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Taliban stop planes of evacuees from leaving but unclear whyAssociated Presson September 5, 2021 at 8:53 pm

KABUL, Afghanistan — At least four planes chartered to evacuate several hundred people seeking to escape the Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan have been unable to leave the country for days, officials said Sunday, with conflicting accounts emerging about why the flights weren’t able to take off as pressure ramps up on the United States to help those left behind to flee.

An Afghan official at the airport in the northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif said that the would-be passengers were Afghans, many of whom did not have passports or visas, and thus were unable to leave the country. He said they had left the airport while the situation was sorted out.

The top Republican on the U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee, however, said that the group included Americans and they were sitting on the planes, but the Taliban were not letting them take off, effectively “holding them hostage.” He did not say where that information came from. It was not immediately possible to reconcile the accounts.

The final days of America’s 20-year war in Afghanistan were marked by a harrowing airlift at Kabul’s airport to evacuate tens of thousands of people — Americans and their allies — who feared what the future would hold, given the Taliban’s history of repression, particularly of women. When the last troops pulled out on Aug. 30, though, many were left behind.

The U.S. promised to continue working with the new Taliban rulers to get those who want to leave out, and the militants pledged to allow anyone with the proper legal documents to leave. But Rep. Michael McCaul of Texas told “Fox News Sunday” that American citizens and Afghan interpreters were being kept on six planes.

“The Taliban will not let them leave the airport,” he said, adding that he’s worried “they’re going to demand more and more, whether it be cash or legitimacy as the government of Afghanistan.” He did not offer more details.

The Afghan official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject, said it was four planes, and their intended passengers were staying at hotels while authorities worked out whether they might be able to leave the country. The sticking point, he indicated, is that many did not have the right travel papers.

Residents of Mazar-e-Sharif also said the passengers were no longer at the airport. At least 10 families were seen at a local hotel waiting, they said, for a decision on their fates. None of them had passports or visas but said they had worked for companies allied with the U.S. or German military. Others were seen at restaurants.

The small airport at Mazar-e-Sharif only recently began to handle international flights and so far only to Turkey. The planes in question were bound for Doha, Qatar, the Afghan official said. It was not clear who chartered them or why they were waiting in the northern city. The massive airlift happened at Kabul’s international airport, which initially closed after the U.S. withdrawal but where domestic flights have now resumed.

Searing images of that chaotic evacuation — including people clinging to an airplane as it took off — came to define the final days of America’s longest war, just weeks after Taliban fighters retook the country in a lightning offensive.

Since their takeover, the Taliban have sought to recast themselves as different from their 1990s incarnation, when they last ruled the country and imposed repressive restrictions across society. Women and girls were denied work and education, men were forced to grow beards, and television and music were banned.

Now, the world is waiting to see the face of the new government, and many Afghans remain skeptical. In the weeks since they took power, signals have been mixed: Government employees including women have been asked to return to work, but some women were later ordered home by lower-ranking Taliban. Universities and schools have been ordered open, but fear has kept both students and teachers away.

Women have demonstrated peacefully, some even having conversations about their rights with Taliban leaders. But some have been dispersed by Taliban special forces firing in the air.

Some signs of normalcy have also begun to return. Kabul’s streets are again clogged with traffic, as Taliban fighters patrol in pickup trucks and police vehicles — brandishing their automatic weapons and flying the Taliban’s white flag. Schools have opened, and moneychangers work the street corners.

Among the promises the Taliban have made is that once the country’s airports are up and running, Afghans with passports and visas would be allowed to travel. More than 100 countries issued a statement saying they would be watching to see that the new rulers held to their commitment.

Technical teams from Qatar and Turkey arrived in recent days and are working to get the civilian airport operational.

On Saturday, state-run Ariana Airlines made its first domestic flights, which continued on Sunday. The airport is without radar facilities, so flights are restricted to daylight hours to allow for visual landing, said official Shershah Stor.

Several countries have also been bringing in humanitarian supplies. The Gulf state of Qatar, where the Taliban maintained a political office since 2013, is making daily flights into Kabul, delivering humanitarian aid for the war-weary nation. Bahrain also announced humanitarian assistance deliveries.

Meanwhile, the Taliban stepped up an assault on the last remaining pocket of resistance being led by fighters opposed to their rule.

The anti-Taliban fighters in Panjshir province, north of the Afghan capital, are being led by former vice president Amrullah Saleh, who has appealed for humanitarian aid to help the thousands of people displaced by the fighting.

A senior Taliban spokesman tweeted Sunday that Taliban troops had overrun Rokha district, one of largest of eight districts in Panjshir. Several Taliban delegations have attempted negotiations with the holdouts there, but talks have failed to gain traction.

Fahim Dashti, the spokesman for the group that is fighting the Taliban, was killed in a battle on Sunday, according to the group’s Twitter account. Dashti was the voice of the group and a prominent media personality during previous governments.

He was also the nephew of Abdullah Abdullah, a senior official of the former government who is involved in negotiations with the Taliban on the future of Afghanistan.

Saleh fled to Panjshir after Afghan President Ashraf Ghani quit Afghanistan as the Taliban marched on the capital. The fighters’ lightning blitz across the country took less than a week to overrun some 300,000 government troops, most of whom surrendered or fled.

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Associated Press writers Rahim Faiez and Tameem Akhgar in Istanbul contributed to this report.

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Taliban stop planes of evacuees from leaving but unclear whyAssociated Presson September 5, 2021 at 8:53 pm Read More »

White Sox push back All-Star Carlos Rodon’s next startDaryl Van Schouwenon September 5, 2021 at 6:14 pm

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Left-hander Carlos Rodon will miss his regular turn in the White Sox starting rotation in the upcoming series at Oakland because of ongoing shoulder soreness and fatigue. The Sox are hope Rodon can pitch next weekend.

Rodon pitched five innings in each of his two most recent starts after being on the injured list from Aug. 8-26 with shoulder fatigue.

“It’s not a decision that you like making,” La Russa said. “We like him pitching but he’s still not experiencing the good feeling, whether it’s fatigue and a little sore. But right now we’re hoping he can pitch against the Red Sox [next] weekend. But there are no guarantees.”

Rodon, 28, who made the All-Star team for the first time and enjoyed the best first half of his career, was limited to 67 and 77 pitches in his two starts against the Cubs and Pirates since coming off the IL. He allowed one run on five hits and one walk while striking out five in a victory against the Pirates Wednesay at Guaranteed Rate Field, lowering his ERA to 2.41.

“Slightly building back, getting ready for the next start, that’s it,” Rodon explained after his outing came to a halt after five innings. “It’s September. Just go out there and pitch.”

“Tired, sore. You know, there is a combination there, not just fatigue,” La Russa said Sunday. “He’s got some soreness to him.”

With trainer James Kruk watching, Rodon played catch in the outfield before the Sox played the Royals Sunday. But his slow-roll return to peak form is the latest worrisome development for a rotation that is the backbone of a team enjoying a 10 1/2 game lead in the AL Central. Opening Day starter Lucas Giolito is on the injured list with a strained hamstring and All-Star Lance Lynn is on the IL with knee soreness. Dallas Keuchel is healthy but is 2-5 with a 7.26 ERA in his last 11 starts.

After getting 12 days off around the All-Star break and not pitching in the All-Star Game, Rodon had rests of five, four and eight days coming out of the break before going on the IL. He had five days between his last two starts.

“We’ve really been careful with him,” La Russa said.

“When he doesn’t feel right it’s impossible to push it. You don’t even dare, even think of that. We do miss him in the rotation and right now hopefully he can pitch against the Red Sox next weekend.

“The smart thing is to be concerned. You don’t want to think it’s a rainbow all the time and get splashed. I didn’t really think it was that bad.”

Rodon had shoulder surgery in September 2017 and Tommy John surgery in May 2019. His average four-seam fastball velocity (93.3 mph) in his last start was about two mph lower than what he averaged for most of the season.

“There’s been a number of times in games where we’ve taken him out and he says, ‘I’ve got more,’ and I said, ‘No, that’s enough,’ ” La Russa said. “That’s what’s concerning, that all this should add up to where right now he would be in peak form. You have to face the reality. He wants to be out there and he doesn’t feel it.

“But we are optimistic. If we just get smart and back off, he’ll pitch for us.”

After an off day Monday, the Sox play the A’s on Tuesday (starter TBA), Wednesday (Keuchel) and Thursday (Reynaldo Lopez).

When Rodon pitches next and how effective he will be bears watching.

“Maybe it will be next week,” La Russa said. “We are going to try our best.”

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White Sox push back All-Star Carlos Rodon’s next startDaryl Van Schouwenon September 5, 2021 at 6:14 pm Read More »

‘I want the music to survive’Neil Steinbergon September 5, 2021 at 7:19 pm

Monday is Labor Day, an apt moment to consider a profession rarely featured in a daily newspaper.

“Let me show you the rest of the studio,” said Steve Albini, moving through a musician’s paradise of musical instruments — fine guitars, timpani, two grand pianos — plus an audiophile’s dream of equipment: Marshall amplifiers, reel-to-reel Ampex tape machines, high-end speakers, coiled cords, headphones, mixing boards, rows of phase shifters and fuzzboxes and other effect pedals. The walls are enormous bricks, each weighing 13 pounds.

“These are adobe bricks we had brought up from New Mexico,” he explains. “They have some interesting acoustic properties. The walls are self-isolating … massive, enormously heavy and that stops the transmission of sound from room to room. We built this whole place. Everything you see is a new construction.”

Since 1997, here on Belmont Avenue, Albini has recorded music by thousands of musicians, from the world famous to the deeply obscure. Commercial clients, too. A few cases of Mambo fruity candy are scattered around the foyer — the manufacturer needed a recording studio to shoot a commercial, and hired the space, which has a feel that is somehow both cutting edge and classic.

“Everything that we’ve seen so far is Studio A — the bigger, fancier studio,” Albini said. “Each of the rooms has a different sound footprint, and that is intentional, so you can make an active choice about what you’re recording. That room over there is Alcatraz — super dead, super dry sound. This room is called the Kentucky room, much brighter and more lively recording environment. It has a quick slap of reverb and not a long-sustaining decay. Very good for drums. Any acoustic instruments, acoustic guitar, banjo violin, mandolin. Any percussion instruments, vibes and marimbas and all that kind of thing — all that sounds great in there because you get this quick, bright, reverberant sound from the room.”

If you’re wondering why we’re here, it’s complicated. Among the many bad things that COVID-19 has done is isolate people. Casual relationships vanish. It gets lonely. A few weeks back, I read a Tribune story about speed cameras that quoted Albini saying the typically challenging, contrarian things I remember him saying when we were in college together. Unlike drivers such as myself, merely irked to get speeding tickets, Albini finds the automatic speed cameras “a nicely implemented, mild reminder to keep speed under control in those areas.” Besides, he said, better to trust automatic cameras than give discretion to cops, who have proved “they will abuse that discretion.”

I miss Steve, I thought, which was odd, because I hadn’t seen him in nearly 40 years, when we were at Northwestern.

“This room has a much longer decay,” he said, continuing his tour. “It’s called Centerfield, and this is where we’ve done quite a few sessions where there is a whole ensemble playing together like a jazz band, where they’ve got a piano player, drummer, string bass, some horns or whatever. Everybody will congregate in this room. It’s a very traditional method of recording that this room is very suited to.”

Steve Albini, seen through the recording studio’s window at Electrical Audio. Albini, prefers to call himself a recording engineer rather than a producer.Pat Nabong/Sun-Times,

We talked technology. I’d never pretend to even a tiny fraction of his knowledge, but come to the subject from a historical perspective. Those Ampex tape machines, for instance, spurred me to mention how Ampex demonstrated the first videotape recording device in Chicago in 1956.

“Ampex was one of the foundational entities in the audio world,” he replied. “The name is from founder Alexander Poniatoff: his initials, A.M.P., and ‘ex’ for excellence. He re-engineered captured German Telefunken tape machines after World War II and started making them in America. Americanized Nazi tape machines under the name ‘Ampex’ certainly became the world standard.”

I’ve toured Shure, the microphone manufacturer based in Niles, and told Steve what an impressive place it is, with their two archivists and acoustic dead rooms and big bottles of artificial sweat, used to test the ability of microphones to stand up under real-world performance conditions.

“It’s an interesting company,” he agreed. “Family-owned since the beginning. They made phonograph cartridges that were really well-respected. When phonograph fell out of favor, they stopped making them. But because they were a closely-held company, they still had all their tooling and all their data and everything about their old phonograph cartridges, so when vinyl made a resurgence they were able to revive their product line and get back in the game very smoothly — the sort of transition a lot of bigger companies couldn’t do.”

LP records now sell more than CD discs, in case you hadn’t heard. Albini mentioned that Shure sometimes gives him microphones to test, and I wondered what that is like from their point of view.

“Shure has done many projects at Electrical over the years, not only testing of prototypes,” said John Born, associate director of product management at Shure. “We’ve done launch events, video shoots, recordings and more. We keep going back because Steve and the team there are wonderful to work with and the facility is incredible.”

In 2000, Steve Albini was one of the recipients of the first Legacy Awards from the Chicago chapter of the Recording Academy.Sun-Times file

What about the debate between analog and digital recording?

“On a base level, all music is analog,” Albini began. “The sound going through the air moves the microphone diaphragm. That’s an analog of the air pressure. That makes an electric current which is an analog of the movement of the diaphragm. Then that gets recorded. Our studio was built during the end of the analog era and the beginning of the digital era, so it’s a hybrid studio. So there’s digital and analog stuff running simultaneously. Most of the freelance engineers or outside engineers who come here are almost all exclusively digital. A small number use analog as a special effect or whiff of exotica” — typography doesn’t permit me to express the note of contempt in his voice. “All of my sessions are analog.”

Later I circled back and asked: Why?

“Analog masters are good for 100 years or so, minimum, (we don’t really know because the earliest analog masters pre-WWII are still playable) while digital masters are beholden to a bunch of proprietary software and hardware, and often become unusable in a few years’ time….” he emailed. “And there’s an important quality to analog recording, that the boundaries of the media are soft, making it more forgiving than digital recording. … In digital recording, if you exceed the headroom of the system you get unusable hash from a violently clipped signal. In an analog system in the same situation you only have some mild artifacts and plenty of leeway. You have to f— up really badly to ruin an analog recording.”

It’s a practical preference.

“I work in the analog domain, but not for reasons of stubbornness, sound ‘magic,’ nostalgia or any other romantic notion,” he continued. “I consider my job to be making the historical record of our musical culture, and analog recordings are the most robust, durable and universal way to ensure that the music survives — potentially long enough for the music to find an audience, but as part of the historical record, if not. People are entrusting me with their lives’ work and I take that responsibility seriously. I want the music to survive.”

Speaking of survival, it was time for lunch — which, I hope you’ll indulge me, will be featured Wednesday, as we have not yet, in my view, gotten to the most interesting part of our conversation.

Recording engineer Steve Albini at his Electrical Audio studio in Chicago’s Avondale neighborhood.Pat Nabong/Sun-Times

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‘I want the music to survive’Neil Steinbergon September 5, 2021 at 7:19 pm Read More »

1st-and-10: Set the bar high for Andy DaltonMark Potashon September 5, 2021 at 6:33 pm

Bears general manager Ryan Pace thought Mike Glennon had the “it” factor. He traded up for Mitch Trubisky instead of settling for Patrick Mahomes or Deshaun Watson. He paid Chase Daniel $5 million a year. He thought Nick Foles’ success in good offenses made him a good fit for Matt Nagy’s fledgling offense.

So of course Pace’s ringing endorsement of veteran Andy Dalton last week was a little unsettling to many Bears fans, critics and analysts who want Justin Fields’ developmental clock to start right now. Pace has had his share of hits and misses in seven years as GM, but it’s his dubious, mystifying record of quarterback evaluation that tips the scale in the negative. Fields can change that. But Pace is emphatically devoted to Dalton.

“We feel like Andy’s in a good spot, too,” Pace said, almost reflexively, when asked why Fields isn’t starting if coach Matt Nagy thinks he’s ready. “There’s a lot of things about Andy — his experience; he’s won a lot of games in this league; his decision-making; his intangibles; his leadership. There’s so many veteran players that have come up to me and have made comments about Andy Dalton and what’s he’s doing — in practices, in the locker room, in the huddle.”

That sounded awfully similar to Pace’s endorsement of Glennon in 2017. “He’s has a natural leadership style to him,” he said. “He’s very charismatic. … He’s a smart player. I think his teammates would attest to that, as far as [how] he raises boats, which is important for that position.”

Every evaluator prides himself in seeing qualities that others don’t — it’s key to their success, but also often the root of their failures. And it has betrayed Pace more than once on quarterbacks. He saw charisma in Glennon. And while Dalton has had a fine career in the NFL, including three Pro Bowl appearances, he’s more like Foles and Trubisky — only as good as the offense around him — rather than a Tom Brady/Russell Wilson-type who seems to will an offense to overachievement. Dalton is an accomplished starting quarterback, but he’s 0-4 with a 51.4 passer rating in the playoffs (one touchdown, six interceptions). He doesn’t have a history of raising his game in big moments.

So Pace’s belief in Dalton elicited a bit of nervousness and ire. Sports talk show host Danny Parkins of 670 The Score went as far as to start rooting for the other team — “It’s infuriating. Go Rams,” he tweeted after Pace’s press conference — the sports-world equivalence of throwing a shoe at an unpopular politician.

Be that as it may, the general reaction to Pace’s support of Dalton is a little overwrought. The Bears felt an obligation to Dalton to start Week 1. After that, all bets are off. If Dalton is as good as Pace says he is, Nagy’s offense will be good — good enough for Fields to take it to another level whenever he starts. And if Dalton is not, Nagy will turn to Fields — and probably sooner rather than later.

The key question is: How high is the bar? How good does Dalton have to be to keep the job? Ryan Pace “knowing it when he sees it” might differ from the rest of us knowing it when we see it. But it seems like Matt Nagy will be watching the same game we are. If there is a quarterback controversy in Chicago, it should not linger.

2. Pace probably feels like he can’t win — he made a deft, bold move to draft Fields and yet still is getting mostly criticism for Dalton standing in the way.

But timing is everything. If Pace had decided prior to free agency that Foles would compete for the starting job in 2021 with the best quarterback he could get in the draft — possibly Alabama’s Mac Jones — he’d be in better shape today.

In that scenario, Pace would have gotten Fields at No. 11 in a surprise. Fields would have won the competition with Foles. And Pace would have Fields starting in Week 1, with a former Super Bowl MVP as his backup — and maybe even cornerback Kyle Fuller still on the team with the cap money he didn’t spend on Dalton. Who wouldn’t be applauding Pace for that?

3. As it is, Pace is stuck with Foles as a third quarterback on the roster until further notice — and with an unwieldy $6,666,666 salary cap hit (per spotrac.com). The roster spot and cap hit are both problematic, but Pace said he’s fine with it — even if Foles is on the roster all season — and even dared to say, “That’s as strong a room from 1-3 — I think a lot of teams would want to have that.”

They might, but probably not with the No. 3 quarterback taking up that much cap space. Of the 12 other third-string quarterbacks on NFL rosters (excluding the Texans’ Deshaun Watson), the average salary cap hit is $841,000. After Foles, the next highest cap hit for a No. 3 quarterback is the Raiders’ Nathan Peterman at $1.025 million.

The sooner Pace finds a taker for Foles, the better.

4. Pace and Nagy muddling responses to questions about injured left tackle Teven Jenkins and running back Tarik Cohen are two more prime reasons for the Bears to allow trainer Andre Tucker to talk to the media. It provide us with better information and saves Nagy the embarrassment of sounding confused about the status of key players.

Once upon a time — when NFL teams were a little less consumed by paranoia — teams allowed media access to the trainer and the Bears had one of the best in Tim Bream, who understood what information reporters needed and could easily explain injuries and rehabilitations in layman’s terms — and did so without divulging state secrets. That the Bears don’t trust Tucker to do the same is baffling — and counter-productive.

5a. The heat will be on Nagy even more than Dalton in the Bears’ opener vs. the Rams on Sunday. Not only does Rams coach Sean McVay have a better record (43-21 in four seasons), more playoff victories (three) and a more productive offense (first, second, seventh and 11th in yards; first, second, 11th and 22nd in points), he usually has the Rams ready for their opener.

The Rams are 4-0 in Week 1 under McVay — beating the Colts 46-9, the Raiders 33-13, the Panthers 30-27 on the road and the Cowboys 20-17 last season. They are averaging 32.3 points per game, 26.5 offensive points per game

The Bears are 1-2 in Week 1 in Nagy’s three seasons — losing to the Packers 24-23 at Lambeau Field, to the Packers 10-3 at Soldier Field and beating the Lions 27-23 at Ford Field last year. They are averaging 20 points per game, 17.7 offensive points per game in their openers under Nagy — and have scored offensive touchdowns in two of 12 quarters.

5b. The key matchup, though, will be rookie defensive coordinator Sean Desai vs. McVay. There has been a “change is good” vibe in Bears camp when it comes to Desai replacing veteran coordinator Chuck Pagano — with reasonable hope that Desai can breathe new life into a once-dominant defense.

But can Desai match Vic Fangio as a game-planner and play-caller? Fangio’s shutdown of McVay’s offense in 2018 — 214 total yards, six points — was so complete that it became a template that other teams have mimicked, including the Patriots in the Super Bowl.

The Rams flummoxed the Bears’ defense last season, noticeably keeping them off-balance in gaining 371 yards, 5.5 yards per play, with 24 first downs and 24 points in a 24-10 victory. Now it’s Desai’s turn, with nose tackle Eddie Goldman but without departed cornerback Kyle Fuller.

As an Ivy League-educated coach known for his intelligence, Desai seems like a good candidate to win the game-day chess match. He’ll get a supreme test right off the bat.

6. Linebacker Danny Trevathan’s three-week stay on injured reserve could be a small first step toward load management in the NFL, with a 17-game season and still only one bye.

Trevathan has a knee “injury” but it did not prevent him from playing in the final preseason game. Still, he was put on IR because of new COVID-era rules that shorten the IR stay from eight weeks to three and allow teams to bring back an unlimited number of players off IR to the active roster.

“We want to get him to … get back to that full 100%,” Nagy said.

It remains to be seen if teams will rest players without using IR. Nagy said early in training camp he did not foresee it — though he acknowledged the 17-game season is new territory. The NFL is generally slow to move in any direction. But with many players already being rested (and injured) in training camp, the wear-and-tear of a 17-game season could cause teams to consider keeping their key players as close to 100% as possible down the stretch. Stay tuned.

7a. If Jason Peters starts at left tackle as expected against the Rams, he still will be the youngest left tackle in Sunday night’s game. The Rams’ Andrew Whitworth, who will be starting his 16th NFL season (including six with Andy Dalton with the Bengals), is 41 days older than Peters.

In fact, if both Peters and Whitworth start Sunday, they will be the oldest combined starting tackles in NFL history at 79 years, 142 days, according to research via pro-football-reference.com. In 1994, the Rams’ Jackie Slater (40) and the Falcons’ Mike Kenn (38) were a combined 78 years, 321 days when the Falcons beat the Rams 31-13 at the Georgia Dome.

7b. Fun Fact: At 39 years, 233 days, Peters would be the oldest player to start a game for the Bears — eclipsing quarterback Todd Collins, who was 38 when he started against the Panthers in 2010. Punter Mike Horan is the oldest player to play for the Bears. He was 39 years, 329 days old when he replaced the injured Todd Sauerbrun for the final 13 games of the 1998 season.

7c. Peters would be the fourth-oldest player to start at offensive tackle in the NFL — behind the Redskins’ Ray Brown (42), Slater and Whitworth. Brown started at tackle in 2004, which was Peters’ rookie year. So either Brown or Peters has been on an NFL roster in every year since 1986.

8. Can the Bears run the ball against a good run defense? That will be an early test for Nagy against the Rams, who ranked first in total defense and third in rushing defense in 2020 under defensive coordinator Brandon Staley — who has been replaced by Raheem Morris after taking the Chargers’ head coaching job.

In seven games under Nagy against defenses that finished in the top-5 in rushing yards allowed, the Bears are averaging 47.9 rushing yards per game and 2.9 yards per carry. Last year they were particular stopped cold by the No. 1 Buccaneers (14 carries, 35 yards), No. 2 Colts (16-28) and No. 3 Rams (17-49).

The Rams did not play their defensive starters in the preseason. Bears offensive starters played sparingly, though the offensive line got most of the work — left tackle Peters (21 snaps), left guard Cody Whitehair (60), center Sam Mustipher (69), right guard James Daniels (21) and right tackle Germain Ifedi (21). Will that matter? Can’t wait to find out.

9. Josh McCown Ex-Bears Player of the Week: Quarterback Chase Daniel made an NFL roster for the 12th consecutive year, this time with the Chargers as a mentor to Justin Herbert. Daniel signed a one-year, $1.5 million contract, which means he will have made nearly $39 million in his career — with five starts, including three with the Bears.

10. Bear-ometer: 8-9 — at Rams (L); vs. Bengals (W); at Browns (L); vs. Lions (W); at Raiders (L); vs. Packers (L); at Buccaneers (L); vs. 49ers (L); at Steelers (L); vs. Ravens (L); at Lions (W); vs. Cardinals (W); at Packers (L); vs. Vikings (W); at Seahawks (W); vs. Giants (W); at Vikings (W).

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1st-and-10: Set the bar high for Andy DaltonMark Potashon September 5, 2021 at 6:33 pm Read More »

Four Downs: News and notes from Week 2 in high school footballMichael O’Brienon September 5, 2021 at 6:47 pm

It was a short stint at the top for Warren.

The Blue Devils’ defense lived up to the hype but the offense was unable to get much done against Maine South in a 10-2 loss on Friday in Gurnee.

Another major power went down on Friday as Lincoln-Way East lost to Naperville Central 20-17. That ends the Griffins’ state-best 21 game winning streak. Lincoln-Way East’s last loss win the 2018 Class 8A semifinals.

The Redhawks knocked off Hinsdale Central in Week 1 and arguably have the state’s most impressive resume after two weeks.

Seth Lendzion made a 30-yard field goal with one second remaining to give Naperville Central the win. Northwestern recruit Reggie Fleurima had eight receptions from 152 yards and two touchdowns.

Road warriors

Preseason No. 1 St. Rita picked up a nice 27-14 win against Louisville Trinity on Friday in Kentucky. Trinity has won 27 state championships.

The Mustangs will travel to Wilmette to face Loyola on Saturday afternoon. Ohio State recruit Kaleb Brown, who was injured in the first quarter of the season opening loss to Mount Carmel, is expected to be out another two to three weeks.

Joliet Catholic also impressed out of state. The Hilltoppers beat Cardinal Ritter, a traditional St. Louis power, 30-20.

Public League worries

There is no doubt that COVID-19 impacted Public League schools the harshest. CPS didn’t allow contact days last year and many schools sat out the spring season entirely.

It might be a long road back to relevance, even for some of the top teams. Phillips, which lost coach Troy McAllister to Sandburg, lost 33-6 to Batavia Week 1 and 42-0 to Mount Carmel Week 2.

Simeon is 0-2, with a 55-6 loss to Joliet Catholic and a 33-0 defeat at Bolingbrook.

Morgan Park and Kenwood appear to be the top teams so far this season. The Mustangs beat St. Viator on Friday and were competitive in a loss at Fenwick Week 1. Kenwood knocked off Lane Week 1 and beat Hillcrest on the road Friday.

Fun finishes

There were a handful of fun, last-second victories on Friday night. Lemont, which still doesn’t have a nickname, knocked off Nazareth at the buzzer.

A pair of juniors pulled off the feat. Quarterback Payton Salomon threw the 40-yard pass to Mike Jabaay. Salomon scrambled to find some space and fired into the corner of the end zone where Jabaay dived to make the grab.

The heroics gave Lemont a 15-10 win over the Roadrunners. Watch the final play here:

Lemont is off to a 2-0 start. It beat St. Charles East 41-6 in Week 1 and will travel to Shepard for Week 3.

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Four Downs: News and notes from Week 2 in high school footballMichael O’Brienon September 5, 2021 at 6:47 pm Read More »

Michael O’Brien’s Super 25 high school football rankings for Week 3Michael O’Brienon September 5, 2021 at 6:50 pm

Well, that didn’t take too long.

Loyola is back on top of the Super 25. The Ramblers spent all six weeks on top of the rankings in the spring and have clearly reloaded quickly. This is a different team. There is no breakout talent like Vaughn Pemberton offensively, but the line play is very strong and the offense is as crisp and capable as last season.

I gave serious thought to Maine South and Naperville Central for the top spot. Naperville Central has the best resume in the area, with wins against Hinsdale Central and Lincoln-Way East. Maine South’s defense was an eye-opener in Gurnee on Friday night.

Brother Rice was a preseason contender for the top spot and was ranked second last week, but at this point I couldn’t elevate a team that has only played one game to number one.

Richards and Evanston drop out this week after picking up losses. Lockport and Lemont, a last-second winner against Nazareth, join the rankings.

Week 3’s Super 25

With record and last week’s ranking

1. Loyola (2-0) 3

Saturday vs. No. 8 St. Rita

2. Maine South (2-0) 11

Friday vs. Fremd

3. Naperville Central (2-0) 9

Friday at Novi Catholic, Mich.

4. Brother Rice (2-0) 2

Friday vs. Benet

5. Marist (2-0) 5

Friday vs. Nazareth

6. Joliet Catholic (2-0) 6

Friday vs. De La Salle

7. Mount Carmel (2-0) 7

Friday vs. Notre Dame

8. St. Rita (1-1) 8

Saturday at No. 1 Loyola

9. Wheaton North (2-0) 10

Friday at No. 15 Batavia

10. Warren (1-1) 1

Friday at Zion-Benton

11. Lincoln-Way East (1-1) 3

Friday vs. Stagg

12. Cary-Grove (2-0) 12

Friday vs. Crystal Lake Central

13. Glenbard West (2-0) 13

Friday at Oak Park

14. Neuqua Valley (2-0) 14

Friday at St. Louis St. Mary’s, Mo.

15. Batavia (2-0) 15

Friday vs. No. 9 Wheaton North

16. Hersey (2-0) 16

Friday at Maine East

17. Fenwick (2-0) 17

Friday vs. Providence

18. St. Charles North (2-0) 19

Friday at No. 25 Wheaton Warrenville South

19. Bolingbrook (2-0) 20

Friday vs. Lincoln-Way West

20. Oswego East (2-0) 23

Friday vs. Plainfield East

21. New Trier (2-0) 24

Friday vs. Barrington

22. Homewood-Flossmoor (2-0) 25

Friday vs. Lincoln-Way Central

23. Lockport (2-0) NR

Friday vs. Bradley-Bourbonnais

24. Lemont (2-0) NR

Friday at Shepard

25. Wheaton Warrenville South (1-1) 18

Friday vs. No. 18 St. Charles North

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Michael O’Brien’s Super 25 high school football rankings for Week 3Michael O’Brienon September 5, 2021 at 6:50 pm Read More »

2 killed, 47 wounded — including 8 kids — in Chicago shootings since Friday eveningSun-Times Wireon September 5, 2021 at 5:36 pm

At least two people have been killed and 47 others, including eight kids, have been wounded in shootings across Chicago since Friday evening.

The youngest gunshot victim is a 4-year-old boy who was wounded Friday in Woodlawn on the South Side. The child was inside a home about 9 p.m. in the 6500 block of South Ellis Avenue when bullets tore through the front window, striking him twice in the head, Chicago police said.

Paramedics took the child to Comer Children’s Hospital, where he was in critical condition, police said.

Seven other people 17 or younger have been shot so far this weekend. On Saturday, a 16-year-old boy with a gunshot wound showed up at Stroger Hospital. Later that day, three people, including a 12-year-old boy and a 15-year-old girl, were wounded in a shooting near a back-to-school event in East Garfield Park.

Saturday night, a 15-year-old boy was shot in a drive-by in Englewood on the South Side, and 13-year-old boy was seriously wounded in a shooting in South Chicago.

Sunday morning, a 14-year-old was shot and wounded in Little Village on the Southwest Side, and a 17-year-old was among two shot in Washington Park on the South Side.

Outside Comer Children’s Hospital Friday night, advocates try to console the father of a 4-year-old boy who was shot in Woodlawn.Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times

In fatal shootings this weekend, a man was killed Sunday morning in Brighton Park on the Southwest Side.

The 23-year-old was stopped at a traffic light about 5:30 a.m. facing southbound in the 3700 block of South Kedzie Avenue when an unknown SUV stopped next to him facing northbound, police said.

After a brief conversation, someone in the SUV opened fire and struck the man in the head as he proceeded southbound after the light turned green, police said.

The man was pronounced dead in the 5500 block of South Albany Avenue, where his vehicle stopped, police said.

Saturday night, a man was shot and killed in Logan Square on the Northwest Side.

Officers responded to calls of a person shot about 11:50 p.m. in the 1600 block of North Central Park Avenue and found a 41-year-old man laying in between two parked cars with two gunshot wounds to the chest, police said. He was taken to Mount Sinai Hospital where he was later died.

Chicago police investigate early Saturday in the 1400 block of South Tripp Avenue, where five people were shot and wounded in a mass shooting in Lawndale on the Southwest Side.Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times

In nonfatal attacks, five people were shot and wounded in a single incident Saturday morning in Lawndale on the West Side.

The five were among a group of people about 12:15 a.m. in the 1400 block of South Tripp Avenue when someone inside a black Nissan opened fire, Chicago police said.

A 22-year-old man was shot in the shoulder and a 37-year-old shot in the back and lower backside, police said. Both were taken to Mount Sinai Hospital and were listed in good condition.

A woman, 25, suffered a graze wound to the hip and another, 33, was shot in the leg, police said. They took themselves to the same hospital, where they were also in good condition.

A 34-year-old woman who was shot twice in the leg was taken to Stroger Hospital in fair condition, police said.

At least 33 other people have been wounded in citywide shootings since 5 p.m. Friday.

Last weekend, at least six people were killed and 50 others were wounded in incidents of gun violence across Chicago.

Shell casings sits in the street Saturday night in the 7000 block of South Sangamon, where a 15-year-old boy was wounded in a drive-by shooting in Englewood on the South Side.Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times

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2 killed, 47 wounded — including 8 kids — in Chicago shootings since Friday eveningSun-Times Wireon September 5, 2021 at 5:36 pm Read More »

On this Labor Day, a visit to Pullman reminds us that the fight for working people goes onCST Editorial Boardon September 5, 2021 at 4:14 pm

Ground zero of the American labor movement — the reason you’re off work on this Monday and why your kids will be in school next week instead of working in a sweatshop — can be found in Chicago on 111th Street just east of Cottage Grove Avenue.

The former Pullman Railroad Car Co., factory and administration building sits at 111th and Cottage. An 1894 wage strike at the facility became a national workers’ movement that halted trains across the country.

U.S. troops, police and the courts were called in to crush the strike, and American Railway Union President Eugene V. Debs, who represented the strikers, was thrown in jail.

But the seeds planted on Chicago’s South Side by the Pullman strikers and Debs would bear fruit for working people in the century to come and to this day, including a living wage, an eight-hour workday and safer working conditions.

We think that’s worth keeping in mind on this Labor Day. Especially as workers’ rights and wages seem to be threatened almost daily, often in ways that would’ve made turn-of-the-last-century oligarchs and business titans green with envy.

A workers’ utopia — then a strike

Railroad car manufacturer George M. Pullman erected his factory and administration building in 1881 as the centerpiece of a 4,000-acre self-contained town entirely built and owned by his company.

It’s a well-told story that the town of Pullman, with its hierarchy of handsome brick residences and paved, landscaped streets, represented the height of Victorian-era city planning and architecture — a contrast to the slums and shantytowns that sometimes sprung up around large factories as affordable places for workers to live.

But George Pullman’s paternalism came at a cost.

When an economic depression hit the country in 1893, Pullman cut wages at the factory by 25% but refused to lower rents in his worker town. He also refused to reduce the dividend his company paid to stockholders, even as he cut the factory’s workforce — people lost jobs — and required other employees to work longer hours.

This led to a scene right out of Dickens. On payday, a Pullman pay boss who delivered checks to the town’s residents was paired with a rent collector. Workers often signed their checks back over to the Pullman Company within moments of receiving it.

“As a result, many workers and their families faced starvation,” Melvin I. Urofsky, professor of law and public policy at Virginia Commonwealth University, writes in a Britannica Online essay on the Pullman strike. “When a delegation of workers tried to present their grievances about low wages, poor living conditions and 16-hour workdays directly to . . . George M. Pullman, he refused to meet with them and ordered them fired.”

Feeling the squeezed, the 18,000 Pullman workers here and in other locales walked off the job in 1894. More than 200,000 other railway workers across the country joined the cause, bringing trains across much of the country to a halt.

The strikers frequently turned violent, though Debs cautioned them to remain peaceful.

In the short run, the Pullman Strike was seen as a blow against the fledgling labor movement, with the federal government using a court injunction to compel workers to return to their jobs. But in time, the strike led to greater legal protections for organized labor while helping the union movement gain traction nationally.

And the porters who provided hotel-class service to passengers on Pullman train cars formed the country’s first Black-led labor union, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, in 1925.

During much of the 20th century, the stronger unions went on to win wage increases, job protections, health insurance, pensions and other basic benefits that greatly strengthened the American working class and expanded the middle class. A steelworker could send his kids to college. A pipefitter could get Saturdays off. A truck driver could retire with dignity.

A factory reborn

In 1898, one year after George Pullman died, the Illinois Supreme court ordered the Pullman Company to sell off its town, allowing workers to buy their homes. The town became a visually striking Chicago neighborhood of privately owned residences. The company, which became Pullman-Standard, closed the factory in 1958.

But the Pullman factory reopened this Labor Day weekend. Restored and reprogrammed, the stately structure has been converted into a visitors center operated by the U.S. National Park Service, devoted to telling all aspects of the Pullman community’s history, including its seminal importance to the American labor movement.

The separately operated National A. Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum, located in Pullman at 10406 S. Maryland Ave., will be open and active this weekend as well.

Both places are well worth a visit.

The story of Pullman serves as a reminder of how far working people have come in this country, how hard they have had to fight to get where they are, and all our nation stands to lose if those gains are lost or eroded.

It serves to remind us that the fight goes on.

Send letters to [email protected].

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On this Labor Day, a visit to Pullman reminds us that the fight for working people goes onCST Editorial Boardon September 5, 2021 at 4:14 pm Read More »

High school football schedule: Week 3Michael O’Brienon September 5, 2021 at 4:28 pm

Please send additions or corrections to [email protected].

Thursday, September 9

CHICAGO AVENUE

Gage Park vs. Tilden at Stagg

LAKE STREET

Fenger vs. Corliss at Gately

Friday, September 10

BIG SHOULDERS

Dunbar vs. King at Eckersall

UP-Bronzeville at Brooks

GREAT LAKES

Bogan vs. Ag. Science at Gately

Johnson vs. Comer at Stagg

HEARTLAND

Speer at Prosser

LAND OF LINCOLN

Young at Lane

PRAIRIE STATE

Clark at Bulls Prep

RED BIRD

Hubbard vs. Kenwood at Gately

Morgan Park at Perspectives

SECOND CITY

Harlan at Solorio

WINDY CITY

Lake View vs. Amundsen at Winnemac

Von Steuben vs. Sullivan at Lane

DUKANE

Geneva at Glenbard North

St. Charles East at Lake Park

St. Charles North at Wheaton-Warrenville South

Wheaton North at Batavia

FOX VALLEY

Crystal Lake Central at Cary-Grove

Crystal Lake South at Hampshire

Dundee-Crown at Burlington Central

McHenry at Jacobs

Prairie Ridge at Huntley

ILLINOIS CENTRAL EIGHT

Herscher at Streator

Lisle at Reed-Custer

Manteno at Peotone

Wilmington at Coal City

KISHWAUKEE I-8 BLUE

Marengo at Johnsburg

Plano at Sandwich

Rochelle at Richmond-Burton

KISHWAUKEE I-8 WHITE

Kaneland at Sycamore

Morris at Woodstock North

Ottawa at LaSalle-Peru

METRO SUBURBAN BLUE

Bishop McNamara at Ridgewood

IC Catholic at Elmwood Park

Wheaton Academy at Aurora Central

METRO SUBURBAN RED

Aurora Christian at Westmont

Riverside-Brookfield at Chicago Christian

St. Francis at St. Edward

NORTH SUBURBAN

Lake Zurich at Libertyville

Mundelein at Waukegan

Stevenson at Lake Forest

Warren at Zion-Benton

NORTHERN LAKE COUNTY

Grayslake North at Grayslake Central

Lakes at Round Lake

North Chicago at Antioch

Wauconda at Grant

SOUTH SUBURBAN BLUE

Bremen at TF South

Oak Forest at Hillcrest

Tinley Park at TF North

SOUTH SUBURBAN RED

Argo at Richards

Oak Lawn at Eisenhower

Reavis at Evergreen Park

SOUTHLAND

Thornridge at Kankakee

Thornton at Crete-Monee

Thornwood at Rich Township

SOUTHWEST PRAIRIE EAST

Joliet West at Plainfield North

UPSTATE EIGHT

East Aurora at Fenton

Elgin at Bartlett

Glenbard East at Streamwood

Glenbard South at South Elgin

West Chicago at Larkin

WEST SUBURBAN GOLD

Hinsdale South at Leyden

Morton at Addison Trail

Proviso East at Willowbrook

WEST SUBURBAN SILVER

Glenbard West at Oak Park-River Forest

Lyons at Hinsdale Central

York at Proviso West

NONCONFERENCE

Barrington at New Trier

Belleville West at DeKalb

Benet at Brother Rice

Bloom at Marian Catholic

Bradley-Bourbonnais at Lockport

Buffalo Grove at Maine West

Conant at Glenbrook South

De La Salle at Joliet Catholic

DePaul Prep at St. Viator

Downers Grove North at Downers Grove South

Elk Grove at Vernon Hills

Fremd at Maine South

Harvard at Woodstock

Hersey at Maine East

Hoffman Estates at Highland Park

Hoopeston at Momence

Joliet Central at Oswego

Lemont at Shepard

Leo at Carmel

Lincoln-Way Central at Homewood-Flossmoor

Lincoln-Way West at Bolingbrook

Marian Central at St. Patrick

Marmion at Montini

Metea Valley at Belleville East

Naperville Central at Novi Catholic Central, Mich.

Naperville North at Brownstown Woodhaven, Mich.

Nazareth at Marist

Neuqua Valley at St. Louis St. Mary’s, Mo.

Notre Dame at Mount Carmel

Ottawa Marquette at Deer Creek-Mackinaw

Palatine at Evanston

Plainfield Central at West Aurora

Plainfield East at Oswego East

Plainfield South at Yorkville

Prospect at Niles West

Providence at Fenwick

Rolling Meadows at Deerfield

Romeoville at Minooka

Salt Fork at Seneca

Sandburg at Andrew

Schaumburg at Niles North

St. Ignatius at St. Laurence

St. Louis Divine Word, Mo. at Hope Academy

Stagg at Lincoln-Way East

Waubonsie Valley at Shaker Heights, Ohio

Wheeling at Glenbrook North

Saturday, September 11

BIG SHOULDERS

Lindblom vs. Hyde Park at Eckersall

GREAT LAKES

Goode vs. Catalyst-Maria at Stagg

HEARTLAND

Kennedy vs. Rauner at Rockne

Steinmetz vs. North Lawndale at Rockne

LAND OF LINCOLN

Lincoln Park at Taft

Phillips at Westinghouse

PRAIRIE STATE

Payton at Orr

Raby at Back of the Yards

RED BIRD

Curie vs. Simeon at Gately

SECOND CITY

Julian vs. Vocational at Gately

Washington vs. Carver at Gately

WINDY CITY

Schurz vs. Mather at Winnemac

CHICAGO AVENUE

Juarez at Kelly

Little Village vs. Collins at Rockne

LAKE STREET

Longwood vs. Butler at Gately

South Shore vs. Bowen at Eckersall

MADISON STREET

Chicago Academy vs. Roosevelt at Winnemac

Pritzker vs. Foreman at Lane

MICHIGAN AVENUE

DuSable vs. Dyett at Stagg

Woodlawn vs. Chicago Military at Eckersall

STATE STREET

Rowe-Clark at Marshall

UIC Prep vs. Phoenix at Lane

NONCONFERENCE

Dwight at Westville

St. Rita at Loyola

Walther Christian at Christ the King

Watseka at Bismarck-Henning

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High school football schedule: Week 3Michael O’Brienon September 5, 2021 at 4:28 pm Read More »

2 killed, 45 wounded — including 8 kids — in Chicago shootings since Friday eveningSun-Times Wireon September 5, 2021 at 1:43 pm

At least two people have been killed and 45 others, including eight kids, have been wounded in shootings across Chicago since Friday evening.

The youngest gunshot victim is a 4-year-old boy who was wounded Friday in Woodlawn on the South Side. The child was inside a home about 9 p.m. in the 6500 block of South Ellis Avenue when bullets tore through the front window, striking him twice in the head, Chicago police said.

Paramedics took the child to Comer Children’s Hospital, where he was in critical condition, police said.

Seven other people 17 or younger have been shot so far this weekend. On Saturday, a 16-year-old boy with a gunshot wound showed up at Stroger Hospital. Later that day, three people, including a 12-year-old boy and a 15-year-old girl, were wounded in a shooting near a back-to-school event in East Garfield Park.

Saturday night, a 15-year-old boy was shot in a drive-by in Englewood on the South Side, and 13-year-old boy was seriously wounded in a shooting in South Chicago.

Sunday morning, a 14-year-old was shot and wounded in Little Village on the Southwest Side, and a 17-year-old was among two shot in Washington Park on the South Side.

In fatal shootings this weekend, a man was killed Sunday morning in Brighton Park on the Southwest Side.

The 23-year-old was stopped at a traffic light about 5:30 a.m. facing southbound in the 3700 block of South Kedzie Avenue when an unknown SUV stopped next to him facing northbound, police said.

After a brief conversation, someone in the SUV opened fire and struck the man in the head as he proceeded southbound after the light turned green, police said.

The man was pronounced dead in the 5500 block of South Albany Avenue, where his vehicle stopped, police said.

Saturday night, a man was shot and killed in Logan Square on the Northwest Side.

Officers responded to calls of a person shot about 11:50 p.m. in the 1600 block of North Central Park Avenue and found a 41-year-old man laying in between two parked cars with two gunshot wounds to the chest, police said. He was taken to Mount Sinai Hospital where he was later died.

In nonfatal attacks, five people were shot and wounded in a single incident Saturday morning in Lawndale on the West Side.

The five were among a group of people about 12:15 a.m. in the 1400 block of South Tripp Avenue when someone inside a black Nissan opened fire, Chicago police said.

A 22-year-old man was shot in the shoulder and a 37-year-old shot in the back and lower backside, police said. Both were taken to Mount Sinai Hospital and were listed in good condition.

A woman, 25, suffered a graze wound to the hip and another, 33, was shot in the leg, police said. They took themselves to the same hospital, where they were also in good condition.

A 34-year-old woman who was shot twice in the leg was taken to Stroger Hospital in fair condition, police said.

At least 31 other people have been wounded in citywide shootings since 5 p.m. Friday.

Last weekend, at least six people were killed and 50 others were wounded in incidents of gun violence across Chicago.

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2 killed, 45 wounded — including 8 kids — in Chicago shootings since Friday eveningSun-Times Wireon September 5, 2021 at 1:43 pm Read More »