PORT BYRON, IL - The Nick Teddy Foundation is pleased to announce the launch of its new event website, www.nickteddy5k.com. The "Nick Teddy 5k", to be held September 13, 2014, includes races, kid's games, food and entertainment, and a silent auction and raffle. This year cash prizes will be offered to overall male and female winners. At the new site, participants can browse photos, learn about The Nick Teddy Foundation and its mission, and register online.
This annual family event is held in memory of Nicholas Theodore Strub, a native of Port Byron, Ill., a 2000 graduate of Riverdale High School, and a 2004 Alumnus of Iowa State University. Nick fought a courageous battle against the pediatric cancer, Ewing's sarcoma, for more than 5-years, until he died at age 29.
Proceeds from the "Nick Teddy 5k" will benefit the Liddy Shriver Sarcoma Initiative (www.sarcomahelp.org), which works to award sarcoma research grants to expert investigators around the world. In 2013, the event registered more than 400 runners and raised over $25,000.
In its first two years, The Nick Teddy Foundation has raised more than $42,000 for research, and to support local Ewing's patients and their families. Currently, several area children and young adults are affected by this disease.
Race Directors: Holly Larson 309-798-3081 race@nickteddy.org
Charles Stelk 309-271-0029 hurdle00@aol.com ! !
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Results of the Federal Housing Finance Agency Annual Stress
Test Under the Severely Adverse Scenario

DES MOINES, Iowa, July 17, 2014 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The Federal Home
Loan Bank of Des Moines today made available the results of its first
annual stress test as required by its regulator, the Federal Housing
Finance Agency. Results can be found on the Bank's investor relations
page:

www.fhlbdm.com/about-fhlb-des-moines/investor-relations/

The stress test estimates the Bank's capital levels under hypothetical
severely adverse economic conditions.

These estimates should not be regarded as forecasts of actual financial
results. These results are modeled projections and may not reflect the
actual impact to the Bank if such a hypothetical scenario were to
occur.

Questions regarding the results of the stress test should be directed
to Megan Feld by calling 515.281.1159.

The Federal Home Loan Bank of Des Moines is a wholesale cooperative
bank that provides low-cost short and long-term funding and community
lending to more than 1,200 members, including commercial banks, saving
institutions, credit unions and insurance companies. The Bank is wholly
owned by its members and receives no taxpayer funding. The Des Moines
Bank serves Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, North Dakota and South Dakota
and is one of twelve regional Banks that make up the Federal Home Loan
Bank System.

Fort Wayne wins, 9-2, to send Quad Cities to fourth straight loss for first time in the second half

DAVENPORT, Iowa (July 16, 2014) - Dustin Peterson singled home the first of four first-inning runs for Fort Wayne Wednesday night, and the third baseman added a home run as one of five TinCaps to collect multi-hit games in the visitors' 9-2 victory over the Quad Cities River Bandits in front of a season-high 7,140 at Modern Woodmen Park.

TinCaps shortstop Trea Tuner began his two-hit night by leading off the game with a double down the right-field line against right-hander Adrian Houser (4-4). Peterson followed with a single to center field and went to second base on a single by first baseman Fernando Perez, who also had two hits in the game. Right fielder Franmil Reyes grounded out to third base for the game's first out, and designated hitter Jake Bauers singled through the right side to drive in Peterson. Catcher Ryan Miller then doubled to left field, scoring Perez for a 3-0 lead, but a relay by left fielder Marc Wik and shortstop Thomas Lindauer to catcher Brian Holberton caught Bauers at home plate for the second out. Center fielder Ronnie Richardson doubled in Miller for a 4-0 TinCaps lead in a six-hit, eight-batter inning.

Left-hander Max Fried set down the first four batters in his Midwest League season debut for Fort Wayne (8-17 second half, 38-56 overall). He allowed back-to-back singles by River Bandits first baseman Chase McDonald and catcher Brian Holberton but got second baseman Jose Fernandez to line to second baseman Josh VanMeter for an inning-ending double play.

Houser did not allow a hit in the second or third innings, but in the fourth inning, he walked the first two batters - Richardson and left fielder Henry Charles. After a strikeout, Turner drove an RBI double to left field, ending Houser's day after allowing seven hits and three walks in 3 1/3 innings. Houser became the fourth straight Quad Cities starter to last no more than four innings and give up at least six runs when Peterson hit a sacrifice fly against right-hander Aaron Vaughn to extend the TinCaps lead to 6-0.

Quad Cities (12-13, 47-47) reached the scoreboard in the fourth inning, when Wik hit a leadoff double and scored when third baseman J.D. Davis doubled to left-center field for the only hit of his Midwest League debut. Designated hitter Ronnie Mitchell walked, but McDonald lined to Turner for a double play. Holberton singled to put runners at first and second bases with two outs, and Fried was removed after allowing one earned run on five hits and a walk with one strikeout in 3 2/3 innings. Left-hander Payton Baskette (4-4) entered to get Fernandez to fly out to center field. Baskette scattered three hits and a walk with two strikeouts in 3 1/3 innings, getting help from the TinCaps' third double play, into which Holberton hit after Mitchell doubled and McDonald singled to start the sixth inning.

The score remained 6-1 as Vaughn retired all five batters he faced in his Midwest League debut. River Bandits right-hander Kevin Comer then retired five straight before Perez hit a two-out single in the seventh inning, and Reyes reached on an error by Lindauer. Bauers and Miller hit consecutive RBI singles to extend their team's lead to 8-1. The River Bandits managed another run in the eighth inning off right-hander Jorge Guzman, as McDonald walked with two outs and scored on Holberton's RBI double. Peterson answered with a one-out home run in the ninth inning to restore the seven-run lead against Comer, who was charged with three runs - one earned - on four hits with a season-high five strikeouts in three innings.

Quad Cities seeks to snap its four-game losing streak - its longest of the second half - at 7 p.m. Thursday against Fort Wayne. River Bandits right-hander Andrew Thurman (5-5) is scheduled to face TinCaps right-hander Jimmi Brasoban (0-4).

ST. LOUIS, MO (07/16/2014)(readMedia)-- The following students were named to the Dean's List for the spring 2014 semester at Washington University in St. Louis:

Ryan Mitchell Kelly of Bettendorf, IA (52722) was named to the Dean's List for the spring 2014 semester at Washington University in St. Louis. Kelly is enrolled in the university's College of Arts & Sciences. To qualify for the Dean's List in the College of Arts & Sciences, students must earn a semester grade point average of 3.6 or above and be enrolled in at least 14 graded units.

Ronald Obinna Nwumeh of Bettendorf, IA (52722) was named to the Dean's List for the spring 2014 semester at Washington University in St. Louis. Nwumeh is enrolled in the university's College of Arts & Sciences. To qualify for the Dean's List in the College of Arts & Sciences, students must earn a semester grade point average of 3.6 or above and be enrolled in at least 14 graded units.

Washington University is counted among the world's leaders in teaching and research, and it draws students and faculty to St. Louis from all 50 states and more than 120 nations. The total student body is more than 14,000 undergraduate, graduate and professional students.

The approximately 3,400 faculty teach in seven schools: Arts & Sciences, Brown School, Olin Business School, Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts, School of Engineering & Applied Science, School of Law and School of Medicine. Twenty-three Nobel laureates have been associated with Washington University, with nine doing the major portion of their pioneering research there.

The university offers more than 90 programs and almost 1,500 courses leading to bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees in a broad spectrum of traditional and interdisciplinary fields, with additional opportunities for minor concentrations and individualized programs.

Construction Projects Will Put Hundreds to Work as Illinois' Unemployment Rate Drops to its Lowest Point Since October 2008

CHICAGO - As Illinois' unemployment rate fell to its lowest point since October 2008, Governor Pat Quinn today announced Employ Illinois, an expansion of his efforts to provide diverse residents with training for jobs in the construction industry. Offered through the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) and the Illinois Tollway, Employ Illinois links job seekers with training and also increases the incentive paid to contractors from $10 to $15 an hour for each program graduate they put to work. Today's announcement is part of Governor Quinn's agenda to create jobs and help drive Illinois' economy forward.

"Putting people back to work is my number one priority," Governor Quinn said. "There are more people working now than when I took office and today's good news shows we are headed in the right direction. While we have more work to do, Employ Illinois will help give more of our hardworking residents the opportunity for hands-on training and job experience at a decent wage. Illinois is making a comeback and this program will help ensure our workers have what it takes to get the job done."

Preliminary data, released today by the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the Illinois Department of Employment Security, shows Illinois' rate has dropped to 7.1 percent, the lowest since October 2008 - months before Governor Quinn took office. The drop in the unemployment rate from March to June is the sharpest three-month decline ever recorded in Illinois.

Governor Quinn has directed IDOT and the Tollway to apply the Employ Illinois incentive on as many eligible projects as possible. Employ Illinois workers will take part in many of the projects funded by a new $1 billion road construction initiative that begins in August.

Under Employ Illinois, participants will develop the pre-apprenticeship skills they need to work on construction sites and begin the process of becoming journeymen and journeywomen in the construction trades. Since the $10 per hour hiring incentive took effect, trainees have participated in 269 contracts statewide, resulting in 9,172 hours in on-the-job training that was reimbursed by the state.

"The Tollway's Move Illinois Program is the largest in our agency's history and the largest of any toll road agency in the nation," Illinois Tollway Executive Director Kristi Lafleur said. "Employ Illinois will bridge the gap between these established training programs and the job opportunities that exist on a variety of roadway construction projects throughout Illinois."

"Employ Illinois is about investing in people as we invest in our roads and bridges," Acting IDOT Secretary Erica Borggren said. "Through this program, we will provide aspiring workers the help they need to develop marketable skills in the transportation trades."

The $15 per hour incentive will be paid by the state to contractors that hire Employ Illinois graduates. On IDOT projects, the agency funds the incentive paid to contractors. The Illinois Tollway will fund the incentives paid to contractors that hire Employ Illinois graduates on Tollway projects.

Ongoing projects already utilizing the new $15 per hour incentive include the Circle Interchange in Chicago, Roosevelt Road in Broadview, West Lake Avenue in Glenview, the Grand Avenue bridge in Gurnee, the U.S. 34 and Canadian National Railway separation project in Aurora and the Richton Road and I-57/Stuenkel Road projects in Will County.

Employ Illinois workers will participate in many of the major northeastern Illinois construction projects this season, part of the $1.1 billion capital bill passed by the Illinois General Assembly this spring, including:

·         $48 million reconstruction of the I-55 bridges approaching Lake Shore Drive in Chicago.

·         $86 million project to rebuild and repair the bridges at I-55 and Illinois 171 in the southwest suburbs.

·         $44.5 million project to add lanes to U.S. 14 in Crystal Lake.

·         $32.7 million reconstruction of the I-55 and Weber Road interchange in Romeoville.

·         $16.1 million reconstruction of the U.S. 41 and Illinois 132 interchange in Gurnee.

Other projects statewide that could include Employ Illinois workers are:

·         $22.4 million resurfacing and bridge repairs to I-64 in Washington County.

·         $21 million resurfacing of I-57 in Williamson County.

·         $13.6 million resurfacing and bridge replacement on I-57 in Iroquois County.

·         $8.6 million resurfacing and safety improvements on I-74 in Champaign County.

·         $30 million resurfacing on I-70 in Fayette and Effingham counties.

·         $26 million resurfacing of 31 miles of I-39/U.S. 51 in Winnebago and Ogle counties.

At Governor Quinn's direction, construction projects have exceeded goals for Disadvantaged Business Enterprise (DBE) participation. Over the past five years, the Tollway has spent nearly $586 million, or 25 percent of its $2.4 billion contracts awarded, with firms owned by minorities or women. Minority workers on Tollway projects have seen their hours quadruple between 2011 and 2013.

The Illinois Jobs Now!-funded $425 million rehabilitation of the Dan Ryan Branch of the Red Line project included 29 percent DBE participation for the track work component and 40 percent for the station work, with more than $56.4 million in construction work awarded to African-American contractors. The $695 million Stan Musial Veterans Memorial Bridge project in the Metro East featured 24 percent minority workforce participation on the Illinois-funded part of the project, nearly 10 percent higher than the goal set by the Federal Highway Administration and a record for construction projects in the Metro East area.

During the past five years, the state's road-building agencies under Governor Quinn have spent more than $4.2 billion with DBE firms, of which nearly $280 million went to African-American owned firms. This is the largest five-year total in the state's history. IDOT has seen DBE participation jump from $186 million, or 11.8 percent of all IDOT project spending in 2008, to $353 million and 16 percent in 2013.

Offerings through Employ Illinois include IDOT's Highway Construction Careers Training program (HCCTP), Tollway's Transportation Construction Apprenticeship Readiness Training program (TCART) and the Earned Credit Program (ECP), also through the Tollway. For more information about Employ Illinois, visit www.Illinois.gov/employ.

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I will be signing copies of my second novel, "The Mangled Spoon" at Dunn Bros. coffee shop, 787 Middle Road, Bettendorf on Wednesday, July 23rd from 2:00-4:00.
Greetings!

Join us on Sunday, October 12th for a day of Genealogy & Research with Michele McNabb.

12:30-2:00: Danish or German? - Researching Ancestors from Schleswig/Slesvig

2:15-3:45: Under Sail & Steam: Emigration from Denmark and Schleswig-Holstein

Sign up today! Call 563-322-8844

$20 Members & $25 for Nonmembers

Michele is coming from The Museum of Danish America in Elkhorn, IA so sign up today to make sure our class fills up in time!

Museum opens at 12:00pm on Oct.12

There will be a 15 minute break in between sessions.

DES MOINES, IA - Bruce Braley released the following statement after Republicans in the US Senate voted to block legislation that would have reversed the Supreme Court's Hobby Lobby decision:

"I am immensely disappointed that today Senate Republicans blocked efforts to restore a woman's ability to access contraception after the Supreme Court's harmful Hobby Lobby decision. Women in Iowa deserve equal access to health care, and their ability to purchase contraception should never be subject to interference from their employers. I strongly believe women in Iowa should be able to make their own health care choices without their bosses' interference, and I would fight tirelessly to protect women's health care rights in the U.S Senate."

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SPRINGFIELD, IL (07/16/2014)(readMedia)-- SPRINGFIELD, Ill. - This week's National Guard Bureau qualification scorecard found the Illinois Army National Guard moved to first place among the states and territories for duty military occupational specialty qualified (DMOSQ) Soldiers. Of the available 8,983 Soldiers assigned, 8,713 are military occupational specialty (MOS) qualified, which is a success rate of 97.5 percent.

A Soldier is DMOSQ when he or she graduates from a school required to qualify for the job specialty.

"The importance of this is about being a ready and relevant force," said Chief Warrant Officer 4 Mark Hebenstreit of Springfield, Illinois, human resources specialist for the personnel branch. "Units need to be able to perform missions, not only for deployments, but federal and state missions. It is important to have trained and competent Soldiers in the units to perform homeland security and combat missions."

The training branch (G3) and the personnel branch (G1) are responsible for identifying Soldiers who need to qualify in their occupational specialty and processing school applications in a timely manner.

"There is a 30-day window when we are allowed to obtain seats from other states," said Staff Sgt. Christopher Melton of Springfield, Illinois, training technician in the Individual Training Branch (G3/7). "We have to stay on top of the packets and process applications."

Melton called multiple states to use allocated school seats. Other states gave unused seats to Illinois, allowing Illinois to send more Soldiers to school.

"This is a team effort between the G3, G1 and the major subordinate command's," said Master Sgt. Christopher Anderson of Dixon, Illinois, the quota source manager for the G3. "It's challenging to get to number one in the state; it is a committed effort in proper manning."

While Illinois is currently number one, the numbers can fluctuate easily, as Soldiers move units and change jobs.

"We try to get the Solders trained as soon as possible," said Melton.

To be effective it is important the Soldiers know their jobs and are DMOSQ.

"We must be committed to ensuring our Soldiers are highly trained," said Lt. Col. Stanely Manes of Springfield, Illinois, chief training division.

Birth control is a woman's choice, not a corporation's business

AURORA - July 16, 2014. Lt. Governor Sheila Simon advocated for women's access to comprehensive health care coverage today following a tour of a Planned Parenthood health center in suburban Chicago.

Simon said that women should be able to make their own health care decisions without cost or other barriers standing in the way, regardless of where they live or work.

"A woman's decision to use birth control is a personal one, and her corporate employer should not be able to interfere with it," Simon said.

Simon's visit to Planned Parenthood's Aurora Health Center comes after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled June 30 that some for-profit businesses can use religious objections to deny access to full birth control coverage to female employees. This will prevent some women, particularly those working low-wage jobs, from getting birth control.

Legislation to override the decision was blocked by GOP Senators today.

The Affordable Care Act requires all insurance policies to cover birth control with no out-of-pocket costs to women, categorizing it as women's basic preventative care. The Supreme Court ruled that for-profit companies owned by a family or small group of individuals can be exempt from the federal rule based on the owners' religious beliefs.

Those for-profit companies will still be required to provide birth control with a co-pay under Illinois law, unless they are self-insured (like Hobby Lobby) or receive a state exemption under the Health Care Right of Conscience Act.

"I am proud to live in a state that protects a woman's right to make private medical decisions. I urge all Illinois lawmakers to stand in support of women, not in the way of their health care," Simon said.

Simon chairs the Governor's Rural Affairs Council and has worked to improve women's health care in underserved areas.

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