May 21, 2012

Breast cancer experts collaborate at U-of-I

A three-day symposium on breast cancer research opened this morning in Iowa City. Dr. Sonia Sugg, a surgery professor at the University of Iowa, says the conference is bringing together more than a hundred of the region’s top experts in the field.

“This is a gathering of breast cancer researchers throughout the Midwest,” Dr. Sugg says. “We will be meeting and talking about our latest research and hoping to establish some good collaborations.” She says breast cancer death rates have dropped in recent years, in part, thanks to very focused research.

This type of gathering is very beneficial, Sugg says, as everyone has the same goal. “The way research works, it really helps to work with a group of people and put our heads together and put our resources together,” Sugg says. “We’re hoping we can at the very least meet other people and talk to each other about our ideas.”

Lung cancer is the number-one cancer killer of Iowa women, but breast cancer is close behind as one of the most common cancers. She says all women should get a mammogram screening by age 40 and every following year.

Brrrrr! Oddball July weather may bring record low temps

Forget the t-shirts and shorts. Some of the coolest weather of the summer is expected in Iowa today with the possibility for record low temperatures tonight. Rod Donovan, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service, says it’s feeling a lot more like March or April, not mid-July.

He says some Iowa cities may see new record "low-max" readings today, meaning their lowest-ever high temperatures for this date. Donovan says those record highs may only be in the mid-60s. He says a big cloud deck will be coming down from Minnesota and Wisconsin that’ll keep Iowa quite cool and spring-like, especially for mid-summer.

As thousands of bicycle riders start building their tent city in Council Bluffs with RAGBRAI starting this weekend, Donovan says it’ll be a chilly night for sleeping outdoors. "Definitely looking at another chance of some record low temperatures tonight or near-record low temperatures," he says. "We could see temperatures in the upper 40s to lower 50s overnight tonight."

This is, after all, July in Iowa and Donovan says warmer weather will get here, eventually. He says warmer temperatures are expected Sunday with highs in the low to mid-70s, with still-warmer temps on Monday, perhaps into the upper 70s and lower 80s.

For a more detailed look at the forecast, visit www.weather.gov .

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Share Iowa offers cheap food in trade for community service

A community service and food program is expanding in Iowa. Jon Eric Brantner coordinates “Share Iowa” in Shenandoah and says he wanted to reinstate the food program since it was beneficial to him as a middle school student.

Brantner says he’s joined forces with the Share Iowa program in Red Oak to provide solid groceries at dramatically lower costs for area residents. “Anyone can participate,” Brantner says. “This used to be a program in Shenandoah that a lot of the elderly people participated in. It’s quite a bit of food and it’s well-balanced food: you get meats, fresh fruits and vegetables and staple items, spagetti or spagetti sauce, as well as usually some type of dessert.”

He says the $22 is supposed to be enough to feed a family of four for a week and there’s only a small catch to getting food so cheaply. The only requirement to participate is to perform two hours of community service.

“You don’t have to be picking trash up off the highways,” Brantner says. “You don’t have to be downtown picking weeds out of the landscapes. Do anything from raking your neighbor’s yard or picking up prescriptions for a sick friend, anything that is volunteering your time to benefit someone else.”

Brantner says Share Iowa creates a win-win for the individual and the community. He says just look for someone to help in any way. He says you may have a neighbor who needs her yard raked or her lawn mowed, adding, “It’s really easy to pick up two hours once you know how to look for the right situation.”

Share Iowa locations are scattered throughout the state. To find the closest one to you, call (712) 215-0024 or visit the website www.shareiowa.org.

Kristan Gray, KMA, Shenandoah

Casino’s charity may be cut if smoking snuffed

Operators of a Quad Cities casino have struck a deal which could lead to a reduction in donations to local charities if smoking is completely banned in Iowa casinos.

On Thursday, state regulators approved the new contract between the Rhythm City Casino and the nonprofit that holds the casino’s gambling license and distributes the casino’s charity. Mary Ellen Chamberlin is president of that nonprofit, which is known as the Riverboat Development Authority.

"If the smoking ban is extended to casinos, we have agreed to reopen our negotiations after a 90 day period to see what the effect would be on the casino," she says.

Iowa law stipulates that state-licensed casinos must make contributions to local charitable organizations and the Rhythm City Casino has been giving the nonprofit roughly $2 million a year to distribute to charity. Chamberlin says her nonprofit would consider agreeing to accepting less than $2 million if profits drop significantly.

According to Chamberlin, her nonprofit renegotiated its deal with the owners of the Rhythm City Casino because competition has increased in the Quad Cities market.

"Many of those changes are outside the control of either the casino or the nonprofit and so therefore we have accepted four points under which that $2 million may be waived or renegotiated," Chamberlin says. "And one of those is if an additional casino is built in either Scott or Rock Island County which would bring that market up to four boats. We are already a three-boat market."

Another trigger for changing the terms of the contract would be an outright ban on smoking in Iowa casinos. The Iowa Clean Air Act which took effect July 1st, 2008, banned smoking in most public places, but it does allow smoking on the casino floor.

Greg Seyfer, chairman of the Iowa Racing and Gaming Commission, rejects the idea other casinos will try to get similar deals that would reduce their charitable contributions if smoking is banned on the casino floor.

"Not that I’m aware of and I think this, by the terms, was ready for renewal," Seyfer says of the Rhythm City deal. "And so they just addressed certain issues that are relevant at this stage."

The Riverboat Development Authority was originally associated with The President Riverboat Casino in Davenport and since 1991 the nonprofit has distributed over $42 million  in charity from The President and, for the past nine years, from the Rhythm City Casino.