Polar bears hit Waukegan Harbor New Year's Day :: ZB Guide

The air temperature ranging from 10 to 17 degrees of New Years Day was just the kind of weather polar bears relish. But the nippy 36 degree water might be a little warm for the furry creatures whose thick coat provides wonderful insulation.

The 410 polar bears that took a dunk in Lake Michigan at the Waukegan Harbor for the 14th annual Polar Bear Plunge didn?t have that much insulation, so it was a bit chillier for them and they didn?t linger long. They ran through icy slush on shore about 40 yards to reach the wet-suited divers from the Waukegan Fire Department to give them a high five before heading back to the warming tent to get into dry, comfy clothes. But they did it for a good cause.

The $10 pre-registration, or $15 at-the-door-fees support scholarships for individuals with disabilities in Special Recreation events of both team and individual sports, such as basketball, softball, bocce ball, track and field events and bowling. Some participants go on to compete in Special Olympics. The funds support registration fees, uniforms, travel, hotel and food expenses as well as a wide range of programs throughout the year in both summer camps and ?no school? day camps.

The Waukegan Park District together with Zion, Lindenhurst and Round Lake, forms the Special Recreation Services of Northern Lake County and offers year-round recreational and sporting choices for special-needs people. Waukegan also actively participates in the Illinois Therapeutic Recreation Section/Professional Service Division of the Illinois Parks and Recreation Association.

Final monetary totals are yet to be tallied because various outside supporters have conducted their own fundraisers. Special thanks goes to these establishments: Sure Vision, G MediaWraps.com, Green Town Tavern, TR?s Front Row Tavern, G Cue Catering, Waukegan Main Street, Fist, Inc., J Mucks, Up North Pub, all of Waukegan and AAA Tentmasters of Gurnee. Also American Outfitters was a tremendous help for providing discounted prices for the 500 T-shirts given to participants.

Source: http://www.zbguide.com/2013/01/03/polar-bears-hit-waukegan-harbor-new-years-day/

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New Congress will take fresh crack at old problems

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The new 113th U.S. Congress, which convenes on Thursday, is set to take a fresh crack at a number of old, and highly contentious, issues, such as gun control, immigration, the record debt, tax reform and the farm bill.

Here's a look:

GUN CONTROL

President Barack Obama vows to crack down on gun violence in the wake of the school massacre last month in Newtown, Connecticut, the latest in a series of shooting rampages over the past decade.

According to a USA Today/Gallup Poll, 58 percent of Americans now back tougher gun laws, but 51 percent oppose Obama's call to outlaw so-called assault weapons.

A sharply divided Congress is awaiting a broad review of gun violence headed by Vice President Joe Biden.

IMMIGRATION

Hispanic voters last year helped Obama win a second term and Democrats to increase their clout in Congress.

Republicans took notice and want to win Hispanic support in the 2014 elections. One step toward that goal would be for Republicans to become more open to immigration reform.

The big question is how far Republicans would go to provide a path toward citizenship for illegal immigrants, estimated to number up to 12 million in the United States.

SEQUESTRATION

The White House and Congress managed to cut a deal on the "fiscal cliff" by agreeing to a two-month delay to sequestration - automatic spending cuts that were set to take effect on January 1.

Obama and lawmakers now have until March 1 to reach agreement on about $85 billion in spending reductions. If they do not, they will see across-the-board ones kick in, about evenly split between military and domestic programs.

DEBT LIMIT

Obama and Congress likely have until the end of February to raise the U.S. debt limit, now at $16.4 trillion.

Failure to do so would result in an unprecedented U.S. default, a move likely to rattle financial markets worldwide.

Obama says he will refuse to allow the debt limit to become a political bargaining tool again.

But Republicans do not seem be willing to raise it without extracting major spending cuts, mostly from government programs such as Social Security and Medicare.

FARM BILL

Congress gave itself a new deadline, September 30, to complete an overdue five-year, $500 billion farm bill that withered in election-year acrimony in 2012.

The House version proposed the deepest cuts in a generation for food stamps for the poor. But fiscal conservatives want more cuts in food stamps as well as farm subsidies.

The bills produced last year by the House and Senate agriculture committees would have cut between $23 billion and $35 billion. They will dig deeper in the months ahead.

It will be the first time Congress began work on a farm bill in one session and had to refile it in the new session.

HURRICANE SANDY RELIEF

Under pressure from fellow Republicans inside and outside of Congress, including New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, the Republican-led House is expected to move quickly in coming weeks to approve a long-delayed relief package for victims of superstorm Sandy in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut.

SENATE FILIBUSTER

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid is fed up with Republican procedural roadblocks commonly known as filibusters.

So Reid, to the outrage of Republicans, vows to try to change the rules - unless both sides enter some sort of an agreement to make the chamber work more efficiently.

VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN

Obama's fellow Democrats will take another crack at trying to renew the 1994 Violence Against Women Act, which was championed nearly two decades ago by Biden, then a senator.

The measure is designed to combat domestic abuse, but became a legislative vehicle in Congress last year for Democrats and Republicans to jockey for political position.

(Reporting By Thomas Ferraro; Editing by Marilyn W. Thompson and Peter Cooney)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/congress-fresh-crack-old-problems-061146363.html

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Reuters sources: US drone strike kills Taliban chief

S.K Khan / AFP - Getty Images, file

Mullah Nazir, center, is seen at a press conference in Wana, Pakistan, in 2007. The Associated Press reported that at least 5,000 people attended Nazir's funeral after he was killed by a U.S. drone strike.

By NBC News wire services

WANA, Pakistan -- A U.S. drone strike killed a Taliban commander, his deputy and at least eight others in northwest Pakistan, intelligence sources and tribal leaders told Reuters Thursday.

Maulvi Nazir, also known as Mullah Nazir, was killed on Wednesday night when missiles struck a house in Angoor Adda?near the Afghan border, intelligence sources and residents said.

His deputy, Ratta Khan, was also killed, sources told Reuters.

Reports of Nazir's death came weeks after he was wounded in a bomb attack believed to have been launched by Taliban rivals.

An A to Z guide to the Islamic Republic of 'Banistan'

According to The Associated Press, Nazir's death could prove to be a contentious issue between Washington and Islamabad, which is believed to have struck a nonaggression pact with Nazir ahead of the Pakistani military's 2009 operation against militants in South Waziristan.

Nazir favored attacking American forces in Afghanistan rather than Pakistani soldiers in Pakistan, a position that put him at odds with some other Pakistan Taliban commanders but earned him a reputation as a "good" Taliban among some in the Pakistan military.

Muhammed Muheisen / AP

Images of daily life, political pursuits, religious rites and deadly violence.

Pakistan's military viewed Nazir and militant chiefs like him as key to keeping the peace internally because they do not attack Pakistani targets.

The military has a large base in Wana, where Nazir and his men were based. Residents said the main market in Wana shut down on Thursday to mark Nazir's death.

In Pakistan's biggest city, 'Old Glory' is flammable and profitable

Nazir was wounded there in a bombing in November, widely believed to be a result of his rivalries with other Taliban commanders. Six others were killed in the same bombing.

Residents in both Angoor Adda and Wana, the biggest town in South Waziristan, said they heard announcements on mosque loudspeakers announcing Nazir's death. One resident, Ajaz Khan, told The Associated Press by telephone that 5,000 to 10,000 people attended the funeral of Nazir and six other people held in Angoor Adda.

Nazir outraged many Pakistanis in June when he announced that he would not allow any polio vaccinations in territory under his control until the U.S. stops drone attacks in the region. Pakistan is one of three countries where polio is still endemic. Nine workers helping in anti-polio vaccination campaigns were killed last month by militant gunmen.

Rumors of plot to sterilize Muslims with polio vaccine sparks killings

The former chief of intelligence in northwest Pakistan, retired brigadier Asad Munir, said Nazir's killing will complicate the fight against militants in the tribal region, and could prompt Nazir's group to carry out retaliatory attacks against the Pakistani army in South Waziristan.

It will also raise questions among military commanders here who would like the U.S. to use its firepower against the Pakistani Taliban, which attacks domestic targets, and not against militants like Nazir who aren't seen as posing as much of a threat to the Pakistani state, Munir told The Associated Press.

Commemoration or deification? Pakistanis honor 'political goddess' Bhutto

Pakistan's army, an uneasy ally of the United States, has clawed back territory from the Taliban since launching a military offensive in 2009.

But senior U.S. officials have frequently said that some elements within Pakistan's security services retain ties to some Taliban commanders.

Intensified U.S. drone strikes have killed many senior Taliban leaders, including Mehsud's predecessor, Baitullah Mehsud, in 2009.

Drone strikes have dramatically increased since President Barack Obama took office. There were only five drone strikes in 2007. The number of strikes peaked at 117 in 2010 but fell to 46 last year.

The program has killed a number of top militant commanders over the past year, including al-Qaida's then-No. 2, Abu Yahya al-Libi, who died in a drone strike in June on the Pakistani village of Khassu Khel in North Waziristan.

Some Pakistanis say the drone strikes are an infringement of their national sovereignty and have called for them to stop.

Can social media propel 'rock star' politician Imran Khan to power?

Others, including some residents of the tribal areas, say they are killing Taliban commanders who have terrorized the local population.

The continuing insecurity is likely to be a key issue in elections scheduled for this spring. The nuclear-armed nation of 180 million has a history of military coups, but these polls should mark the first time one elected civilian government gets to hand power to another.

Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/03/16314548-us-drone-strike-kills-taliban-commander-in-pakistan-sources-tell-reuters?lite

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Fiscal Cliff Deal Leaves Charities' and NGOs' Fears Unresolved

The fiscal cliff agreement passed late last night extends some much-needed benefits and tax breaks, but looming spending cuts leave minority and poverty-stricken communities in limbo.

Leaders in the nonprofit community praised the bill's handling of some aspects like the charitable-giving tax deduction. But in other areas, they said they felt it failed to support them, and by extension, left poverty-stricken Americans who depend on their services in a state of flux.

Though it would have put billions of dollars back in the budget, Congress voted this week to keep the charitable deduction with one change: The deal brings back a limit on how much taxpayers can deduct.

The Limitation on Itemized Deductions, commonly called Pease after the congressman who created it, was part of the 1986 tax reforms and reduced deductions made by high-income earners. Yesterday's deal defines that threshold as those making $300,000 or more for couples and $250,000 for unmarried individuals.

But Tim Delaney, president and CEO of the National Council of Nonprofits, called the amount it shaves off wealthy American's itemized deductions nothing more than "a haircut."

"On the whole nonprofits, for the time being, are looking at [keeping the charitable deduction despite the cap] as a disaster averted, because there were proposals to substantially take away charitable giving," Delaney said.

Maya Wiley, president of the Center for Social Inclusion (an advocacy group focusing on eliminating social inequalities), said the extension of the earned income tax credit was especially important for African American households, whose real median income had not recovered to pre-recession levels at the beginning of 2012, according to the Census Bureau.

She also praised Congress for extending unemployment benefits.

The unemployment rate for black Americans in November was 13.2 percent, 5.5 points higher than the national average and 6.4 percent more than among whites.

But overall, Wiley called the deal "a fiscal fiasco" for its failure to address spending cuts that would mean a steep drop in discretionary spending.

Title I, a Department of Education initiative aimed at improving academic achievement in disadvantaged communities, is an example of a program that would face cuts under the sequester, according to Wiley.

Said Wiley, "1.6 million kids will lose funding just from Title I alone." Of that 1.6 million, Wiley said 1 million are black and Latino. "We haven't had a sufficient conversation about who really is going to get hurt by that."

Like a sword of Damocles, these prescribed cuts hang over the heads of charities and NGOs, keeping the nonprofits in a state of instability, not knowing if the local governments who hire them to serve their neediest residents will have the funding necessary to pay for their work two months down the road, according to Delaney.

The members of Congress who voted to put the cuts off until March "seem disconnected with the real work that's going on in their home states and their districts," Delaney said.

"The key is for them to recognize how their failure to act has created a dark cloud over the ability of community-based nonprofits to function, that the uncertainty of whether funds will flow to the states and to the local governments to meet their needs is causing consternation and freezing the ability of people to make informed decisions out in the field," DeLaney told ABC News by phone Wednesday.

But Fergus Hodgson, director of fiscal policy studies at the John Locke Foundation (a free-market think tank based in North Carolina), said the struggles experienced by nonprofits is "such a small drop in the ocean," in comparison with what he sees as the real problem at hand: reforming programs like Social Security and Medicare to curb the nation's growing debt.

"It's about reforming our future obligations or addressing them," Hodgson said. "There was absolutely no change to those forms of entitlements, and as we speak those entitlements or the deficits associated with them are just continuing on all the time."

JD Foster, a tax economist at the conservative Heritage Foundation, blamed President Obama for the lack of entitlement reform in the final bill.

"We had an opportunity to cut spending," Foster said. "And the president said no."

There was one thing actors on both sides agreed on: The deal left the country in a state of uncertainty instead of putting Americans' fears to rest.

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fiscal-cliff-deal-leaves-charities-ngos-fears-unresolved-222039809--abc-news-politics.html

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Bishop Emeritus John D'Arcy Hospitalized With Cancer | Indiana's ...

January 1, 2013 Updated Jan 2, 2013 at 12:59 PM EST

BRIGHTON, Mass. (www.incnow.tv) - Bishop Emeritus John D'Arcy of the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend has been hospitalized in a Boston area hospital after being diagnosed with brain and lung cancer.

"Shortly after this Christmas, I began to feel unwell," the retired bishop said in a statement. "After extensive tests, they found cancer in the lung and the brain."

D'Arcy, 80, says he became ill while visiting family in Boston. Doctors at St. Elizabeth Hospital in his native Brighton, Mass., diagnosed the cancer. He will begin radiation treatment in the coming days, and hopes to return to Fort Wayne in three weeks.

"It is my hope to keep all the commitments I have made to the parish missions and Confirmations," D'Arcy said. "Of course, that will depend on the advice of my doctors."
(To read Bishop Emeritus D'Arcy's entire statement, click here.)

Bishop Kevin Rhoades, who succeeded Bishop D'Arcy in the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend, offered his prayers for Bishop D'Arcy.

"Bishop D'Arcy shared with me his deep trust in the Lord," Rhoades said in a statement. "May our Lord bestow his healing grace upon Bishop D'Arcy and grant him strength and inner peace."
(To read Bishop Rhoades's entire statement, click here.)

D'Arcy was diagnosed with prostate cancer in February of 2011, and was given extensive radiation treatments. He no longer has prostate cancer, the diocese says.

D'Arcy served as Bishop of Fort Wayne-South Bend from 1985 to 2010, when Catholic Church rules made him retire. D'Arcy has continued to celebrate Mass throughout the diocese, and serves as chaplain for Bishop Luers High School.




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Source: http://www.indianasnewscenter.com/news/local/130101-bishop-darcy-cancer-diagnosis-185368872.html

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Kim Kardashian's Pregnancy to Be Featured on Reality TV Show ...

Kim Kardashian Pregnant with Kanye WestSteve Mack, Getty Images

Though news of her pregnancy has only just been revealed, Kanye West s baby's-mother-to-be Kim Kardashian is already dishing about the trials of her upcoming motherhood.

"I wouldn't say that it's been easy," she revealed during a New Year's Eve party in Las Vegas. "When people say pregnancy is fun and they love it, I would have to disagree. It's not as easy as people think. It is, you know, a little painful. There's a lot of growing pains."

In typical fashion, the reality TV star's pregnancy will be captured for her show, "Keeping Up With the Kardashians."

"Like so many Kardashian fans, we love it when this close-knit family gets even bigger," E! President Suzanne Kolb explained. "We look forward to sharing the joy as they prepare for more diapers, more bottle and without a doubt, more fabulous baby wear."

Meanwhile, Kanye's family said that they were "shocked" by the news of the pregnancy, which was revealed to them the day after Christmas.

"Kanye flew in the day after Christmas without Kim to tell us the news. When he told us, the family was silent. We were all kind of shocked," the rapper's cousin, Tony Williams, said.

After ringing in the New Year at a club in Las Vegas, the couple were spotted on a trip to Pinkberry in Los Angeles.

Source: http://www.theboombox.com/2013/01/02/kim-kardashians-pregnancy-show/

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On Using a Coordinated Direct Maketing Campaign in a Lead ...

IMB Enterprises, Inc. offers considerable experience producing leads from highly competitive markets. We approach our task with a set of tactics that we refer to as a coordinated direct marketing campaign. We have built our tactics, in part, on some of the work of acknowledged experts in the fields of direct marketing, product marketing, and enterprise sales. These experts include Ernan Ronan (http://www NULL.huffingtonpost NULL.com/ernan-roman/), Jeff Thull (http://www NULL.primeresource NULL.com/), and, with regards to competitive markets, Michael Porter (http://www NULL.hbs NULL.edu/faculty/Pages/profile NULL.aspx?facId=6532).

The remainder of our tool set amounts to a gallery of our own entirely original techniques, which we developed through our work with three entrepreneurs who successfully built businesses that went public. We need to note that two of these three individuals are serial entrepreneurs with several business-building success stories. They each built multiple businesses that successfully went public. We will be happy to present more information about these three entrepreneurs, and our affiliation with each of them, upon request. Please contact us for more information.

We are happy to say that we, ourselves, have successfully managed our own business, in its present form, for over ten years. Therefore, our clients can depend upon our consultants as representatives of a successful business venture, who, as required, can provide overall business counsel, as required.

The tactics that we have developed over the years, which we have used to successfully deliver the results required by our clients, maybe, to some extent, surprising. For example, we are equally comfortable conceptualizing, designing, and, then managing marketing communications efforts (including print and/or electronic media), telemarketing and teleprospecting campaigns, and even some aspects of product marketing. These tactics can be particularly useful to early stage businesses with unique (or seemingly unique) products as well as more mature businesses looking to consolidate several marketing roles into a single resource.

As well, our team includes individuals with expertise of strategic value for growing businesses in 2013. Of particular importance, as we see it today, with specific regard to marketing communications, is an ability to combine graphic design with editorial content into a recipe that stimulates the appetite, and provokes the required interest on the part of prospects, to motivate them to reach out and engage with vendors like our clients. The members of our team possess this expertise.

In our opinion, it is by no means satisfactory for our clients to simply either over emphasize the value of a strictly graphical representation of a concept, or, conversely, to merely portray it through words alone. Rather a combination and balance is required, of graphic elements, text, and video, particularly where the competitive markets of concern are enterprise businesses.

In the next post to this blog we will discuss the second section of our gallery of tools, telemarketing and teleprospecting.

? IMB Enterprises, Inc. & Ira Michael Blonder, 2012 All Rights Reserved

Source: http://www.imbenterprises.com/direct-marketing/on-using-a-coordinated-direct-maketing-campaign-in-a-lead-generation-program-for-highly-competitive-markets/

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Sandy Hook students, teachers head back to school

(AP) ? Since escaping a gunman's rampage at their elementary school, the 8-year-old Connors triplets have suffered nightmares, jumped at noises and clung to their parents a little more than usual.

Now parents like David Connors are bracing to send their children back to school, nearly three weeks after the shooting rampage at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown. It won't be easy ? for the parents or the children, who heard the gunshots that killed 20 of their classmates and six educators.

"I'm nervous about it," Connors said. "It's unchartered waters for us. I know it's going to be difficult."

Classes are starting Thursday at a repurposed school in the neighboring town of Monroe, where the students' desks have been taken along with backpacks and other belongings that were left behind in the chaos following the shooting on Dec. 14. Families have been coming in to see the new school, and an open house is scheduled for Wednesday.

An army of workers has been getting the school ready, painting, moving furniture and even raising the floors in the bathrooms of the former middle school so the smaller elementary school students can reach the toilets.

Connors, a 40-year-old engineer, felt reassured after recently visiting the new setup at the former Chalk Hill school in Monroe. He said his children were excited to see their backpacks and coats, and that the family was greeted by a police officer at the door and grief counselors in the hallways.

Teachers will try to make it as normal a school day as possible for the children, schools Superintendent Janet Robinson said.

"We want to get back to teaching and learning," she said. "We will obviously take time out from the academics for any conversations that need to take place, and there will be a lot of support there. All in all, we want the kids to reconnect with their friends and classroom teachers, and I think that's going to be the healthiest thing."

Teachers are returning as well, and some have already been working on their classrooms. At some point, all those will be honored, but officials are still working out how and when to do so, Robinson said.

"Everyone was part and parcel of getting as many kids out of there safely as they could," she said. "Almost everybody did something to save kids. One art teacher locked her kids in the kiln room, and I got a message from her on my cellphone saying she wouldn't come out until she saw a police badge."

After the evacuation, teachers grouped their children at a nearby fire station, Robinson said. One sang songs, while others read to the students, she said.

Julian Ford, a clinical psychologist at the University of Connecticut who helped counsel families in the days immediately following the shooting, recommended addressing it as questions come up but otherwise focusing on regular school work.

"Kids just spontaneously make associations and will start talking about something that reminds them of someone, or that reminds them of some of the scary parts of the experience," Ford said. "They don't need a lot of words; they need a few selective words that are thoughtful and sensitive, like, 'We're going to be OK,' and 'We really miss this person, but we'll always be able to think about her or him in ways that are really nice.'"

It will be important for parents and teachers to listen and be observant, Ford said.

"Each of the boys and girls are going to have different reactions to different aspects of the environment, different little things that will be reminders to them," he said.

Parents might have a harder time with fear than children, Ford said.

Before the shooting, a baby sitter would take Connors' children to the bus stop. But Connors said he'll probably take the third-graders to the bus the first few days.

"I think that they need to get back into a normal routine as quickly as possible," Connors said. "If you're hovering over them at all times, it almost intensifies the fear for them."

His children, who escaped unharmed, ask questions about the gunman.

"It's hard for us to say why," Connors said. "That's kind of what we tell them. This person wasn't well, was sick and didn't get the help he needed."

Connors said his children are excited to go back to school but predicted they might be nervous as the first day approaches. He hopes the grief counseling services continue, he said.

"It's going to be a long road back," Connors said. "Back to what I guess is the biggest question. Everyone keeps throwing that word around the new normal. What does the new normal look like? I think everybody kind of has to define that for themselves."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-01-01-Connecticut%20School%20Shooting/id-53e3a6630f3045d0a700199b17d2d6cc

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ALIEN SPACESHIPS TO ATTACK EARTH IN MARCH 2013 ...

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Iterate 36: Pacific Helm

Iterate 35: Maheux and Lanham of Twitterrific 5

Marc, Seth, and Rene talk to Louie Mantia, Brad Ellis, and Jessie Char of Pacific Helm about their backgrounds, their toolsets, how they manage projects, and designing Checkers and The Magazine. It's the funnest episode of Iterate ever!

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