Tag Archives: Chicago Tribune

Illinois Students With Disabilities Will Now Be Able To Opt Out Of Gym Class, According To New Bill

By The Huffington Post News Editors

Student-athletes with disabilities in Illinois will now be able to opt out of gym class, just like their non-disabled student-athlete peers.

Illinois governor Pat Quinn (D) signed a bill Sunday that allows students with disabilities to be excused from physical education classes, so long as they have proof that they participate in organized sports outside of school. This gym class exemption privilege previously existed for student-athletes but did not include students with disabilities, according to the Chicago Tribune.

Open to high school juniors and seniors, the exemption gives student-athletes the option of taking extra classes instead of participating in gym class.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Cops Kill 95-Year-Old With Bean-Bag Gun

By Kevin Spak

When a 95-year-old at a Chicago senior living community refused medical treatment, police were called in—and wound up killing the man with a bean-bag gun, the Chicago Tribune reports. Officers were called in Friday night to help a private ambulance crew deal with a “combative” resident being “involuntarily” sent… …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

MLB All-Star Game Moments: Pete Rose Collision, Reggie Jackson Homer Among Most Memorable

By The Huffington Post News Editors

Don’t tell Ray Fosse that the All-Star Game didn’t really “count” until 2003.

The longtime Cleveland Indians catcher was on the wrong end of one of the most infamous — and painful — plays in All-Star history when Pete Rose obliterated him in a collision at home plate in order to score the winning run in 1970. Fosse’s fractured and separated soldier surely counted.

Dating back to July 1933, when Chicago Tribune sports editor Arch Ward orchestrated a star-studded charity game at Comiskey Park, the most talented — and most popular — players in the majors have gathered on one summer day for one star-studded game. While generations of the game’s best and brightest stars have shone on the All-Star stage, pride was the only thing on the line until the 2002 affair ended in an embarrassing tie. The following year, MLB adopted a “This Time It Counts” slogan and awarded home-field advantage in the World Series to the winning team.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Lisa Madigan Won’t Run For Governor Of Illinois

By The Huffington Post News Editors

The Illinois attorney general said Monday she won’t run for governor next year because her father remains a top state legislator.

State Attorney General Lisa Madigan (D), who had been considered a front-runner against Gov. Pat Quinn (D), said in a statement that she would not run because her father, state House Speaker Michael Madigan (D-Chicago), would remain in his post. Madigan instead said she will seek a fourth term as state attorney general.

“I feel strongly that the state would not be well served by having a governor and speaker of the House from the same family and have never planned to run for governor if that would be the case,” Lisa Madigan said in a statement to the Chicago Tribune. “With Speaker Madigan planning to continue in office, I will not run for governor.”

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Koch Bros. Look to Buy 8 Newspapers

By Ruth Brown Brothers Charles and David Koch, the billionaire businessmen behind Koch Industries and noted supporters of libertarian causes, are looking to buy into the newspaper business. They’re exploring a deal to acquire the Tribune Company‘s eight regional newspapers, including the Los Angeles Times , the Chicago Tribune and the Baltimore Sun , the…

From: http://www.newser.com/story/166589/koch-bros-look-to-buy-8-newspapers.html

Inside Forbes: On a Visit to Ole Miss, a Look Into Journalism's Past, Present and Future

By Lewis DVorkin, Forbes Staff

Will Norton and I go back 40 years. A former Chicago Tribune reporter (a job I coveted at that time), he was a graduate student at the University of Iowa moonlighting as publisher of the campus newspaper. I was an undergrad — I think a junior — who found his way into the newsroom and the excitement and camaraderie of deadline pressure. Will convinced me to write what turned out to be a 50-page plan to run The Daily Iowan. I got the editor’s job, and, as they say, the rest is history, including the 25-cent late-night beers and shop talk we shared after putting the paper to bed.

From: http://www.forbes.com/sites/lewisdvorkin/2013/04/15/inside-forbes-on-a-visit-to-ole-miss-a-look-into-journalisms-past-present-and-future/

Roger Ebert Remembered for 'Big Heart' at Funeral

By Neal Colgrass A huge crowd attended Roger Ebert‘s funeral today at Holy Name Cathedral in Chicago, where friends, family, and Mayor Rahm Emanuel paid tribute to the country’s most famous film critic, the Chicago Tribune reports. “He had a heart big enough to accept and love all,” said Chaz Elbert, his wife… …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

Remembering Roger Ebert

By Brian Richards, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Roger Ebert, film critic for the Chicago Sun-Times for nearly half a century, and a game-changing television presenter, died Thursday at the age of 70.

Ebert had been in ill health for some time. He was first diagnosed with cancer in 2002 and, through complications from that disease and subsequent surgeries, he lost his lower jaw, and with it, the ability to eat, drink, and talk. Yet he remained a prolific writer right up to the end.

Ebert will be remembered as a pioneering media figure — he won a Pulitzer, the first for a film critic, and co-hosted At the Movies, “one of the most powerful programs in television history,” according to the Chicago Tribune.

He’ll also be remembered as one of the best critics in American history. He was prolific, accessible, passionate, and honest. By all accounts (see the Deadspin.com article linked below), he was a nice guy and a mentor to a younger generation. He was a champion of the movies. But most of all, he was a hell of a writer.

At 22, I was an aspiring writer/journalist living in Chicago. I loved movies — still do — and was attending the same university Ebert did for a brief spell (he left a Ph.D. program to write for the Sun-Times). At that point in my life, I wanted to be like Roger Ebert.

When Night of the Living Dead was released in 1967, Ebert wrote a quasi-review of the film that, as a student years later, I read probably a dozen times; it spawned the idea for my own graduate thesis (analyzing the way audiences interact with horror movies, quite a ways from my current work today, but a lot of fun, nonetheless).

I’ve read hundreds of Ebert’s reviews, although I never personally interacted with him. However, Ebert and The Motley Fool crossed paths over the years. Before the 2002 Academy Awards, Fool co-founder Tom Gardner interviewed him for our radio show — you can listen to the audio in this clip. (Note his prescient “sell” call on Blockbuster back then.)

 

In the clip, Ebert talks about his admiration for the Danny DeVito quote about money from David Mamet‘s 2001 movie Heist. We liked that line so much that producer Mac Greer incorporated it into the intro to our current radio show, Motley Fool Money.

Tangential note: After Ebert lost his ability to speak, a company called CereProc spent a year constructing a text-to-speech voice that would resemble his own. Per Wikipedia:

In 2009, film critic Roger Ebert employed CereProc to create a synthetic version of his voice. Ebert has lost the power of speech following surgery to treat thyroid cancer. CereProc mined tapes and DVD commentaries featuring Ebert’s voice to create a text-to-speech voice that sounded more like his own. Roger Ebert used the voice in his March 2, 2010 appearance appearance on The Oprah Winfrey Show.

As part of that process, we sent CereProc the interview linked above, in the hopes of helping him sound …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Northerly Island Pavilion Expansion OKed: Phish, Jimmy Buffett Booked As Headliners

By The Huffington Post News Editors

The Chicago Plan Commission on Thursday OKed a proposal to expand Northerly Island’s Charter One Pavilion, which will play host to major acts Jimmy Buffett and Phish this summer.

The seasonal music venue — on the former site of Meigs Fieldwas seeking approval to boost its capacity by more than 20,000 people by shifting the pavilion’s stage to include a new lawn seating area in addition to 600 new pavilion seats, all facing a backdrop of the city’s picturesque skyline.

The Ticketmaster/Live Nation-owned venue’s makeover into something resembling a Ravinia in the city will be “self-sufficient,” according to DNAinfo Chicago, and should be completed by June 1, in time for Buffett’s June 29 gig, Phish’s July 19-21 jam. In addition, the Chicago Tribune reports Dispatch will play the venue on June 1, O.A.R. on June 28 and Ben Folds and Barenaked Ladies will share a double bill on July 9.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Fan whose 1949 shooting of ballplayer inspired “The Natural” dies after years in obscurity

By hnn

CHICAGO — She inspired a novel and a movie starring Robert Redford when in 1949 she lured a major league ballplayer she’d never met into a hotel room with a cryptic note and shot him, nearly killing him.

After the headlines faded, Ruth Ann Steinhagen did something else just as surprising: She disappeared into obscurity, living a quiet life unnoticed in Chicago until now, more than a half century later, when news broke that she had died three months earlier.

The Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office confirmed Friday that Steinhagen passed away of natural causes on Dec. 29, at the age of 83. First reported by the Chicago Tribune last week, her identity was a surprise even to the morgue employees who knew about the 1984 movie “The Natural,” in which she was portrayed by actress Barbara Hershey….

Source:
WaPo

Source URL:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/nationals/fan-whose-1949-shooting-of-ballplayer-inspired-the-natural-dies-after-years-in-obscurity/2013/03/17/ae1e736c-8f2b-11e2-9173-7f87cda73b49_story.html

Date:
3-17-13

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at History News Network – George Mason University

Koch Brothers Vs. Rupert Murdoch: The Fight For Tribune Newspapers Is On

By Breaking News

Rupert Murdoch SC  Koch Brothers vs. Rupert Murdoch: The Fight for Tribune Newspapers Is On

This could get very ugly, very fast. The Koch brothers are reportedly considering a bid for the Tribune Company newspapers — focusing on the crown jewels of the L.A. Times and Chicago Tribune, or at least what jewels of power are left in the flailing newspaper industry — but they may face stiff competition in the form of a debt-free, full pocketed media power player named Rupert Murdoch.

L.A. Weekly’s Hillel Aron reports “multiple sources” claiming Charles and David Koch will offer to buy the Tribune Co. slate of papers — including the Times, the Trib, the Baltimore Sun, and five other papers — or maybe just offer to buy all of Tribune Co. outright. If the notoriously free-spending political heavyweights and brothers in industry choose to go for the whole company — and, importantly, if their offer is taken seriously and ends up bailing out the papers — their purchase would also include 20 television stations along with the eight papers. The Tribune Co. emerged from bankruptcy at the end of 2012 and has been looking to unload their newspaper holdings, apparently as part of a single-package deal, according to Bloomberg’s Edmund Lee. Any buyer interested in Tribune’s Co.’s newspapers will have to cough up a cool $600 million to acquire the whole lot — not exactly a lot to the Koch brothers, who spent untold hundreds of millions on the 2012 election… and weren’t too pleased with their return on investment.

What makes the L.A. Weekly report all the more exciting — if a little far fetched — is the looming giant in the wings: Murdoch has been eyeing the L.A. Times and Chicago Tribune for months now. It’s been reported that Murdoch “covets” the Times as a potential addition to his empire of more than 175 newspapers. There were reports of his interest as far back as last June. Then there were dueling reports of Murdochian interest in the Times, in particular, in October: one from the Times itself, and another from Murdoch’s Wall Street Journal. This was described by Daily Intel’s Joe Coscarelli as “media mogul equivalent of flirting.” In December, Murdoch was planning “to take a close look at Tribune Co.’s newspaper assets once they’re available,” Bloomberg’s Lee reported.

Read More at The Atlantic  . By Connor Simpson.

Photo credit: World Economic Forum (Creative Commons)

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Blake Springsteen Wanted: Police Looking For Illinois Man They Say Stabbed, Bound His Mother

By The Huffington Post News Editors

Police are now looking for a Homewood, Ill. man wanted in a disturbing attack on his mother.

Blake Springsteen, 22, allegedly beat his 46-year-old mother and bound her and put her into the trunk of a car before driving her to Crete, stabbing her multiple times and leaving her in a ditch, the Cook County Sheriff’s Office said Wednesday, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.

Springsteen’s mother survived the alleged attack and is in stable condition at an area hospital, the Chicago Tribune reports.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Wife Due Most of Poisoned Lotto Winner's Estate: Lawyer

By Matt Cantor More potential clues in the case of the poisoned lottery winner: Urooj Khan had recently arranged his finances so that, should he die, his wife would receive his share in a dry cleaning business, the Chicago Tribune reports. The news comes following word that his family is battling over his… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

Former Drew Peterson lawyer sues current lawyer

A public quarrel between one former and one current attorney for Drew Peterson over who is to blame for the suburban Chicago police officer’s murder conviction has escalated again.

Joel Brodsky, Peterson’s lead trial attorney who has since stepped down from the legal team, filed a 31-page defamation lawsuit this week that hurls bitter denunciations wrapped in legalese at Steve Greenberg, a co-counsel at the trial who is still representing Peterson. Peterson was convicted in September.

The burgeoning feud comes weeks before a Will County judge is set to rule on a defense motion for a new trial based on allegations of Brodsky’s inadequate representation. If the judge rejects the motion, Peterson would immediately be sentenced for killing his third wife, Kathleen Savio. Peterson is also suspect in the 2007 disappearance of his fourth wide, Stacy Peterson, though he has never been charged.

Brodsky’s lawsuit, filed Wednesday in Cook County Court, singles out a letter Greenberg released to the media in September accusing Brodsky of “single-handedly” losing the trial. The letter provides an unflattering account of Brodsky’s leadership at trial, saying he insisted on other lawyers calling him “coach.”

The lawsuit says Greenberg “developed animus, hatred and resentment of Brodsky which caused him to ignore the best interest of Peterson and become irrationally fixated and obsessed with destroying Brodsky.”

Greenberg developed a grudge, it says, because Brodsky told him to stop appearing on national TV shows during the trial.

The alleged defamation by Greenberg, the suit claims, held Brodsky up to “great public scorn, hatred, contempt, ridicule, humiliation, distress, anguish, anxiety, disgrace, and suffer great injury to his dignity, honor, personal and reputation …”

In his Sept. 24 letter, Greenberg hit equally hard.

“You wafted the greatest case by ignorance, obduracy and ineptitude,” Greenberg wrote. “Your effort to blame me is suggestive of a six-year-old child changing the rules of the game when he falls behind. … You are nothing more than a bully.”

The lawsuit also names the Chicago Tribune and AOL’s Patch news website, both of which closely covered the yawning rift between Brodsky and Greenberg that started just hours after the trial ended.

The Tribune didn’t have an immediate comment. AOL Patch didn’t return a message seeking …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Disabled Vietnam veteran credited for saving 4-year-old fire victim

A Vietnam veteran in Chicago is being credited for saving a 4-year-old girl’s life after she caught fire in her bed.

“I believe that she was being sheltered by God already,” Clyde Harden, 55, a disabled veteran, told The Chicago Tribune. “Somebody was there for her.”

Harden was alerted to the Wednesday night fire after he heard his neighbor yell, “my sister’s on fire,” The Sun-Times Media Wire reported. He rushed to the girl’s apartment and used a towel to smother the flames. He said the girl appeared to be badly burned and in shock.

“She was crying and she put her head on my shoulder,” he said. “It’s scary because the burns were so severe,” he said, according to the wire. At that time, another neighbor poured water on the flaming mattress.

She was rushed to a nearby hospital and listed in critical condition.

The young girl’s 16-year-old sister suffered burns on her hand in her rescue attempt and her 10-year-old brother was also treated for minor injuries, the wire report said.

Police told the Chicago Tribune that they do not suspect foul play and believe it was an accidental fire. Neighbors told MyFoxChicago.com that the brother may have been playing with matches.

Neither parent was home at the time of the fire, but investigators have labeled it a tragic accident. They do not face criminal charges.

Click for more from MyFoxChicago.com

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News