Thursday, September 15, 2011

On the Chicago set of 'The Playboy Club' - Chicago Tribune (blog)

Smoke wafts over the stage as a sexy chanteuse bursts through a curtain of gold streamers and reaches for the microphone to sing "The Lady Is a Tramp."

"Wait. Can I try that again?" asks the singer, Laura Benanti, who plays Bunny mother Carol-Lynne in NBC's new drama, "The Playboy Club," which films in Chicago and makes its debut at 9 p.m. Monday.

The series tells the tales of Playboy Bunnies, those satin-clad and Bunny-eared women who served drinks and cigarettes to high-rolling guests during the clubs' heydays in the 1960s and 70s. Among its stars are Eddie Cibrian, Amber Heard, Naturi Naughton, Jenna Dewan-Tatum (Channing?s wife), Wes Ramsey and David Krumholtz.

The main attraction at this moment, however, is Tony winner Benanti, and things aren?t going smoothly. Her arm keeps getting caught in the tangle of streamers. After a few practice runs and being primped by the ever-present stylists, she?s tries again. Over the course of several hours, Benanti will lip sync to a recording of herself more than a half-dozen times while cameras film her from the front, the back, with and without the dozens of extras dressed as the club?s Bunnies and patrons.

If it weren?t for the cameras, a visitor could almost believe he?s standing in the first Playboy Club, which Playboy magazine founder Hugh Hefner opened at 116 E. Walton St. in the 1960. But it?s actually the gorgeous set at Cinespace Chicago Film Studios on the Southwest Side, where the production makes its home.

In just a few months, production designer Scott Murphy oversaw the building of three soundstages in the massive space. The two-story set for the club includes a wood-paneled coat check area and gift shop, a game area with Barcelona chairs, a bumper pool table, a giant case full of LP records and an old stereo hi-fi. Two floating spiral staircases lead to a smaller lounge that overlooks the dining room and stage where Benanti is performing. The magnificent space advertises the lavish sophistication of the clubs, from the Mondrian-style red, blue and yellow color-block room dividers (they match the entrance to the original, real-life club) to the giant chandelier to the back lit bar.

Murphy?s second set is smaller, but no less sumptuous. The Bunny dorm may be littered with nighties and unmade beds, but it?s decorated just the way you?d expect the Playboy mansion to be. Red velvety paper covers the dorm walls, while bathrooms on either end sport wall paper in blue and yellow; one was actually vintage and the other is a knockoff created by Murphy and his team.

Still under construction was the soundstage for what will be the high rise apartment of Nick Dalton, the sexy bachelor with slicked back hair and a dark past played by Cibrian. Every appointment is a stunning relic of the time period. A sectional sofa spreads out over the sunken living room that is surrounded by walls of windows on two sides. Viewers will never know that those windows look out at a curtain backdrop and not the city?s skyline.

?I want the audience to want to live here,? Murphy says. OK, when can I move in?

It?s hard to believe that in May, there weren?t even walls built between the three sets in the vast, open-spaced building that was once part of the Ryerson steel plant. The Starz series ?Boss? filmed in the building over the summer. ?The Playboy Club,? which uses a crew that?s about 90 percent local, began filming July 26 and is expected to be here through December.

The show?s creator, Chad Hodge, says he couldn?t imagine not shooting the series in Chicago, home of the original club. That makes sense, considering he?s from Highland Park and graduated from Northwestern University. Before beginning his writing career, the 34-year-old worked at Harpo Studios for Oprah Winfrey. He now lives on Walton Street, just a short stroll away from the original Playboy Club.

Approached by Imagine Entertainment with the series concept, Hodge wanted it to be a peek into the lives of Bunnies and patrons at the nightspot. It is not a historical piece, he emphasizes, although we will see historical figures like Mayor Richard J. Daley and musicians such as Lesley Gore and Ike and Tina Turner. And although he has picked Hef?s brain and has done exhaustive research in the Playboy archives, it?s not about Playboy magazine, centerfolds or Hef?s life.

?It?s a big, fun, sexy, sophisticated soap,? he says. ?It?s got tons of music and performances. It?s a bunch of sexy characters and love stories and thriller stories?and crime and the mob.?

And Bunnies? ?They?re fabulous,? he says. ?They?re all strong, real women ? deep, rich characters with great stories.?

That?s important to note, considering the controversy that has swirled around the series since it was announced. The NBC affiliate in Salt Lake City has refused to broadcast it. Women?s rights advocate Gloria Steinem has urged a boycott of the show because it is demeaning to women. The Parents Television Council is waging an all-out war to stop the show, claiming it will expose viewers to porn.

Hodge and cast members are taking the hits in stride, saying that the negative reactions are coming from people who haven?t actually seen the show.

?I think people are reacting to Playboy in general ? and their preconceived ideas about what Playboy is rather than the show itself,? Hodge says. ?It seems like a lot of the controversy is about sort of everything but the show itself.?

Benanti, Naughton and Dewar-Tatum all spent time with former bunnies and researched their experiences by reading such books as ?The Bunny Years: The Surprising Inside Story of the Playboy Clubs and the Women Who Worked as Bunnies and Where They Are Now.? Written by author/actress/publisher and former Bunny Kathryn Leigh Scott, the book has testimonials from more than 250 former Bunnies about their time in the clubs. Many dispute the recollections of Steinem, who famously worked at New York?s Playboy Club for a 1963 magazine piece that claimed life as a Bunny wasn?t wonderful.

The actresses say that many of the women they spoke with used their club jobs as springboards to high-powered careers in real estate, business and broadcasting, to name just a few. At time when women didn?t have many options in the workforce, being a Bunny offered them a safe working environment and a chance to make some good coin.

?Everyone?s like, ?I had a blast,?? says Naughton, who plays Bunny Brenda on the show. ?It wasn?t easy all the time, but when you take it all in perspective, they came out so much stronger because they were saying to the world, ?I?m taking control of my life.??

Back on set, Benanti has taken control of ?The Lady Is a Tramp,? nailing the performance for the final time. (?Guess what I?m never going to sing again?? she jokes later.)

?That was great, Laura!? yells director Lesli Linka Glatter, who serves as co-executive producer on ?The Playboy Club? and has been a director of another 1960s era show, ?Mad Men,? since it began.

During a break, Linka Glatter addresses the controversy swirling around the show by admitting that she wouldn?t have been part of Bunny culture, but she is always interesting in examining unfamiliar worlds.

?I feel like this is a part of our history,? she says. ?The fact that we?re in this very glamorous world and women wear Bunny suits; I wouldn?t go dressed in that outfit, but I love the fact that it exists and we get to explore it.?

She explains ?The Playboy Club? and another new series set in the 1960s, ABC?s ?Pan Am,? are more about the fictional characters and less focused on social issues of the time and how they affect us now, which is what ?Mad Men? does.

?I think it?s a rich opportunity in the same way ?Pan Am? is dealing with stewardesses. You know, they?re not called stewardesses any more,? she says. ?That was a hugely glamorous job at the time and it?s not quite as glamorous any more; it?s changed. Our perception has changed with what?s possible now. But in 1961, working in the Playboy Club or being a stewardess, those were great jobs to have.?

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNEqcJM2S1nGoEsueDlRE3y2qGUCdQ&url=http://www.chicagotribune.com/entertainment/tv/redeye-on-the-chicago-set-of-the-playboy-club-20110915,0,188190.story

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School council in Lakeview debates longer school day - Chicago Tribune

Although teachers at Agassiz Elementary School in Chicago?s Lakeview neighborhood have already said they oppose a longer school day, the local school council held an emergency meeting on Wednesday night to discuss the issue with parents.

Like similar discussions at other schools, the debate at Agassiz was wide-ranging. Some parents supported the longer day, arguing that it helps teachers and parents. Others said Mayor Rahm Emanuel's offer of incentives is merely a political effort to break the strength of the Chicago Teachers Union.

?I want you to think about it,? Ingrid Kromer, a member of the local school council, told teachers at the school. ?It's one school year of making a sacrifice. It's taking a little risk so we can have some extra money.?

The school?s teachers have informally rejected working a longer day. But they have yet to hold a formal vote on the issue.

Emanuel and Chicago Public Schools chief Jean-Claude Brizard have promised $150,000 in discretionary money for schools ready to start a longer day this month and a $1,250 bonus for each of those teachers. Schools ready to start in January would gain $75,000, and their teachers each would receive an $800 bonus.

But some parents at Agassiz said the school should reject the money. They were willing to raise the necessary funds.

?This just seems like CPS is trying to put money out there to turn people against each other,? said Julie Rakay, parent of a kindergartner and an incoming pre-schooler. ?I'd rather send my kids to a school that stands with its union. My kids? well-being is directly related to their teachers' well-being.?

Some felt any effort to add 90 minutes this month was too rushed. Others asked for a compromise, such as a longer school day in January.

So far, teachers at seven schools across the city have voted for the additional instruction time for students.

The union has filed a complaint with the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board asking for those votes to be rejected. The union believes the CPS administration is using the financial incentives as ?carrot-stick bargaining? to go around the union.

CTU spokeswoman Stephanie Gadlin said the district?s board has gone around the union to enforce a system-wide policy that required teachers to waive critical parts of their contract.

?What they are doing now ?- soliciting ?yes? votes in exchange for incentives such as bonuses, resources for their schools, and money -- is unethical and illegal,? Gadlin said.

The district?s administration has insisted that both state law and the union contract allow for the waivers to be used to implement longer days at schools that choose that option.

In the meantime, the union is looking at floating a proposal for a longer school day in 2012-2013 that adds 75 minutes extra for students but keeps teachers' work schedules the same.

The CTU?s offer -- based on a schedule for University of Chicago Laboratory Schools, the private school where Emanuel's children attend classes -- calls for an hour more in art, 30 minutes more in music, 75 minutes more in physical education and 90 minutes for a world language class. But it cuts the current time devoted to writing by 10 minutes and the time spent on math by 15 minutes.

It also proposes an extra hour each in science and social studies instruction, 15 minutes more in the library and a half-hour more on computers.

CPS spokeswoman Becky Carroll said with students needing extra instruction time, ?we are open to any discussion that will help make that happen.?

nahmed@tribune.com

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNHlyvQPXf1kopIJ96o11jpXCwoyfw&url=http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/chi-school-council-in-lakeview-debates-longer-school-day-20110914,0,5518522.story?track=rss

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APNewsBreak: Chicago to publish crime stats online - CBS News

(AP)� CHICAGO ? Long a city with a reputation for withholding information, Chicago now wants to make public every crime over the past 10 years ? a highly unusual move among the nation's major police departments.

Starting Wednesday, millions of crime statistics dating to 2001 will be posted online in a searchable database. It will be updated daily, providing fodder for residents to evaluate their own neighborhoods, academics to study crime and techie types to create websites or apps.

The release is the latest attempt by the administration of Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who took office in May, to make city dealings more open and counter Chicago's reputation for entrenched systemic corruption and backroom deals. Chicago officials recently posted online the salaries of city employees, city contracts and lobbying data, with more information expected in coming months.

"It's a whole new era of openness and transparency," said Brett Goldstein, the city's chief data officer and former police officer. "You determine your own analysis."

While some city critics are skeptical, Chicago's crime data release goes beyond what other major police departments do, crime experts say. Besides listing every crime over the past decade &#8212 some 4.6 million incidents &#8212 the database also lists each address, if there was an arrest, the police beat, city ward and case number. That includes everything from sidewalk arrests for marijuana possession to homicides.

An average person can already get details on a crime that happened the day before, but now they'll be able to look back over the past decade on their neighborhood, ward or entire city. It also increases the potential for more long-term studies by experts and, some hope, take steps toward crime prevention.

"It's big," said David Kennedy, director of the Center for Crime Prevention and Control at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York. "If not unprecedented, it's very unusual."

While no one tracks the some 15,000 police departments nationwide, a check of other major police departments that post crime statistics online shows nothing as comprehensive as Chicago.

Many, including Los Angeles, use a third-party company that maps data over a limited time period, generally a month or two. Los Angeles also has some historical data available, but it's through static reports or compilations of incidents. That information isn't searchable and a recent check showed links to several years were broken. Houston has a 30-day log. New York publishes weekly data, and has some historical data online, though the department has faced criticism for allegations of manipulating data and the police commissioner recently formed a unit to look into the claims.

The Seattle Police Department appears to come closest to what Chicago is attempting. It offers logs of 911 calls and has a searchable database, but the time and incidents aren't complete.

Prior to Wednesday, Chicago offered a 90-day glimpse of crime in a mapping tool. The city added a yearlong database earlier in the summer.

"By posting this data online, we are providing a resource that will significantly impact criminal research while allowing community organizations to more effectively collaborate with the Chicago Police Department and better understand where crime is happening in their neighborhoods, streets and corners," Emanuel said in a statement.

Chicago's data won't include some cases that are under federal investigation. Also, the database won't specify if the shooting was police officer-involved, for instance, though all homicides will be in the database, city officials said.

Some advocacy groups worry the information doesn't go far enough because it doesn't include race or detailed police reports.

"It would be one small step in the right direction," said Tracy Siska, executive director of the Chicago Justice Project, which helps increase public access to information. He called the police department's reputation "horrible" when it comes to doling out information, citing an incident last year when the group waited 78 days to release details on the sexual assaults, he said.

Also he said such massive information dumps aren't always user friendly to the average person. City officials recognized that fact, but Goldstein said there are more benefits to making raw data available to everyone.

He said those who stand to benefit the most are academics and journalists because the data will be in one place, cutting down on Freedom of Information Act requests and other time-consuming and costly requests for records.

Yale University professor Tracey Meares, who has long studied Chicago crime, said it sends a message to academics that the Chicago Police Department is "an agency that's willing to share."

"That kind of transparency is a good idea," she said.

__

Online:

http://data.cityofchicago.org

__

Sophia Tareen can be reached at http://twitter.com/sophiatareen

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNGLxXJ92rXkvq86-IxoDEjpmqjAPg&url=http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/09/14/ap/business/main20105945.shtml

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Wednesday, September 14, 2011

APNewsBreak: Chicago to publish crime stats online - CBS News

(AP)� CHICAGO ? Long a city with a reputation for withholding information, Chicago now wants to make public every crime over the past 10 years ? a highly unusual move among the nation's major police departments.

Starting Wednesday, millions of crime statistics dating to 2001 will be posted online in a searchable database. It will be updated daily, providing fodder for residents to evaluate their own neighborhoods, academics to study crime and techie types to create websites or apps.

The release is the latest attempt by the administration of Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who took office in May, to make city dealings more open and counter Chicago's reputation for entrenched systemic corruption and backroom deals. Chicago officials recently posted online the salaries of city employees, city contracts and lobbying data, with more information expected in coming months.

"It's a whole new era of openness and transparency," said Brett Goldstein, the city's chief data officer and former police officer. "You determine your own analysis."

While some city critics are skeptical, Chicago's crime data release goes beyond what other major police departments do, crime experts say. Besides listing every crime over the past decade &#8212 some 4.6 million incidents &#8212 the database also lists each address, if there was an arrest, the police beat, city ward and case number. That includes everything from sidewalk arrests for marijuana possession to homicides.

An average person can already get details on a crime that happened the day before, but now they'll be able to look back over the past decade on their neighborhood, ward or entire city. It also increases the potential for more long-term studies by experts and, some hope, take steps toward crime prevention.

"It's big," said David Kennedy, director of the Center for Crime Prevention and Control at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York. "If not unprecedented, it's very unusual."

While no one tracks the some 15,000 police departments nationwide, a check of other major police departments that post crime statistics online shows nothing as comprehensive as Chicago.

Many, including Los Angeles, use a third-party company that maps data over a limited time period, generally a month or two. Los Angeles also has some historical data available, but it's through static reports or compilations of incidents. That information isn't searchable and a recent check showed links to several years were broken. Houston has a 30-day log. New York publishes weekly data, and has some historical data online, though the department has faced criticism for allegations of manipulating data and the police commissioner recently formed a unit to look into the claims.

The Seattle Police Department appears to come closest to what Chicago is attempting. It offers logs of 911 calls and has a searchable database, but the time and incidents aren't complete.

Prior to Wednesday, Chicago offered a 90-day glimpse of crime in a mapping tool. The city added a yearlong database earlier in the summer.

"By posting this data online, we are providing a resource that will significantly impact criminal research while allowing community organizations to more effectively collaborate with the Chicago Police Department and better understand where crime is happening in their neighborhoods, streets and corners," Emanuel said in a statement.

Chicago's data won't include some cases that are under federal investigation. Also, the database won't specify if the shooting was police officer-involved, for instance, though all homicides will be in the database, city officials said.

Some advocacy groups worry the information doesn't go far enough because it doesn't include race or detailed police reports.

"It would be one small step in the right direction," said Tracy Siska, executive director of the Chicago Justice Project, which helps increase public access to information. He called the police department's reputation "horrible" when it comes to doling out information, citing an incident last year when the group waited 78 days to release details on the sexual assaults, he said.

Also he said such massive information dumps aren't always user friendly to the average person. City officials recognized that fact, but Goldstein said there are more benefits to making raw data available to everyone.

He said those who stand to benefit the most are academics and journalists because the data will be in one place, cutting down on Freedom of Information Act requests and other time-consuming and costly requests for records.

Yale University professor Tracey Meares, who has long studied Chicago crime, said it sends a message to academics that the Chicago Police Department is "an agency that's willing to share."

"That kind of transparency is a good idea," she said.

__

Online:

http://data.cityofchicago.org

__

Sophia Tareen can be reached at http://twitter.com/sophiatareen

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNGLxXJ92rXkvq86-IxoDEjpmqjAPg&url=http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/09/14/ap/business/main20105945.shtml

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APNewsBreak: Chicago to publish crime stats online - CBS News

(AP)� CHICAGO ? Long a city with a reputation for withholding information, Chicago now wants to make public every crime over the past 10 years ? a highly unusual move among the nation's major police departments.

Starting Wednesday, millions of crime statistics dating to 2001 will be posted online in a searchable database. It will be updated daily, providing fodder for residents to evaluate their own neighborhoods, academics to study crime and techie types to create websites or apps.

The release is the latest attempt by the administration of Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who took office in May, to make city dealings more open and counter Chicago's reputation for entrenched systemic corruption and backroom deals. Chicago officials recently posted online the salaries of city employees, city contracts and lobbying data, with more information expected in coming months.

"It's a whole new era of openness and transparency," said Brett Goldstein, the city's chief data officer and former police officer. "You determine your own analysis."

While some city critics are skeptical, Chicago's crime data release goes beyond what other major police departments do, crime experts say. Besides listing every crime over the past decade &#8212 some 4.6 million incidents &#8212 the database also lists each address, if there was an arrest, the police beat, city ward and case number. That includes everything from sidewalk arrests for marijuana possession to homicides.

An average person can already get details on a crime that happened the day before, but now they'll be able to look back over the past decade on their neighborhood, ward or entire city. It also increases the potential for more long-term studies by experts and, some hope, take steps toward crime prevention.

"It's big," said David Kennedy, director of the Center for Crime Prevention and Control at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York. "If not unprecedented, it's very unusual."

While no one tracks the some 15,000 police departments nationwide, a check of other major police departments that post crime statistics online shows nothing as comprehensive as Chicago.

Many, including Los Angeles, use a third-party company that maps data over a limited time period, generally a month or two. Los Angeles also has some historical data available, but it's through static reports or compilations of incidents. That information isn't searchable and a recent check showed links to several years were broken. Houston has a 30-day log. New York publishes weekly data, and has some historical data online, though the department has faced criticism for allegations of manipulating data and the police commissioner recently formed a unit to look into the claims.

The Seattle Police Department appears to come closest to what Chicago is attempting. It offers logs of 911 calls and has a searchable database, but the time and incidents aren't complete.

Prior to Wednesday, Chicago offered a 90-day glimpse of crime in a mapping tool. The city added a yearlong database earlier in the summer.

"By posting this data online, we are providing a resource that will significantly impact criminal research while allowing community organizations to more effectively collaborate with the Chicago Police Department and better understand where crime is happening in their neighborhoods, streets and corners," Emanuel said in a statement.

Chicago's data won't include some cases that are under federal investigation. Also, the database won't specify if the shooting was police officer-involved, for instance, though all homicides will be in the database, city officials said.

Some advocacy groups worry the information doesn't go far enough because it doesn't include race or detailed police reports.

"It would be one small step in the right direction," said Tracy Siska, executive director of the Chicago Justice Project, which helps increase public access to information. He called the police department's reputation "horrible" when it comes to doling out information, citing an incident last year when the group waited 78 days to release details on the sexual assaults, he said.

Also he said such massive information dumps aren't always user friendly to the average person. City officials recognized that fact, but Goldstein said there are more benefits to making raw data available to everyone.

He said those who stand to benefit the most are academics and journalists because the data will be in one place, cutting down on Freedom of Information Act requests and other time-consuming and costly requests for records.

Yale University professor Tracey Meares, who has long studied Chicago crime, said it sends a message to academics that the Chicago Police Department is "an agency that's willing to share."

"That kind of transparency is a good idea," she said.

__

Online:

http://data.cityofchicago.org

__

Sophia Tareen can be reached at http://twitter.com/sophiatareen

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNGLxXJ92rXkvq86-IxoDEjpmqjAPg&url=http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/09/14/ap/business/main20105945.shtml

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City of Chicago Putting 10 Years Worth Of Crime Data Online - Techzone360

We live in a world that can be downright scary at times.�Whether you are talking about the internet or the outside world, dangers seem to lurk around every corner.�In just the last few weeks we have seen reports from McAfee talking about how today?s newest cars can actually be hacked.�We?ve also seen how companies like Facebook are actually paying people to hack into their sites in order to find their own weaknesses.�

In the real world, security and safety are things that are talked about in the abstract, but statistics are rarely made public.�The police department of Chicago is looking to change that, at least in their little corner of the world.�Chicago will be releasing ? starting today ? every crime statistic in the city over the last 10 years.�That move is unheard of in law enforcement circles who usually believe making statistics of that depth public will only serve to give their departments black eyes.�

The statistics will not just be archival but rather will also be updated every day.�This will give Chicago?s residents the ability to freely and continually evaluate their neighborhoods.�Even better when considering a move will be the ability to actually see what kind of crime is taking place in their prospective neighborhoods.�

This particular maneuver is the latest in a series that Chicago has undertaken since former White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel was elected mayor in May.�The endeavor is supposed to show that a city that has long been known as secretive is now open to the public.

?It?s a whole new era of openness and transparency,? Brett Goldstein, the city?s chief data officer and former police officer said. ?You determine your own analysis.?

While a citizen could track the crime rates of what had happened in their city the day before already, the move to be able to look 10 years back is being hailed as almost revolutionary.�While it will aid citizens in determining their own analysis it will also aid researchers putting together larger studies.�Many hope it will also help the city reduce its crime rates.

Want to learn more about the latest in communications and technology? Then be sure to attend ITEXPO West 2011, happening now, in Austin, Texas. ITEXPO offers an educational program to help corporate decision makers select the right IP-based voice, video, fax and unified communications solutions to improve their operations. It's also where service providers learn how to profitably roll out the services their subscribers are clamoring for ? and where resellers can learn about new growth opportunities. To register, click here.

Stay in touch with everything happening at ITEXPO? follow us on Twitter

Edited by Jennifer Russell

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNE1y4myNJjcOBP_nQFbPKD1gQFHhw&url=http://www.techzone360.com/topics/techzone/articles/218207-city-chicago-putting-10-years-worth-crime-data.htm

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Roy Williams to sit out practice; unsure of status for Saints - Chicago Tribune

Roy Williams to sit out practice; unsure of status for Saints

Roy Williams signals a first down during Sunday's game. (Brian Cassella/Tribune Photo)

Chicago Bears receiver Roy Williams, who suffered a groin injury in Sunday?s 30-12 win over the Falcons, will sit out Wednesday?s practice as the Bears begin preparation for the New Orleans Saints.

Williams has received routine treatment on his groin over the last few days. He wouldn?t speculate on his status for the New Orleans game.

Williams, who caught four passes for 55 yards in the opener before exiting in the fourth quarter, hopes to return to practice Thursday.

"It?s not a bad thing missing a day of practice,?? Williams said. "I remember in Detroit during the best year I had, my son had gotten sick in Texas and I flew down and I missed Wednesday and Thursday practices. I came back Friday, played against the Bills Sunday and I had like (10) catches for 161 yards and a touchdown.

"I?m not going to go Allen Iverson on you, but (missing practice) was good for my legs. At the same time, you have to be there mentally. And I was there mentally that week.??

If Williams can?t go Sunday, Johnny Knox would step in as the ``X?? receiver.

"I hope to be back as soon as I can,?? Williams said.

vxmcclure@tribune.com

Twitter @vxmcclure23

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNHw1lC1yuVavVf4KJ9Sd91SFIU1LQ&url=http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/football/bears/chi-roy-williams-to-sit-out-practice-unsure-of-status-for-saints-20110914,0,3064592.story

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Goldman Sachs brings small-business help to Chicago - Chicago Sun-Times

Story Image

Dina Powell, president of the Goldman Sachs Foundation, announces the program Tuesday. | Brian Jackson~Sun-Times

Updated: September 14, 2011 12:23AM

Small businesses that desperately need the know-how and the capital to survive in a down economy would have access to both, thanks to a $25 million program bankrolled by an investment banking heavyweight.

Chicago will become the sixth U.S. city to benefit from the 10,000 Small Businesses initiative launched by Goldman Sachs in New York, Los Angeles, Houston, New Orleans and Long Beach, Calif.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel made his fortune in investment banking. He lobbied the company to add Chicago and delivered, with an assist from his longtime friend and adviser Penny Pritzker, who?s a member of the Goldman Sachs National Advisory Board for 10,000 Small Businesses.

Penny Pritzker served as President Barack Obama?s national finance chair in 2008 and was appointed to the school board by Emanuel. She and her husband contributed $1 million to the $5 million pool of money the mayor plans to use to provide merit pay for principals.

In Chicago, the 10,000 Small Businesses initiative will provide $20 million worth of loans to small businesses that often have a tough time accessing capital.

The remaining $5 million will go to the Chicago City Colleges to provide ten, all-day Saturday classes that provide small business owners with 100 hours of ?customized? training in such critical areas as marketing, negotiations and how to navigate the maze of government contracts.

?The deck was stacked against small businesses,? said Emanuel, who has reformed and simplified city contracting to even the playing field.

?The way procurement was designed across different city agencies, it was prohibitive to small- and minority-owned businesses. You could only absorb the cost if you were a large business.?

Dina Powell, president of the Goldman Sachs Foundation, added, ?Of course, capital for growth is critical. But, if you don?t know how to use that capital, and you don?t have that knowledge and the growth plan along with it,? money alone doesn?t do a small business any good.

During a news conference Tuesday at Harold Washington College, Pritzker told the story of Demolition Diva, a residential and commercial demolition company formed by a New Orleans woman after Hurricane Katrina.

Before participating in 10,000 Small Businesses, the owner of Demolition Diva was saddled with more than $2 million in receivables that threatened the long-term health of her business.

Since graduating from the program in June, the woman has secured more than fifteen new contracts, collected over $1 million of her outstanding receivables and implemented an incentive program for her employees, Pritzker said.

?We couldn?t be more pleased with the success that 10,000 Small Businesses has had ? and that success is coming to Chicago,? Pritzker said.

To qualify for the 8 a.m.-to-5 p.m. classes, small business owners must be in business for at least two years, have annual revenues ranging from $150,000 to $4 million and employ at least four full-time workers.

The Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce, the Chicago Urban League, the Women?s Business Development Center and the Illinois Hispanic Chamber of Commerce will ?spread the word? and help recruit top-notch teachers and mentors.

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Goldman Sachs brings small-business help to Chicago - Chicago Sun-Times

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Dina Powell, president of the Goldman Sachs Foundation, announces the program Tuesday. | Brian Jackson~Sun-Times

Updated: September 14, 2011 12:23AM

Small businesses that desperately need the know-how and the capital to survive in a down economy would have access to both, thanks to a $25 million program bankrolled by an investment banking heavyweight.

Chicago will become the sixth U.S. city to benefit from the 10,000 Small Businesses initiative launched by Goldman Sachs in New York, Los Angeles, Houston, New Orleans and Long Beach, Calif.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel made his fortune in investment banking. He lobbied the company to add Chicago and delivered, with an assist from his longtime friend and adviser Penny Pritzker, who?s a member of the Goldman Sachs National Advisory Board for 10,000 Small Businesses.

Penny Pritzker served as President Barack Obama?s national finance chair in 2008 and was appointed to the school board by Emanuel. She and her husband contributed $1 million to the $5 million pool of money the mayor plans to use to provide merit pay for principals.

In Chicago, the 10,000 Small Businesses initiative will provide $20 million worth of loans to small businesses that often have a tough time accessing capital.

The remaining $5 million will go to the Chicago City Colleges to provide ten, all-day Saturday classes that provide small business owners with 100 hours of ?customized? training in such critical areas as marketing, negotiations and how to navigate the maze of government contracts.

?The deck was stacked against small businesses,? said Emanuel, who has reformed and simplified city contracting to even the playing field.

?The way procurement was designed across different city agencies, it was prohibitive to small- and minority-owned businesses. You could only absorb the cost if you were a large business.?

Dina Powell, president of the Goldman Sachs Foundation, added, ?Of course, capital for growth is critical. But, if you don?t know how to use that capital, and you don?t have that knowledge and the growth plan along with it,? money alone doesn?t do a small business any good.

During a news conference Tuesday at Harold Washington College, Pritzker told the story of Demolition Diva, a residential and commercial demolition company formed by a New Orleans woman after Hurricane Katrina.

Before participating in 10,000 Small Businesses, the owner of Demolition Diva was saddled with more than $2 million in receivables that threatened the long-term health of her business.

Since graduating from the program in June, the woman has secured more than fifteen new contracts, collected over $1 million of her outstanding receivables and implemented an incentive program for her employees, Pritzker said.

?We couldn?t be more pleased with the success that 10,000 Small Businesses has had ? and that success is coming to Chicago,? Pritzker said.

To qualify for the 8 a.m.-to-5 p.m. classes, small business owners must be in business for at least two years, have annual revenues ranging from $150,000 to $4 million and employ at least four full-time workers.

The Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce, the Chicago Urban League, the Women?s Business Development Center and the Illinois Hispanic Chamber of Commerce will ?spread the word? and help recruit top-notch teachers and mentors.

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17-year-old boy charged in beating deaths of parents in suburban Chicago - Washington Post

BRIDGEVIEW, Ill. ? Authorities say they arrested the teenage son of a Chicago couple found dead in their home after figuring out he lied about his whereabouts the night they were killed.

Seventeen-year-old John Granat is facing first-degree murder charges in the deaths of his parents. He was denied bond Tuesday.

(no/Associated Press) - This undated photo provided Sept. 13, 2011 by the Cook County Sheriff?s Department, shows 17-year-old John Granat, of Palos Park, Ill. Granat was charged with first-degree murder in the deaths of his parents, 42-year-old Maria Granat and 44-year-old John Granat, who were found beaten to death at their home Sunday, Sept. 11, 2011, in Palos Park.

Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart says Granat told investigators he was home all night. But they later determined he?d been pulled over by police two hours before he called 911 to report finding his parents dead early Sunday in their Palos Park home.

The county medical examiner says 42-year-old Maria Granat and 44-year-old John Granat died after suffering multiple blunt force injuries.

Police haven?t revealed a motive for the killings but say the teen had made past death threats against his parents.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Teachers union: Pattern longer CPS day after Emanuel kids' school - Chicago Sun-Times

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The University of Chicago Lab School, Blaine Hall 1362 e 59th. Tuesday, September 13, 2011 | Brian Jackson~Chicago Sun-Times

Updated: September 13, 2011 10:56PM

Using the elite private school where Mayor Rahm Emanuel now sends his kids as a starting point, Chicago Teachers Union officials have crafted a proposed schedule that adds 75 minutes to the typical public elementary school student?s day.

The union?s latest salvo in the battle over a longer school day uses as a comparison point the schedule of one third-grade classroom at the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools, union officials said Tuesday.

Just like at what U of C kids often call ?the Lab School,?? the CTU proposal offers a well-rounded curriculum featuring far more art, music, physical education and other extras than most CPS kids now get and even includes the study of a second language.

Ultimately, the proposed CTU schedule would provide an even longer school day than the Lab School , where a third-grader?s tuition is $21,876. And it does so without requiring Chicago Public School teachers to add any minutes to their work day.

However, the schedule is 15 minutes shorter per day for kids than the one proposed by Emanuel and Schools CEO Jean-Claude Brizard for next school year. And, it probably would require many schools to hire extra teachers to provide the kind of enrichment that the Lab School now offers.

?The University of Chicago Lab School has the reputation of being one of the best schools in the country, not just Chicago,?? said Jackson Potter, chief of staff to CTU President Karen Lewis.

?And obviously, the mayor sends his children there. The president [Barack Obama] sent his children there. So it?s highly regarded by people who make education policy. That seems a good method for determining how this district should operate.??

The proposed CTU schedule is just a ?starting point?? for discussion on the longer school day that CPS officials and Emanuel have said they intend to implement systemwide, starting next school year, after the current teachers contract expires June 30, Potter said.

In the meantime, Emanuel has urged schools to join a pilot project to add 90 minutes to their school day this school year. On Tuesday, Nash and Disney II Magnet became the sixth and seventh CPS elementary schools in which teachers approved waiving the current CTU contract to take on a longer school day.

Signing on to the pilot nets schools $150,000 if they start the longer day in September and $75,000 if they start it in January. Teachers get a two percent pay boost for the extra days worked out of the deal.

CPS officials contend the system?s current 5 hour and 45 minute day for kids is the shortest among the 10 largest cities in the country. Emanuel made extending the CPS school day and year a cornerstone of his mayoral campaign, saying kids had gotten ?the shaft?? for too long.

The union?s long-awaited proposal follows contentions by Lewis that she would not be publicly ?bullied?? into a slapdash longer school day this year. She has urged union members to reject waivers and let CTU union officials negotiate a longer day on their behalf next school year. Emanuel?s waiver drumbeat, Lewis has said, amounts to ?a declaration of war?? on the CTU.

The CTU?s proposal pads out the day for kids by moving teachers? 45-minute lunch from the end of the day to the middle of the day, and having teachers start work at the same time as kids instead of a half-hour earlier. That mere tweak of the typical current elementary-school schedule adds 75 minutes to most student?s day without lengthening a teacher?s work day.

Other big changes include boosting the amount of art offered in a week from 30 to 90 minutes and the amount of music from 60 to 90 minutes a week to mimic that offered at the U of C Lab Schools.

Physical education minutes would more than double, from 60 minutes to 135 minutes a week, also following the Lab School template. CPS kids also would enjoy more time in science, the library and computer classes under the CTU proposal.

Their time for lunch and recess combined would more than double, but even at 225 minutes a week, it still would not reach the 300 minutes a week Lab kids now get.

All CPS elementary students would learn a second language, just like at the Lab School ? a real plus in the world?s growing ?global economy,?? Potter said.

?We don?t want to just teach to the test. We want a very rich curriculum that provides a spread of different topics that students need to know about the world,?? Potter said.

?U of C [Lab Schools] has a world-class educational environment,?? Potter said. ?We think this is a schedule that the best and brightest students are provided and all our students deserve the best and that?s what we want to provide for them.??

Contacted Tuesday night, CPS spokeswoman Becky Carroll said ?We?re very pleased that the CTU joins us in calling for a longer day that includes enrichment programs for our students and adds more time for recess.?? Carroll also encouraged Lewis to ?rethink? her decision not to join a CPS longer-school-day advisory panel so ?we can work hand in hand with the CTU to lengthen the day.?

The CTU description of the number of minutes one third-grade Lab School classroom devotes to non-core subjects ? such as art, music and physical education ? ?sound about right,?? said Kay Kirkpatrick, a spokeswoman for the U of C Lab Schools lower school, covering first through fourth grade.

However, Kirkpatrick described a Lab School day for kids as totalling 1,930 minutes a week, more than the 1,795 per week listed by the CTU. The source of the discrepancy was not immediately clear, but even the new Lab School figures amount to a shorter week than the 2,100-minute week for kids the CTU is proposing.

Also, Kirkpatrick cautioned that because the Lab School uses project-based learning, the number of minutes spent on reading, writing, math and social studies is up to each teacher and can vary from classroom to classroom and even from week to week within the same classroom.

Where his children attend school has been a sensitive subject for Emanuel, who cut off an interview with Channel 5 TV?s Mary Ann Ahern earlier this year when she asked him what school his kids would be attending. After the camera stopped rolling, the mayor ?positioned himself inches away?? from her head, raised his voice, pointed a finger at her, and ?admonished?? her for asking such a question, Ahern reported.

Lewis recently revealed that Emanuel jumped up out of his chair, pointed his finger at her, yelled and told her ?F--- you, Lewis? when she accused him of wanting a longer school day for ?public safety? reasons, rather than educational ones.

Asked Tuesday whether he feels the need to apologize for reportedly hurling the ?f-bomb?? at the CTU president, Emanuel changed the subject.

?My view is, this is a distraction from the major issue, which is getting kids an education and time in class learning,?? the mayor said.

Contributing: Fran Spielman

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Players don't want to abandon Chicago market - Chicago Tribune

Jerry Kelly is looking out for Chicago golf fans. Or at least he's trying to.

"Chicago needs a tournament," he said Tuesday while walking down the 10th fairway at Cog Hill. "This is in our heartland. There is no way a market like Chicago should be off this schedule."

Chicago is in danger of losing a PGA Tour event after this week's BMW Championship.

With next year's Ryder Cup headed to Medinah, the 2012 BMW will be played at Crooked Stick outside Indianapolis. The 2014 event is set for Denver's Cherry Hills.

Luke Donald is pushing the tour to award the 2013 event to Conway Farms, his home course in Lake Forest. Donald played a practice round there Tuesday.

But the BMW instead could opt to leave Chicago and point to this discrepancy: The 2008 event at Bellerive in St. Louis generated $3.3 million for the Western Golf Association's charitable mission, the Evans Scholars Foundation.

In part because of declining attendance, the 2009 and 2010 events at Cog Hill have averaged $1.8 million.

Cog Hill owner Frank Jemsek said of the possibility of losing the BMW Championship: "It could be nostalgic, but we hope not. We would very definitely like to have the tournament back here, so we'll try."

Kelly, a Wisconsin native and Madison resident, has been trying to help Milwaukee regain a tour event. He also has talked to companies about sponsoring a rebirth of the Western Open, which Cog Hill hosted from 1991 to 2006.

"If BMW doesn't feel like having it in Chicago consistently, I'm one for starting another Western Open," he said. "As hard as I've tried in Milwaukee, I'll try just as hard for here."

Cha-ching: Webb Simpson comes to Cog Hill after winning two of his last three starts, including a grind-it-out playoff triumph over Chez Reavie at the Deutsche Bank Championship. The string of success has vaulted Simpson into the FedEx Cup standings lead over this tournament's defending champion Dustin Johnson.

Whoever sits atop those standings after the Tour Championship outside Atlanta on Sept. 25 wins a cool $10 million. That can buy a lot of range balls.

"We want to win golf tournaments, but when $10 million is at stake, you can't not think about that," he said. "Part of me is kind of happy this week isn't determining who's going to win because you get one more week to focus on the golf. I know in Atlanta it'll be a lot more focus on the $10 million."

Simpson, the father of a young child, joked he would buy more diapers if he lands the prize.

The BMW Championship offers an $8 million overall purse with $1.44 earmarked for the winner. Not to mention more prized FedEx Cup points.

kcjohnson@tribune.com

Twitter @kcjhoop

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JMC Steel wants more than $2M to move HQ to Chicago - Chicago Tribune

An Ohio-based manufacturing company that received $2 million from Illinois to move its headquarters here wants further assistance from Chicago.

On Tuesday, Chicago's Community Development Commission approved the use of $1.12 million in tax-increment financing funds to subsidize renovations to the new offices of JMC Steel Group on the 26th floor of 227 W. Monroe St., the former AT&T Corporate Center. The project has to be approved by the City Council before it is finalized.

JMC Steel Group, a maker of tubular products, says it needs the assistance to offset build out costs of $4.7 million, according to a report presented to the commission on Tuesday.

The company plans to� employ about 100 people at its new headquarters within four years. About half of those workers would relocated from Ohio. The other half would move from the company's Atlas Tube facility in South Deering, according to the report.

The company also agreed to retain a combined 286 workers from its Atlas Tube and Wheatland Tube facilities.

The company didn't return calls seeking comment.

In January, the state doled out a package worth $2 million in corporate income tax credits over 10 years for JMC Steel Group to consolidate its regional offices into a national headquarters in the city.

As part of that deal, the company already had agreed to retain 50 workers from its Atlas Tube facility and move them to the new national headquarters in the Loop.

JMC Steel Group pledged then to invest $10.2 million in the state, including the purchase of furniture and fixtures, lease improvements and lease payments over 10 years. That investment includes the $4.7 million in buildout costs.

Ald. Robert Fioretti, 2nd, said the company has been in conversations with him since the end of last year.

Though he didn't know how much assistance the company received from the state, Fioretti said the Illinois "has been losing the struggle to keep companies here," which is why the city also needs to provide incentives.

"I am a firm believer all companies need incentives from the city," he said, adding that if the TIF funds are approved, JMC Steel Group will receive $224,000 per year over five years.

This proposal cancels a 2003 TIF agreement between the city and Wheatland Tube, a JMC's subsidiary,� to redevelop their facility at 4435 S. Western and maintain 236 workers there over 10 years. The city awarded then $1.9 million in TIF funds over 10 years.

Though Wheatland redeveloped the site, it could only keep about two-thirds of the jobs promised. The company received $590,000 in TIF funds for the four years it kept the number of jobs required. If the new project is approved by City Council, the company will keep that money in addition to the new funds.

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Reds turn to Leake against Cubs - Los Angeles Times

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Right-hander Mike Leake aims to stabilize a recent inconsistent trend tonight when his Cincinnati Reds host the Chicago Cubs in the second of four games at Great American Ball Park.

The Cubs won Monday's opener when Alfonso Soriano drove in three runs and Starlin Castro knocked home three and scored four times in a 12-8 decision.

Castro continued his breakout campaign with his ninth home run of the season, one of three hit by the Cubs and one of seven on the night. Aramis Ramirez finished 3-for-5 and hit his 25th home run for Chicago, which has won three straight.

Rodrigo Lopez (5-6) gave up five runs on nine hits with four strikeouts and one walk over 5 1/3 frames, but it was good enough to halt a three-decision losing streak.

Dontrelle Willis (0-6) remained winless on the season after giving up eight runs on nine hits with three walks over 3 1/3 innings. The southpaw didn't strike out a batter for the Reds, who have dropped three in a row and six of nine. Brandon Phillips hit two home runs in the loss.

Leake, who reached the majors last season out of Arizona State, has alternated wins and losses in his last seven decisions, beginning with a 4-2 defeat against the New York Mets on July 25.

He got a no-decision in his last start, against the Cubs, after going nine frames in the Reds' 13-inning win on Sept. 6.

The 23-year-old is 3-1 lifetime against them with a 2.95 earned run average in 42 2/3 innings over six starts.

He's faced by 34-year-old righty Ryan Dempster, an ex-Red who was on the winning end of Leake's Aug. 5 loss, allowing two runs and four hits in a 4-3 triumph.

Dempster returned to face the Reds again in Sept. 7 and got a no-decision in Chicago's 4-3 victory after giving up 10 hits and three runs.

The British Columbia native hasn't won since Aug. 11, when he completed a three-start streak with a 4-3 triumph over Washington.

A Red for 37 games in 2002-03, Dempster is 7-7 against them in 41 career appearances.

Though the Cubs have won six of their last eight over the Reds, Cincinnati still leads the season series, 8-7.

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Goldman Sachs to offer $20M in loans to Chicago businesses - Chicago Tribune

Goldman Sachs to offer $20M in loans to Chicago businesses

Goldman Sachs chairman and CEO Lloyd Blankfein in April of 2010. (AP file photo/Susan Walsh)

Goldman Sachs is funneling $20 million in loans to Chicago's small businesses as part of a broader program to provide funding, training and support services to entrepreneurs, Mayor Rahm Emanuel announced Tuesday.

The investment bank launched its 10,000 Small Businesses initiative in 2009, committing $500 million. The program is already running in Houston, Los Angeles, New York, New Orleans and Long Beach, Calif. Chicago business owners can apply through the website of City Colleges of Chicago, which is partnering with Goldman Sachs for the initiative's educational component. The program begins in January 2012 and classes will be free to entrepreneurs that are selected from the application process.

The lending component of the initiative will be managed by Community Development Financial Institution funds, which work with businesses that are shut out of traditional sources of capital. Goldman Sachs has set aside $20 million in loans to be disbursed to Chicago-area businesses.

It was not immediately clear from the initial announcement how business owners can qualify and apply for the loans.

Emanuel is scheduled to hold a press conference about the announcement this morning at Harold Washington College.

wawong@tribune.com

Twitter: @velocitywong

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Baseball: Detroit Tigers win 10th in a row, blast White Sox 14-4 - San Jose Mercury News

Nobody knows better than the Chicago White Sox how well the Detroit Tigers are playing right now.

The Tigers blasted Chicago 14-4 on Monday for their 10th win in a row. The streak began with a sweep of the White Sox during a lopsided three-game series Sept. 3-5 in Detroit. The Tigers outscored Chicago 35-11 in that series, and continued to embarrass their A.L. Central rival with a 14-run, 21-hit explosion on Monday.

"I don't know if there is a hotter team out there right now," said White Sox starter John Danks, who was tagged for eight runs and 11 hits in five innings. "It's embarrassing but at the same time you have to realize how good they're playing."

It's the Tigers' first 10-game streak since they won 11 in a row in September 1968 before going on to win the World Series that year.

Back-to-back homers by Jhonny Peralta and Ryan Raburn in the second inning on Monday got the Tigers rolling after facing a 1-0 deficit. Raburn finished the game with four hits and three RBIs and Peralta added two hits and three RBIs for the Tigers, who reduced their magic number to six in the A.L. Central.

Detroit starter Rick Porcello (14-8) coasted to an easy victory. He allowed three runs on six hits in 6?2/3 innings. He allowed one of Brent Morel's two home runs.

"We got that cushion and he got some balls on the ground and did a good job," Tigers manager Jim Leyland said. "I think that relaxed him a little bit when we got the

lead and he pitched very well, but he's got to continue working to get the breaking stuff better and the changeup -- more strikes.

"He was sick, too. He had a temperature last night, he had a fever," Leyland said. "I was really worried about him going into the game, how strong he would be. I'm sure getting the lead helped relax him a little bit, he didn't have to go max effort."

Rays: Tampa Bay stayed hot coming off a weekend series sweep of the Red Sox with a 5-2 win over Baltimore, and so did B.J. Upton. Upton doubled twice and took two walks to set a team mark by reaching base in nine straight plate appearances.

Upton went 4 for 4 with a walk on Sunday against Boston, then reached base four successive times against the Orioles before striking out in the eighth inning.

"I just want to help this team whether it's offensively or defensively, and right now it happens to be on the offensive end," Upton said. "I feel good right now, and I'll just try to feel good as long as I can. The hits are just falling."

Tampa Bay won for the eighth time in nine games to move within three games of idle Boston in the A.L. wild-card race after trailing by nine on Sept. 2.

Ramirez arrested: Former World Series MVP Manny Ramirez was arrested and charged with battery Monday after a domestic dispute at his South Florida home, police said.

Ramirez, 39, and his wife were arguing in their bedroom when he slapped her face, causing her to hit her head on their bed's headboard, according to a police report. She told the deputy she was afraid the situation would escalate and called police. Ramirez denied hitting his wife, according to the report, telling a deputy "he grabbed his wife by the shoulders and when he shrugged her, she hit her head."

Ramirez's wife, Juliana, had red swelling on her face and a small bruise on the back of her head, the police report said. She did not want medical treatment.

Cardinals: Pitcher Chris Carpenter and the team are closing in on a $21 million, two-year contract, a person familiar with the negotiations told The Associated Press.

The person spoke Monday on condition of anonymity because negotiations are not yet complete. The agreement is likely to be announced this week.

Yankees: Backup catcher Francisco Cervelli is out indefinitely with a concussion.

Cervelli was examined Monday in New York by Dr. Kirk Roberts, a neurologist specializing in concussion syndromes. The catcher was diagnosed with a concussion but MRI results were negative, the Yankees said. Cervelli is resting at home and there is no immediate timetable for his return. All of his baseball-related activities have been suspended, the team said.

With starting catcher Russell Martin still sidelined by a sore right thumb, the A.L. East leaders have been forced to hand the catching duties to a pair of rookies: Jesus Montero and Austin Romine.

Mets: The team's player representative, Josh Thole, hopes to come to an agreement soon with Major League Baseball on a policy that would allow his team to wear emergency service-department caps during games on Sept. 11 every year. Thole called the players' association Monday, a day after the Mets were denied their request to wear caps honoring first responders on the 10th anniversary of the attacks.

The Mets wanted to wear caps honoring police, firefighters and other first responders when they played the Chicago Cubs on Sunday night. They wore the hats for batting practice and the pregame ceremony, but MLB insisted they wear their regular caps during the game.

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Cubs tee off on Reds' pitching staff - Chicago Tribune

CINCINNATI ? Cubs manager Mike Quade may be an incurable optimist.

Not even a season like this one can convince him the National League Central is not within the Cubs' reach in 2012.

"Absolutely it is," he said.

Hope springs eternal, even in late summer with the Cubs in their fourth month of playing out the string.

Before Monday's 12-8 win over the Reds, the Cubs were 21 games behind first-place Milwaukee and 18 games below .500, while their starting pitchers combined to post the highest earned-run average of any NL club.

Despite a combined 1,698 feet worth of home runs off starter Rodrigo Lopez, including the first ball ever hit over the right-field bleachers at the Great American Ballpark ? a 502-foot shot by catcher Juan Francisco ? the Cubs coasted Monday behind their offense.

"I'm surprised at how many runs we scored," Alfonso Soriano said. "We don't look tired today. It's good for the team. We got here at 5:30 in the morning (from New York). It was a good performance for everybody."

Jeff Baker, Aramis Ramirez and Starlin Castro homered in the Cubs' 16-hit attack against Dontrelle Willis and the Reds' bullpen.

Castro's home run traveled 425 feet, and he added a pair of doubles and drove in three runs, while Soriano also had three RBIs.

Castro's three hits left him with 190 for the season, giving him a shot at hitting the 200-hit mark during the final Cubs homestand.

"I can get to 196 or 197 in Cincinnati, and then get it at home," Castro said. "I want to do it at home. It's better there."

As for the Cubs' chances in 2012, Quade lauded the Reds, Cardinals and Brewers before adding: "There's always reason to believe that if you put the right things together and improve in the areas you need to, you can compete. ? It's a long season, but I find no reason to think we can't make some decisions and put something together and contend."

Whether Quade will get another chance to contend remains to be seen. His team is putting together another last-gasp run, just as it did last year, going 24-13 under Quade to save his job and give the players hope a carry-over affect would be in play in 2011.

It didn't happen, of course, costing general manager Jim Hendry his job and leaving Quade on the hot seat.

The best they can do this year is finish in fourth, a reachable goal now that Pittsburgh is in the midst of an epic meltdown.

"I'd love to catch the Pirates, absolutely," Quade said. "You'd love to go on an unbelievable run and find a way to catch (the Reds). But I think we let that take care of itself."

psullivan@tribune.com

Twitter @PWSullivan

Save up to 40% on Chicago Cubs gifts

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNEWE4cMw8AShLfNf5YA3Ap4RL0X6Q&url=http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/baseball/cubs/ct-spt-0913-cubs-reds-chicago--20110913,0,1720976.story

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