A former Chicago Weekly writer and Features Editor like Katie Buitrago! All of us at the Weekly want to congratulate Katie on her excellent feature in the most recent Chicago Reader, “What sort of woman reads Playboy?” It’s about Peggy Wilkins, a forty-something Hyde Park resident and University of Chicago Library server technician, who has worked her way to the top of Playboy Magazine fandom. She’s even had to rent an second apartment above the one she shares with her boyfriend to store her exhaustive collection of magazines and posters. So what drives Wilkins’s passion? Read the article to find out!
Do some good for Haitian disaster relief–and your sweet tooth–by checking out the charity bakesale held tomorrow from 2-6 pm at the Medici on 57th Bakery (1327 E 57th St.) All proceeds are given directly to Doctors Without Borders and Oxfam, and goodies will be available from individual volunteers and pro bakeries from across the city, including Bleeding Heart Bakery, Jimmy Jamm Sweet Potato Pies, and Luscious Layers Bakery. More info, including the full list of participating bakeries and items (gluten-free goods should be available too), is here.
Maoist polemicist Raymond Lotta issued a reply to Keith Jamieson’s recent essay, Everything You Know About Communism is Right, and had it passed out in front of the University’s Cobb Hall today.
The reply argues that the atrocities carried out in the last century by Communist revolutionary governments are part of the “learning curve” of the revolutionary project, and corrects the claim that Stalin killed millions of people to reflect the mere 700,000 or so death sentences carried out between 1937 and 1938. He asserts that regardless of the atrocities of communism, people have been lied to about it, and that the record needs to be corrected. His rebuttal also corrects some factual errors from his recent speech.
One of Lotta’s fellow Revolutionary Communist Party members and polemicists (who is curiously unnamed on the flier) will be on campus to informally “take on all comers” next Tuesday, Dec 1, 11am to 3pm in Hutchinson Commons at the University of Chicago.
This year’s Chicago Humanities Festival, which begins today, is devoted to a topic everyone can relate to: laughter. The kick-off begins appropriately on the South Side (where the roots of improv grow deep). Here’s the breakdown:
- Tim and Tom: A Comedy in Black and White will take place from 2-3pm today at the DuSable Museum of African American History at 740 East 56th Place. Tim Reid was a Dupont Marketing Manager, and Tom Dressen was an insurance salesman when they met in 1968. They were at a Junior Chamber of Commerce meeting in Chicago and decided to form a comedy duo, Tim and Tom. Through the increasingly tumultuous ’60s, they were the first (and only) black and white comedy duo. Here, they’ll reflect on their time together through an exciting period in Chicago’s history.
- From 4:30-5:30 PM at the International House at 1414 East 59th Street, An Incomplete History of Comedy in Hyde Park will feature Anne Libera, executive artistic director of The Second City Training Centers, and Sheldon Patinkin, founding member of The Second City and chair emeritus of the Columbia College Chicago Theater Department as they take the audience through the history of Hyde Park’s role in comedy.Chicago comedy might bring up associations with the impov group Second City, but Hyde Park was actually a pivotal place for the development of improvisational comedy. Second City itself came out of a comedy group at the University of Chicago in the 1950s. The evolution and development of Second City included the Compass Players, with Alan Arkin (Little Miss Sunshine, Wait Until Dark), Elaine May (Primary Colors, the Birdcage), and Mike Nichols (The Graduate, Charlie Wilson’s War), and has concluded with the current form of improv we see today.
Despite the cold weather, Shawn Michelle’s seemed to be doing good business yesterday when we saw (and sampled) their ice cream truck parked in Kimbark Plaza in Hyde Park. They were back today as well. We’ll try to confirm whether they’ll be in the same place every weekend and for how long into the season they’ll be around—hopefully they’re planning to come back when the weather’s warmer, because that ice cream is good.
Update, 10/14: The plan right now is to have the truck in Kimbark Plaza 2pm-10pm, Wednesday through Sunday, and they’ll be year-round. They also said they’re working on some things like hot fudge to warm up the winter months.

RECYCLES bikes outside of the Regenstein library. (Sam Bowman)
The University of Chicago’s Office of Sustainability opened a pilot bike sharing program on campus for University affiliates at the end of the summer. The twenty bikes can be checked out for free from Ratner Athletics Center, the Regenstein library, the School of Social Service Administration and the NSIT/TTI-C building at 6045 S. Kenwood Ave. The bikes are used and are mostly medium to small mountain bikes from the nonprofit Blackstone Bikes.
During the pilot program restrictions on usage are fairly strict. Cycles can be checked out only from 8:30am to 5pm on weekdays, and must be returned to their starting locations, though this may change once the pilot ends in the spring.
University ID holders are eligible to register for the program online at universitybikeshare.com.
Shawn Michelle’s Homemade Ice Cream, which we wrote about in last year’s Best of the South Side issue, has some of the most delicious ice cream I’ve ever tasted. Unfortunately it’s located so far south, at 119th and Western, that I rarely get down there. Now, presumably because of some good karma I’ve been accumulating, Shawn Michelle’s is getting its first ice cream truck specifically in order to serve Hyde Park! Founder Yahya Muhammad explains, “This truck is intended to be a mobile extension of Shawn Michelle’s, targeting those who have an appreciation for distinctive ice cream.” In addition to their “Sweet Sixteen Flavors,” Muhammad says the truck will offer “several perfect combinations.” Hopefully this will include the “Barack Supreme” (made up of Melanin Magic and Butter Pecan Supreme), which I tried for the first time last week and have been craving ever since. The truck begins its route within the next two weeks.

Kimbark Liquors: Where fun gets resurrected
Kimbark Liquors: Where fun gets resurrected.
The popular Hyde Park beverage establishment, nicknamed Kim’s Liqs by some UofC students, has a new line of T-shirts referencing the University’s unofficial slogan. The shirts cost $15, or free with party-size supplies of alcohol.
Sarah Murray founded the Slow Bicycle Society last spring, a year after car accidents, engine fires, and lemons drove her to start commuting by bicycle. The group is the Chicago branch of an international movement for relaxed biking, akin to the Slow Food movement. “What is the rush? Why is everyone clipping along? Are they late? Does it matter? Are they enjoying the ride?” asks Murray. “These are critically important issues.”
The society’s first seasonal ride, the Summer Slowterium, included a picnic stop and a meal at Jane’s Restaurant in Bucktown. For the second, the Autumnal Slowterium, participants will gather at the 31st Street Beach this Saturday at 10am and head down along the lakefront to 55th Street at speeds no faster than 8 mph. In Hyde Park, the society will pick up lunches from Rajun Cajun and picnic at Promontory Point before partaking in the Hyde Park Jazz Festival. For more information, see the Facebook event or email Murray at slowbicyclesociety@gmail.com
