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    Feb 21, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  1. Jacksons' case a tale of runaway spending

    It was the kind of runaway spending usually reserved for someone with newfound riches — a holistic retreat, a cruise, pricey restaurant tabs, flat-screen televisions and even a pair of stuffed elk heads —and former Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr. admitted he conspired with his then-Chicago alderman wife to pay for it all with campaign money and cover it up.
    Tribune reporters
    It was the kind of runaway spending usually reserved for someone with newfound riches — a holistic retreat, a cruise, pricey restaurant tabs, flat-screen televisions and even a pair of stuffed elk heads —and former Congressman Jesse Jackson...

    Tags: U.S. Congress, Rod Blagojevich, Michael Jackson, Politics, Prosecution

  2. Feb 6, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  3. Signing up for summer camp

    Frigid February temperatures notwithstanding, it's not too early to plan where to send the kids to camp this summer. Throughout the city and the suburbs, a number of museums, botanical gardens and zoos offer hands-on learning experiences built around scientific and environmental principles. Here are just a few to consider, and if you're interested, don't wait — some fill up before the temperatures rise.
    Frigid February temperatures notwithstanding, it's not too early to plan where to send the kids to camp this summer. Throughout the city and the suburbs, a number of museums, botanical gardens and zoos offer hands-on learning experiences built around...

    Tags: Science, Arts and Culture, Science and Technology, Chicago Botanic Garden, Shedd Aquarium

  4. Feb 1, 2013 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  5. Forgotten Chicago keeps city's bygone parts alive

    A building is not, of course, a living thing, and so, unless it's the one you work in, live in or visit with some regularity, you probably take most of the city's thousands of other buildings for granted.
    A building is not, of course, a living thing, and so, unless it's the one you work in, live in or visit with some regularity, you probably take most of the city's thousands of other buildings for granted. There are, of course, the stars, those...

    Tags: Distilling and Brewing Industry, Rogers Park, Tribune Tower, Arts and Culture, Photography Supplies and Services

  6. Feb 1, 2013 |Story| Fetchtoto
  7. New exhibit invites you to enter the world of Animation

    <span style="font-size: small;">Starting Saturday, February 2, Exploration&nbsp;Place visitors will be able to step into the exciting and visually rich world of animation when the 6,000-square-foot, highly interactive exhibit&nbsp;<em>Animation&nbsp;</em>featuring Cartoon Network characters opens. </span>
    Starting Saturday, February 2, Exploration Place visitors will be able to step into the exciting and visually rich world of animation when the 6,000-square-foot, highly interactive exhibit Animation featuring Cartoon Network characters opens. PHOTOS:...

    Tags: Science, Satellite and Cable Service, Cartoon Network (tv network), Arts and Culture, Arts

  8. Jan 31, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  9. Shedd says it draws most visitors of any U.S. aquarium

    The Shedd Aquarium reclaimed its attendance title among the nation&rsquo;s major non-profit aquariums after trailing the relatively new Georgia Aquarium in Atlanta for the last five years.
    Tribune reporter
    The Shedd Aquarium reclaimed its attendance title among the nation’s major non-profit aquariums after trailing the relatively new Georgia Aquarium in Atlanta for the last five years. Nearly 2.17 million people visited the Shedd in 2012, a 2 percent...

    Tags: Humboldt Park, Tourism and Leisure, Arts and Culture, Arts, Travel

  10. Jan 23, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  11. A whoosh of fresh air at lively DuPage Children's Museum

    Let's pretend for a moment that you're raising your kids the way people did in the olden days, before traveling taekwondo clubs and chess club championships and daylong birthday parties at paintball shooting ranges.
    Let's pretend for a moment that you're raising your kids the way people did in the olden days, before traveling taekwondo clubs and chess club championships and daylong birthday parties at paintball shooting ranges. In other words, let's pretend you'...

    Tags: Union (McHenry, Illinois), Arts and Culture, Science and Technology, Metra, Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corporation

  12. Jan 2, 2013 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  13. This year's upcoming museum exhibits

    Glowing fish, giant dinosaurs, plasticized animals and more. That's not a description of the toy aisles at Target, or at least it's not only that. It also spotlights what's coming up in the new year at the area's family museums and zoos. Here are some of the events we are anticipating in 2013:
    Glowing fish, giant dinosaurs, plasticized animals and more. That's not a description of the toy aisles at Target, or at least it's not only that. It also spotlights what's coming up in the new year at the area's family museums and zoos. Here are some...

    Tags: Petroleum Industry, Greektown, Politics, Arts and Culture, Brookfield Zoo

  14. Dec 1, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  15. Choosing books for the holidays

    Inevitably this holiday season, my mom will tick through her shopping list and say with a sigh, "Your dad wants a book." Since I was a kid, my mom has teased my dad about the predictablity of this ritual, which usually involves the purchase of a brick-sized tome of history. I love shopping for my dad. I don't buy what he asks for; I go with books I suspect he'll like. Bill Buford's "Heat," a memoir about Italian cooking, was an unexpected hit. The next year, I bought him a cookbook.
    Inevitably this holiday season, my mom will tick through her shopping list and say with a sigh, "Your dad wants a book." Since I was a kid, my mom has teased my dad about the predictablity of this ritual, which usually involves the purchase of a brick-...

    Tags: Ray Bradbury, The Beatles (music group), Science Fiction (genre), Politics, Libraries

  16. Aug 22, 2012 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  17. At the Lincoln Park Zoo, camping out under the monkeys

    The campfire was in a metal pit, under a great, wide roof. The tents were pitched on a well-tended lawn, with help from people who work for an outdoors store. Bears were a threat only if someone had forgotten to lock an enclosure door.
    The campfire was in a metal pit, under a great, wide roof. The tents were pitched on a well-tended lawn, with help from people who work for an outdoors store. Bears were a threat only if someone had forgotten to lock an enclosure door. And dinner was...

    Tags: Yosemite National Park, Brooklyn (New York City), Brookfield Zoo, Field Museum of Natural History, Lincoln Park Zoo

  18. Nov 7, 2012 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  19. 'Charlie Brown and the Great Exhibit': Good, not great, grief

    "Charlie Brown and the Great Exhibit" is a big, reasonably well-stuffed celebration of one of the great achievements in American popular culture, the "Peanuts" newspaper comic strip by lachrymose Minnesotan Charles Schulz.
    "Charlie Brown and the Great Exhibit" is a big, reasonably well-stuffed celebration of one of the great achievements in American popular culture, the "Peanuts" newspaper comic strip by lachrymose Minnesotan Charles Schulz. In section after section of...

    Tags: A Charlie Brown Christmas (tv program), Arts and Culture, Arts, Cartoons, Halloween

  20. Jun 25, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  21. Walgreen company man rises to top

    Greg Wasson gambled away a total of about $60 during the 2 1/2 years he lived in Las Vegas. All of it came while he was parked at some low-stakes slot machine, waiting for his out-of-town guests to wrap up their requisite casino visit.
    Tribune staff reporter
    Greg Wasson gambled away a total of about $60 during the 2 1/2 years he lived in Las Vegas. All of it came while he was parked at some low-stakes slot machine, waiting for his out-of-town guests to wrap up their requisite casino visit.    Wasson, 53,...

    Tags: Corporate Officers, Vaccines, The Wall Street Journal, Customs and Tradition, Lakes and Ponds

  22. Sep 17, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  23. Leadership role always in the cards for chief of fast-growing Catamaran

    Mark Thierer has a sticker for everything: golf balls, fruit, cars, states, letters, numbers. In all, he thinks he has probably 40,000 of them, collected from around the world.
    Tribune staff reporter
    Mark Thierer has a sticker for everything: golf balls, fruit, cars, states, letters, numbers. In all, he thinks he has probably 40,000 of them, collected from around the world.     "If you're ever actually looking for them, you'd be amazed where you'd...

    Tags: Habitat for Humanity International, Marketing, Corporate Officers, Abbott Laboratories, Customs and Tradition

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Museum of Science and Industry Photos
Friends Rick Otty, of New York, and Marcia Smith-Wood,...
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Internal circuit of the nervous system of a dog, with c...
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Oryx skeleton on display, part of the "Animal Inside Ou...
(March 13, 2013)
 Oryx skeleton