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			 Made 
			possible by the T.W. Samuels Lecture Fund, Quinones' presentation 
			will be held in the Bob and Deb Johnston Banquet Rooms, located on 
			the 3rd floor of the University Commons, on Millikin's campus. The 
			event is free and open to the public; no reservations or tickets 
			required. 
			 
			"Dreamland: The True Tale of America's Opiate Epidemic" (Bloomsbury, 
			2015) recounts twin stories of drug marketing in the 21st Century. A 
			pharmaceutical corporation flogs its legal new opiate prescription 
			painkiller as nonaddictive. Meanwhile, immigrants from a small town 
			in Nayarit, Mexico devise a method for retailing black-tar heroin 
			like pizza in the U.S., and take that system nationwide, riding a 
			wave of addiction to prescription pills from coast to coast. The 
			collision of those two forces has led to America's deadliest drug 
			scourge in modern times. 
			
			  
			 
			"Dreamland" was selected as one of the Best books of 2015 by 
			Amazon.com, Slate.com, the Daily Beast, Buzzfeed, Seattle Times, 
			Boston Globe, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Entertainment Weekly, 
			Audible, and in the Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg Business by 
			economics laureate, Professor Angus Deaton of Princeton University. 
			 
			Quinones' previous two highly-acclaimed books grew from his 10 years 
			living and working as a freelance writer in Mexico (1994-2004): 
			"True Tales From Another Mexico: The Lynch Mob, the Popsicle Kings, 
			Chalino and the Bronx" and "Antonio's Gun and Delfino's Dream: True 
			Tales of Mexican Migration." 
			 
			"True Tales From Another Mexico: The Lynch Mob, the Popsicle Kings, 
			Chalino and the Bronx" was released in 2001. It is a cult classic of 
			a book from Mexico's vital margins – stories of drag queens and 
			Oaxacan Indian basketball players, popsicle makers and telenovela 
			stars, migrants, farm workers, a narcosaint, a slain drug balladeer, 
			a slum boss, and a doomed tough guy. 
			In 2007, 
			Quinones came out with "Antonio's Gun and Delfino's Dream: True 
			Tales of Mexican Migration." In it, Quinones narrates the saga of 
			the Henry Ford of Velvet Painting, and of how an opera scene emerged 
			in Tijuana, and how a Zacatecan taco empire formed in Chicago.
			 
			
			
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			He tells the tale of 
			the Tomato King, of a high school soccer season in Kansas, and of 
			Mexican corruption in a small L.A. County town. Threading through 
			the book are three tales of a modern Mexican Huck Finn. Quinones 
			ends the collection in a chapter called "Leaving Mexico" with his 
			harrowing tangle with the Narco-Mennonites of Chihuahua. 
			 
			Sam Quinones is formerly a reporter with the L.A. Times, where he 
			worked for 10 years (2004-2014). He is a veteran reporter on 
			immigration, gangs, drug trafficking and the Mexican border. 
			 
			In 2014, he resigned from the paper to return to freelancing, 
			working for National Geographic, Pacific Standard Magazine, the New 
			York Times, Los Angeles Magazine, and other publications. 
			
			  
			Columbia Journalism 
			School selected him as a 2008 recipient of the Maria Moors Cabot 
			prize, for a career of excellence in covering Latin America. He is 
			also a 1998 recipient of an Alicia Patterson Fellowship, one of the 
			most prestigious fellowships given to print journalists. 
			 
			For more information on Sam Quinones, visit samquinones.com.  
			 
			T.W. Samuels Lecture 
			 
			The T.W. Samuels Lecture Series was created in 1977 in honor of 
			attorney T.W. Samuels, senior partner in the Decatur law firm of 
			Samuels, Miller, Schroeder, Jackson and Sly. Samuels was active in 
			Decatur community affairs until his death in 1989 at age 103. 
			Samuels' sons, William J. Samuels of Menlo Park, Calif., and the 
			late Dr. Thomas W. Samuels Jr., then created an endowment fund to 
			finance the series in recognition of their father. The endowment is 
			used to bring great thinkers and speakers to Millikin for the 
			purpose of community enrichment. 
			
			[Millikin University Media Relations]  |