Chicago - A message from the station manager

Sleeping Beauty at Rockwell Station

By Erika Enk

cc: ctahelp@chicago.com
Hello,
I e-mailed you on March 24 and March 26 regarding a sleeping employee at the Brown Line Rockwell Station. Well, at around 7:20 this morning, I walked into the station and a different employee was asleep. Sleeping Beauty looked rather happy in her slumber, leaning back in her chair, eyes closed, a small grin on her face. Slamming my hand on the kiosk door didn’t seem to stir her from her slumber. Maybe she was dreaming of a magical fairytale place where the trains run without delay and people get to work on time (I have that dream too, sometimes). I wish I had brought my camera; I had finally put it away thinking that the issue was resolved. I was mistaken.

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Posted on April 30, 2008

Westward Ho!

Part Six  Birds   By Leigh Novak

I have always had a unique relationship with birds. As far back as I can remember, I have been entranced by, entertained by, fascinated by, and attacked by birds. For every time I arrive at my shit-splattered car, or am accosted by seagulls at the beach, and under my breath mutter how much I hate birds, there is another occasion in which I am mesmerized by the sight of a bird out my window or during a woodsy hike.
Naturally, there is a hierarchy for the tolerability of birds. I don’t think there are many of us fighting causes in defense of those damn Canadian Geese, for example, who seemingly have more rights in America than you or I. When working at an old job, I ate lunch outside the office towers on most nice days. Surrounding a section of the building was a dirty man-made pond that was home to its own active community of the forsaken species.
Every hike out to our favorite lunch bench was a sure-footed exercise in avoiding mounds of goose crap. Worse yet was dodging the irate territorial creatures themselves, who hissed and charged at you with all the hate in the world swirling around in their beady black eyes. The trick, we quickly learned, was to walk briskly and without eye contact. Insolent beasts, they are. And if you hit one with a car, you get a ticket! Where are the squirrel activists on this one? Why do we protect this obnoxious clan of feathered rodents, and not milder, often cuter common roadkill candidates?
I’ll never forget the satisfied look upon my detective friend’s face during his retelling of how thousands of feathers exploded in every direction when one of those geese fatefully met his truck’s grill on the way to the station one day. I don’t think he wrote himself a ticket.
Then there are the ever-belligerent seagulls. I truly feel bad for seagulls because although they are dirty and annoying, it is humans who have ruined the seagull’s rap. I cannot even convey the level of contempt I hold for all those fat-ass American families who sit on their beach blankets and for amusement (because reading or being civil are not an option for many Americans) throw food at the gathering hordes (not flocks) of seagulls, who jump on a tossed Cheetos Puff as though they are tempting starvation and need it to live another day.
I can see how this mild form of animal abuse can garner a laugh from some simple-minded folks, but this practice is just plain evil to the seagulls. Not only are humans feeding them processed crap that no living organism should eat, but they are shattering the species’ reputation by distinguishing them as pesky beggars. This is why seagulls get fed Alka-Seltzer tablets on a regular basis.
But the reason I brought up birds in the first place is because I have been quite intimate with birds of all varieties since moving to Washington. Chicago’s landscape provided less than desirable opportunities to appreciate birds. But somewhere between the natural environment and the slower pace of life here, I often find myself wishing I had a thorough encyclopedia of birds. I’ve known adults to have such things. And I suppose it is just a certain coming of age that many of us will go through. I have reached that age now, where a bird encyclopedia is topping my birthday wish list. Boring adulthood, here I come!

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Posted on April 29, 2008

What’s Wrong With You?

By The  Special Guests  Publicity Service

Doctor Gives 4 Tips To Gauge Your Health Before It’s Too Late
Sudbury, ON – The kind, gentle old family practitioner keeping an eye out for the patient’s overall health is a thing of the past. These days, doctors are as swamped with HMO paperwork as they are with patients.
The New England Journal Of Medicine reports the average doctor’s appointment lasts less than 22 minutes. An American Medical Association report cites patients changing health insurance providers as a reason few have the same “family doctor” watching over them year after year. It’s becoming the patient’s responsibility to keep an eye on their own changing health, guide their doctors, and do their own bodies “preventive maintenance.”
In his new book, Medical Crisis: Secrets Your Doctor Won’t Share With You, Dr Anthony Martin asserts that breast cancer and prostate cancer are nearly 100 percent preventable. It takes more than five years for most cancers to grow to the size of the tip of a ballpoint pen. By the time cancer is found by routine blood tests or feeling a lump, the patient may have missed precious time.
“Your car has dashboard warning lights to alert you that the oil is low, or you’re out of gas,” says Dr. Martin. “The body has those same warning signals. You just have to know how to read them.”
Here are Dr. Martin’s four warning signs to find out if you are on the path to cancer, stroke or other illnesses:

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Posted on April 28, 2008

How To Be A Gentleman In A Changing World

By The  Special Guests  Publicity Service

Should you take your Blackberry on vacation? Is an e-mail an acceptable means of writing a thank-you note? When and where is it OK to use your cell phone or camera phone? While the tenets of gracious behavior never change, the situations a gentleman faces in today’s post-9/11 world certainly have.
Conducting Talk Show interviews on the topic of proper etiquette in a changing world is John Bridges, author of the bestselling book on manners in America, How to Be a Gentleman.
During your interview with John Bridges, he addresses 21st century issues such as airport security, smoking policy changes, Bluetooth and Blackberry usage, cell phones, e-mail and text messaging – as well as untucked shirts, low-hanging pants and baseball caps. Timeless topics such as how to properly receive a compliment, make introductions and set a dinner table, of course, remain.

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Posted on April 25, 2008

Chicagoetry: A Modest Proposal

By J.J. Tindall

A MODEST PROPOSAL
It is a melancholy object to those
who walk through this great city-state
to see the streets, roads and tavern doors
littered with inconvenient and foul-smelling
human debris. As to my own part,
having turned my thoughts upon this
important subject, weary with offering
vain, idle, visionary thoughts,

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Posted on April 22, 2008

Westward Ho!

Part Five  Homeward   By Leigh Novak

I am sure many people who have left their hometowns can relate to one of the best parts about moving away: going home from time to time to see the family, cuddle with the dog, and have a drink with old friends. Also vital for the wayward Chicagoan: eating Vienna beef hot dogs, getting stuffed with stuffed pizza, and drinking copious amounts of Leinenkugel’s.
I just celebrated/lamented my first anniversary of living in Seattle. In the course of the year gone by, I went home three times. And my fourth trip is just around the corner. I haven’t exactly been shy about staying at my mom’s when I come back to visit, begging the inevitable question: “How can we miss you if you don’t stay gone?”

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Posted on April 16, 2008

Other People’s Money

By The Beachwood Unjust Economy Affairs Desk

Both Parade and Chicago did their annual “What They Earn” issues recently. We combined the most interesting into one list.

* Twila Schuster, real estate broker in Fairbanks, Alaska: $173,300
* Rex Grossman, quarterback, Chicago: $629,290
* Jeff Foxworthy, Atlanta: $10 million
* Glen Heroy, hospital clown, New York City: $28,000
* Allison Elmore, senior colorist, Art + Science salon, Chicago: $80,000

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Posted on April 14, 2008

Chasing Skinny Rabbits

By The  Special Guests  Publicity Service

Tax Time is upon us once again. Millions of Americans are hustling and bustling to make the dreaded deadline of April 15.
But is the work that we do and the frenzied pace we live our lives worth the mental, emotional and spiritual exhaustion?
Conducting Talk Show interviews addressing this question is best-selling author Dr. John Trent, who says, “No!”
During your interview with Dr. Trent who gives nuggets of wisdom from his newest, Chasing Skinny Rabbits: What Leads You Into Emotional and Spiritual Exhaustion . . . And What Can Lead You Out (Thomas Nelson Publishing, January 1, 2008).

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Posted on April 14, 2008

Chicagoetry: Come Back To The Five And Dime Bag, Stu Levine, Stu Levine

By J.J. Tindall

COME BACK TO THE FIVE AND DIME BAG, STU LEVINE, STU LEVINE
Back, come back: you can blame it all on me.
I was wrong and I just can’t live without you.
You are my Poster Boy! Lovely: the polished image
of suburban Caucasian
propriety. MY MAN!
Wide lawns, narrow blinds, freshly-washed SUVs
stocked with
Miley Cyrus DVDs.
Goddam! Sure: goddam the Pusher Man.

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Posted on April 10, 2008

Westward Ho!

Part Four  Peninsula   By Leigh Novak

There is one final follow-up to my singing the blues last week. One more chance to rub your thumb and index finger together and play the world’s smallest violin for me before I get going on a bit of Washington State optimism.
Remember how I had the good company of my two cats traveling across the country and softening my loneliness to a degree? Well one of those felines – the one I had since I was 10-years-old – died one month after I arrived in Washington. Now understand, this was my first pet. I had this little critter from pre-pubescence, through the pit of hell that was high school, all the way through a year past college graduation. Thirteen years of life, he lied by my side, loyal and regal as a cat can be.
In a story by David Sedaris, he makes a comment that rang quite true for me upon the death of my first pet. He says when cats die, their owners tend to veil an entire period of life – the cat’s death is emblematic of their own chapter coming to a close. One of the main thoughts that crossed my mind as I sat awake with my old friend, certain that this night would be his last, was how symbolic it was that this cat of mine who saw me through my whole life in Chicago, this symbol of my life there, was leaving me. I actually envisioned a chapter titled “Chicago” and saw the pages closing.
So now that that’s out of the way, there are a couple of neat things about life out here. My personal favorite is the landscape. Being relatively land-locked my whole life and desiring some coastal inspiration, the Pacific Ocean is the main reason I moved here. The sound and smell of an ocean can soothe the soul; and there is nothing comparable to its healing power. Nothing at least, that can be found in a loud city.

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Posted on April 7, 2008

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