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Mayor Johnson’s papal plans

Good morning, Chicago. ✶

🔎 Below: Our journalists are at the Vatican to cover Mayor Brandon Johnson’s upcoming meeting with the world’s most famous Chicagoan, Pope Leo XIV. We’ll give you the itinerary — and want you to give us your Rome recommendations.

🗞️ Plus: A local teen is home after immigration detention, fallout from the tainted “Broadview Six” case, a look behind the scenes of the new Second City show and more.

📝 Keeping scoreThe Cubs lost to the Pirates, 12-1; the White Sox fell to the Twins, 5-3.

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⏱️: An 8-minute read


TODAY’S WEATHER 🔆

Sunny with a high near 83. The Chicago Metro area and Northwest Indiana are under an air quality alert through Wednesday night.


TODAY’S TOP STORY 🔎

Mayor Brandon Johnson, seen Sunday at Peach’s restaurant in Bronzeville, will travel to the Vatican this week to meet Pope Leo XIV.

Arthur Maiorella/For the Sun-Times

On Vatican trip, Mayor Johnson will laud Pope Leo for pushback against Trump

By Mariah Woelfel

Mayor in Rome: Mayor Brandon Johnson has a meeting Thursday with the world’s most famous Chicagoan: Pope Leo XIV. He will be the latest Illinoisan to meet the pope, who has given locals from his hometown, including Gov. JB Pritzker, private audiences since starting his papal ministry a year ago.

Papal plan: Johnson plans to thank Pope Leo for his advocacy, which includes pushing back against the U.S. war in Iran, calling for peace in Gaza and criticizing President Donald Trump’s immigration policies. The meeting comes as Johnson attempts to shore up his political base before what’s sure to be a tough reelection battle, though the mayor hasn’t announced a bid yet.

The itinerary: On Wednesday, a 50-member delegation will tour the town with members of Rome’s City Council. Johnson is set to arrive Thursday and meet the pope at 3:30 p.m., when he plans to present the pontiff with a jar of giardiniera. Then Johnson will hold press conference at American University, and later has scheduled a fireside chat and dinner. On Friday, Johnson plans to tour a new Metro station and an affordable housing project with Rome Mayor Roberto Gualtieri.

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WATCH: JOHNSON TO VISIT ROME ▶️


IMMIGRATION ✶

Ricardo Navarette hugs his mother, Liliana, after his release from immigration detention Tuesday.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Mather High senior heads home to Chicago after release from immigration detention

By Emmanuel Camarillo

Teen freed: Ricardo Navarrete, a Mather High School senior detained by federal agents with his mother in March, is heading back to Chicago. Navarrete appeared for a bond hearing in immigration court Tuesday morning and was later released from custody, according to the family’s attorney.

Key context: Immigration agents detained the 18-year-old and his mom during a routine court appearance for their asylum case in March. Last week, a federal judge in Kentucky released Liliana Navarrete. The pair, who arrived in Chicago in 2022 from Colombia, had an active asylum application when they were detained, and neither has a criminal record, according to their lawyers.

In their corner: Friends, family and other supporters held rallies and spoke with numerous news outlets hoping the attention would help bring the mother and son home to Chicago. Ricardo missed Mather’s senior prom last week, but there is a chance he could make it back in time to walk across the stage at the graduation ceremony Thursday.

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COURTS ⚖️

U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros told U.S. District Judge April Perry last week that he wasn’t aware of alleged grand jury misconduct until late April.

Anthony Vazquez file


MORE NEWS YOU NEED 🗞️

Healthcare workers, religious leaders and community members rally outside West Suburban Hospital in Oak Park.

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times


 

EDUCATION 🍎

From left: Hilario Dominguez, Jessica Biggs, Victor Henderson, Sendhil Revuluri and Jennifer Custer.

Sun-Times

Here are the candidates for Chicago’s first-ever elected school board president

By Sarah Karp and Emmanuel Camarillo

In the running: Tuesday was the petition filing deadline to enter the race for a seat on Chicago’s first fully elected school board. Fifty-one candidates are officially in the running. All 20 district seats and the citywide president position will be up for grabs in the Nov. 3 election. Voters will get to cast a ballot for a school board member in their community and for the president.

Race for prez: Five people are running for board president, a powerful position that holds sway over what the board debates and votes on. Four of them — Jessica Biggs, Jennifer Custer, former board member Sendhil Revuluri and attorney Victor Henderson — submitted petitions the first day and will face off in a lottery to get the top spot on the ballot. Hilario Dominguez, deputy political director for the Chicago Teachers Union and the CTU’s preferred candidate, submitted his petition Tuesday.

Key context: November’s election and the transition from a partially elected, partially appointed board marks the culmination of years of work by advocates. They pushed for a fully elected board, arguing it would inject democracy and community voices into a governing body that for decades was under mayor control.

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ON WBEZ 91.5 FM 📻

In the Loop with Sasha-Ann Simons, 9 a.m.

Say More with Mary Dixon and Patrick Smith, 10 a.m.

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FROM THE PRESS BOX ⚾🏀⚽


 

CHICAGO MINI CROSSWORD 🌭

Today’s clue: 6A: Transitional housing center in the former Diplomat Motel with a peaceful name

PLAY NOW

 


BRIGHT ONE 🔆

Zoe McKee (left) and Yazmin Ramos rehearse the new Second City show “Pandemonium, Please Hold.”

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times

Inside the making of a Second City show

By Mike Davis

It’s a typical afternoon in April. Onstage at Second City, just after lunchtime, six actors are rehearsing a sketch for its newest show, “Pandemonium, Please Hold.”

Being in the room for a Second City rehearsal is a stark contrast to traditional theater, whose rehearsals include a lot of dead air with actors standing around doing nothing as crew members problem-solve lighting, sound and technical issues.

But here, rehearsal is exciting. When director Carisa Barreca pauses a scene to give notes, the performers immediately start riffing. Ideas and jokes are flying in every direction. At one point, cast member Zoe McKee breaks out into song. It’s beautiful, but Barreca eventually reigns them in.

How do you problem-solve funny? How does Second City, a company known for being the training ground for sketch comedy legends, create skits that work? It all starts in the rehearsal room.

WBEZ got a behind-the-scenes look at the making of the now open show. You can read about it here, or listen to the audio story here.

MORE HERE


YOUR DAILY QUESTION ☕️

WBEZ reporter Mariah Woelfel and Sun-Times photojournalist Zubaer Khan are in Rome to cover Mayor Johnson’s meeting with Pope Leo XIV. We’re looking for your Rome recommendations to send them for their off-hours. Where should they go? What should they eat?

We want to know: What would you do in Rome? Tell us why.

Email your answer here (please include your first and last name). We may run your answer in a future newsletter or story. Tell us your name and neighborhood so we can shout you out.


PICTURE CHICAGO 📸

A haze hangs over Chicago’s downtown area Tuesday.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times


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Written and curated by: Matt Moore
Editor: Eydie Cubarrubia


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