WAVERLY, IA (11/04/2015)(readMedia)-- Fourteen Wartburg College students were selected for the 2015 Iowa Collegiate Honor Band.

The band will perform Friday, Nov. 20, 2:30 p.m., in the Nevada High School auditorium. The performance, held in conjunction with the Iowa Music Educators Association Conference, is free and open to the public.

Participants include :

Allison Coe of Dixon

Anthony Skinner of Davenport

The band represents the best collegiate band students from across the state, with nominations coming from 19 community colleges, colleges and universities.

Craig Hancock, Wartburg's director of bands, said the selection process is often weighted toward music majors because of the partnership with IMEA.

"The fact that several of the Wartburg students are not music majors speaks highly of our training at the college and the experiences they receive here," he said.

Wartburg was one of only three schools that had all of its nominees selected for the honor.

Wartburg, a four-year liberal arts college internationally recognized for community engagement, enrolls 1,537 students. Wartburg is affiliated with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and named after the castle in Germany where Martin Luther took refuge disguised as a knight during the stormy days of the Reformation while translating the Bible from Greek into German.

Washington, D.C. - Congressman Dave Loebsack will have a member of his staff in Clinton and Scott Counties for open office hours. Jared Mullendore, Loebsack's District Representative, will be at the following locations. Mullendore will be on hand to work with individuals who are having difficulty with a government agency, have suggestions for Dave, or would just like to share their concerns. Members of the public are invited to attend. Mullendore holds regular office hours throughout Eastern Iowa.

If residents are unable to attend but have a concern to share with the Congressman, please call our district office toll-free at 1-866-914-IOWA (4692).

Mullendore's schedule is as follows.

Tuesday, November 10

  • Camanche City Hall

849 7th Ave.

9:00 - 10:00 AM

  • Clinton City Hall

611 South Third Street, 1st Floor

11:00 AM - NOON

  • Bettendorf City Hall

1609 State St., Conference Room

2:00 - 3:00 PM

 

###

(DES MOINES) - Gov. Terry E. Branstad today appointed Susan "Suzy" Christensen as judge to the 4th Judicial District.  Christensen was appointed to fill the vacancy created by the Honorable Timothy O'Grady.

 

Christensen, 53, of Harlan, currently serves as a District Associate Judge in the 4th District.  Prior to her appointment as District Associate Judge, she was in private practice.  Christensen received her undergraduate degree from Judson College in 1988 and her law degree from Creighton University in 1991.

District 4 consists of the following counties: Audubon, Cass, Fremont, Harrison, Mills, Montgomery, Page, Pottawattamie, and Shelby.

###
For the 2nd time in three years, the National FFA Central Region Vice President is from Iowa! Abrah Meyer, 2014-15 Iowa FFA President, was elected last Saturday at the 88th National FFA Convention and Expo. To learn more about the new National FFA Officer team, click here.
Other Iowa highlights include (click here for the National FFA Convention and Expo press room):
127 American Degree Recipients
3rd Place Ag Communication CDE Team: Montezuma FFA Chapter
1st Place Ag Sames CDE Team: Muscatine FFA Chapter: 1st place individual Makayla Kellor and 2nd place individual Tiffany Tomlin
9th Place Dairy Cattle CDE Team: Maquoketa Valley FFA Chapter
2nd Place Farm Business Management Individual: Spencer Pech, Starmont FFA
6th Place Floriculture CDE Team: Muscatine FFA Chapter
3rd Place Prepared Public Speaking CDE: Kalee Leistikow, Wapsie Valley FFA Chapter
National FFA Proficiency Award Winner, Ag Mechanics Repair and Maintenance: Kellie Einck, South O'Brien FFA Chapter
LeClaire Chamber of Commerce Ribbon Cutting

LeClaire River Retreat Guest Condo
215 1/2 Cody Road, LeClaire
First Friday, November 6, 2015
5p.m.

Located in the heart of historic downtown LeClaire, IA, overlooking the Mississippi River,
this luxury condominium is available for overnight, weekend, weekly, or monthly rental.
Also available for group parties.
563-484-1555. leclaireriverretreat@gmail.com,
www.leclaireriverretreat.com

Light Refreshments Will Be Served

Everyone Welcome!
Quad City Symphony Orchestra,
Mark Russell Smith, Music Director and Conductor, Presents
Masterworks II: Bach, Brahms, and Shostakovich

Highlighting the Extraordinary Talents of QCSO Concertmaster Naha Greenholtz and
Principal Cellist Hannah Holman

The grace of Bach, the romance of Brahms, and the profundity of Shostakovich will showcase QCSO Concertmaster Naha Greenholtz, Principal Cellist Hannah Holman, and the entire orchestra.

The program will delight with the graceful Baroque simplicity of Bach Sinfonias from Cantatas #42 and #21 displaying a unique and rarely seen - but characteristic Baroque gathering from the days of Bach - led by Music Director and Conductor Mark Russell Smith on harpsichord. 

To conclude the first half, the two leading ladies of the orchestra will wow you with their virtuosity in Brahms Double Concerto for Violin, Violoncello and Orchestra in A minor, Op. 102. 

The show will conclude with the profound and challenging Symphony #10 by Russian composer Dmitri Shostakovich, which probes the depths of tragedy, loss, anger, despair, violence, but closing with triumph, a masterpiece not performed by the QCSO since 2007.  Both Brahms and Shostakovich admired Bach and this represents the unseen common denominator in the carefully crafted repertoire of the QCSO's Masterworks II concert.

There are two performances. The first is Saturday, November 7, 2015 at 8:00 p.m. at Davenport's Adler Theatre, RiverCenter.  The second is Sunday, November 8 at 2:00 p.m. at Centennial Hall at Augustana College.

This presentation will sweep you away into new worlds!

Group and student pricing is available for most performances.

More information and tickets for performances and events are available at www.qcso.org or by calling 563-322-QCSO (7276).

###

(DES MOINES)  - Gov. Terry E. Branstad announced today that he will be visiting GE's West Burlington manufacturing facility to join GE executives ? including Stephanie Mains, the newly appointed CEO of the company's Industrial Solutions business ? as they share updates on the future of the West Burlington manufacturing facility.

In addition, media attendees will have the opportunity to speak with GE's Stephanie Mains and Stuart Thompson, general manager of Power Equipment for GE's Industrial Solutions business, about the news and GE's exciting plans for the plant.

 

WHEN:                 Thursday, November 4, 2015

11 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.

  • 11 - 11:30 a.m.: GE executives and Governor Branstad discuss future of West Burlington facility.
  • 11:30 a.m. - noon:  Plant tours available for Governor Branstad, media and special guests. There will also be time for media to speak with GE executives.
  • 11:30 a.m.: Begin serving lunch for employees and invited guests.

 

There will be opportunities to capture photos and video at the event.

 

WHO: The following individuals will be making remarks at the event:

  • Governor Terry E. Branstad
  • Stephanie Mains, CEO, GE's Industrial Solutions business
  • Stuart Thompson, general manager?Power Equipment, GE's Industrial Solutions business
  • Scott Ganschow, plant manager at GE's West Burlington facility

 

WHERE:               GE's West Burlington Facility

510 E Agency Road

West Burlington, Iowa 52655

 

RSVP TO: Gia Oei                               
Communications Executive
Industrial Solutions

T: (860) 747 7626

M: (860) 709 2341
gia.oei@ge.com

Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2015

Sen. Chuck Grassley released the following statement after the Senate passed a resolution of disapproval of the Waters of the U.S. rule.  Grassley is a cosponsor of the resolution, which was introduced by Sen. Joni Ernst.  A resolution of disapproval is a legislative procedure used to try to overturn regulations and rules put forth by the executive branch.  A simple majority of the Senate is needed for passage.  The House of Representatives must now pass the resolution before it can be sent to the President.  The President has threatened to veto this resolution.

"It's clear that EPA overstepped its bounds in the Waters of the U.S. rule.  Federal courts said it when they determined that the rulemaking by EPA was flawed.  And, now, a bipartisan majority of the Senate voiced its agreement today.

"WOTUS is a massive power grab by EPA.   This was clearly an effort by a bloated federal agency to push its own agenda.  The rule was crafted outside of EPA's authority in a process that left out the states and other key parties that are affected by the rule.  And, legitimate concerns raised during the public comment period were ignored.

"The result of this absurd rule is not cleaner water, but a bigger roll of red tape.  What EPA defines as a 'navigable river' could encompass everything from a small pond to trickling creek bed to land that is dry most of the year.   Under EPA's definition, WOTUS affects everyone from farmers, to construction companies to golf course managers in their day-to-day decision making.  This red tape rule would require permits for just about any changes to land in 97 percent of Iowa.  That would discourage common sense projects to prevent erosion or control runoff, resulting in dirtier water.  Talk about Washington being an island surrounded by reality."

New findings from an international team of researchers suggest business leaders who oversee teams need to find a middle ground in how they treat team members - or risk hurting team performance. Specifically, the researchers found that treating some team members much better than others can adversely affect performance - as can treating all team members the same way.

"Existing research has generally shown that leaders treating team members differently, depending on factors such as how competent they believe each member is, can result in productive teams," says Bradley Kirkman, co-author of a paper on the work, General Hugh Shelton Distinguished Professor of Leadership and head of the Department of Management, Innovation and Entrepreneurship in North Carolina State University's Poole College of Management. "In fact, previous research points to a linear relationship between treating team members differently and team performance. But we didn't find that to be true.

"Instead, we found that leaders can go too far. If a leader treats team members too differently from each other, performance suffers," Kirkman says. "The relationship between 'differentiation' and team performance is more of a bell curve than a straight line."

The work was done by researchers from NC State, the University of Science and Technology in Beijing, Peking University and the University of Iowa.

For the study, the researchers evaluated differential treatment by team leaders of 145 teams in three Chinese companies: a pharmaceutical company, a telecommunications company and a manufacturing company. Team performance was assessed via a survey of the team leaders, focusing on issues such as the quality and efficiency of each team's work and the team's ability to meet deadlines and stay on budget.

The differential treatment was measured using the "LMX7" scale, which assesses the relationship quality between team leaders and team members. The focus of the LMX7 scale is on issues such as working relationships, rather than tangible rewards such as salaries.

"We found an upper limit to how far leaders should go in treating their team members differently," Kirkman says. "If leaders go too far with this behavior, leaders will end up with teams composed of basically two subgroups - the ingroup and the outgroup. And we know that the outgroup will not be happy about this and will start to slack off, withdraw from participating, and even go so far as to be disruptive to the ingroup team members. But treating all team members the same also hurts performance. Leaders need to find a middle ground, or moderate level of differentiation.

"In practice, leaders should not treat all members the same - there needs to be some differentiation based on competence and ability - but they also need to avoid engaging in extreme preferential treatment," Kirkman says.

The researchers also found two factors that influenced how much differential treatment a team could withstand before adversely affecting performance. First, larger teams - such as those with 10 or more members - could withstand more differentiation.

"This is because larger teams have greater needs for coordination and integration and putting more resources towards more capable members actually helps these processes get accomplished," Kirkman says.

The second factor is the "power distance orientation" of the team. Power distance orientation is an evaluation of how accepting a given culture is of power differences between individuals and the social importance of hierarchy.

"A team whose members are in higher power distance countries, such as India, will likely react less negatively to differential treatment than a team in a lower power distance country, such as Australia or Israel," Kirkman says. "Teams in lower power distance countries may simply reject this sort of differential treatment."

The paper, "Understanding the Curvilinear Relationships between LMX Differentiation and Team Coordination and Performance," is published online in the journal Personnel Psychology. Lead author of the paper is Yang Sui, of the University of Science and Technology. The paper was co-authored by Kirkman, Hui Wang of Peking University and Ning Li of the University of Iowa. The research was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China.

Kent will succeed current Chairman John May of Deere & Company

DES MOINES, Iowa (November 4, 2015) – The Cultivation Corridor Board of Directors have unanimously voted Gage A. Kent of Kent Corporation as the economic development organization's next chairman.

Kent will be the Cultivation Corridor's second chairman, succeeding John May of Deere & Company, who has served as the Corridor's chairman since 2014. In addition to being a founding member of the Cultivation Corridor, Kent has significant experience in agribusiness as the CEO of Muscatine, Iowa's Kent Corporation, which is the parent corporation to Grain Processing Corporation; Kent Nutrition Group, Inc. and Precision Foods, Inc. Kent has held numerous positions in each subsidiary throughout his nearly three-decade career with the company.

Kent also serves on the Board of Directors for Simpson College and the Iowa Business Council, and is a member and former Chair of the Board for the Iowa College Foundation and a director of Iowa State University Foundation's Board of Governors. Kent is also a member of the Iowa Association of Business and Industry.

Regarding his recent appointment, Kent said, "I'm privileged to succeed John [May] as the Corridor's next Chairman," Kent said. "His leadership of the Corridor board during the crucial early years of the organization have been integral to creating broad opportunity to scale and capitalize on our mission. The Corridor's work to firmly establish Iowa as the pre-eminent destination for investment, talent and research in value-added agriculture is integral to the future growth of our state's economy and role in the world. I am excited to contribute leadership to the mission."

John May endorsed Kent's new role in leading the initiative into the future: "The Corridor is tremendously fortunate to have Gage as its next board leader," he said. "His leadership of one of Iowa's largest and most important value-added agricultural enterprises makes him an excellent choice to lead the Corridor through its next phase of growth. I can't think of a better-qualified and more respected leader to help move the Corridor's mission forward."

Kent's term as Chairman of the Board will begin July 1, 2016.

About the Cultivation Corridor

Iowa's Cultivation Corridor is an economic development and innovation acceleration organization focused on growing the agbioscience and agtechnology industries in Central Iowa. With offices in Des Moines and Ames, the Corridor oversees national and international marketing; business attraction, retention and expansion; and capacity-building programming designed to draw value-added agricultural investment, talent and research to Iowa. The Corridor leverages one of the world's strongest concentrations of private sector investment, a globally-competitive talent network and Iowa State University's status as a leading agricultural research institution to promote the growth of the value-added ag economy in Iowa.

The Corridor is a public-private strategic partnership overseen by a statewide CEO-level board with stakeholders including Iowa State University, the Iowa Economic Development Authority, Greater Des Moines Partnership, Ames Economic Development Commission and private-sector companies.

For more information, visit www.cultivationcorridor.org.

Pages