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Keeping CurrentWalking Away From Civil WarWhen Peter Magai Bul and other Sudanese boys came to the attention of aid workers in the early 1990s, they presented a grim image: a river of thousands of children, uprooted from their homes amid the chaos of Sudan's civil war, rail-thin and often naked, walking hundreds of miles in scorching heat. > Read More |
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Spending More with LessAverage lottery players in mostly-black ZIP code areas spent more money and a higher percentage of their income on the lottery in fiscal year 2002 than did average lottery players in mostly-Latino and mostly-white ZIP code areas.> Read More |
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A Closer LookIn a recent letter published in the Chicago Sun-Times, Terry Peterson, the Chicago Housing Authority's chief executive officer, trumpets successes of the city's program to connect public housing residents to social services. But several of his statements were incomplete or misleading, according to city documents.> Read More |
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Courting LatinosWhile the total population of the five collar counties grew 47 percent between 1980 and 2000, the number of Latinos in the area rose more than 300 percent. Some are attributing at least part of the Democratic Party's gains to the surge.> Read More |
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Republican TurfThe Republican Party's advantage in the collar counties has been pivotal to its dominance of Illinois gubernatorial elections. But in 1972, Democrat Daniel Walker carried 42 percent of the vote in the collars on his way to winning. And mild Democratic success there led to close elections in 1982, 1990 and 1998, when Glenn Poshard collected 213,650 collar-county votes, the most since Walker's 257,857.> Read More |
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Inside StoriesCampaigns Vie for Suburban LatinosA shift of minorities has forced Democrats to pay attention to the collar counties in this election--and the strategy is paying dividends.> Read More |
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Inside StoriesOne Year Later, CHA Program a Work in ProgressA year after its launch, city officials are still struggling to define and implement an ambitious program to help public housing tenants get jobs and social services.> Read More |
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Inside StoriesLottery Payoff Uncertain for SchoolsDespite the promise of bringing in more revenue for the state's public schools, lottery money is not a bonus to schools, but just a regular part of the state's education budget.> Read More |
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Fair ShareIn Illinois, all lottery profits are deposited into the state's Common School Fund, joining money from other sources. But the state does not consider the source of lottery proceeds when splitting that fund among Illinois schools.> Read More |
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Little ReturnWhile the Illinois Lottery generated more than $500 million for public education in fiscal year 2000, it accounted for less than 10 percent of the state's spending for primary and secondary education. The lottery's share has steadily decreased since 1985, when the Illinois General Assembly mandated that lottery proceeds go directly toward public education.> Read More |
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Cash FlowIllinois schools received slightly more than a third of the $1.59 billion the state received in lottery proceeds in the 2002 fiscal year.> Read More |
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Top PlayersThe state's top 20 ZIP code areas in fiscal year 2002 lottery sales were from Chicago. Among them, six were at least 70 percent black, four were at least 60 percent Latino and three were at least 70 percent white.> Read More |
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