DES MOINES, IA (08/16/2012)(readMedia)-- Young Fairgoers pedaled their way to victory at the Pedal Power Pull held Tuesday at the 2012 Iowa State Fair.

In the Pedal Power Pull, kids attempt to pedal a mini tractor 40 feet (a "full pull") pulling a box weighing from 80 pounds for 4-year-olds to 260 pounds for 11-year-olds. In the event of a tie or two full pulls, weight is added and a re-pull is held to determine the winner.

Results below:

GIRLS

4-Year-Olds

1) Reagen Liggett, Corydon, 26 feet, 4 inches

2) Lillianna Wayne, Iowa City, 22 feet, 4 inches

3) Katelyn Moffitt, Indianola, 21 feet, 8 inches

4) Kylee Beamer, Dallas Center, 21 feet, 3 inches

5) Landri Steenhard, Ankeny, 18 feet, 7 inches

5-Year-Olds

1) Stacia Linder, Deep River, 33 feet, 7 inches

2) Alyssa Bartlett, Pleasant Hill, 29 feet, 6 inches

3) Samantha Price, Bloomfield, 29 feet

4) Rylee Jiras, Oxford, 27 feet, 6 inches

5) Emma Cook, Colfax, 23 feet, 4 inches

6-Year-Olds

1) Elizabeth Stohlmann, Marengo, Full Pull, 34 feet, 6 inches

2) Grace Prybil, Riverside, Full Pull, 31 feet, 2 inches

3) Laney Jiras, Oxford, Full Pull, 26 feet, 9 inches

4) Isabella Van Oosbree, Full Pull, Des Moines, 25 feet, 6 inches

5) Allie Turnbull, Mingo, Full Pull, 25 feet, 4 inches

7-Year-Olds

1) Quinn Grubbs, Casey, 27 feet, 8 inches

2) Madeline Barker, Floris, 26 feet, 3 inches

3) Julia Bents, Ames, 20 feet, 9 inches

4) Erin Renshaw, Cedar Rapids, 19 feet, 3 inches

5) Lydia Sandbulte, Waukee, 16 feet, 6 inches

8-Year-Olds

1) Becca Mohlis, Tripoli, Full Pull

2) Katie Schlosser, Colfax, 39 feet, 6 inches

3) Katie Wardlow, Kahoka, Mo., 37 feet, 5 inches

4) Clare Schnicker, Mount Pleasant, 32 feet

5) Keely Malone, Morning Sun, 21 feet

9-Year-Olds

1) Kenzie Smith, Knoxville, Full Pull

2) Megan Van Zante, Sully, 39 feet, 7 inches

3) Sky Weber, Harper, 22 feet, 1 inch

4) Tatum Grubbs, Casey, 20 feet, 7 inches

5) Kayla Jiras, Oxford, 19 feet, 9 inches

10-Year-Olds

1) Korie Jack, Kellogg, Full Pull, 36 feet, 2 inches

2) Tala Saulmon, Memphis, Mo., Full Pull, 30 feet, 6 inches

3) Renee Grimm, Audubon, 30 feet, 8 inches

4) Learia Wardlow, Kahoka, Mo., 28 feet

5) Rowan Langford, Des Moines, 21 feet, 1 inch

11-Year-Olds

1) Morgan Hines, Clinton, Full Pull, Full Pull, Full Pull

2) Lexi Mohlis, Tripoli, Full Pull, Full Pull, 35 feet, 9 inches

3) Faith Diephuis, Farmington, Full Pull, Full Pull, 33 feet, 6 inches

4) Camilla Schlosser, Colfax, Full Pull, 39 feet, 4 inches

5) Madison Warschkow, Iowa Falls, 33 feet, 7 inches

BOYS

4-Year-Olds

1) Evan Stohlmann, Marengo, 26 feet

2) Dawnson Elliot, Bloomfield, 25 feet, 1 inch

3) Trice Van Ryswyk, Chariton, 22 feet, 7 inches

4) Cooper Linder, Deep River, 22 feet, 6 inches

5) Truman Van Oosbree, Des Moines, 19 feet, 5 inches

5-Year-Olds

1) Kaiden Smith, Knoxville, 36 feet, 4 inches

2) Leyton Steenhard, Ankeny, 33 feet

3) Colton Metcalf, Pleasantville, 32 feet, 11 inches

4) Tanner Klejah, Grant City, Mo., 32 feet, 6 inches

5) Michael Jensen, Winterset, 31 feet, 10 inches

6-Year-Olds

1) Ethan Thimmes, Mechanicsville, Full Pull

2) Isaac Wardlow, Kahoke, Mo., 32 feet, 1 inch

3) Cade Odell, Princeton, 27 feet, 9 inches

4) Brayden Moeller, Urbandale, 26 feet

5tie) Milo Staver, Afton, 22 feet, 6 inches

5tie) Jesse Kenseth, Ankeny, 22 feet, 6 inches

7-Year-Olds

1) Brandon Greiner, Washington, 38 feet, 5 inches

2) Lanten Simpson, Albia, 32 feet, 8 inches

3) Ryan Doud, Batavia, 31 feet

4) Zachary Bradfield, Huxley, 30 feet, 6 inches

5) Luke Van Essen, Pella, 29 feet, 5 inches

8-Year-Olds

1) Kenny Schlosser, Colfax, 38 feet, 7 inches

2) William O'Connor, Clearfield, 37 feet, 2 inches

3) Bryce Moffitt, Indianola, 34 feet, 9 inches

4) John Koll, Urbandale, 32 feet, 2 inches

5) Kai Malone, Morning Sun, 30 feet, 6 inches

9-Year-Olds

1) Benjamin Moffit, Indianola, Full Pull, Full Pull, 36 feet, 4 inches

2) Grant Prybil, Riverside, Full Pull, Full Pull, 32 feet, 4 inches

3) Dominic Baker, Des Moines, Full Pull, 38 feet, 2 inches

4) Jaxton Elliot, Bloomfield, Full Pull, 27 feet, 4 inches

5) Thomas Schnicker, Mount Pleasant, 39 feet, 4 inches

10-Year-Olds

1) Ethan Diephuis, Farmington, Full Pull, Full Pull

2) Tristan Clark, Swan, Full Pull, 37 feet, 9 inches

3) Dillon Berynett, Panora, Full Pull, 33 feet, 8 inches

4) David Wedemeyer, Lake City, Full Pull, 30 feet

5) Nathan Kroeger, Carroll, Full Pull, 28 feet, 6 inches

11-Year-Olds

1) Koby Van Houweling, Prairie City, Full Pull

2) Brady Smith, Knoxville, 33 feet

3) Noah Bassett, Urbandale, 31 feet, 2 inches

4) Sage Bents, Ames, 25 feet, 1 inch

"Nothing Compares" to the 2012 Iowa State Fair, August 9-19. The Fairgrounds are located at East 30th and East University Avenue, just 10 minutes east of downtown Des Moines, and are open 7 a.m. to 1 a.m. each day of the Fair. Exhibit hours may vary. For more information, call 800/545-FAIR or visit iowastatefair.org.

* * *

MOUNT VERNON, IA (08/14/2012)(readMedia)-- Cornell College in Mount Vernon, Iowa, named 321 students to the Dean's List for the spring semester. The following students in your area were named to the list.

Leanna Doyle of Davenport, earned Highest Honors.

Christine Nguyen of Davenport, earned Highest Honors.

A grade point average of at least 3.6 on a 4.0 scale is required for this designation. "Highest honors" are granted to students with 4.0 averages; "high honors" are awarded to students with 3.8 to 3.99 averages; and "honors" include grade point averages of 3.6 to 3.79.

One of the 40 "Colleges That Change Lives," Cornell College in Mount Vernon, Iowa, is a national liberal arts college with a distinctive One Course At A Time (OCAAT) academic calendar. The OCAAT schedule provides students with intellectual immersion, academic focus, and unique freedom to shed the confines of the traditional classroom to study off-campus, pursue research, or accept an internship-all without missing out on other classes. Founded in 1853, the college's entire hilltop campus is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

For more information, visit www.cornellcollege.edu.

Mount Carroll. IL- Timber Lake Playhouse (TLP) closes its 2012 season with a stunning collection of compositions of songs from Rodgers & Hammerstein with the show, Some Enchanted Evening. The final production will feature favorite song selections that audiences will love from Oklahoma!, The King and I, The Sound of Music, South Pacific and many others.

Guest Artist Samantha Dubina returns to TLP to perform in this special production. Dubina has been seen in TLP productions for the last 5 years, including White Christmas, All Shook Up, Church Basement Ladies and The 25th Annual Putnam Spelling Bee. She said she is excited to be a part of the upcoming production because "the music is beautiful and it's been such a long time since I've been in a show that's almost all choral singing." Dubina resides and in Chicago, performing with theatre companies such as Griffin Theatre, Bailiwick Rep, Northbrook Children's Theatre, Metropolis Performing Arts, Noble Fool Theatricals, and Bailiwick Chicago, where she serves as Casting Administrator. In the fall, Sam will be playing Rachel Jackson in the Midwest Premiere of Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson.

Some Enchanted Evening will also feature newcomer Melissa Griffith from Oklahoma City. She recently received a Kennedy Center Commendation for Distinguished Achievements in Vocal Arrangements for Flipside: The Patti Page Story. Rounding out the small cast will also include TLP residents Henry McGinniss (Ren in Footloose), Dryden Meints (Sky Masterson in Guys and Dolls), Analisha Santini (Bertha in Boeing Boeing) and Kyle Brazel (Willard Hewitt in Footloose) who performs and music directs the production.

Some Enchanted Evening performs August 16-26. Performances are at 7:30pm, Tuesday through Saturdays and there are 2pm matinees on Sunday and Wednesday. New this season, there is also a Saturday matinee performance on opening weekends at 2pm. Tickets are available through the box office during regular business hours, 11am - 6pm daily, at www.timberlakeplayhouse.org or 815-244-2035. Timber Lake Playhouse is located at 8215 Black Oak Road, Mount Carroll.

Timber Lake Playhouse, What's Your Story?

Some-Enchanted-Evening.jpg

This program is partially supported by a grant for the Illinois Arts Council, a state agency.

Production Sponsors are Kunes Country Auto Group and Compliance Signs.

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CHICAGO - August 10, 2012. Governor Pat Quinn today took action on the following bill:

Bill No.: SB 3766

An Act Concerning: Public Utilities

Amends the Public Utilities Act to void any previously approved sourcing agreements by the ICC as it relates to the Chicago Clean Energy (CCE) project, and seeks to address several contested issues in the current docket case (11-0710) including the debt ratio, the projected annual output, and the cost recovery percentages.

Action: Vetoed

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Ballet Quad Cities 2012-2013 Season Tickets

NOW ON SALE


Bold.

Jazzy.

Contemporary.

Classical.

Professional Dance.

 

Save time and service fees when you

buy season tickets!

 

You don't want to miss the exciting 2012-2013 season with LIVE MUSIC, the return of

Domingo Rubio, plus amazing performances!

 

Ballet Quad Cities' 16th season will include live music with Orchestra Iowa for both the holiday favorite The Nutcracker and the most beloved fairytale of all times Cinderella.

Ballet Quad Cities' historic 2012-2013 season officially opens September 28 and 29 as Dracula is performed at the Scottish Rite Cathedral in Moline, with renowned artist Domingo Rubio dancing the lead role of Dracula. The original choreography and music collage is by the company's resident choreographer Deanna Carter; the ballet loosely follows the Bram Stoker's piece of literature "Dracula".

 

 

2012-2013 marks the beginning of an exciting cultural partnership between the Ballet and Orchestra Iowa. The two premier state performing arts organizations team up for two classic productions. The Nutcracker and Cinderella will be staged at both the Paramount Theatre in Cedar Rapids and the Adler Theatre in Davenport.

 

Waltz of the Flowers

 

Annual subscriptions for the 2012-2013 season may be made by downloading the order form TODAY!

 

 


 

Questions?

 

Call (309) 786-3779

 

E-mail dkosterballetqc@sbcglobal.net

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Committee of the Whole - 8:00 am
Board Room, 1st Floor, Administrative Center

Facilities & Economic Development

1. Approval of temporary road closures for the Quad City Air Show. (Item 1)

2. Approval of the first reading of an ordinance to amend Chapter 10, Sec. 10-10 of the
Scott County Code to establish a new "No Parking" area in Parkview. (Item 2)

3. Approval of purchase of an aluminum box culvert. (Item 3)

4. Approval of award of bid for fine paper purchase. (Item 4)

5. Approval of award of bid for the purchase of a Jail transport vehicle for the Sheriff's
Office. (Item 5)

Human Resources

6. Discussion of pending litigation pursuant to Iowa Code Section 21.5(1)(c). - CLOSED
SESSION

7. Approval of personnel actions. (Item 7)

Finance & Intergovernmental

8. Discussion of setting upcoming canvass dates: North Scott School District Election
on Tuesday, September 18 at 8:00 a.m. and General Election on Wednesday,
November 14 at 1:00 p.m.

9. Approval of beer/liquor license for Mickey's Country Cafe.

10. Resolution approving the appointment of Tony Brus (Muscatine County appointment)
to the Benefited Fire District #6. (Item 10)

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Regular Board Meeting - 5:30 pm
Board Room, 1st Floor, Administrative Center

Presentation

1. Urban County Coalition update by Murphy Consultants.
August 7, 2012 - Cedar Rapids, Iowa - Theatre Cedar Rapids celebrated its 2011-12 season by honoring volunteers at Ovations Saturday, August 4, 2012.
The awards program featured video montages of every production from the past season; remarks by directors and staff members; and special awards for actors and a variety of volunteers. The celebration also included naming TCR's Volunteer of the Year.  Images of the event can be viewed at TCR's volunteer Facebook gallery by clicking here.
Award Recipients:
  • Volunteer of the Year
    • Emmy Palmersheim
  • Fed Hedges Lifetime Achievement Award  
    • Joan Sammons
  • Outstanding Performance by a Supporting Actor in a Play 
    • Andy Lesieur as the Mad Hatter in Alice in Wonderland
  • Outstanding Performance by a Supporting Actress in a Play 
    • Marty Norton as Miss Prism in The Importance of Being Earnest
  • Golden Badge Award  
    • Doreen Meier
  • Outstanding Performance by a Lead Actor in a Play  
    • David Morton as Oscar Wilde in Gross Indecency: The Three Trials of Oscar Wilde
  • Outstanding Performance by a Lead Actress in a Play  
    • Lindsay Prince as Georganne Darby in Five Women Wearing the Same Dress
  • Technical Volunteer of the Year  
    • Rachel Potthoff
  • Outstanding Performance by a Supporting Actor in a Musical  
    • Aaron Canterbury as George in The Wedding Singer
  • Outstanding Performance by a Supporting Actress in a Musical  
    • Tina Conroy as Velma Von Tussle in Hairspray
  • Outstanding Performance by a Lead Actor in a Musical  
    • Michael Holmes as Edna Turnblad in Hairspray
  • Outstanding Performance by a Lead Actress in a Musical  
    • Emma Drtina as Tracy Turnblad in Hairspray
  • Outstanding Performance by a Male Youth  
    • Josh Payne as Link Larkin in Hairspray
  • Outstanding Performance by a Female Youth  
    • Carly Herron as Penny Lou Pingleton in Hairspray
  • 2011-2012 Season Spirit Award winners:
    • Lovar Davis Kidd and Conor Schulz for "13"
    • Nicolette Coiner-Winn and Craig Allen for "Superior Donuts"
    • Danny Mulka and Greg Smith for "Damn Yankees"
    • Amy Marner and Lucie Riddell for "A Christmas Carol"
    • Angela Billman, Kevin Hartnett, Nicolette Coiner-Winn for "The Importance of Being Earnest"
    • David Morton and Andrew Clancey for "Gross Indecency: the Three Trials of Oscar Wilde"
    • Michaela Arnold and Rob Merritt for "The Wedding Singer
    • Rachel Potthoff, Andrea Kelly and Lindsay Prince for "Five Women Wearing the Same Dress"
    • Theresa Alt and Len Struttmann for "Alice in Wonderland"
    • Susie Streit and Shari Miller for "On Golden Pond"
    • Mike Holmes and Stephen Banks for "Hairspray"
  • Outstanding Play   
    • Five Women Wearing the Same Dress
  • Outstanding Musical   
    • Hairspray

 

 

 


Hard-Won First-Amendment Freedom is Again in Bureaucratic Crosshairs, Lawyer Says

While recent protests over proposed legislation addressing media entertainment piracy were loud and widespread, a veteran TV executive says the public seems unaware of an even greater threat to our free speech and a free press.

"People voiced concern about whether SOPA and PIPA (the House and Senate piracy bills) would limit free speech on the Internet. But the resurrection of television's old Fairness Doctrine, so government could again edit and censor news is a far more ominous threat," says Corydon B. Dunham, former 25-year NBC-TV executive and author of Government Control of News: A Constitutional Challenge (www.freespeech.authorsxpress.com).

"The Federal Communications Commission has drafted a new policy for government control of news.  And even though a special study last year recommended that such a censorship policy be scrapped, it's still pending, with the potential for action. Frankly, I'm surprised there is no outcry or debate about this political threat to distort news and speech and suppress them."

The FCC's proposed new Localism, Balance and Diversity Doctrine mirrors many aspects of the long-dead Fairness Doctrine, he says. That doctrine was revoked in 1987 when the FCC and the courts found that it had suppressed news, chilled speech, imposed censorship, prevented criticism of the administration then in office, and created an atmosphere of "timidity and fear."

"The new localism doctrine is very similar." Dunham says. "It would force television stations to provide government 'localism' in news production and coverage - as well as revise news reports to comply with government dictates on news balance and viewpoint diversity. Failure to comply could mean loss of the station license to broadcast.

"It may sound good to some people, but in the past, government investigations and regulation enforcement deterred news broadcasts about public and political issues. to keep their broadcast licenses, stations had to conform their news and political reports to what they believed FCC commissioners would approve or revise news reports to what the commissioners did approve.

"The FCC itself finally revoked that doctrine as against the public interest. Since the FCC is planning to transfer to the internet the broadcast spectrum now used by local TV, news websites ultimately could fall under the new Internet rules."

Here are some highlights of the old doctrine and the new one:

• The Fairness Doctrine ruled TV news broadcasters from 1949 to 1987. Believing that the communication power of this, at the time, new medium concentrated great power in few hands, the government mandated that broadcast stations provide what the FCC would decide and dictate as  appropriate "contrasting view" coverage.

• Under the Localism Doctrine, enforcement would not only be the job of the FCC, but also of a local board added at each station to monitor programming, including news. the members of that board would be required to recommend against a station's license renewal if  they thought station programming news was not complying with this new FCC  policy on localism, balance and diversity.

• Under localism rules, a three-vote majority of five politically appointed FCC commissioners at a central government agency would make local news judgments. They would override independent, local TV reporters and editors to impose government agency views on what should be reported and how.

"This new policy, if activated, would directly target news and speech on television and enable an administration to use news coverage to manipulate and influence public opinion about important public and political issues," Dunham says. "The effect would inevitably be something quite different from independent news."

That isn't speculation, Dunham notes. It's history.

About Corydon B. Dunham

Corydon B. Dunham is a Harvard Law School graduate. His Government Control of News study was initiated at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Smithsonian Institute, and expanded and developed for the Corydon B. Dunham Fellowship for the First Amendment at Harvard Law School and the Dunham Open Forum for First Amendment Values at Bowdoin College. Dunham was an executive at NBC from 1965 to 1990. He oversaw legal and government matters and broadcast standards. He was on the board of directors of the National Television Academy of Arts and Sciences, American Corporate Counsel Association, and American Arbitration Association among other posts.

Mount Carroll, IL-The Magic Owl Children's Theatre at Timber Lake Playhouse is presenting the classic musical for kids of all ages, You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown. The show, staged by TLP Artistic Director James Beaudry, enjoyed a successful week-long run earlier in the summer and returns August 7th, 9th, 10th and 11th at 11 a.m. All tickets are $6 and the show runs about an hour.

Cast Shot of Charlie Brown.jpg

Charles Schultz's beloved Peanuts characters were a mainstay of American comics and television for half a century, and they continue to entertain us in reruns today. Featuring Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Linus, Lucy, Sally and Schroeder, the stage production is full of the joyous wonder, good humor and naive wisdom of these characters that resonate with both children and adults. The musical, based on the original comic strips, was written by Clark Gesner and began its life as a record album in 1966. A year later, the stage adaptation opened in New York City, where it ran for over four years.

The cast includes six performers from TLP's resident acting company. Charlie Brown is played by Tim Wessel, who thrilled audiences as Nicely Nicely Johnson in Guys & Dolls. Anne-Marie Trabolsi, praised for her comedic deadpan as Urleen in Footloose, is Sally Brown, Charlie's sister. Henry McGinniss (Ren in Footloose) is Schroeder. Zak Jacobs, known for his tremendous skills as a dancer, takes on Linus. Lucy is played by Hayley Gribble, who was unforgettable as Adelaide in Guys & Dolls. Joe Capstick, Nathan Detroit to Gribble's Adelaide and currently starring as the Master of Ceremonies in Cabaret, plays the lovable Snoopy and serves as choreographer for the production.

Tickets are available by calling the box office at 815-244-2035 during regular business hours, 11 a.m. through 6 p.m. daily. They may also be purchased online www.timberlakeplayhouse.org. Timber Lake Playhouse, located at 8215 Black Oak Road in Mount Carroll, IL is the state's longest-running professional summer theatre.

Timber Lake Playhouse, What's Your Story?

This program is partially supported by a grant for the Illinois Arts Council, a state agency.

Production Sponsors are Kunes Country Auto Group and Compliance Signs.

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COO Advocates Values-in-Action Courses for All Students

Barclays, Lehman Brothers, JP Morgan - it seems every time we turn around, another financial giant is accused of lying, cheating and stealing.

It's not your imagination, says Rakesh Malhotra, a longtime COO who has worked in Asia, East Europe and United States and led cross-cultural diverse teams.

"White-collar crime convictions in the United States alone have increased 17.8 percent in the last five years alone," he says. "Last year, the Securities Exchange Commission filed a record 735 enforcement actions."

And it's not just hedge fund operators and money traders. White-collar crimes include identity theft, cheating on taxes, health-care fraud - crimes as readily committed by employees at the local big-box store as suits in penthouse offices.

"The problem is one of values," says Malhotra, author of Adventures of Tornado Kid: Whirling Back Home Towards Timeless Values (www.FiveGlobalValues.com). "I have worked in several countries, recruiting, hiring, training and retaining employees. I found that in every culture, the same core values play a key role in the success of both employees and the corporation.

"Unfortunately, they are not taught in school - not in grade school or in most business schools. While we would benefit from having values taught at all age levels, for now they are learned mostly from parents, mentors, inspiring teachers and others who shape young lives."

It's as important for the business to have what Malhotra has identified as five essential global values as it is for the employees, he says.

"The business has to show that these ethics are implemented and acted upon. Otherwise, the employee with values, the one instructed to, say, lie about a product, will feel secure about reporting such conduct without being fired."

What are these values and how can they be taught?

• Responsibility: There is nothing more fundamental to being an adult in our society than accountability. Parents can create cause-and-effect circumstances, such as letting a teen borrow the car provided they put gas in it. Breaking such a pact though, because of a bad grade in school, creates a mixed message. When children learn responsibility, they know that happiness comes from doing the right thing.

• Compassion: It's not just a term for being nice; compassion is a form of intelligence - an empathetic ability to see a situation through another's eyes and to feel what another person feels. When adults are compassionate, they reach out to help others because they can feel others' pain - and the relief and gratitude of help, sympathy or encouragement.

• Integrity: Integrity is the glue that holds together all of the values. When given an option to stray from our values, such as lying for the sake of convenience, integrity is there to hold us accountable.

• Peace: Our ability to manage conflicts amicably is a direct result of a peaceful mind and attitude. Those who value peace view anger, jealousy and hostility as the barriers to communication that they are. In all settings, business and domestic, conflicts will arise - it is inevitable. We must work through these peacefully if we are to move forward.

• Love: You must love what you do, passionately. Do your work and your organization in some way contribute to the welfare of people? That is the reason for your passion. With love, you contribute to the greater good and feel gratified.

About Rakesh Malhotra

Rakesh Malhotra has worked in, lived in or traveled to more than 40 countries. During this time, he studied human behavior in relation to core values as a means hire, promote and manage effectively. He has focused on what influences performance and what makes some employees perform at a higher level than others. Malhotra holds a master's in Public Administration and several diplomas in business education.

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