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.

Davenport NEW Misses Benchmark

July 29 - Editorial - Davenport NEW Meets Old Davenport. Success signs - getting front-line city staff involved.

As the largest department of the city, there is no greater front-line than Public Works. In an election year, it is difficult to evaluate and judge the performance of our mayor and aldermen on their hand-picked choice for Public Works director, when he fails to show up for a First Ward meeting and conveys his loathing to speak to the public, through the elected official. As one who is also old Davenport (old school), I'd like to hear from the man in charge: Do we have enough salt for Winter? Is he thinking about spring flooding, potholes, sewer collapses, road resurfacing? If Davenport NEW is about open and transparent access to government, then meeting the new Public Works director would be a good public-relations start.

Arthur Anderson
Davenport

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, or pick up the August 5 edition of the River Cities' Reader.

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

2009 marks Midwest Writing Center's 36th-annual Mississippi Valley Poetry Contest. This year Max Molleston, longtime contest administrator, passed the reins to local poet Kristin Abraham, author of Little Red Riding Hood Missed the Bus. Kristin reconfigured the contest to contain just two categories: regional and national.

A total of 349 poems were entered - 165 for the national category and 184 for the regional. Out of these entries, 25 finalists were selected to be judged by our regional judge, former Quad Cities Poet Laureate Rebecca Wee, and 25 were sent to our national judge, May Swenson Award-winning poet F. Daniel Rzicznek. From these entries our judges each selected first-, second-, and third-place winners as well as honorable mentions. First-place winners received $200, second-place winners received $150, and third-place winners received $75. The first-place regional winner also receives the Max Molleston Award, created by local artist Dee Schricker. All of the poems that were selected as finalists will be printed in Off Channel, Midwest Writing Center's Mississippi Valley Poetry Contest anthology, due out before the end of summer 2009.

The Midwest Writing Center accepts entries for the Mississippi Valley Poetry Contest from January 1 through March 31 each year. More information is available online at MidwestWritingCenter.org.

A reception and reading will be held on Saturday, July 18, from 7 to 9 p.m. in our conference room at 225 East Second Street in Davenport -- the Bucktown Center for the Arts. All individuals who submitted poems to the contest are invited to read their work.

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