Donors can now claim tax deductions to help save historic theater

TIPTON, Iowa?The Hardacre Theater Preservation Association (HTPA) announced today it has achieved its long-awaited goal of attaining 501(c)(3) status from the IRS, making the group an official nonprofit organization and opening doors for the organization and its donors.

With nonprofit designation, the HTPA can now offer tax deductions to donors who want to help save the theater and pursue grants and funding opportunities only available to 501(c)(3) organizations.

"We are thrilled to attain this status, as it will open so many doors for not only the Hardacre Theater Preservation Association but for its donors," said Greg Brown, HTPA president. "Many grants are available only to nonprofit organizations. Attaining this status will help us realize the community's vision for the Hardacre Theater."

The Hardacre Theater is a nearly 100-year-old opera house and movie theater that, until August 2013, was in continuous operation since it opened in 1916. The theater is home to Iowa's longest-running film festival?the Hardacre Film Festival?which celebrated its 16th year in August 2013. The movie industry's rapid evolution from 35mm film to digital projection has left many single-screen, privately owned theaters scrambling to upgrade to digital or close their businesses.

The HTPA's goal is to purchase and upgrade the Hardacre Theater, creating a multi-use venue for both recorded and live entertainment. The first fundraising phase will be to purchase the theater building, then renovate and upgrade its technology to create a state-of-the-art entertainment and cultural facility.

The group is formulating a fundraising and grant-attainment plan. Anyone interested in donating, pledging a donation, and following the Hardacre Theater's journey to renovation can visit the HTPA's website at thehardacre.org.


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And You Thought Your Work-Life Balance
Was Difficult ...
Dad of Quadruplets Shares What He Learned Juggling Family
Life and Successful Business Career

Larry Katzen forged an ambitious career as a leader at one of the world's most prestigious accounting firms.

But he has been equally ambitious with his family life; he's the father of quadruplets?three sons and a daughter. And he felt it was important to serve his community, sitting on more than 10 boards of directors.

"It was an incredible challenge and I don't regret one minute of it!" says Katzen, author of "And You Thought Accountants Were Boring - My Life Inside Arthur Andersen," (Larryrkatzen.com), a look at working in one of the world's most historically important accounting firms while nurturing bonds with his wife and children.

"The quadruplets were born April 22, 1974, before multiple births became fairly common, so we were front-page news and featured on all the national TV news shows," Katzen says. "But that also tells you there weren't many other parents who could give us advice, and certainly no internet forums to turn to!"

At the time, Katzen was also working his way up the ladder and taking on new challenges at Arthur Andersen, one of the "Big 8" accounting firms. How did he and his wife, Susan, manage?

"It comes down to sticking to some basic principles: doing the right thing, for one, and listening to your heart," Katzen says.

He draws on his 35-year career and family life to offer these tips for working parents with multiple children:

· Cultivate support systems! One of the wonderful things about Arthur Andersen was the people who worked there, including his bosses, Katzen says. "They knew the physical and financial struggles Susan and I faced caring for four babies and, because I never gave less than my all at work, they did what they could to work around my situation," he says. That included a heftier-than-usual annual pay raise that Katzen learned only years later was approved because the firm's partners knew he would need the extra money.

Susan reached out to moms of multiples to develop her own support system, and the couple hired a recent high school graduate to help care for their rambunctious brood a couple days a week.

"There's no glory in not asking for support and help," Katzen says.

· Combine business and family. Katzen traveled frequently for his job and, when his children were 9 years old, a business friend suggested he bring them along, one at a time, on his trips.

"The first was my daughter, Laurie. We flew to New York on a Friday and spent the weekend shopping, dining, taking in a show. For the first time ever, we were alone together without any disruptions," Katzen says. "Neither of us ever forgot that weekend."

· Consider buying a small vacation home. Traveling with four young children was extremely difficult, especially nights in motels, where the family would split up into two rooms - one parent and two children in each.

"When we discovered Sun Valley, Idaho, the children were 6. On our first trip there, they quickly learned to ski, and they clearly loved the snow - we could hardly get them to come inside," Katzen says.

The family so enjoyed the vacation, they looked into the prices of condos.

"We found a furnished condo at a very affordable price and for the next 13 years, we enjoyed summers and winters in Sun Valley," Katzen says. "It may sound like a big investment, but when you consider the costs of motels and dining out for a family of six, it works out well - and it's a lot more comfortable."

About Larry Katzen

After graduating from Drake University in 1967, Larry Katzen started working at Arthur Andersen and quickly rose through the ranks to become the Great Plains Regional Managing Partner. An honorable, hard-working man who devoted his life to Arthur Andersen, Larry was there from the company's meteoric rise to its unjust demise. He stayed with the firm for 35 years, serving clients globally until 2002. In his new memoir, And You Thought Accountants Were Boring - My Life Inside Arthur Andersen, Katzen details the political fodder in the government's prosecution of Enron; how the company was unjustly dismantled for its supposed connections to the corruption; its vindication and why it came too late, and the devastating impact it had on 85,000 employees.

Hammond, IN (October 29, 2013) - Just before the start of the annual "A Christmas Story" Comes Home exhibit, the South Shore Convention and Visitors Authority unveiled an opportunity for visitors to see Flick, a character from the classic Christmas movie "A Christmas Story," get his tongue stuck to a flag pole in front of the Indiana Welcome Center.


Speros A. Batistatos, president and CEO of the South Shore Convention and Visitors Authority, and Scott Schwartz, the actor who played Flick in the movie, unveiled the permanent bronze statue during a press conference on Tuesday outside the Indiana Welcome Center.


"The South Shore CVA wanted to do something special for our 30th anniversary, as well as the 30th anniversary of the holiday classic 'A Christmas Story,'" said Batistatos. "In honor of Jean Shepherd and the movie, the iconic "Triple Dog Dare" scene is now immortalized on one of the Indiana Welcome Center's flag poles."


The Flick statue was commissioned by the South Shore CVA in January 2013 and was created, in partnership with Warner Bros. Consumer Products, by Timeless Creations - The Studio of Rotblatt-Amrany. In addition to the creation of Flick, Rotblatt-Amrany's studio created the Orville Redenbacher statue in Valparaiso, as well as Michael Jordan, Frank Thomas and Harry Carey in Chicago.


The "A Christmas Story" Comes Home exhibit will open Saturday, Nov. 9 and run through Sunday, Jan. 5. The Indiana Welcome Center is open seven days a week from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and is located at 7770 Corinne Drive, Hammond, Indiana 46323. For more information on the exhibit, weekend and holiday hours or special events, contact Bethany Randolph, special events and services manager for the South Shore Convention and Visitors Authority, at 219-554-2229 or visit www.achristmasstorycomeshome.com.


###


About the South Shore Convention and Visitors Authority
The South Shore Convention & Visitors Authority, as the official destination marketing organization, leads and supports the visitor industry through the marketing and development of the county from convention, sports, gaming and special interest travel segments, thereby increasing economic impact, creating employment and enhancing the communities' quality of life.

About Warner Bros. Consumer Products
Warner Bros. Consumer Products, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company, is one of the leading licensing and retail merchandising organizations in the world.

A CHRISTMAS STORY and all related characters and elements are trademarks of and © Turner Entertainment Co.
(s13)

Rock Island, IL - In October sessions of the 16th Annual Frieze Lecture Series at Rock Island Library, Augustana College professors considered the generational impacts on how people perceive their ethnic identity and shown how Western artists perceive African art, and how African cultures use ceremonial objects and textiles to reinforce social lessons, spiritual connections and status.

The two remaining lectures in November will explore global connections in literature. Lectures begin at 2:00 pm in the Rock Island Main Library Community Room, 401 19th Street, and are free and open to the public. This year's theme,  "It IS a Small World After All: Globalism's Impact on Literature, Art and Culture" was chosen to illustrate the global connections between the humanities.

On Tuesday, Nov. 5, visiting professor Dr. Benjamin Mier-Cruz, of the Augustana College department of German and Scandinavian, will speak on the exploding popularity of the Swedish Crime Novel. From works such as "Girl with the Dragon Tattoo" by the late Steig Larsson to the Wallander novels by Henning Mankell, what is behind the huge popularity of violent crime fiction in a relatively tranquil national culture? Novels by Camilla Läckberg, the Swedish author of "The Hidden Child" and "The Lost Boy" have been translated into 33 languages.

In the final Frieze Lecture on Tuesday, Nov. 12, Prof. Katie Hanson, from Augustana's Education Department, will speak on one of Britain's foremost authors, Japanese-born Kazuo Ishiguro. Hanson will consider how the author's background as somewhat of a cultural outsider have informed or influenced his perceptions of the Western world. Ishiguro has become one of the most celebrated contemporary fiction authors in the English-speaking world, receiving four Mann Booker writing prize nominations, and winning the 1989 award for his novel, The Remains of the Day. His 2005 novel, Never Let Me Go, also nominated for the Mann Booker prize, was chosen by Augustana's faculty as the common summer reader for this year's entering class.

The annual adult program partnership between Rock Island Library and Augustana College is dedicated to the memory of late library board member Ruth Evelyn Katz, who created the Frieze Lectures in 1998  to recognize the Rock Island Public Library's 125th anniversary. The series takes its name from an architectural feature of Main Library building.

For more details about events at the Rock Island Library, call 309 732 -7323 or check the online calendar at www.rockislandlibrary.org.

(end)

Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2013

Senator Chuck Grassley released the following statement after learning from multiple media reports that the federal  government is expected to fine Infosys for immigration fraud and abuse of U.S. visa programs.

Grassley has been working to root out waste, fraud and abuse of the H-1B visa program.  As those loopholes are tightened, it appears that companies are circumventing the H-1B program by using the B-1 visa program which does not have the same wage and recruitment restrictions of the H-1B program.  Jay Palmer, an Infosys employee who sued the company, was the first to bring evidence to Grassley on regarding these practices.

After hearing about the allegations from Palmer, Grassley asked for a thorough investigation by the Departments of State and Homeland Security of the B-1 visa program and the use of this visa program by employers to recruit foreign workers who are then not subject to the cap and the prevailing wage requirements of the H-1B program.  To date, it's unclear if any changes have been made in the policies at the State and Homeland Security departments.

Here is Grassley's comment on the settlement.

"Some companies are finding creative ways to subvert the H-1B visa program and bring in foreign workers to the detriment of Americans workers.  Corporate whistleblowers who have brought abusive practices to light reveal that too many companies appear to be pushing the envelope and ignoring the intent or spirit of the law.   It's time that the administration and Congress do more to reign in the fraud and abuse to ensure that both American and foreign workers are protected."
DATE: Wednesday, October 30th at 8:30am

LOCATION: Stoney Creek Inn, Moline

ROCK ISLAND, Illinois - Twenty-eight area nonprofit organizations will be awarded $357,000 on Wednesday, October 30th during The Amy Helpenstell Foundation's Fall Grant Reception at 8:30 a.m. at Stoney Creek Inn in Moline. This is the largest amount of funding awarded by the Foundation in a single grant cycle.

Nonprofit guests will be present to receive their grants from Amy's father, Franz "Bud" Helpenstell. In addition, the following nonprofit leaders will speak on behalf of their organizations to share how they will utilize the grant money received from the Foundation.

Michael Woods, Casa Guanajuato

Regina Haddock, Dress for Success Quad Cities

Ben Loeb, QC Symphony Orchestra

Diane Sonneville, Supplemental Emergency Assistance Program

Among the causes and organizations it supports, The Amy Helpenstell Foundation promotes awareness, understanding, diagnosis and treatment of eating disorders in the greater Quad Cities area. Amy Helpenstell passed away in 2003 from complications related to an eating disorder. Ms. Helpenstell created the Foundation through her estate to support causes related to health, education, youth development, community development and cultural activities within a 60-mile radius of Rock Island, where she lived and worked.

"Amy's Foundation has given nearly $4.9 million back to the community since 2005, all to causes that she cared about very much," said Bud Helpenstell, Amy's father and President of The Amy Helpenstell Foundation. "With the full impact of state cutbacks to nonprofits being especially noticeable now, we are happy to support these organizations in every way we can. The important work they do can be felt in the lives of real people every day."


• Casa Guanajuato Quad Cities - Si Podemos (Yes We Can) Latina Development Project, $10,000

• Christian Care - Domestic Violence Shelter Counseling and Case Management, $20,000

• Churches United of the Quad City Area - Winnie's Place Emergency Homeless Shelter, $20,000

• Dress for Success - Empowering Women with Job Search and Employment Support, $10,000

• Family Resources - Core Mission Support - Matching Grant, $15,000

• Genesis Health Services Foundation - Genesis Flu-Free QC, $6,000

• Habitat for Humanity Quad Cities - House Build #85, $10,000

• Humility of Mary Housing, Inc. - Transitional & Permanent Supportive Services for Adults Experiencing Homelessness, $15,000

• Humility of Mary Shelter, Inc. - Emergency Shelter, Housing, and Supportive Services for Adults Experiencing Homelessness, $15,000

• Martin Luther King Center - King Center Youth Programming, $20,000

• Metropolitan Youth Program, $15,000

• Project Renewal - After School Program, $13,000

• Quad City Arts - Galumpha Visiting Artist Series Residency, $5,000

• Quad City Botanical Center - Children's Garden Phase One - Construction & Operations, $10,000

• Quad City Symphony Orchestra - K-12 Education Programs for 2011-2012, 2012-2013, 2013-14 school years, $10,000

• Rebuilding Together - Home repairs for low income homeowners, $20,000

• RICO Extension & 4-H Education Foundation - Rock Island County 4-H Teen Leadership Program, $5,000

• River Bend Foodbank - Backpack Program, $15,000

• St. Joseph the Worker House Association - Touching Families, $10,000

• Supplemental Emergency Assistance Program - Client Emergency Financial Assistance/Related Costs, $10,000

• Thomas Merton House (Café on Vine) - Daily Readiness for meal program, $10,000

• Transitions Mental Health Services - Palm Pilots, $10,000

• Trinity Health Foundation - Behavioral Health Crisis Stabilization Unit, $10,000

• Two Rivers YMCA - Technology/ Helping Pre-schoolers be Successful, $10,000

• WVIK Augustana Public Radio - WVIK Public Broadcast Fellowship, $10,000

• Youth Service Bureau of R.I. County - Family Therapy, $20,000

• YouthBuild Quad Cities - Hands-on Job Training for Youth - $18,000

• YWCA of the Quad Cities - Youth Programming, $15,000

For more information about The Amy Helpenstell Foundation, visit www.amyhelpenstell.org or call 563-326-2840. The Amy Helpenstell Foundation is administered by the Community Foundation of the Great River Bend.

###

A Maddie Celebration

November 2nd, 2013  2:00pm until 4:00pm

Fundraiser and awareness:  Six year old Maddie has Alopecia, a disease that makes her hair to fall out.  This of course causes her to look different from her classmates and sometimes be teased.

Let's show Maddie that we care for her and she is a beautiful child!

The purpose of this fundraiser is to raise money and awareness of Alopecia in children. The funds will be used to purchase a couple of wigs for Maddie.  The remaining funds will be donated to the Children's Alopecia Project, a foudnation that educates the children and teachers at Maddie's school about Alopecia.

Please bring a cute hat for Maddie!  Donations welcome, too.

Maddie Celebration at Berean Baptist Church, 3103 West 13th Street (corner of 13th and Clark), Davenport, Iowa 52804

UPDATE, FRIDAY, NOV 1:

he five float planes are expected to arrive in LeClaire today around 2:15 - 2:30pm. There will be three docking in LeClaire on the Levee and two just upriver from the quarry. They will be staying overnight and flying out around 10am tomorrow morning.

Five "float planes" (Supercub, Cessna 172, 180, 182 and a vintage Twin Beech 18) are heading to Florida from Minneapolis. Weather permitting, 13 pilots and passengers will be making a stop in LeClaire, Iowa, on Thursday, October 31, 2013 and staying overnight. If they are delayed because of the weather, they will be arriving in LeClaire on Friday morning around 11am or noon. The Twin Beech 18 will be docked at the City dock on the Levee in LeClaire. The other four aircraft will be docked upriver just past Territorial Road.

Here is more information about the company that is leading the Florida migration:

http://www.adventureseaplanes.com/

Des Moines, October 29, 2013 ?On Wednesday, November 6, members of the Iowa Supreme Court will visit five Burlington area high schools and the community college to meet with students and discuss the role of the courts. In Burlington, the justices will visit Burlington, West Burlington and Notre Dame high schools and Southeastern Iowa Community College. Justices will also visit Danville and Mediapolis high schools.

High School/Community College visit schedule for Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Justice Daryl Hecht will visit West Burlington High School at 8:30 a.m.

Justice David Wiggins will visit Burlington Notre Dame High School at 8:50 a.m.

Chief Justice Mark Cady will visit Burlington High School at 9:05 a.m.

Justice Thomas Waterman will visit Mediapolis High School at 9:15 a.m.

Justice Brent Appel will visit Danville High School at 9:30 a.m.

Justice Bruce Zager will visit Southeastern Iowa Community College at 10:00 a.m.

In addition to the school visits, the supreme court will hold a special session in Burlington on Tuesday evening November 5. During the special session, the court will hear oral arguments in two cases in the auditorium at Edward Stone Middle School, 3000 Mason Road. The session begins at 7 p.m. As always, oral arguments are open to the public. A public reception with the justices, sponsored by the Des Moines County Bar Association, will follow the oral arguments in the auditorium lobby.

Special Session

Tuesday, November 5, at 7:00 p.m.

Edward Stone Middle School auditorium

3000 Mason Road

Burlington, Iowa

The Iowa Supreme Court will hear lawyers argue in two cases:

Palmer College of Chiropractic v. Davenport Civil Rights Commission and Aaron Cannon

Aaron Cannon, blind since birth, began the Bachelor of Science program at Palmer College in 2004. The college had in place technical standards for admission and graduation providing that students have sufficient use of vision to perform chiropractic and general physical examinations. Palmer College denied Cannon's request for a sighted assistant, and Cannon filed a complaint of discrimination based on disability. On appeal Cannon argues the district court incorrectly concluded that the vision requirement was reasonably necessary for the chiropractic curriculum and that a sighted assistant would fundamentally alter the nature of the chiropractic program.

Joseph DeMocko, et al. vs. Iowa Department of Natural Resources

Iowa Code chapter 483A governs the terms and conditions under which individuals may hunt and fish in Iowa. Non-residents pay a higher license fee than residents and are subject to various restrictions. Appellants argue that the district court incorrectly concluded that they are not Iowa residents for the purposes of chapter 483A and that limiting landowner hunting licenses only to Iowa residents, as defined in chapter 483A, is unconstitutional.

For more information about the oral arguments

Attorneys' briefs for the two cases and a "Guide to Oral Arguments" are posted on the Iowa Judicial Branch website at:

http://www.iowacourts.gov/About_the_Courts/Supreme_Court/Offsite_Oral_Arguments .

Note to news media

News media are invited to attend the oral arguments. Court rules apply regarding still camera, video camera, and audio recording devices used during the oral arguments. Information on expanded media coverage is available on the Iowa Judicial Branch Website at: http://www.iowacourts.gov/For_the_Media/Expanded_Media_Coverage .

The Iowa Court Rules regarding cameras and other electronic devices in the courtroom are on the Iowa Legislature website at:

https://www.legis.iowa.gov/DOCS/ACO/CR/LINC/09-27-2013.chapter.25.pdf (the first page is blank)

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Ring in the holiday season with loads of belly laughs from the RiffTrax crew as NCM Fathom Events, RiffTrax and IGN bring "RiffTrax Live: Santa Claus Conquers the Martians" to more than 570 select cinemas nationwide. For one night only, join RiffTrax?Michael J. Nelson, Kevin Murphy and Bill Corbett (best known for the groundbreaking "Mystery Science Theater 3000")? for a hilarious never-before-seen take on the family holiday 'classic' LIVE on Thursday, Dec. 5 at 8:00 p.m. ET / 7:00 p.m. CT and tape delayed at 7:00 p.m. MT and 8:00 p.m  PT/HI/AK.

"RiffTrax Live: Santa Claus Conquers the Martians" will be presented at the following cinemas in your area on Thursday, December 5:
Cinemark Davenport 18 with IMAX 3601 E 53Rd St Davenport IA 52807
Click here for a full list of participating theaters (subject to change).
Tickets are available now at participating theater box offices and online at www.FathomEvents.com.

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