Eclipse watchers pour into Carbondale as Southern Illinois welcomes 200,000
Cheers erupted as the last bit of sunlight wrapped around the moon and turned the skies pitch dark.
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Marie Saavedra is back where it all began! She grew up in Evanston and is a graduate of the Missouri School of Journalism.
Saavedra's career as an anchor and reporter started in Springfield, Missouri, at KYTV. She was on scene in the aftermath of the EF-5 tornado that hit Joplin in 2011, and won a Regional Edward R. Murrow Award for her report on a Missouri veteran whose case was mishandled at a local VA hospital.
Her next stop was KTVK in Phoenix, where she covered everything from immigration to wildfires. Saavedra then spent seven years at WFAA in Dallas. While there, she was awarded Regional Emmys for her work on several feature stories and for her live reports the night of the 2016 Dallas police ambush. She joined the CBS News Chicago team in October 2020.
Cheers erupted as the last bit of sunlight wrapped around the moon and turned the skies pitch dark.
The proposed law change comes after a CBS 2 story on one suburban woman's pills being taken by a stranger from her local CVS pharmacy.
Back in 1972, John Messerschmidt began chasing eclipses at the age of 14 and will being his whole family along for the next one.
"It's nurturing, it's nourishing. We want you to leave here feeling really good about the choices that you made," co-owner Britni DeLeon said.
Principal Tony Medina said the school celebrates loyalty with strong support from students and alumni.
"During those weekdays, they're walking around and enjoying the city, and then again, the weekends are times when people really go crazy and get out in the neighborhoods and get to know these local businesses and buy."
Students collect food from around the Illinois Medical District that would otherwise have been thrown out.
"That's a need that needs to get filled, and I'm happy to do a teeny tiny part."
Dr. Anita Thomas has only been on the job at North Central College since July, but she's made it her home and the students her family.
A team will investigate AI from a human perspective, including what it means to be human in a world with AI creating art.
As Principal Mr. Brian Rucinski said, "It's a special place" that feels like "one big family."
Her story reveals the danger of such medication falling into the wrong hands amid a national opioid epidemic.
While most people probably associate Jewish delis with New York, they also have important roots in Chicago's meat industry.
Monarrez said he picked up his first can of spray paint at 10 years old. After getting in trouble, he eventually turned that creativity into his own business.
Bennett Haried loves to build things, like many kids his age; but unlike most kids, he is translating his hobby into lessons everyone can learn.