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"He'll make a one-handed catch that just blows us all away when we see it."<br><br>Bolin just considers it business as usual, but he's seen how making a great catch can inspire his teammates and provide instant momentum.<br> <br>"I just try to do my job to the best of my ability," he said. "When anybody makes a big play, it can really pump us up.<br><br>"Guys go out there and make one-handed catches, whether it's me or someone else, and it gets everyone excited. The 'D' wants to go out there and make a big play, too. They want to get a big hit on somebody."<br><br>Bolin is a big part of an offense that's clicking on all cylinders for Lemont (11-0) heading into a Class 6A state quarterfinal game at 5 p.m. Saturday against host St. Laurence (8-3),cheap real jordans.<br><br>The Indians followed a 35-13 first-round win over Oak Forest with a 42-10 rout of Danville last week.<br> <br>In the Danville win, Steve Fleming was the hero of the passing game, catching three touchdown throws from Spencer Nagel.<br><br>All season,cheap jordans, though,cheap retro jordans, Nagel has been able to find a different go-to guy each week. If a defense tries to take away one receiver, say Spencer's brother Austin, another will emerge.<br><br>Austin Nagel (455 yards, 8 TDs), Bolin (385 yards, 2 TDs), Matt Slee (383 yards, 4 TDs) and Fleming (378 yards,cheap jordan shoes, 6 TDs) provide a formidable receiving corps.<br><br>"I love playing in this offense," Bolin said. "I've been playing with all these guys since we were in third grade. It feels like I'm playing with all my best friends and it's great. Anybody on our team can step up and make a play. That's what makes us tough to stop."<br><br>Bolin's impact goes beyond the stat sheet. He's a leader who sets an example for his teammates every time he takes the field, whether in a game or in practice.<br><br>"Bret sort of exemplifies our program,cheap air jordans," Kooi said. "He's an absolutely awesome kid who goes above and beyond.<br><br>"In practice, he's diving for balls and always going all out. In all my years coaching, I don't know if I've ever seen anyone who works harder or challenges himself more to catch a ball."<br><br>The hard work goes back years. Playing receiver for Lemont was always Bolin's goal.<br><br>"Growing up, I played running back and a little bit of tight end," he said. "I always knew that I wanted to play wide receiver in high school, though. I didn't know if I'd get to do it,cheap jordans for sale, but that's what I was hoping.<br><br>"I'm getting to do it now and I love it."<br><br>Steve Millar is a freelance writer for the Daily Southtown.<ul> <li>Iggy cheap retro jordans Azale< li> <li>Park ch< li> <li>< li> < ul> It is mid-June on the West Side of Chicago, and a dozen or so people are standing around what looks an awful lot like an automobile encased in concrete. Pockmarked at multiple points on its surface, blotchy in others, the structure is under a protective canopy. The people, mostly, are not. "We don't want to bring any more original material in danger," says Christian Scheidemann, an expert in conserving art made from unusual substances. "I think we have to be very sensitive here about these bumps." "There's a natural area here you can patch against," says Amanda Trienens, a specialist in concrete restoration. "But you have to consider where you stop." Hannah Higgins, a University of Illinois at Chicago art historian, says, "I think it's important to leave real visual evidence of what was patched, even if it's a bad patch." The conversation continues in this vein: Sober talk about the nature of sand and concrete, the experts' level of happiness with patches on the rear of the structure, whether they should drill into the thing to take a core sample, and what is the right level of inflation for the tires on what is, in fact, a concrete-clad car. This is not just any vehicle rendered immobile with nearly 14 tons of a hardened sand, aggregate and cement slurry,cheap jordans for sale, however. It is a 1957 Cadillac DeVille that was entombed by German artist Wolf Vostell, a leader of the Fluxus movement, in a 1970 public performance near the old site of Chicago's Museum of Contemporary Art. And on Friday the Caddy will revisit that site as part of a procession that will see the sculpture returned to its second and longest-standing home, the University of Chicago campus. That parade will mark the end of a five-year,cheap jordans, roughly $500,000 rediscovery and restoration process that began with a Chicago art history professor asking herself what public art the university owned. It will also be the catalyst for a series of programs in the next year under the banner Concrete Happenings, meant to make people think about public art. Prominent among these is a Vostell exhibition at the university's Smart Museum of Art in January. MOST READ ENTERTAINMENT NEWS THIS HOUR The work, entitled Concrete Traffic, is, in fact,cheap air jordans, the largest remaining artifact of Fluxus, a largely performance-based movement that counted Yoko Ono among its associated artists. But for now, in June in Humboldt Park, it's also a not-street-legal 32,400-pound shapely slab deteriorating out behind an art handling shop, its home since it was moved from the U. of C. campus in 2009 to make way, ironically, for a new arts center. It is a work of art that people can lean on as they discuss its conservation. Somebody brings up the "Bumstead patches," so named for a university landscaper who tried to do some repair work years ago, the removal and replacement of which is a key part of the restoration process. Somebody else wonders aloud about whether Jimmy Hoffa might be inside. "You're not the first person to say that," says Anna Weiss-Pfau, the U. of C.'s campus art coordinator. "Oh, God, I'm dying to see the inside of the car," says Higgins. "I want to know what happened to the car seat material. There could be a whole ecosystem in there." "Yuck," responds one of the eminent conservators. As the focus moves to the bottom of the car, the debate becomes about how much tire should be showing when the sculpture gets remounted, how much was originally showing and whether the steel undercarriage built for the piece will need to be redone. But maybe they're being too fussy? "We're art historians,cheap jordans for sale," Higgins points out, "not normal people." It was an art historian who got this whole project rolling. Christine Mehring was in her fourth year at Chicago when, in September 2011, the provost put her in charge of a faculty committee, the University Committee on Campus Planning. "I said, 'Well, it would be nice if we started paying attention to public art. What do we have anyway?'" she recalls. She heard about the car sculpture that had been moved from a campus sculpture garden ?? right in front of the studio where the sculptor Lorado Taft worked ?? to make way for the gleaming new Logan Arts Center, and she drove to Humboldt Park to have a look. It was a moment both exciting and sad, as she describes it. "It looked awful," she says. "There were big patches of concrete missing. That's what was so overwhelming." At the same time, she knew what she was looking at, more or less. German herself, she had written about post-war German art and recognized Vostell's style. "It was a really important work," she says. "I think I was absolutely exhilarated. Wow." She had a thought that proved, she allows, naive: "Early on, I thought it would be cheaper to conserve it than to keep paying the storage fee." But she started scraping together money to look into restoring it. The school's Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society got behind the project, including with early grant money. A conservation team came together in a manner that sounds a little like the way the team is assembled in a caper movie, except without Matt Damon. She reached out to Scheidemann, she says, because of his work with extraordinary materials. It was a perfect fit: "He came out, and we immediately started arguing about what needs to be done," she says. Trienens, the concrete specialist, came on. Two engineers, "the art structural engineer and the historic structural engineer," Mehring says. MCA staff, who found documentation on the original fabrication of the piece,cheap jordan shoes, fundamental to settling questions about how best to restore it. Also joining the team were university conservators and scholars. Higgins, from UIC, "the daughter of Alison Knowles and Dick Higgins, who are key, key Fluxus artists,cheap air jordans," says Mehring. An architect to help them keep the big picture in mind. A classic car expert. The car guy, she says, told her, "Wow, this Cadillac is in better condition than it would have been if it had sat on the street." That's probably doubly true when you consider that it was purchased for the art project for just $89. "That completely fits in with Vostell's thinking about the sculpture, which we know was a kind of mummification for him of an object of industrial civilization. It's a completely violent gesture but at the same time it's preserving it," says Mehring.<ul> <li>Do b cheap< li> <li>Dange< li> <li>Alzheimers cheap jordan shoes D< li> < ul> Alcohol<br><br>Daniel Alsteen, 41, of the 3N500 block of Howard, Elmhurst, was charged with disorderly conduct – public intoxication at 5:38 p.m. Nov. 4 at Park and Arlington.<br> <br>Michael Mackessy, 18, of the 8200 block of Rutledge, Merrillville, Ind., was charged with consumption of alcohol by a minor, battery and resisting a police officer at 1:26 a.m. Nov. 6 in the 1000 block of South York Street.<br><br>Battery<br><br>Robert Kelly, 53, of the 200 block of East Butterfield, Elmhurst, was charged with domestic battery and possession of a controlled substance at 3:41 a.m. Nov. 7.<br><br>Clifton Calbert,cheap jordans online, 26, of the 400 block of Niagara, Elmhurst, was charged with domestic battery and assault at 3:29 p.m. Nov. 7.<br> <br>Darnel Martinez, 45, of the 500 block of Waterford, Oswego, was charged with battery and obstructing and resisting a police officer at 1:59 a.m. Nov. 6 in the 500 block of South Spring.<br><br>Drugs<br><br>Vincent Gaudio, 19, of the 300 block of North Geneva, Elmhurst, was charged with possession of marijuana at 9:54 p.m. Nov. 9 at Garden and Belden. Jeffrey Hain, 21, of the 500 block of North West, Elmhurst, was charged with possession of drug paraphernalia in the same incident.<br><br>Corey Salinas, 31, of the 200 block of East North End, Elmhurst, was charged with unlawful possession of a controlled substance and littering at 9:23 p.m. Nov. 3 at York and Belden. Melissa Barber, 30, of the same address, was charged with unlawful possession of a controlled substance in the same incident.<br><br>Mark Betlejewski, 23, of the 100 block of Waters, Glendale Heights, was charged with possession of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia and driving with obstructed registration at 10:07 p.m. Nov. 3 at Route 83 and North Avenue.<br><br>Roger Person,retro new jordans, 61, of the 1300 block of South Mackinaw, Calumet City, was charged with unlawful delivery of a controlled substance at 7:17 p.m. Nov. 4 in the 100 block of East Brush Hill.<br><br>Quintin Wright,b cheap jordans, 26, of the 3500 block of Madison, Bellwood, was charged with possession of marijuana, speeding, driving while his license was suspended and driving with suspended registration at 4:54 p.m. Nov. 4 at Spring and Van Buren.<br><br>Gustavo Gomez-Hipolito, 20, of the 3300 block of West 66th, Chicago, was charged with possession of marijuana at 11:53 p.m. Nov. 4 in the 400 block of North York Street.<br><br>Keith Campbell, 21, of the 0-100 block of Donald Court, Elmhurst, was charged with possession of marijuana and failure to have a valid driver's license at 7:58 p.m. Nov. 6 at the Donald Court location.<br><br>Caitlin Denz, 21, of the 500 block of South Westmore, Lombard, was charged with possession of marijuana in the same incident.<br><br>DUI<br><br>Enrique Cruz, 31, of the 700 block of Memorial Drive, Bensenville, was charged with driving under the influence,cheap retro jordans, failure to yield turning left, possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia at 12:17 a.m. Nov. 3 at Grand and Industrial.<br><br>Freddie Pinto, 33, of the 10200 block of Armitage,cheap jordan shoes, Melrose Park, was charged with driving under the influence, possession of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia, disobeying a traffic control device and illegal transportation of alcohol at 1:09 a.m. Nov. 3 at North Avenue and Melrose.<br><br>Gerardo Arroyo, 45, of the 5800 block of Mason, Chicago, was charged with driving under the influence, failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident, driving without insurance and driving on the wrong side of the road at 1:32 a.m. Nov. 3 at York and Lexington.<br><br>Joseph Bonfield, 65, of the 100 block of Harrison,cheap jordans, Oak Park, was charged with driving under the influence of drugs and improper lane use at 5:36 a.m. Nov. 4 at North Avenue and Oak.<br><br>Freddie Hani, 27, of the 2900 block of North Albany, Chicago, was charged with driving under the influence, driving too fast for conditions, driving without insurance, leaving the scene of an accident, possession of marijuana and resisting arrest at 11:05 p.m. Nov. 5 at North Avenue and Elm.<br><br>Theft<br><br>Franceska Polak, 32, of the 12100 block of Prairie, Westmont, was charged with retail theft at 4:26 p.m. Nov. 5 from Kohl's, 303 S. Route 83.<br><br>Graydon Megan is a freelance reporter for Pioneer Press.<ul> <li>Calvin cheap retro jordans Law< li> <li>< li> <li>Tajikistan cheap jordan shoes N< li> < ul> Dennis Farina Paul Buck EPA <br>Dennis Farina arriving for the premiere of 'The Grand' in Los Angeles, California.<br> <br>Dennis Farina arriving for the premiere of 'The Grand' in Los Angeles, California.<br> (Paul Buck EPA) <br>Here's what happens when you start Googling "Dennis Farina" and "Chicago accent": You go hurtling down a rabbit hole that leads you to a mesmerizingly bad compilation of Old Style commercials from the 1990s. "What'd I tell ya," Farina says to his crew as he looks through some window blinds, "Chicawgo is being invaded by people from Nooo York and L.A. who want our Old Style and Old Style Light … look at the outfits on these guys!" Then he holds up a pair of car keys and taunts said beer burglars: "Hey you big dummies, look what I got! Ah? Walk! Carry it!"<br><br>Farina's sound always had a tough guy's edge to it,cheap jordan shoes, whether he was playing cop or criminal. But to my ear, the Chicago sound (which a friend of mine calls it a meatball accent; I've heard others call it a Polish sausage accent) tends to have a different connotation: true blue,cheap air jordans, no pretensions,cheap real jordans, not trying to get one over on you — just a normal Joe who works for a living and likes a beer at the end of the day, and not some fancy microbrew, thank you.<br><br>And that's what the "SNL" Super Fans sketch captured, even as it lovingly skewered obsessive fans of Mike Ditka and the Chicago Bears. It was a sketch populated by guys who understood Chicago: "Cheers" star George Wendt (who grew up on the Southwest Side), Mike Myers and Chris Farley (both Second City alums), and the sketch's writer and co-star Robert Smigel (who also studied comedy in Chicago before heading to "SNL").<br><br>"Hello my friends and welcome to anudder edition of Bill Swerski's Super Fans," Wendt says in a sketch from 1991. "I'm Baab Swerski, sittin' in for my brudder Bill, who's recovering from his most recent heart attaaack."<br><br>Even back then they were playing middle-aged guys. So maybe it is generational? Durian, the linguist,retro new jordans, told me he's been studying five generations in order to trace the Chicago accent over time.<br><br>Incorporating audio from an earlier dialect study from the 1960s, here's what he found: "What's interesting is that when you go back to people born in 1875 (who were in their early 80s when they were studied), what we now call the Chicago accent wasn't even around yet. They've got a few of the characteristics, but that doesn't really kick into play until the next generation. And actually,cheap retro jordans, prime time for the Chicago accent is really the next two generations, so,cheap jordans online, the parents of the baby boomers and the baby boomers themselves. Those are the people who show the strongest aspects of the Chicago accents.<ul> <li>< li> <li>< li> <li>July< li> < ul> . The Nationals think they are close. The Cardinals are the Cardinals. The Cubs face two immediate pressing questions as general manager meetings convene Monday in Arizona: center fielder Dexter Fowler and closer Aroldis Chapman enter free-agency Tuesday. What happens if "You Go, We Go" Fowler goes to the Cardinals or Giants? How aggressive will the Cubs be in trying to re-sign the players, both major factors in the Series? The Cubs have faith in outfielder Albert Almora Jr. and reliever Carl Edwards Jr. as potential replacements and confidence in Epstein remains high to find other alternatives if those don't work. Anthony Rizzo tribute to David Ross highlight of championship celebration Mark Gonzales Under a clear sky in comfortable November weather, the Cubs celebrated their first World Series title since 1908 with an estimated 5 million of their closest friends lining the parade route and gathering at Grant Park. Before the Cubs arrived, a fan wearing a Cardinals jacket saluted them as their... Under a clear sky in comfortable November weather, the Cubs celebrated their first World Series title since 1908 with an estimated 5 million of their closest friends lining the parade route and gathering at Grant Park. Before the Cubs arrived, a fan wearing a Cardinals jacket saluted them as their... (Mark Gonzales) The other significant issue involves starting pitching. The entire rotation expects to return, provided the Cubs pick up 15-game winner Jason Hammel's $12 million option. And even if they do, left-hander Mike Montgomery looks like a solid candidate to supplant him as the fifth starter. How Jake Arrieta handles the final year of his contract,cheap jordan shoes, amid ongoing speculation over possible long-term deal, looms as a possible distraction. John Lackey looked every bit of 38 in the playoffs. Only Jon Lester and Kyle Hendricks return without any nagging questions. But the Cubs bought enough pitching to win a World Series and, as long as Epstein is the one shopping, either can buy or acquire replacements capable of doing it again. The unanswerable question involves chemistry. Success changes people. It's why the 1985 Bears never dominated more than one season. It's the one thing impossible to anticipate for the young Cubs celebrities whose lives changed forever Wednesday night. As well as Epstein understands nuance, nobody can account for everything that makes an atmosphere in a locker room or clubhouse conducive to winning. What will the mix be like in '17? Joy spans generations at Cubs World Series rally and parade Duaa Eldeib and Juan Perez Jr. It is a legacy,cheap real jordans, an heirloom of sorts, passed down from generation to generation. For many families, being a Chicago Cubs fan,cheap retro jordans, and experiencing all the frustration that went with it, embodies more than any grandparent's rocking chair or old timepiece ever could. In the end, it represents a set of... It is a legacy, an heirloom of sorts,cheap jordans, passed down from generation to generation. For many families, being a Chicago Cubs fan, and experiencing all the frustration that went with it, embodies more than any grandparent's rocking chair or old timepiece ever could. In the end,cheap jordans online, it represents a set of... (Duaa Eldeib and Juan Perez Jr.) Nobody could have anticipated the importance of 39-year-old backup catcher David Ross to the Cubs. Nobody could have predicted underrated leader Miguel Montero, hardly a lock for the playoff roster because of a bad back and light bat,cheap air jordans, would come up with two of the biggest hits<ul> <li>Quickly che< li> <li>< li> <li>< li> < ul> No Dwyane Wade, no problem.<br><br>Jimmy Butler scored a season-high 40 points,cheap retro jordans, Isaiah Canaan added a season-high 17 off the bench and Nikola Mirotic and Robin Lopez added double-doubles as the Bulls improved to 3-1 on their circus trip with a 118-110 victory over the Lakers Sunday night at Staples Center.<br><br>Butler shot 14-for-23 from the field and 12-for-14 from the line in a dominant performance that included seven rebounds and six assists,retro new jordans.<br><br>Mirotic's 15 rebounds marked a career-high.<br><br>As for Wade, he and coach Fred Hoiberg have said consistently their communication regarding Wade's usage has been strong.<br><br>On Sunday,cheap real jordans, that conversation led to the Bulls...<br>election signs Genevieve Bookwalter Pioneer Press Election signs cover the grass across from Evanston Civic Center on Monday, Nov. 7,cheap jordans, 2016. Evanston Civic Center was the city's only early voting site in the 2016 presidential election. Election signs cover the grass across from Evanston Civic Center on Monday, Nov. 7, 2016. Evanston Civic Center was the city's only early voting site in the 2016 presidential election. (Genevieve Bookwalter Pioneer Press) <br>Resident Edmund Zebrowski, 41, said he voted Monday after waiting four hours in line to vote in a previous election in a different suburb. The Lifetime Fitness massage therapist said he found the courtesy shown between voters refreshing.<br><br>"People in line are being really civil,cheap jordan shoes," said Zebrowski, after casting his ballot. "This is the first time I've early voted. I was in and out in 20 minutes, and that line is long."<br> <br>Cars circled the Civic Center parking lot much of the day as voters pulled in and out of available spaces. Those casting ballots, or who already had cast ballots,cheap jordans online, were greeted by dozens of election signs ?C some handmade ?C planted in the grass across from the city's municipal center.<br><br>Candidates and signature gatherers competed for voters' attention as they mingled on the steps and grass leading up to the Civic Center.<br><br>gbookwalter@tribpub<br><br>Twitter @GenevieveBook<ul> <li>< li> <li>< li> <li>Beyond retro ne< li> < ul>
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