ROCHESTER, NY (06/03/2015)(readMedia)-- Emma Nelson of Moline was inducted into Rochester Institute of Technology's Alpha Sigma Lambda Honor Society on May 18. Nelson is a software engineering major in RIT's B. Thomas Golisano College of Computing and Information Sciences.

Alpha Sigma Lambda was founded in 1964 to honor students who represent the guiding principles of ASL: Activities, Scholarship and Leadership. Recipients must be a senior in an undergraduate program and have at least a 3.4 cumulative GPA.

Nominees are judged on the basis of scholarship, active participation and contributions in activities, and leadership in academic and co-curricular student activities. Service to the community is also considered.

Rochester Institute of Technology is home to leading creators, entrepreneurs, innovators and researchers. Founded in 1829, RIT enrolls 18,000 students in more than 200 career-oriented and professional programs, making it among the largest private universities in the U.S.

The university is internationally recognized and ranked for academic leadership in business, computing, engineering, imaging science, liberal arts, sustainability, and fine and applied arts. RIT also offers unparalleled support services for deaf and hard-of-hearing students. The cooperative education program is one of the oldest and largest in the nation. Global partnerships include campuses in Croatia, Dubai and Kosovo.

For news, photos and videos, go to www.rit.edu/news.

The German American Heritage Center is excited to announce that our upcoming exhibition Zeitgeist: Bix Beiderbecke & the Spirit of His Times has been supported by the Scott County Regional Authority! We look forward to this exhibit opening July 5th!
Saturday, June 6th 10:30
Join us for this informative and fun walking tour every Saturday this summer! Beginning June 6 the German American Heritage Center will be welcoming visitors to walk the bluff with us as we discuss the presence and influence of Germans in the Gold Coast/Hamburg District and Downtown!

$5 gets you in on the one hour tour that is approximately 1.3 miles and includes uphill and downhill stairs. 10:30 am start time at the German American Heritage Center. Please dress prepared for weather and walking; bring your own water if needed. No tour on the 4th of July and last tour of the season is on August 15.

Sponsored by the City of Davenport
SIOUX CITY, IOWA (June 3, 2015) - A total of 295 students were named Roadman Scholars and Dimmitt Scholars at Morningside College in recognition of high academic distinction for the 2014-15 academic year.

Roadman Scholars must be full-time students who have completed at least 45 credits of college work with a cumulative grade point average of 3.76 or above. The award is named in honor of the late Earl Roadman, who was president of Morningside College from 1936 to 1956.

Dimmitt Scholars must be full-time students who have completed at least 45 credits of college work with a cumulative grade point average between 3.50 and 3.75. The award is named in honor of the late Lillian Dimmitt, who served as a teacher and administrator at Morningside College for more than 60 years. Samuel E. Cunningham of Bettendorf, a junior history major was named a Dimmitt Scholar,

Morningside College, located in Sioux City, Iowa, is a private, coeducational, four-year liberal arts college with a total enrollment of more than 2,800 students. U.S. News and World Report has designated Morningside as one of the Midwest's "Best Regional Colleges" every year since 2005. The Princeton Review has named Morningside a "Best Midwestern College" since 2003.

More information about Morningside College is at www.morningside.edu.

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Quad Cities - On June 13-21, more than twenty museums from across the Quad Cities region will welcome visitors for a week-long adventure of fun activities, great discoveries, and exploration.  Don't miss the first-ever Quad Cities Museum Week!  Information on participating museums and their events can be found at www.qcmuseumweek.com.

Quad Cities Museum Week is for everyone!  Enjoy this celebration of the region's museums and participate in special activities, exhibits and promotions during this fun-filled week.  Each museum features its own, unique theme, history, galleries, and exhibits.  Come and discover these wonderful gems!

Area museums also encourage you to tweet and post about your museum experiences on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.  Use hashtag #QCMUSEUMS!

What you can expect to find:

·        Underground Tunnel Tour - Deere-Wiman House

·        Emancipation and Its Legacies Exhibit - Davenport Freemont Library

·        Driving Tour - Buffalo Bill Museum, Buffalo Bill Cody Homestead, Dan Nagle Walnut Pioneer Village, Alexander Brownlie Sod House

·        Behind the Scenes Art Tours - Augustana College - Augustana Teaching Museum of Art

·        Catich Gallery Art Exhibition - St. Ambrose University

·        Buckskinners Rendezvous and House Tours - Colonel Davenport House

·        Archives & Communities' Education Display - Davenport School Museum

·        Rainforest Exhibit and Kids Yard Sale - Family Museum

·        Highlight Tour, Free Family Day, PechaKucha Night presentation, Print Sale - Figge Art Museum

·        A Look at the Book Exhibit - German American Heritage Center

·        Guided House Tours - Hauberg Center

·        History Presentations - Black Hawk State Historic Site - John Hauberg Indian Museum

·        Kids Scavenger Hunt and truck films - Iowa 80 Trucking Museum

·        Presidents of the Continental Congress manuscript exhibit - Karpeles Manuscript Museum

·        Rock Island Arsenal Exhibit, D-Day 3D Documentary, Family Science Night - Putnam Museum

·        Masonic Temple and chiropractic museum self-guided -  Palmer College of Chiropractic

·        Made in Rock Island County Exhibit - Atkinson-Peek Historical House- Rock Island County Historical Society

·        "Vietnam War" Exhibit - Rock Island Arsenal Museum

"Even if you can't make one of the special events or activities taking place, the museums are open and ready to welcome you all during Museum Week and throughout the year," says Charlotte Doehler-Morrison, VP Marketing & Communications, Quad Cities Convention & Visitors Bureau.  "This is a great opportunity to spend time exploring our wonderful museums with families and friends."

Quad Cities Museum Week was created through collaboration between area museums and the Quad Cities Convention & Visitors Bureau.  The event is designed to showcase the wealth of museums in the Quad Cities region and to create a greater awareness about what each museum has to offer to a variety of audiences throughout the year.

For information on the Quad Cities, go to www.visitquadcities.com. For information on Museum Week, go to www.qcmuseumweek.com.

Bettendorf - The Quad Cities hosts the 200 attendees of the Iowa Veterans of Foreign Wars State Convention on June 4-7, 2015, at the Isle Casino Hotel Bettendorf.

As part of the State Convention, Senator Lindsey Graham and U.S. Congressman Dave Loebsack will speak to attendees on Saturday at 9 a.m.  At the opening session on Friday at 8 a.m., Bettendorf Mayor Bob Gallagher will welcome the group.

The last time the Quad Cities hosted the Iowa VFW State Convention was in 1991 and 1992.  The location is determined by the home of the State Commander.  Christian Popp is from the Davenport area and is a member of the VFW Post 9128 in Bettendorf, Iowa.  In 2012, the Quad Cities Convention & Visitors Bureau (QCCVB) met with the Iowa VFW Office and learned that Christian Popp was going to be State Commander in 2014-2015.  They urged us to begin working on a location to host the state convention and the QCCVB has worked closely with Christian Popp & Penny Hurt (Ladies Auxiliary Incoming President) to plan many aspects of this convention.

The QCCVB estimates the local economic impact is over $80,000.

The Department of Iowa VFW is an organization that supports Veterans and their families with providing a voice to the National VFW to make sure that the Veterans that fought in Wars in the past and the Veterans that will fight in Wars in the future have the benefits and support of a grateful nation.
Celebrate the 4th of July in the Amana Colonies in Amana, Iowa  and come to the Firecracker 4th Antique Show . Our 9th annual show has grown even bigger with two buildings full of nationally recognized dealers, and outdoor vendors. Our show has two full days of antiquing fun,......July 3rd 8am to noon is early bird for $3.00 and noon to 5 pm is FREE. Then on July 4th from 8 am to 3 pm , also free. On site parking (FREE) with terrific shopping, great food, and of course, Amana Colonies hospitality.
The Firecracker 4th Antique Show is located on the Amana R V Park grounds in Amana, Iowa. The fields offer a great location to come and camp or  bring your R V. Antiquers will love the quality selection from Americana, primitives, folk art,toys, farm and ag collectibles, oil and gas signs and petroleum, advertising, country store, quilts, native American,postcards, lightning rods and balls, children's collectibles, vintage and more!!!!! Shop in air-conditioned comfort, and enjoy the Amana Meat Markets famous brats, and BBQ  as well as PIE!!!!!!!! Come see for yourself and while in Amana, shop all 10 shops!
There are three shows in eastern Iowa the weekend of the 4th of July.  The Lincoln Highway Show in Mt. Vernon Iowa on the 4th and Iowa City 4th of July show also on the 4th.Come celebrate the fun, shop Amana on the 3rd, and all of the shops, then on the 4th hit the other two shows and then come back  to Amana for lunch of brats and pie!!!!  and more shopping. All of us at the Firecracker 4th want to thank Sandy and the late Jerry Hanson for the 33 years they had Hanson's Grove as a premier antique show. Many  customers were saddened when Hanson's Grove closed last year, but we are pleased to say  that many of the dealers have joined us at the Firecracker 4th Antique Show and look forward to seeing all of our old friends and we welcome new friends to experience a quality show at the Firecracker 4th Antique Show.
For show information on dealer space, times and directions, visit www.firecracker4antiques.com.
For lodging or camping information  visit www.amanacolonies.com.
Like us on facebook at firecracker4thantiqueshow and also at smokehousesquareantiques.
Firecracker 4th Antique Show is sponsored by Smokehouse Square Antiques 4503 F Street, Amana,Iowa. 319.622.3539 or 319.430.2728.
WASHINGTON - Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley, Ranking Member Patrick Leahy, and Judiciary Committee members John Cornyn, Chuck Schumer, Orrin Hatch, Mike Lee and Amy Klobuchar ahead of the committee's consideration of the bipartisan PATENT Act, today released a managers' amendment that includes technical changes and, as discussed upon introduction of the bill, provisions to address concerns regarding post-grant review proceedings at the Patent and Trademark Office. 

The Judiciary Committee is expected to consider the bill on Thursday during its executive business meeting.  The markup will start at 9:30 a.m. (ET) in room 226 of the Dirksen Senate Office Building.  The proceedings can be seen on the committee's website, www.judiciary.senate.gov.

Upon releasing the managers' amendment, the cosponsors noted that the language addressing the amendment of patent claims in post-grant proceedings (contained within Section 11 of the bill, which makes other changes to post-grant proceedings) is a placeholder.  The senators intend to continue to work on and refine this placeholder language as the bill moves forward. 

The managers' amendment:
•       Modifies the fee shifting provision to clarify that undue economic hardship to a named inventor or an institution of higher education are "special circumstances" that could make a fee award unjust, and clarifies the burden of proof in the fee provision.
•       Modifies the provision governing recovery of fee awards to ensure that traditional lenders are not on the hook for potential liability simply for making a commercial loan.
•       Includes technical fixes to the provision governing demand letters.
•       Includes a technical fix to adjust waiting periods from 120 days to 90 days, consistent with a broader change in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure currently being implemented by the Judicial Conference.
•       Includes measures relating to patent policy at the Patent & Trademark Office:
o    Amends current law governing information sharing between global patent offices when applicants have filed in multiple offices.
o   Ensures that the PTO's issuance of petition decisions by employees is consistent with the Appointments Clause of the Constitution.
o   Allows potential members of the Public Patent Advisory Committee (PPAC) to obtain conflict of interest waivers to allow for their participation, in line with standards applied to other federal advisory committees.
o   Clarifies that properly licensed foreign universities may be eligible for microentity fees.
o   Provides papers and fees filed via the PTO's electronic filing system with the same benefits and protections as those filed via the United States Postal Service, regardless of the timezone.
o   Extends the PTO's fee setting authority by 7 years.
•       Includes S. 1402 (Patents for Humanity Program Improvement Act) to strengthen the PTO's Patents for Humanity Program, a prize program for inventors whose innovations promote humanitarian goals around the world.
•       Adds new Section 11, which makes reasonable changes to address concerns about abusive conduct in the inter partes review and post grant proceedings before the Patent Trial and Appeals Board (PTAB) at the PTO.   
o   Claim construction standard: Applies the district court (Phillips) claim construction standard in IPR and PGR proceedings, and directs the PTAB to consider if claims have previously been construed in district court. Estops parties from eschewing in later court or PTO proceedings arguments made on claim construction to the PTO.
o   Presumption of validity: Makes explicit in statute that, for purposes of PTAB adjudications, patents are presumed to be valid.  Retains current law providing that the petitioner has the burden to prove a proposition of unpatentability by a preponderance of the evidence.
o   Measures to limit serial challenges at the PTO:  Makes clear that the Director has discretion not to institute an IPR or PGR if doing so would not serve the interests of justice. Instructs the Director, in making that decision, to consider factors such as whether the same art or arguments have already been decided in a prior judicial or PTO proceeding involving the patent, and whether the patent is already to the subject of another proceeding before the PTO.
o   Measures to improve the institution decision:  Allows patent owners to submit evidence in response to a petition to institute an IPR or PGR, and petitioners to file a reply to respond to new issues.  Directs the PTO to modify the institution process so that institution and merits decisions are not made by the same panels.
o   Preventing gamesmanship:  Directs the PTO to hold a rulemaking on instituting a Rule 11-type obligation in IPR and PGR proceedings. Requires PTAB decisions to be publicly available and searchable on the web. Removes the ability to join additional claims to a timely-filed IPR after the time for filing has elapsed, except for claims that are newly-served against the petitioner in an amended complaint (which get 1 year from amendment).
o   Amending patent claims: Includes placeholder language relating to the amendment of patent claims in IPRs and PGRs.  The Managers have agreed that further work is needed to address concerns with currently proposed text.

The managers' amendment is a full substitute of the original PATENT Act.  The new language can be found here.  A redlined version of the bill can be found here.



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Five River Bandits alumni named Player or Pitcher of the Month at their respective Houston affiliates

DAVENPORT, Iowa (June 2, 2015) - Catcher and first baseman Jacob Nottingham is the Quad Cities River Bandits Player of the Month for May, and right-handed pitcher Akeem Bostick is the team's Pitcher of the Month, the Houston Astros announced on Tuesday.

The Houston Astros Player Development Department named a Pitcher and Player of the Month at each of their four full-season affiliates. These awards are chosen every month by the field staff of each team. Quad Cities finished May with 20 wins - the most in a single month for the club since August 2013 - and had the most wins (35) of any team in professional baseball through the end of May.

Nottingham, Houston's sixth-round pick out of Redlands (Calif.) High School in the 2013 First-Year Player Draft, led Quad Cities during the month with a .355 batting average (33-for-93), four home runs, 13 extra-base hits, 20 RBIs, a .591 slugging percentage and .997 on-base plus slugging (OPS). The 20-year-old played in 23 May games, including a team-high 17 games as a catcher and five others as a first baseman. Nottingham ended May as the Midwest League leader in slugging percentage (.574) and OPS (.961), while ranking third in home runs (eight), fifth in batting average (.324), and tied for fourth in extra-base hits (20) and total bases (85).

Bostick, acquired by Houston in a trade with Texas on Jan. 21, made his Midwest League and Houston Astros organizational debut May 8 at Modern Woodmen Park, and went five scoreless innings for a win against Wisconsin. In his next outing, the 20-year-old Florence, S.C., native earned his first save since 2013 by pitching four scoreless innings in Cedar Rapids. With four outings, including three starts, in May, Bostick finished 1-1 with a 1.29 ERA, a .125 opponents' average, one walk and 14 strikeouts in 21 innings. He posted a team-best 0.48 walk-plus-hits per inning pitched (WHIP) in May.

For other Houston Astros affiliates, five former River Bandits were recognized as Player or Pitcher of the Month in May. Jon Singleton (2013 River Bandits) was Player of the Month for the Triple-A Fresno Grizzlies. Tony Kemp (2013) and Chris Devenski (2013) were respectively the Player and Pitcher of the Month for the Double-A Corpus Christi Hooks, as Devenski won for a second straight month. A.J. Reed (2014) and Joe Musgrove (2015) were respectively the Player and Pitcher of the Month for the Class-A Advanced Lancaster JetHawks. Musgrove was the Quad Cities Pitcher of the Month in April.

Every Astros full-season minor league affiliate, as well as the major league club, finished May with a winning record. Houston maintained first place in the American League West for the entire month. Triple-A Fresno, Double-A Corpus Christi, and Quad Cities all finished May in first place in their respective divisions. Class-A Advanced Lancaster finished May in second place in its division.

UP NEXT: It's not too late to sign up for the River Bandits Baseball Camp! For only $80, each child will get two days of professional instruction (June 10-11 or Aug. 5-6), a camp T-shirt, lunch on both days, and a ticket to a River Bandits game. Camps are limited to 100 participants. Individual tickets are on sale at the River Bandits box office and online at riverbandits.com. Ticket plans of 12 to 70 games - which include free parking, reserved seats, merchandise discounts, and guaranteed giveaways - are available by calling 563-324-3000.

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Senator Chuck Grassley, Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, made the following statement after the Senate passed the USA FREEDOM Act.  Grassley voted for several amendments to improve the bill that did not pass.  He voted for the bill on final passage.

"I've pointed out in the past the concerns I have with this bill.  Those concerns remain.  I voted for several amendments to fix the amicus provision, provide the government notice if the telephone companies were not going to continue to hold the phone records for at least 18 months, and require the Director of National Intelligence to certify that the new program was operationally effective.  Those amendments would have addressed several of my concerns.  I remain hopeful that many of these deficiencies can be addressed in the future.

"In the end, I felt that the bill was better than no reform at all and it restored several important, noncontroversial national security tools."

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