crossword.graphicTo download a PDF of the puzzle, click here.

For the answers, click here.

For the answers to last week's puzzle, click here.

crossword.graphicTo download a PDF of the puzzle, click here.

For the answers, click here.

For the answers to last week's puzzle, click here.

crossword.graphicTo download a PDF of the puzzle, click here.

For the answers, click here.

For the answers to last week's puzzle, click here.

crossword.graphicTo download a PDF of the puzzle, click here.

For the answers, click here.

For the answers to last week's puzzle, click here.

On Monday July 14, 2014 Davenport Mayor Bill Gluba hosted a roundtable discussion at the Davenport Public Library. The purpose of the meeting was to address the influx of migrant children coming in from Central America into the United States and how a Quad Cities based "Caring Cities" campaign could assist.

The meeting was approximately 50 minutes long. This video has been edited down to 17 minutes.
In attendance and identified on the video are:
Mayor Bill Gluba, City of Davenport
Glenn Leach, Davenport Catholic Diocese
Mike Reyes, League of United Latin American Citizens
Cheryl Goodwin, President Family Resources
Mr. Ortiz, Outreach and Community Enrollment Coordinator for Community Healthcare
Rick Schloemer, Scott County Housing Council
Stephanie Lynch, Doctoral Candidate University of Iowa
Amy Rowell, Director of Moline World Relief
Byron Brown, Retired ARMY, CEO at TGR Solutions

[Note: Not every individual seated at the table is identified by name in the video. We are happy to update this story with any missing participants.]

crossword.graphicTo download a PDF of the puzzle, click here.

For the answers, click here.

For the answers to last week's puzzle, click here.

crossword.graphicTo download a PDF of the puzzle, click here.

For the answers, click here.

For the answers to last week's puzzle, click here.

For our 2014 short-fiction contest - co-sponsored by the Bettendorf Public Library - we're celebrating banned and challenged books. Our 20 prompts are all drawn from famous (and sometimes infamous) novels that school boards, governments, or other arbiters of taste and morality didn't want people to read.

The deadline for entries is September 2.

We'll publish winners and favorites in the September 18 issue of the River Cities' Reader - just in time for Banned Books Week, which this year runs September 21 through 27.

We're also planning an event featuring readings of winning and favorite stories at 7 p.m. on Thursday, September 25, in the Bettendorf Room of the Bettendorf Public Library. More details will be announced later.

crossword.graphicTo download a PDF of the puzzle, click here.

For the answers, click here.

For the answers to last week's puzzle, click here.

crossword.graphicTo download a PDF of the puzzle, click here.

For the answers, click here.

For the answers to last week's puzzle, click here.

Pages