(DES MOINES) - Gov. Terry Branstad today issued the following statement upon learning of the passing of Kum & Go co-founder Bill Krause:

"Bill Krause was a great Iowa entrepreneur. He built a successful family business that focuses on providing outstanding service to their customers. He was a manager for the Iowa Hawkeyes football team and a loyal Hawkeye fan. He always had a smile on his face, an upbeat attitude and was fun to be around. He will be greatly missed."

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Washington, D.C.  - Congressman Dave Loebsack today announced that the Davenport Fire Department will receive $68,000 in funding from the Department of Homeland Security's Assistance to Firefighters Grants (AFG) Program.

"Our firefighters and first responders stand ready to serve us the moment disaster strikes," said Loebsack.  "This funding will ensure that they are able to secure the resources and training they need to respond quickly to emergencies and keep our families and communities safe."

The Fire Prevention and Safety (FP&S) Grants are part of the Assistance to Firefighters Grants (AFG) and support projects that enhance the safety of the public and firefighters from fire and related hazards. The primary goal is to reduce injury and prevent death among high-risk populations.

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WASHINGTON, D.C. - Senator Tom Harkin (D-IA) today announced that a total of $2,673,197 has been awarded to ten AmeriCorps programs across Iowa. This competitive funding comes from the Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS). Harkin has been a longtime supporter of AmeriCorps and is the Chairman of the panel that funds these initiatives.

"The work that AmeriCorps members do across Iowa is essential in helping build strong communities," said Harkin. "Getting young people involved in service to improve their community and enhance the lives of those around them is at the heart of AmeriCorps programs. From teaching and mentoring children to building houses for the poor to restoring wildlife habitats, today's funding will improve the lives of countless Iowans and I commend these organizations on receiving it."

The grants awarded today will allocate AmeriCorps resources across a range of issues including strengthening education, fostering economic opportunity, preparing for and responding to disasters, improving health, meeting environmental and energy efficiency needs, and assisting veterans and military families.

Details of the grants follow:

Big Brothers Big Sisters of the Mississippi Valley: $129,949 to recruit and support volunteers to mentor disadvantaged youth at risk of leaving school without a diploma in Eastern Iowa.

Community Corrections Improvement Association: $460,169 to recruit volunteers to provide mentoring and out of school time programming as a prevention strategy for youth who are at-risk of involvement or already involved in the juvenile justice system. Members will also provide mentoring for system-involved adult offenders, particularly targeting veterans and families in the child welfare system for abuse and neglect. The initiative will focus on the CNCS focus areas of Education, Healthy Futures, Veterans, and Economic Opportunity in Linn, Johnson, and Tama counties.

Des Moines Independent Community School District: $610,064 to provide tutoring, mentoring and service-learning interventions to students at risk of dropping out or underperforming in math and literacy. Members will recruit volunteers to increase academic performance and engagement rates of K-12 students. The program will serve urban schools in Des Moines, Iowa.

City of Dubuque: $210,581 to provide in-school, before school and after-school academic mentoring and summer learning opportunities to improve math and reading proficiency in the city of Dubuque, Iowa.

Graceland University: $175,146 to leverage volunteers to strengthen academic engagement through mentoring, service-learning, cultural/enrichment opportunity programs and building 'developmental assets' as indicators of academic achievement in rural south central Iowa.

Habitat for Humanity of Iowa, Inc.: $260,847 to recruit and manage volunteers to make homeownership a reality by building safe and affordable homes in partnership with financially challenged families. The program will serve 25 counties across the state of Iowa.

Iowa Department of Natural Resources: $532,155 to improve public lands and trails through habitat restoration, trail work, and disaster response, resulting in improved water quality, miles of trails accessible to those with disabilities, and communities with improved capacity to respond to and recover from natural disasters. This program will serve all residents, particularly in rural communities, throughout the state of Iowa.

Iowa Legal Aid: $132,600 for members of the Iowa Legal Aid (ILA) AmeriCorps to serve in non-attorney positions to assist with outreach, education, and representation of low-income clients in civil legal matters. Members help expand the services that ILA offices provide to economically vulnerable individuals and families in every county of the state.

Iowa Western Community College: $28,348 for the Iowa College AmeriCorps Program (ICAP), an initiative that increases college students' skills and interest in citizenship and leadership, building the capacity of local community partner nonprofit organizations. AmeriCorps members will serve through 10 college campus sites throughout Iowa. These members will recruit and manage volunteers, improve partner organization volunteer practices, and conduct community impact assessments to improve the performance of targeted community organizations.

United Way of East Central Iowa: $133,338 to provide early literacy activities and tutoring in out of school time programs to children and parents, and provide outreach services for children and families with disabilities. Members will serve in Eastern Iowa and the program will address the CNCS focus area of Education.

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Los Angeles, CA - Jack Garman, author of MOW- April 25, 1993, The Day The American Gay Community Found Its Voice is pleased to announce that in honor of Gay Pride Month his ebook is free to any Kindle device on each Sunday in June ($9.99 all other days).

http://www.amazon.com/MOW-April-American-Community-ebook/dp/B00A634OV2/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1371321641&sr=8-1&keywords=jack+garman+mow

 

20 Years to Plan a Gay Wedding

 

20 years ago same-gender marriage first got major exposure. It happened during the March On Washington for Gay, Lesbian and Bi Rights and Liberation on April 25, 1993. Organizers estimated that nearly one million gays and lesbians from around the country gathered in Washington to show their support for every issue within the GLBT community. During a week of related events that preceded the March, huge crowds surged through the streets of DC to make a place for themselves in the modern world.

On Saturday, April 24, the day before the March, The Wedding took place. Scores of gay and lesbian couples gathered for a mass wedding, presided over by Troy Perry, Founder of MCC, Metropolitan Community Church, an evangelical Christian church established in 1968 to serve the GLBT community.

Those couples' commitment to each other anchored the rest of the issues of the week in their long-term struggle for legal recognition.

Now, 20 years later, that struggle has reached the Supreme Court. No matter what their decision, the March On Washington was a watershed event that established a new attitude within the GLBT community and beyond about how a larger society will see their GLBT members.

The social forces put into motion by the MOW is best understood with a visit to Washington during a week that set up two decades of unprecedented change.

Jack Garman, then Manager of Lambda Rising Bookstore in Baltimore, went to the MOW for a week and attended numerous related events in the lead-up to the March itself. He describes them all here, and includes the results of dozens of interviews with others from across the country as well some reflections on his personal journey as a gay man.

The result is an incomparable documentary-style reliving of this historically significant event.
Any history of the modern Gay and Lesbian movement would not be complete without a thorough description of the way this enormous event energized a population and made it possible for them to claim rights many would work so hard to deny them.

 

 

Excerpted from

MOW - April 25, 1993, The Day the American Gay Community Found Its Voice

by Jack Garman

Where is That Guy?

The Wedding

 

I waited a while longer, took some pictures of eye-catching Quilt panels, and then moved on. I had to get to The Wedding. Not my wedding, The Wedding. My wedding was another matter.

The Wedding was schedule for a spot around the corner from the Quilt site, halfway down the block. Thousands of couples jammed the space set aside for them. They so completely filled the entire street for a full city block that they were beginning to creep up the lawn of the Smithsonian building. The crowd was so densely packed together that I was afraid I wouldn't be able to stand in the middle of everything and hold my camera over my head. I was afraid I'd step on someone's foot, or fall over and interrupt The Wedding. I made a beeline for the densest part of the crowd.

As I reached the edge of the crowd, I came across a part of the street blocked off from pedestrian traffic where people wrote messages in the street with sidewalk chalk. Everywhere I looked, there were hearts with Jim Loves Andy and stuff like that in the middle of them. I watched the people as they drew their hearts. They worked quickly and then looked for someone to give their chalk to. All around them were people who waited patiently for their turn with the chalk. They complimented the work of the person they waited for and thanked them for the chalk and took the chalk and did their thing and then looked for the next person who needed the chalk and got their own compliment and then they scooted away, smiling the best smiles you ever did see. I assumed that people in couples have their own politeness rules. Maybe I should pay more attention to them. Beyond the chalk garden, where the crowd really got thick and heavy, there was a very beautiful woman with dramatic black hair and an air of confidence and self-assurance who held up a sign that said, "I need a wife."

I thought I would stand next to her and hold up a sign that said, "I need a husband."

Then I remembered my experience over the phone and I decided that I take this stuff too seriously to do what she was doing. Darn that serious streak in me, anyway.

I made my way through the crowd and finally found a good spot. Along the way, I met Joe from Chicago. We talked about how each of us wanted to meet someone to marry at The Wedding. Both of use felt foolish to show up an event where everyone was already in a couple. Of course, both of us were single.

I asked him about how he got to the March.

"I asked ten different friends if they would come with me to this March. They all turned me down. Even my own brother, who is also gay, wouldn't come with me."

I was not in the mood to get hitched, all of a sudden. There was a solemnity to this affair, even though the crowd was bubbling with chatter, bright and gay. The few couples in tuxedo jackets, usually over shorts and with brightly colored cummerbunds, reminded people that there is another quality of gravity to the experience. It wasn't simply a matter of having a party and getting into a pretend marriage, as if it was nothing more than some sort of pick-up game at a public basketball court.

I saw two Jewish women under a chuppa made from a rainbow flag and I though it must be fun to be Jewish and to know that you had better be able to bring along four good friends if you plan to get married so you have enough people to get your chuppa up in the air.

Once the crowd had filled the street from curb to curb and beyond and for nearly the entire length of the block, the ceremony began. The first person to speak to the crowd was the first open lesbian ordained by any denomination. She got that ordination nineteen years ago. She limited her remarks to the developments of our community over the past twenty years and she got an enormous ovation.

Then Troy Perry, founder of the MCC spoke. He told us first off about the way two men, lovers, organized the previous March on Washington in 1987 and that both are now dead from AIDS. I thought of the way two men who loved each other were able to create an event like the 1987 March that was so important to the way the rest of us have been able to find each other. If that's not a good reason to marry someone you love, I don't know what is.

Up until this moment, I've never understood why people cry at weddings. It occurred to me that it wasn't about the remembrance of the two men who had died. After all, when was the last time you went to a wedding and the celebrant started off by talking about the deceased. Mourning is a different matter. While mourning shows up in just about every aspect of our gay and lesbian daily lives, I've found that we as a community are just as able to feel other human emotions stirring within us while we are mourning as anybody else. In other words, mourning hasn't entirely taken over our lives, much as our detractors would like it to.

I began to cry, just a little bit, from the thought that this wedding is for people who overcame something and who then demanded happiness in their own lives as their own birthright. When they saw their lives and their loves in that light, they knew they didn't have to wait for anyone else to come along and approve their marriage. They simply did something about it themselves.

Robin Tyler, a funny lady, introduced her partner of 28 years. I thought 'how could anyone live with a comedian for twenty eight years?' Big round of applause. Then she pointed out that although "two lesbians are men's greatest fantasies, 2000 lesbians are men's greatest fears." Lots of cheering and applause. Then she described an experience she had on a trip to Russia where she met one of the men who work to bring some light into the gay and lesbian community in his country. She asked him about the dangers he faces in his country and wanted to know why he took such chances. He answered, "I would rather live one minute in the light than the rest of my life in darkness. We have a duty to love each other." If we are going to have any sort of future as a community, it will express further what he said.

Throughout the crowd, people shouted, "What he said! What he said!"

There was a guy standing in front of me who had his head shaved except for a triangular patch of hair that he dyed pink.

The next speaker was Patrick Gill who, along with his lover, was suing the city of DC to grant them a marriage license. I supported him all the way, but I will always treat our requests from government agencies as somewhat unsatisfying. I don't think we find personal truth by government decree. We find personal truth in our bedrooms, and there must a stout and well-defended barricade between the two.

He kept using the words I, he, and us while talking about his lover and about our community. I found that appealing and I thought it created an important dialogue. Then he said, "It is ironic that society stereotypes us as being unable to form stable relationships while at the same time society denies us the means to stabilize our relationships."

The crowd went wild.

Karen Thompson, caregiver of Sharon Kowalski, was next on the podium and got quite the ovation. Once you look at your own life challenges then you can begin to appreciate what Karen went through to stay in touch with her lover. She was the primary caregiver for Karen after a serious car accident and the family got a court order to keep her away.

"The first line of protection is to come out" she told us all.

I remembered all the times people had told me to be less out or to hold myself back. They told me to compromise and don't rock the boat. I wondered many other ways people have told me something that isn't in my self-interest, but in the interest of keeping that closet in good repair for the day when they finally succeed in shoving us back into it. After all, the closet is for their convenience, not ours. The closet makes them happy, not us. The closet keeps their lives in order, not ours. Sharon hadn't had the luxury or the good fortune to have come out yet, and so, after the car accident, her partner spent years in court fights. She further advised extensive legal documentation to compensate for the lack of a marriage law.

I met Dave Leiss, a nurse from southern Pennsylvania. He was with two female friends, who were in a couple. He had seen my "Husband Hunting" button and decided to come a little bit closer. He struck up a conversation by saying "Hi."

He told me he decided to come out as a New Year's resolution at the beginning of 1993. He told me how during the first few weeks of the year he came out to his parents, to his friends and to his coworkers. He said he felt very lucky to have a great deal of support from them in the process. This March is the first rally he has ever attended and the experience has blitzed him out. He couldn't wait to tell me what he and his friends saw on the Metro on their way over here.

Turns out, he saw the same family I did. The ones who didn't heed the warnings and were on a Metro car full of homos. He told me he heard them sing Barney songs like it would protect them from something. Whatever was the danger, he couldn't tell.

Meanwhile, on stage, there was a lesbian couple who told of being together for 33 years. They got quite an ovation. They had met in a bar and fell in love at first sight.

By this time, the ceremonies were impending. The assembled couples were about to be married. Maybe their home state wouldn't recognize them with any sort of legal or financial benefits, but they would recognize each other.

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Amana - The Old Creamery Theatre has special events coming your way in July!

On Saturday, July 6 they welcome back Keith Allynn, winner of the 2009 and 2010 Tribute Artist of the Year and the 2010 and 2011 Tribute Show of the Year. Direct from Branson Mo, Allynn will perform two great shows on The Old Creamery's Main Stage.

In A Tribute to Neil Diamond, you'll experience the "Feel of Neil" in this non-stop show that tells Neil Diamond's life through his songs. You'll hear favorites from the 60's, 70's and 80's such as Cracklin' Rose, America, Solitary Man, Play Me, Song Sung Blue, Sweet Caroline and many more. A Tribute to Neil Diamond plays on the Main Stage for one show only on Saturday, July 6th at 3 p.m.

At 8 p.m, Allynn takes to the stage again for On the Road Again with Willie Nelson and Other Outlaws, where he will showcase not only Willie Nelson, but also Waylon Jennings, Joe Cocker, Roger Miller, Elvis and many others. Keith even performs a duet - alone! You'll laugh until it hurts as Keith spins a yarn, literally changing character before your eyes in this Branson style production.

Tickets to each of Keith Allynn's shows are $25 per person or come to both shows for just $40 per person!

The Old Creamery Theatre is also pleased to bring you The Brett Family Singers, direct from Branson Mo., for three exciting shows, July 16, 17 and 18 at 3 p.m.

From an amateur family act, to an internationally known group of seasoned professionals, The Bretts have appeared on worldwide television and in more than 3,000 live performances around the globe. The Bretts deliver high energy, high-caliber professional entertainment to audiences of all ages. Voted Best Morning Show in Branson, The Bretts consistently make their daytime performance the place to be on the Strip in Branson and now you can see them without leaving the state! The Bretts are celebrating their 15th anniversary of performing with this all-new show you won't want to miss.

Tickets to The Bretts are $29.50 for adults and $19.50 for students. Group rates for 15 or more are available.

For tickets to any of these special events, call The Old Creamery Theatre box office at 800-35-AMANA (800-352-6262) or go online at www.oldcreamery.com to reserve your seats today!

Special events are not included as part of any Season Ticket or Discount Ticket Package. Coupons, gift certificates, complimentary tickets or $20 ticket vouchers will not be accepted to purchase tickets to special events.

The Old Creamery Theatre is a not-for-profit live, professional theatre founded in 1971 in Garrison, Iowa. The company is celebrating 42 years of bringing live professional theatre to the people of Iowa and the Midwest.

Student Loan Relief Act Supported By Loebsack & Bustos Would Prevent Stafford Student Loan Interest Rates From Doubling & Making College More Expensive

 

With Only Six Scheduled Legislative Days Before July 1, Loebsack & Bustos Urge Action On Common Sense Bill

WASHINGTON, D.C. - Today, Congressman Dave Loebsack (IA-02) and Congresswoman Cheri Bustos (IL-17) sent a letter to House Speaker John Boehner and Majority Leader Eric Cantor urging them to allow a vote on their bill to prevent student loan interest rates from doubling on July 1st.  The Student Loan Relief Act of 2013 (H.R. 1595), supported by Loebsack and Bustos, is a common sense bill that would keep interest rates on federally subsidized Stafford student loans locked in place at 3.4 percent so that hardworking families across Illinois and Iowa are not burdened by higher costs for college come next school year.

Without action from Congress, interest rates on federally subsidized Stafford student loans will double from 3.4 percent to 6.8 percent on July 1st.  There are currently only six scheduled legislative days left before this rapidly approaching deadline

A copy of the letter from Loebsack and Bustos can be found HERE.

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Winner Also Will Meet Series Host Mario Lopez

DES MOINES, IA - June 19, 2013 - Mediacom will send one of its Facebook friends to Los Angeles next month to attend a taping of the auditions for the hit singing competition series THE X FACTOR. The winner also will meet THE X FACTOR host Mario Lopez. The unique sweepstakes, sponsored in partnership with Fox Broadcasting Company (FOX), gives THE X FACTOR fans a chance to be part of the search to find the next great solo artist or vocal group.

Mediacom's THE X FACTOR sweepstakes is open to anyone who visits the company's Facebook page and submits an entry form from June 17-28. Contestants must "like" the Facebook page and also click on the contest entry link. The winner will receive airfare for two, a three-night hotel stay, car rental, two tickets to the July 12 taping of THE X FACTOR auditions, $250 in spending money and other perks, including a meet-and-greet with the show's charismatic host, Mario Lopez. Contest information can be found at www.facebook.com/mediacomcable.

THE X FACTOR returns Wednesdays and Thursdays this fall on FOX. It was recently announced that Grammy Award-winning artist Kelly Rowland and global pop sensation Paulina Rubio will join Simon Cowell and Demi Lovato as judges on the series.

THE X FACTOR was created by Syco Entertainment and is produced by Syco Entertainment and FremantleMedia North America. Rob Wade and Nigel Hall are executive producers for Syco Television. Trish Kinane, Richard Holloway and Andrew Llinares serve as executive producers for FremantleMedia North America. "Like" THE X FACTOR on Facebook at www.Facebook.com/TheXFactorUSA. Follow the series on Twitter @TheXFactorUSA and join the discussion at #xfactor. Download The Xtra Factor App at www.TheXFactorUSA.com/mobileapps.

About Mediacom:

Mediacom Communications is the nation's eighth largest cable television company and one of the leading cable operators focused on serving the smaller cities in the United States, with a significant concentration in the Midwestern and Southeastern regions. Mediacom Communications offers a wide array of broadband products and services, including traditional and advanced video services such as digital television, video-on-demand, digital video recorders, high-definition television, as well as high-speed Internet access and phone service. Through Mediacom Business, the Company offers affordable broadband communications solutions that can be tailored to any size business.

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Trade Shows Expert Shares 3 Cutting-Edge New Technologies

Most of us think about technology on a mostly two-dimensional plane as we flick our way from screen to screen on touch glass. But today's tech includes applications that are far from flat, says major-events expert Ann Windham.

"What if you could control all primary aspects of major events like trade shows, big weddings and awards ceremonies through your iPad or smartphone; imagine shutting everything down at the end of a long and exhausting night by pushing one button on your phone - that's just some of what's possible with today's software," says Ann Windham, president and CEO of Imagine Xhibits, Inc. (imaginexhibits.com/events).

Lights, climate control, projectors and monitors, curtains, fountains and much more can be controlled with an app, and the data that you take away from trade shows can be used to quickly follow up on sales leads, says Windham, who will be showcasing this cutting-edge technology July 9 at Trade Show Technology Summit 2013, to be held at the Irving Convention Center at Las Colinas in Irving, Texas.

The summit will show attendees how to manage technology such as QR codes, mobile apps, virtual trade shows, social media, on-line asset management, interactive media and live stream video on electronic devices as simple as a mobile phone, she says.

"We'll show planners the newest event management tools for efficiency and streamlining tasks before, during and after their event. We'll also have hands-on, educational workshops to show them how to use management," she says.

Windham shares three of her favorite new technologies:

• Pre-show - Event Management Software: This one-stop source for managing every detail about your event - from Fed Ex tracking numbers to vendor contact information to photos from the show - even allows you to manage multiple events from any location. "In the past, we carried all the details for each show in one huge binder. If you were at a show in Texas and someone called with a question about the show in Oregon, you wouldn't have that information handy," Windham says. Event management software relies on cloud storage, so members of your team can access it from their smart phone or iPad no matter where they are. Another benefit: You've got just one place to input all that data.

• During the show - Remote Sensors: Sensors built into the walls of an exhibit allow you to control all of the electronics from your smart phone or iPad. Not only does it save time, it's an easy way to add valuable theatrics during a demonstration. "Say you're standing at the back of the room and you realize the speaker can't be heard, you just turn up the volume on his mic, right from your your iPad," Windham says. "Or, if you want to create special effects using lighting and room temperature, you can dim the lighting and drop the temperature." Her favorite feature? At the end of a long day, rather than walking from one device to the next, shutting off each, you press just one button and turn everything off while walking out the door.

• Post-show - Sales Leads Follow-up: Seventy percent of percent of exhibitors who capture sales leads at trade shows don't collect qualifying information, according to the Center for Exhibition Industry Research (CEIR).Scanners collect only the most basic data from visitors to each booth - there's no way of knowing whether they were a "hot" lead ready to buy, or someone who stopped by for the free T-shirt, Windham says. Now, however, event management software allows exhibitors to include qualifying information every time a visitor's badge is scanned. "At the end of the event, you can quickly see who your hottest leads were and send them an email or postcard before you've even left the event," Windham says.

For planners who've been hamstrung by personnel cutbacks in recent years, these new tools are lifesavers, she says.

"The days of 'The Jetsons' has arrived."

About Ann Windham

Ann Windham is the president and CEO of Imagine Xhibits, Inc., a full-service trade show marketing company that offers custom design exhibits using modular components. Windham's company offers customers more than 50 percent savings on operating expenses; expert face-to-face marketing consultants that will work to increase ROI with four-step marketing; quarterly seminars offering continuous education by certified trainers; in-house design services for custom structures, graphic design and brand development; turn-key services and exhibit management program for all logistical needs; and a one-stop shop for meeting planning, promotional products, collateral web-site and more.

Thomas Jefferson's gardens at Monticello have a history as complicated as our country's own. But now they're experiencing something never before seen in their hundreds of years of meticulously recorded garden journals: the devastating effects of climate change.

Peter Hatch has spent the last 35 years of his life in those gardens, witnessing the new pests and extreme weather descending upon the historic property. He took the time to share his experiences with us?and we've created a slideshow to help share them with you.

Come visit Monticello's gardens with us, and see how a changing climate is putting them at risk.

Fruits, vegetables, and even trees aren't safe from these dangers which have never been seen in Monticello's centuries of existence. Will our own backyards be next?

Jefferson believed that recording and examining the past was the key to understanding the world around us. Now, the gardens he began at age 26 are giving us the opportunity to do just that.

I hope you'll visit our slideshow, and learn what a national treasure can tell us about our warming world.

ROMEOVILLE, IL (06/18/2013)(readMedia)-- Lewis University announces Dean's List honorees.These following students were among those honored on the Lewis University Dean's List for spring semester 2013.

Erie resident Kimberly Teats was studying Biology at Lewis University.

East Moline resident Jake Dopler was studying Finance at Lewis University.

To be eligible for this honor, students must have completed a minimum of 12 semester hours of credit with a grade point average of 3.25 out of a possible 4.0.

Lewis University is a Catholic university in the Lasallian tradition offering distinctive undergraduate and graduate programs to more than 6,500 traditional and adult students. Lewis offers multiple campus locations, online degree programs, and a variety of formats that provide accessibility and convenience to a growing student population. Sponsored by the De La Salle Christian Brothers, Lewis prepares intellectually engaged, ethically grounded, globally connected, and socially responsible graduates. The seventh largest private not-for-profit university in Illinois, Lewis has been nationally recognized by The Princeton Review and U.S. News & World Report. Visit www.lewisu.edu for further information.

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