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He said he’ll remain CEO and stay on top of Chicago operations from St. Louis. He also said the Chicago International Social Change Film Festival, which he founded, will continue.<br><br>Cambry said it’s the first step in expanding his Blue concept across the U.S. He says he plans to open in Minneapolis in March, then Atlanta and possibly Compton, Calif.<br> <br>“There are a lot of cities excited about us being there,” he said.<br><br>Cambry said operations will continue at his original center, which he opened in Pilsen in 2013, and an Englewood location that opened this spring. He said he plans to open centers in Washington Heights, Lawndale, Austin and Roseland.<br><br>“I want to be really hands on,” Cambry said. “My goal is to go to these cities and get them up and running and be there and engrained in the community ... just to make sure we keep it consistent with the culture that has worked here.”<br><br>About 4,000 people participate monthly in the Chicago coworking spaces,cheap real jordans, coding boot camps, workshops and other events, Cambry said. Membership packages start at $25 a month.<br> Blue1647 emphasizes women in tech Wednesday with new '1919' initiative Amina Elahi <br>Blue1647 is the latest tech hub seeking to give Chicago female entrepreneurs a boost.<br> <br>The Pilsen-based entrepreneurship and technology center on Wednesday evening kicks off its 1919 Women in Technology and Entrepreneurship Initiative, named for the year of passage for the 19th amendment,cheap air jordans, which...<br> <br>Blue1647 is the latest tech hub seeking to give Chicago female entrepreneurs a boost.<br> <br>The Pilsen-based entrepreneurship and technology center on Wednesday evening kicks off its 1919 Women in Technology and Entrepreneurship Initiative,cheap jordan shoes, named for the year of passage for the 19th amendment, which...<br> (Amina Elahi) <br>Cambry said Blue1647 became profitable 15 months after it opened. EnglewoodBlue is still developing after an undisclosed investment, Cambry said.<br><br>He said Kenneth Watkins and Keith Bradley, instructors and project managers at Blue1647, will lead the Chicago efforts in his absence.<br><br>“Nothing will change,” Cambry said. “The program will run and still thrive, and I’ll make sure I do everything on my end to support them and make sure it continues to grow.”<br><br>Cambry said he had planned from the beginning to expand the technology and innovation center beyond Chicago. Scaling is part of his mission to provide the greatest impact and a means of attracting sponsors and investors,air jordans for cheap, he said.<br><br>He said he plans to unveil a digital system that shows the economic effect of Blue centers in all places.<br><br>“Ultimately, what we’re going to be showing is real-time impact,cheap retro jordans,” he said. “That’s the thing I’m excited about coming soon. People will be able to log in and see the real time impact that’s taking place on a daily, weekly, monthly basis and have that at their fingertips.”<br><br>Cambry said Blue1647 has established St. Louis partnerships including LaunchCode, which places workers in tech jobs.<br><br>“And organizations like the NAACP have been tremendous in trying to push us to scale,cheap jordan shoes,” Cambry said.<br><br>Adolphus Pruitt, president of St. Louis branch of the NAACP, said his organization has been working to identify funding and bring operations to the city.<br><br>“Our primary goal is to make sure that Blue1647 gets everything it needs, resource wise, to bring its proven track record of educating and training people in the IT area to the St. Louis marketplace,” he said.<br><br>Blue1647 aims to convert underused recreational centers and “develop some national models out of St. Louis that we can really take other places, as we continue our expansion,” Cambry said.<br><br>He said sponsors have allowed him to spend less time fundraising and more time doing “what we do best, which is provide services to the community.”<br><br>About his Chicago experience, Cambry said, “I think the good thing about us having had to work so hard in Chicago to get up and running is we know what works and what doesn’t work. And we don’t want to go to these other cities and think that we can just make it a franchise as opposed to a real, true community development and organizing effort around technology."<br><br>Cheryl V. Jackson is a freelance writer.<ul> <li>Couples< li> <li>< li> <li>Bill retro new jordans.< li> < ul> There's very little plot machinery. The title character played by Shults' aunt, Krisha Fairchild, has been away for 10 years on a zigzag path of self-discovery. We first see her on screen in an unblinking tight shot. She regards the camera, as it encroaches. Her forest of wild gray-white hair frames a pair of bright but somehow tragic eyes. This is who she is; "Krisha" shows us how she got there. Krisha is in charge of cooking a turkey large enough to be a "mutant," as she calls it. Her sister's house, to which Krisha has brought a single piece of wheeled luggage and her dog, bustles with noise and activity; her sisters' boys rarely quit arm-wrestling or tackling each other long enough to pay attention to this stranger in their midst. We learn in dribs and drabs that Krisha has struggled to get sober, while inching toward the idea of reconciling with her now-grown son Trey (played by the filmmaker). Years earlier Krisha parked him with relatives for safekeeping during her long, long lost weekend and subsequent rehab. Back in the family fold, however uneasily, Krisha tells her brother-in-law Doyle (Bill Wise, sympathetic one minute, needling the next) that she has been concentrating on "finding a peaceful person inside me." She knows all too well that in this family, she's what she calls "the eggshell one." 'Batman v Superman' review: Yawn of justice Michael Phillips A near-total drag, ??Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice?? plays like a loose, unofficial quarter-billion-dollar remake of ??The Odd Couple,?? in which Oscar and Felix are literally trying to kill each other. I kid. A little. This certainly is not true of director Zack Snyder??s solemn melee. The movie... A near-total drag, ??Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice?? plays like a loose, unofficial quarter-billion-dollar remake of ??The Odd Couple,?? in which Oscar and Felix are literally trying to kill each other. I kid. A little. This certainly is not true of director Zack Snyder??s solemn melee. The movie... (Michael Phillips) To her face, in a disarmingly fragmented backyard chat surrounded by barking dogs, Doyle one-ups that assessment. "You're heartbreak incarnate," he says. An awkward catch-up conversation between Krisha and estranged son Trey reveals a needy and vulnerable relationship without much of a foundation. The movie Trey, like the Trey who actually made the film, is a budding filmmaker. Krisha urges him to follow his dream; she speaks of the sadness of not finding her own passion at a crucial age. The old wounds are too much after a while. To cope, to lubricate, to isolate that sadness, eventually she reaches for the bottle. In real life Shults' parents are both therapists,cheap retro jordans, and he made "Krisha" using many family members. But this is more than a writer-director's therapy session in the guise of a narrative. So many films try to get behind the eyes and into the desperation of alcoholism. (Phoniest prestige example in that genre,cheap real jordans, despite good performances: "Leaving Las Vegas.") Few succeed in getting beneath the surface. "Krisha" is one of the few. Each shift in perspective, even in aspect ratio (the screen scrunches up,cheap jordans, subtly, at key moments in Krisha's crisis), seems to come from, or speak to, Krisha's psyche. Check out the latest movie reviews from Michael Phillips and the Chicago Tribune. Some members of the ensemble are professional actors,cheap retro jordans, notably Fairchild, whom her director nephew swears is nothing like movie-Krisha in real life. Others are non-professionals and family members taking part in Shults' bittersweet labor of love. You don't notice anybody's acting. The film's chronology, thanks to Shults' free-association editing, has a way of keeping us off-balance; the same goes for composer Brian McOmber's nervous, skittery musical score. (There's also a striking use of the Nina Simone cover of "Just in Time.") Expanded from a short film made a year earlier, "Krisha" is obviously personal for Shults, but there's a limit to that fact. The film's technique transcends the merely personal. Shults worked for a time for Terrence Malick, and many of the ground-level scramble shots in "Krisha," scampering after dogs and whatnot, put you in mind of a Malick film. Other shots, lit expertly by cinematographer Drew Daniels,cheap jordans online, favor the leisurely zoom-in or pull-back approach, recalling Robert Altman. The naked emotions, when they finally break loose, carry serious weight,retro new jordans, akin to a John Cassavetes psychodrama. Now and then a scene restates an idea without sufficient variation (the final dinner-table confrontation is a bit of a loose flap). But Shults wears his influences lightly, and "Krisha" ?? now that I've officially oversold it ?? manages to be both compact in size and formidable in impact. "It Comes at Night" is the title of Shults' next film, also to be released by A24, boutique distributor of so much of modern filmmaking's most exciting talent. It's a horror film, of sorts. But then, so is "Krisha." Open in NY and LA and opens in Chicago April 1. Michael Phillips is a Tribune Newspapers critic. mjphillips@tribpub Twitter @phillipstribune "Krisha" ?? 4 stars MPAA rating: R (for language, substance abuse and some sexual content) Running time: 1:22 Opens: Friday at AMC 600 North Michigan 9<ul> <li>< li> <li>< li> <li>Osw< li> < ul> Amazon released the first trailer for Woody Allen's television foray "Crisis in Six Scenes,cheap jordans for sale," just about two weeks before the series is released on the streaming service Sept. 30.<br><br>The trailer indicates that the show will not shy away from being self-aware: "I've been working on an idea for a television series now,air jordans for cheap," Allen tells his barber while getting a trim.<br><br>"Oh I see, the usual dysfunctional family with the wise-crackin' wife and kids and much-harassed husband kind of thing?" the barber asks. Allen simply stammers, shrugs and concedes.<br><br>"Crisis in Six Scenes" is set during the 1960's. It focuses on Allen and Elaine May who play...<br>Williams admitted that on Nov. 1, 2013, he was at a residence in the 2500 block of Delaware Street in Gary, where Leviticus and Toshiba Dupree lived. Williams said he took a shotgun belonging to Leviticus Dupree,cheap retro jordans, and wielded a knife during the robbery. While stealing the shotgun, Toshiba Dupree and Leviticus Dupree were stabbed to death in their home.<br><br>When Lake Superior Court Judge Diane Ross Boswell asked Williams if he has a mental condition that might affect his understanding of the court hearing,retro new jordans, Williams responded: "A little bit," and smiled at the judge. Defense attorney Arlington Foley Sr. said he would submit mental health records documenting his client's mental heath issues.<br> <br>Williams also said he is unable to read. Foley said he explained everything in detail to Williams in a two-hour meeting with him, and Williams said he understood the document.<br><br>The plea agreement indicates that Foley and deputy prosecutor Maureen Koonce will argue a sentence for Williams, including whether he will serve the sentences on the two counts concurrently or consecutively.<br><br>In 1996, Williams was charged with murder. He pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter and was sentenced in May 1997 to 30 years.<br><br>Williams' co-defendant in the double homicide,cheap air jordans, Anthony Terry Wilson, 49, of Gary, has pleaded not guilty to two counts of murder, two counts of murder in perpetration of robbery,cheap jordan shoes, two counts of robbery and auto theft. His next court date is Oct. 25, and the online docket indicates he may submit a plea agreement.<br><br>Ruth Ann Krause is a freelance reporter for the Post-Tribune.<ul> <li>< li> <li>< li> <li>Cubs cheap jordan shoes< li> < ul> That said, the best-selling author (who has well over 275 million copies of his books in print) invariably finds a way to keep the familiar formula fresh.<br><br>RELATED: TRENDING LIFE & STYLE NEWS THIS HOUR<br> <br>Grisham's latest,cheap retro jordans, "The Whistler," introduces readers to a couple of legal-eagle protagonists,air jordans for cheap, Lacy Stoltz and Hugo Hatch of the Florida Board on Judicial Conduct.<br><br> They're mismatched best friends who work for an unheralded and understaffed state agency that investigates complaints against judges. Lacy and Hugo aren't detectives they don't carry guns,retro new jordans, just subpoenas but they do some big-time sleuthing in "The Whistler."<br><br> Few of the matters they handle ever amount to much. There's a lot of judicial incompetence, a bit of small-time graft and the occasional sour-grapes complaint that wastes everyone's time.<br><br> But in this instance, an anonymous whistleblower has come forward, using an ex-con lawyer as an intermediary, with a daunting conspiracy story about an Indian casino in the Florida Panhandle, a ruthless criminal syndicate that's secretly skimming profits and a veteran circuit court judge who's letting it happen.<br> <br> This dirty judge, according to the complaint, has pocketed more payola in her 17 years on the bench than all other crooked judges combined. And we're not talking just Florida judges. We're talking all of the bad judges in the entire country.<br><br> This judge,cheap jordans, Lacy and Hugo are told, has been a party to "bribery, extortion, intimidation, rigged trials, at least two murders and ... a man rotting away on death row who was framed."<br><br> It is the judge angle where Grisham,katrinrocks, a perennial best-selling author since "The Firm" put him on the map in 1991, has worked some of his storytelling magic.<br><br> By focusing on the sins of the judge, Grisham has given an intriguing twist to what could have been a run-of-the-mill conspiracy thriller.<br><br> For example, the investigation is launched not out of concern that an innocent man has been framed for a double murder, but merely because the Whistler selfishly hopes to pocket a big payday under the Florida Whistleblower Statute.<br><br> As for our heroes, they aren't the least bit interested in solving decade-old crimes or in catching the puppet-master leader of the so-called Catfish Mafia. They just want to get the goods on the Honorable Claudia McDover of Brunswick County, who's getting rich while she perverts the legal system.<br><br> Once the investigators take the case, however, they quickly get drawn into the larger conspiracy. They are repeatedly warned that they're putting their lives in danger by poking around the casino and questioning disgruntled members of the Tappacola tribe.<br><br> Crime boss Vonn Dubose, they are told, doesn't like snoops. And sure enough, Lacy soon gets a wake-up call when a would-be killer puts her in the hospital.<br><br> It's a roller-coaster ride of legal twists and dangerous double crosses after that.<br><br> Not sure how Grisham pulls it off time and again except for the fact that, as a former Mississippi attorney who practiced law in the 1980s, he knows the territory.<br><br> On top of that and this is probably Grisham's greatest asset as a storyteller he has been blessed with a runaway imagination.<br><br>"The Whistler" by John Grisham; Doubleday (384 pages, $28.95)<br><br>(c)2016 Fort Worth Star-Telegram | www.star-telegram,cheap jordans<br><br> Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.<ul> <li>< li> <li>< li> <li>< li> < ul> The Cash Michaels Trio performs at Marie's Shauna Bittle Chicago Tribune Jim Sellers, from left, on piano, Corey Biggerstaff on bass and Michael Hesiak of the Cash Michaels Trio play at Marie's Pizza & Liquors. Jim Sellers, from left, on piano, Corey Biggerstaff on bass and Michael Hesiak of the Cash Michaels Trio play at Marie's Pizza & Liquors. (Shauna Bittle Chicago Tribune) <br>That person, by the way, is Pietro Benincasa. He is 81 and comes to the restaurant seven days a week. He started working here in 1957. He comes in every morning between five and six and leaves every day a few hours later, between eleven and twelve. He makes the dough, makes the meatballs, makes what needs making for the day, then he walks home. <br><br>"Every day," he told me, "I am walking from one house to the next house,cheap jordan shoes, then back again." He grew up in Sanremo,cheap real jordans, Italy. This is the only job he has ever held in this country. <br> <br>He was hired by George Karavidas, who bought Marie's when he was 21. He bought it from his father, Theodore Karavidas. This is how Marie's got its name: Theodore moved to America from Greece at 16. He came alone, landed in New England, came to Chicago,cheap jordans for sale, married, had a child. When his wife was pregnant with their second child, she tripped in a pothole, miscarried and died. He sent a letter to his village in Greece. <br> The Cheap Eater: Forno Rosso Pizzeria Napoletana Kevin Pang <br>In honor of National Pizza Day, here's another look at a pizzeria in Dunning:<br> <br>We are a city divided by pizza lines. Where do you side? The deep-dish faction stands its ground. The thin-crust sausage cheese camp cries,, "No, no, we won't go!" The support for New York-style pizza numbers are small...<br> <br>In honor of National Pizza Day, here's another look at a pizzeria in Dunning:<br> <br>We are a city divided by pizza lines. Where do you side? The deep-dish faction stands its ground. The thin-crust sausage cheese camp cries, "No, no, we won't go!" The support for New York-style pizza numbers are small...<br> (Kevin Pang) <br>He explained what had happened and asked them to send him a new wife. Which is what they did. Theodore drove to Ellis Island to pick her up. They married there, at the immigration office. Her name was Mary. <br><br>Mary is Marie. <br><br>The owner is now George's daughter, Nadine Karavidas, who describes herself as a "triple threat": a singer, dancer and actor. She used to live in Las Vegas and worked mostly backstage at the Paris Las Vegas hotel. She is in her early 50s now. When George got sick in late 1999, she gravitated back to Chicago. <br><br>She told me her grandfather invented frozen pizza; I wasn't entirely convinced, though I wished it were true. She told me that one night, five years ago, she was serving coffee to an elderly customer. He suddenly grabbed her hand. The man told her that her father had saved his life. In the 1950s, he crashed a motorcycle outside Marie's. George ran into the street and tied his apron around the man's leg -- instant tourniquet. <br><br>She told me her father did so much for the neighborhood. She wiped a tear and said she could tell you how many times that "Check, Please" guy called her restaurant a dump. Three times. She said the rocks on the wall are real. She had me touch them. "It's real," she said. "We're real." Then I asked her if she intends to close someday, if she has an expiration date in her head. We were sitting down when I asked her this. <br><br>She considered me coolly and folded her hands before her. I suddenly felt like I was a sheriff telling Sally Field she needed to leave her property soon or the state would be taking it, nuthin I can do about it, ma'am. <br><br>"No," Nadine said slowly, in a whisper,cheap jordans, fluttering her thick black eyelashes. "No, we have no plans to close." <br><br>Gail Beitz, a secretary for 45th Ward Ald. John Arena, told me that there had once been a rumor around Mayfair that Marie's was closing; this led to many panicked calls to their office. Indeed, Nadine said that there was a period, before her father died in 2000, when she was yearning to get back to Vegas, and the restaurant might have closed. "But then I would have been the one to let 60 years pass into nothing," she said. "And then what would happen to the 35 or 40 families whose income is linked to us? What would happen to this community without us? Marie's gets passed down by family and friends. We can't go away." <br><br>She swiped at a tear. "What's wrong with you?" she asked me. <br><br> <br><br>Kathy Olson, a waitress here since 1981,katrinrocks, stopped at the table. Nadine said she wanted dessert, and Kathy nodded her head. Behind them the monthly meeting of the Ladies Ancient Order of the Hibernians was heating up. At the bar, an overweight guy said, hell, yes, he still smokes. A customer explained to a waitress what "streaming video" meant. I asked Olson why she still works here. She looked at me oddly. <ul> <li>< li> <li>Deerfi< li> <li>< li> < ul> that it would make the administration appear unduly partisan too close to the Nov. 8 election, according to officials familiar with the deliberations. ... (Ellen Nakashima) Soon after the investigators found the new trove of thousands of emails, they notified the separate team of FBI agents in Washington that worked on the probe into Clinton's private email server,cheap jordans for sale, officials said. Comey said in July that the investigation was complete and that he would recommend to prosecutors that no charges be brought. After the agents on the Clinton case were notified in early October about the newly discovered emails, they in turn told FBI leaders about them. At that point, the leaders did not believe they had enough information to make a decision about what to do next,cheap jordans online, officials said. The senior FBI officials instructed the agents to do everything they could within legal limits to determine the relevance of the new emails, one official said. That review, including a closer examination of the email metadata, was an attempt to figure out the scope and volume of what the agents had found. An FBI spokesman declined to comment. It would take a bombshell for FBI to charge Hillary Clinton in email case,, experts say Del Quentin Wilber Even if FBI agents discover classified information on a newly seized laptop, Hillary Clinton is unlikely to?face criminal charges, according to legal experts and former federal prosecutors. That��s largely because the Justice Department and FBI Director James B. Comey have already declined to prosecute?based... Even if FBI agents discover classified information on a newly seized laptop, Hillary Clinton is unlikely to?face criminal charges, according to legal experts and former federal prosecutors. That��s largely because the Justice Department and FBI Director James B. Comey have already declined to prosecute?based... (Del Quentin Wilber) In notifying lawmakers on Friday about the new investigative steps, Comey said he had been "briefed" about the newly discovered emails a day earlier but did not mention that he had first heard about them before that. The news media has widely reported that Comey was first told about the emails last week. A formal briefing for Comey with the investigative team was held Oct. 27 at FBI headquarters. At that point,cheap jordans online, Comey was given a complete presentation of everything the team knew about the trove. "It was a combination of assessments by the investigative team as to what it might be,cheap jordan shoes," the official said. Much was unknown about the contents and relevance of the thousands of emails. How many were to or from Clinton? Did any contain classified information? How many were duplicates of material the FBI had already reviewed? Was any of this significant to the Clinton email investigation that had been completed? "At that point,cheap jordans for sale, there was no way for Comey to know if the (Clinton investigators) had already seen the emails before or if they were new, old or different," an official said. "All of that was just unknown." But Comey and others felt there was enough information at that point to pursue a warrant, which would permit the investigators on the Clinton case to read the emails, officials said. They could not read them without legal permission because the emails had been discovered in the separate criminal probe involving Weiner. Justice officials warned FBI about Comey's decision to update Congress Sari Horwitz, Tom Hamburger, Ellen Nakashima Senior Justice Department<ul> <li>July< li> <li>Cl< li> <li>< li> < ul>
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