Dr. Joel Wallach: the Father of Epigenetics.

Introduced by

Dr. Robert Wiedemann, D.C.

Dr. Wiedemann is Academic Advisor to the Academy of Applied Epigenetics

General Discussion to follow.

December 10th. 2015.

2nd Floor of  the Moline Commercial Club

1530 Fifth Avenue.  Moline. Illinois.

7.00 p.m.

The presentation will be available on the website www.qcinstitute.org under ISE ARTICLES.

Free and open to the public.

Doors open at 6.30

Independent Scholars Evenings are sponsored by

THE INSTITUTE FOR CULTURAL & HEALING TRADITIONS, Ltd.

.......................................development through innovative scholarship

The Institute for Cultural & Healing Traditions, Ltd is a 501©3 organization since 1996

www.qcinstitute.org

email: instistutecht@gmail.com

* please note: printed copies of Independent Scholars presentations are available in library at The Moline Commercial Club.



Beginning on Friday, December 11th, area theatre­goers will have the opportunity to see the Iowa Premier of Adam's Gifts, a play by Peter Filichia. The theater critic emeritus for the Star­Ledger in Newark, New Jersey and News 12 New Jersey, he is the author of Let's Put on a Musical; Broadway Musicals: The Biggest Hit of the Season / The Biggest Flop of the Season and Broadway Musical MVPs 1960­2010: The Most Valuable Players of the Last 50 Seasons. Before joining the Theatre World Awards in 1996 as host and head of the selection committee, Filichia served four terms as president of the Drama Desk. He has served on an assessment panel for the National Endowment for the Arts, and is currently critic­in­residence for the University of Cincinnati­Conservatory of Music and the musical theater judge for the ASCAP Awards program.

Clinton Area Showboat Theatre is presenting this Community Production of Adam's Gifts. Performances are scheduled for December 11, 12, 18 and 19 at 7:30pm and on December 13 and 20 at 3pm, located at Ashford University's Mullany Theatre. Adam's Gifts is a modern take on the classic Dickens' story, A Christmas Carol. William Pront is a miserly landlord who is transformed by his relationship with a very sick child. The role of Pront is played by Peter L. Sickels, a priest at Christ Episcopal Church in Clinton. Peter has appeared in the 2013 holiday production of A Christmas Carol (Scrooge) as well as two main­stage Showboat musicals: Annie Get Your Gun (Pawnee Bill) and Cats (Gus). Laurel Decker will play the role of Glynis, a ghostly character who guides Pront along his journey to redemption. Laurel is a pharmacist for Wagner Pharmacy and has appeared in the past two holiday productions (Christmas Belles, A Christmas Carol) as well as numerous Showboat shows, most recently as Charlie Davenport in Annie Get Your Gun. Pront's long­suffering assistant Jason is played by Justin Tegeler, who also portrays Sam, a figure from Pront's past. Justin is a graduate of Clinton High School working in marketing and sales at Tegeler Music. Past Showboat productions include : Singin' in the Rain, Joseph and...Dreamcoat, Rent, and Showboat. The roles of Lisa (Jason's ex-wife) and Mary (Pront's long­ago girlfriend) are played by Showboat newcomer Rebecca Chan. A participant in plays at Hinsdale High School and Western Springs Theatre, Rebecca has also studied at Hofstra University and had training at Second City and Act One Studios, both in Chicago. The character who is best able to bring about Pront's transformation is Adam, played by Jaxon Gerken­Spencer. A student at Eagle Heights in Clinton, Jaxon will play the role of young Pront as well as the title role of Adam. Jaxon participated in CAST's 2013 A Christmas Carol as Peter Cratchit.

Kris Doss is directing Adam's Gifts. A graduate of University of Dubuque with BA in Theatre and BS in Psychology, Kris spent the past summer as Box Office Manager and Education director for CAST where he directed Go Dog Go and Junie B. Jones the Musical. Kris also played Macavity in Cats and the Doctors in Next to Normal. Recently he directed The Diary of Anne Frank and This is a Test with Marquette High School in Bellevue where he will return to direct the spring musical.

Clinton Area Showboat Theatre is excited to announce local auditions for its 2016 Main­Stage "Season of American Classics" which includes: The Odd Couple, The Music Man, South Pacific, Grease and The Glass Menagerie. The Intern Company's Theatre for Young People Season will include : You're a Good Man Charlie Brown and A Year With Frog and Toad.

Auditions will be held February 6th and 7th at the Mullany Theatre at Ashford University. Please prepare 32 bars of a song and bring sheet music in the correct key. An accompanist will be provided. Some of those auditioning will be asked to attend the dance callback at 5pm each night. Roles are available for local actors of all ages and ethnicities in Music Man, South Pacific and Grease. Please email krisjdoss@hotmail.com for an appointment. Limited slots are available.

Teenagers interested in interviewing for the professional intern company are asked to prepare a one minute monologue in addition to the song, as well as to attend an informational meeting from 10­10:30 am on Saturday, February 6th. Please email krisjdoss@hotmail.com for an application packet and handbook.

General admission tickets for Adam's Gifts are $10 for adults and $5 for youth (17 and under) and may be purchased at the door, at Clinton Printing, Wagner Pharmacy, Sweet Woodruff or online at www.clintonshowboat.org. Season tickets for the 2016 Season of American Classics are also available at those sites.
The Be Healthy QC Worksite Wellness Workgroup of the Quad City Health Initiative (QCHI) is pleased to celebrate the first anniversary of its Be Healthy QC Workplace Recognition Program and identify the new organizations that have been recognized. This program was designed to highlight the work of local businesses and organizations and bring awareness to workplace wellness. By highlighting organizations that create a healthier workplace, the Be Healthy QC Worksite Wellness Workgroup strives to create an overall culture of health within the community. The latest organizations to receive recognition are Augustana College, the City of Bettendorf, the City of Davenport, Family Resources Inc., Pleasant Valley School District, QCR Holdings/Quad City Bank and Trust, Rock Valley Physical Therapy, U.P.S., U.S. Army Sustainment Command and the Waste Commission of Scott County. Since the program's inception in November of 2014, a total of 17 organizations have been recognized.

All organizations interested in applying for recognition are invited to complete the "Be Healthy QC: Creating a Healthy Workplace Assessment". The brief assessment identifies worksites in Rock Island and Scott Counties that are choosing to implement evidence based best practices promoting physical activity, nutrition, tobacco cessation and/or overall employee health and well-being. The assessment is intended to be completed by human resource or administrative staff at worksites in the Quad Cities. Instructions and the assessment can be found at www.qchealthinitiative.org under "Our Projects - Be Healthy QC Coalition".

The Be Healthy QC Coalition seeks to align all sectors of our bi-state community and work together on program, policy, systems and environmental changes in order to create a "culture of wellness" that supports healthy eating and active living.

This work is supported by the Quad City Health Initiative, a cross-sector partnership working to create a healthy community since 1999. The Quad City Health Initiative creates collaborative action on health and abides by the core values of commitment, collaboration and creativity. The Initiative seeks to be our community's recognized leader for creating collaborative action on health and abides by the core values of commitment, collaboration and creativity. Major financial support of the Quad City Health Initiative is currently provided by the generous direct and in-kind investments of Genesis Health System and UnityPoint Health-Trinity. Additional financial support is provided by Deere & Company, Mississippi Valley Health, KJWW Engineering Consultants, Davenport Eye Group, Modern Woodmen of America, Community Health Care, ILLOWA Construction and Labor Management Council, United Way of the Quad Cities Area, Hy-Vee, Inc., QCR Holdings, Inc., Quad Cities Chamber of Commerce, Scott County Family Y, Scott County Health Department, and Rock Island County Health Department.

For more information, please call 563-421-2815 or visit our website at www.qchealthinitiative.org or www.behealthyqc.org.

(DES MOINES) - Today, Gov. Terry E. Branstad announced an extension of the time period in which Medicaid providers are able to receive full reimbursement.  This measure allows all Medicaid providers, whether in-network or out-of-network for the partner insurance plans, to receive 100 percent reimbursement for services provided until April 1, 2016.

The Iowa Medicaid Modernization plan always included a safe harbor reimbursement floor of 100 percent current Medicaid rates for any provider who contracts with a partner insurance plan. The extension announced today is intended to give patients peace of mind that they can continue seeing their providers. The measure also gives providers additional time within the safe harbor to contract with a partner plan.

This announcement comes on the heels of news that three major hospital systems have signed up with a managed care organization last week. Extending the safe harbor for provider reimbursement coupled with the hospital systems signing demonstrates Iowa will have a robust provider network for Medicaid patients on Jan. 1, 2016.

This safe harbor extension builds upon an already thoughtful transition to deliver improved health outcomes for Iowans on Medicaid.  Phased-in details were announced back in November and can be found here.

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Due to the vast interest of persons applying for weapons permits, permits will no longer be issued the same day.  If a person actually comes in to the Sheriff's Office and completes their application on the Sheriff's Office kiosk computer, their permit will be issued in the order in which it was received.
Nashville, TN. (December 7, 2015) In partnership with the MLB and MiLB (Minor League Baseball), Veteran Tickets Foundation has provided nearly 80,000 tickets; which is 15% of the forecasted total of 530,000 tickets that Vet Tix will provide this year to military members from all across the country.

"Veteran Tickets Foundation has been overwhelmed by the generosity of our season ticket donors, team ticket donors and partner organizations in 2015. With their support our military, veterans and their families have been able to access more than 530,000 tickets to events in all 50 states. This is an increase of more than 100,000 tickets over last year," said Edward Rausch Chief Operating Officer, chairman & founder of the Veteran Tickets Foundation.

These donations go a long way in providing our military veterans with great memories of our national past time, peace of mind and entertainment that many don't get to experience. Our most recent online survey of more than 28,000 respondents backs this claim when it found that 79% of all members don't attend events because they cannot afford it, while 15% found that the comfort of being around other veterans in public at these events is the biggest reason for attending. In another survey it was noted a family of four spends approximately $100 at a game on team items, parking and refreshments.

For more information please visit Veteran Tickets Foundation website, visit us at MiLB Trade Show at the MLB Winter Meeting 1st year pavilion booth 1105, and/or contact Tiffany Hoffman at Tiffany.hoffman@maagcommplus.com

About Veteran Tickets Foundation (Vet Tix)
Veteran Tickets Foundation (Vet Tix) is a national 501(c)(3) nonprofit foundation supporting our military community. Vet Tix has provided over 1.6 million free event tickets to currently serving military, veterans and family members of those killed in action to sporting events, concerts, performing arts and family activities. Our military and veterans experience many difficult transitions as they reintegrate into their families, communities, and eventually, into civilian life. Attending events improves morale, strengthens family bonds through shared interests and encourages service members to stay engaged with local communities and American life. In gratitude for their service and to support their reintegration, Vet Tix is dedicated to giving back to those who gave us so much. Donations are eligible for tax deductions. Please visit our web site at www.VetTix.org Follow us on Twitter and Facebook. ###

The 30th season of the Quad City Wind Ensemble (QCWE) continues with a free holiday concert featuring the Big River Brass Band (BRBB).  The concert will be Sunday, December 13 at 3:00 p.m. in the Galvin Fine Arts Center, 517 W. Locust St., on the campus of St. Ambrose University in Davenport, IA.  The event is free and open to the public.  This is the 4th year the BRBB has been featured during the holiday QCWE concert.

The QCWE is conducted by Brian Hughes, who was recently named a finalist in The American Prize award for band/wind ensemble conducting.  In 2012 the QCWE was the Community Division winner of The American Prize in Band/Wind Ensemble Performance.  The QCWE was founded in 1987 by Dr. Charles B. DCamp of St. Ambrose University, and has become one of the finest adult bands in the nation.  For additional information, please visit www.qcwindensemble.org, or http://www.facebook.com/qcwindensemble.  Please contact info@qcwindensemble.org for further information about the Quad City Wind Ensemble.

The BRBB was co-founded by Ed Butterfield, retired band director for Rock Island High School and Jerry Miller, John Deere retiree.  Miller saw a picture of the Deere Cornet Band in a book about Deere's history and decided to revive a brass band using Deere employees in order to carry on the Deere tradition.  Ed Butterfield later retired as director and was succeeded by current conductor Brian Burke. Since 2006, regular concerts have been played in Aledo, Geneseo, Rock Island, Moline, Bettendorf, and at the Festival of Trees in Davenport. The BRBB plays in the style of European brass bands and draws literature from classic brass band, jazz arrangements for brass band, and continues to search for new music.  For additional information, please visit their Facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/bigriverbrassband

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DAVENPORT, IA - On December 4, 2015, Sandra Lagos Neda, age 51, a citizen of Honduras, was sentenced by United States District Court Judge Stephanie M. Rose to 12 months and one day in prison after pleading guilty to illegal re-entry into the United States, announced Acting United States Attorney Kevin E. VanderSchel. Lagos Neda was also ordered to pay $100 towards the Crime Victims Fund. After serving her sentence, Lagos Neda will be turned over to immigration authorities for deportation proceedings.

This matter was investigated by the United States Department of Homeland Security-Immigration and Customs Enforcement-Enforcement and Removal Operations, and the case was prosecuted by the United States Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Iowa.

DAVENPORT, IA- On December 4, 2015, Gerald W. Ledford, age 57, of Clinton, Iowa, was sentenced by United States District Court Judge Stephanie M. Rose to four years' probation, with the first six months in home confinement, after pleading guilty to transmitting a threatening communication, announced Acting United States Attorney Kevin E. VanderSchel. Ledford was also ordered to pay $100 to the Crime Victims Fund, to have no contact with the Islamic Society of Boston Cultural Center or any of its employees, to allow a search of his residence under certain conditions, and to restrict his possession of a computer or access to the Internet without prior approval by the United States Probation Office.

On October 20, 2014, an employee of the Islamic Society of Boston Cultural Center (ISBCC) discovered two messages posted to the ISBCC's Facebook page. The ISBCC is located in Roxbury, Massachusetts, and is a member of the New England Muslim community. According to its website, the ISBCC is not just a mosque, but a dynamic cultural center that is designed to serve the entire community by offering a variety of educational, spiritual, and social services. The first post made derogatory statements about "Mohamed," and made threats to harm Muslims. The second post also made a threat of violence toward Muslims.

The Facebook page posting these two messages displayed the name "Gerry Ledford" and was identified with a unique account identification number. This account was deactivated on November 14, 2014. A "friend" of this account was another Facebook publically viewable page under the name of "Gerry.ledford.3," also with a unique account identification number. Search warrants were obtained for both of these Facebook accounts. Based on information obtained from these search warrants these accounts had certain personal identifiers, such as date of birth, hometown, current city of residence, educational history and digital photographs that were consistent with the same personally identifiable information about Gerald Ledford. Both accounts logged in from an identified Internet Protocol (IP) address identified to a known family member of Ledford's. Information obtained from the search warrants showed that one of these identified Facebook accounts conducted a search for the ISBCC on October 19, 2014. A day before the posted messages, one of these Facebook accounts was used to search for information about the "Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant" and two minutes later a search for information on the "Islamic Society of Boson Cultural Center (ISBCC)." Additional searches were conducted on similar topics both before and after October 19, 2014.

Gerald Ledford admitted in his plea proceeding that he was the individual user registered to these Facebook accounts, that on or about October 19, 2014, he knowingly posted these two threatening messages, and that he individually selected this victim because of the religious affiliation of ISBCC. Gerald Ledford further admitted that he knew that these two messages would be viewed as a threat.

This matter was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigations and the Clinton, Iowa, Police Department. The case was prosecuted by the United States Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Iowa and the United States Attorney's Office for the District of Massachusetts.

Q: Why are you working to increase imports of pharmaceuticals from Canada into the United States?

 

A: Americans ought to have the ability to benefit from free markets, including when they fill their prescription medicines. It makes no sense that a woman in Ottumwa, Iowa, would pay double or triple the amount for the same medication that her sister might pay in Ottawa, Ontario, as an example.  I don't blame Americans who are fed up with subsidizing for the rest of the world the research and development costs that it takes to bring life-saving miracle medicine to market. This is a free trade issue. Imports create competition and keep the domestic industry more responsive to consumers. A healthy dose of competition results in better services, better prices and better choices for consumers. From airlines to restaurants and gas stations, consumers will spend their travel, entertainment and fuel dollars where they can stretch them for the best value.  The same goes for insurance premiums and prescription medicines.  At the same time, policymakers must protect the ingenuity of the free market system that rewards innovation and the discovery of breakthrough medicine. It's a tricky balance to enact patent and trade laws that foster innovation and keep medicines affordable and accessible to Americans. One thing is for certain. Americans are paying more than their fair share for the high cost of pharmaceutical research and development.

Q: Are Americans allowed to import drugs from Canada?

 

A: Congress passed a law in 2003 that allows the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to permit pharmacists and wholesalers to import prescription medicines from Canada. The FDA also may issue a waiver to individuals. But first, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) must certify that importation would not pose risks to public health and safety. Moreover, HHS must certify that importation also would lower prices for the same prescription medicine sold in the United States.  Let's remember that American consumers have grown accustomed to the idea that "you get what you pay for." That couldn't be more important in a policy debate about importing prescription medicine. When cancer or diabetic patients pay for their life-saving treatments and medicines, they deserve to know they are getting the safest, highest quality product. That's why importation of prescription drugs needs to come from a trading partner with a regulatory regime comparable to the U.S. regime, for example.  Taxpayers and consumers are coughing up more and more out-of-pocket to pay for prescription medicine. Policymakers have an obligation to figure out the best way to keep prescription prices affordable without crippling innovation. That's why I've urged HHS to use its full authority under the law to allow for pharmaceutical drug imports if certain circumstances are met, including significant and inexplicable price hikes and that the imported drug is produced by the name brand manufacturer that originally developed the drug or by a reputable generic manufacturer that commonly does business in the United States.

Q: What other measures are you working on to address instability, affordability and accessibility for prescription medicine?

 

A: In November, I released the results of an 18-month, bipartisan investigation that took a deep dive into the pricing and marketing strategy of a name brand drug prescribed to treat Hepatitis C. The price tag for a 12-week treatment cost $84,000 or $1,000 per pill. Taxpayers have a tremendous stake in this debate as federal programs pay for a significant share of prescription drug coverage for the elderly, individuals with disabilities and veterans. That's why I'm also working to crack down on anti-competitive arrangements, known as "pay for delay" deals that abuse litigation to keep affordable generics off the pharmacy store shelves. My bipartisan Preserve Access to Affordable Generics Act would help make sure consumers have access to the cost-saving generic drugs.

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