Five Of The Bulls’ Most Forgettable First-Rounders

Today’s sports column from CBS Chicago

Twenty-five years ago this month, the Chicago Bulls enjoyed an NBA Draft Night that laid nearly as much of their championship foundation as the one that brought some kid named Jordan to town three seasons earlier.

In 1987, Bulls general manager Jerry Krause was at his “organization-building” best when he flipped No. 8 pick Olden Polynice for a lanky forward out of Central Arkansas named Scottie Pippen that Seattle had selected at No. 5. Two picks later, Krause plucked Clemson forward Horace Grant off the board at No. 10.

And just like that, Chicago’s “Dobermans” were born.

Not every Bulls’ draft has been as memorable as that one, however.

Continue reading at CBSChicago.com

It’s Time To End The NBA Draft Lottery

Today’s sports column from CBS Chicago

By Dave Wischnowsky –

(CBS) In life, some things are just more trouble than they’re worth.

And in the NBA, that includes the Draft Lottery.

Since 1985, it’s the league’s preferred way of dispensing its top picks, but these days the system – designed to launch basketball careers – instead spawns more conspiracy theories than Area 51.

And it’s time for the thing to become extinct.

Continue reading at CBSChicago.com

Dear, DePaul …

My latest story about college basketball from ChicagoSide

 It’s Time To Bring Big-Time College Basketball Back To Chicago

By Dave Wischnowsky

June 25, 2012

For Chicago basketball fans, the year ahead promises to be a painful one.

Derrick Rose is on crutches and not expected to suit up until 2013, reducing a championship-caliber Bulls team into a puddle of doubt. Will Rose still be Rose when he returns? We wait, anxiously, to see.

In the meantime, we have one more season to watch SI cover boy Jabari Parker posterize opponents at Simeon High School. But, sadly, there’s little chance that Parker will stick around after his senior year since the area college teams are far from worthy of his prodigious talents.

To continue reading at ChicagoSide, click here.

Blowing through Chicago’s summertime sports scene

This weekend’s newspaper column from The Daily Journal (Kankakee, Ill.) and The Times (Ottawa, Ill.)

Blowing through Chicago’s summertime sports scene

The WISCH LIST

June 23, 2012

With temperatures soaring into the mid-90s and powerful gusts whipping around every street corner, this week in the Windy City was one of the warmest – and windiest – in recent memory.

So, I figured I’d take advantage and let it blow a few summertime thoughts about Chicago’s sports teams down your way.

And away we go …
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Listings for Chicago’s priciest homes is downright batty

This weekend’s newspaper column from The Daily Journal (Kankakee, Ill.) and The Times (Ottawa, Ill.)

Listings for Chicago’s priciest homes is downright batty

The WISCH LIST

June 16, 2012

In the 2008 Batman flick, “The Dark Knight,” the role of Gotham was played by the city of Chicago. (Quite brilliantly, I might add.)

And during it, the role of Bruce Wayne’s home away from stately Wayne Manor was played by the exterior of the Hotel 71 penthouse, perched high above the Loop at 71 E. Wacker Drive.

Now, one would figure that in both Gotham City – and the Windy City – such a luxurious location just south of the Chicago River, would cost an awfully pretty penny.
Continue reading “Listings for Chicago’s priciest homes is downright batty”

A pioneering idea for Chicago’s riverfront

This weekend’s newspaper column from The Daily Journal (Kankakee, Ill.) and The Times (Ottawa, Ill.)

A pioneering idea for Chicago’s riverfront

The WISCH LIST

June 9, 2012

I love skyscrapers.

From the Willis to the Hancock to the Trump, I marvel at them all. Back in 2008, I very much wanted “The Spire,” a 2,000-foot-tall, twisting tower that would have loomed along Lake Michigan, to be built, and was disappointed when it was not. And every time I hear a proposal for a soaring new building in downtown Chicago, I find myself intrigued.

But this time around, I’m not sure that the Windy City – the cradle of American architecture – really needs another skyscraper.

Perhaps it could use a history lesson instead.
Continue reading “A pioneering idea for Chicago’s riverfront”

June a smorgasbord of Chicago street fests

This weekend’s newspaper column from The Daily Journal (Kankakee, Ill.) and The Times (Ottawa, Ill.)

June a smorgasbord of Chicago street fests

The WISCH LIST

June 2, 2012

Summertime is about sunshine. It’s about vacations and beaches and picnics. And, in my world, it’s about baseball.

Or, at least it would be if the Cubs were any good.

But in Chicago, summertime is also about food. And lots of it. That’s especially true this month, as June’s lineup of city street fests includes a heaping helping of, well, just about everything.

The following is a sampling of this month’s food-focused celebrations in Chicago, which are sure to whet your appetite.
And, if you don’t watch it, expand your waistband too.
Continue reading “June a smorgasbord of Chicago street fests”

Chicago’s tourist hotspots – they’re not just for tourists

From the Saturday, May 26, 2012, editions of The Daily Journal (Kankakee, Ill.) and The Times (Ottawa, Ill.) …

Chicago’s tourist hotspots – they’re not just for tourists

The WISCH LIST

May 26, 2012

It’s Memorial Day Weekend, otherwise known as the unofficial start of summertime.

And in Chicago, otherwise known as “Summer’s Favorite City,” that means it’s officially time to start enjoying all that the city has to offer under the sun. That includes some of the obvious things that you might have already enjoyed in the past. Or, perhaps, those that you haven’t enjoyed because they’re, well, so darn obvious.

This past weekend, I spent time in Colorado visiting family. And during a conversation with a cousin who has lived in the San Francisco area for the past few years, the topic of Alcatraz came up.

Despite living just miles from the bay, my cousin explained how he’s never visited “The Rock,” which has long been one of the top tourist destinations (and my personal favorite) in San Fran.

My cousin remarked how sometimes you just don’t think about seeing the “touristy” sights in the big city nearest to you. That, of course, got me thinking about Chicago and its stereotypical tourist hotspots that everyone from out-of-state seems to visit, but locals often seem to ignore.

Well, I’m here to say that you shouldn’t ignore them.

There’s a reason why Chicago’s tourist hotspots are so hot. They’re fun. And the following is a list of five places in Chicago that everyone should experience at least once in their lifetime.

SkyDeck at Willis Tower

It’ll always be Sears Tower to me (even if it now isn’t). And it’s still the tallest building in North America (even if it might not always be, as New York City’s Freedom Tower may ultimately rise higher.)

If you’ve never been, the SkyDeck atop Chicago’s most iconic skyscraper is worth climbing up to (by elevator, of course). And if you haven’t been there recently, it’s worth revisiting. Especially to experience “The Ledge,” a quartet of enclosed glass boxes that stick out four feet from the 103rd floor Skydeck – and leave you peering 1,353 feet straight down.

The Signature Room

The Sears, er, Willis Tower’s SkyDeck gets all the glamour in Chicago. But it’s actually the John Hancock Tower’s 95th floor observatory – featuring the famous Signature Room lounge – that offers the city’s most spectacular view.

Situated on the northern end of Michigan Avenue, the Signature Room offers sweeping views the lake, the Magnificent Mile and the city sprawling off to the west. The drinks aren’t bad, either.

The Ferris Wheel at Navy Pier

During Chicago’s 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition, the world’s first Ferris wheel made its debut. The version found today at Navy Pier today is modeled after the original, and has become one of Chicago’s most visible attractions.

Speaking of views, the 150-foot-tall wheel offers a truly breathtaking one of the skyline during a seven-minute ride in one of its gondolas.

The Bean

Officially known as “Cloud Gate,” although no one calls it that, the most iconic element of Millennium Park is a treat to see, no matter if you’ve seen “The Bean” a hundred times before, or if you’ve never seen it at all.

The stainless-steel, mirrored sculpture is especially enjoyable during the summer when the sunshine and skyscrapers are reflecting off it, while little kids scurry about beneath its 12-foot-high arch.

“Eat at Ed’s”

It’s not as popular as it once was, but for any red-blooded Chicago area resident, Ed Debevic’s – the famously kitschy 1950s-themed “diner deluxe” in River North – is still a must-see at least once.

No doubt, Ed’s notoriously smart-aleck wait staff will tell you the same – right after they’ve slid you into a sparkly plastic booth and forced you to wear a paper deli hat throughout your meal.

NATO protests the latest under Chicago’s ‘Big Top’

Today’s newspaper column from The Daily Journal (Kankakee, Ill.) and The Times (Ottawa, Ill.)

NATO protests the latest under Chicago’s ‘Big Top’

The WISCH LIST

May 19, 2012

Well, the circus is in town.

That’s both figuratively with the arrival of Chicago’s NATO summit and, well, literally thanks to a pack of protesting clowns.

Yes, clowns.

On Wednesday, WBBM Newsradio 780 reported that a radical group called Clown Bloq whose members dress in circus-style get-up is expected to take part in protests during this weekend’s summit.

Supposedly armed with 1,000 whipped cream pies potentially targeted for police officers, Clown Bloq says on its website that its main goal is “to provide hilarity in the face of a humorless police state and to provide a fool’s critique of organized and militarized repression of the people, their voices and their best interests.”

On a lighter note, upon hearing word of Clown Bloq via Facebook this week, one of my friends commented that, “Police anticipate minimal traffic congestion, as the protesters will be arriving in one car.”

In Chicago, clowns on parade would be just the latest chapter in the city’s colorful – and controversial – history of protests. The hope here, of course, is that nothing violent spins out from the NATO crowds this weekend. But the following are some of the most notorious moments in Chicago’s history that sparked its ugliest riots.

Haymarket Riot

On May 4, 1886, in Haymarket Square on Chicago’s Near West Side, a rally was held in support of workers striking for an eight-hour workday. The demonstration was peaceful until an unknown person tossed a dynamite bomb at police. The explosion and ensuing gunfire killed seven officers and at least four civilians.

Eight anarchists were later convicted of conspiracy, although prosecutors conceded that none of them had thrown the bomb. The Haymarket affair is generally considered the origin of the international May Day observances for workers.

Pullman Strike

Eight years after Haymarket, a Chicago protest sparked a nationwide movement. In 1894, employees of railroad car magnate George Pullman went on strike protesting severe wage cuts he had instituted in the midst of an economic depression.

Sympathy strikes soon spread to 23 other states, and when the protests were accompanied by violence, President Grover Cleveland made the decision to dispatch federal troops to quell the uprisings. During the course of the strike, 13 strikers were killed and another 57 wounded.

Six days after the strike ended, Cleveland and Congress quickly passed legislation that made Labor Day a federal holiday.

Chicago Race Riot of 1919

On July 27, 1919, ethnic tension caused by competition between new groups in Chicago came to a boil when a major racial conflict erupted in the city and lasted until Aug. 3.

During the Chicago riot, dozens died and hundreds of others were injured as it came to be considered the worst of approximately 25 riots across the nation during the “Red Summer of 1919,” named so because of the violence and fatalities.

1968 Democratic National Convention

In a year known across the nation for political protest, civil unrest and violence, Chicago became the poster child for such turbulence when the Democratic National Convention rolled into town in late August.

Chicago mayor Richard J. Daley had intended to showcase his city’s achievements to national politicians and the news media. But on Aug. 28 outside the Conrad Hilton Hotel on Michigan Avenue, chaos broke out instead.

Approximately 10,000 Vietnam War protesters gathered outside the convention, where they were met by 23,000 police and National Guardsmen. While network television cameras rolled, the groups clashed for 20 minutes. As some protesters were being led or dragged away, others chanted: “The whole world is watching. The whole world is watching.”

Hopefully, this weekend we don’t see clowns chanting the same.