Illinois Soldiers compete for title of Best Warrior

Pentagon-level Leader visits competiton

MARSEILLES, IL (04/09/2015)(readMedia)-- The Illinois National Guard conducts the Best Warrior Competition to select the non-commissioned officer and enlisted Soldier to represent the Illinois Army National Guard at regional and national competitions in 2015.

WHO:

Illinois National Guard

Chief Master Sgt. Mitchell Brush, National Guard Bureau Senior Enlisted Avisor

WHAT:

• The Best Warrior Competition pits Soldiers against each other in warrior tasks, weapons qualification, land navigation and physical fitness. Key events include a 12-mile road march with a 40-pound rucksack, a confidence course race, and an interview board.

• During the Best Warrior Competition, Chief Master Sgt. Mitchell Brush will visit to speak with Soldiers. Brush is the Senior Enlisted Advisor for the National Guard Bureau. He advises the Chief, National Guard Bureau on all enlisted matters affecting training, health of the force, and enlisted professional development.

WHEN: Saturday April 11, 2015 at 01:30PM Central Time (US & Canada)

WHERE:1700 Army Road
Marseilles, Illinois 61341

MOUNT VERNON, IA (04/09/2015)(readMedia)-- Aubrey Kohl of Bettendorf (52722) is one of more than 60 students who will present their independent research at Cornell College's 19th Annual Student Symposium on April 25.

Kohl is giving an oral presentation on "What Do You Do When Life Give You Lemons?"

Students will present independent research on topics ranging from Pablo Neruda's poetry and politics and Beyonce's status as a feminist icon to an examination of ACL tears in female athletes and a look at the climate of ancient Iberia at the symposium, which has been an academic highlight at Cornell College since 1997 and features students' original research through oral and poster presentations. Each student participant works closely with a faculty sponsor in developing the presentations. The projects, many of which are initiated by students, generally take several months to prepare.

One of the 40 "Colleges That Change Lives," Cornell College in Mount Vernon, Iowa, is a national liberal arts college with a distinctive One Course At A Time curriculum. The One Course schedule provides students the chance to dive into their studies, focus more intensely on the disciplines of their choice, and learn authentically with the unique freedom to shed the confines of the traditional classroom to study off-campus, pursue research, or accept an internship - all without missing out on other classes.

Cornell has been recognized by numerous publications for the value its education offers and for academic excellence. This year it was named of the 100 best values in liberal arts education by Kiplinger's, one of the "Best Value Schools" among national liberal arts colleges by U.S. News and World Report, and one of the 100 Affordable Elite Colleges by Washington Monthly. Ninety-three percent of Cornell graduates earn their degrees in four years. In 2013 Cornell was named one of the 25 colleges with the best professors by the Center for College Affordability and Productivity.

For more information, visit www.cornellcollege.edu.

Inside the Music TODAY at 4:00 p.m.
Inside the Music will have a one-time revised start time with doors opening at 4:00 p.m. and the program led by our charismatic Music Director Mark Russell Smith will begin at 4:30 p.m. TODAY at the Hotel Blackhawk.

Learn more about James Stephenson, Ludwig Van Beethoven, and Arnold Schoenberg by reading the program notes written by Dennis Loftin and Jacob Bancks for this weekend's grand finale Masterworks performance.

QCSYEs Spring Festival Concert
Sunday, April 26
Centennial Hall, Rock Island
3:00 p.m.

Our talented QCSYEs will perform classical favorites like Bach, Rutter, Tchaikovsky, and Copland.

Solo by Gabrielle Hartman, bassoon, 2015 QCSYEs Concerto Competition Youth Symphony Orchestra Prizewinner

Former Good Morning America host, Joan Lunden, speaks at the RiverCenter tomorrow during the Gilda's Club Annual Fundraiser presented by Genesis Cancer Care Institute. Join this award-winning journalist, motivational speaker, successful entrepreneur, and mom of seven as she brings insight to top issues in America. For fun of a very different kind on Saturday, you'll find unlimited beer samples, a commemorative glass, live entertainment, and tons o' bacon at the RiverCenter during the Bacon & Beer Festival!
 Right next door, the Quad City Symphony Orchestra performs Masterworks VI at the Adler on Saturday. With the help of multiple choirs, this performance highlights Beethoven's Symphony No. 9 and Schoenber's Friede auf Erden. Be sure to get your tickets for Ballet Quad Cities': The Sleeping Beauty next Saturday and Jersey Boys April 21 - 26 while you're there.

 The smell of hot dogs, popcorn, and springtime fill the air this weekend as the Quad Cities River Bandits celebrate their Opening Day! Kick-off the 2015 baseball season the right way by cheering the Bandits to a win on Sunday. If you can't make it Sunday, have no fear! The Bandits will also be home Monday and Tuesday evening as they take on the Clinton LumberKings. Check out some awesome promotions scheduled for the 2015 season here.

 What do you get when you fuse together jazz, classical, bluegrass, southern rock, and Indian ragas? The Galactic Cowboy Orchestra! Hear how they combine these sounds with their own original style Saturday at River Music Experience. Singer/songwriter Mason Jennings also returns to the Redstone Room tomorrow performing a show of rugged, acoustic-guitar-driven indie-folk.
 Whether you're looking to paint your own piece or peruse the works of others, there are plenty of resources downtown to get your art fix in. Create a masterpiece of your own by participating in Vino van Gogh or classes at Re-Cre8 Studio. Support local artists by exploring works at Art on Third or Bucktown Center for the Arts. Don't forget to swing by the Figge Art Museum and German American Heritage Center for their many exhibits open now, too.
See you downtown! Sponsored by the River Cities' Reader
for more events, click here
Former Miss Deaf America Says Act Helped Tear Down Barriers

The day the Americans With Disabilities Act passed in 1990, U.S. Sen. Tom Harkin delivered a speech from the Senate floor in a way most of his colleagues didn't understand.

Harkin, the bill's sponsor, used sign language for the benefit of his brother who was deaf and had taught Harkin this lesson: "People should be judged on the basis of their abilities and not on the basis of their disabilities."

With the country marking the Act's 25th anniversary, Brandi Rarus, a former Miss Deaf America, remembers how important it was for people with disabilities to make it known they would no longer allow others to set limits on what they could achieve.

"Those of us with disabilities face many barriers," says Rarus, co-author with Gail Harris of the book "Finding Zoe: A Deaf Woman's Story of Identity, Love and Adoption." (www.brandirarus.com)

"Some of those are unavoidable. I can't listen to the radio as I drive to work in the morning. Often, because of communication barriers, I have to work twice as hard as a hearing person. Instead of taking me five minutes to make a doctor's appointment, it takes me 10."

But some barriers are avoidable, Rarus says. And that's why the Americans With Disabilities Act has played such an important role in people's lives for the last 25 years.

The ADA prohibits discrimination against qualified individuals with disabilities when it comes to employment issues. The Act also requires employers to make reasonable accommodations for a disability unless it causes an "undue hardship."

Harris, a professional storyteller and Rarus' co-author, says that although Rarus is deaf, her life struggles are similar to everyone's.

"We can all relate to finding our place in the world and fitting in, about self-acceptance, about being judged and judging others, and how we must look past all that to fulfill our dreams," says Harris. (www.gailharrisauthor.com)

The U.S. Department of Labor says many concerns about the ADA never materialized. According to the department:

•  Complying isn't expensive. The majority of workers with disabilities do not need accommodations, and for those who do, the cost is usually minimal. In fact, 57 percent of accommodations cost nothing, according to the Job Accommodation Network, a service from the Department of Labor's Office of Disability Employment Policy.

•  Lawsuits have not flooded the courts. The majority of ADA employment-related disputes are resolved through informal negotiation or mediation. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which enforces the ADA's employment provisions, investigates the merits of each case and offers alternatives to litigation. The number of ADA employment-related cases represents a tiny percentage of the millions of employers in the U.S.

•  The ADA is rarely misused. If an individual files a complaint under the ADA and does not have a condition that meets its definition of disability, the complaint is dismissed. While claims by people with false or minor conditions may get media attention, the reality is these complaints are usually dismissed.
Rarus, who became deaf at age 6 when she contracted spinal meningitis, was making strides toward success even before the passage of the ADA.

Winning the Miss Deaf America crown in 1988 led to numerous opportunities. She signed the National Anthem at a Chicago Cubs game. She spoke at corporate conferences and traveled the country speaking out for deaf children and building awareness of what it means to be deaf. She was understudy for Marlee Matlin in the play "Children of a Lesser God."

Her latest project is "Finding Zoe." The book Rarus and Harris joined forces to write tells the story of Rarus' early years as she learned to live with being deaf, but the focal point becomes her effort to adopt Zoe, a deaf infant caught in the foster care system.

Harris, upon collaborating with Rarus on her story, was on a mission to help bring it forth, as everyone is deserving of basic human rights. "People don't realize what the deaf have gone through," she says.

Working with Rarus and the anniversary of the ADA have reminded her of the challenges all people face, whether black or white, deaf or hearing, gay or straight.

"It's how we deal with them that counts," Harris says. "Brandi's courage and tenacity can get us thinking about our own vulnerabilities and how they can make us strong."

About Brandi Rarus and Gail Harris

Brandi Rarus (www.brandirarus.com), who lost her hearing at age 6, has traveled the country speaking out for deaf children and building awareness of what it means to be deaf. She was Miss Deaf America in 1988. She and her husband live in Austin, Texas, with their three sons and adopted daughter.

Gail Harris (www.gailharrisauthor.com) is an award-winning writer and teacher of the intuitive process who also adopted a child. In addition to co-writing "Finding Zoe," she is the author of "Your Heart Knows the Answer." She lives with her husband and son in Framingham, Mass

Registration is now open for the inaugural Quad Cities Pollinator Conference, June 10-11, 2015 at Jumer's Casino and Hotel in Rock Island, IL. This two-day event features a keynote dinner by John Phipps, commentator for U.S. Farm Report, titled, "Shades of Grey: Communicating Science to an Anxious Public." With insights from his farm to the TV studio, Phipps will share experiences and working rules for explaining probabilistic technical information to audiences craving black and white answers.

Throughout the two days, participants will also attend a variety of educational sessions from experts, such as May Berenbaum, Ph.D, Department of Entomology, University of Illinois, on: plant-pollinator relationships, pollinator decline, designing pollinator support plantings, conservation measures, pollinator-friendly landscapes in agricultural and urban settings, and more. In addition, individuals can attend an optional off-site workshop and tours.

This conference is geared toward: the agricultural community; municipal, state and federal government employees; landowners; homeowners; beekeepers; and educators. The conference will provide a platform for knowledge-sharing, open dialogue, networking, and pollinator-related goods and services.

Pollinators are a critical natural resource in agriculture and healthy ecosystems, but there has been a significant pollinator decline over the past few decades. Of the 100 crops that make up 90% of the global food supply, 71 are dependent on bees. Although our main cash crops are self-pollinating, insects do pollinate both plants and may be more important than historically thought. Honey bee pollination alone adds more than $15 billion in value to agricultural crops each year in the United States.

Pre-registration for the event is required. Exhibitor space & sponsorships are available. For registration and information, visit www.qcpollinatorconference.org or call Nahant Marsh at (563) 323-5196.

The conference is sponsored by: Nahant Marsh; U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service; Soil & Water Conservation Districts of Rock Island, Scott and Henry counties; Rock Island County Farm Bureau, Scott County Farm Bureau, The Singh Family Charitable Giving Fund, Wallace's Garden Center, Waste Commission of Scott County and Radish magazine.

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Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Rivermont Collegiate, Becherer Hall Gym

1821 Sunset Drive, Bettendorf

Schools will begin arriving at 8:30 a.m.

Competition will begin at approximately 9:00 a.m.

The event concludes at 2:00 p.m.

The Rivermont Academic Invitational (RAI) is a unique academic competition for 5th-8th Grade students

from schools throughout the greater Quad Cities. RAI brings over 200 students to the Rivermont campus for a day of

hands-on academic challenges. The day encourages out-of-the-box thinking and problem solving, promotes teamwork, and is a ton of fun!


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Coralville, IA  - April 9, 2015 -  West Music Pianos is proud to announce the Steinway Selection Showroom at their Coralville, Iowa location.  When guests visit the Steinway Selection Showroom, they will have the opportunity to experience an unparalleled selection of the finest pianos the state of Iowa has to offer in a one-of-a-kind setting.  Guests are able to hand select their Steinway piano from a number of models tuned and ready to play, as each instrument is unique in its nature and character.  The showroom has a wide variety of grand and upright pianos from Steinway, Boston, Essex, and more.  Please contact West Music to set up an appointment and experience the Steinway Selection Showroom for yourself.   For more information about West Music and their expansive piano services, please call West Music Coralville at 319-351-2000 or visit pianos.westmusic.com.
Mercer County Republicans worked hard to get a Republican majority on
the county board last fall, and now, after 30 years of Democrat
control, the county is faced with a serious financial situation. The
Mercer County Board declared last week that county government is in a
period of financial emergency including:

1. The Mercer County board's 2015 appropriations ordinance did not
provide funding for:

--Salary of the county engineer & other MFT expenses;
--All required "step increases" in compensation for represented
employees in compliance with labor agreements;
--Required payments for interest or principle reduction for the
county's operating line of credit;
--Likely settlement of three expired bargaining unit contracts and
costs associated with the likely settlements.

2. Mercer County does not maintain an unencumbered fund balance
sufficient to manage county business without incurring short term debt
for the purpose of maintaining county operations.

3. Mercer County has been unable to meet its legal and contractual
obligations to make payments to creditors, including the Public
Building Commission.

4. The growth in the cost of labor and benefits have exceeded the
economic growth of Mercer County as well as the county's legal ability
or desire to raise taxes to meet the rising costs

5. In recent years financial obligations have been funded by selling
county assets or through inter-fund borrowing and transfers, which is
no longer an available financial strategy (the county has one asset left -- a farm).

See http://www.mercercountyrepublicans.org/mercer-county-resolution-of-fiscal-emergency/ for entire text of the emergency resolution.

Brian Anseeuw, MD
Mercer County Board Chair
April 25,26:  Black Hawk Gem and Mineral Club Spring Rock, Gem and Jewelry Show, Clarion Hotel 5202 Brady St, Davenport, IA 52806 Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Sun. 10 a.m.-4 p.m.  The show will feature rocks, minerals, fossils, agates, geodes, tumbled stones, beads, silver and beaded jewelry, carved stones, spheres, arrowheads and much more. There will be demonstrations on Glass bead Making, Faceting, and Flint Knapping. You can learn to make arrowheads and/or Crack you own Geodes. Admission is free. For information call (563) 445-3034

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