ROCK ISLAND, Ill. - Gov. Bruce Rauner's government shutdown is taking a steep toll on middle-class families, the elderly, and sick and disabled residents said local families who joined with state Rep. Mike Smiddy, D-Hillsdale, and Pat Verschoore, D-Milan, to urge a more balanced solution to the state's budget crisis.
"Illinois simply cannot halt basic services for middle-class families and seniors, withhold life-sustaining care for seniors and the disabled, and pretend it's fiscally responsible," Smiddy said. "The governor's decision to shut down basic services isn't making Illinois more competitive, and it certainly isn't compassionate."
Rauner's veto of the state budget eliminated funding for a number of critical services, including the Illinois Breast and Cervical Cancer Program, which an estimated 27,000 women rely on the every year to access free mammograms and cervical cancer screenings. Rauner's veto has also stopped funding for the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP), which helps over 8,000 Rock Island County residents cover the home heating and cooling during winter and summer months.
Local families and service providers stood with Smiddy and Verschoore at the Western Illinois Area Agency on Aging in Rock Island to discuss how Rauner's government shutdown has put meals on wheels for seniors, therapy for children with autism and services for victims of domestic violence at risk. Residents called for a more balanced approach that makes responsible spending cuts while protecting critical services for middle-class families, the elderly and those in great need.
"We can't afford more of the governor's games and we can't afford to balance the budget on the backs of people who are already struggling to make ends meet," Verschoore said. "These men and women work hard to provide for their families. They didn't create the mess in Springfield. It's not fair to make them pay for it."
ROCKFORD, Ill., Aug. 20, 2015 /Christian Newswire/ -- Dr. John Addison Howard, the namesake and Senior Fellow of The Howard Center for Family, Religion & Society and International Ambassador for World Congress of Families died August 6th in his sleep.  He was a week shy of his 94th birthday. 

Dr. Allan C. Carlson, President, The Rockford Institute, 1986-1997; President, The Howard Center for Family, Religion & Society, 1998-2015; and co-founder of the World Congress of Families offers the following reflections on John's life, 1921-2015.
    Born in Evanston, Illinois, in 1921, John Howard spent many summers in Rockford staying with his grandparents, Charles and Mary Sackett. Among his Rockford ancestors was John Manny, inventor of the famed Manny Reaper in the 1850s. [A portrait of Manny graced John's office for as long as I knew him.]  Graduating from the North Shore Country Day School in Winnetka, he entered Princeton University in 1939.

    Three years later, John's academic studies were interrupted by entry into the U.S. Army. For the next three years, he served in an armored unit of the First Infantry Division. From D-Day through "Victory in Europe" Day, he was in almost continuous combat, including intensive engagement in the Battle of the Bulge. For his service, he received two Silver Stars, two Purple Hearts, and a battlefield commission. Following the war, he continued academic work at Northwestern University, where he gained B.S., B.A., and Ph.D. degrees, the latter in French Literature.

    In 1951, John married Janette Marie Nobis of Davenport, Iowa. They would have four children: Marie, Steven, Martha, and Katherine.

    John took a position as an Instructor at California's Palos Verdes College in 1947. Two years later, he became Dean of Students. And in 1951, at age 29, he became President of the College. Four years later he left that post, accepting appointment by President Dwight Eisenhower as Executive Vice Chairman of the President's Committee on Government Contracts. This body conducted the first program to leverage federal contracts to open jobs to qualified minority applicants. In this capacity, he reported to Vice President Richard Nixon; committee members included labor leaders George Meany and Walter Reuther and U.S. Attorney General William Rogers.

    In 1960, John began a term of seventeen years as President of Rockford College. He arrived at a critical time, for the College trustees had recently resolved to build an entirely new campus, yet lacked the needed funding.  He coordinated the fundraising for and construction of 25 new buildings, all paid for without any government money. John expanded the Board of Trustees to include many prominent national citizens, reestablished the college chaplaincy and the practice of invocations at college events, tripled faculty salaries and instituted a pension program, and raised student body size by 50 percent.

    John Howard also distinguished himself as an opponent of any federal funding of private higher education, arguing [prophetically] that such aid would undermine the autonomy of such schools. Toward that end, he helped found and served as President (for three years) of the American Association of Presidents of Independent Colleges and Universities.

    In addition, John became a prominent, principled foe of the student radicalism and "counter-culturalism" sweeping American campuses in the late 1960's and early 1970's. His public debates with Stanford University's "Maoist" Professor H. Bruce Franklin appeared as the book Who Should Run the University? He also debated leaders of the Berkeley "free speech" movement. In 1969, President Nixon invited him to join the White House Task Force on Priorities in Higher Education, to suggest ways in which the federal government might help calm the turmoil on American campuses. In 1971, he accepted another Presidential appointment, this time to the National Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse; he long continued to argue against marijuana legalization.

    By this time, John Howard also won recognition as a leader in the emerging Conservative movement in America, committed to reclaiming and advancing the ideals of ordered liberty. In this regard, he was an early friend and collaborator with conservative intellectuals such as Russell Kirk and Robert Nisbet, publisher Henry Regnery, editor William F. Buckley, and future President Ronald Reagan. He gained election to membership in the prestigious Mt. Pelerin Society and the Philadelphia Society, serving as President of the latter in 1979-80.

    In 1976, John Howard created the Rockford College Institute, to analyze and respond to the damage done to American social institutions by the cultural upheaval of the late 1960's. He recruited writer Leopold Tyrmand-expelled from Communist Poland several years earlier for anti-government activities-as editor of a new monthly periodical, Chronicles of Culture (now, Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture). John stepped down as College President in 1977, to become full-time director of the Institute. Over the next several years, he held three major national conferences in Rockford on "Capitalism and Culture," "Corporate Responsibility," and "The Family: America's Hope." The latter was the first national conference to document and analyze the family decay that had come in wake of the "counter-culture." John edited the lectures presented at these events into books bearing the same titles.

    The renamed Rockford Institute became independent of the College in 1979 and moved to its current location on North Main Street. I joined the Institute in 1981 as Assistant to the President and then Executive Vice President. Chronicles and the monthly monograph series launched by John Howard in 1977--originally named Persuasion at Work and focused in the beginning on the activities of the hard-left in American politics and culture-- continued under the new framework. [The latter would be relaunched in 1987 as The Family in America, with an exclusive emphasis on family questions and continues to this day as a quarterly journal.] In 1982, John conceived and hosted a European-wide Congress, "For Your Freedom, and Ours," held in Frankfurt, Germany and drawing intellectual and political leaders from across the continent. Two years later, John created The Center on Religion and Society. Its first director was Richard John Neuhaus; his successor in 1989 would be Harold O.J. Brown. On Leopold Tyrmand's untimely death in 1985, Thomas J. Fleming became editor of Chronicles.

    On reaching age 65, John Howard retired as President of the Institute, assuming the post of Senior Fellow. In the 29 years which followed, he continued to give lectures, write articles and books, and assist in fund-raising and long-range planning. For example, he was an inspiration for and active participant in the inaugural World Congress of Families (WCF), held 1997 in Prague, The Czech Republic. This event has since grown into an international movement of pro-family leaders and organizations which has held over 30 regional congresses on six continents and will soon convene the Ninth full WCF in Salt Lake City. He also gave presentations at full congresses in Geneva, Mexico City, and Warsaw.

    In 1997, John guided the spinoff of several Rockford Institute programs into an independent Howard Center for Family, Religion & Society, named in his honor. He holds honorary Doctorate degrees from Grove City College, Rockford College, and Brigham Young University.

    Over the years, John spoke before over 500 audiences. Forty-five of these addresses were featured in the publication, Vital Speeches. In addition to the volumes already mentioned, John Howard's books included: Churches on the Wrong Road (as editor, 1986); Detoxifying the Culture (2001); Christianity: Lifeblood of America's Free Society, 1620-1945 (2012); and America's Best Colleges! Really! (2012).

    John Howard is survived by his wife, Janette, by his children Marie Howard Schroeder, Steven Lamson Howard, Martha Howard Manning, and Katharine Howard Drerup, and by nine grandchildren. He will be buried in Rockford's Greenwood Cemetery next to his illustrious ancestor, John Manny.

    After a lifetime of devoted service to family, faith, and nation, may he Rest In Peace.
-- Allan C. Carlson, President, The Rockford Institute, 1986-1997, President, The Howard Center for Family, Religion & Society, 1998-2015

NOTE: A Memorial Service for John Howard will be held on Saturday, August 29, starting 11 A.M. at Westminster Presbyterian Church, 2821 N. Bell School Road, in Rockford, Illinois.
Please email johnhowardmemorial@profam.org for more information.
Rock Island, IL: The Rock Island Public Library Foundation will host a uniquely wordy fundraiser for the Rock Island Library on Wednesday, Sept. 9, from 6:00 to 9:00 pm at Mama Compton's restaurant in Rock Island. Their first Scrabble Scramble fundraiser will pair teams of one to four players in an evening of "your word against theirs" word games.

The tournament will consist of three 30 minute games for a fast-moving night of wordplay and fun. Players can sign up as a team or as individuals, and be matched with a team if desired, in beginner/intermediate or advanced/expert divisions.

Registration is open to ages 12 and up and is $20 per player. For extra luck, players may buy a peek at a word list, get help from an expert, or purchase a blank tile. Each legal cheat is $5. Players may bring their own Scrabble game, or use a supplied board. To register, call 309-752-2014 or email riplfoundation@gmail.com by Sept. 7.

Mama Compton's, 1725 2nd Avenue, has generously donated the use of their restaurant for the night. Meals and drinks will be available for sale before and during the event.

For more details about the Rock Island Public Library Foundation, and opportunities to give, please call 309-732-7326 or email RIPLFoundation@gmail.com.

For more information about the Rock Island Library, call 309-732-READ (7323), visit the library website at www.rockislandlibrary.org, or follow the library's Facebook and Twitter sites.

###

About the Rock Island Public Library Foundation: The Rock Island Public Library Foundation is a 501(c)3 organization that was established nearly 30 years ago to support the valuable extras that go far beyond the library's city supported budget.

About the Rock Island Public Library: Founded in 1872, the Rock Island Public Library provides resources to enhance personal achievement and stimulate the imagination through the Main, 30/31 and Southwest Branches, community outreach efforts, and online opportunities.

(DES MOINES) - Iowa Gov. Terry E. Branstad and Lt. Gov. Kim Reynolds today congratulated new Iowa House Speaker-select Linda Upmeyer, new House Majority Leader Chris Hagenow, new House Majority whip Joel Fry and new Assistant House Majority Leader Zach Nunn following the House Republican caucus' leadership election today at the Iowa State Capitol.

"Today is a historic day as Republican Linda Upmeyer will become the first female speaker of the Iowa House of Representatives. I congratulate Speaker-select Upmeyer and am eager to work with her, Majority Leader Chris Hagenow, Majority Whip Joel Fry and Assistant Majority Leader Zach Nunn to continue building Iowa for the future," said Branstad. "In Iowa, women are leading in key positions throughout state government - Lieutenant Governor Kim Reynolds, State Auditor Mary Mosiman, Senate President Pam Jochum, the most female department directors in Iowa history, and soon the Speaker of the Iowa House of Representatives."

In addition to Iowa Lt. Gov. Kim Reynolds, State Auditor Mary Mosiman, Senate President Pam Jochum, and Speaker-select of the House Linda Upmeyer, Iowa has more female department and agency directors than ever before. They include :

1.      Debi Durham, Iowa Economic Development Authority

2.      Courtney Kay-Decker, Department of Revenue

3.      Janet Phipps Burkhead, Department of Administrative Services

4.      Jodi Tymeson, Iowa Veterans Home

5.      Beth Townsend, Iowa Workforce Development

6.      Donna Harvey, Department on Aging

7.      Mary Cownie, Department of Cultural Affairs

8.      Geri Huser, Iowa Utilities Board

9.      Donna Mueller, Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System

10.  San Wong, Department of Human Rights

11.  Roxann Ryan, Iowa Department of Public Safety

12.  Kristin Johnson, Iowa Civil Rights Commission

13.  Joann Johnson, Iowa Credit Union Division

14.  Judy Bradshaw, Iowa Law Enforcement  Academy

"As the co-chair of Right Women Right Now, I'm proud to see Speaker-select Upmeyer being a trailblazer and role model right here in Iowa. Speaker-select Upmeyer, Majority Leader Hagenow, Majority Whip Fry and Assistant Majority Leader Nunn are dedicated public servants and will be strong leaders for the Iowa House Republican caucus as they continue to partner with us to bring high-quality careers to Iowa, focus on student-centered education that raises achievement in our schools, increases family incomes and makes government more efficient and effective," said Reynolds. "I look forward to continuing to work with Iowa House Republicans and leaders in the Senate to continue moving Iowa forward."

###

SPRINGFIELD - Governor Bruce Rauner signed SB 2042 today, which appropriates money for the pass through of federal dollars without adding to the state's budget deficit. The clean bill allows the state to provide some services to the state's most vulnerable citizens.

"Governor Rauner supported and signed this clean pass through bill because it will help those in need without adding to the state's budget deficit," Director of Communications Lance Trover said. "While the Governor continues to work on passing a balanced budget with structural reforms to maximize how much we can invest in our schools and important social services, some of the state's most vulnerable citizens will be able receive additional support."

Bill No.: SB 2042

An Act Concerning Appropriations

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

###

August 25, 2015    Extension Council Meeting, Scoot County Extension Office, 7 pm

September 4, 2015    Pesticide Applicator Testing, Scott County Extension Office, 10-2 pm

September 7, 2015    Office Closed for Holiday

October 2, 2015    Pesticide Applicator Testing, Scott County Extension Office, 10-2 pm

October 3, 2015     Growing Along the River Fall Master Gardener Conference, Scott Community College, 8 am-4 pm.

October 21, 2015    Roadside, Forest, and Aquatic Pest Management, Scott County Extension, 9-11:30 am

October 29. 2015    Mosquito and Public Health Pest Management, Scott County Extension, 9-11:30 am




Visit our events calendar at our web site:   http://dbs.extension.iastate.edu/calendar/

Growing Along the River - Focus on Fall Gardening Conference benefits all gardeners, both novice and seasoned, with an opportunity to learn, mingle, and share ideas on all aspects of gardening in the Quad-Cities. This year's conference will be held Saturday, October 3, 2015 at Scott Community College, 500 Belmont Road, Bettendorf, Iowa from 8:00am-4:00pm.


Keynote speakers are Jason Delaney and Laura Christensen. Jason is the Bulbs Collection Specialist at the Missouri Botanical Garden and will speak on "Success with Bulbs in Midwest Gardens." Laura is a landscape architect and owns her own business, Design with Nature, in Wheaton, Illinois and will be presenting "A Landscape Love Affair: A 25-Year Relationship with My Garden."


In addition to the keynote speakers, four breakout sessions will be offered with participants choosing from 20 additional gardening topics presented by Iowa State University (ISU) professors, horticulturalists, and local experts. The cost is $40 and includes lunch.


The conference is presented by ISU Scott County Extension Master Gardeners. Complete conference information is online at www.eicc.edu/focusonfall and search course #159012. You can also find us on Facebook at ISU Scott County Extension and Outreach and on the web at http://www.extension.iastate.edu/scott or call 563-359-7577 for more information.


-30-
Last year, after nearly a decade, The Project of the Quad Cities revived its extremely popular We Care Weekend. We are happy to announce that we will be hosting the 2015 We Care Weekend September 11th-12th, 2015 in downtown Davenport on West 2nd Street.

To kick the weekend off, we will be having a Fish Fry starting at 5:00PM. Plates are $10.00 per person and include fish, spaghetti, coleslaw, bread, desert and a drink. Delivery options are available in the Quad Cities area. Company Delivery will start 11:00AM until 3:00PM, and personal delivery is from 3:00PM to 5:00PM. For ticket and delivery information, call (309) 762-5433.

Saturday's schedule features a Vendor fair from 12:00pm to 6:00pm, Bags tournament at 12:00PM, a Cutest pet Contest at 2:00PM and a Drag Show and White Elephant Auction at 6:00pm. Registration is $10 per bags team and $10 per pet for the Cutest Pet Contest. Saturday will also have food, music, raffles, Hoola-Hoop girls, and Jail and Bail.

Donations for the White Elephant Auction are now being accepted. All donations are tax deductible and donors will receive a tax letter.

Some of the QCA area vendors attending are: Prida Wear, Bearpaw Creations SFX, Pobanz Creations, Hi-Fit, Origami Owl by Erin Menting, and the Scott Community Health Department.

The Project of the Quad Cities is a 501(c) 3 non-profit organization that works diligently to provide much needed advocacy and assistance to those in our community who are living with HIV and AIDS. We Care Weekend helps us provide critical funds to continue safeguarding the health of our fellow Quad Citians.

For more information and contest applications please visit www.facebook.com/TPQCWeCare or stop in at 2316 5th Avenue, Moline, IL.

# # #
DECORAH, Iowa-Events related to immigration fill the media, but rarely do stories about the day-to-day realities, the heart and humor of the immigrants themselves, make their way past the headlines and sound bites. Author Cristina Henríquez has filled her latest book, "The Book of Unknown Americans," with just such stories.

Henríquez will speak about the concept of identity and address common narratives about immigration as she gives the Luther College Opening Convocation Lecture "Finding Ourselves in Stories," Thursday, Sept. 3. Convocation begins at 9:40 a.m. in the Center for Faith and Life Main Hall on the Luther campus and is open to the public with no charge for admission.

"The Book of Unknown Americans" is a New York Times Notable Book of 2014 and appears on many other Best of 2014 book lists. Henríquez's lecture is sponsored by Luther College's Paideia program, which chose her book as this year's all-campus summer reading. Offering a new definition of what it means to be American, the book tells stories of men and women who have come to the United States from Central and South America.

Henríquez' inspiration came in part from her father's tale of immigrating from Panama as well as stories of others living in Delaware, where she grew up. The Washington Post's review called the book, "Vivid... Striking... A ringing paean to live in general: to the love between man and wife, parent and child, outsider and newcomer, pilgrims and promised land."

Henríquez has said that her book relates stories that people might not otherwise hear in hopes that more people will feel comfortable sharing their immigration stories. To further this dream, she has created a webpage at unknownamericans.tumblr.com, which shares stories posted using the hashtag #UnknownAmerican.

In addition to "The Book of Unknown Americans," Henríquez is the author of "Come Together, Fall Apart," a collection of stories about family bonds and generational conflicts in Panama, and "The World in Half," a novel telling the story of Miraflores piecing together life after finding a father she never knew.

Her work has appeared in The New Yorker, The American Scholar and The Atlantic, and she has been a guest on National Public Radio. She earned a Master of Fine Arts from the Iowa Writers' Workshop. Henríquez teaches at Northwestern University.

-30-

First time author's new memoir celebrates indomitable human spirit

DES MOINES, Iowa - At the age of 96, Desmond Halcomb Bragg has a lifetime of stories to tell. In his recently released memoir, he looks back at his journey and how he overcame seemingly insurmountable odds including being orphaned at the age of four, poverty, homelessness, and a tragic accident that left him paralyzed. Readers will follow Bragg on his transformative odyssey in "Started Out from Texas" (published by Xlibris).

Born in 1918, Bragg grew up in an orphanage in Beaumont, Texas, until he was sent to live with a foster family on a dairy farm at the age of 11. At 16, he dropped out of high school and left Texas for good on a freight train at midnight, in the middle of the Great Depression. Bragg was determined to seek out his fortune with nothing in his pockets but fifty cents and a biscuit. Now, 80 years later, Bragg recognizes that fortune has come in a variety of forms - a rewarding life, lasting relationships, nuggets of wisdom and incredible resilience.

"Started Out from Texas" chronicles Bragg's remarkable life from childhood to the present. Although personal in nature, the themes in this account are universal, a tribute to the indomitable human spirit and an authentic American story of a young boy who dared to follow his dreams. The author's courage shines throughout the pages of this book.

"Almost everyone faces some challenges growing up and the transition to adult life is still a difficult time in any person's life," Bragg says, "If a poor, uneducated orphan boy from Texas can make it, so can you!"

"Started Out from Texas"

By Desmond Halcomb Bragg

Hardcover | 6 x 9in | 142 pages | ISBN 9781499080841

Softcover | 6 x 9in | 142 pages | ISBN 9781499080858

E-Book | 142 pages | ISBN 9781499080865

Available at Amazon and Barnes & Noble

About the Author

Desmond Halcomb Bragg was born in Port Arthur, Texas, in 1918. He holds a bachelor's degree, master's degree and doctorate in education from the University of Wisconsin. He and his wife, Jean, have three children. They settled in Iowa and Bragg became a college professor at Drake University for 25 years.

Pages