Des Moines, IA - Today, Braley for Iowa announced that Hillary Rodham Clinton will join Bruce Braley at grassroots events in Cedar Rapids and Davenport on Wednesday, October 29, 2014. Hillary Clinton and Bruce Braley will speak about the importance of voting in this year's crucial midterm election, as well as about Bruce's plans to fight for all Iowa families. 

Hillary Clinton and Bruce Braley will encourage all Iowans to vote and make their voice heard in this year's crucial midterm election. Iowans can vote early in person from now until November 3. For more information about early voting locations, visit vote.brucebraley.com.

For press credentials for the grassroots event in Cedar Rapids, RSVP here.

For press credentials for the grassroots event in Davenport, RSVP here

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Braley for Iowa Grassroots Event with Special Guest Hillary Clinton
IBEW Local 405 Hall,
1211 Wiley Blvd. SW
Cedar Rapids, IA
Doors open at 12:45 pm
For tickets visit www.brucebraley.com/cedar-rapids or call 515-802-8943.

Braley for Iowa Grassroots Event with Special Guest Hillary Clinton
RiverCenter, Atrium
136 E. 3rd Street
Davenport, IA
Doors open at 4:45 pm 
For tickets visit www.brucebraley.com/davenport or call 515-802-8943.
# # #

Illinois' 108th Sustainment Brigade Returns from Deployment

CHICAGO - Governor Pat Quinn today welcomed home more than 200 Illinois Army National Guard soldiers who served in Kuwait. The soldiers are all members of the 108th Sustainment Brigade, and were deployed overseas for approximately 10 months. Homecoming ceremonies for the brigade were held today in Bridgeview and Springfield.

"I'm proud to welcome home the heroes of the 108th Brigade and thank them for serving our country and protecting our freedoms," Governor Quinn said. "It's important that we take care of those who have borne that battle and this celebration is a small thank you to our state's veterans and their families. While we could never repay them for their sacrifice, we thank each of our National Guardsmen for their service to our great nation. Welcome home."

The 108th includes soldiers from throughout Illinois, with a large concentration from Chicago and the surrounding suburbs. The soldiers trained for a brief time at Fort Hood, Texas before deploying overseas. In preparation for the deployment, the unit participated in training exercises at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas and the Illinois National Guard's Marseilles Training Center.

The 108th Sustainment Brigade, led by Col. Drew Dukett of Roodhouse and Command Sgt. Maj. John Burns of Benld, deployed to Kuwait in January.  Most were headquartered at Camp Arifjan, Kuwait, while several soldiers served in other locations throughout the region. The 108th provided mission command and logistical support operations for servicemembers and civilians in Kuwait, Afghanistan and Iraq, and assisted with humanitarian aid in Iraq.

The 108th Special Troops Battalion, led by Lt. Col. Ron A. Jeanblanc of Athens, was deployed as part of the brigade and provided all internal support and medical operations within the brigade. The battalion also oversaw more than $600 million in financial transactions and conducted more than 220 financial missions throughout the Middle East. They also established the first Army Post Office in Iraq since 2011 and coordinated the transport of more than seven million tons of cargo across 75,000 nautical miles.

Governor Quinn is committed to honoring and supporting the men and women who have served our nation, and supporting the mission of the Illinois National Guard. His efforts include signing a law to create the Veterans Cash lottery ticket to be sold year round with 100 percent of proceeds supporting Illinois veterans. In 2011, Governor Quinn launched the Welcome Home Heroes program to support Illinois servicemembers seeking homeownership. Since that time more than 1,500 Illinois veterans, active military personnel, reservists and Illinois National Guard members have accessed more than $170 million to buy their homes.

While Braley puts Iowa families first, Ernst stands with millionaires, billionaires and special interests

Davenport, IA - Bruce Braley visited Davenport to speak with grassroots volunteers and organizers at a canvass kickoff and share his vision to be a Senator who fights for all of Iowa's hardworking families, not just the wealthiest few. While Ernst continues to try and hide her out-of-step policies by refusing to meet with newspaper editorial boards across Iowa, Bruce is traveling the state and sharing his vision to be a Senator who puts Iowa families first.

"The excitement surrounding this election is clear to me from the energy and enthusiasm that I see from our fantastic volunteers and grassroots organizers. Iowans face a clear choice, and I'm running for the Senate to fight for all of Iowa's hardworking families. I'm committed to breaking through the gridlock to build an economy that works for all of Iowa's families, not just the wealthiest few. While my opponent has made it clear that she stands for millionaires, billionaires and the special interests backing her campaign, I'll always put Iowa first," said Braley.

In stark contrast to Bruce's focus on policies that put Iowa families first, Sen. Joni Ernst's plans - including privatizing Social Security, protecting corporations that ship jobs overseas from paying their fair share in taxes, abolishing federal student loans, and opposing a minimum wage increase that would give 300,000 Iowans a raise - would have devastating consequences for Iowa's families.

Bruce also spoke on the importance of voting early in this year's midterm election. Iowans can vote early in person from now until November 3. For more information about early voting locations, visit vote.brucebraley.com.
# # #

Rock Island County Clerk Karen Kinney remains defiant, lashes out in Facebook posts on KWQC news story

ROCK ISLAND, IL -- KWQC TV-6 reported yesterday about several complaints of electronic voting fraud with the early voting machines in Rock Island County. You can read and watch that story here.

Rock Island County Clerk Karen Kinney (D-Rock Island) offered no comment to the media about the allegations, but did take to Facebook last night to silence any criticism, calling the formal complaints "lies, & more lies" and accusing those who filed complaints of "making false allegations to suppress the vote." Kinney's posts were written under a thread about this issue on KWQC's Facebook page.

The Schilling campaign reached out to the Illinois State Board of Elections on Friday to report the situation. The State Board of Elections made contact with the Rock Island County Clerk's office and recommended re-calibrating the early voting machines. As of yet, there is no evidence that a full re-calibration has occurred.

The Schilling campaign has now received more than 20 reports from voters who have had their vote switched on the electronic voting machines. Several formal complaints have been filed to the Rock Island County Clerk's office.
Yesterday, the Schilling campaign also heard from a voter who went to early vote at the County Clerk's office and was turned away after requesting a paper ballot.

Jon Schweppe, communications director at Bobby Schilling for Congress, released the following statement:

"Every vote matters. Every vote should be counted. Karen Kinney needs to stop victim-blaming on Facebook and start working to fix the faulty machines. Voters in Rock Island County are quickly losing faith in the legitimacy of our elections, and that's unacceptable. The Rock Island County Clerk needs to do something immediately."

The Giant Wheel will take you up 110 feet in the air in an open air gondola that seat up to 6 people. The wheel will spin slowly around offering views of the Mississippi River, Modern Woodmen Park, and downtown Davenport and Rock Island. The ride will be lit at light with an impressive LED light package with millions of color combinations which makes it an entirely different ride at night!

All guests below 42" must be accompanied by a supervising companion. The Giant Wheel requires five amusement coupons to ride.

For each ride, 50 cents will be donated to the Genesis Health Services Foundation, benefiting Camp Genesis, Genesis Neonatal Intensive Care Unit and Genesis Flu-Free Quad Cities.

IH Mississippi Valley Credit Union members can use the Fastpass line and be the next guests loaded onto the ride by just showing their credit union card.

Amusements Schedule and General Information

CHICAGO - Governor Pat Quinn today ordered the Illinois Department of Public Health to require a mandatory 21-day home quarantine for high-risk individuals who have had direct contact with an individual infected with the Ebola virus while in Liberia, Sierra Leone or Guinea.

The mandatory quarantine order includes any high-risk medical personnel who have performed medical services to individuals infected with the Ebola virus. The order will be implemented by local health departments across the state. Previously these high-risk individuals were subject to a voluntary quarantine.

"This protective measure is too important to be voluntary," Governor Quinn said. "We must take every step necessary to ensure the people of Illinois are protected from potential exposure to the Ebola virus. While we have no confirmed cases of the Ebola virus in Illinois, we will continue to take every safeguard necessary to protect first responders, healthcare workers and the people of Illinois."

This directive was issued to every local health department in Illinois earlier today.

For the most up to date information visit http://www.idph.state.il.us/ebola/index.htm.

###
IA/IL QUAD-CITIES - A compelling artist who combines exhilarating emotion with fierce integrity, award-winning violinist Erin Keefe has performed with the top orchestras of the world. In the second presentation of the Quad City Symphony Orchestra (QCSO) 100th Anniversary Masterworks series, Keefe will perform one of the greatest concerto masterpieces - Johannes Brahms' Violin Concerto, which abounds with rich melodies and joyous dances. Keefe's performance is just one course of the musical feast presented in Masterworks II: A Passion for Life.

Masterworks II will be held 8 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 1 at the Adler Theatre, Davenport, IA, and 2 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 2 at Centennial Hall, Augustana College, Rock Island, IL. QCSO Music Director and Conductor Mark Russell Smith will lead the orchestra. In addition to the Violin Concerto, the evening will also include a world premiere composition by James Romig entitled "Bridges," and Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 6 "Pathétique."

"Keefe is charismatic, profound and engaging," said Smith. "She imbues the Violin Concerto with life. Brahms' piece has a vibrant Hungarian folk music influence. It holds drama and also offers moments of sweeping beauty. For me, it is 'the' violin concerto." 

Erin Keefe and Brahms' Violin Concerto
Violinist Erin Keefe is quickly establishing a powerful reputation worldwide. She is a top prize-winner of international competitions and has given recitals in America, Austria, Germany, Korea, Poland, Japan and Denmark. "The Brahms is my absolute favorite concerto to perform," she said. "It is technically quite challenging but incredibly rewarding. I have played it many times but not at all in the past five years, so I'm really looking forward to this performance."

Neither of Keefe's parents are musicians, but her father always loved listening to classical music. "He thought it would be a good hobby for me," she said, "so I started taking violin lessons at the age of 7 through a Suzuki program." 

Keefe added that she feels very honored to take part in the 100th Season of the QCSO. "I have heard so many great things about the orchestra," she said, "and I'm looking forward to making music with them. It will also be fun to work with Mark Russell Smith because he was the conductor of an orchestra I played in when I was in high school."

"Erin is an exceptional musician and a true soloist with a depth of musicality," said Benjamin Loeb, Executive Director of the QCSO. "She has the talent and maturity needed to express the different roles in this beautiful work by Brahms. She will give a glorious performance."

Johannes Brahms (1833-1897) was a German composer and pianist. He composed for piano, chamber ensembles, symphony orchestra, as well as voice and chorus. His popularity and influence throughout his career were considerable. He is often grouped with Johann Sebastian Bach and Ludwig van Beethoven as one of the "Three Bs" of great composers.

James Romig's "Bridges"

New commissions have been an important part of the QCSO's history - especially during the 100th Anniversary season. New music helps to keep orchestral music relevant, and the QCSO encourages its creation. Masterworks II will feature a new composition entitled "Bridges" from Quad-Cities resident James Romig, Associate Professor of Composition and Theory at Western Illinois University.

Romig composes music that reflects the intricate complexity of nature. He enjoys hiking and photography, and is interested in chaos theory, fractal geometry, and small-world networks. Romig stated that he is delighted to be part of the QCSO's 100th Season. "I've enjoyed and appreciated the QCSO since my student days at the University of Iowa in the 1990s," he said. 

Romig's new work is entitled "Bridges" and he noted that the name has numerous meanings.  "Compositionally speaking, my new work provides multiple musical high-points that are connected by 'bridges' of long notes in the woodwinds and brass instruments," he said. "The cities of Moline, Rock Island, Bettendorf, and Davenport are quite literally connected by bridges. Also, the title is a pun on the anatomy of string instruments, whose strings rest on a thin piece of resonant wood called a bridge."

"James' diverse interests give his music an inner logic that his listeners understand implicitly," said Loeb. "His sense of structure is masterful. You may not see the girders, but you need them to make sure the building is sound." 

Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 6 "Pathétique"

The final piece of the evening, Symphony No. 6 "Pathétique," comes from composer Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893). He was the first Russian composer whose music made a lasting impression on an international level. 

His final work, Symphony No. 6 is the capstone to a career filled with both wild success and deep disappointment. "Music is indeed the most beautiful of all Heaven's gifts to humanity wandering in the darkness," Tchaikovsky once said. "Alone it calms, enlightens, and stills our souls. It is not the straw to which the drowning man clings; but a true friend, refuge, and comforter, for whose sake life is worth living."

"Tchaikovsky poured his heart out in this piece," Loeb said. "It represents the highest highs and the lowest lows. There are profound emotions in this piece that go beyond the everyday happy and sad. While Brahms and Tchaikovsky did not like each other's music, we are sure our patrons will enjoy hearing them as part of the same program."

Quad City Symphony Orchestra tickets are available at the QCSO box office at 327 Brady St., Davenport, IA. You can also call the QCSO at (563) 322-7276 or visit www.qcso.org. For more information on future offerings from QCSO, be sure to download the full 100th Season brochure at www.qcso.org/calendar.html.

WHO Congressman Dave Loebsack

Mayor Bill Gluba

Food Forest officials

 

WHAT Dave will join City officials and break ground on this new community garden

 

WHERE Blackhawk Gardens Park

Corner of S. Concord and Pansy Ave.

Davenport

 

WHEN Saturday, October 25 at 10:00am

 

###

Simon: Screening is key to early detection, saving lives

 

CHICAGO - Oct. 24, 2014. Lt. Governor Sheila Simon today highlighted the importance of receiving regular mammograms to detect breast cancer in its early stages. Simon visited Lynn Sage Comprehensive Breast Center at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago where she underwent a mammogram and urged all women to make their health a priority and seek proactive screenings.

"Studies show that as we get older, women are at an increased risk of breast cancer," said Simon. "But this disease, which takes away so many of our mothers, daughters, wives, sisters and aunts, can be preventable and treatable with an earlier warning. I'm urging all women to get screened."

October is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month. The American Cancer Society recommends all women age 40 and older have a mammogram every year to screen for breast cancer.

"Except for skin cancer, breast cancer is the most common cancer in women, and early detection plays a critical role in its treatment," said Erin I. Neuschler, MD, associate director of breast imaging clinical operations for Northwestern Medicine and assistant professor of radiology at the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. "When breast cancer is detected at an early stage, it can be treated effectively in most women, and mammography is a proven method for early detection."

Simon chairs the Governor's Rural Affairs Council and advocated for improved access to women's health care in underserved areas. Throughout her term as Lt. Governor, Simon has used her own breast cancer screenings as a tool to encourage women throughout Illinois to seek proactive treatments.

"The process of getting a mammogram is quick and painless, and usually private," Simon added. "But if giving a peek into my exam room convinces even one woman to go out and get a mammogram, it's worth the discomfort."

Please see above for satellite uplink coordinates. Footage includes b-roll of Lt. Governor Simon's exam, as well as interviews with Simon and Dr. Neuschler.

###
Waterloo, IA - Today, Bruce Braley voted early at the Black Hawk County Auditor's office in Waterloo. Braley was joined by his wife, Carolyn Braley, and supporters Scott and Regina Porter and Jesse McCunniff.

"It was great to be joined today by Jesse and the Porter family, who remind me of why I'm running for the Senate - to fight for Iowans, and to always put Iowa's families first. I'm committed to breaking through the gridlock to build an economy that works for all of Iowa's families, not just the wealthiest few. While my opponent has made it clear that she stands for millionaires, billionaires and the special interests backing her campaign, I'll always put Iowa first," said Braley.

Scott and Regina Porter are the grandparents of Joseph Craig, a Nigerian-born toddler who was adopted by Jonathan and Kayla Craig in 2011. Braley helped the Craig family navigate bureaucratic problems and secure a visa so that Joseph could enter the United States.

Jesse McCunniff is a member of the 1/133rd infantry battalion in the Iowa National Guard, and has been deployed to Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Iraq and Afghanistan during his 17 years in the National Guard. Braley led a successful effort to secure respite pay and GI Bill benefits that were initially denied to members of the 1/133rd infantry battalion.

Voting early is the simplest and easiest way to cast a ballot. Iowans can vote early in person from now until November 3. For more information about early voting locations, visit vote.brucebraley.com.
# # #

Pages