(DES MOINES) - Gov. Terry Branstad and Lt. Gov. Kim Reynolds released the following statements to commemorate the 11th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks:

"We must never forget the terrible atrocities of that fateful day, and we must continue to promote this great experiment that is America. Iowans answered the call of duty on 9/11, and have every day since. As our Iowa military service members so bravely responded with their determination, I hope all Iowans will take time today to remember the sacrifices of our service members and their families." - Gov. Terry E. Branstad

"Today we remember those who perished in the deliberate, violent attack on our nation. The terrorists hoped to tear a hole in the fabric of our ideals, but instead Americans responded with a strengthened resolve as a united country. I encourage all Iowans to take a moment, remember those we lost, and pledge their time and energy to make this country a better place for all who reside within its borders." - Lt. Gov. Kim Reynolds

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BookWorld is now open near Maurice's at SouthPark Mall

Who: BookWorld Inc. has opened a more than 4,000 sq. ft. store at SouthPark Mall in Moline, IL. This new to the area bookstore offers a wide variety of books, magazines, greeting cards, gifts and much more in a friendly, welcoming atmosphere.

The staff at BookWorld is from the community and is ready to work with customers to help them find everything they need.

What: Stop by BookWorld today for the hometown customer service and selection that makes BookWorld a community staple.

BookWorld Inc.
SouthPark Mall
4500 16th Street
Moline, IL 61265
"Women of Greece and Rome"
By
Michael Rosenthal
Sarah Pomeroy helped bring about a revolutionary turn of perspective in which the old adage,  "history is written by and about men,"  no longer holds true.  We will revisit her classic - Goddesses , Whores, Wives, and Slaves - with supplemental material on some dynastic mothers, to see how women lived in ancient Greece and Rome.
Presenter Michael Rosenthal is an Independent Scholar and has completed extensive graduate work in
theology, philosophy and psychology at the St. Paul Seminary and the University of Iowa and Western Illinois University.
Independent  Scholars Evenings. 7.00 p.m. Sept. 13th
1530 Fifth Avenue.  Moline. Illinois
Doors open at 6.30 p.m.
Free and open to the public.
Dress code: business casual.
Elevators are located through the 16th. Street entrance.
Independent Scholars' Evenings are sponsored by The Institute for Cultural and
Healing Traditions, Ltd. a 501©3 at State and Federal levels since 1996. Please visit:  www.qcinstitute.org
The Institute for Cultural and Healing Traditions, Ltd.

"September 11th, 2001, was a horrible day that left a hole in this country's heart that can never be filled. That day the United States lost many innocent people including native Iowans Tim Haviland, Michael Tinley, and Karen Kincaid-Batacan, but today we remember them in the lives they lived, and the people whose lives they touched.

 

"My thoughts and prayers go out to everyone who lost a loved one, and to all of the service men and women who are fighting for peace and for our country overseas.

 

"We will never forget September 11th, and we will strive to make this country stronger and safer for those who lost so much."

 

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Floor Statement of Senator Chuck Grassley

Ranking Member, Senate Judiciary Committee

On the Nomination of

Stephanie Marie Rose, to be United States District Judge for the Southern District of Iowa

Monday, September 10, 2012

 

Mr. President,

 

I rise in support of the nomination Stephanie Marie Rose, to be United States District Judge for the Southern District of Iowa.   In addition, she has the support of Senator Harkin, and is well regarded throughout my home state of Iowa.  She was reported out of the Judiciary Committee by a voice vote.  She was previously confirmed by the Senate for her current position, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Iowa

 

Ms. Rose is a Hawkeye through and through, receiving two degrees from the University of Iowa - her B.A in 1994 and her J.D. in 1996.  Obviously, Ms. Rose was on the fast track through law school.

 

After graduation from law school, Ms. Rose wisely chose to remain in Iowa, and Iowa was fortunate for that decision.  She first served as a law clerk in the United States Attorney's Office for the Northern District of Iowa.  In 1997, she was hired as a full-time attorney in that same office, where she has risen through the ranks and now heads the office.

 

She served as a Special Assistant United States Attorney from 1997 to 1999 and as an Assistant United States Attorney from 1999 to 2009.  During this time, she was lead counsel in the prosecution of more than 250 cases.  These cases spanned a wide range of legal issues from violent crimes and drug offense to immigration violations and money laundering.  Additionally, she has handled approximately 45 federal civil cases.  These cases have included post-conviction relief and asset forfeiture matters, as well as Freedom of Information Act and property return lawsuits.

 

In 2009, Ms. Rose was nominated by the President, and then confirmed by the Senate, to serve as the United States Attorney for the Northern District of Iowa.  In this role, she oversees most every aspect of the office.  This includes overseeing the civil and criminal work completed by office staff and making final determinations regarding charging decisions, plea offers, and civil settlements.

 

The American Bar Association's Standing Committee on the Federal Judiciary unanimously rated Ms. Rose as "Well Qualified" for this position.

 

In addition, she is supported by the legal community and judges throughout the state.  Newspaper articles published in the Cedar Rapids Gazette newspaper on February 2 and February 20, 2012 captured some of that support.   I ask unanimous consent to insert these articles into the Congressional Record.

 

Assistant U.S. Attorney C.J. Williams described her ability to quickly comprehend complex issues.   Former Assistant U.S. Attorney Bob Teig, who retired last year after 31 years, said that Rose will make an "excellent" federal judge. "She has experience in the courtroom and as an administrator," Teig said. "She has a broad view of the federal legal system and she's very intelligent. Stephanie will make a great addition to the federal bench."

 

U.S. District Judge Mark Bennett said "she is very skilled.  She doesn't have a personal agenda. She goes by the law."    U.S. District Judge John Jarvey of the Southern District said her prosecution record is impressive, noting "Stephanie has won the respect of prosecutors and defense lawyers."

 

Ms. Rose is also a member of the Iowa Academy of Trial Lawyers.  Membership in the Academy is limited to 250 attorneys whose primary focus is on trial advocacy. Membership in this distinguished group is by invitation only, with unanimous approval of the Board of Governors.  Ms. Rose is one of 15 women in the academy.    Mr. Leon Spies, the gentleman who nominated Ms. Rose, said he nominated her because she exhibited exactly what the organization strives for ? the "highest quality of trial advocacy and ethical responsibilities to clients and the law."

 

If confirmed, and I 'm sure she will be confirmed, Ms. Rose will be the first woman to serve as a federal judge in the Southern District and only the second woman to serve on the federal bench in Iowa's history.

 

I congratulate Ms. Rose and wish her well as she assumes her duties as a United States District Judge.

 

With her confirmation today, the Senate will have confirmed 156 of President Obama's nominees to the District and Circuit Courts. The fact is, we have confirmed over 80 percent of President Obama's District nominees.

 

During the last presidential election year, 2008, the Senate confirmed a total of 28 judges - 24 district and 4 circuit.   This presidential election year we have exceeded those numbers.  We have confirmed 5 circuit nominees, and Judge Rose will be the 29th district judge confirmed.  That is a total of 34 judges this year versus 28 in the last presidential election year.

 

Yet, even as we make consistent progress on filling judicial vacancies, there are still voices out there claiming otherwise.  For example, early last month the Des Moines Register ran an editorial titled "Judges remain hostages in the Senate."  They stated in that editorial, in reference to the nomination of Ms. Rose, "she will be lucky to come up for confirmation when the Senate reconvenes."  Of course the vote had already been scheduled at that point, but they overlooked that fact.

 

The Register and other critics who erroneously blame vacancy rates in the federal judiciary on Republican obstructionism overlook other facts as well.  You've heard me say on the Senate floor that the Senate can only confirm judges that have been sent up here from the White House.  So if the White House hasn't sent nominations up here, we obviously can't confirm them.

 

So in regard to that, I'd like to point out something from the New York Times. I think a lot of times the New York Times would not do much to give us a basis for our position that we've done a pretty good job of confirming judges and why aren't judicial nominations up here in the Senate.  But an article dated August 17, 2012 sheds some light on the subject.  In that article, "Obama Lags on Judicial Picks, Limiting His Mark on Courts" the Times pointed out how President Obama made judicial nominations a lower political priority.  The article discusses how two Supreme Court nominations, personnel upheavals, and the President's emphasis on diversity also slowed the nominations process for lower court judges.  In fact, even as we continue to confirm judges, the President continues to lag in nominations - including nominations to so-called "judicial emergencies". Today only 32 of the 78 current vacancies have a nominee.  Stated differently, nearly 60 percent of the current vacancies are without a nominee.  That has been the pattern for most of this administration.

 

So once, again, I wanted to set the record straight, and I hope I have set it straight.  Republicans have been more than fair to this President and his judicial nominees, especially considering the fact that we have so many vacancies that haven't had a nominee submitted to the Senate for our consideration.

 

Again, I congratulate Ms. Rose and yield the floor.

 

-30-
Religious Scholar Cites 4 Reasons
to Support Space Exploration

Despite slashing government budgets on everything from entitlement to defense programs, NASA is proceeding with its $2.5 billion Mars Science Laboratory mission.

Central to the mission's success is Curiosity - a one-ton rover that continues to impress Earthlings with laser blasts for rock samples, mobility via a joystick and plenty of video and pictures. On all accounts, the mission, which may provide answers to questions of life on Mars, has so far been a wild success.

"With this Mars program, NASA has once again captured the imaginations of people throughout the world, instigating conversations about the universe and even the significance of life not only on Earth, but also on other planets," says Sanjay C. Patel, (www.SanjayCPatel.com), author of "God Is Real," a book that explores similarities between modern science and ancient cosmology.

Science and religion do not conflict with each other; they are different languages that ultimately lead to the same truth, he says. As science has done in the past, Patel suspects more data from extraterrestrial locations like Mars will continue to confirm ancient religious theories. He discusses four reasons why the Mars mission is well worth the expense.

• 2012 meets 1492 - an argument for resources: It's not just science-fiction anymore; prominent scientists like Steven Hawking say Earth's moon, Mars and Titan, a moon of Saturn, have resources people will need sooner rather than later. The main reason - the world's explosive growth in human population and the exponential consumption of land and other necessities. What we might find, Patel says, is a scenario very much like that which early Europeans experienced in the New World: new foods, reams of building supplies, new fuels, land and other resources. We may discover things that will become essential to future human beings.

• A spiritual-scientific connection: Science has confirmed what religion posited more than a millennium ago, Patel says. For example, scientific findings have confirmed what ancient Yogis said: That volcanic fire scorched India about 120 million years ago. Related volcanoes in the ocean south of India submerged about 117 million years ago. "The submarine Fire exists in the ocean," he says, quoting ancient Yogis. "It drinks the seawater and removes its saltiness. It then expels the desalinated water from another opening. ... That perfectly describes the undersea volcanoes and hydrothermal vents near India."

• If we're not moving forward ... Predictions as to where we'd be with space exploration in 2012 were quite ambitious during the race to the moon in the 1960s. But we haven't accomplished a lot since then. Celebrity astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson recently argued that we're still reaping the benefits of the research and development that went into the space race decades ago, and to negate space exploration is to turn off one of humanity's most important dimensions - our ambition to innovate.

• Alien life may not be so alien: As the European discovery of the New World revealed, the meeting of foreign civilizations can have disastrous consequences. However, the discovery of life elsewhere, whether or not it is intelligent or self-aware, can further enlighten us as to our origins, our reason for being, and our role in the universe, Patel says.

About Sanjay C. Patel

Sanjay C. Patel studied theology, Sanskrit, ancient cosmology, advanced yoga and meditation techniques, among many other subjects, earning a degree in Divinity at the BAPS Swaminarayan Ashram in India. He continued studies of modern science and ancient spiritual texts for 30 years. His discoveries regarding the convergence of science and ancient texts were published in mainstream science journals and presented at the 22nd International Congress of History of Science in Beijing.

CARBONDALE - Lt. Governor Sheila Simon will visit two Southern Illinois community colleges Tuesday to launch an anti-texting while driving campaign and honor fallen service members.

 

Teaming up with AT&T and community colleges across the state, Simon will kick off the "It Can Wait" campaign at John A. Logan College and pledge to never text while driving. Community college students, a large proportion of whom drive to school, will be encouraged to join Simon in the pledge and learn about the dangers of texting while driving. Nationwide, drivers who text while driving are 23 times more likely to be in an accident, according to the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute.

 

Simon will pay tribute to Illinois' fallen military service members at Kaskaskia College at the opening of the "Portrait of a Soldier" exhibit, and remember those who have been killed since Sept. 11, 2001 in the Global War on Terror. The college is constructing a "Veterans Tribute" to recognize past, present and future veterans with private funds.

 

Tuesday, September 11

 

EVENT: "It Can Wait" campaign launch

TIME: 2 p.m.

PLACE: Atrium, John A. Logan College, 700 Logan College Drive, Carterville

 

EVENT: Portrait of a Soldier ceremony

TIME: 6 p.m.

PLACE: Lifelong Building, Kaskaskia College, 27210 College Road, Centralia

 

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Washington, DC - Congressman Bobby Schilling (IL-17) released the following statement this morning:

"I condemn the attacks on the American consulate in Benghazi and our embassy in Cairo.  My thoughts and prayers are with the families of Ambassador Chris Stevens, Foreign Service Information Management Officer Sean Smith, and the two other brave American personnel who were killed in Libya.  We must honor these public servants, and continue working to promote individual and religious freedoms, democracy, and peace throughout the world."

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Come on out to the Whistle Stop Java Shop on Saturday, Sept. 29th for the 2nd Annual Milan Old Time Bluegrass Music Fest featuring several local bands.  Bring your lawn chairs and settle in from 4pm until 8pm for some good times and good music!

Gaslight Square shopping center in Milan has added two new businesses within the past couple of months.

Cactus Mexican Restaurant is open at 315 10th Avenue West serving up all of your favorite Mexican dishes. You can reach them at 309-787-7100 or click here for more information.

Milan Liquor and Tobacco Outlet Mart, a convenience store with a large variety of alcohol products and tobacco goods, is open next door to the Cactus. 

Both of these businesses carry the River Cities' Reader.

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