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  Chicago, IL - Ald. Bob Fioretti (2nd) will begin his biannual clean and green event at ...
CHICAGO, IL – Filmmakers 21 years old and younger are invited to submit their short ...
  Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White announced that the Secretary of State Police issued 187 ...
 Superintendent Koch named president of the Council of Chief State School Officers   Springfield, IL – State ...
San Francisco, CA (BlackNews.com) -- Terrance Amen says the Black community can become prosperous by ...
  Ball is in Cardinal George’s court   By Chinta Strausberg   Echoing what he said during a recent town ...
 A former Chicago Housing Authority mailroom employee has been charged with stealing rent money sent ...
   Tickets on sale Aug. 5     Chicago, IL – The critically acclaimed Giordano Jazz Dance Chicago (GJDC) presents ...
Rev. Lottie Woods Hall, pastor of The Intercessory Center and host of "The Joy Factor", ...

Archive for July 21st, 2010

African American medical anthropologist to release Engenetics Paper detailing scientific experiment that supports Charles Darwin’s Theory of Evolution

Posted by PMac On July - 21 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Engenetics: The Science of Species

Santa Cruz, CA (BlackNews.com) — Santa Cruz-based Medical Anthropologist, Kofi Busia, will release the ENGENETICS PAPER online at www.engenetics.net. This highly anticipated report details a scientific experiment that Busia’s team conducted resulting in a model to support Charles Darwin’s theory of Evolution.

Throughout the years, innovative scientists, biologists, sociologists and anthropologists have developed life changing theories and each was ultimately either supported or proved unachievable with a successful model. James Watt developed the steam engine but the Industrial Revolution only took off after Sadi Carnot provided a model. Karl Marx had a theory to improve working class conditions but Nobel Prize Winner, Paul Samuelson developed a model that proved Marx’s theory would fail.

Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution, “Natural Selection,” was presented in 1859 in his publication On the Origin of Species. When Darwin proposed his theory, he did not offer a sound model (in the strict mathematical sense) to support his observations. Because of this deficiency, his theory has been attacked from the beginning and debate about the mechanisms of evolution continue to this day.

As a Medical Anthropologist, Busia’s focus began with the social aspects of disease – how disease is defined, how it fits into society’s overall ethos, how and whether treatment is approached, etc. A desire to unify the practical, theoretical, and psychological aspects of biology, society, health, mind, body and development led to an internationally renowned career in the teaching and philosophy of yoga where questions of death and dying, and medical ethics in general, led to a particular interest and research in Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s. Examining what “life” is, how it is defined, and how it is approached, of course, involves biology. And, in his pursuit to find a way to determine what made biological organisms what they are, Busia proved that all biological entities both on this planet and any yet to be discovered are subject to Darwinian evolution.

The ENGENETICS PAPER outlines Busia’s findings in detail, describing his Brassica Rapa experiment and the resulting data and values; Busia reveals the simple premises behind the model at the basis of Engentics and his derived four laws of biology and four maxims of ecology. The social implications of Busia’s findings are monumental.

All are invited to visit www.engenetics.net for further information.

Small business owners explain health reform benefits for Illinois small businesses

Posted by PMac On July - 21 - 2010 1 COMMENT
  
Small Business Owners Explain Benefits of Reform Just As Tax Credits, Help for Early Retirees, Other Benefits to Small Business Begin to Roll Out
 
 
 Pattie Cagney Sheehan, owner of Second Act; Garry Apelian, owner of Apelian Carpets and Orientals, Inc., and Jonathan VanderBrug of the Campaign for Better Health Care, will hold a press conference today detailing the benefits for small business under the recently enacted Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.
 
On July 23, another benefit of the new health reform law will take effect.
In 2010, four million small businesses nationwide will get a tax cut to help them pay for health insurance for their employees.  They will get a credit up to 35 percent of the money the small business owner spends on premiums for employees.  Those credits will increase over time, eventually reaching 50 percent when the Insurance Exchanges go into effect. Small businesses with up to 25 employees that pay average annual wages below $50,000 and provide health insurance will be eligible for the credit.
 
The news conference will be held at the Second Act, 3020 N. Lincoln Avenue, beginning at 11 a.m.
According to participants, America’s 27 million small businesses are the backbone and engine of the US economy. Over half of the private work force takes home a small business paycheck. The ingenuity and hard work of America’s dynamic small businesses create three quarters of our new jobs year after year.
 
Spiraling health care costs are forcing small business owners to choose between providing health benefits or jobs. The new health reform law rewards America’s entrepreneurs by leveling the playing field.
 
Small business owners are getting tax credits this year to make healthcare coverage for their employees more affordable. With the new reform law in place, they can provide the coverage they’ve wanted to be able to give their employees, but haven’t always been able to afford. They’ll have more freedom to do what they do best – innovate, reinvest in their companies, and bring aboard new talented workers.
 
The new law will be implemented over a five-year period (2010-2014) to avoid disruption to the existing system and make transitions as smooth as possible. The general approach is to build upon the existing employer-based health system that employers and employees are used to: insurance will still be purchased from private insurance companies as well as not-for-profit plans, and the private sector healthcare system of doctors, hospitals and other providers will be maintained. Medicare will still cover retirees and Medicaid will continue as it does currently to cover uninsured children and low-income adults, with new flexibility to cover more people.
 
FOR MORE INFORMATION:    www.cbhconline.org
 
About the Campaign for Better Health Care
We believe that accessible, affordable, quality health care is a basic human right for all people.  The Campaign for Better Health Care is the state’s largest coalition representing over 300 diverse organizations, organizing to help create and advocate for an accessible, quality health care system for all.  For more information, visit www.cbhconline.org.
 
 

Gov. Quinn appoints Goodman Theatre Artistic Associate Henry Godinez to four-year term on the Illinois Arts Council

Posted by PMac On July - 21 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

 

Chicago, IL - The Goodman Theatre announced that Governor Pat Quinn has appointed Resident Artistic Associate Henry Godinez as a member of the Illinois Arts Council.

Governor Quinn and Godinez celebrated the announcement with the cast of The Sins of Sor Juana—including Malaya Rivera Drew and Tony Plana—following a recent performance at Goodman Theatre. Godinez joins the Council of twenty-one private citizens chosen for their demonstrated commitment to the arts. Council members serve in a voluntary capacity for four-year terms, and are charged with developing the state’s public arts policy and fostering quality culturally diverse programs.

“I am honored that Henry has accepted my appointment to serve the citizens of Illinois as a member of the Arts Council,” said Governor Pat Quinn. “He was a clear choice to join this prestigious group given his outstanding commitment to the arts in Illinois—in particular the Latino Theatre Festival at Goodman Theatre, the only one of its kind in our region.”

Born in Havana Cuba, Godinez has been a member of Goodman Theatre’s Artistic Collective since 1996. Godinez is also an Associate Professor at Northwestern University and has served as a sight evaluator and panelist for the National Endowment for the Arts, the Illinois Arts Council and the Evanston Arts Council. He is the recipient of the 1999 TCG Alan Schneider Directing Award, the Distinguished Service Award from the Lawyers for the Creative Arts and was recognized as the 2008 Latino Professional of the Year by the Chicago Latino Network. Goodman Theatre Executive Director Roche Schulfer previously served as a member of the Illinois Arts Council for two consecutive four-year terms from 1993 to 2002.

About the Illinois Arts Council

The Illinois Arts Council was created as a state agency by the Illinois General Assembly in 1965 through legislation sponsored by Senators Paul Simon, Thomas McGloon and Alan Dixon. The agency is governed by up to twenty-one private citizens chosen for their demonstrated commitment to the arts and appointed by the Governor. Council members serve in a voluntary, non-paid capacity and are charged with developing the state’s public arts policy and fostering quality culturally diverse programs. These members serve in a voluntary capacity for four-year terms. A small professional staff with in-depth knowledge of the arts develops and administers the agency’s programs, provides technical assistance and ensures the responsible and impactful distribution of all funds. Resources to support the Illinois Arts Council are provided by the Governor and General Assembly of Illinois and the National Endowment for the Arts.

About Henry Godinez

Henry Godinez is the Resident Artistic Associate at Goodman Theatre and the curator of the biennial Latino Theatre Festival. Most recently at the Goodman, he directed José Rivera’s Boleros for the Disenchanted, as well as the world premiere at Yale Repertory Theatre. At the Goodman he has directed the world premieres of Karen Zacarías’ Mariela in the Desert, Regina Taylor’s Millennium Mambo and Luis Alfaro’s Straight As A Line. Also at Goodman, he has directed The Cook by Eduardo Machado, Electricidad by Luis Alfaro, Zoot Suit by Luis Valdez, Sam Shepard’s Red Cross (one of the five short plays in Regina Taylor’s Transformations), the Goodman/Teatro Vista co-production of Jose Rivera’s Cloud Tectonics and the Goodman’s production of A Christmas Carol from 1996-2001. Other productions include Esperanza Rising and A Year with Frog and Toad for Chicago Children’s Theatre, the Apple Tree Theatre/Teatro Vista co-production of Nilo Cruz’s Two Sisters and a Piano and the Victory Gardens Theater production of Nilo Cruz’s Pulitzer Prize winner, Anna in the Tropics. Godinez is the co-founder of Teatro Vista and served as artistic director for its first five years. With Teatro Vista he directed Broken Eggs, El Paso Blue, Journey of the Sparrows, Santos & Santos and The Crossing. Other directing credits include True West at Portland Center Stage, Urban Zulu Mambo at Signature Theatre in New York City (starring Regina Taylor), The Winter’s Tale at Missouri Repertory Theatre, Macbeth for the Oak Park Festival Theatre, Romeo and Juliet at the Colorado Shakespeare Festival and several seasons of Stories on Stage for WBEZ Chicago Public Radio. As an actor Godinez appeared most recently in the Goodman/Teatro Vista world premiere of José Rivera’s Massacre (Sing for Your Children). Film and television appearances include The Beast, Above the Law, The Fugitive, The Package, Lady Blue, Amerika, and thirtysomething. His stage appearances include Goodman Theatre, Chicago Shakespeare Theater, Wisdom Bridge Theatre, Court Theatre, Apple Tree Theatre and The Old Globe.

About Goodman Theatre

Goodman Theatre has been internationally recognized for its artists, productions and programs since 1925. In 2010/2011, the Goodman’s 85th year, the nation’s “Best Regional Theatre” (Time magazine) celebrates ten years in the North Loop Theatre District as a major cultural, educational and economic pillar in Chicago. The Goodman has garnered hundreds of awards for artistic achievement and community engagement, including numerous Tony Awards and two Pulitzer Prizes. Under the leadership of Artistic Director Robert Falls and Executive Director Roche Schulfer, the Goodman’s priorities include new plays—including more than 100 world or American premieres over the last 30 years—re-imagined classic productions, culturally specific work and musical theater. Robert Falls’ contemporary versions Death of a Salesman, Long Day’s Journey into Night and King Lear have been celebrated nationally and internationally, along with his artistic collaboration with actor Brian Dennehy. Over the past two decades, the Goodman has produced 25 musical theater works, including 10 world premieres. Cultural diversity stands at the forefront of the Goodman’s mission; one-third of Goodman productions have featured artists of color (including 21 world premieres) since 1990, and the Goodman was the first theater in the world to produce all ten plays in August Wilson’s 20th Century Cycle. Since 2003, the Latino Theatre Festival has been a biennial celebration of Latin theater companies from Chicago and around the globe. Each year Goodman’s numerous education and community engagement programs, including the highly praised Student Subscription Series, serve several thousand Chicago Public High School students. In addition, for 33 years the annual holiday tradition of A Christmas Carol has led to the creation of a new generation of theatergoers in Chicago. Goodman Theatre’s leadership includes the distinguished members of the Artistic Collective: Brian Dennehy, Frank Galati, Henry Godinez, Steve Scott, Chuck Smith, and Regina Taylor. The Chairman of Goodman Theatre’s Board of Trustees is Patricia Cox. Karen Pigott is President of the Women’s Board, and Joan Clifford is the President Elect. American Airlines is the Exclusive Airline of Goodman Theatre.

Visit us virtually at GoodmanTheatre.org; discover the 2010/2011 Season at ExploreTheGoodman.org; catch the latest news on the Goodman’s Blog; Like us on Facebook; Follow us on Twitter; and peek behind-the-scenes on the Goodman’s YouTube Channel.

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