Chicago Sun-Times

Subscribe   •   EasyPay   •   e-paper
Reader Rewards   •   Customer Service

Good Morning
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
NEWS ALERTS:

A young fan holds up a sign at Sundays White Sox-Rays playoff game at U.S. Cellular Field. (Sun-Times)
Sox fans remember season On Monday, Sox fans returned to Bridgeport wearing all black -- this time for the season's funeral. The Tampa Bay Rays beat the White Sox 6-2 to win the American League Division Series. Fans shuffled home remembering the good times that got their team this far.

WEB ONLY ::
VIDEO :: MORE »

Chicago Sun-Times Front page

View Full Front Page Historic Front Pages Mark Brown Greg Couch Chris De Luca Ask Ellie Robert Feder Stella Foster Sandra Guy Horoscopes Jesse Jackson Lewis Lazare Letters to the Editor Mary Mitchell Other Views QT Elliott Harris Richard Roeper Carol Slezak Michael Sneed Lynn Sweet Hedy Weiss You Docs Bill Zwecker Autos Jobs Homes Place an ad Yellow Pages
Subscribe to paper
Subscribe today Easy Pay Reader Rewards Customer Service
e-paper
Account login Free trial offer Subscribe to e-paper
P.M. Edition
Send us your feedback What is it? Current edition
Daily Features
Chicago 24/7 Crime Crossword Health Horoscopes jump local Neighborhoods P.M. Edition Real Chicago Shopping Sudoku The Ride Travel TV listings
Blogs
Across the Pond BackTalk Eye on Rezko Full Court Press High School Confidential Inside the Bears Inside the Bulls Inside the Cubs Inside the White Sox Jim DeRogatis Lynn Sweet Mary Mitchell Neighborhoods Oprah Scratch Crib Shopping Sports Pros(e) Stray Casts The Gold Rush The Outfit on trial The Ride Travel What are you lookin' at?
Newsletters
Bears Insider Bulls Insider Cubs Insider Hawks Insider Morning Update P.M. Edition Roger Ebert Sox Insider Sports Headlines Beijing Olympics Updates
Manage Account
F.A.Q. Log In Register Edit Profile Forgot Password Change Password Unsubscribe
ELECTION 2008
Election coverage Results
CenterStage
Articles Bars + Clubs Chicago Events Dating + Advice Fitness Food Lifestyle Music Places A to Z Theatre Travel + Tourism User Reviews Virtual L ® Navigator Visual Arts Words
Readers' Favorites
At Home Autos Auto Show Best of Chicago Blogs Buy and sell tickets Books CenterStage Chicagopedia Commentary Crossword Death notices Dining Eating In Editorials Education Food Health Healthology High School of the Week Horoscopes Lottery Made in Chicago Movie Times Obituaries Patch of Green Politics Prep Spotlight Photo Galleries Racing Challenge Real Chicago Real Estate Roger Ebert School Report Cards Shopping Stock Market Sudoku Special Sections Technology The Fixer This Much I Know Tony Rezko Travel Transportation What's my line? YourSeason.com What's missing?
Search Chicago
Autos Careers Homes Place an Ad
Information
Contact Us Feedback About Us Advertising Back Issues Media Kit Reprints and Licensing Special Section Calendar Subscriptions
Feedback
Letters to the Editor Talk Back Contact Us P.M. Edition Feedback
Special Sections
Main Page Breast Cancer Camp Guide Career Source Noir Woman
suntimes.com
Data RSS feeds Leading Stories Multimedia AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Metro & Tri-state Teen killed over hand bump on CTA bus
An accidental hand brush between two men on a South Side CTA bus Sunday night led to the shooting death of a 17-year-old Chicago high school student. The shooting interrupted a typical teenage moment -- Kiyanna Salter was chatting with a friend on her cell phone when the shots rang out aboard the No. 71 bus traveling along 71st Street in Grand Crossing.

Feds talking to Rezko, seek to delay sentencing Towing flap heats up Five injured in crash on Near West Side Dozens get lifetime ban from city work Retailers hope pinch doesn't steal Christmas sales Man seriously injured in South Shore shooting Metra shooting linked to murder-for-hire plot Ex-Death Row inmate can't collect jury award: court Putting a fan in baby's room might fight SIDS Marine giving orders for new elite cop unit Deals for savvy Santas

STNG Video View more local videos
Chicago 24/7 Crime Teen killed over hand bump on CTA bus Man seriously injured in South Shore shooting Marine giving orders for new elite cop unit Metra shooting linked to murder-for-hire plot Education U. of I. backs off ban on all politicking Riding the Web into college

Campaign 2008

Sports Cabrera, Swisher fail to deliver, one will go Chris De Luca: They stopped playing postseason baseball in the Midwest on Monday. No more Cubs. No more Brewers. And now no more White Sox.


Ray-signed to their fate A.J. Pierzynski looked around the clubhouse and started to smile. ''One word to describe this year? Roller coaster,'' the White Sox catcher said without a pause.


Cubs could've used Roberts In the bitter end, the difference might have been Brian Roberts, after all. Maybe he wouldn't have overcome the walks in Game 1 or the errors in Game 2, but the Cubs' woeful lack of playoff hitting comes down to two big deficiencies: First, they have no left-handed hitters whom opponents respect. The second one is that the Cubs aren't built to hit in the postseason.







TRAVEL: Kentucky Slugger museum is a hit Chicago Sun-Times Andrew Herrmann: Jose Cardenal roamed the Wrigley Field outfield in the 1970s, a favorite with a lot of fans but especially so for certain females -- despite a bushy afro that, bursting from beneath his Cubbie ball cap, made him look more like Bozo than a ballplayer. Slugger museum is a hit Desert oasis Theme park's future Farecast holiday forecast Blog: Travel with Lori Rackl More in Travel




Lifestyles Obama's winning the race for Halloween masks The method is far from scientific, but Halloween stores are predicting the winner in the presidential election, and there’s no exit polling needed — only political mask sales. Halloween suppliers say sales of masks of presidential candidates have predicted the winner in the last several campaigns. So far, that’s good news for Barack Obama, whose mask is outselling John McCain’s at several national retailers.


Be Tina Fey on Halloween! How to do Sarah Palin's hair
At Home Spring forward for color fest Interior affairs: Plaid fad Religion Church welcomes special cross Episcopal diocese OKs split over Bible, gays Horoscopes Holiday Mathis horoscopes for October 7 Georgia Nicols horoscopes for October 7



Entertainment The Wachowskis: From '2001' to 'The Godfather' to 'The Matrix' Roger Ebert: It was a night out of your dreams. We'd been invited by James Bond, the famed projection wizard, to see the new Kinowerks post-production and screening facility he designed and built on Chicago's north side. You have James to thank if you've ever attended the Grant Park outdoor film festival or Ebertfest. He'd arranged with Robert Harris, the famed restoration wizard, to show us Paramount's new print of "The Godfather."



Books Hanging with Hef Review: 'Free-Range Chickens' by Simon Rich Review: 'The Hunger Games' by Suzanne Collins Classical At U. of C., Messiaen in a bottle Stage Who cares about story? This 'Quartet' can rock Everyone in the family wants to be elsewhere Vishneva dazzles in 'Giselle' Galleries



Business Mortgage relief deal Sandra Guy: Nearly 11,000 Illinoisans with Countrywide mortgages -- most of them in the Chicago area -- are expected to get help to avoid foreclosure after Countrywide's new owner, Bank of America, agreed to an $8.7 billion settlement with Illinois and 10 other states. Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan's office helped resolve a lawsuit that alleged Countrywide put people into loans, mostly subprime loans, that the would-be homeowners could not afford.


Savage: Prepare for the worst
Ouch! Dow ends down 369 after falling over 800 points Kraft to slash 400 jobs Retailers hope pinch doesn't steal Christmas sales Arbitron rollout jumps the gun