Empty desks are a sign of the season
Transcription
Empty desks are a sign of the season
Product: CTMETRO PubDate: 12-20-2007 Zone: C Edition: HD Page: CMETRO1-1 User: gajohnson Time: 12-19-2007 22:13 Color: C K Y M SECTION 2 T H U R S D AY DECEMBER 20, 2007 CHICAGO Eric Zorn Catching up with early departures N o single local story of 2007 excited as much attention, as much sanctimony and as much armchair sociology as the Amy Jacobson story. To refresh: Jacobson, a veteran reporter for NBC-Ch. 5, accepted a lastminute invitation July 6 to a back-yard gathering at the Plainfield home of Craig Stebic, whose wife, Lisa, had vanished April 30. Jacobson said she was on her way to take her kids swimming in Chicago when she got the invitation. Sensing an opportunity to get better access to the reclusive man at the center of the mystery, she drove them to Plainfield instead. When a crew from CBS-Ch. 2 videotaped her in a bikini top “partying” near Stebic’s back-yard pool, Jacobson lost her job and became the focus of an intense debate about journalism ethics, sexism and even parenting. “It still seems surreal,” she said Wednesday when I called to update her story. Those who predicted that a competing Chicago station or a cable-news network would hire Jacobson if for no other reason than publicity were wrong: She said she’s interviewed only with local TV news outlets in Los Angeles, St. Louis, Phoenix and Tampa. She said reports hinting she was pursuing an entertainment career were “misleading.” She said that when she taped a Fox News Channel pilot in October with Erich “Mancow” Muller she was not serving as a co-star, but “just helping out a friend by being the member of a panel. I eventually will come back to TV news reporting.” The silver lining of this career crisis? “I get to be with my children [ages 2½ and 4] a lot at a great time during their lives,” she said. The older child is vaguely aware of what happened, Jacobson said. She said that, at a restaurant, when a waitress asked, “What do you want?” the boy answered, “I want my mommy’s job back. She got fired for taking us swimming.” She said she has not spoken to Craig Stebic since her visit to his house became national news and that she still lives on the North Side. Jacobson said she briefly took a part-time job with a not-for-profit agency that assists low-income families with tax problems, but now she volunteers at that agency and at a homeless shelter. Regrets? “Sure, I’d do things differently” given the benefit of hindsight, she said. “But I don’t want to go there. I’ve got to move forward.” A local story that got considerably less attention this year was the quixotic bid for the presidency by Chicago businessman John Cox. Cox began campaigning in Iowa and New Hampshire in early 2006, visiting both states dozens of times and spending at least $1 million of his own money trying to become a contender in the crowded Republican primary field. When I interviewed him for a column in August shortly after he finished 11th out of 11 candidates in an Iowa straw poll, Cox vowed to “stick it out” through the early caucuses and primaries. But when I called him for an update Wednesday he said he’d closed his campaign offices late last month after having been excluded from yet another Republican debate. “What’s the point anymore?” he asked. “I always knew it was a long shot. But when the media made their decision not to include me, I figured it was a total lost cause.” After I wrote a column in October about how a portion of folk singer Steve Goodman’s ashes were scattered on the warning track at Wrigley Field, I heard from a number of readers who admitted to having surreptitiously leaned over the outfield wall to scatter cremated remains at the Friendly Confines. Several got in touch with me again when they read of the massive postseason excavation and rehab of the playing surface at Wrigley: What had become of their loved ones? Not to worry, said team spokesman Jason Carr. They continue to rest in pieces. The warning track—where most ashes, including Goodman’s, end up— was extended but otherwise undisturbed during the landscaping project. Read the original columns and leave comments at chicagotribune.com/zorn Duncan: 50 grade schools could close Chief defends plan as CPS’ best course By Carlos Sadovi Tribune staff reporter Chicago Public Schools Chief Arne Duncan indicated on Wednesday that about 50 underutilized elementary schools could be closed within the next five years under a plan designed to address declining enrollment. Duncan defended the proposal as the best option for students, who he said would lose educational and extracurricular options if their schools’ enrollments became too small. The closings would be the most dramatic moves in a review of 147 of the district’s most underutilized schools, all of them with fewer than half the students they are designed to handle. Under the plan, district officials would go before the school board every year for the next three to five years, with recommendations that could potentially mean closing or consolidating 10 to 15 schools each year. The program must be approved by the board each year. “While generally I’m a fan of small schools, you have to have some critical mass to run a viable school. When you get down to 150 or 175 students, you don’t have enough students in each grade to run a full menu of activities,’’ Duncan said. “Educationally [con- solidation is] the right move.” The Tribune on Wednesday reported that 122 schools are at 30 to 50 percent of their enrollment capacity. An additional 25 are below 30 percent capacity, and are at the greatest risk of closing. The majority of the underused schools are in areas that have experienced demographic changes on the Near West and South Sides, with smaller pockets in lakefront PLEASE SEE SCHOOLS, PAGE 6 Birds of a feather on the North Side have lost one of their own Tribune file photo by Bob Fila Pigeon-bedecked Joseph Zeman was a familiar figure for years in Lincoln Square. Pigeon man’s story at end A newspaper clipping helps police identify a man killed in an accident, drawing Tribune reporter Barbara Mahany back into the world of the ‘Pigeon Man of Lincoln Square’ Tribune photo by Antonio Perez Fourth-graders at Columbia Explorers Academy on the Southwest Side do schoolwork Tuesday in the midst of several empty desks. Some of their classmates already had left to spend an extended Christmas vacation visiting relatives. Empty desks are a sign of the season Hispanic students pay a steep price for taking monthlong Christmas vacations to their homelands, school officials say By Alexa Aguilar Tribune staff reporter Martha Padilla-Ramos and Jose Barrera fondly remember the long car rides south to Mexico each December when they were children. At the end of the trek awaited their cousins, delicious food, trips to church and days of parties to celebrate Christmas. It was a beloved part of their childhood, so the Chicago-area school administrators understand why families make the annual trek to their homelands. But they can’t understand why so many families—an estimated 10 percent of the Hispanic students in Waukegan, for example—plan these trips to last a month or more, far beyond the tradi- Tribune photo by Nuccio DiNuzzo Juan Carlos Camarillo (from left), 5, as Joseph; Valeria Gomez, 6, as Mary; and Angel Camarillo, 4, as an angel, are ready for a procession in St. Nicholas Parish in Aurora. tional two-week holiday break Illinois schools allow. Although most local schools are holding classes through Friday, many of these families already have been gone a week or more. In addition to falling behind in their schoolwork, educators said, the students are in danger of being labeled truant and could perform poorly on standardized tests that help determine if their schools meet federal No Child Left Behind guidelines. Other students can expect extra class time with teachers to catch up. Some districts threaten to fail students who miss too many days or force them to re-enroll, repaying registration fees and possibly losing PLEASE SEE VACATION, PAGE 6 Police didn’t know who he was, the old man killed Tuesday by a van near Devon Avenue and McCormick Road. They found newspaper clippings—about a half-dozen laminated copies of the same story—tucked into one of his many Jewel bags. Cut, copied, pressed between plastic, the clipping showed the man in full color, feathered with pigeons, and told a piece of his story. And except for that clipping, the cops and the doctors who pronounced him dead at the hospital had no clue who he was. The pigeon man’s life was like that. Barely a soul had a clue who he was. That’s why the cops called me, just an hour or two after he died. They knew I knew a bit of his story. I wrote the one they found in his possession. Two years and three months had passed, and he still carried it wherever he went. After the old man died an hour later, the cops needed someone to call, needed to know if there was a soul in the world who might care to know what happened to Joe Zeman, who most everybody called “the pigeon man of Lincoln Square.” Here’s just a bit of the pigeon man’s story, the one he carried: “Except for the lips, you would think he was made out of stone, the man who sits, hours on end, on the red fire hydrant on Western Avenue, just north of Lawrence, pigeons by the dozens perched on him. “Pigeons on his head. PiPLEASE SEE PIGEON, PAGE 5 Beds, help lacking for homeless youth By Karoun Demirjian Tribune staff reporter Hector Castro was 13 years old when his parents kicked him out of the house. Castro, now 20, made his way to downtown Chicago to find a way to live on his own. What he found were limited options: He could prostitute himself for money and shelter or simply sleep on the streets. Though he tried repeatedly to get into shelters, Castro said, he was routinely met with closed doors. “It would take three or four months each time before I could find a bed,” Castro said. “I didn’t have money for the phone, so I had to go from place to place, but it was always the same . . . waiting lists.” It’s a common problem, according to the Chicago Coalition for the Homeless, which released a study Thursday that said more than half of the state’s homeless youths, those who are 14 to 24 years old and unaccompanied, are turned away from shelters because of a lack of space. The report states that there PLEASE SEE HOMELESS, PAGE 9 Tribune photo by Abel Uribe Hector Castro, 20, stops by the Night Ministry’s van on a recent Friday night. Castro, who was homeless from age 13, said he was often turned away from shelters due to lack of space. Product: CTMETRO PubDate: 12-20-2007 Zone: C Edition: HD Page: 2-9 User: gajohnson Time: 12-19-2007 S 22:10 Color: K C CHICAGO TRIBUNE Ô METRO Ô SECTION 2 Ô THURSDAY, DECEMBER 20, 2007 Last Call. GREAT SAVINGS DURING OUR WINE & SPIRITS CABINET SALE, NOW THRU JAN 6. NO PAYMENTS, NO INTEREST FOR ONE FULL YEAR. FREE DELIVERY Available for immediate delivery subject to prior sale Tribune photo by Abel Uribe Michael Arians, a former Oregon, Ill., mayor who has been trying to solve the 1948 murder of 17-year-old Mary Jane Reed, has a sketch of the victim in his restaurant. Rose Barcelona www.fcadesigncenter.com/rose www.fcadesigncenter.com/barcelona Sale price $1,424 Sale price $581 Orig. retail $2,035 Orig. retail $830 Mismatched bones add to mystery of ’48 slaying Experts examine remains from victim By Ted Gregory Tribune staff reporter A curious, 59-year-old murder mystery in Oregon, Ill., took its latest twist Wednesday when a forensic anthropologist who examined the remains from the victim’s casket said the skull and vertebrae are from different bodies. The man who has been trying to solve the 1948 murder of Mary Jane Reed for nearly a decade said that conclusion is more evidence that the initial investigation was, at the very least, inept and probably corrupt. “There has been a cover-up in this town for 60 years,” said Michael Arians, a local restaurateur and former Oregon mayor. Arians said he has spent more than $50,000 to hire University of Illinois forensic anthropologist Linda Klepinger to clear up HOMELESS: Many more resorting to dealing drugs CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 are only enough beds to serve about 10 percent of the state’s homeless youths, who number more than 4,100 according to a 2005 study by University of Illinois at Chicago researchers. For those who need services besides housing, the success rate is not much better: Only 12 percent of homeless youths are able to get these services, the coalition found. The directors of the study say the gaps in service often mean the difference between rehabilitating young people and letting them fall through the cracks. Finding a place to stay has a dramatic effect on a homeless young person. Of homeless youths who emerge from transitional living programs in shelters, 87 percent move in to safe, stable permanent housing, the study found. “Youths that have been turned away numerous times end up sleeping in cars or on friends’ floors or on the street. Meanwhile, they’re trying to get to school and trying to get to work, but struggling and losing hope because of their homelessness,” said Daria Mueller, a policy specialist for the coalition. “If they can just get into a program, they have a chance to realize their potential.” Getting into a program is proving an increasingly difficult task. Across Chicago, which has about 36 percent of the state’s capacity for youth shelters, shelter managers say they are forced to turn away the mystery that has gnawed at him since 1999. Arians maintains that a nowdeceased local law-enforcement officer killed Reed, 17, after a stormy relationship. “Everybody’s scared to death to say anything. We need someone from outside the area, someone with some forensic expertise to jump in and get involved and ask some questions and get some answers.” Ogle County Sheriff Greg Beitel, whose office coordinated Mary Jane Reed’s exhumation in August 2005 and led the ensuing investigation, said his office has nothing to hide. Investigators who re-examined the case announced in February 2006 that two now-deceased brothers likely were the killers of Reed and her date, Stanley Skridla, 28. The couple were attacked while they were parked on a Lovers Lane on the outskirts of Oregon, a town of about 4,000 people on the Rock River 100 miles west of Chicago. The inyoung people in need nightly for lack of space. The Open Door Shelter in West Town, which is run by the Night Ministry, has 16 beds available for homeless youths ages 14 to 20. Director Carole Mills said the number of young people turned away has been increasing steadily, from 514 in 2004, to 605 in 2005, to 788 in 2006. “We’re averaging almost two youths a day who we can’t serve because there’s no bed open for them,” Mills said. “It’s one of the most difficult parts of the job, knowing that kids needed a bed and we couldn’t provide them that.” A lack of money is a major reason why the shelters aren’t able to expand to meet growing demands. Most shelters rely on a combination of government dollars and private donations to keep their doors open, but in the last decade, annual state funding—$4 million in 1998, $4.7 million in 2007—has not kept pace with inflation, Mueller said. But simply increasing funding for beds across the state is not a quick fix for youth homelessness, the coalition study’s directors said, pointing to to other findings that suggest long-term stability may not be dependent on access to permanent housing alone. Although 87 percent of young people emerging from transitional shelters find stable housing, only 36 percent get jobs. Getting jobs for young homeless people is “a need that we are trying to fill and a No. 1 priority,” said David Myers, executive director of Teen Living Programs of Chicago, which provides 36 beds and other programs for youth. “Without jobs, you cannot remain independent.” The problem may be more acute outside city limits, according to the study. Services are concentrated where homeless youths come to live, down- vestigators suggested the killings may have resulted from a botched robbery attempt. But Arians, who, with Reed’s last surviving sibling pushed for the exhumation and investigation, said the sheriff’s conclusion conflicts with evidence that suggests the killings were “a crime of passion.” Those indicators include Skridla being shot four times in the groin and the charring of his head, Arians said. Klepinger, who has been working in forensic pathology since about 1978 and wrote the book “Fundamentals of Forensic Anthropology” in 2006, said she and John Moore, a professor of anatomy and forensics at Parkland College in Champaign, examined the skull and vertebrae last week. Both came to the same conclusion, Klepinger said. “It’s wacko, really weird,” Klepinger said Wednesday. “I’ve never come across anything like this before.” tgregory@tribune.com town Chicago, but most youths are leaving homes outside Chicago. That means displaced youths, having few resources, may have to travel great distances to get help, Mueller said. The longer it takes to get off the street, the greater the consequences can be. According to a recent study based on an analysis of call-center data by the Chicago-based National Runaway Switchboard, unaccompanied homeless youth are reporting being away from home for longer periods of time and engaging in more dangerous practices, such as sex and drugs, in order to survive. “I often talk about it as a silent crisis in our society,” said Maureen Blaha, director of the National Runaway Switchboard, which reports that since 2001, the increase in calls by young people who say they have sold drugs has gone up by 150 percent. Those who say they have engaged in prostitution has gone up by 60 percent. But there is still hope to reach even those who seem to have been failed by an insufficient system, social workers say. For Castro, whose parents kicked him out after he revealed his homosexuality at age 13, it took seven years of intermittent attempts to finally get off the street. In those seven years, he said, he had resorted to prostitution, sometimes for money and sometimes for a place to sleep. In that time, he contracted HIV, he said. Two weeks ago, he enrolled in a permanent housing program at Chicago House, an organization that provides services to young people infected with HIV and AIDS; he has enrolled in G.E.D. classes and, for the first time, is thinking about college. “I spent so long going from place to place, and being told no,” he said. “It’s so nice to have a place to go home.” kdemirjian@tribune.com Police probe Glendale Heights slaying Glendale Heights police are investigating the homicide of a local man found fatally shot early Wednesday. Police found the body of Corey Dale Krueger, 35, of Glendale Heights while responding to a complaint about a dog barking in the 1200 block of Pleasant Avenue about 3 a.m., police said. Krueger was lying on the sidewalk and appeared to have suffered a gunshot wound to his head, police said. 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