ap

Skip to content

Daywatch: Lightfoot’s gas card plan advances | Lost Larson pays fired worker after retaliation claim | Bulls even playoff series against Bucks

PUBLISHED:
Getting your player ready...

Good morning, Chicago.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s high-profile effort to hand out 50,000 gas cards and 100,000 CTA transit fare cards narrowly cleared an important City Council hurdle Wednesday even as than helping citizens.

“I’ve heard from some constituents who’ve said they feel this is the mayor trying to prove that she has the biggest gas hose,” said Northwest Side Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa, 35th.

Lightfoot’s plan, dubbed “Chicago Moves,” came just weeks after onetime political supporter and now potential mayoral opponent Willie Wilson used his own money to buy more than $1 million in free gas at Chicago stations in March as prices at the pump have soared. participating in Wilson’s latest giveaway Saturday, one that now comes with to potential voters.

And in Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday, even as he ordered his troops not to storm the last pocket of Ukrainian resistance. Meanwhile, as thousands of tanks and troops rumbled into Chernobyl in the earliest hours of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February, they churned up highly contaminated soil from the site of the 1986 accident that was the world’s worst nuclear disaster. It’s being seen as a seen as

Here are the top stories you need to know to start your day.

| | | | |

Renowned Chicago bakery Lost Larson paid more than $2,000 last month to a former employee after the National Labor Relations Board found merit to the worker’s claim that she was .

Lucy Honold, 31, who worked at Lost Larson from November 2020 until her firing Aug. 2, 2021, filed a charge with the NLRB in November. A four-month investigation concluded Honold had been fired in response to “her protected concerted activity of bringing workers’ concerns to the employer’s attention,” a NLRB spokesperson said.

Chicago Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez asked a federal judge to consider the , Ald. Daniel Solis, when weighing the unprecedented deal Solis has been offered by federal prosecutors in his bribery case.

Sigcho-Lopez’s two-page victim impact statement was sent to U.S. District Judge Andrea Wood in the form of a letter, not a formal filing in the case against Solis, who pleaded not guilty to a bribery count last week as part of a deferred prosecution agreement with the U.S. attorney’s office.

A University of Chicago Medicine doctor is arguing that one of the most common types of cancer in men sometimes shouldn’t be called cancer at all — a stance that some say could save many patients from invasive, unnecessary treatments but others say could put patients at risk.

Dr. Scott Eggener argues in a paper published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology that Gleason 6 .

DeMar DeRozan is a man of his word, the Tribune’s Julia Poe writes. He proved that to Chicago Bulls fans Wednesday night, devouring the Milwaukee Bucks defense in the second half to cement a 114-110 win that evened the first-round playoff series at a game apiece.

The Bulls star didn’t disguise his frustration after Game 1, promising he wouldn’t repeat his 6-of-25 shooting performance. In Game 2, .

Chicago baseball fans don’t have to go far for a great game day experience — the majesty of Wrigley Field, the camaraderie of Sox Park. But if that first whiff of fresh air at a springtime ballgame has got you spellbound with wanderlust, why not make an excuse to join your favorite team at an away game for a weekender that’s sure to be a home run.

to cheer on the Chicago team of choice, then spend some time taking in sights, activities and delicious food.

()

RevContent Feed

More in Sports