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{{for|the film of the same name|Skokie (film)}}
{{Infobox Television |
{{Chicagoland municipality|
| image =
muni-name = Skokie|
| caption =
image_name = US-IL-Chicagoland-Skokie.png|
| show_name = Rock of Love: Charm School
state = Illinois|
| format = [[Reality television|Reality]]
muni = Village|
| runtime = 60 minutes (including commercials)
date = 1888|
| creator = [[Cris Abrego]]<br>[[Mark Cronin]]
township = Niles|
| executive_producer = Cris Abrego<br>[[Mark Cronin]]<br>Ben Samek
county = Cook|
| starring = [[Sharon Osbourne]], [[Riki Rachtman]] and [[Charm School 2|Daniella Clarke]]
gov = [[Council-manager government|Council-manager]]|

head_label = Mayor|
| country = [[United States]]
gov_head = George Van Dusen|
| network = [[VH1]]
pop = 63,348|
| first_aired = [[October 12]], [[2008]]<ref name=VH1520/>
density-km = 2,521.1|
| last_aired =
density-mi = 6,588.2|
| num_episodes = 12
status = up|
| preceded_by = ''[[Flavor of Love Girls: Charm School]]''<br/>''[[Rock of Love 2]]''<br/>''[[I Love Money]]''
percent = 6.6|
| website = http://www.vh1.com/shows/series/rock_of_love_charm_school/
prevyear = 1990|
white = 65.6|
black = 4.51|
hispanic = 5.71|
asian = 21.28|
islander = 1.86|
native = 0.17|
other = 0.87|
zips = 60076, 60077|
acode = 847 & 224|
area-km = 2.62|
area-mi = 10.1|
latdegree = 42|
latarc = 2.13|
longdegree = 87|
longarc = 44.24|
pci = 27,136|
geocode = 70122|
mhi = 57,375|
mnhv = 234,700|
mhv = 272,000 ([[Coldwell Banker|2005]])|
website = skokie.org|
}}
}}


'''Skokie''' (formerly Niles Center) is a [[village]] in [[Cook County, Illinois|Cook County]], [[Illinois]], [[United States]]. It is a [[Chicago]] [[suburb]], on the northwest border of the city, that, per the 2000 census, had a population of 63,348.
'''''Rock of Love: Charm School''''' is the second season of the [[VH1]] [[reality television series]] ''[[Charm School (TV series)|Charm School]]''. Fourteen contestants from both seasons of ''[[Rock of Love]]''<ref name=VH1520/> will compete to develop proper [[etiquette]] in order to win $100,000.<ref name=VH1520/> [[Sharon Osbourne]] will host.<ref name=VH1520>[http://blog.vh1.com/2008-05-20/exclusive-rock-of-love-girls-head-to-charm-school-with-sharon-osbourne/ Exclusive: Rock of Love Girls Head to Charm School With Tyra Banks]. ''VH1.com'', [[May 20]] [[2008]]. Retrieved [[2008-05-20]].</ref> ''Charm School 2'' is set to begin airing on VH1 on October 12, 2008.


==Geography==
There was a short preview of the season during the 2008 VMA's.


The Village of Skokie, Illinois, U.S., is at co-ordinates {{coor dms|42|2|13|N|87|44|24|W|city}} (42.037030, -87.740070) {{GR|1}}; per the [[United States Census Bureau]], its total area is 10.0&nbsp;square miles (26.0&nbsp;km²), all land. The village is bordered by [[Evanston, Illinois|Evanston]], [[Chicago]], [[Lincolnwood]], [[Niles, Illinois|Niles]], [[Morton Grove, Illinois|Morton Grove]], [[Glenview, Cook County, Illinois|Glenview]], and [[Wilmette]].
==Ten Commandments==
# Thou Shalt Rock Together
# Thou Shalt Rock It With Style
# Thou Shalt Be Takin' Care of Business
# Thou Shalt Not Rock Rude
# Thou Shalt Rock Thy Body
# Thou Shalt Rock At Love
# Thou Shalt Express Thyself
# Thou Shalt Know Who Thou Art
# Thou Shalt Rock Unto Others
# Thou Shalt Be Fully Rockin'


The village's street circulation is a standard street-grid pattern, with major east-west thoroughfare every half-mile: Old Orchard Road, Golf Road, Church Street, Dempster Street, Main Street, Oakton Street, Howard Street, and Touhy Avenue. The major north-south thoroughfares are Skokie Boulevard, [[Crawford Avenue]], and McCormick Boulevard; the major diagonal streets are [[Lincoln Avenue (Chicago)|Lincoln Avenue]], Niles Center Road, and Gross Point Road.
==Contestants==
{| class="wikitable"
|-
Host: [[Sharon Osbourne]]<br>
Dean #1: [[Charm School 2|Daniella Clarke]] <br>
Dean #2: [[Riki Rachtman]]
|-
! Name
! Season on ''[[Rock of Love with Bret Michaels|Rock of Love]]
! Episode Eliminated
|-
| [[Megan Hauserman]]
| ''[[Rock of Love with Bret Michaels (season 2)|Rock of Love 2]]'' ||
|-
| Brandi Cunningham
| ''[[Rock of Love with Bret Michaels (season 1)|Rock of Love]]'' ||
|-
| Brandi Mahon
| ''[[Rock of Love with Bret Michaels (season 1)|Rock of Love]]'' ||
|-
| Dallas Harrison
| ''[[Rock of Love with Bret Michaels (season 1)|Rock of Love]]'' ||
|-
| Destiney Sue Moore
| ''[[Rock of Love with Bret Michaels (season 2)|Rock of Love 2]]'' ||
|-
| Heather Chadwell
| ''[[Rock of Love with Bret Michaels (season 1)|Rock of Love]]'' ||
|-
| Inna Dimitrenko
| ''[[Rock of Love with Bret Michaels (season 2)|Rock of Love 2]]'' ||
|-
| Jessica Kinni
| ''[[Rock of Love with Bret Michaels (season 2)|Rock of Love 2]]'' ||
|-
| Kristy Joe Muller
| ''[[Rock of Love with Bret Michaels (season 2)|Rock of Love 2]]'' ||
|-
| Lacey Conner
| ''[[Rock of Love with Bret Michaels (season 1)|Rock of Love]]'' ||
|-
| Angelique Morgan
| ''[[Rock of Love with Bret Michaels (season 2)|Rock of Love 2]]'' ||
|-
| Rodeo (Cindy Steedle)
| ''[[Rock of Love with Bret Michaels (season 1)|Rock of Love]]'' ||
|-
| Courtney Van Dusen
| ''[[Rock of Love with Bret Michaels (season 2)|Rock of Love 2]]'' || Episode 1
|-
| Raven Williams
| ''[[Rock of Love with Bret Michaels (season 1)|Rock of Love]]'' || Episode 1 (Quit)
|-
|}


Skokie's north-south streets continue the street names and (house number) grid values of Chicago's north-south streets — with the notable exceptions of Cicero Avenue, which is renamed Skokie Boulevard, in Skokie, and Chicago's Pulaski Road retains its original Chicago City name, Crawford Avenue. The east-west streets continue Evanston's street names, but with Chicago grid values, such that, Evanston's Dempster Street is 8800 north, in Skokie addresses. Resultantly, the Village of Skokie has two Greenleaf streets, the first, west-bound from Rogers Park (a city neighbourhood), south of Touhy Avenue, the second, west-bound from Evanston, south of Dempster Street.
==Call Out order==
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|+ Episode progress
|-
! # !! Contestant !! 1 !! 2
|-
! 1
| ''Angelique'' || style="background-color:white;"| SAFE ||
|-
! 2
| ''Brandi C.'' || style="background-color:white;"| SAFE ||
|-
! 3
| ''Brandi M.'' || style="background-color:white;"| SAFE ||
|-
! 4
| ''Dallas'' || style="background-color:pink;"| RISK ||
|-
! 5
| ''Destiney'' || style="background-color:white;"| SAFE ||
|-
! 6
| ''Heather'' || style="background-color:white;"| SAFE ||
|-
! 7
| ''Inna'' || style="background-color:white;"| SAFE ||
|-
! 8
| ''Jessica'' || style="background-color:white;"| SAFE ||
|-
! 9
| ''Kristy Joe'' || style="background-color:white;"| SAFE ||
|-
! 10
| ''Lacey'' || style="background-color:pink;"| RISK ||
|-
! 11
| ''Megan'' || style="background-color:white;"| SAFE ||
|-
! 12
| ''Rodeo'' || style="background-color:white;"| SAFE ||
|-
! 13
| ''Courtney'' || style="background-color:tomato;"| OUT || style="background:#CCCCCC;" colspan="1"|
|-
! 14
| ''Raven'' || style="background-color:blue;"| <font color="white">QUIT</font> || style="background:#CCCCCC;" colspan="1"|
|-
|}


==Public Transport==


The [[Chicago Transit Authority]]'s [[Yellow Line (Chicago Transit Authority)|Yellow Line]] rapid transit train (formerly the ''Skokie Swift'') has its terminus at the [[Skokie (CTA Yellow Line)|Dempster Street]] station in Skokie. Currently, plans are underway to build a new Yellow Line train station at Oakton Street, to serve downtown Skokie and environs, it is slated to open in 2009.
:{{colorbox|limegreen}} The contestant won the competition.
:{{colorbox|cornflowerblue}} The contestant won the challenge and was safe from expulsion.
:{{colorbox|white}} The contestant did not win the challenge but was safe from being expelled.
:{{colorbox|pink}} The contestant was at risk for expulsion.
:{{colorbox|tomato}} The contestant was expelled.
:{{colorbox|blue}} The contestant voluntarily quit the competition.


Although the Yellow Line is the principal, and fastest transport to and from the city, the Village also is served with CTA and PACE bus routes and a [[Greyhound Bus]] Terminal at the Dempster Street train station. For automobile transport, [[Interstate 94]], the [[Edens Expressway]], traverses western Skokie, with interchanges at Touhy Avenue, Dempster Street, and Old Orchard Road.
==Episodes==
===Episode 1: '''One Bad Apple''' (Aired [[October]] [[12]], [[2008]])===
Sharon Osbourne welcomes 14 girls from both seasons of Rock Of Love to Charm School and explains that the girl who shows the most improvement to show more class, manners, charm, and style, will be declared ''Charm School Queen'' and win $100,000. The girls rush into the house to find their rooms. Heather is upset because her bed is assigned to be in the same room with Brandi C. and Megan (Heather has hated them since they got her kicked off of '''[[I Love Money]]'''). Dallas is also unsatisfied with who one of her roommates is: Lacey. They still don't like each other since their argument from season 1. Brandi C. introduces Megan to Lacey and the two instantly become fast friends and an alliance starts to form. Once outside, Lacey continuously antagonizes Dallas and tickles her butt and Dallas states she doesn't like to be touched in inappropriate places. Upset, Dallas pours her drink on Lacey and Lacey throws her drink on Dallas and then Dallas completely lashes out and throws an apple at Lacey's ear. Meanwhile, Jessica, Megan and Brandi C. attempt to make friends with Raven, but Raven doesn't want to talk to them and fights with Brandi C about Raven acting like she's above them and Charm School. Courtney tries to limit herself from drinking so much, but fails when Brandi M. pours her what should of been her last drink and passes out. It's time for the administration ceremony and a very drunk Courtney has trouble getting inside the room and Raven and Rodeo have to help her get in. Sharon introduces the deans, Riki and Daniella, and shows the girls DVDs representing their worst moments from Rock Of Love. Courtney doesn't feel good and has an alcoholic stench on her and Sharon has Destiney and Jessica take her up to her room to hopefully sleep off her [[hangover]]. While the girls get ready for their first elimination, Courtney wakes up and gets her act back together and shows up for elimination. Riki asks Raven if she really wants to be there, since Dallas told him earlier that she doesn't think she needs to be there, and she begins to talk about herself, and Sharon decides Raven's decision is quite clear and takes away her pledge pin and Raven leaves. Everybody thinks because Raven has left, they figure no one else will go home, but Sharon drops a bomb and says somebody still has to go home. Sharon calls down Courtney, Lacey, and Dallas down to the carpet. Lacey is on the carpet for her diva attitude and her constant antagonizing. Dallas is down there for her temper and Courtney is there for always getting drunk. Sharon calls down Courtney and says Charm School can't help her with her drinking problems, but says they can help her by admitting her to [[rehab]]. Courtney is expelled for her alcohol problems.


==Demographic composition==
*'''Challenge Winner(s)''': N/A
*'''Bottom Three''': Courtney, Dallas, Lacey
*'''Expelled''': Courtney, Raven (voluntarily quit)


Per the [[census]]{{GR|2}} of 2000, the Village of Skokie was composed of 63,348 people who formed in 23,223 households containing 17,045 families. The village's [[population density]] was 6,308.70 people per square mile (2,436.1/km²) living in 23,702 housing units (average population density: 2,360.4/square mile [911.5/km²]). The Village's racial composition was: 65.6% [[White (U.S. Census)|White]], 4.51% [[African American (U.S. Census)|African American]], 0.17% [[Native American (U.S. Census)|Native American]], 21.28% [[Asian (U.S. Census)|Asian]], 0.03% [[Pacific Islander (U.S. Census)|Pacific Islander]], 1.86% from [[Race (United States Census)|other races]], 3.23% from two or more races, and the [[Hispanic (U.S. Census)|Hispanic]] and [[Latino (U.S. Census)|Latino]], of any race, were 5.71% of the village's population.
===Episode 2: '''Quit Yer Beaching''' (To Be Aired [[October]] [[19]], [[2008]])===


The 23,223 households comprise: 32.2% with minority-age children (younger than 18 years), 60.5% were cohabiting [[Marriage|married couples]], 9.9% of households were headed by a woman (with no husband present), and 26.6% were non-family cohabitants, 23.6% were single-person households, and 13.6% included an elder person (65 years of age or older). The average Skokie household size was 2.68 persons, and the average household family size was 3.20 persons.
===Episode 3: '''The Trashion Show''' (To Be Aired [[October]] [[26]], [[2008]])===


Chronologically, Skokie's age population comprises: 23.0% of minority age (younger than 18 years); 7.0% aged from 18 to 24 years; 25.0% aged from 25 to 44, 25.5% aged from 45 to 64, and 19.6% aged 65 years and older. The median Villager's age is 42 years; for every woman younger than 18 years, there were 90.1 men; for every 100 women age 18 and older, there were 85.2 men.
==External Links==
*[http://www.bourgy.com/charm-school2-01.html Charm School 2 Photo Gallery, Bourgy.com]
*[http://www.maximumthreshold.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=167/ Interview with Destiney Moore, Jessica Kinni and Ambre Lake on MT]
*[http://www.maximumthreshold.net/index.php?option=com_weblinks&task=view&catid=13&id=168/ Angelique Morgan Interview on MT]
*[http://podcast.maximumthreshold.net/podcast/?p=63 Interview with Inna Dimitrenko on MT]
*[http://podcast.maximumthreshold.net/podcast/?p=63 Interview with Courtney Van Dusen on MT]
*[http://podcast.maximumthreshold.net/podcast/?p=50 Interview with Lacey Connor on MT]
[[Category:2000s American television series]]
[[Category:2008 television series debuts]]
[[Category:Flavor of Love spinoffs]]
[[Category:The Surreal Life spinoffs]]
[[Category:VH1 television series]]


Financially, Skokie's median household income was $57,375; the median family income was $68,253; a man's median income was $44,869; a woman's median income was $33,051. The ''per capitum'' income is approximately $27,136; 4.2% of families and 5.4% of the population lived on an income inferior to the Government's Federal [[poverty line]] income, including 5.9% of children under 18 and 5.3% of elders aged 65 years and older.
[[es:Rock of Love]]

Since the 1950s, the Village of Skokie is home to a large Jewish community, today the population is very racially diverse and integrated. The Village of Skokie have built synagogues that continue attracting the world's Jewish immigrants (most recently from post-Communist Russia) to settle in the Village. <ref>[http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/1148.html Skokie, IL<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

==History==
===Beginnings===

[[Image:summer 2006 0882.jpg|thumb|right|200px|A 1925 ''Chicago''-style bungalow in Skokie.]]

In 1888, '''Skokie''' originally was incorporated and named '''Niles Centre''', with the second word's spelling in French. Around 1910, the spelling of the Village's name was anglicised, to '''Niles Center'''; nevertheless, the Village's name caused its confusion with neighbour village [[Niles, Illinois|Niles]], Illinois, given that both villages were in '''Niles Township''', in the event, in the 1930s there emerged a village-renaming campaign, finally, on 15 November 1940, '''Niles Center''' became the '''Village of Skokie'''.

In the real estate boom of the 1920s, the lands of the Village were much subdivided; many two- and three-flat apartment buildings were built, with the ''Chicago''-style bungalow a dominant architectural specimen, until the Great Crash of 1929, and consequent [[market crash|Great Depression]], stopped the boom, rendering the Village homeostatic. It was not until the 1940s and the 1950s, when the [[baby boom]] generation moved their families from Chicago to the suburbs, that Skokie's housing development began again. Consequently, the Village developed commercially, an example being the Old Orchard Shopping Center, currently named [[Westfield Old Orchard]].

=== Toponymy ===

Virgil Vogel's ''Indian Place Names in Illinois'' (Illinois State Historical Society, 1963), records the name '''Skokie''' deriving “directly from '''skoutay''' or '''scoti''' and variant [[Algonquian]] words for ''fire''. The reference is to the fact that the marshy grasslands, such as occurred in the Skokie region, were burned over, by the Indians, in order to flush out the game” and “Several persons declare that ''Skokie'' is the Indian word for ''marsh'' ”.

Allowing for inevitable usage corruptions, this seems correct, because, until about thirty years ago, maps named the Skokie marsh as '''Chewab Skokie''', a probable derivation from '''Kitchi-wap choku''', the [[Potawatomi]] term denoting ''great marsh''. Though undocumented, this explanation is credible, because it consists with the Skokie area's former physiography. Like-wise, '''Skokie''' might derive from the same Algonquian roots as derives the word '''Chicago''' — '''zh'gak''' and '''sh'kag''', two, different voicings of the base words for ''skunk'' and ''wild leek'' in languages of this group. Moreover, in ''Native Placenames of the United States'' (U. of Oklahoma Pr, 2004), William Bright lists Vogel's Potawatomi derivation first, but adds reference to the Ojibwa term '''miishkooki''' (''marsh'') recorded in the ''Eastern Ojibwa-Chippewa-Ottawa Dictionary'' (Mouton, 1985), by Richard A. Rhodes.

===NSPA Controversy===

In 1977 and 1978, Illinois Nazis of the [[National Socialist Party of America]] (derived from the [[American Nazi Party]]) attempted to demonstrate their political existence with a march in Skokie — at the City's north western border — far from their south side headquarters. Originally, the NSPA had planned a political rally in [[Marquette Park]], in the south side of [[Chicago]], to which the City reacted against, first, by requiring the NSPA post an onerous public-safety-insurance bond, then, by banning ''all'' political demonstrations in Marquette Park.

Seeking another free-speech political venue, the NSPA chose to march on Skokie. Given the many [[Holocaust]] survivors living in Skokie, the Village's Government thought the Nazi march would be politically provocative and socially disruptive, and refused the NSPA its permission. In the event, the [[American Civil Liberties Union]] interceded in behalf of the NSPA, in the case of the ''[[National Socialist Party of America v. Village of Skokie]]'', wherein an Illinois appeals court raised the injunction issued by a Cook County Circuit Court judge, ruling that the presence of the swastika, the Nazi emblem, would constitute deliberate provocation of the people of Skokie, however, the Court also ruled that Skokie's attorneys had failed to prove that either the Nazi uniform or their printed materials, alleged the Nazis intended to distribute, would incite violence. <ref>{{cite news | last = Dubey | first = Diane | title = No swastikas allowed : Lift march injunction | page = | work = The Skokie Life | date = [[1977-07-14]] | url = http://www.digitalpast.org/cdm4/item_viewer.php?CISOROOT=/skokiepo001&CISOPTR=165 | accessdate = }} </ref>

Moreover, because Chicago subsequently lifted its Marquette Park political demonstration ban, the NSPA ultimately held its rally in Chicago. In 1981, the attempted Illinois Nazi march on Skokie was dramatised in the television movie, ''[[Skokie (film)|Skokie]]''.

===Tragic occurrences===

In 1934, the cadaver of gangster Lester Gillis — [[Baby Face Nelson]] — was dumped at the entrance to the St. Peter Catholic Cemetery, a Skokie cemetery. <ref>{{cite news | last = Dunn | first = Bill | title = Details Swamp Baby Face Nelson Bio | page = | work = The Capitol Times | date = [[2002-08-02]] | url = http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-90047355.html | accessdate = 2008-10-11 }} </ref>

In 1999, on the 4th of July week end, [[Creativity Movement]] disciple [[Benjamin Nathaniel Smith]] went on a racist, random shooting spree, killing African-Americans in drive-by shootings in Illinois and Indiana. Among the people he killed was the black man [[Ricky Byrdsong]] (former Northwestern University basketball coach), near his (Byrdsong's) house in Skokie.

In December of 2000, the Skokie courthouse, on Old Orchard Road, became the stage for a second, political-free-speech demonstration by a racist, [[anti-Semitism|anti-Semitic]] organisation, the [[Ku Klux Klan]], who were like-wise countered by [[Anti-Racist Action]] and the [[Jewish Defense League]] counter-protests.{{fact|date=May 2007}}

=== Film history ===

These films were photographed in Skokie:

* ''[[Risky Business]]''
* ''[[Sixteen Candles]]''
* ''[[The Weather Man]]''
* ''[[She's Having A Baby]]''
* ''[[Skokie (film)|Skokie]]'', a television movie.

Skokie is referred to in the film ''The Usual Suspects'': the Verbal Kint character claims having been in “a barbershop quartet in Skokie, Illinois”, an idea he derived from the ''brand name'' of a bulletin board made by the Quartet company, in Skokie, until it moved to Northbrook, Illinois, in 2006.

==Notable Residents==
*[[Rashard Mendenhall]]- [[Pittsburgh Steelers]] running back and former [[University of Illinois]] football player
*[[James Carlos Goncalves]]-[[inventor]]- invented the automatic nut cracker[[University of Missouri at Columbia]]

==Notable Corporations==
*[[Ifbyphone, Inc.]] - Provider of web-telephony integration
*[[VOCOMOTION]] - Award-winning a cappella recording studio
*[[U.S. Robotics]]
== Sister City ==
In 1967, Skokie, Illinois, and [[Porbandar]], India, became sister cities; Porbandar is Mahatma [[Gandhi]]'s birthplace. Later, the Village erected a statue of India's "Father of the Nation", on the McCormick bicycling trail, between Dempster and Church steets.

== Economy ==

The Village's AAA [[bond rating]] attests to strong economic health via prudent fiscal management. In 2003, Skokie became the U.S.'s first municipality to achieve nationally-accredited Police, Fire, and Public Works departments, and a Class-1 fire department, per the [[Insurance Services Office]] (ISO) ratings. Like-wise in 2003, [[Money]] magazine named Skokie, Illinois, among the 80 fastest-growing suburbs in the U.S.

Besides strong manufacturing and retail commerce bases, Skokie's economy will add [[health sciences]] jobs; in 2003, [[Forest City Enterprises]] announced their re-development of the vacant [[Pfizer]] research laboratories, in downtown Skokie, as the ''Illinois Science + Technology Park'', a 23-acre campus of research installations (2-million ft.² [180,000 m²] of chemistry, genomics, toxicology laboratories, clean rooms, NMR suites, conference rooms, etc). In 2006, the Evanston Northwestern Healthcare company announced installing their consolidated data center operations at the park, adding 500 jobs to the economy; also, cartographer [[Rand McNally]] and online grocer [[Peapod]] have offices in Skokie.

== Parks and Recreation ==

[[Image:North Shore Center for Performing Arts.jpg|thumb|right|300 px|North Shore Center for Performing Arts in Skokie]]
The Skokie Park District protects natural resources, preserves historical sites and provides unique recreational opportunities within its more than {{convert|240|acre|km2}} of parkland and in its ten facilities. The district is a recent winner of the national "Gold Medal for Excellence" in parks and recreation management. Skokie is home to one of the most diverse populations in the Chicago suburbs. To celebrate this diversity, every May since 1991, the park district hosts the Skokie Festival of Cultures.

Skokie also has a sculpture garden that is situated between McCormick Avenue and north channel of the Chicago river (Sanitary canal). It was started in 1988 and now has over 70 sculptures. <ref>[http://www.sculpturepark.org Skokie Northshore Sculpture Park - Home Page<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

Just north of the sculpture garden is a statue to [[Mahatma Gandhi]] with five of his famous quotations engraved around the base. This was dedicated on [[October 2]] [[2004]].<ref>[http://www.skokienet.org/gandhimemorial/memorial.htm]</ref>

The Village is also home to the state of the art North Shore Center for the Performing Arts, encompassing Centre East, Northlight Theatre and the Skokie Valley Symphony Orchestra. The facility celebrated its 10th anniversary in 2006.

== Schools ==

=== High schools ===
* [[Niles West High School|Niles West]] of District 219
* [[Niles North High School|Niles North]] of District 219
* [[Niles East High School|Niles East]] of District 219 (closed and building razed)
* [[Evanston Township High School]] of District 202 (only serves students who live on the border of Skokie and Evanston east of Crawford, south of Golf and north of Greenleaf St. in zipcode 60203 and a small part of zipcode 60076)
* Niles Township District 219 was awarded the Kennedy Center for Performing Arts Top program for fine arts education in the United States on [[April 27]] [[2007]].

=== Elementary schools ===
* Jane Stenson School, (K through 5th) of District 68
* Devonshire School, (K through 5th) of District 68
* Highland School, (K through 5th) of District 68
* Madison School, (pre-K through 2nd) of District 69
* Edison School, (3rd through 5th) of District 69
* Fairview North formerly of District 72
* Fairview South School, (K through 8th) of District 72
* Cleveland School, (K through 6th) of District 73.5 (school closed and building razed)
* Elizabeth Meyer School, (pre-K and K) of District 73.5
* John Middleton School, (1st through 5th) of District 73.5
* East Prairie School, (Pre-K through 8th) of District 73
* Walker Elementary School, (K through 5th, located in Skokie) of Skokie/Evanston District 65
* Dr. Bessie Rhodes Magnet School, (K through 8th, located in Skokie) of Skokie/Evanston District 65, formerly Timber Ridge Magnet School (may be attended by Skokie students in District 65)
* Martin Luther King, Jr. Laboratory School, (K through 8th magnet school, located in Evanston) of Skokie/Evanston District 65 (may be attended by Skokie students in District 65)

=== Jewish day schools ===
* Arie Crown Hebrew Day School, (pre-K through 8th) Orthodox Judaism
* Cheder Lubavitch Hebrew Day School, (pre-K through 8th) Orthodox Judaism, separate boys and girls programs
* Hillel Torah North Suburban Day School, (pre-K through 8th) Orthodox Judaism
* Skokie Solomon Schechter Day School, (K through 5th) Conservative Judaism
* [[Fasman Yeshiva High School]], (9th through 12th) Orthodox Judaism, boys only

===Catholic elementary schools===
* Saint Peter School, Downtown Skokie
* Saint Joan of Arc School, northeast Skokie/Evanston

=== Junior high schools ===
See the same map as elementary schools.
* Oliver McCracken Middle School, (formerly Oakview Junior High) of District 73.5
* East Prairie Middle School, (Pre-K through 8th) of District 73
* Fairview South School of District 72
* Lincoln Junior High of District 69
* Old Orchard Junior High of District 68
* Chute Middle School of Skokie/Evanston District 65

=== Higher education ===
* [[Oakton Community College]] (Ray Hartstein Campus) This is the site of the old Niles East High School. The original structure, built in the 1930s, was demolished in the 1990s.

* [[Hebrew Theological College]], a private university. It was chartered in 1922 as one of the first Modern Orthodox Jewish institutions of higher education in America.

* Ort Technical Institute, [http://www.zg-ort.edu] For over 125 years ORT has been training people in over 60 countries for jobs in technical fields.

* [[Knowledge Systems Institute (KSI)]], a private graduate school of computer and information sciences. KSI is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools (NCA).

== Library ==
* [http://www.skokielibrary.info Skokie Public Library]

== Population trends ==
*1900 - 529
*1910 - 568
*1920 - 763
*1930 - 5,007
*1940 - 7,172
*1950 - 14,832
*1960 - 59,364
*1970 - 68,627
*1980 - 60,278
*1990 - 59,432
*2000 - 63,348
*2006 - 66,659[http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/SAFFPopulation?_event=Search&_name=skokie&_state=04000US17&_county=skokie&_cityTown=skokie&_zip=&_sse=on&_lang=en&pctxt=fph]

==References==
===Notes===
{{Reflist}}
===Bibliography===
*''When the Nazis Came to Skokie: Freedom for Speech We Hate'', Philippa Strum, University Press of Kansas (31 Mar 1999), ISBN 0700609415
*''Skokie, 1888-1988: A centennial history'', Richard Whittingham, Village of Skokie (1988), ASIN B00071EORW [http://skokienet.org/skokienet.now/centenn/]
*''The industrialization of the Skokie area'', James Byron Kenyon, University Of Chicago Press (1954), ASIN B0007DMRX8

===External links===
*[http://www.skokie.org Village of Skokie]
*[http://www.skokie.org/about/history.html Brief history of Skokie]
*[http://www.skokiehistory.info Skokie Historical Society]
*[http://www.skokienet.org/cats/history/index.html Skokie History Center]
*[http://www.skokienet.org/ SkokieNet Community Information Network]
*[http://www.skokieindians.org/ Skokie Indians Little League]
*[http://www.skokielibrary.info/s_info/in_biography/attempted_march/index.asp Archive on the attempted Nazi march]
*[http://www.chicagohistory.org/static_media/pdf/historyfair/aclu_and_nazis_in_skokie_1978.pdf The ACLU and the Skokie march (pdf)]
*[http://www.skokielibrary.info/s_info/in_biography/Skokie_history/index.asp Skokie History Project (historic photographs)]
*[http://www.skokielibrary.info/s_info/in_biography/Skokie_history/index.asp At Home in Skokie (historic photographs)]
*[http://www.skokielibrary.info/s_info/in_biography/Louise_Klehm/index.asp Dr. Louise Klehm Archive]
*[http://www.skokielibrary.info/s_info/in_biography/Fire_Department/index.asp Skokie Fire Department History]
*[http://www.skokieculturefest.org/ Skokie Festival of Cultures]
*[http://www.skokielibrary.info/ Skokie Public Library]
{{Mapit-US-cityscale|42.03703|-87.74007}}

{{Cook County, Illinois}}
{{Chicagoland}}
{{Illinois}}
{{Geographic Location
| Center = [[Skokie, Illinois]]
| North = [[Wilmette, Illinois]]
| East = [[Evanston, Illinois]]
| Southeast = [[West Ridge, Chicago|West Ridge]], [[Chicago]]
| South = [[Lincolnwood, Illinois]]
| Southwest = [[Niles, Illinois]]
| West = [[Morton Grove, Illinois]]
| Northwest = [[Glenview, Cook County, Illinois|Glenview, Illinois]]
}}


[[Category:Skokie, Illinois| ]]
{{Rock of Love}}
[[Category:Cook County, Illinois]]
[[Category:Villages in Illinois]]
[[Category:United States places with Orthodox Jewish communities]]
[[Category:Jews and Judaism in Chicago]]


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Revision as of 17:47, 13 October 2008

Template:Chicagoland municipality

Skokie (formerly Niles Center) is a village in Cook County, Illinois, United States. It is a Chicago suburb, on the northwest border of the city, that, per the 2000 census, had a population of 63,348.

Geography

The Village of Skokie, Illinois, U.S., is at co-ordinates 42°2′13″N 87°44′24″W / 42.03694°N 87.74000°W / 42.03694; -87.74000Invalid arguments have been passed to the {{#coordinates:}} function (42.037030, -87.740070) Template:GR; per the United States Census Bureau, its total area is 10.0 square miles (26.0 km²), all land. The village is bordered by Evanston, Chicago, Lincolnwood, Niles, Morton Grove, Glenview, and Wilmette.

The village's street circulation is a standard street-grid pattern, with major east-west thoroughfare every half-mile: Old Orchard Road, Golf Road, Church Street, Dempster Street, Main Street, Oakton Street, Howard Street, and Touhy Avenue. The major north-south thoroughfares are Skokie Boulevard, Crawford Avenue, and McCormick Boulevard; the major diagonal streets are Lincoln Avenue, Niles Center Road, and Gross Point Road.

Skokie's north-south streets continue the street names and (house number) grid values of Chicago's north-south streets — with the notable exceptions of Cicero Avenue, which is renamed Skokie Boulevard, in Skokie, and Chicago's Pulaski Road retains its original Chicago City name, Crawford Avenue. The east-west streets continue Evanston's street names, but with Chicago grid values, such that, Evanston's Dempster Street is 8800 north, in Skokie addresses. Resultantly, the Village of Skokie has two Greenleaf streets, the first, west-bound from Rogers Park (a city neighbourhood), south of Touhy Avenue, the second, west-bound from Evanston, south of Dempster Street.

Public Transport

The Chicago Transit Authority's Yellow Line rapid transit train (formerly the Skokie Swift) has its terminus at the Dempster Street station in Skokie. Currently, plans are underway to build a new Yellow Line train station at Oakton Street, to serve downtown Skokie and environs, it is slated to open in 2009.

Although the Yellow Line is the principal, and fastest transport to and from the city, the Village also is served with CTA and PACE bus routes and a Greyhound Bus Terminal at the Dempster Street train station. For automobile transport, Interstate 94, the Edens Expressway, traverses western Skokie, with interchanges at Touhy Avenue, Dempster Street, and Old Orchard Road.

Demographic composition

Per the censusTemplate:GR of 2000, the Village of Skokie was composed of 63,348 people who formed in 23,223 households containing 17,045 families. The village's population density was 6,308.70 people per square mile (2,436.1/km²) living in 23,702 housing units (average population density: 2,360.4/square mile [911.5/km²]). The Village's racial composition was: 65.6% White, 4.51% African American, 0.17% Native American, 21.28% Asian, 0.03% Pacific Islander, 1.86% from other races, 3.23% from two or more races, and the Hispanic and Latino, of any race, were 5.71% of the village's population.

The 23,223 households comprise: 32.2% with minority-age children (younger than 18 years), 60.5% were cohabiting married couples, 9.9% of households were headed by a woman (with no husband present), and 26.6% were non-family cohabitants, 23.6% were single-person households, and 13.6% included an elder person (65 years of age or older). The average Skokie household size was 2.68 persons, and the average household family size was 3.20 persons.

Chronologically, Skokie's age population comprises: 23.0% of minority age (younger than 18 years); 7.0% aged from 18 to 24 years; 25.0% aged from 25 to 44, 25.5% aged from 45 to 64, and 19.6% aged 65 years and older. The median Villager's age is 42 years; for every woman younger than 18 years, there were 90.1 men; for every 100 women age 18 and older, there were 85.2 men.

Financially, Skokie's median household income was $57,375; the median family income was $68,253; a man's median income was $44,869; a woman's median income was $33,051. The per capitum income is approximately $27,136; 4.2% of families and 5.4% of the population lived on an income inferior to the Government's Federal poverty line income, including 5.9% of children under 18 and 5.3% of elders aged 65 years and older.

Since the 1950s, the Village of Skokie is home to a large Jewish community, today the population is very racially diverse and integrated. The Village of Skokie have built synagogues that continue attracting the world's Jewish immigrants (most recently from post-Communist Russia) to settle in the Village. [1]

History

Beginnings

A 1925 Chicago-style bungalow in Skokie.

In 1888, Skokie originally was incorporated and named Niles Centre, with the second word's spelling in French. Around 1910, the spelling of the Village's name was anglicised, to Niles Center; nevertheless, the Village's name caused its confusion with neighbour village Niles, Illinois, given that both villages were in Niles Township, in the event, in the 1930s there emerged a village-renaming campaign, finally, on 15 November 1940, Niles Center became the Village of Skokie.

In the real estate boom of the 1920s, the lands of the Village were much subdivided; many two- and three-flat apartment buildings were built, with the Chicago-style bungalow a dominant architectural specimen, until the Great Crash of 1929, and consequent Great Depression, stopped the boom, rendering the Village homeostatic. It was not until the 1940s and the 1950s, when the baby boom generation moved their families from Chicago to the suburbs, that Skokie's housing development began again. Consequently, the Village developed commercially, an example being the Old Orchard Shopping Center, currently named Westfield Old Orchard.

Toponymy

Virgil Vogel's Indian Place Names in Illinois (Illinois State Historical Society, 1963), records the name Skokie deriving “directly from skoutay or scoti and variant Algonquian words for fire. The reference is to the fact that the marshy grasslands, such as occurred in the Skokie region, were burned over, by the Indians, in order to flush out the game” and “Several persons declare that Skokie is the Indian word for marsh ”.

Allowing for inevitable usage corruptions, this seems correct, because, until about thirty years ago, maps named the Skokie marsh as Chewab Skokie, a probable derivation from Kitchi-wap choku, the Potawatomi term denoting great marsh. Though undocumented, this explanation is credible, because it consists with the Skokie area's former physiography. Like-wise, Skokie might derive from the same Algonquian roots as derives the word Chicagozh'gak and sh'kag, two, different voicings of the base words for skunk and wild leek in languages of this group. Moreover, in Native Placenames of the United States (U. of Oklahoma Pr, 2004), William Bright lists Vogel's Potawatomi derivation first, but adds reference to the Ojibwa term miishkooki (marsh) recorded in the Eastern Ojibwa-Chippewa-Ottawa Dictionary (Mouton, 1985), by Richard A. Rhodes.

NSPA Controversy

In 1977 and 1978, Illinois Nazis of the National Socialist Party of America (derived from the American Nazi Party) attempted to demonstrate their political existence with a march in Skokie — at the City's north western border — far from their south side headquarters. Originally, the NSPA had planned a political rally in Marquette Park, in the south side of Chicago, to which the City reacted against, first, by requiring the NSPA post an onerous public-safety-insurance bond, then, by banning all political demonstrations in Marquette Park.

Seeking another free-speech political venue, the NSPA chose to march on Skokie. Given the many Holocaust survivors living in Skokie, the Village's Government thought the Nazi march would be politically provocative and socially disruptive, and refused the NSPA its permission. In the event, the American Civil Liberties Union interceded in behalf of the NSPA, in the case of the National Socialist Party of America v. Village of Skokie, wherein an Illinois appeals court raised the injunction issued by a Cook County Circuit Court judge, ruling that the presence of the swastika, the Nazi emblem, would constitute deliberate provocation of the people of Skokie, however, the Court also ruled that Skokie's attorneys had failed to prove that either the Nazi uniform or their printed materials, alleged the Nazis intended to distribute, would incite violence. [2]

Moreover, because Chicago subsequently lifted its Marquette Park political demonstration ban, the NSPA ultimately held its rally in Chicago. In 1981, the attempted Illinois Nazi march on Skokie was dramatised in the television movie, Skokie.

Tragic occurrences

In 1934, the cadaver of gangster Lester Gillis — Baby Face Nelson — was dumped at the entrance to the St. Peter Catholic Cemetery, a Skokie cemetery. [3]

In 1999, on the 4th of July week end, Creativity Movement disciple Benjamin Nathaniel Smith went on a racist, random shooting spree, killing African-Americans in drive-by shootings in Illinois and Indiana. Among the people he killed was the black man Ricky Byrdsong (former Northwestern University basketball coach), near his (Byrdsong's) house in Skokie.

In December of 2000, the Skokie courthouse, on Old Orchard Road, became the stage for a second, political-free-speech demonstration by a racist, anti-Semitic organisation, the Ku Klux Klan, who were like-wise countered by Anti-Racist Action and the Jewish Defense League counter-protests.[citation needed]

Film history

These films were photographed in Skokie:

Skokie is referred to in the film The Usual Suspects: the Verbal Kint character claims having been in “a barbershop quartet in Skokie, Illinois”, an idea he derived from the brand name of a bulletin board made by the Quartet company, in Skokie, until it moved to Northbrook, Illinois, in 2006.

Notable Residents

Notable Corporations

Sister City

In 1967, Skokie, Illinois, and Porbandar, India, became sister cities; Porbandar is Mahatma Gandhi's birthplace. Later, the Village erected a statue of India's "Father of the Nation", on the McCormick bicycling trail, between Dempster and Church steets.

Economy

The Village's AAA bond rating attests to strong economic health via prudent fiscal management. In 2003, Skokie became the U.S.'s first municipality to achieve nationally-accredited Police, Fire, and Public Works departments, and a Class-1 fire department, per the Insurance Services Office (ISO) ratings. Like-wise in 2003, Money magazine named Skokie, Illinois, among the 80 fastest-growing suburbs in the U.S.

Besides strong manufacturing and retail commerce bases, Skokie's economy will add health sciences jobs; in 2003, Forest City Enterprises announced their re-development of the vacant Pfizer research laboratories, in downtown Skokie, as the Illinois Science + Technology Park, a 23-acre campus of research installations (2-million ft.² [180,000 m²] of chemistry, genomics, toxicology laboratories, clean rooms, NMR suites, conference rooms, etc). In 2006, the Evanston Northwestern Healthcare company announced installing their consolidated data center operations at the park, adding 500 jobs to the economy; also, cartographer Rand McNally and online grocer Peapod have offices in Skokie.

Parks and Recreation

North Shore Center for Performing Arts in Skokie

The Skokie Park District protects natural resources, preserves historical sites and provides unique recreational opportunities within its more than 240 acres (0.97 km2) of parkland and in its ten facilities. The district is a recent winner of the national "Gold Medal for Excellence" in parks and recreation management. Skokie is home to one of the most diverse populations in the Chicago suburbs. To celebrate this diversity, every May since 1991, the park district hosts the Skokie Festival of Cultures.

Skokie also has a sculpture garden that is situated between McCormick Avenue and north channel of the Chicago river (Sanitary canal). It was started in 1988 and now has over 70 sculptures. [4]

Just north of the sculpture garden is a statue to Mahatma Gandhi with five of his famous quotations engraved around the base. This was dedicated on October 2 2004.[5]

The Village is also home to the state of the art North Shore Center for the Performing Arts, encompassing Centre East, Northlight Theatre and the Skokie Valley Symphony Orchestra. The facility celebrated its 10th anniversary in 2006.

Schools

High schools

  • Niles West of District 219
  • Niles North of District 219
  • Niles East of District 219 (closed and building razed)
  • Evanston Township High School of District 202 (only serves students who live on the border of Skokie and Evanston east of Crawford, south of Golf and north of Greenleaf St. in zipcode 60203 and a small part of zipcode 60076)
  • Niles Township District 219 was awarded the Kennedy Center for Performing Arts Top program for fine arts education in the United States on April 27 2007.

Elementary schools

  • Jane Stenson School, (K through 5th) of District 68
  • Devonshire School, (K through 5th) of District 68
  • Highland School, (K through 5th) of District 68
  • Madison School, (pre-K through 2nd) of District 69
  • Edison School, (3rd through 5th) of District 69
  • Fairview North formerly of District 72
  • Fairview South School, (K through 8th) of District 72
  • Cleveland School, (K through 6th) of District 73.5 (school closed and building razed)
  • Elizabeth Meyer School, (pre-K and K) of District 73.5
  • John Middleton School, (1st through 5th) of District 73.5
  • East Prairie School, (Pre-K through 8th) of District 73
  • Walker Elementary School, (K through 5th, located in Skokie) of Skokie/Evanston District 65
  • Dr. Bessie Rhodes Magnet School, (K through 8th, located in Skokie) of Skokie/Evanston District 65, formerly Timber Ridge Magnet School (may be attended by Skokie students in District 65)
  • Martin Luther King, Jr. Laboratory School, (K through 8th magnet school, located in Evanston) of Skokie/Evanston District 65 (may be attended by Skokie students in District 65)

Jewish day schools

  • Arie Crown Hebrew Day School, (pre-K through 8th) Orthodox Judaism
  • Cheder Lubavitch Hebrew Day School, (pre-K through 8th) Orthodox Judaism, separate boys and girls programs
  • Hillel Torah North Suburban Day School, (pre-K through 8th) Orthodox Judaism
  • Skokie Solomon Schechter Day School, (K through 5th) Conservative Judaism
  • Fasman Yeshiva High School, (9th through 12th) Orthodox Judaism, boys only

Catholic elementary schools

  • Saint Peter School, Downtown Skokie
  • Saint Joan of Arc School, northeast Skokie/Evanston

Junior high schools

See the same map as elementary schools.

  • Oliver McCracken Middle School, (formerly Oakview Junior High) of District 73.5
  • East Prairie Middle School, (Pre-K through 8th) of District 73
  • Fairview South School of District 72
  • Lincoln Junior High of District 69
  • Old Orchard Junior High of District 68
  • Chute Middle School of Skokie/Evanston District 65

Higher education

  • Oakton Community College (Ray Hartstein Campus) This is the site of the old Niles East High School. The original structure, built in the 1930s, was demolished in the 1990s.
  • Hebrew Theological College, a private university. It was chartered in 1922 as one of the first Modern Orthodox Jewish institutions of higher education in America.
  • Ort Technical Institute, [2] For over 125 years ORT has been training people in over 60 countries for jobs in technical fields.
  • Knowledge Systems Institute (KSI), a private graduate school of computer and information sciences. KSI is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools (NCA).

Library

Population trends

  • 1900 - 529
  • 1910 - 568
  • 1920 - 763
  • 1930 - 5,007
  • 1940 - 7,172
  • 1950 - 14,832
  • 1960 - 59,364
  • 1970 - 68,627
  • 1980 - 60,278
  • 1990 - 59,432
  • 2000 - 63,348
  • 2006 - 66,659[3]

References

Notes

  1. ^ Skokie, IL
  2. ^ Dubey, Diane (1977-07-14). "No swastikas allowed : Lift march injunction". The Skokie Life. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. ^ Dunn, Bill (2002-08-02). "Details Swamp Baby Face Nelson Bio". The Capitol Times. Retrieved 2008-10-11. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  4. ^ Skokie Northshore Sculpture Park - Home Page
  5. ^ [1]

Bibliography

  • When the Nazis Came to Skokie: Freedom for Speech We Hate, Philippa Strum, University Press of Kansas (31 Mar 1999), ISBN 0700609415
  • Skokie, 1888-1988: A centennial history, Richard Whittingham, Village of Skokie (1988), ASIN B00071EORW [4]
  • The industrialization of the Skokie area, James Byron Kenyon, University Of Chicago Press (1954), ASIN B0007DMRX8

External links

Template:Mapit-US-cityscale