4 minute read

Ordway welcomes new diverse board members

On March 1, 2023, the Ordway Center for the Performing Arts in St. Paul, Minnesota, announced the addition of five new board members. These new board members have different skill sets and backgrounds, including representation from the fields of law, engineering, and digital services. The Ordway’s board now consists of 31 people from a variety of generations, backgrounds, and professions who feel that performing arts are crucial to the development of thriving communities.

New to the Ordway Board is Erin Dady, the top marketing and public relations officer for Bremer Bank. Dady oversees the bank’s marketing department, which includes digital marketing, creative services, external and executive communications, and community relations. She formerly served as director of marketing and chief of staff for the City of Saint Paul and as director of government and community relations at the University of Minnesota. Dady earned a bachelor’s degree in political science from Northwestern University and a master’s degree in business

Medicare Medicare

From 5 among older Americans, but raising the eligibility age for Medicare, is widely unpopular, said Mary Johnson, a policy administration from the Carlson School of Management at the University of Minnesota. In 2012, she also finished the Senior Executives in State and Local Government program at Harvard Kennedy School.

President of Windward Engineers & Consultants, Jason Booth, has also joined the board. Windward Engineers & Consultants provides design services for mechanical, electrical, and plumbing engineering. Booth is a seasoned and enterprising business executive who previously founded and directed analyst for the nonpartisan Senior Citizens League who has researched the issue.

Politicians who try that route might “lose supporters and it can backfire. You can wind up losing your office, too,” she said. “A very high percentage of seniors are voting in elections.”

Biden’s plan is also intended to close what the White

Amendment of the Constitution that the new Republic would neither “establish” nor “prevent the free exercise of religion.”

The Patient Source, the biggest Native-owned healthcare education agency in the United States. The University of Minnesota awarded him a bachelor’s degree in English, and he is a proud member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians.

Jeff Lin, founder and chief executive officer of Bust Out, a Minneapolis-based studio that designs and develops websites, mobile applications, and digital experiences, is the third new member of the board. In 2021, he established Pennant, a software tool that

House describes as loopholes that allow people to avoid Medicare taxes on some income. Besides the taxes, Biden wants to expand Medicare’s ability to negotiate drug costs, which began with the Inflation Reduction Act. He signed the sweeping legislation last year.

The White House said its budget plan would lets performing artists develop their own custom-branded streaming video platform on the web, mobile, and television. Lin, originally from Oberlin, Ohio, moved to Minnesota to study biology at Carleton College. John Lunseth, 45, a Taft, Stettinius & Hollister LLP equity partner is the fourth new board member. Lunseth has been a first-chair trial attorney handling major, complex intellectual property and commercial issues. He has represented Fortune 100 and Fortune 500 organizations, as well as local governments expand the pharmaceutical drug provisions of the Inflation Reduction Act. More drugs would be subject to price negotiations, other drugs would be brought into the negotiation process sooner and the scope of rebates would be expanded. Taken together, Biden’s new proposals would help shore up a key trust and private business owners.

The University of Minnesota awarded him both his law degree and his undergraduate degree in international relations.

3M’s senior vice president for emerging markets, Jose R. Varela Garza, is the fifth member. Varela Garza is a leader with worldwide, multibusiness, and multi-function expertise, having lived in nine different countries and overseen businesses with global, regional, and local responsibilities. He studied computer programming at Técnica Alemana, earned a bachelor’s degree in fund that pays for Medicare, which provides health care for older adults. According to the White House, the changes would keep the fund solvent until the 2050s, about 25 years longer than currently expected.

Changes would also be made to Medicare benefits.

Biden wants to limit cost sharing for some generic drugs business administration from Universidad Católica, U.C.A., El Salvador, and is currently pursuing a master’s degree in science, computer science, and international business at the University of Cumbria, UK. The Ordway said it is concluding a successful 20222023 campaign and hopes to continue its success in the future. For more insight on Ordway news, visit https:// ordway.org/ to only $2. The idea would lower out-of-pocket costs for treating hypertension, high cholesterol and other ailments. AP writers Amanda Seitz and Farnoush Amiri contributed to this report. Follow the AP’s coverage of Medicare at https://apnews. com/hub/medicare revered as “Founding Fathers” like Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, and John Adams— British subjects one and all— ensured within the very First

Those two phrases have meant for well over two centuries that “Christ” may be the head of some of our individual lives, but he sure isn’t supposed to be the head of the federal or individual state governments.

The above facts are the primary reason why I aver that Tennessee’s law, much like Florida’s “Stop Woke Act” and other infringements upon free speech by Republican leaders across America, very likely will be struck down in federal courts on First Amendment grounds. Still, those hard headed, hard hearted, and all too bigoted

Republicans will push their cultural war narratives because it is far easier for them to codify laws designed to marginalize or impede the progress of gays, lesbians, transgender, Blacks, and other people of color, than it is for them to address the high illiteracy, high unemployment, and high poverty rates in their struggling states—especially in the South. on television and on stage, like: Heck, even Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee (R) was dressed in drag while in college, as the photo that was pulled out of somebody’s closet shows below: Which leads to my last dig at “so-called Christians,” but this “drag” aimed squarely

LEE

This article is from: