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NIPSCO starts work on two new solar farms in northwest IndianaAssociated Presson November 9, 2021 at 11:29 pm

NIPSCO will be using even more solar panels like these when two new solar farms come online next year. | Provided

The projects for the Merrillville-based utility come as it aims to retire all of its coal-fired generation by 2028 and generate more electricity from renewable energy sources.

Northern Indiana Public Service Co. has started work on two new solar farms in northwest Indiana that it says will generate a combined 465 megawatts of power when they come online next year.

The new projects for the Merrillville-based utility, a subsidiary of NiSource, come as NIPSCO aims to retire all of its coal-fired generation by 2028 and generate more electricity from renewable energy sources.

NIPSCO is partnering with EDP Renewables North America to build Indiana Crossroads Solar, a 200-megawatt solar farm in White County. That project is expected to produce $40 million in local taxes and pay $1 million a year to landowners, according to the utility company.

NextEra Energy Resources LLC is building the other new solar farm in Jasper County. To be called Dunns Bridge Solar I, that 265-megawatt installation will feature about 900,000 solar panels that will generate enough electricity to power 79,5000 homes.

A planned second phase, Dunns Bridge Solar II, will add 435 megawatts of solar with 1.5 million solar panels and 75 megawatts of battery storage and is expected to come online in 2023.

NextEra Energy Resources will sell both installations to NIPSCO once construction is finished.

NIPSCO has built two wind farms and has 10 other renewable projects in the works. The utility says it expects to finish 14 renewable energy projects by 2023.

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NIPSCO starts work on two new solar farms in northwest IndianaAssociated Presson November 9, 2021 at 11:29 pm Read More »

Gonzaga’s quest, UCLA’s test, the Big Ten’s best and all the restSteve Greenbergon November 9, 2021 at 11:17 pm

Drew Timme and Gonzaga are ranked No. 1 again. | Photo by Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images

Ten things to know about the college basketball season, which started on Tuesday.

Nothing says the start of the college basketball season like the Champions Classic, the annual blue-blood-fueled doubleheader with a March-in-November feel. Tuesday, that meant Kansas being pitted against Michigan State and Duke against Kentucky in New York.

Best on best, right?

Not so much anymore.

Take those four programs, toss in North Carolina and you’ve got the five leaders in NCAA Tournament wins this century. But there has been a not-so-subtle falling off of late that was starkly evident when last season’s Big Dance rolled around: Kansas was a 3 seed, North Carolina an 8 and Michigan State an 11 — all three were quickly eliminated — and Duke and Kentucky were both absent from the field for the first time since 1976.

The 2015 tournament was the only one of the last nine in which more than one of the five traditional powerhouses reached the Final Four. Last season — for the first time in eight years — none of the five got there.

Of course, nobody at all got there two seasons ago, when the tournament was canceled as COVID-19 spread. Michigan State, Kentucky, Kansas and Duke were ranked 1-4 in the 2019-20 preseason Top 25, but only Kansas, as it turned out, would’ve had a shot at a No. 1 seed had the tournament been played.

This season? The Jayhawks were third in the preseason Top 25, the Blue Devils ninth, the Wildcats 10th, the Tar Heels 19th and the Spartans nowhere to be found. On the whole: not terrible, but no longer a group that stands apart from the rest.

To the rest of a season-preview Big 10 (where 10 actually means 10):

2. Gonzaga’s title quest: Guess who’s ranked No. 1 going in for the second year in a row. Are the Zags ever going to win a national championship? They’ve been to 22 straight tournaments, 21 of them under Mark Few, whose previously spotless reputation — not counting the whole can’t-win-it-all thing — took a hit with his offseason DUI.

3. What about Baylor? The defending champs are ranked eighth, but I put them at 18th on my ballot. Two reasons: Jared Butler and Davion Mitchell. As in, they’re gone. So are the Bears’ chances of being great again.

Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images
UCLA’s Juzang became a household name last March.

4. What about UCLA? The Bruins are No. 2 — and I ranked them fourth — because the whole gang is back. Come on, you remember them: Johnny Juzang, Tyger Campbell, Jaime Jaquez Jr. et al. But remember, their run to the Final Four almost didn’t happen; they barely got into the tournament. Are we all overrating them?

5. Coach K, all day: Nobody’s going to stop talking about Mike Krzyzewski, 74, who’s in his last season at Duke. Northbrook guy Jon Scheyer is going to replace him, if you haven’t heard. Hubert Davis is the new boss at North Carolina, replacing Roy Williams. That’ll take some zing out of this rivalry, won’t it?

6. Penny Hardaway’s comeback: It’s actually Season 4 for Hardaway at Memphis, but it has been easy to miss him; his Tigers have yet to get to a Big Dance. Yeah, well, that ends this season — and don’t be surprised if Memphis plays to a 1 or 2 seed. Jalen Duren and Emoni Bates are potential top-five NBA picks in 2022 and 2023, respectively.

7. Other duos: Gonzaga has Drew Timme, the frontrunner for national player of the year, and Chet Holmgren, the top freshman in the 2021 class. Must be nice. The Big Ten (where Ten doesn’t mean anything close to Ten) has Kofi Cockburn and Andre Curbelo at 11th-ranked Illinois and Jaden Ivey and Trevion Williams at seventh-ranked Purdue. Just spitballing here, but the Illini and Boilermakers really should think about putting together a best-of-seven two-on-two event with those guys.

Photo by Michael Hickey/Getty Images
Curbelo served many a fancy dish to Cockburn last season.

8. Speaking of the Big Ten: At this point, I’ve got Illinois as the third-best team — behind Michigan and Purdue — in an excellent league. Ohio State is next. Don’t forget about Rutgers or Maryland and, sure, Michigan State could really rise up.

9. Oh, um, Northwestern: We should probably address the developing situation in Evanston, which is that nothing much seems to be, you know, developing. Since breaking through with their first-ever Big Dance appearance in 2017, the Wildcats have finished 10th, 14th, 13th and 12th in the Big Ten standings. I’ve got them 12th this time, ahead of only Minnesota and Penn State.

10. The big lie? Tons of people are saying the Big Ten is the best conference in the country. I would be, too, if the league had produced a single national champion since Michigan State in 2000. It’s hard to ignore a streak that’s old enough to legally drink. I’m going with the Big 12 instead.

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Gonzaga’s quest, UCLA’s test, the Big Ten’s best and all the restSteve Greenbergon November 9, 2021 at 11:17 pm Read More »

Ex-apprentice Justin Fields making his own plan workMark Potashon November 9, 2021 at 11:38 pm

Bears rookie quarterback Justin Fields (1) threw for a career-high 291 yards, with one touchdown and one interception, for an 89.9 passer rating against the Steelers on Monday night. | Emilee Chinn/Getty Images

Bears coach Matt Nagy’s original strategy to have Fields to sit behind veteran Andy Dalton this season overlooked perhaps the rookie’s strongest trait: He learns well.

When Bears coach Matt Nagy devised the apprenticeship plan for rookie quarterback Justin Fields to sit behind veteran Andy Dalton, he never insisted it was the right one or the only one.

Nagy acknowledged that there was no sure-fire template for rookie quarterbacks. Some sit and fail. Some sit and succeed. Some play and fail. Some play and succeed.

Fate ended up moving its huge hands to push Nagy in the right direction. An injury to Dalton and a timely dose of common sense promoted Fields into a permanent starting role. And after Fields struggled early, significant progress in back-to-back games — a small step against the 49ers and a much larger step against the Steelers on Monday night — have provided the strongest evidence yet that playing Fields now was the best move.

“Yeah,” Nagy said. “You think back to his first start in Cleveland [when he was sacked nine times with one net passing yard]. That hostile environment. First start. On the road. And also us as coaches, building and formulating a game plan for him — not necessarily knowing what [were] gonna be his strengths heading into that game.”

Six weeks later, Fields threw for a career-high 291 yards and engineered a fourth-quarter touchdown drive, capped by a nifty pass-on-the-run for a 16-yard touchdown to Darnell Mooney that temporarily gave the Bears an improbable 27-26 lead with 1:46 left in the fourth quarter.

It didn’t last — the Steelers rallied for a field goal to win 29-27 when Cairo Santos’ 65-yard field goal attempt fell short as time expired. But the Bears left with more hope than they’ve had in three seasons.

Chicago’s got their QB1,” NBC analyst and Pro Football Focus owner Cris Collinsworth tweeted, noting that Fields was PFF’s highest rated quarterback in Week 9.

We’ll see about that. This is the Bears, after all. But there is no doubt that Fields has come a long way from the Cleveland debacle. At times it appears he’s rising above the muck of a stodgy offense. But offensive coordinator Bill Lazor and Nagy are getting more out of him now than they did then, when Fields was like a toy they tore out of the box and played with before reading the instructions.

“We feel a lot different now,” Nagy said. “We feel better as to the types of plays we’re putting in that fit him [and] fit our offense — trying to match that and that balance.”

Fields’ raising his game in a big moment was the most promising indicator against the Steelers. But big plays and open receivers were the most tangible proof of growth — for the rookie and the offense. Fields had four pass plays of 25 or more yards, to four different receivers — 50 yards to Marquise Goodwin, 39 yards to Allen Robinson, 28 yards to tight end Jimmy Graham and 25 yards to tight end Cole Kmet. That’s as many passing plays of 25 yards or more as the Bears had in their first eight games.

“The last two weeks his decision-making and timing has been really, really good,” Nagy said. “And he’s taking shots downfield, which is great. We’re not hitting on all of them, but when you take those downfield [shots], they can’t sit on you all the time.”

The bye week will give Fields a chance to take a deep breath after seven consecutive weeks of force-feeding. He’ll get some rest, watch some film, self-scout the offense and get a head start on preparing for the Ravens on Nov. 21 at Soldier Field.

But it’ll give Nagy, Lazor and quarterbacks coach John DeFilippo an extra week to take a deep breath of their own — and see exactly what they have to work with.

“Coach Flip and coach Lazor will have some nice stuff for him,” Nagy said. “I think he’ll be excited to really attack it. He kind of feels that ball rolling the right way. He’s got momentum going. He feels that, so he’s going to be super-excited to get right back at it.”

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Ex-apprentice Justin Fields making his own plan workMark Potashon November 9, 2021 at 11:38 pm Read More »

Bears lead the NFL in taunting flags, whether they like the rule or notPatrick Finleyon November 9, 2021 at 10:16 pm

Bears coach Matt Nagy complains to an official Monday night. | Fred Vuich/AP

Matt Nagy’s players keep making the same mistake. That makes them undisciplined, or poorly coached, or both.

Bears inside linebacker Alec Ogletree stood over Rams right guard Austin Corbett in Week 1 and was flagged for taunting.

“I don’t like the taunting, because that’s gonna be emphasized this year,” Bears coach Matt Nagy said then.

The very next week, after safety Tashaun Gipson was called for taunting when he clapped into the direction of rookie Bengals receiver Ja’Marr Chase, Nagy said that the Bears were teaching their players to “move on to the next play.”

Outside linebacker Cassius Marsh was called for taunting for staring at the Steelers bench Monday night after doing a spinning heel kick celebration following a third-down sack. Rather than punt with 3:16 to play, ahead by three, the Steelers kept the ball, forced the Bears to burn two timeouts and kicked a field goal in a game they’d win by two.

The objective nature of the taunting rule and the context of the game gave the Bears ample reason to complain about the taunting flag, even though the NFL instructed its officials at the start of the season to enforce the rule.

The Bears lost their moral high ground a long time ago, though. They’ve been called for taunting three times for 45 yards this season, tied for the most in the NFL. Fourteen teams don’t have a single taunting penalty.

“In that moment, you have to be super careful of being in the gray with this new rule, with the taunting,” Nagy said Tuesday. “And any gray that you give them, they can make a decision on and it can be subjective — and that’s part of the rule.”

Nagy has been saying that for two months. His players keep making the same mistake. That makes them undisciplined, or poorly coached, or both.

Whether they agree with an unpopular rule is immaterial. A penalty is a penalty — and the Bears’ 58 flags this year are 13th-most in the NFL and their 511 penalty yards rank 11th.

“It’s a very emotional game and an emotional time in the game,” Nagy said. “And so, you have that balance of somebody that’s fighting their ass off to make a play, and then who makes the play and is excited. Isn’t that a part of loving the game, man — the passion, fire, fun. Right? That’s a part of the game.

“But when you’re in the gray, then it can, there can be consequences.”

Contrast that with Steelers coach Mike Tomlin, a member of the NFL’s competition committee who told reporters Tuesday that he unequivocally agrees with the rule.

“This game being played at the highest level, we understand that people who play at a lower level watch us and often mimic the things we do and how we conduct ourselves,” he said. “And just largely as a league competition committee specifically, there was a desire to improve in that area. That’s been expressed to our guys. “

Unsurprisingly, the Steelers haven’t been flagged for taunting. In the NFL, you are what you emphasize.

The Bears led the NFL with 12 flags last week. Their 115 penalty yards was trumped only by the Bills, who had 118. The Bears have plenty of examples to turn into the league for review this week, but even Nagy knows they won’t get any satisfaction from it.

Rookie quarterback Justin Fields was upset Monday night the Steelers didn’t get flagged for hitting him late, saying “the vets, they get those calls.”

Nagy wouldn’t comment when asked about that, but he was clear about one thing. Marsh said late Monday that he was “hip-checked” by referee Tony Corrente as he ran off the field following the flag. After watching a replay, Marsh said he found the contact intentional and “incredibly inappropriate.”

Nagy didn’t see it that way.

“It’s in the moment,” he said. “They’re both doing their thing. I don’t see anything intentional through both of them.”

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Bears lead the NFL in taunting flags, whether they like the rule or notPatrick Finleyon November 9, 2021 at 10:16 pm Read More »

7 Best Restaurants in Cicero, IL for a Chow DownJulie Caion November 9, 2021 at 2:49 pm

Cicero is one of the closest suburbs to the city and the only incorporated town in Cook County. As one of the oldest and largest municipalities in Illinois, the town is filled with colorful histories. While the western suburb is primarily associated with manufacturing, you may be drawn to nearby attractions like Columbus Park, Oak Park Conservatory, or Hawthorne Race Course. And if you’ve worked up an appetite after all the exploration, we’ve got you covered with some of the best restaurants in Cicero, IL to chow down.

4700 W Cermak Rd, Cicero, IL 60804

This no-frills joint has been serving Italian classics in Cicero since 1953. Scatchell’s is an iconic neighborhood restaurant with signage that lights up the town and a menu that will satiate your hungry appetite.

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In addition, since Scatchell’s is a member of the Vienna Beef Hot Dog Hall of Fame, so the Polish Dog is a must. If that’s not enough, the menu also has their famed Italian beef sandwiches, pizza, and other fast-food eats.

1600 S 61st Ave, Cicero, IL 60804

Since 1968, Freddy’s has been an old school, family-owned, and operated Italian market and deli. It’s a treasured spot in Cicero and well-loved for its squares of thick-crust pizza.

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The menu also features pastas, salads, sandwiches, and classic desserts like gelato and Italian ice. If you can’t get enough of the sweets, you can even order quarts to take home.

4836 W Cermak Rd, Cicero, IL 60804

Feast on traditional Mexican fare and wash it down with fresh margaritas. First opened in 1975 with just eight dining tables, Cocula has expanded to six different locations in the Chicagoland area today, including Cicero. The local chain offers classic Mexican breakfast items, like Chilaquiles, and has all your favorites for lunch and dinner, including tacos, tortas, and tostadas.

6031 Ogden Ave, Cicero, IL 60804

If you’re driving down Historic Route 66, make a pit stop at Henry’s Drive-In to field up for the road. The eatery is famous for its hot dogs and has served classic fast food in Cicero since 1950. For something unique, try the BLT Dog, a deep-fried hot dog wrapped in bacon. Then, finish the meal with a delicious shake, slushee, or malt!

5960 Ogden Ave, Cicero, IL 60804

This cash-only spot serves up casual Mexican staples like tacos, burritos, quesadillas, and enchiladas. Open late, Mr. Taco is perfect for those late-night cravings or after a few rounds. Try customer favorites like the steak tacos and quesadillas and pair it with a fresh cup of horchata.

5647 Ogden Ave, Cicero, IL 60804

5556 W 26th St, Cicero, IL 60804

5601 W Roosevelt Rd, Cicero, IL 60804

Steak’n Egger is a 24-hour joint serving breakfast, lunch, and dinner. The family-run restaurant has served the Chicagoland area since 1955 for three generations. There are seven locations, with three in Cicero alone.

From pancakes and omelettes to burgers and homemade chili, you can have it all in one place! Try the customer favorite Big Boy Sandwich, a half-pound chopped steak on Texas toast with fries.

6043 Roosevelt Rd, Cicero, IL 60804

Lucky Dog is a family business that first opened in 1984 in Melrose Park. It has since expanded to Cicero and Berwyn and all locations serve their signature hot dogs, Italian beef, gyros, and other late-night grub. The eatery adds a homemade touch to every menu item and serves generous portions, so come hungry!

Featured Image Credit: Freddy’s Pizza

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7 Best Restaurants in Cicero, IL for a Chow DownJulie Caion November 9, 2021 at 2:49 pm Read More »

Aaron Rodgers says he takes responsibility for ‘misleading’ comments about his vaccine statusUSA TODAY SPORTSon November 9, 2021 at 9:08 pm

“I stand by what I said and the reasons why I made the decision,” Aaron Rodgers said Tuesday. | Jeffrey Phelps/AP

“I shared an opinion that is polarizing,” Rodgers said Tuesday. “… But at the end I have to stay true to who I am and what I’m about.”

Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers returned to “The Pat McAfee Show” on Tuesday following a provocative appearance on the program last week in which he defended his unvaccinated status and spread COVID-19 vaccine misinformation.

“I made some comments that people might’ve felt were misleading. To anybody who felt misled by those comments, I take full responsibility for those comments,” Rodgers said at the beginning of his interview with McAfee, the former Indianapolis Colts punter, and A.J. Hawk, Rodgers’ former Packers teammate.

“I stand by what I said and the reasons why I made the decision,” Rodgers said later in the interview.

McAfee pressed Rodgers on the medical experts he consulted to make his decision, other than Joe Rogan, who Rodgers praised last week. He offered no specifics.

“Look, I have a lot of admiration for Joe,” Rodgers said. “I definitely talked with about a dozen friends of mine who dealt with COVID and they were all very helpful in different ways, Joe being one of them.”

This marks the second Rodgers has appeared on “The Pat McAfee Show” since he tested positive for COVID-19 last week and missed Sunday’s loss against the Kansas City Chiefs.

Rodgers is required to isolate for a minimum of 10 days, in accordance with the NFL’s health and safety protocols that were jointly agreed to with the NFL Players Association, meaning that he could also miss Green Bay’s next game, Sunday against the Seattle Seahawks. Once the 10-day period has passed, Rodgers will have to produce two negative tests at least 24 hours apart and will have to be symptom free to be cleared to return to the team.

Rodgers said he has several health hurdles to clear before knowing he’s ready for game action. He’s taken walks and done yoga while recovering from the infection. He acknowledged there’s a possibility he won’t play Sunday and said he is prepared to focus on what’s happening on the field again.

“I’m an athlete. I’m not an activist,” he said. “So I’m going to get back to what I’m doing best, and that’s playing ball.”

Rodgers hasn’t made any other public comments, other than Friday’s episode of the “Pat McAfee Show,” when he confirmed that he was unvaccinated and added that he had taken ivermectin during a 46-minute session. Following Friday’s appearance, Rodgers has faced harsh criticism for his comments, many of which don’t hold up to scrutiny after fact checking.

Rodgers said last week that, politically, the left will vilify him while the right would champion his decision. He also referenced Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. about following “unjust laws.”

“Hate is not going to bring us out of this pandemic. It’s going to be connecting and love,” he said. “I’m not going to hate on anybody that’s said things about me. I believe everybody’s entitled to their opinion and I’ll always believe that.”

Rodgers, 37, had said in August that he was “immunized” when a reporter asked him in a news conference if he was vaccinated. He did not clarify his status after a follow-up question about what went into his decision.

“I shared an opinion that is polarizing,” Rodgers said Tuesday. “I get it. And I misled some people about my status, which I take full responsibility for, those comments, but at the end I have to stay true to who I am and what I’m about.”

Read more at usatoday.com

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Aaron Rodgers says he takes responsibility for ‘misleading’ comments about his vaccine statusUSA TODAY SPORTSon November 9, 2021 at 9:08 pm Read More »

Dean Stockwell, starred in ‘Quantum Leap,’ ‘Married to the Mob,’ dies at 85Jake Coyle | AP Film Writeron November 9, 2021 at 9:32 pm

Dean Stockwell | AP File

Stockwell was perhaps best-known for co-starring in the TV series “Quantum Leap” opposite Scott Bakula.

Dean Stockwell, a top Hollywood child actor who gained new success in middle age in the sci-fi series “Quantum Leap” and in a string of indelible performances in film, including David Lynch’s “Blue Velvet,” Wim Wenders’ “Paris, Texas” and Jonathan Demme’s “Married to the Mob,” has died. He was 85.

Jay Schwartz, a family spokesperson, said Stockwell died of natural causes at home Sunday.

Stockwell was Oscar-nominated for his comic mafia kingpin in “Married to the Mob” and was four times an Emmy-nominee for “Quantum Leap.” But in a career that spanned seven decades, Stockwell was a supreme character actor whose performances — lip-syncing Roy Orbison in a nightmarish party scene in “Blue Velvet,” a desperate agent in Robert Altman’s “The Player,” Howard Hughes in Francis Ford Coppola’s “Tucker: The Man and His Dream” — didn’t have to be lengthy to be mesmerizing.

Stockwell’s own relationship with acting, having started on Broadway at age 7, was complicated. In a peripatetic career, he quit show business several times, including at age 16 and again in the 1980s, when he moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico, to sell real estate.

AP
Actor Dean Stockwell poses in Feb 1989 at an unknown location. Stockwell, a top Hollywood child actor who gained new success in middle age, garnering an Oscar nomination for “Married to the Mob” and Emmy nominations for “Quantum Leap,” died of natural causes at his home on Nov. 7, 2021. He was 85.

“Dean spent a lifetime yo-yoing back and forth between fame and anonymity,” his family said in a statement. “Because of that, when he had a job, he was grateful. He never took the business for granted. He was a rebel, wildly talented and always a breath of fresh air.”

The dark-haired Stockwell was a Hollywood veteran by the time he reached his teens. In his 20s, he starred on Broadway as a young killer in the play “Compulsion” and in prestigious films such as “Sons and Lovers.” He was awarded best actor at the Cannes Film Festival twice, in 1959 for the big-screen version of “Compulsion” and in 1962 for Sidney Lumet’s adaptation of Eugene O’Neill’s “Long Day’s Journey Into Night.” While his career had some lean times, he reached his full stride in the 1980s.

“My way of working is still the same as it was in the beginning — totally intuitive and instinctive,” he told The New York Times in 1987. “But as you live your life, you compile so many millions of experiences and bits of information that you become a richer vessel as a person. You draw on more experience.”

His Oscar-nominated role as Tony “The Tiger” Russo, a flamboyant gangster, in the 1988 hit “Married to the Mob” led to his most notable TV role the following year, in NBC’s science fiction series “Quantum Leap.” Both roles had strong comic elements.

“It’s the first time anyone’s offered me a series and the first time I’ve ever wanted to do one,” he said in 1989. “If people hadn’t seen me in ‘Married To the Mob’ they wouldn’t have realized I could do comedy.”

Starring with Stockwell in “Quantum Leap” was Scott Bakula, playing a scientist who assumes different identities in different eras after a time-travel experiment goes awry. As his colleague, “The Observer,” Stockwell lends his help but is seen only on a holographic computer image. The show lasted from 1989 to 1993.

“The only time he ever complained was when we called him on the golf course and told him we were ready for him to come to work,” recalled Bakula in a statement Tuesday. “He used to announce his presence on the sound stage (if we hadn’t already caught a whiff of cigar smoke trailing in behind him), with a bellowed, ‘The fun starts now!’ Truer words were never spoken.”

He continued playing roles, big and small, in films and TV, into the 21st century, including a regular role in another science fiction series, “Battlestar Galactica.”

Stockwell became an actor at an early age. His father, Harry Stockwell, voiced the role of Prince Charming in Disney’s “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs” and appeared in several Broadway musicals.

At age 7, Dean made his show business debut in the 1943 Broadway show “The Innocent Voyage,” the story of orphaned children entangled with pirates. His older brother, Guy, also was in the cast.

A producer at MGM was impressed by Dean and persuaded the studio to sign him. His first significant role was as Kathryn Grayson’s nephew in the 1945 musical “Anchors Away,” which starred Gene Kelly and Frank Sinatra.

In the next few years, Stockwell appeared in such films as the Oscar-winning anti-Semitism drama “Gentlemen’s Agreement,” with Gregory Peck, as well as “Song of the Thin Man,” the last of the William Powell-Myrna Loy mystery series, with Stockwell playing their son.

He had the title roles in the 1948 anti-war film “The Boy With Green Hair,” about a war orphan whose hair changes color, and “Kim,” the 1950 version of the Rudyard Kipling tale, which starred Errol Flynn. Films in his youth also included “Down to the Sea in Ships,” with Lionel Barrymore; “The Secret Garden,” with Margaret O’Brien; and “Stars in My Crown” with Joel McCrea.

“I was very lucky to have a loving and caring and sympathetic mother and not a stage mother,” he told The Associated Press in 1989. Still, he stressed, it wasn’t always easy, and he dropped out of the business when he reached 16.

“I never really wanted to be an actor,” he said. “I found acting very difficult from the beginning. I worked long hours, six days a week. It wasn’t fun.” It wasn’t the only time he dropped out. But, he said, “I came back each time because I had no other training.”

Reviving his career after five years, Stockwell returned to New York where he co-starred with Roddy McDowall on Broadway in “Compulsion,” a 1957 drama based on the notorious Leopold-Loeb murder case in which two college students killed a 14-year-old boy for the thrill of it. The film version starred Orson Welles.

Stockwell had two more prestigious film roles in the early 1960s. He was the struggling son in D.H. Lawrence’s “Sons and Lovers” — an Oscar nominee for best picture — and the sensitive younger brother in “Long Day’s Journey Into Night” with Ralph Richardson and Katharine Hepburn.

He also tried his hand at theater directing, putting on a well-received program of Beckett and Ionesco plays in Los Angeles in 1961.

In 1960, Stockwell married Millie Perkins, best known for her starring turn as Anne in the 1959 film “The Diary of Anne Frank.” The marriage ended in divorce after only two years.

In the mid-60s, Stockwell dropped out of Hollywood and became a regular presence at the hippie enclave of Topanga Canyon. After the encouragement of Dennis Hopper, Stockwell wrote a screenplay that never got produced but inspired Neil Young’s 1970 album “After the Gold Rush,” which took its name from Stockwell’s script. Stockwell, longtime friends with Young, later co-directed and starred with Young on 1982?s “Human Highway.” Stockwell also designed the cover of Young’s 1977 album “American Stars ‘N Bars.”

In 1981 he married Joy Marchenko, a textile expert. When his career hit a down period, Stockwell decided to take his family to New Mexico. As soon as he left Hollywood, filmmakers started calling again.

He was cast as Harry Dean Stanton’s drifting brother in Wim Wenders’ acclaimed 1984 film “Paris, Texas” and that same year as the evil Dr. Yueh in Lynch’s “Dune.”

He called his success from the 1980s onward his “third career.” As for the Oscar nomination, he told the AP in 1989 that it was “something I’ve dreamed about for years. … It’s just one of the best feelings I’ve ever had.”

Like his longtime friend Hopper, a noted photographer as well as an actor, Stockwell was active in the visual arts. He made photo collages and what he called “diceworks,” sculptures made of dice. He often used his full name, Robert Dean Stockwell, in his art projects.

His brother, Guy Stockwell, also became a prolific film and television actor, even doing guest shot on “Quantum Leap.” He died in 2002 at age 68.

Stockwell is survived by his wife, Joy, and their two children, Austin Stockwell and Sophie Stockwell.

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Dean Stockwell, starred in ‘Quantum Leap,’ ‘Married to the Mob,’ dies at 85Jake Coyle | AP Film Writeron November 9, 2021 at 9:32 pm Read More »

City Council member demands broader solution to homelessness in ChicagoFran Spielmanon November 9, 2021 at 9:17 pm

Workers from the city’s Department of Streets and Sanitation clear out a homeless encampment near South Desplaines Street and West Roosevelt Road last year. | Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times

A City Council committee agreed to extend an alternative housing deal with a downtown hotel through the winter. But Ald. Walter Burnett said more needs to be done. “If we don’t do anything soon to help these folks, they’re just gonna take liberties and sleep in our backyards.”

A City Council committee agreed Tuesday to extend an alternative housing agreement with a downtown hotel through the winter amid demands for a broader solution to help Chicago’s burgeoning homeless population.

“I find myself in quagmires all the time with people complaining about people being on the street. … People are giving ’em tents and they’re setting up all over. Everywhere you go, you see a tent now,” said Near West Side Ald. Walter Burnett (27th).

“I went to L.A. and I saw tents all up and down the street. If we don’t do anything soon to help these folks, they’re just gonna take liberties and sleep in our backyards. … We need to think deeper and further than this … or we’re gonna find ourselves in a position where we’re gonna be walking over people every day all the time.”

In March, 2020, the Hotel Julian, 168 N. Michigan Ave., was one of four Chicago hotels owned by Oxford Capital Group LLC that agreed to rent rooms to isolate patients who tested positive for the coronavirus or had been exposed to someone who had. Some rooms also would provide a “sanctuary for first-responders” between shifts.

The four hotels joined a network of hotel rooms intended to ease the strain on overburdened hospitals.

The agreement — to rent 175 rooms at a daily rate of $99 oer room, including three meals a day and support services — already had been extended once, for three months.

On Tuesday, the Council’s Housing Committee authorized yet another extension, expiring Feb. 28, 2022. Same number of rooms. Same terms. Same targeted population: single men, primarily over 60, with chronic health conditions.

Maura McCauley, deputy commissioner for homeless and domestic violence services for the city’s Department of Family and Support Services, said City Hall has worked to “help the shelter system safely return to normal where possible.”

But McCauley noted adult shelters are “very large congregational spaces that, under current circumstances with the pandemic, are not able to return to complete bed capacity” until sometime next year.

“We will need some version of shelter de-compression for the near future,” she said.

Noting that 130 men once housed at the Hotel Julian now have permanent housing, McCauley said: “People do better in the privacy of their own rooms, when they have access to a shower and food and private space. We’ve seen a lot of different improvements.”

Under questioning, McCauley acknowledged only 73 rooms of the 175 rooms are occupied.

“Perhaps there could be a concerted effort to get chronically homeless individuals steered in this direction,” Ald. Sophia King (4th) told McCauley.

“Since we have all of these rooms and we’re paying for them, I would like to be part of trying to figure out how to get some of the chronically homeless folks into this opportunity. I would like to see us get to 100% room occupancy … and perhaps open it up to a larger population, if that targeted one is not yielding a higher percentage.”

That prompted downtown Ald. Brendan Reilly (42nd) to declare this the third and final extension.

“The Hotel Julian is a hotel and they plan on becoming one again in the spring,” he said.

“This is not a new housing facility for single rooms that folks can avail themselves of for the foreseeable future. This is a very interim condition that will change in the spring.”

But, Reilly added: “This may be a bigger conversation about single rooms and having them downtown and throughout the city.”

Burnett noted many elderly homeless men with chronic health conditions the city is targeting are military veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder and other mental health challenges.

He commended Reilly for allowing downtown hotels to be used to house those men, even temporarily.

“I know you have a community that don’t feel as comfortable as other people do with having them stand around there because when they come out, they’re all over the place,” Burnett said.

Regal project land sale OK’d

Also on Wednesday, the Housing Committee agreed to sell six parcels of vacant, city-owned land in South Shore for an appraised value of $31,000. The buyers are the developers of a $60 million project: Regal Mile Studios. The parcels are to be used as a parking lot.

The ambitious project at 7731 S. Chicago Ave. — with six studios for film and television production — is being spearheaded Chicago-born rapper Common and producer Derek Dudley.

Dudley has said the project could anchor a South Side entertainment district that would include the nearby Avalon Regal Theater.

Local Ald. Leslie Hairston (5th) said she is “ecstatic” about the film studio project that will only strengthen Chicago’s reputation as the Hollywood of the Midwest.

“What makes it even better is that they are former residents who are doing things to help improve the community,” Hairston said.

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City Council member demands broader solution to homelessness in ChicagoFran Spielmanon November 9, 2021 at 9:17 pm Read More »

Chicago Bulls: Ayo Dosunmu really is an impressive rookieVincent Pariseon November 9, 2021 at 9:00 pm

The Chicago Bulls have a lot of impressive players. When you think about their 7-3 start, the conversation begins with stars like Zach LaVine, Lonzo Ball, and DeMar DeRozan. Nikola Vucevic is having a slow start for his standards but he will figure it out. Outside of those four, there are some younger players stepping […] Chicago Bulls: Ayo Dosunmu really is an impressive rookie – Da Windy City – Da Windy City – A Chicago Sports Site – Bears, Bulls, Cubs, White Sox, Blackhawks, Fighting Illini & MoreRead More

Chicago Bulls: Ayo Dosunmu really is an impressive rookieVincent Pariseon November 9, 2021 at 9:00 pm Read More »

For Dennis Quaid, singing solo is like going ‘to the edge of the cliff’Miriam Di Nunzioon November 9, 2021 at 7:59 pm

Dennis Quaid performs a at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum on Oct. 24, 2021 in Nashville, Tennessee. Quaid brings his solo evening of music to City Winery Chicago on Nov. 10. | Getty

Band stays home for concert by the actor-musician, who has been focusing on spiritual sounds — and filming a movie as Ronald Reagan.

Music legend Jerry Lee Lewis once famously sang “I’m really nervous, but it sure is fun.” And while actor Dennis Quaid says he’s not nervous in the least about his latest endeavor, he is sure having fun thanks to music — that of Lewis and other industry icons, as well as his own.

Quaid portrayed Lewis in the 1989 biopic “Great Balls of Fire,” a dream come true for the kid from Texas who idolized the rock ‘n’ roll pioneer. He counts country icons Johnny Cash, Hank Williams, Willie Nelson and a host of other legends including fellow Texan Buddy Holly, the Beatles and the Doors as his musical influences.

“It’s the music I grew up with,” Quaid says, calling on a recent November morning. And it’s the music of these greats along with original material that Quaid is presenting in his new solo concert, which arrives at City Winery on Wednesday night. (Quaid and his band the Sharks have performed across the country for the past 20 years, releasing their debut album in 2018.)

But a solo, “intimate evening” is something new for his fans, whom he invites to just “come and have a good time.”

“It is just me. It’s the first time I’ve been doing music on stage by myself since I was 19 years old. … [Laughs] You have to go to the edge of the cliff and just jump off. I find that it’s very much like theater without a fourth wall.”

Breaking that fourth wall has its challenges.

“I realize it’s like any relationship. When you meet it’s always a little awkward at first,” Quaid muses. “Sometimes I identify someone sitting out there who has this ‘show me’ attitude and I will focus on them. [Laughs] People are people; they paid their hard-earned money to come there and they want to be there, or the other person they’re with dragged them there.”

In recent years, Quaid’s music has turned to the realm of inspirational. He released “On My Way to Heaven” in 2018 (produced by T Bone Burnett) for the soundtrack of “I Can Only Imagine,” in which he also starred. A gospel/inspirational album is due next year. It may surprise more than a few folks to learn the actor is a man of deep faith.

“I’ve always been spiritual. I grew up in a Southern Baptist church, became disillusioned with it as a teenager. I turned to Eastern religions and philosophies,” he says. “I read the Bible twice, read the Koran, went to India nine times. Along the way I came back to Christianity, and well, finding that it’s really the same all throughout the world. People are people with the same sort of yearnings. We’re all spiritual beings whether we know it or not. So that’s what I speak to: one’s relationship with God or non-relationship with God.”

The album will feature traditional, “spiritual songs I grew up with in church,” as well as original material. Billy Ray Cyrus joins Quaid on a new tune, “Fallen,” while Tanya Tucker, Kris Kristofferson and Brandi Carlisle join him for a new take on “On My Way to Heaven.”

A self-described “baritone at best,” Quaid says the first song he tried to learn (he’s a self-taught guitarist/pianist ) was “Light My Fire,” which, he admits, is not a good song for a beginner. “So I found myself gravitating toward Johnny Cash because he had simple chords and story songs and that really affected me as a kid. He probably still remains my top role model when it comes to songwriting.”

When it comes to acting, Quaid, whose film work includes “The Day After Tomorrow,” “Vantage Point,” “The Parent Trap,” “The Right Stuff,” “Breaking Away” and “Midway,” has a penchant for bringing real-life characters to the big screen. In his latest film, he stars as Ronald Reagan in “Reagan,” due out next year. Penelope Ann Miller co-stars as Nancy Reagan. (In addition to Lewis, he’s starred as Doc Holiday in “Tombstone,” Sam Houston in “The Alamo” and President Bill Clinton in “The Special Relationship.”

“I like to play people who are real because you have a template, but I try not to approach it like an impersonation. I like to find out what makes people tick and you can do that with real people.”

The movie was filmed, in part, at the Reagans’ 688-acre ranch in Santa Barbara, California, which was fascinating and a little eerie at the same time, he says.

“In a way he was sort of unknowable, even to those who were close to him. … Filming at the house was a special experience. Penelope and I had to pinch ourselves at times because we were doing these scenes in that house in the very place where they took place. You could really feel both of them there. They left that house exactly as they had left it. Their clothes are in the closet, everything is exactly as it was.”

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For Dennis Quaid, singing solo is like going ‘to the edge of the cliff’Miriam Di Nunzioon November 9, 2021 at 7:59 pm Read More »