Chicago Reader: Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center in Skokie is one of the best museums!

Best small museum, Skokie division

The museum's Room of RemembranceThe museum’s Room of Remembrance

COURTESY ILLINOIS HOLOCAUST MUSEUM

Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center

Over the past 60 years the Holocaust has been discussed and dissected and interpreted and reinterpreted so many times, it’s hard to imagine there’s anything left to say. The tiny Illinois Holocaust Museum in Skokie, however, continues to find new stories to tell. In addition to a permanent exhibit recounting the Holocaust through the perspective of Illinois residents who either experienced it or witnessed it as American GIs, it hosts just two shows every year, but its curatorial staff chooses them wisely. Over the past few years, the museum has featured exhibits on Hannah Senesh, a Hungarian poet/soldier who was captured during a rescue mission;Charlotte Salomon, a German artist who painted an extensive graphic autobiography while hiding from the Nazis in the south of France; and Ruth Gruber, an American photojournalist who documented the plight of Jewish refugees after World War II. But the museum doesn’t just focus on the events of World War II: it also looks at holocausts in other times and places, such as South Africa, Croatia, and the Soviet Union, and asks us to consider the cost of intolerance in our own lives. Every visit gives you something new to think about. Among the current special exhibitions is “Through Soviet Jewish Eyes: Photography, War, and the Holocaust,” which runs through September 7.

Skokie Review: Skokie panel backs looser restrictions on commercial electronic signs

Drive by the Oakton Community Center, Weber Park or the CTA station along Skokie Boulevard and you’ll see electronic signs flashing different pieces of information about upcoming events. 

Drive by an electronic sign outside any Skokie business, however, and you’ll find a static, single piece of information. The content on that electronic sign will not change until the next day and cannot change until then in order to adhere to village code.

The different playing field for commercially-owned and government-owned electronic signs needs to be leveled, Klein said.

Under a new recommendation by the Economic Development Commission, businesses would be able to change content on their electronic signs by the minute, which is in keeping with many other municipalities, Klein said.

While the current restrictions were based on concerns about safety for distracted drivers, Klein said the Commission found that there is no evidence to support the concern. The recommended change is scheduled to go before the Village Board soon, he said.

“I think there was agreement that not allowing changes (for commercial electronic signs) for 24 hours was not necessary,” Klein said.

He also said that the concern is especially invalid since there are many non-commercial electronic signs in Skokie that have regular content changes.

One of the more adamant proponents of the sign code change was commission member Randy Miles, owner of the Village Inn and president of the Independent Merchants of Downtown Skokie. Miles doesn’t have an electronic sign for his business, but he sees Skokie’s restrictions as outdated and business-unfriendly.

“I’d like to think Skokie is in the curve and not behind it,” he said at the public hearing. “I travel a fair amount, and I see a lot of different communities, and I think there is a case for moving electronic signs. I’ve felt that way for quite some time.”

Klein said he believes the recommended change will not become a contentious issue as there seems to be agreement in the village that it is overdue.

The Economic Development Commission also looked at other aspects of the sign current code including restrictions for sandwich or A-frame signs. Other recommendations about the sign code could come before the Village Board at a later time, Klein said.

Read More: http://www.chicagotribune.com/suburbs/skokie/news/ct-skr-sign-code-tl-0618-20150616-story.html

misaacs@pioneerlocal.com

Twitter: @SKReview_Mike

Jewish B2B Networking's Hour of Power

Jewish B2B Networking  is now organizing a smaller, inclusive networking group to assist and encourage businesses to support, share ideas and grow together. The JB2B Hour of Power Networkers will be meeting on a monthly basis at a private office in Skokie, IL.
Our networking group is designed for the business professional catering to the Business to Business outreach as opposed to a business to consumer market. Please note that our networking group is designed by invitation only and as we start the group, we are limiting participation to one participant each of their respected field. The mission of The JB2B Hour of Power Networkers is to assist each other in the  promotion of our businesses throughout our individual networks, to share ideas strengthening our services and products and to support one another as we continue to grow and prosper. As with any relationship, we meet, learn and feel confident in recommending others products & services. As is Aesop’s fable of  The Tortoise and the Hareour goal is to build long term relationships over time with trust, commitment and integrity. We all strive for business today and sales tomorrow, but the foundations of friendship are built on the layers of time.
If you are interested in learning more about the Hour of Power Networkers – please contact Steven Schwartz at SMSchwartz@aaachicago.com.

A Conversation about Employment

FREE Employment Clinic
in Northbrook, July 14
Register at http://goo.gl/jVJYX6
The ARK and Jewish B2B Networking invite all job seekers from the Chicagoland Jewish community to a FREE session: 
A Conversation about Employment
This energetic, comprehensive conversation will address the issues YOU are going through, and the obstacles YOU might be facing.
  • Bring your questions, challenges, and personal experiences; or just come and listen!
  • Optional: e-mail your questions in advance (any questions presented at the session will be anonymous).
The clinic will be led by employment professionals, and will take place on:

Tuesday, July 14, 6-8 pm
The ARK Northwest
3100 Dundee Rd., Suite 802 (note new suite #)
Northbrook

There are no prerequisites regarding income or employment status, and affiliation with The ARK or JB2BN is not required.

The session is part of an ongoing series of free clinics that address the obstacles today’s job seekers face, and provide realistic, relevant information that can assist in conducting a more productive job search. Each session is self-contained; job seekers may attend any one or more of the sessions.

Register online at: http://goo.gl/jVJYX6

For more information, email or call Andrea Storz at 773.681.8964.

Moving Our Agenda Forward

Friends and Board Members,

Since re-launching in late 2013, the Jewish Community Council of West Rogers Park has taken on many priorities. While we try to use these weekly emails as a platform to update our key stakeholders on our work, there is so much more that is taking place behind the scenes. Our top priorities have been and remain business development and advocacy. This week was a great example of how we move those items forward on a daily basis.

On Monday of this week, Tony Martinez of the Chicago Community Trust, a resident of our area and a member of our advocacy committee chaired a meeting attended by key leaders in the Jewish Community Council of West Rogers Park, the West Ridge Chamber of Commerce and the West Rogers Park Community Organization. The agenda was discussing a path forward regarding organizing for improvements to the NorthTown branch of the Chicago Public Library. Each attendee took on several key next steps which involve petitions, social media, and meetings with officials. If you would like to be included in this conversation, please let me know so we can keep you informed on next steps.

You have likely seen the final touches to the first phase of the streetscape on Devon Avenue. The improvements are major and the credit for that is owed to Alderman Debra Silverstein. Now we have to leverage those positive developments and attract businesses to all of our major commercial areas in West Rogers Park. To that end, Howard Rieger and I have been discussing the possibility of adding a part-time position to our organization and hiring a business outreach assistant to support my work in bringing commerce and small businesses to our thoroughfares.  Several candidates have been recommended and we are looking for additional resumes to review (draft job description is available here). Your suggestions for candidates would be very much appreciated.

As always, I look forward to your feedback and welcome the opportunity to meet to review our progress.

Thank you,

 

SK