Seven Game Homestand Starts Tonight with Winning Wednesday Presented by T.G.I. Friday's

$1 Dog/$1 Beer Night Presented by 97X Returns Friday

MOLINE, Ill. (February 25, 2014) - The Quad City Mallards this week will hit the ice for three home games featuring the return of Winning Wednesday presented by T.G.I. Friday's and $1 Dog/$1 Beer Friday presented by 97X and culminating in a visit from Duck Dynasty's Mountain Man this Saturday night courtesy of Genesis Health System.

Mountain Man will drop the puck for the ceremonial faceoff prior to Saturday night's 7:05 p.m. game between the Mallards and Brampton Beast and will meet fans and sign autographs through the second period of that contest.

Mountain Man, whose real name is Tim Guraedy, is a neighbor of the Robertsons, the Louisiana family that has made a fortune from its best-selling duck calls and is the focus of Duck Dynasty.  Mountain Man is the only Duck Dynasty cast member who is not a Robertson family member or employee of Duck Commander.  He is a neighbor of the Robertsons who operates his own air-conditioning repair business and is known for speaking very slowly.

The Mallards will kick off a seven-game homestand tomorrow night at 7:05 p.m. with Winning Wednesday presented by T.G.I. Friday's.  If the Mallards defeat the Missouri Mavericks tomorrow evening each fan in attendance will receive a free ticket to the Mallards' next Wednesday game- March 5 again against the Mavericks.

At each Winning Wednesday game fans also have the opportunity to purchase $2 hot dogs and beer at iWireless Center concession stands.  After each Wednesday contest- including this week's- fans are invited to join the Mallards for a post-game party at T.G.I. Friday's adjacent to the iWireless Center at 1425 River Drive in Moline.

Fans planning on attending tomorrow night's game can also save with the Harris Pizza Puck and Pizza Package.  With the Puck and Pizza Package, fans can purchase four lower level tickets for just $55 or four upper level seats only $45 for any Wednesday or Sunday home game and receive a certificate for a free large single topping pizza from Harris Pizza.  The Puck and Pizza Package is available at the iWireless Center box office.

This week also brings the penultimate $1 Dog/$1 Beer Night of the season when the Mallards take on the Beast at 7:05 p.m. Friday.  $1 hot dogs and $1 beers are available at iWireless Center concession stands during each of the Mallards' 11 Friday night home games this season.  First intermission entertainment, will, courtesy of 97X, follow the hot dog-themed spirit of the evening.

The Mallards have also partnered with Metro, which provides earlier service on the Route 59 between Augustana College and downtown Moline during Friday home games this season.  The Route 59 will make one trip from campus to downtown Moline prior to the game (arriving at 5th Avenue and 15th Street at 6:30 p.m.) and will resume service from downtown to campus every 30 minutes from 10:00 p.m. to 3:00 a.m.  Regular Metro fares are just $1 one-way or $2 round-trip.  As part of Metro's unlimited ride program, Augustana riders can use their Augustana ID as their fare.  Visit www.gogreenmetro.com or www.facebook.com/53and59 for more information.  

Tickets for this week's games or any remaining Mallards regular season home tilt can be purchased at the iWireless Center ticket office, Ticketmaster outlets, through ticketmaster.com or through Ticketmaster charge-by-phone toll free at 1-800-745-3000

WASHINGTON - Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa said today that Katie Marie Gibson of Sioux Rapids has received an appointment to the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy in Great Neck, N.Y., for the 2014-2015 school year.

Gibson is the daughter of Carolyn and Thomas Gibson.  She will graduate in May from Sioux Central High School.  Gibson participated in volleyball, basketball, cross country, softball, individual speech club, 4-H, Future Business Leaders of America, National Honor Society and the Harlan Institute Program, a law-based debate club.

"Admission to the service academies is highly competitive and a great honor," Grassley said.  "Students work very hard to earn this kind of opportunity.  I wish Katie well and thank her for her commitment to serve our nation."

Gibson was among the 55 Iowans Grassley nominated this year for appointments to the U.S. service academies.  Information about seeking nominations can be found on Grassley's website.

For more than 200 years, these academies have educated and trained individuals to lead and command the U.S. armed forces.

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September 13, 2014 - September 29, 2014

We have blocked seats on Lufthansa flying from Chicago to Dusseldorf.  Return flight is from Hamburg to Dusseldorf to Chicago.  Price is $1250.

Our group will be taking a Mosel River grape harvest cruise for one week.  We then will be going by train to Schleswig Holstein, having some free time before we attend the Low German Friendship Conference in Eckernforde on the Baltic Sea.  We have found that cabins are still available on the TUI Sonata.  The entire cost (including cruise) is approximately $4000.

Call either Mary Burchett at 563 355-6274 or call Erika Hansen at 563 355-6274 for further information.  We are holding the seats until Monday, March 3.

CEDAR FALLS, IOWA - (Feb. 25, 2014) - Six high-achieving Iowa high schools are participating this spring in an international test of science, mathematics and reading, providing each of them and Iowa with a global benchmark for where our learners stand compared to their peers in over 65 countries and economies worldwide. Iowa's participation in the project, along with Minnesota, Illinois and Tennessee, is being funded by the Kern Family Foundation through a grant to the education organization Innovate + Educate. The voluntary PISA-based (Program for International Student Achievement) test engages 15-year-old students in critical thinking and contextual problem solving, attributes that college and business leaders say are critical. The test is produced by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), and is similar to the PISA test taken by over 500,000 15-year-olds around the globe every three years.
Iowa's schools were chosen based on aggregate ACT test scores (some of the highest in the state), size and geography. Each school will administer the test during spring semester 2014, and scores will be publicly reported. Each school commits to hosting conversations that engage business and community partners in gauging and improving performance in an international context. Three global business partners have signed on to help the schools leverage the results: Rockwell Collins, John Deere and DuPont Pioneer.
"This is a great opportunity for Iowa to see where we stand and look at how we can better prepare students for a knowledge-based, global economy," said Lt. Gov. Kim Reynolds, co-chair of the Governor's STEM Advisory Council. "The schools' participation demonstrates Iowans' commitment to giving our children a world-class education."
The six high schools taking the OECD test are Adel-DeSoto-Minburn (ADM), Ames, Decorah, Cedar Rapids Kennedy, Pella, and Cedar Rapids Washington.
"Iowa's business sector competes worldwide not only for customers but for talent, so these results will be a welcome window into how we stack up," said Vermeer CEO Mary Andringa who co-chairs the Governor's STEM Advisory Council."More important than any specific outcomes, the community conversations this test will drive hold great promise for advancing education in Iowa."
For additional information regarding the OECD test, visit http://www.americaachieves.org/oecd. For additional information regarding the Governor's STEM Advisory Council, visit www.IowaSTEM.gov.
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$70 million investment will leverage additional $250 million in private funds to focus on digital manufacturing

Washington, D.C. - Congressman Dave Loebsack today praised the announcement by President Obama that will establish a public-private partnership to boost advanced manufacturing through the Department of Defense. All three of Iowa's public universities, University of Iowa, Iowa State University and the University of Northern Iowa, will be involved in the Digital Manufacturing and Design Innovation (DMDI) Institute, which will be headed by UI Labs based in Chicago. Last year, Loebsack led the charge among the members of Iowa's House delegation to ensure Iowa's premiere universities would be included in this consortium of 73 companies, universities, nonprofits, and research labs. Iowa based companies involved with the DMDI Institute include Deere & Company, Rockwell Collins, General Dynamics - Ordnance & Tactical Systems, General Electric, Honeywell and Siemens.

"Today's announcement will lead to the creation of good, high-paying jobs across the country in the manufacturing field," said Loebsack. "We must continue to focus on growing the economy and putting Iowans back to work. Investing in our universities and other businesses, which in turn leverages public-private partnerships, helps strengthen the economy and promote job creation."

Specifically, the DMDI Institute will create a novel partnership between world-leading manufacturing experts and cutting-edge software companies to enable interoperability across the supply chain, develop enhanced digital capabilities to design and test new products, and reduce costs in manufacturing processes across multiple industries.

The consortium consists of the following members:

23 Universities and Labs: University of Iowa, Iowa State University, University of Northern Iowa, Colorado University - Boulder, Illinois Institute of Technology, Indiana University, Missouri University of Science and Technology, Northern Illinois University, Northwestern University, Notre Dame, Oregon State, Purdue University, Rochester Institute of Technology, Southern Illinois University, University of Chicago, University of Illinois at Chicago, University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign, University of Louisville, University of Michigan, University of Nebraska- Lincoln, University of Texas - Austin, University of Wisconsin - Madison, Western Illinois University.

 

41 Companies: 3D Systems, ANSYS, Autodesk, Big Kaiser Precision Tooling Inc., Boeing, Caron Engineering Inc., Caterpillar, CG Tech, Cincinnati Inc., Colorado Association for Manufacturing & Technology, Cray, Dassault Systems, Deere & Company, DMG Mori, Evolved Analytics LLC, General Dynamics - Ordnance & Tactical Systems, General Electric, Haas Automation, Honeywell, Illinois Tool Works, Imagecom Inc. (Aspire 3D), International TechneGroup Inc., Kennametal, Lockheed Martin, Microsoft, MSC Software, North American Die Casting Association, National Instruments, Nimbis Services Inc., Okuma, Palo Alto Research Center, Parlec, Procter & Gamble, Product Development & Analysis, PTC, Inc., Rockwell Collins, Rolls-Royce, Siemens, System Insights, The Dow Chemical Company, UPS.

9 Other Organizations: American Foundry Society, City of Chicago - Department of Housing & Economic Opportunity, Colorado OEDIT, Commonwealth of Kentucky, Illinois Department of Commerce & Economic Opportunity, Illinois Science & Technology Coalition, MT Connect Institute, Reshoring Initiative, UI Labs.

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Floor Statement of Senator Chuck Grassley

On How the Senate Should Operate

Delivered Monday, February 24, 2014

Mr. President, either tonight or tomorrow, the Senate will consider several district court nominees.  These nominees will be brought up, considered by the Senate, and in all likelihood, confirmed in short order.

As I've mentioned several times, this is the procedure that the Democrats voted to pursue in November when they voted for the so-called "nuclear option."  The Majority voted to eliminate the filibuster on nominations, and to cut the Minority out of the process.

So, while the Senate is debating these district court nominees, it gives me a good opportunity to continue the discussion about how the Senate ought to be functioning.

There's no debate that the Senate isn't functioning properly, and we've been treated to relentless finger-pointing from the other side regarding who is to blame.

Unless we can establish a non-partisan account of how the Senate ought to function, this debate will amount to nothing more than a kindergarten shouting match.

So, I would like to return to the Federalist Papers, which are the most detailed account from the time the Constitution was being ratified about how our institutions were intended to operate.

Although they were written over 200 years ago, the principles the Federalist Papers articulate are timeless and the problems they highlight are strikingly relevant to today.

The last time I addressed the Senate on this subject, I quoted at length from a passage in Federalist Number 62.

Although all the Federalist Papers were published under the pseudonym Publius, we know that they were written by three of our Founding Fathers - James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay.

Federalist 62 has been attributed to the Father of the Constitution, James Madison.

In it, he lists several problems that can be encountered by a Republic that the U.S. Senate was specifically designed to counteract.

The first point Madison makes is that having a second chamber composed differently than the House makes it less likely that one faction will be able to take over and enact an agenda out of step with the American People.

The second point deals with the tendency of unicameral legislatures to yield to sudden popular impulses and pass "intemperate and pernicious resolutions."

The third point is that based on the experience of the early, unicameral state legislatures, a second chamber with longer terms and a more deliberative process will make sure that any laws passed are well thought out.

The Framers of our Constitution determined that it was better to get it right the first time than to subject the American people to the upheaval caused by the need to fix poorly conceived laws.

Madison talks about the early American experience with "all the repealing, explaining, and amending laws" which he calls:

"monuments of deficient wisdom;

-so many impeachments exhibited by each succeeding against each preceding session;

-so many admonitions to the people, of the value of those aids which may be expected from a well-constituted senate."

In my last speech, I did not get to Madison's fourth and final point in Federalist 62, which is quite long and deserves to be examined in detail.

Madison concludes Federalist 62 with an extensive discussion of the importance of stability to good government and the danger to the rule of law from constant change.

This section starts: "Fourthly. The mutability in the public councils arising from a rapid succession of new members, however qualified they may be, points out, in the strongest manner, the necessity of some stable institution in the government.--

"Every new election in the States is found to change one half of the representatives.

"From this change of men must proceed a change of opinions; and from a change of opinions, a change of measures.

"But a continual change even of good measures is inconsistent with every rule of prudence and every prospect of success.

"The remark is verified in private life, and becomes more just, as well as more important, in national transactions."

Here, Madison is making a case for stable government instead of constant change.

He says that constant change, even with good ideas, will not produce positive results.

Madison then elaborates on the various problems caused by an unstable government.

He first says about a country that is constantly changing its laws that "...she is held in no respect by her friends; that she is the derision of her enemies; and that she is a prey to every nation which has an interest in speculating on her fluctuating councils and embarrassed affairs."

Madison then makes the case that the domestic ramifications of constantly enacting and changing laws "poisons the blessing of liberty itself."

He goes on to explain, "It will be of little avail to the people, that the laws are made by men of their own choice, if the laws be so voluminous that they cannot be read, or so incoherent that they cannot be understood; if they be repealed or revised before they are promulgated, or undergo such incessant changes that no man, who knows what the law is to-day, can guess what it will be to-morrow."

This sounds like the Health Care Law, which is being rewritten daily on the fly by the Obama Administration.

But, it's part of a bigger problem we face with new laws and regulations from agencies, which have the force of law, being churned out in such a volume that no American can possibly know them all.

Just based on probability, Americans are likely to violate some regulation or another without knowing it at any time.

Madison is making a case not just for more thoughtful laws, but fewer laws.

When the Majority Leader and many in the media complain that the Senate should be passing laws at a higher rate, they miss the point entirely.

To listen to some members of the majority and many in the media, you would think the success of a session of Congress was measured solely on the sheer number of laws passed, not the quality of the laws it passes.

The Senate was specifically designed to slow down the process and make sure Congress passes fewer, but better laws.

Madison then elaborates further on why fewer laws are better in a passage that is extremely relevant today:

"Another effect of public instability is the unreasonable advantage it gives to the sagacious, the enterprising, and the moneyed few over the industrious and uniformed mass of the people. --

"Every new regulation concerning commerce or revenue, or in any way affecting the value of the different species of property, presents a new harvest to those who watch the change, and can trace its consequences; a harvest, reared not by themselves, but by the toils and cares of the great body of their fellow-citizens."

In other words, a situation where Congress is constantly changing the laws gives more influence to those who can hire lawyers to keep on top of the changes, and lobbyists to influence them, versus the little guy who is on his own.

It is sometimes said that big businesses don't like regulations, but that isn't my experience in many instances.

The bigger and wealthier a business, or a union, or other special interest group, the better chance they have to shape a new law or regulation and the more people they can hire to help them comply.

On the other hand, small businesses and individuals can't hire a team of lawyers to read the latest laws and regulations and to fill out the proper paperwork.

Small businesses and individuals are the ones squeezed out of the marketplace by the constant flow of new laws.

An overactive government benefits the big guys at the expense of the little guys, and if you think that fact is lost on the big guys and their lobbyists when they come to Congress, you would be mistaken.

As James Madison so wisely noted, an overactive government is an invitation to the rich and powerful to use government to their benefit and the detriment of their competitors.

That goes to show that there's a great benefit to stability in law as opposed to constant change.

A cornerstone of liberty is the Rule of Law, meaning the law is transparent and no one is above the law.

If you look around the world today, the poorest and least free countries are the ones where there is no rule of law.

If someone can take what you've earned through force and you have no legal recourse, that's an example where there is no rule of law.

If the rich and powerful get special privileges, that's an example where the rule of law has broken down.

The Rule of Law is one of the principles our country was founded on.

But, when there are so many rules, and they are changing so quickly that the average citizen cannot keep up, that undermines the Rule of Law.

Of course, the situation is only made worse when the rules already on the books are waived for the politically connected.

That is another problem but one that has become all too common under the Obama administration.

Getting back to the Senate's role, I'm not making a case for doing nothing, or that we should be happy with the failure of the Senate to debate legislation.

The Senate is supposed to be slow and deliberative, not stopped.

Still, it is important to get away from this notion that somehow the failure to ram legislation through the Senate with little debate and no amendments is the problem.

The reason the Senate doesn't function when the majority leadership tries to run it that way is very simple:

The Senate was not designed that way.

The Senate was intended to be a deliberative body, and has been for most of its history.

It has now become routine for the Majority Leader to file cloture to end consideration of a matter immediately upon moving to it.

By contrast, the regular order is for the Senate to consider a matter for some period of time, allowing senators from all parties to weigh in, before cloture is even contemplated.

Cloture was invented to allow the Senate to end consideration of a matter after the vast majority of senators had concluded it had received sufficient consideration.

Prior to that, there was no way to end debate so long as at least one senator wished to keep deliberating.

Cloture was a compromise between the desire to move things along and the principle that each senator, as a representative of his or her state, has the right to participate fully in the legislative process.

The compromise was originally that two-thirds of senators voting had to be satisfied that a matter had received sufficient consideration.

That was reduced to three-fifths of all senators.

Each time this matter is renegotiated, the compromise leans more in favor of speeding up the process at the expense of allowing senators to fully represent the people of their states.

Now, the majority leadership routinely files cloture immediately upon proceeding to a matter.

Again, cloture is a tool to cut off further consideration of a matter when it appears that it is dragging on too long.

You can hardly claim that the Senate has taken too much time to deliberate over something when it hasn't even begun consideration of the matter.

According to data from the Congressional Research Service, there were only seven times during the first session of the current Congress that the Senate started to consider a bill for a day or more before cloture was filed.

That's out of 34 cloture motions related to legislative business.

The number of same-day cloture filings has more than doubled compared to when Republicans last controlled the Senate.

Moreover, the total number of cloture motions filed each session of Congress under this majority leadership has roughly doubled compared to the period from 1991 to 2006 under majority leaders of both parties.

Before that, cloture was even more rare.

This is a sign that cloture is being overused, even abused by the majority.

Still, if this alarming rise in cloture motions was a legitimate response to a minority of senators insisting on extended debate to delay proceedings beyond what's necessary for reasonable deliberation, otherwise known as a filibuster, it might be justified.

That's clearly not the case when the overwhelming number of motions to cut off debate are made before debate has even started.

What amount of time is necessary for deliberation, and what is purely dilatory in any particular case is a subjective determination.

However, the practice of routinely moving to cut off consideration of virtually every measure when there has not yet been any deliberation cannot be justified.

This is an abuse of the cloture motion.

Along with the routine blocking of amendments, cloture abuse is preventing senators from doing what we are paid to do -- that's represent the people of our states.

Shutting senators out of the deliberative process isn't just an argument about dry Senate procedure, as the Majority Leader has tried to suggest in response to criticisms.

When senators are blocked from participating in the legislative process, the people they represent are disenfranchised.

When I say that people are disenfranchised when the majority leadership shuts senators out of the process, I don't just mean the citizens of the 45 states that elected Republicans.

The citizens of states that elected Democrat senators also expect them to offer amendments and engage with their colleagues from different parties.

Shutting down consideration of a bill before it has even been considered prevents even members of the majority party from offering amendments that may be important to the people they represent.

Voters have a right to expect the people they elect to actually do the hard work of representing them, not just be a rubber stamp for their leadership's agenda.

Senators who go along with tactics that disenfranchise their own constituents should have to answer to those who voted them into office as to why they aren't willing to do the job they were elected to do.

That job includes not just offering amendments when appropriate, but taking tough votes that reveal to your constituents where you stand.

The majority leader has gone out of his way to shield members of his caucus from taking votes that may hurt them back home.

Senators don't have any right to avoid tough votes.

That's not the deliberative process James Madison envisioned.

If we are going to have good laws that can stand the test of time, the Senate must be allowed to function as it was intended.

One aspect of what's needed to return the Senate to its proper function as a deliberative body is to end cloture abuse.

I would ask my colleagues to reflect on all of the changes to the Senate recently, including those negotiated between the two leaders a year ago in return for a promise not to use the nuclear option, as well as the subsequent use of the nuclear option 10 months later.

Those reforms, if you can call them that, have been in the direction of reducing the ability of individual senators to represent the people of their states and concentrating power with the majority leadership.

It's time we had some reforms to get the Senate back functioning as a deliberative body like it was intended to under our Constitution.

The Senate is supposed to be a place where all voices are heard and reason can rise above partisanship.

I would urge all my colleagues to reflect on that and think about your responsibility to the people of your state.

If we do that, I'm sure we can come up with some sensible reforms to end the abuse of cloture and restore the Senate to the deliberative body the Framers of the Constitution intended it to be.

I'll be thinking about that and I would encourage all my colleagues to do the same.

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Becomes First Republican Candidate in Current Field to Complete Tour

WEST DES MOINES - On November 19, 2013, 99 days ago, Mark Jacobs announced that he was seeking the Republican nomination for Iowa's U.S. Senate seat. Since that time, Jacobs has worked tirelessly to successfully visit each one of Iowa's 99 counties.

Other candidates seeking a statewide office will also visit all 99 counties, however none in this election cycle will have done so in such a concentrated period of time. This accomplishment speaks to Jacobs' commitment to put in the hard work necessary to run a successful statewide campaign.

During events, Jacobs shared his focus on creating jobs and opportunities for all and listened to concerns from fellow Iowans on a variety of topics.

"Iowans all over the state have expressed to me a deep concern that this country is continuing to head in the wrong direction. They are worried that the American Dream is slipping away, and our elected leaders in Washington are unable to solve problems," said Mark Jacobs.

The top concerns people shared with Jacobs centered on the country's runaway debt and deficits, the negative realities of Obamacare, and the real-world impacts of overly burdensome government regulations.

Jacobs said, "Like many Iowans, I am frustrated by the lack of results in Washington. But I remain optimistic about this country's future. And, as Iowa's next Senator, I will take what I have learned in the private sector and work with officials - on both sides of the aisle - to implement conservative solutions to the problems impacting Iowa families and businesses."

Jacobs will continue to visit with concerned Iowans as the race moves toward the Republican primary on June 3, 2014.

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As part of its 2014 tour, OPERA Iowa Educational Touring Troupe, a program of Des Moines Metro Opera, Inc., will perform a reduced version for five singers of Gaetano Donizetti's romantic comedy The Elixir of Love on Friday, March 28 at 7:30pm at the Coralville Center for the Performing Arts, 1301 5th Street in Coralville.

Donizetti's The Elixir of Love mixes love, jealousy and mysterious libations in a romantic comedy. Young Nemorino is in love with the wealthy but fickle Adina. When Sergeant Belcore also sets his sights on Adina, Nemorino turns to visiting "doctor" Dulcamara for an "elixir of love," guaranteed to turn Adina's head and win her heart. Heads turn, but who wins her heart? The Elixir of Love lasts approximately 2 hours with an intermission, and is sung in English with piano accompaniment.

Tickets are $15 for adults, $12 for students and seniors, and $8 for youth ages 12 and under.  Tickets may be purchased by phone at 319.248.9370, online at coralvillearts.org, and in person at the CCPA box office and the Coralville Recreation Center at 1506 8th Street.

OPERA Iowa Educational Touring Troupe members are handpicked from nationwide auditions of more than 800 singers to share their love of opera with audiences of all ages. The talented young performers of the 2014 OPERA Iowa troupe are: soprano Bevin Hill of New York, NY; mezzo-soprano Stephanie Schoenhofer of Lima, OH; baritone Zachary Ballard of Roslindale, MA; tenor Joshua Weeker of Kettering, OH; and bass Alex Soare of Schaumburg, IL. The music director is Scott Arens of Ann Arbor, MI and the technical director is Thomas Plummer of Crown Point, IN.

Des Moines Metro Opera, founded in 1973, is an independent, non-profit, professional opera company dedicated to bringing world-class opera productions and vital performing arts education to central Iowa. In addition to providing mainstage productions, Des Moines Metro Opera is responsible for OPERA Iowa Educational Touring Troupe, which brings opera to classrooms across Iowa and to nearly 24,000 students, OPERAtion Opera Community Outreach Program, which works with more than 30 human service agencies to provide opera to underserved and at-risk audiences, the Apprentice Artist Program, one of the largest singer-training programs in the country, and two new programs: The Design and Production Internship Program, a training program for students within the theater arts who wish to expand experience and gain the skills necessary for a successful professional career; and Raising Voices -Rising Stars program which gives high school musicians the opportunity to explore career opportunities from the rare vantage point within a professional opera company.

Owned and operated by the City of Coralville, the Coralville Center for the Performing Arts is dedicated to enriching the community and contributing to the vitality of Coralville by offering an accessible, affordable venue for a variety of performances, presentations, and public and private events.  The 472 seat theater opened August 26, 2011 and has hosted performances from City Circle Acting Company, Orchestra Iowa, Cedar Rapids Opera Theatre, Dan Knight, Lola Astanova, Lorie Line, Judy Carmichael, Jim McDonough, Nolte Academy of Dance, and many others.  Coralville schools are also able to use the Center free of charge up to three times per year; 16 school events took place at the Center in the 2012-2013 school year. The Center was named 2012 Member of the Year by the Iowa City/Coralville Area Convention and Visitors Bureau.

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Join the new Francesca's and Yankee Candle as they celebrate their new stores!

WHO: Yankee Candle will host a ribbon cutting and a grand re-opening in style with fun promotions, new sales and spectacular savings in their newly remodeled location at NorthPark Mall on February 28 at 10:00am. Francesca's will host a ribbon cutting and a grand opening on March 8 at 10am.

WHAT: Yankee Candle has moved and remodeled a new location next to Complete Nutrition. Yankee Candle is also celebrating their 10 year anniversary of being in the Quad Cities. They employ a team of 9 and invite the public to the open house to enjoy coffee and doughnuts in the new store immediately following the ribbon cutting.

Francesca's is in a new location across from Tilly's. Francesca's opened in 1999 in Houston, Texas and has grown to 350 boutiques in 45 states across the country. Francesca's offers an eclectic mix of carefully-curated clothing, bright baubles, bold accessories, and playful gifts that are as fun to give as they are to receive. Boutiques reveal an array of new arrivals almost daily, so you'll always discover something special and amazing on every visit.

Follow us on Twitter @NorthParkMallIA and like us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/NorthParkMallIA.

WHERE: NorthPark Mall in between Younkers and JCPenney.
DAVENPORT, IOWA - Wildwood Hills Ranch is pleased to announce that the 13th Wild About the Child Barn Dance held Nov. 9, 2013 in Davenport raised more than $200,000 to improve the lives of Quad City's area at-risk youth!

"We feel so blessed as an organization to have such amazing support from the Quad Cities' area," Al Lorenzen, CEO explained, "The success of the event is truly a testament to the passion the committee members have for our mission and the generosity of the community!"

Event committee chair, Cindy Quinby said, "The generosity and spirit of this community continues to amaze by helping raise a record amount for the support of at-risk kids in the Quad City area. Our amazingly creative and supportive committee proved that a pair of boots and a barn is all you need to have a great time for an even greater cause."

The event is held each year at Veritas Stables and features a live and silent auction, live music, delicious food and a mechanical bull. The event has raised over $1 million for Wildwood Hills Ranch in its 13-year history.

Founded in 2001, Wildwood Hill's Ranch, located south of Des Moines, exists to transform lives and strengthen communities by providing healing, hope, and God's unconditional love to children and youth at-risk. The Ranch serves nearly 1,000 youth from across the state of Iowa annually through programming involving equine, agriculture, aquatic, team-building and art, as well as a uniquely designed approach to putting children on paths to hope. For more information, visit www.wildwoodhillsranch.org.

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