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Topic: Bug House Square, Evanston Branch
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Ann Rainey  875
10-31-2008 10:24 AM ET (US)
Hi Meghan - see the main board.
Meghan Vinson  874
10-30-2008 02:54 PM ET (US)
Does anyone have anymore info on the shooting that took place in Downtown Evanston today?

http://www.chicagobreakingnews.com/2008/10...ed-in-shooting.html
Ann Rainey  873
08-19-2008 11:10 AM ET (US)
Edited by author 10-31-2008 10:24 AM
They have a big rebate staring them in the face - if they can get a Steve and Barrys to open - god bless. That deal is done - and well worth it - all Freed has to do is perform - get the store up and running. I think the buyer is nuts to not open this store.
vito  872
08-19-2008 11:02 AM ET (US)
The Steve & Barry saga continues. There is a buyout firm that will keep about 250 stores open if they get concessions. Staying open depends upon the concessions that the mall owners are willing to make to the new owners. Will Dodge/Dempster come begging to the city now for more concessions?
vito  871
05-29-2008 09:06 AM ET (US)
Edited by author 05-29-2008 09:06 AM
No, Bienen will ascend to Valhalla.
Ann Rainey  870
05-29-2008 12:36 AM ET (US)
Vito - I heard that NU is going to ready the Dawes home for Bienen's retirement home.
vito  869
03-03-2008 06:21 PM ET (US)
There seems to be a lack of activity, not only on this chat board, but also on the others. Perhaps it is the hope and change we have all been waiting for.

In the mean time, not only have we passed a budget that dings it to the taxpayers, despite Ann's valiant attempt, with an 8 to 1 vote to screw Evanston taxpayers. At least it is settled, for now, and our fearless top administrator can go play some golf.

There is change afoot, Bienen will retire from NU next August and I assume all our city officials will get on bended knee to thank him for using our services for a pittance.

Even ENH can't be spared NU's grasp. There is a bit of a fuss going on as NU demands more from the ENH cartel. ENH could lose its slave labor residents if NU and ENH sever their relationship.

Look at it positively, there is more than enough to distract us from the budget, at least until the next tax bill. But think positively, our 10% retail tax could almost be a value added tax, but at least it could alleviate parking problems as customers head outside to buy things or to Amazon.
Ryan Kettelkamp  868
11-02-2007 06:15 PM ET (US)
Come on guys....can't we albumen about this?
Ann Rainey  867
11-02-2007 12:35 PM ET (US)
from richard

--QT-------------------------------------------------------------
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Schlarg: I have quite the sense of humor. This message board
doesn't. But as y ou seem to be a new poster, you will quickly
find that out for yourself.
_________________________________________________________________
Ann Rainey  866
11-02-2007 12:33 PM ET (US)
Edited by author 11-05-2007 03:31 PM
Schlarg 10420
 
11-02-2007 11:29 AM cst(US)

 Very thoughtful post, Tad. Richard - I hate to break it to you, but it's time to come out of your shell. Dozen anyone have a sense of humor anymore? While egg throwing is no yolk, it's certainly ok to look to look at the sunny side of this. You know, just let it go over easy. Quite frankly I'm a omelette'll tired of some of this angry reggtoric. In fact, it can be down right eggscrutiating to sort through sometimes. That said, maybe Tad can keep his yolks to a minimum in the future. And hens forth...no more puns.

More powdered to the people!
Schlarg Heimer
vito  865
08-16-2007 01:17 PM ET (US)
Interesting editorial in the WSJ today:

WONDER LAND
By DANIEL HENNINGER
The Death of Diversity
August 16, 2007; Page A10

Diversity was once just another word. Now it's a fighting word. One of the biggest problems with diversity is that it won't let you alone. Corporations everywhere have force-marched middle managers into training sessions led by "diversity trainers." Most people already knew that the basic idea beneath diversity emerged about 2,000 years ago under two rubrics: Love thy neighbor as thyself, and Do unto others as they would do unto you. Then suddenly this got rewritten as "appreciating differentness."

George Bernard Shaw is said to have demurred from the Golden Rule. "Do not do unto others as you would have them do unto you," Shaw advised. "Their tastes may not be the same." No such voluntary opt-out is permissible in our time. The parsons of the press made diversity into a secular commandment; do a word-search of "diversity" in a broad database of newspapers and it might come up 250 million times. In the Supreme Court term just ended, the Seattle schools integration case led most of the justices into arcane discussions of diversity's legal compulsions. More recently it emerged that the University of Michigan, a virtual Mecca of diversity, announced it would install Muslim footbaths in bathrooms, causing a fight.

Now comes word that diversity as an ideology may be dead, or not worth saving. Robert Putnam, the Harvard don who in the controversial bestseller "Bowling Alone" announced the decline of communal-mindedness amid the rise of home-alone couch potatoes, has completed a mammoth study of the effects of ethnic diversity on communities. His researchers did 30,000 interviews in 41 U.S. communities. Short version: People in ethnically diverse settings don't want to have much of anything to do with each other. "Social capital" erodes. Diversity has a downside.

Prof. Putnam isn't exactly hiding these volatile conclusions, though he did introduce them in a journal called Scandinavian Political Studies. A great believer in the efficacy of what social scientists call "reciprocity," he wasn't happy with what he found but didn't mince words describing the results:

"Inhabitants of diverse communities tend to withdraw from collective life, to distrust their neighbors, regardless of the color of their skin, to withdraw even from close friends, to expect the worst from their community and its leaders, to volunteer less, give less to charity and work on community projects less often, to register to vote less, to agitate for social reform more, but have less faith that they can actually make a difference, and to huddle unhappily in front of the television." The diversity nightmare gets worse: They have little confidence in the "local news media." This after all we've done for them.

Colleagues and diversity advocates, disturbed at what was emerging from the study, suggested alternative explanations. Prof. Putnam and his team re-ran the data every which way from Sunday and the result was always the same: Diverse communities may be yeasty and even creative, but trust, altruism and community cooperation fall. He calls it "hunkering down."

Give me a break! you scream. What about New York City or L.A.? From the time of Sherwood Anderson's "Winesburg, Ohio" through "Peyton Place" and beyond, people have fled the flat-lined, gossip-driven homogeneity of small American "communities" for the welcome anonymity of big-city apartment building -- so long as your name wasn't Kitty Genovese, the famous New York woman who bled to death crying for help.

It's a wonderfully thought-provoking study, suitable for arguing the length of a long August weekend and available as a lecture on Prof. Putnam's Harvard Web site, the "Saguaro Seminar." Astute readers, however, have already guessed who's thrilled with the results.

Pat Buchanan, reflecting an array of commentaries on the study from the American right, says, "Putnam provides supporting fire from Harvard Yard for those who say America needs a time-out from mass immigration, be it legal or illegal." The "antis" believe the Putnam study hammers the final intellectual nail in the coffin of immigration and diversity.

The diversity ideologues deserve whatever ill tidings they get. They're the ones who weren't willing to persuade the public of diversity's merits, preferring to turn "diversity" into a political and legal hammer to compel compliance. The conversions were forced conversions. As always, with politics comes pushback. And it never stops.

The harvest of bitter fruit from the diversity wars begun three decades ago across campuses, corporations and newsrooms has made the immigration debate significantly worse. Diversity's advocates gave short shrift to assimilation, indeed arguing that assimilation into the American mainstream was oppressive and coercive. So they demoted assimilation and elevated "differences." Then they took the nation to court. Little wonder the immigration debate is riven with distrust.

The diversity ideologues ruined a good word and, properly understood, a decent notion. What's needed now is for a younger black, brown or polka-dot writer to recast the idea in a way that restores the worth and utility of assimilation. Somebody had better do it soon; the first chart offered in the Putnam study depicts inexorably rising rates of immigration in many nations. The idea that the U.S. can wave into effect a 10-year "time out" on immigration flows is as likely as King Canute commanding the tides to recede.

Here, too, Robert Putnam has a possible assimilation model. Hold onto your hat. It's Christian evangelical megachurches. "In many large evangelical congregations," he writes, "the participants constituted the largest thoroughly integrated gatherings we have ever witnessed." This, too, is an inconvenient truth. They do it with low entry barriers to the church and by offering lots of little groups to join inside the larger "shared identity" of the church. A Harvard prof finds good in evangelical megachurches. Send this man a suit of body armor!

My own model for the way forward in a 21st century American society of unavoidable ethnic multitudes is an old one, a phrase found nowhere in the Putnam study or any commentary on it: the middle class. Its assimilating virtues may be boring, but it works, if you work at getting into it.

Of course Hillary Clinton believes this can't happen here because the middle class has been "invisible" to George Bush. As with diversity, progress is always just beyond the horizon.


   URL for this article:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB118723057817399279.html

   Hyperlinks in this Article:
(1) mailto:edit.page@wsj.com
Christos Georgakis  864
07-23-2007 02:33 PM ET (US)
Lets see what happens with it, he just signed it last week.
vito  863
07-23-2007 08:36 AM ET (US)
Christos,

If this is as bad as you hint, then why are CNN, NPR, PBS, NYT, MoveOn.org, etc., not impacted?
Christos Georgakis  862
07-22-2007 09:35 PM ET (US)
You want to talk about BDS? Have you seen this:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2007/07/20070717-3.html

Want another reason to vote for Ron Paul? He is the only candidate to come out against the abuse of executive orders. Now apparently if you speak out against the war the government can seize your assets. Nice country we have.
vito  861
07-21-2007 12:16 PM ET (US)
Christos,

Sunday's NYT Magazine has a piece on Ron Paul.
vito  860
07-09-2007 11:00 PM ET (US)
Michael,

This is a tempest in a teapot. Another example of BDS (Bush Deranged Syndrome) As if there are no politics in Washington. Yeah, its politics, but on a rank order scale, peanuts compared to others, such as Bubba. It will suck up time with hearings and the usual flamboyant rhetoric, in the meantime there is a ton of legislation waiting.

Perhaps they could do something more helpful and utilitarian, say an earmark for a larger freezer for Rep. Jefferson.
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