FAYETTE, IA (10/25/2013)(readMedia)-- Upper Iowa University has released the winners of the Presidential and Trustee Scholarships for 2013-14. Receiving these prestigious scholarships are:

  • Joshua Hilty of Wilton, IA receiving a Presidential Scholarship in the amount of $14,000;
  • Taylor Livermore of Muscatine, IA receiving a Presidential Scholarship in the amount of $14,000;
  • McKenna Luepker of Wheatland, IA receiving a Presidential Scholarship in the amount of $14,000;
  • Kaylea Rusch of Muscatine, IA receiving a Presidential Scholarship in the amount of $14,000;
  • Bryce Melton of Bettendorf, IA receiving a Presidential Scholarship in the amount of $14,000;
  • Kyrstin Plohr of Rock Island, IL receiving a Trustee Scholarship in the amount of $17,000;

About Upper Iowa University Founded in 1857, Upper Iowa University is a private, not-for-profit university providing undergraduate and graduate degree programs and leadership development opportunities to some 6,200 students-nationally and internationally-at its Fayette campus and learning centers worldwide. Upper Iowa University is a recognized innovator in offering accredited, quality programs through flexible, multiple delivery systems, including online and independent study. For more information, visit www.uiu.edu.

WASHINGTON - Sen. Chuck Grassley said today that spring internships for college-age Iowans are available, and applications are due Nov. 15.

Internships are available in Grassley's Washington, D.C., office as well as his offices in Cedar Rapids, Council Bluffs, Davenport, Des Moines, Sioux City and Waterloo.  The spring session will run from Jan. 13 to May 23.

Interns will be placed in one of three departments:  administrative, legislative or communications.  An internship allows for a wide range of learning experience and exposure for students on Capitol Hill.  A firsthand account of a Grassley internship can be read here.

Grassley said he encourages young Iowans who are interested in learning more about the government to apply.  "Interning in a congressional office is a good way for college students and new graduates to learn more about the legislative branch of the federal government while gaining valuable experience.  Internships in my offices are available to students in all areas of study," he said.

Application forms are available on Grassley's website and in Grassley's offices in Iowa.  Due to security-related delays in postal mail delivery to U.S. Senate office buildings, internship applications should be emailed to intern_applications@grassley.senate.gov or faxed to 202-224-5136.  For additional information, email intern_applications@grassley.senate.gov or call 202-224-3744.

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QUAD CITIES - The Epilepsy Foundation of the Quad Cities will be recognizing November's Epilepsy Awareness Month with a few activities.

Nov. 1:  "FUN-Raiser for Awareness -a night of laughter and support" at ComedySportz.  Doors open at 6:15 with a full-length, family friendly show at ComedySportz beginning at 7pm.  Raffles, trivia contest, and more.  Tickets - $20 to reserve call the Establishment Theater box office:  309.7786.1111

Nov. 15:  "ZUMBA for Awareness" at Heritage Church, Rock Island.  Doors open at 5:30 and sessions run from 6pm-8pm.  Cost is $10 for one or all sessions. Certified Zumba instructors will lead the sessions to raise your heartbeat along with funds to assist with epilepsy services.

Nov. 23:  The Epilepsy Foundation will have a unique entry in the Quad City Arts Festival of Trees parade.  It's sure to get some notice!

The Foundation will also host a Support Group Meeting on Thursday, November 7 starting 7pm at Trinity Moline, 500 John Deere Road.  We will also have a designer tree at Festival of Trees called "Light on Awareness" to help bring epilepsy out of the shadow of stigma.

For more information contact the Epilepsy Foundation at 309.373.0377 or email to efqc@efncil.org.

Epilepsy affects nearly 3 Million Americans and is the most widespread serious brain disorder worldwide.  More Americans have epilepsy than Multiple Sclerosis, Cerebral Palsy, Muscular Dystrophy, Parkinson's Disease, ALS, and Autism Spectrum Disorders COMBINED.  1 in 26 will develop epilepsy at some point in their lifetime.

It's time to talk about epilepsy.
Humanitarian Cites Slain Young Laborer Who Continues
to Inspire Kids Today

One of the poorest, most troubled countries in the world, Pakistan, has also produced some of our bravest, most inspiring young leaders, says Zulfiqar Rashid, (www.zulfiqarrashid.com), a Pakistan native and U.S. artist and businessman.

"Malala Yousafzai is only the most recent example," says Rashid, referring to the 16-year-old advocate for girls' education who was shot by the Taliban a year ago.

Rashid, who frequently travels to Pakistan and around the world, says he continues to see appalling treatment of children in his journeys. His new book focuses on a particularly cruel practice in Indo Asian countries. In "The Rat-boys of Karalabad," he writes about young beggars whose heads and limbs are tightly bound when they're very young to stunt their growth. The practice makes the disfigured children more effective beggars at religious shrines, helping enrich those who control the shrines.

"The 'rat-boys' are, sadly, very real. In my book, the person who stands up to this evil is a boy who would ultimately have benefited from it," Rashid says. "While he is fictional, he symbolizes the many young people in the world whose passion for doing good holds an extraordinary power that often goes unrecognized."

Today's story is Malala, but Rashid says the tale of another young Pakistani children's rights advocate illustrates just how far-reaching children's influence can be.

• At 10 years old, Iqbal Masih crusaded against bonded servitude. When he was 4 years old, Iqbal's impoverished Pakistani family sold him into bonded servitude for a $12 loan. For six years, he sat chained to a loom weaving carpets for 14 hours a day six days a week. He and the other children were forbidden from talking and were beaten if they were slow, fell asleep, or made a mistake. They were fed little so that their fingers would stay small enough to work the tiny knots in the carpets.

Iqbal escaped the factory in 1992 with help from the Bonded Labor Liberation Front of Pakistan, and began speaking out on behalf of child laborers and their right to an education. His revelations about the carpet industry gained worldwide attention, and he's credited with freeing 3,000 children from factories.

• 7th-graders build a school for Iqbal. In December 1994, Iqbal visited Broad Meadows Middle School in Quincy, Mass., at the invitation of teacher Ron Adams, who wanted to give his seventh-graders a deeper understanding of international economics and human rights. Iqbal, the same age as the American students, was half their size - his growth stunted by malnutrition and confinement - but tremendously courageous. He knew his actions were angering the carpet barons, who might retaliate.

Four months after that visit, Iqbal was shot and killed while riding his bicycle in his village.
The outraged Beacons Meadows students insisted on doing something to remember Iqbal and decided to raise $5,000 to build a school in his village. "I thought, 'Impossible!' but the kids never doubted they could do it," Adams said recently.

They faxed and emailed (with a borrowed computer from Amnesty International) requests to schools around the country seeking $12 donations for A School for Iqbal. By 1997, when they stopped fundraising, they'd raised $147,000, which built and helped fund the school for three years. Today Chanaan No. 3 is a self-sufficient campus for working children.

• Operation: Day's Work - kids helping kids around the world. A School for Iqbal grew into a student-led charitable organization that has spread to six other nations. Co-founded in the United States by eight schools with the help of the U.S. Agency for International Development, ODW turns 15 years old this year.

Each year ODW students research charitable groups and projects benefiting kids in developing countries. They invite their favorites to apply for grant money, then debate the merits of the applicants and projects. Finally, they vote to decide their beneficiary for the year. Then students raise money to fund their grant. Last year, they paid tuition, room and board for 38 rescued child laborers through the Kenyan Schoolhouse Project.

Joining Operation: Days Work is free and open to schools with students in fifth- through 12th grades. Visit www.odwusa.org for information.

About Zulfiqar Rashid

Zulfiqar Rashid was born in Pakistan and lives in southern California. As a regular contributor to various newspapers, he has written extensively about his travels to Pakistan, and major figures in the Pakistani artistic and cultural scene.  Rashid is also an accomplished artist and calligrapher, whose art has been featured in the San Diego Union Tribune.  His works have been exhibited at galleries in San Diego, Del Mar, and La Jolla, as well as the San Diego Art Institute and the San Diego Port Authority's "I Madonnari" festival.

ANNOUNCEMENTS - Friday 10/25/2013

The December 2013 Chamber Newsletter will soon be in production to be delivered to Every Business and Home within the 52753 zipcode area!!
 Advertising rates remain: 1/8 page: $75; ¼ page: $100; ½ page: $125; full page: $250. Just send your ad information to LeClaireChamber@gmail.com and we will forward it on to House of Print for you. No cost assistance in developing an advertisement is available through House of Print. If you would rather work with House of Print directly, send your ad to HouseofPrint@mchsi.com, and please copy LeClaireChamber@gmail.com Deadline November 7th, 5:00 p.m. Get the word out about your business and be ready for the Holidays!!

WELCOMING NEW MEMBERS!

The Shameless Chocoholic and Sweet Dreams Guest House 200 Jones St., LeClaire.  Specialty chocolates and confections - indulging never tasted so good! And, indulge in a great night's sleep by reserving the Guest House! Call Jen or Rebecca, 563-289-1339. www.theshamelesschocoholic.com

Tambi Rosendahl, Hair Stylist, Expressive Design 521 North Cody Road, LeClaire.  Specializing in micro-beading in Dream Catchers Hair extensions, color, highlights, hair cutting, waxing, facials, shellac, manicures, pedicures and protective color. 563-370-9263. Tambi011@gmail.com

 

CALENDAR

October 26th - Witches' Walk Costume Contest and Parade Registration at 11 a.m. on the levee near the Pavilion. Judging and Kids' Activities 11a.m.-1p.m. Free to participate! Parade starts at 1p.m. 

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October 26th - 4th Annual Hallowine! Starts at the LeClaire Information Center, 2-5pm, tickets are $10, available that day at the Information Center, 122 N. Cody Rd. First 200 attendees receive a free wine glass. Participants will also receive a wristband and list/map of the 10 shops that have the food and wine. Join us for LeClaire's Food & Wine Tour, and enjoy local cuisine and wine samples while touring the shops of LeClaire! Proceeds to benefit local charities. www.visitleclaire.com

 

October 26th- The Faithful Pilot is open for LUNCH! From 12-4. Small wine samples for Hall-O-Wine.

 

October 26th - Wide River Winery - 1776 E. Deer Creek Road, Clinton. Celebrate the harvest season! Live music with the Old 57's, 1:00-4:00 p.m. The Old 57's perform a flashy show covering oldies and rockabilly music. Bring your dancing shoes! Cost is FREE with purchase. No outside beverages please. Featuring Harvest Hurrah. This semi sweet, slightly spiced wine is perfect for sipping on the porch, watching the sunset and toasting the harvest. Regular price $12.00 Saturday only: $9.99 (not valid with other discounts). Try Uncle Pat's BBQ - it's delicious!

 

October 31st - All women are invited to attend the First Presbyterian Church Annual Women's Fall Retreat (one day) at Camp Wyoming. We will leave our church at 9a.m. and plan to be at the camp at 10a.m. We will have devotions, craft by Rev. Pat Halverson, lunch (each woman brings her own sack lunch), snacks, hayrack ride (weather permitting), time for a walk, conversation and fellowship. cost $10. RSVP by 10-28 - 563-289-4371 or 563-381-7777.

 

November 1st - First Friday, 5:30 - 8:00 Downtown LeClaire

Mississippi River Distilling Company Food and Spirit Tastings www.mrdistilling.com

Wide River Winery Wine Samples. Open until 8PM featuring "Merry Berry" and serving dips paired with our award winning locally made wines.

Aunt Hatties - Come in for a red velvet cupcake!

Razzleberries - Booze cake while it lasts!

Faithful Pilot - The Matriarchs, live music - 7:30-9:00pm

Restaurants and several shops will be open late!

November 6th - River Valley Optimist Club Basketball Fun! Harlem Ambassadors vs The Optimist Slammers! (an eclectic group of local leaders and celebrities) 7p.m. Pleasant Valley High School Gym. Tickets $8 in advance/$10 at the door. Kids 12 and under admitted free with paying adult. Tickets can be purchased at Arndt Chiropractic Center or at LeClaire Antiques and Appraisals, or call 563-723-1877 for more information. Harlem-style comedy basketball featuring high-flying slam dunks, games with the kids, and hilarious comedy! Complimentary autograph session with theHarlem Ambassadors after the game. All proceeds go to the River Valley Optimist Club Youth Programs.

 

November 7th - LeClaire Community Library - STEM Club Love science, engineering, math, and technology? This is the club for you! Join us monthly for science experiments and more! Our first meeting will take place on November 7, 2013 from 4-5pm. Special guest, Dr. Neil Aschliman, from St. Ambrose University will be joining us to talk about the basics of DNA and we'll make our very own edible DNA models! Please note this program is recommended for those in 3rd-6th grades.

 

November 9th - LeClaire Community Library - Stampin' Up Class for Kids! Join us from 10-11:30am and make 2 unique cards for the upcoming holidays. This is a free program, but we ask that participants register ahead of time due to limited space. Call the library at (563)289-4242 or email us at library@leclaireiowa.gov to secure your spot! Also, don't forget to bring a pair of small scissors! This class is open to 9-13 year olds only.

 

November 18th - Economic Development Meeting Great River Financial Services, 8:00a.m.

 

November 21st - LeClaire Community Library - You are cordially invited to attend an ENDOWMENT RECEPTION for the Green Tree Library Fund, a special endowment planted for the long-term benefit of the library and our community -6:00-8:00 P.M. The Black Watch Room at Pebble Creek, 3851 Forest Grove Drive, LeClaire, Iowa. Enjoy live music from members of the Pleasant Valley Jazz Band and Orchestra, hors d'oevres and tastings from Wide River Winery and Mississippi River Distilling Company. RSVP Encouraged by November 7th, Walk-Ins Welcome; 563-505-6703 or chris@ccx.net Hosted by the Friends of the LeClaire Community Library.

 

Save the Date

December 6th- First Friday in LeClaire!

December 6th-8th - Christmas in LeClaire 2013!

Friday - 10:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m.

Crafts and Silent Auction at Civic Center

Free Trolley Rides

Cookie Tin Sales

Bazaars and Craft Fair

Baked Goods

Saturday - 10:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m.

Breakfast with Santa - 8-10 a.m.

Buffalo Bill Museum Tours

Santa's Playhouse - 12-3 p.m.

Crafts and Silent Auction

Cookie Tin Sales

Bake Sale

Free Trolley Rides

Sunday - 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

Free Trolley Rides

Buffalo Bill Museum Tours

Local Stores Open

Crafts and Silent Auction at Civic Center

For more information, contact Joyce 289-4205, Diane 370-3509, Vicki 289-3882

 

FYI

"Something NEW" at the LeClaire Civic Club - BUNCO! Every third Tuesday from10:00 AM through 12:30PM!  Call Debbie for details - 563-289-4458.

The LeClaire Chamber Website and our Facebook page are currently being updated and revised. Watch for the new website to be up and running soon, visit us again soon on Facebook, and in the meantime, thank you for your patience! 

Street Level Commercial Space for Rent, 117 S. Cody Road, 700 sq.ft. (20'x35'). Contact Vince Ramsey, 563-289-3129.

Apartment is available over Artswork 223 1/2 N Cody. It is a lovely 1 BR with all the trimmings - garage, deck with a beautiful view, laundry, 2 full baths, contemporary kitchen. Call 563-940-3742 for more info.

Do you have Residential or Commercial property available? If you own residential rental property or commercial property that is available for lease or sale in the greater LeClaire region, please contact the LeClaire Chamber of Commerce, leclairechamber@gmail.com, with a property description, complete contact information including phone numbers and rental or purchase pricing. As a service to the community, we would like to have the information available so we can share the most up-to-date information on our website!

SERVING THE COMMUNITY AND BEYOND

Primitive Cottage is collecting food for the Princeton Presbyterian Church's Food Pantry which is in great need of food donations. They have helped alot of people, and now they need our help.  Donations can be dropped off at Primitive Cottage in LeClaire. Please check the expiration date on items because anything that has expired can't be given away.

First Presbyterian Church of LeClaire Meals for Seniors at the church every Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 12 noon. Good food and a time to visit with others. Please call 563-289-3646 and make a reservation 2 days in advance.

Chamber 2013 Networking Events - Everyone welcome to attend!

November - place, date and time tbd

December 10th - Hungry Hobo - lunch - noon

LeClaire 2013 Events Calendar:

First Fridays each month 5:00-8:00 P.M.

October 26th - HalloWine

October 26th - Witches Walk Costume Contest and Parade

December 6-8 - Christmas in LeClaire

Family Nights at the LeClaire Rec Center: Details at www.leclairereccenter.com

www.LeClaireChamber.com and visit the Chamber on FaceBook!

Notice: The opinions posted on this site are slip opinions only. Under the Rules of Appellate Procedure a party has a limited number of days to request a rehearing after the filing of an opinion. Also, all slip opinions are subject to modification or correction by the court. Therefore, opinions on this site are not to be considered the final decisions of the court. The official published opinions of the Iowa Supreme Court are those published in the North Western Reporter published by West Group.

Opinions released before April 2006 and available in the archives are posted in Word format. Opinions released after April 2006 are posted to the website in PDF (Portable Document Format).   Note: To open a PDF you must have the free Acrobat Reader installed. PDF format preserves the original appearance of a document without requiring you to possess the software that created that document. For more information about PDF read: Using the Adobe Reader.

For your convenience, the Judicial Branch offers a free e-mail notification service for Supreme Court opinions, Court of Appeals opinions, press releases and orders. To subscribe, click here.

NOTE: Copies of these opinions may be obtained from the Clerk of the Supreme Court, Judicial Branch Building, 1111 East Court Avenue, Des Moines, IA 50319, for a fee of fifty cents per page.

No. 12-1340

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF CARROLL IRVING SAMPSON, Deceased. CHERYL ANN MURKEN and MARY ANN SMITH, Coexecutors of the Christine Rosilia Sampson Estate

No. 13-0397

IOWA SUPREME COURT ATTORNEY DISCIPLINARY BOARD vs. CURT N. DANIELS
I was misdiagnosed 4 times and giving a questionable doubt of survival, I know firsthand the challenges of paying bills and trying to make ends meet while enduring my Chemo and radiation. I was laid off for a year with no pay and I have a lot of decisions to make, to purchase or buy my medicines. To take a chance to go to the doctors with the little I had in my tank and arrive to my doctor's appointment with no money for my co-pay.

That when my husband and I created It's In The Genes, Breast Cancer Advocates fighting the fight against Breast Cancer. I help My Sisters, My Mothers, My Grandmothers, My Aunts, My Firends, My Community find the resources they need to survive.

It's in the Genes has partnered with Total Life Style Changes, INC. a Maryland non-profit 501 (c)3 corporation. We assist those dealing with these issues by educating, empowering and informing about Breast Cancer. We know that our help is needed if we are going to win against this fight and we are ready to Do Something! Are you?

[DUBUQUE, IA] DubuqueFest Fine Arts Festival is now accepting applications for the 37th annual juried fine art fair scheduled for May 17 and 18, 2014 in Dubuque, Iowa. All interested fine artists and fine craft artisans are encouraged to apply. The juried fine art fair features the work of 85 artists & artisans from across the region. $1000 cash prizes are awarded to Best of Show, Second Place, & Third Place during an artist's appreciation reception on Saturday, May 18 at the Dubuque Museum of Art.

Dubuque has made an impact as an arts & culture destination in the Midwest. Through successful arts programming and dedicated city partnerships the DubuqueFest Fine Arts Festival grows along with it drawing lovers of fine art and history to the oldest festival in Iowa's first city. Applications are available now through February 2014.

DubuqueFest Fine Arts Festival is an affiliate of Dubuque County Fine Arts Society, a non profit arts org whose mission is to offer free arts programming to the masses, founded 1976.

May 16-18, 2014

www.dubuquefest.org

Download the application at www.dubuquefest.org. To request one by mail contact

Paula paula@dubuquefest.org or by calling 563.564.5290.

IMPORTANT INFORMATION

• Application deadline is February 15, 2014

• Application fee: $110

• Jury fee: $15 (non-refundable)

• Two Emerging Artist Scholarships are available

# # #

(DES MOINES) - Gov. Terry E. Branstad today approved an emergency declaration suspending the regulatory provisions pertaining to hours of service for drivers of commercial motor vehicles transporting propane. The order goes into effect at 12:01 a.m. on Friday, Oct. 25 and ends at 11:59 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 7.

The proclamation is as follows:

WHEREAS, because of the late harvest and high demand for petroleum products throughout the Midwest, the people of the State of Iowa are faced with extremely low supplies of propane; and

WHEREAS, adequate supplies of propane are necessary to continue normal agricultural harvesting and to provide residential heating to our citizens, particularly those in rural portions of the state; and

WHEREAS, the effects of this propane shortage are being felt throughout the State of Iowa; and

WHEREAS, the limited suspension of certain hours of service regulations for drivers of commercial motor vehicles transporting propane in our state will increase the amount of propane transported throughout the State of Iowa, thereby reducing the damaging effects of this shortage; and

WHEREAS, these conditions threaten the peace, health, and safety of the citizens of the State of Iowa and its agricultural industry and accordingly provide legal justification for the issuance of a Proclamation of a State of Disaster Emergency pursuant to Iowa Code § 29C.6(1).

NOW, THEREFORE, I, TERRY E. BRANSTAD, Governor of the State of Iowa, by the power and authority vested in me by the Iowa Constitution Art. IV, §§ 1, 8 and Iowa Code § 29C.6(1), and all other applicable laws, do hereby proclaim a State of Disaster Emergency for the entire state of Iowa and do hereby ORDER and DIRECT the following:

SECTION One.  I temporarily suspend the regulatory provisions of Iowa Code § 321.449 pertaining to hours of service for drivers of commercial motor vehicles transporting propane, during the duration of this disaster, subject to these conditions:

A.    Nothing contained in this Proclamation shall be construed as an exemption from the controlled substances and alcohol use and testing requirements under 49 CFR Part 382, the commercial drivers' license requirements under 49 CFR Part 383, the financial responsibility requirements of 49 CFR Part 387, or any other portion of the Code of Federal Regulations not specifically identified in this proclamation.

A.    No motor carrier operating under the terms of this proclamation shall require or allow a fatigued or ill driver to operate a motor vehicle. A driver who informs a carrier that he or she needs immediate rest shall be given at least ten consecutive hours off duty before the driver is required to return to service.

B.     Upon the request of a driver, a commercial motor carrier operating under this proclamation must give a driver at least thirty-four (34) consecutive hours off when the driver has been on duty for more than seventy (70) hours during any eight consecutive days.

C.     Motor carriers that have an out-of-service order in effect may not take advantage of the relief from regulations that this declaration provides under title 49 CFR § 390.23.

D.    Upon the expiration of the effective date of this Proclamation, or when a driver has been relieved of all duty and responsibility to provide direct assistance to the emergency effort, a driver that has had at least thirty-four (34) consecutive hours off duty shall be permitted to start his or her on-duty status hours and 60/70 hour clock at zero.

SECTION Two.  This state of disaster emergency shall be effective at 12:01 a.m. on October 25, 2013, shall continue for fourteen (14) days, and shall expire on November 7, 2013 at 11:59 p.m., unless sooner terminated or extended in writing by me.

IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I have hereunto subscribed my name and caused the Great Seal of the State of Iowa to be affixed at Des Moines, Iowa this twenty-fourth day of October in the year of our Lord Two Thousand Thirteen.
Last week we received overwhelming support for our warriors ? thank you! In response to the wishes of many, Wounded Warrior Project® (WWP) would like to share an inspiring story with you.

Andrew Harriman deployed to Iraq as a medic in 2006. During the first nine months of Andrew's deployment, he treated 23 men. Every one of them survived. "There was a lot of skill involved," Andrew says. "But I got very lucky in a lot of circumstances, too."

On March 5, 2007, while on a mission to deliver supplies to snipers in a heavily armed insurgent area of the Diyala River Valley, a fellow warrior was hit by gunfire. While attempting to save his comrade, Andrew's medical kit exploded, forcing him to act quickly.

While applying pressure to stop his comrade's bleeding, Andrew grabbed a nearby weapon in his other hand and started to fire. He dragged his fellow warrior out of the line of fire, stabilized him, and quickly arranged to have him airlifted to safety.

Andrew was awarded the Silver Star for bravery, and by the end of his deployment, he was also awarded a Bronze Star for valor, an Army Commendation Medal with valor, and the Purple Heart.

Andrew's own injuries include leg wounds, punctured eardrums, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). But he, too, had someone to help him when he needed it most. He says: "WWP has helped me immensely ... [including] getting me out with other warriors who have been hurt ... resources for finding a job through the Warriors to Work® program ... WWP has all the aspects covered."

Andrew continues his involvement with WWP through outdoor excursions. "The fact that everyone has had similar experiences really helps. You can be yourself."

You show Andrew and the countless injured warriors like him your support by giving a generous gift of $50, $75, $100, or more today. Your gift lets injured warriors know they are not forgotten.

With thanks,

Steven Nardizzi
Executive Director
Wounded Warrior Project

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