Dear Friends and Members:
You are invited to come find out how to have a memorable and beautiful wedding, without breaking the bank!
Sunday, September 16   12-3pm

Local vendors come together at the German American Heritage Center to offer you one of a kind deals for your special day!
VENDORS
Crane and Pelican Cafe
Fairy Tales of Flowers
AAA Rents
Luebbe Weddings Photography
The Paper Nest
Johannes Bus Service
Epiphany Events
Enjoy with Troy
Cunningham Confectionery
All Pro Custom Productions
Blue Horizon Travel
Bier Stube
Wrap it Up
Ducky's Formal Wear

Don't forget to check us out on Paula Sands Live on Tuesday, September 11th at 3pm on KWQC-TV News channel 6!
Sincerely,

Kelly Lao
German American Heritage Center

King's Harvest Golf Tournament Fundraiser is being held on September 14th at Palmer Hills Golf Course at 2999 Middle Road in Bettendorf, IA.  Players will tee off at 8:00 a.m.  

This tournament will feature formerUniversity of Iowa Football great and NFL player Tim Dwight as a celebrity guest golfer.

King's Harvest is a non-profit 501c(3) organization that serves the poor and homeless in the Quad Citiesand is located in Downtown Davenport.  All funds raised will help King's Harvest with their mission offeeding, clothing and sheltering many who have absolutely nothing including our Shelter for HomelessMothers with Children.The event still needs golfers and includes 18 holes of golf with a cart.  It will be a two person best ballformat.  

The event will be followed by a lunch.  It is $75.00 a person or $140.00 for a two person team.Please call Grant Curtis for more information at 563-528-0835 or golf-tournament@mediacombb.net.

Help the poor and homeless with a fun day of golf!

If you would like more information about this topic, or to schedule an interview with Anne McVey,Fundraising Coordinator for King's Harvest Ministries, please call 563-508-4170.

If you would like to make a donation to the King's Harvest please visit www.kingsharvest.net and usepaypal or mail checks to King's Harvest Ministries at 5837 Wisconsin Ave. Davenport, IA 52806.#  #  #

Lange and his Washington friends falsely claim Braley endangered Medicare


WATERLOO, IA -- In a new TV ad launching today, titled "Brass", Rep. Bruce Braley has enlisted the help of former President Bill Clinton to debunk the latest false claim leveled by Ben Lange and his allies.

The Washington, DC-based National Republican Congressional committee began running a false attack ad yesterday against Braley claiming that Braley "voted to slash Medicare [by $716 billion] to pay for Obamacare."

The claim has already been labeled by independent fact-checkers as "questionable" and "false."
"The truth is simple: Bruce Braley voted to save Medicare billions by cutting subsidies to insurance companies.  The savings were used to close the donut hole gap in the Medicare prescription drug program and add eight years to the life of the Medicare trust fund," said Jeff Giertz, Braley for Congress campaign manager.

"Ben Lange and his Washington friends are working overtime to distract from his support of Paul Ryan's plan to turn Medicare into a voucher program, ending guaranteed Medicare benefits for workers under age 55 and raising out-of-pocket costs for Iowa seniors by $6,000 per year.  Ben Lange is a prescription for trouble for Iowa seniors."

Braley's ad features President Clinton setting the record straight on this false claim at the Democratic National Convention.  The ad can be viewed at the following link: http://youtu.be/76qh7GlzWfo

Ceremony Highlights Heroism and Bravery of Illinois Servicemembers

TROY - September 8, 2012. Governor Pat Quinn today joined Gold Star families and local leaders at a ceremony honoring Senior Airman Bradley Smith with the Silver Star, the third-highest military decoration that can be awarded to any branch of the United States Military. The posthumous award is in recognition of Smith's heroic acts to protect other airmen following an attack in the Kandahar Province of Afghanistan on January 3, 2010.

"Airman Smith made the ultimate sacrifice in service to our country and the debt we owe him can never be repaid," Governor Quinn said. "This award is a testament to his bravery and his loyalty to his unit and his nation. His memory shall live on in our hearts and in every measure of support we can give to those who have borne the battle."

According to the Air Force, Smith was on patrol in a village in the Kandahar Province of Afghanistan when his unit came under attack. When another part of his team triggered an IED (improvised explosive device), Smith led the wounded airmen to safety. After rejoining the fight, Smith volunteered to recover the body of one of the fallen soldiers, which he did successfully with the assistance of Army Medic Brian Bowman. After they reached the casualty collection point, a second IED exploded, killing both Smith and Bowman.

Today's ceremony will be held at the beginning of the third annual Bradley Smith Memorial/Scholarship 5k run established in his memory by the Smith family, which has attracted more than 800 participants and provided more than $20,000 in scholarships to students of Triad High School in Troy and to the children of active duty and retired servicemembers. The Silver Star Medal is being delivered to Smith's family by members of the 10th Air Support Operations Squadron, who also fought bravely alongside Smith that day. The airmen, some of whom were gravely injured in the attack, made a week-long march on foot from Fort Riley, Kansas to Troy.

Governor Quinn is encouraging Illinois residents to honor the servicemen and servicewomen who have lost their lives fighting for democracy by supporting programs that benefit Gold Star Families, including the Illinois Military Family Relief Fund, Operation Hero Miles, and Operation Support Our Troops. For more information about programs for our Veterans, visit www.operationhomefront.org or call the Illinois Department of Veterans Affairs at 217-782-6641 or 312-814-2460.

Personally calls on President to push Congress to act

Washington, D.C. - Congressman Dave Loebsack today issued the following statement in response to the Department of Labor's announcement that the unemployment rate was 8.1 percent in August and 96,000 jobs were added.

"The ongoing political games have gotten us nowhere. Today's report serves as another reminder that in order for anything to get accomplished that actually improves our economy, Congress must work together.

"The House Republicans have shown an utter lack of leadership. It isn't leadership when you continually put politics before people and refuse to bring a comprehensive jobs package up for a vote.  Leadership isn't holding hostage tax cuts for middle class families when we all agree they must be passed.  Leadership isn't taking our economy up to the brink of collapsing last summer by refusing to deal with the debt ceiling, and pushing it up against a fiscal cliff this fall. Leadership isn't taking a five-week vacation when Iowans are dealing with the worst drought in 60 years without passing a reformed farm bill.  Iowans expect their leaders to work until the job is complete and the leaders of this Congress have refused to even begin their work.  The games must end and the work must begin."

   

Today, in a face-to-face meeting, Loebsack also personally urged President Obama to use his position to push Congressional action on multiple critical issues that affect our economy, including the farm bill, a comprehensive jobs package, wind energy tax credit, sequestration, and middle class tax cuts.  He stressed the importance of action and the dire consequences if no action is taken.  A copy of the letter he presented to the President can be found here.   

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Exactly a year ago, President Obama laid out a series of policy proposals known collectively as the American Jobs Act. The plan included stimulus spending in the form of immediate infrastructure investments, tax credits for working Americans and employers to encourage consumer spending and job growth, and efforts to shore up state and local budgets to prevent further layoffs of teachers, firefighters, police officers, and other public safety officials.

The American Jobs Act never became law, however, because Republicans opposed it from the start, blasting it as another form of "failed stimulus" that wouldn't help the economy. (They ignored the fact that the first "failed stimulus," the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, wasn't a failure at all.) One month later, the GOP blocked the bill in the Senate, preventing the creation of more than a million jobs and the added growth that multiple economists predicted would occur if the bill passed:

-Moody's Analytics estimated the American Jobs Act would create 1.9 million jobs and add two percent to gross domestic product.

-The Economic Policy Institute estimated it would create 2.6 million jobs and protect an addition 1.6 million existing jobs.

-Macroeconomic Advisers predicted it would create 2.1 million jobs and boost GDP by 1.5 percent.

-Goldman Sachs estimated it would add 1.5 percent to GDP.

The American economy has continued to recover since the American Jobs Act failed. It added 96,000 jobs last month, according to today's Bureau of Labor Statistics report, making August the 30th consecutive month in which the private sector has grown. But growth could have been faster: the public sector shed 7,000 jobs in August, adding to the more 700,000 it has lost since 2009. That includes hundreds of thousands of teachersand educators, firefighters, and police officers. Had the public sector spent the last three years growing at its previous rate, unemployment would be at least a full point lower than it is now.

The American Jobs Act and policies like it would have unquestionably boosted job creation and economic growth, a stark contrast to the tax-cutting policies put forth by congressional Republicans, whose "job creation" bills would have actually destroyed thousands of jobs. Republicans nevertheless continue to ignore economists and basic economics, instead pushing supply-side tax policies that have repeatedly failed to boost job creation and economic growth.

A Century Ago, Self-Reliance Wasn't an Option - It Was a Requirement, Translator Says

While the current recession continues to hit millions hard, a researcher says the example of our ancestors should inspire us.

"We have become so accustomed to the fruits of our forefathers' labor that many of us have forgotten just how tough they had it," says Sigrid Wilshinsky, translator of "My Life in America Before, During and After the Civil War" (www.amazon.com). She translated numerous letters from German immigrant Louis Hensel, who wrote about life in the United States throughout the mid-1800s to his German granddaughter, Emma, whom he had never met.

"Reading Hensel's letters is like peeking through a rip in the curtain of history and seeing through the eyes of one who had experienced so much," Wilshinsky says.

That includes meeting Abraham Lincoln in the White House while pretending to be a translator to various Native American tribes; life in New York City in the mid 1800s; training the Union Calvary as a master horseman; the adventures of a traveling opera company, and various intimate details of an America that was still untamed yet quickly ascending as a world powerhouse.

Today's economic troubles are serious and we don't know exactly where they are heading, Wilshinsky says, "but imagine losing a well-to-do business in France, thanks to a revolution, another in Long Island 10 years later, and yet another in Williamsburg (in Brooklyn) because of illness."

Wilshinsky provides tips for surviving today's economic woes via inspiration from Hensel's example:

• A jump-starter: Hensel writes that many immigrants who landed in New York took a few weeks to settle in, sightsee, and get accustomed to city life in America before seeking work. Not him; he writes that after acquiring comfortable lodgings - procured by a friend -- he immediately walked the streets to find work, which he found at the end of his second day in the United States.

• Capitalize on all your talents: Before fleeing Paris, Hensel had a thriving engraving company. He was able to use this skill to immediately land a job. Hensel continually honed his knowledge in order to work in a variety of capacities, Wilshinsky says. He learned equine veterinary medicine in his spare time, made nightly runs to the fruit and vegetable market in New York for produce sales, joined local theater groups and was hired by the German Opera Company, with whom he traveled the United States during the winters.

• An indefatigable work ethic: For Hensel, not working was never an option. While writing his letters to Emma during his later years - he lived to be 91 - he discussed life as a music teacher to locals, which meant plenty of traveling. Always an active man, Hensel loathed physical inactivity, and work was a way of life for him.

• A helping spirit: Although Wilshinsky says Hensel may have "bragged a bit" about his deeds, he was nonetheless heroic in his aid to others during numerous incidents.

• An open heart/open mind: Hensel naturally gravitated toward well-educated people, and he learned from them. He valued honesty and integrity in his business dealings, which earned him trust, respect and a strong network of friends and colleagues.

About Sigrid Wilshinsky

Born in Berlin, Germany in 1943, Sigrid Wilshinsky's family escaped into West Germany in 1952. She benefited from a world-class education in Berlin, where she focused on art, and immigrated to the United States in 1962. She has since traveled the world as a stewardess and eventually became a resident of the Pocono Mountains, where she has befriended the local wildlife. Like Louis Hensel, the German-born renaissance man of the 1800s whose letters she translated, Wilshinsky is a multitalented individual with many interests.

Friday, September 7, 2012

Senator Chuck Grassley issued the following statement after the Office of the Inspector General at the Department of Justice released the ninth interim report on the implementation of the FBI's Sentinel Project, the FBI's attempt to upgrade its computer system.  Grassley is Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Committee which has jurisdiction over the FBI.

"More than a decade after the FBI began upgrading its computer system, we're still talking about cost overruns, hidden fees and delayed results.  In its latest report, the Inspector General detailed that the cost of Sentinel is at least an additional $60 million over budget. In addition, looking ahead, the report shows that the FBI has failed to include costs such as the $30 million annual operating fee, and costs to continue operating legacy systems that were originally slated for incorporation into the Sentinel Project but were eliminated.  Costs like this are sprinkled throughout the project's future budgets.  Unfortunately, it looks like this isn't close to the end of the taxpayers' commitment to this project, which has already been hundreds of millions of dollars."

 

 

Washington, D.C. - Congressman Dave Loebsack today spoke with Social Security Administration (SSA) Commissioner Michael Astrue to express the importance of the Clinton Field Office and repeated his calls that the office be kept open.  

 

The office currently serves 49,000 residents in Clinton, including 10,000 current Social Security beneficiaries.  An office consolidation would force seniors to travel up to 40 miles to receive services.

"I have opposed the closure of the Clinton Social Security Office since day one," said Loebsack.  "Many local community officials and citizens have reached out to me to express their concerns as well, and I asked the Commissioner to ensure that their input is heard though a public meeting.  I also stressed the importance of the office to our local seniors, and pushed him to stop the closure."

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