| Sittercity Helps Parents Separate Breastfeeding From Beer This Super ...
CHICAGO, Jan. 31 /PRNewswire/ -- This Sunday, many moms and dads will either head out to a friend's to watch the big game or host their beloved football fanatic friends at their own home. But what happens when your Super Bowl party isn't Adults Only? With kids added to the mix you'll start to have visions of playing patty cake instead of slapping a high five after a touchdown, assuming you're not too obsessed with preventing little Johnny from knocking over the chips and guac onto your newly cleaned carpets. That's why Sittercity.com, America's largest and most trusted online source for caregivers, urges football-loving parents to not only stock up on chips and beer, but also arm their parties with a much-needed babysitter. "There's nothing more frustrating to your singleton friends and diehard football fans than a Super Bowl party turning into a daycare operation," said Genevieve Thiers, Founder and CEO of Sittercity.
Man pushes pregnant ex into hamburger buns
A 19-year-old Fort Walton Beach man was arrested after shoving his pregnant ex-girlfriend into a stack of hamburger buns. The man entered Back Yard Burgers on Mary Esther Cutoff and yelled into the kitchen that he wanted to speak with the victim, according to an Okaloosa County Sheriff’s Office offense report. When she refused to come out, the man entered the kitchen and began to yell at her and others in the back. The man then placed his hands on the woman’s chest and shoved her, causing her to fall backwards onto a stack of crates containing hamburger buns. The victim stood back up and asked the man to leave several times, according to the report. He pushed her again and she tried to enter the manager’s office. The man attempted to close the door while she was in the doorway, but she managed to move before she was hit.
Terrapin's troubles
While numerous suburban home builders are struggling, Chicago-based Terrapin Properties LLC is emerging as the first major condo developer here to see operations spin out of control in the current housing slowdown. A foreclosure suit filed against Terrapin over a project in Kenosha, Wis., indicates the company could be dissolved. Indymac Bank, the primary lender on the 162-unit condo development in Kenosha, last month sued Terrapin for more than $13 million in back debts. But the case isn't a garden-variety foreclosure in which a lender has no recourse beyond getting the keys to the property. .
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