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The panel gathers in preparation for today's interesting discussion on Rabbi Goldschmidt's latest work.
For more information about Rabbi Goldschmidt please go to : rabbiscer.org/about-cer/president/
or
rabbiscer.org/about-cer/president/
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For more information about Rabbi Goldschmidt please go to : rabbiscer.org/about-cer/president/
or
rabbiscer.org/about-cer/president/
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Roundtable Discussion: The Process of Content: On a Temporality of Contemporary Art, Cooper Gallery 2014
Speakers: Guy Brett (Curator and Critic, London), Lynda Morris (Curator and Art Historian, Norwich), Tobi Maier (Curator and Writer, São Paulo), Prof. Martin Warnke & Carmen Wedemeyer (Researchers, Leuphana University Lüneburg). Chaired by Dr. Lisa Otty (Research Fellow, The University of Edinburgh).
Accompanying the Roundtable Discussion will be a series of readings by writers in Scotland: Frances Davis, Kirsty Hendry, Alex Hetherington, Catherine Street & JL Williams and Richard Taylor.
More info: www.dundee.ac.uk/djcad/exhibitions/events/roundtable-disc...
Photos: Kathryn Rattray
Dr. Brett Dumbauld (left), Dr. Alan Trimble (center) and Ken Weigardt involved in the discussion.
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In opening a health care panel discussion on Jan. 30 at Wilmington Hospital, Sen. Chris Coons said he expects the Affordable Care Act to be repealed by Congress by the end of March, putting at risk not only Delawareans who get coverage and care through the Marketplace and the Medicaid expansion, but also the quality of care for the more than 500,000 people who receive employer-based coverage. “To repeal the Affordable Care Act without a solid replacement plan is congressional malpractice and would hurt people across the country,” Coons said.
U.S. Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester said more than 9,000 jobs could be impacted by repeal of the ACA, and that Delawareans have approached her who are concerned and scared about dramatic changes. “It doesn’t affect just one slice of the population,” she said. On replacing the ACA, Sen. Tom Carper said, “We’re going to fight like hell to make sure we don’t do something stupid.”
Steve Groff, director of DHSS’ Division of Medicaid and Medical Assistance, said the repeal of the ACA, including the Medicaid expansion, could cost Delaware $120 million in state funding to cover 40,000 to 50,000 adults who qualify up to 100% of the Federal Poverty Level and about 11,000 in the newly eligible population, up to 138% of the FPL, or about $16,000 a year in annual income. “The Affordable Care Act is not just the Medicaid expansion and the Marketplace,” he said. The state might face additional costs in reinstating medical care and cancer treatment for people with low incomes who don’t qualify under new Medicaid guidelines.
Kerry Orr, who enrolled on Delaware’s Marketplace in May 2014, because of the mandate to have health insurance. She re-enrolled in December 2014 and had her first colonoscopy in January 2015. She believed her doctor would find hemorrhoids, but she found a massive tumor instead, which required surgery. “This may sound hard to believe, but most people consider a cancer diagnosis to be one of the scariest things you can experience,” she said. “But I actually was so relieved that I had health insurance that my gratitude outweighed my fear.” Without the ACA, its individual mandate and its preventive care, she said she would be dead today. “The Affordable Care Act literally has saved my life.”
Others joining the panel were Dr. Janice Nevin, president and CEO of Christiana Care; Lolita Lopez, president and CEO of Westside Family Healthcare; Kristen Isaac, a health insurance navigator with Westside; Dr. Roy Proujansky, chief executive of Nemours/Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children; and Dr. Prayus Tailor, president of the Medical Society of Delaware.
Batteaux are on their way from Lynchburg to Richmond. It has been some very hot days for these voyagers and I wish them luck.
Quick conflab about where to put the hay
© Susannah Relf All Rights Reserved
Unauthorized use or reproduction for any reason is prohibited
Camera: Fuji GA645zi
Lens: Fujinon 55-90mm/f4.5-6.9
Film: Ilford FP4 Plus 125
Place: Arezzo, Italy
Date: June 22, 2013
© Copyright: Christian Poulton
Lincoln High was chosen for the second year as the showcase school in Iowa by AVID, a national program aimed at college readiness for students who would be the first generation of their families to pursue post-secondary degrees. Classroom visits by officials from neighboring school districts and panel discussions in the school library were part of the showcase on November 16.
A guest contributes his thoughts and asks questions during the open discussion moderated by Ellal Aklilu. Photo Credit: Rosa Pineda Photography.
The Ethiopian American Youth Initiative held a public meeting in Washington, D.C. at the Embassy of Ethiopia on Saturday, January 2, 2010. The meeting featured Samuel Gebru, President of EAYI; David Shinn, former U.S. Ambassador to Ethiopia; Georgis Kefale, an Ethiopian physician; and Wondimu Asamnew, Ethiopia's charge d'affaires.
Members of the Panel discuss the election of ICC judges with ASP President Christian Wenaweser and Francisca Pedros-Carretera, an integral part of the ICC's future search committee.
Premier Kathleen Wynne sat down with Lindsay residents for an informal discussion on local and provincial issues over a cup of tea at the Common Grounds Café.