Austin Weekly News 011018

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AUSTIN WEEKLY news ■

W. Side leaders want investigation for cop who killed LeGrier, Jones,

Vol. 32 No. 2

January 10, 2018

austinweeklynews.com

Also serving Garfield Park

@AustinWeeklyChi

@AustinWeeklyNews

PAGE 10

Meett Vi M Vince Johnson, page 3

Galewoodbased bank could get new parent

Aurora-based Old Second Bank plans to purchase ABC Bank for $41M By IGOR STUDENKOV Contributing Reporter

ABC bank, which was founded in Austin over a century ago and is still headquartered in Galewood, is expected to be purchased by Aurora-based Old Second Bank. According to a statement released by both companies, Old Second will pay around $41.1 million in cash for the acquisition. The deal will expand Old Second’s presence in Chicago, where it currently has one branch. ABC Bank customers will be able to take advantage of Old Second ATMs in the western and southwestern suburbs, and have access to more services. The sale is expected to be finalized sometime during the spring. ABC Bank was founded in 1891 as Austin State Bank. By the time Greater Chicago Financial Corporation acquired the bank in 1987, it was known as the Austin Bank of Chicago. In 2002, the bank was rebranded as ABC Bank. The bank is currently headquartered on the Galewood side of the Chicago/Oak Park border, at 6400 W. North Avenue. There’s also a branch in suburban Bensenville and two branches in Chicago — one in Little Italy and one on the Far South Side. “ABC Bank is committed to building value for our communities by sponsoring community events and supporting local fundraisers See ABC BANK on page 4

Humble champs

ALEXA ROGALS/Staff Photographer

Orr’s Raekwon Drake (25) goes up for a shot and scores on Friday, Dec. 29, 2017, during a game against Uplift at the 57th annual Proviso West Holiday Tournament at the school’s campus in Hillside. Read about the team on page 8.

Black students leave CPS for other segregated districts In the last decade, more than 52K students have left Chicago Public Schools By KALYN BELSHA Originally Published in the Chicago Reporter

When Chicago Public Schools announced plans to close their neighborhood elementary school in March 2013, Lettrice Sanders and her children protested the proposal together.

Sanders, the president of the local school council at Emmet on the city’s West Side, became a familiar face in the media. “My momma, when she talked on the news, she was fierce,” her 16-year-old daughter, Brittany, recalls. Lettrice and her husband, Kenneth Sand-

ers, didn’t finish high school. She wouldn’t let the closures disrupt their children’s education. But Emmet and 48 other elementary schools closed in an unprecedented deci-

Austin Chamber of Commerce on the move... 773.854.5848 • www.austinchicagochamber.com

See CPS EXODUS on page 6


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