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Doing business in Chicago? After the meetings, nix the hotel and take in The Windy City.


If you're headed to Chicago for a business trip: beware. The Windy City offers so much diversity in entertaining places to wind down, cultural sites to see and natural beauty toe enjoy, visitors are often tempted toe stay longer. This is the scene for the melancholy blues, frenetic house music, museums, shopping and major sports teams. And if you travel there during the warmer months, you might even be able toe sneak in a lakefront swim at the close of a deal.

After dark, the House of Blues House of Blues (HOB) is a chain of music halls and restaurants founded in 1992 by Hard Rock Cafe founder Isaac Tigrett and his friend and investor Dan Aykroyd. It is a home for live music and southern-inspired cuisine, whose clubs celebrate African-American culture, specifically  (329 N. Dearborn St.; 312-527-2583) is a popular spot for starpower concerts like Erykah Badu's and the professional set's parties. There's plenty of bopping to the sounds of live jazz at the Green Dolphin Street restaurant (2200 N. Ashland Ave.; 773-395-0066). Club Inta's (308 W. Erie; 312-664-6880) is a perennial choice for the after-work crowd on most Fridays. And All Jokes Aside
For the Miss Nana album, see All Jokes Aside (album)

All Jokes Aside is a documentary about black comedians in Hollywood.
 Comedy Club (1000 S. Wabash Ave.; 312-922-0577) is sure to deliver a few laughs with stand-up stand·up or stand-up  
adj.
1. Standing erect; upright: a standup collar.

2. Taken, done, or used while standing: a standup supper; a standup bar.
 acts five nights a week.

Many restaurants also serve up local flavor. A recent upscale soul food arrival is the Shark Bar (212 N. Canal St.; 312-559-9057). If you can't snag a Bulls ticket, Michael Jordan's Restaurant (500 N. LaSalle St.; 312-644-3865) is a trendy place to watch a game on the big screen at the bar or have dinner. The Signature Room at the 95th (875 N. Michigan Ave.; 312-787-9596) is, as the name implies, 95 floors atop the John Hancock Center For the tower in Boston, Massachusetts, see .

The John Hancock Center at 875 N. Michigan Ave. in Chicago, Illinois, is a 100-story, 344 m (1,127 ft) tall skyscraper designed by structural engineer Fazlur Khan of Skidmore, Owings and Merrill.
, serving up sumptuous French-American fare and a divine 360-degree view day and night. The lengthy waits are worth it at Gino's East (160 E. Superior at Michigan Ave.; 312-943-1124) to try delicious deep-dish pizza.

Downtown Chicagoans and visitors alike frequent the designer stores on the Magnificent Mile of N. Michigan Ave. and nearby Oak St. On the lake, the restored downtown Navy Pier has shopping, a Ferris wheel, IMAX IMAX
Noun

a film projection process that produces an image ten times larger than standard
 theater and several dinner cruise ships year-round.

If you have time to take in some cultural sites, leave the downtown area and head to the South Side's famed Bronzeville section, also known as the Black Metropolis. The section runs along 35th and State streets and has been restored by a $10 million city, state and federal arts project. Bronze plaques outline a walk of fame where visitors can read a brief history of the events and people of its heyday from the 1920s-50s. For further information, call the Black Metropolis Convention and Tourism Council at 773-548-2579 or go to their site at www. interman. net/bronzeville.

African Americans have thrived in Chitown, as it is affectionately known to locals, ever since a black man, Jean Baptiste Pointe DuSable, founded a trading post trading post

See post.
 in 1782. The legacy continued through this century's great black migration from the South, which brought millions of blacks, including Joe Louis, Mahalia Jackson and Elijah Muhammad, to the South and West Sides. The DuSable Museum of African American History African American history is the portion of American history that specifically discusses the African American or Black American ethnic group in the United States. Most African Americans are the descendants of African slaves held in the United States from 1619 to 1865.  (740 E. 56th Place; 773-947-0600) commemorates this age of prosperity and more with some 12,000 artifacts artifacts

see specimen artifacts.
 and works of art of the African Diaspora. It also hosts events like an annual African arts and heritage books festival.

The Art Institute of Chicago Art Institute of Chicago, museum and art school, in Grant Park, facing Michigan Ave. It was incorporated in 1879; George Armour was the first president. Since 1893 the Institute has been housed in its present building, designed in the Italian Renaissance style by  (S. Michigan Ave. and E. Adams St.; 312-443-3600) ranks among the world's great museums and holds a premier French Impressionist collection. One local gallery highlight is the Akainyah Gallery (357 W. Erie; 312-654-0333), where the Ghanaian-born artist and owner, William Akainyah, displays his Afrocentric oils and acrylics. Be sure to check out black-owned radio stations, including WBEE 1570 AM (jazz); WSSD WSSD World Summit on Sustainable Development (UN)
WSSD World Summit for Social Development
WSSD Websphere Studio Site Developer
WSSD Work Skills Series Manual Dexterity
WSSD Weapon System Support Development
 88.1 FM (blues); WYBA 106.3 FM (gospel); and WKKC 89.3 FM (music and current events).

For a good introduction to the city's history, spirit and diversity, order The Guide to Black Chicago (888-840-2345) for $9.95, complete with maps and more suggestions on the city's points of interest.
COPYRIGHT 1997 Earl G. Graves Publishing Co., Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:On Tour
Author:Collins, Noelle C.
Publication:Black Enterprise
Article Type:Directory
Date:Sep 1, 1997
Words:645
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