The presence of lead pipes has persisted due in part to…

Capitol Briefs: Bill creating new early childhood agency among 244 to advance

Capitol Briefs: Bill creating new early childhood agency among 244 to advance

By ALEX ABBEDUTO HANNAH MEISEL & COLE LONGCOR Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – Gov. JB Pritzker’s plan to create a new state agency to oversee Illinois’ various early childhood programs moved forward on Friday after the state Senate’s unanimous approval. It was one of 244 bills that cleared the Senate this week. Early childhood…

INVESTIGATE MIDWEST: Farmers have clamored for the Right to Repair for years. It’s getting little traction in John Deere’s home state

INVESTIGATE MIDWEST: Farmers have clamored for the Right to Repair for years. It’s getting little traction in John Deere’s home state

By Jennifer Bamberg, Investigate Midwest Originally published April 10, 2024 During the 2023 harvest season, one of Jake Lieb’s tractors quit working. A week later, his combine stopped working, too. Both were new — and he was locked out from making any repairs himself because of software restrictions embedded in the machines.  Instead, a technician…