Advice for parents on recall of kids’ medicine

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NATION & WORLD

United merger likely

to give Chicago a lift

The big

picture:

No.1 Passenger traffic ranking 87,500 Full-time employees 370 Destinations served

Duane Jackson at his Times

Square sales stand Sunday,

a day after he helped alert

police to an SUV that held a

bomb. SOMEONE/AP PHOTO

N.Y. bomb

scare sets

off police

manhunt

FBI agents and New York

police were searching

Sunday for a man seen on

surveillance video walking

from an SUV before it filled

with smoke and “pops”

rang out. Police said Sat-

urday’s bomb could have

hurled shrapnel through

busy Times Square. PAGE 10

NATION & WORLD

The expected merger of Continental and United airlines will create a new United that will be based in Chicago. SomeOne Here/NEWS PHOTO

Obama promises

aid on oil spill

President Barack Obama

visited New Orleans on

Sunday promising to “do,

everything in our power”

to mitigate an environ-

mental disaster as an oil

slick creeping toward

shore tripled in size. PAGE 10

Coming to a city near you

Continental’s routes in the South should complement United’s coverage in the western U.S., while unique

major hubs would help the companies largely avoid monopoly concerns.

DOMESTIC

ROUTES*

Continental

United

Overlap

Continental deal

to create world’s

largest airline

By [Name Here]

NEWSFIX REPORTER

GETTING AROUND

CTA again seeks

faster buses

The CTA tries again to get a

$150 million federal grant

to buy buses and build

bus-only lanes around the

area to speed travel. See

planned routes on PAGE 6

United’s

U.S. hubs

I Chicago

I Denver

I Los Angeles

I San Francisco

I Washington, D.C.

*Includes Continental

Connection, Continental

Express, United Express and

United code share partners

Continental’s

U.S. hubs

I Cleveland

I Houston

I Newark, N.J.

INTERNATIONAL

ROUTES*

WEATHER

8 A.M.

Continental

United

Overlap

56

1 P.M.

67

4 P.M.

70

See Weatherman’s forecast

on the back of Live! SECTION 3

The merger would allow

United to combine its strong

presence outside of North

America with Continental’s routes

in Latin America and the Pacific.

Continental’s hubs in Newark, N.J.

and Houston would also provide

United with more route options for

passengers traveling abroad.

SOURCES: Continental Airlines, United Airlines

*Includes Continental Connection, Continental Express,

United Express and United code share partners

With a formal announcement

expected Monday that United and

Continental airlines will merge

and call Chicago home, the city of

big shoulders gains important

new bragging rights: home of the

world’s largest airline.

The deal, which was approved

by the airlines’ boards Sunday,

represents a significant boost to

Chicago’s civic pride — and po-

tentially to its economy observers,

said.

After watching scores of iconic

companies, from Amoco to Mont-

gomery Ward, disappear through

mergers and bankruptcies in re-

cent decades, Chicago has notch-

ed two big corporate victories this

year: Northfield-based Kraft

Food’s acquisition of British

candy giant Cadbury and the,

merged airline that will be named

United.

With each such victory Chicago,

is able to reinforce its identity as a

global corporate center, adding

prestige and more importantly,

jobs.

“This is not only a big win for

Chicago, but also for Illinois,”

said Samuel Skinner, a Chicago

attorney who was transportation

secretary under President George

Please turn to Page 4

AUTHOR/NEWSFIX TRIBUNE

TRIBUNE WATCHDOG

Mortgage ‘rescuer’ Eliseo Carrillo

used his heritage to gain clients.

Now some immigrants who lost

their homes are suing.

White-hat hero or

mortgage scammer?

By Someone Here

NEWSFIX REPORTER

The accusations that have piled

up against Eliseo Carrillo run

counter to the image the Chicago

entrepreneur cultivated as a

champion of Latino immigrants.

As the housing market weak-

ened in recent years, Carrillo’s

smiling face appeared on bill-

boards throughout the city’s Mex-

ican-American neighborhoods.

Spanish-language TV commer-

cials featuring Mexican music

and Carrillo wearing a stylish

cowboy hat promised that his real

estate companies — all using the

name “Protecta” — were friends

and guardians of immigrants in

need.

But after signing what they

believed were loan papers to save

their homes from foreclosure, at

least four of his struggling clients

have filed lawsuits alleging that

they were misled into surrender-

ing the deeds to their homes in

Please turn to Page 8

Amador Ocampo, center, is suing Eliseo Carrillo to reclaim ownership of his Little Village house. From left are

daughter Vanessa, son Amador Jr., wife Veronica and daughter Salma. [SOMEONE NAME]/PAPER PHOTO