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High school senior Henry Hanson recently watched in anticipation as various possible musicals were ticked off a board each day, a tradition that helps get students excited to officially announce Hampshire High School’s spring production.
The theater student was eager for the reveal of this year’s selection of “The Prom,” a comedic musical about a school that tries to cancel a dance to prevent a gay student from attending. The 18-year-old said this year’s production meant more than usual because it was a chance for theater kids, some part of the LGBTQ+ community, to feel represented in their craft.
But then district administrators stepped in. They shut down the announcement, telling students in a meeting last Friday that they wouldn’t allow the music department to put on the show this year due to safety concerns, he said.
“It was disheartening that they had said we can’t do it ‘because of your own safety.’ We’ve never had something like this happen before,” Hanson said. “Overall, it’s a generally accepting community so it kind of felt like a shock.”
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A man shot and killed at least 16 people at a restaurant and a bowling alley in Lewiston, Maine, on Wednesday and then fled into the night, sparking a massive search by hundreds of officers while frightened residents stayed locked in their homes.
A police bulletin identified Robert Card, 40, as a person of interest in the attack that sent panicked bowlers scrambling behind pins when shots rang out around 7 p.m. Card was described as a firearms instructor believed to be in the Army Reserve and assigned to a training facility in Saco, Maine.
A jury found the father of Tyshawn Lee, the 9-year-old lured into an alley and shot in 2015, guilty of trying to kill three people to avenge his son’s death.
The jurors rendered the verdict at the Leighton Criminal Court Building after deliberating for several hours.
Prosecutors had told jurors that not long after chilling details of the slaying of his 9-year-old son were revealed in court, Pierre Stokes encountered the girlfriend of one of his son’s killers, looked straight at her, threatened her and fired six shots.
Republicans unanimously elected Rep. Mike Johnson as House speaker on Wednesday, eagerly elevating a deeply conservative but lesser-known leader to the major seat of U.S. power and ending for now the weeks of political chaos in their majority.
Four NorthShore—Edward-Elmhurst Health hospitals will be led by new presidents in 2024 after a series of internal promotions. Two-thirds of the system will be led by women, many with backgrounds in nursing, which changed their views on how to run a hospital.
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Her appointment, which takes effect Nov. 20, follows the departure of former Commissioner Maurice Cox and is subject to City Council approval.
Sergio Brown, 35, appeared in court Wednesday to face first-degree murder charges for the September death of his mother, Myrtle Simmons-Brown, who prosecutors said he lived with in Maywood.
Coming off a 30-12 romp over the Las Vegas Raiders, the Chicago Bears will finish off the AFC West portion of their schedule Sunday night when they travel to Los Angeles to face the Chargers. As the game approaches, here’s a look at 12 attention-grabbing facts and figures.
The WNBA always has had rivalries. But this season seemed different, writes Shakeia Taylor.
“You have a beautiful family, a beautiful life,” says one old friend to another. “I hope it was worth it.”
In “Fellow Travelers,” the Showtime limited series adapted from the 2007 novel of the same name, “it” means living in the closet, which has been professionally beneficial for the sleekly handsome Hawkins Fuller (Matt Bomer) — it’s the 1980s and he’s about to take a diplomatic posting in Milan — but devastating on his soul. Critic Nina Metz has a review.
There’s a special club of CinemaScored movies: the 22 films that have received F scores, the lowest possible, meaning they angered, frustrated and alienated the highest possible percentage of a typical Friday night multiplex crowd out for a good time.