Friday, July 25, 2008 Last Update: 9:46 a.m.
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News submitted by Ron Grossman (Chicago Tribune)

Family ties proved Ayers' point

A funny thing happened to Bill Ayers in the years between his first headline-grabbing activities and his cameo role in the 2008 presidential campaign. He became a pillar of the very establishment he had once conspired to bring down.

Mayor Richard Daley proclaimed Ayers, an educational consultant to the city, “a valued member of the Chicago community.”

Ayers, 63, was less charitable about Daley’s father, who was mayor in 1968 when Vietnam War activists tried to disrupt the Democratic National Convention.

“White and fleshy, he reeked with the stench of evil,” Ayers wrote of Richard J. Daley in his 2001 memoir, “Fugitive Days.”

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At storied co-op, cupboards bare

Troubled Hyde Park Co-op to vote on closing out a million in debt, closing its doors.

The end may be near for the Hyde Park Co-op, a linchpin of the South Side neighborhood and a link to an era of utopian dreams—including a conviction that a better society lay in a grocery whose owners would be customers.

The Co-op’s Depression-era founders wanted a business in which decisions were made not by distant executives, but by a show of hands.

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Edgewater Beach Hotel and Apartments, Chicago