Dear Rivermont Community,

 

Today Rivermont students and faculty participate in our annual Service Day.  Although our students are involved in numerous service activities throughout the year this day is special because we try to have every student from Kindergarten through Grade Twelve go out into the Quad City community.  The inspiration came a few years ago when the Upper School decided that there was still a lot to be done after participating in the United Way Day of Caring.  That year they decided to hold a second "Day of Caring."  Lower School students and teachers were motivated by the example of the Upper School and suggested that everyone go out and serve the community.

 

This is so Rivermont!  Someone gets an idea and does something about it.  Other students are motivated to join in and before you know it a tradition is born.  Call it community, call it positive peer pressure, call it setting the example, it all comes down to leadership.  Leadership begins with one and grows from there.  How uplifting and encouraging to be part of a school community that is focused on developing good ideas and caring habits.  The Rivermont Experience is not just one thing, but rather a collection of ideas and people who seek to advance the entire community.

 

Kindergarten, First, Second and Third Grade students have been busy making special cards for the residents of the Bettendorf Care Center.  The students and their teachers will travel to the Center to hand deliver the cards to each resident then they are off to Rocket Park to clean the park and have a picnic lunch.

 

Second Graders decided that they wanted a special project of their own.  The students (with parent help) organized a bake sale to raise money to donate to the Fulton Illinois De Immuigrant Windmill.  Their entrepreneurial efforts will purchase a brick in the memorial walkway.

 

After taking a river cruise, the Fourth Grade will clean up Butterworth Parkway.  I am certain the views on their river cruise will motivate them to help clean one of our beautiful parkways.

 

Fifth Graders will take a step toward Middle School as they work on the National Junior Honor Society garden on our campus.  Vegetables from this garden will be donated to our local agencies to provide good, nutritious food.

 

Our strings students will travel to Manor Care Nursing Home in Davenport to entertain the residents while our ShowChoir will take their talents on the road with five concerts at other local centers.

 

Middle Schoolers will walk to area elementary schools and read to students, bringing their love of reading to the community.  That done, they will get bags and gloves and clean the neighborhood surrounding our campus.

 

The Upper School students and faculty will travel to CASI and Cafe on Vine to lend a helping hand.  One group will also participate in the Quad Cities Leadercast and provide support service for this conference and one group will stay behind to work on the campus grounds.

 

For the Middle and Upper Schools, the day began with a service leadership workshop led by the Davenport Volunteer Connection and Dean Ed Knupp.  Students will explore ways they can become more involved in their local communities while learning how to share their talents.

 

Intellect, Character, and Creativity!  Everyday but especially today!

 

Rick St. Laurent

Headmaster

 


KUDOS!

 

Congratulations to our Middle School students and Director Kris Skaggs for putting on a fantastic production of "Looking Glass Land" last weekend.

 

 

On to Nationals!  Congratulations to Lolly Telleen, Adam Dada and Grace Moran who placed First in their division at the National History Day - Senior State Competition. They will represent Iowa at the National Competition in June!  History is made here everyday!

 

 

WQPT, along with Butterworth Center & Deere - Wiman House, Family Museum, Figge Art Museum and Midwest Writing Center are proud to announce the winners of the PBS Kids Go Writers Contest. 16 winners were chosen, four from each grade.

From Rivermont:

First Grade - Third Place: Isabella Jones

Third Grade - Second Place: Angela Jones

 

Congratulations to our Sixth Grade Math Bee Team for placing 5th in the state.  Naina Ninan and Sophia Xiao received special awards for their individual scores.  We are so glad we can count on you Kenton Fee, Niana Ninan, Collin Smith, Sophia Xiao and alternate Perapa Chotiprasidhi!  Special thanks to volunteer coach Mrs. Chae Hee Porubcin.

 

Good Luck to Rivermont's participants in the National History Day - Junior State Competition on Monday, May 7.  Kenton Fee, Sophia Xiao, Naina Ninan, Emilia Porubcin, Shivani Ganesh, & Manasa Pagadala.

 

Fifth grader Mahum Haque won 2nd place in the regional What the Flag Means to Me essay contest. She writes, "I believe the flag means justice,k perseverance, hope, and all our country's accomplishments. I believe the flag means pride and freedom..." She received a savings bond as a reward for her fabulous essay.


Please Watch Your Speed!

 

Please watch your speed as you drive through the campus especially during morning drop-off and afternoon pick-up.  Children (and parents) sometimes walk unexpectedly from between cars.

ALSO, THERE IS A STOP SIGN AT THE END OF THE LOWER PARKING LOT.  PLEASE STOP!!!

stop sign


Spring Sports Night

Rivermont Collegiate Sports Update

 

Cooperative Sports Programs*

 

This week Alex Skillin, 8th grade and Ryan Howell, freshman, participated in tryouts for the freshman baseball team at Bettendorf High School. Both are involved with club baseball in the Quad Cities. Alex also competed for and won a spot on the Quad City Blues hockey team which features the best high school hockey players in the area.

 

Lolly Telleen, freshmann and Shravya Pothula, sophomoren are playing tennis with the Bettendorf team this spring. Next week is the girls conference tournament.

 

Michal Porubcin, freshman, is competing in the conference tournament with the Bettendorf varsity boys tennis team. Next week, Michal and his teammates will enter District play with the goal of earning a trip to the State Tournament.

 

Middle School

 

The Lions Track & Field team will wrap up their season with the Quad Cities Conference meet next Monday (field events) and Wednesday (running events).

 

* Did you know that students in Rivermont's Upper School are eligible to play on athletic teams at Bettendorf High School when Rivermont does not field its own team?  In the past students have participated on the football, track, swimming and soccer teams.  Rivermont students have been welcome participants thanks to their strong work ethic and respect.

 

Good luck to Lions of all ages as they compete in

their spring and summer sports programs!

 

 


Registration for summer camp is now open!

Don't miss out on one of the best summer camps in the Quad Cities! Click the link above to download your brochure today. Space is limited and classes are filled on a first come, first served basis. These classes are open to the entire community, so invite a friend!

 

8 Full Weeks of Enrichment Classes!

Chess tournament

Thank You!  Thank You!  Thank You!

and the Total is

$105,825

Thank you to Event Chair Kristine Teitle and the entire Auction Committee for making it a glamorous and successful evening.

Donations can still be made to this year's Fund-A-Need
Electronic & Experiential Education
E3 will continue the School's efforts to incorporate leading technology in the curriculum while also establishing a series of off campus learning trips that will develop leadership, stewardship and resilience!
Donations may be sent to the Business Office. 
Please indicate it is for Fund A Need 2012.
Special thanks to our sponsors:

Dr. & Mrs. Michal Porubcin
Sears Manufacturing Company
Drs. Rajesh & Bindu Alla
Ed & Courtney Decker
Muna Strasser, DDS
Eye Surgeons Associates - Tina Eckhardt, MD
Select Benefit Solutions - Michael White
Lilac Hill Photography
Vanguard Distributors
American Safety Training Solutions
Davenport Printing Company
Bullseye Direct Mail


Special keepsake headshots of our students are still on sale from the School if you were not able to attend the event.  Please contact Tammi or Linda.  $15 each

Go online and purchase photos of the evening
Auction Lion



A Benefit for Humility of Mary Housing, Inc.
at the Family Museum, Bettendorf
June 9, 2012 from 5-8 pm
Entertainment - Food - Balloon Artists
$5 admission/person    Call 563-326-1300 for more info


Upcoming Events

 

May
7-18  AP Exam Weeks
7        MS Track at Silvis, 4:00 PM
8        Kindergarten Q & U Wedding, 8:20 AM
9        Parents' Council Meeting, 8:30 AM
MS Track at UTHS, 4:00 PM
10     Grade 7 to Finance Park
Final Day for All Rivermont Art Exhibition
Reception 5:30-6:45 PM
Spring Music Concert, 7:00 PM
11     Last Day for Seniors!
Early School Program, 10:45 AM
Lunch on the Lawn, 11:30 AM - 1:00 PM
MS-US Imp Tiger Day
14      Spring Sports Night, 6:30 PM
16      Grades 2, 3, 4 Track & Field Event at Augustana College
17      Grade 2 trip to Fulton
18      In-Store Rivermont BookFair at Barnes & Noble - NorthPark
PreSchool & Grade 1 to Adler Theatre
22      Grade 4 trip to Dubuque
23      JrK to Niabi Zoo
24      Middle School trip to Chicago
Admission Open House, 6:00-8:00 PM
24, 25, 29   Upper School Final Exams
25      K to Clinton Discovery Center
28      Memorial Day - NO SCHOOL
29      Lower School Imp-Tiger Day
30      LS Promotion Ceremony, 9:00 AM
MS & US Awards Ceremony, 10:30 AM
Senior Project Presentations, 5:30 PM - Public Invited!
Senior Dinner, 7:00 PM
31       Grades 5-12 End of Year trip to AdventureLand

June
1         125th Commencement Exercises, 10:00 AM
11       SUMMER CAMP begins

August
13        First Day of Classes!

Over the next several months the Hawkeye Caucus will profile "A day in the life" of a typical student on campus.

Last Tuesday, I woke up and got my day started at 8:00 am. I grabbed my laptop and checked emails from the night before for about 30 minutes, as I do every morning.  I then got ready for the day and ate some breakfast.

After breakfast, I read for my Health Economics class for about an hour or so to prepare for my class later that night. At noon, I went to the College of Public Health building for my Human Resources for Healthcare Organizations' class, which lasted until 2:00 pm.

After class, I walked over to the Iowa Memorial Union to eat lunch and held the first part of my weekly office hours for Dance Marathon. During these few hours, I caught up on more emails and then worked on improving one of our development areas for Dance Marathon. This included doing some data analysis and comparing it to previous years to see how we could improve for this year.

At 4:30, I started my Health Economics which goes until 7:30 pm. Following my class, I ate dinner and then read for my Maternal/Child/Family Health class, which occurs on Wednesday. After reading, I prepared for what I needed to do for the rest of the week and prioritized what needed to get done first.

Afterward, I checked emails for one last time and then talked with my girlfriend before falling asleep around 12:30 am.

Nic Rusher is a Master of Health Administration Candidate and is the Executive Director of the University of Iowa Dance Marathon.

DID YOU KNOW?

The University of Iowa Dance Marathon is the largest student-run philanthropic organization west of the Mississippi River.

Pheasants Forever gun raffle, open to the public, is aimed at increasing shooting sports for Iowa youth

Iowa - May 4 - By purchasing your ticket for the Iowa Pheasants Forever (PF) State Council Forever Shooting Sports 52-Gun Raffle, sponsored by the Iowa Pheasants Forever State Council, MidwayUSA and Sportsman's Warehouse, you can help further Iowa youth shooting sports. Fifty-two brand new firearms will be raffled off, with all proceeds going to youth shooting sports in the state. In addition, a four hundred dollar gift certificate to Sportsman's Warehouse will be awarded to each individual, youth shooting team or chapter that sells 25 raffle tickets.

"The Iowa PF State Council Forever Shooting Sports 52-Gun Raffle was made possible due to Pheasants Forever's unique relationship with MidwayUSA, as well as Sportsman's Warehouse. These two partners play a major role in providing exceptional opportunities for youth shooting sports in Iowa," said Jared Wiklund, Pheasants Forever Central Iowa Regional Representative, "With all of the proceeds of the raffle going towards youth shooting sports in the state, it is a win-win for everyone." At the completion of the raffle, Pheasants Forever's chapters will be contributing fundraised dollars to various shooting teams throughout Iowa.

Chapters, individuals and youth shooting teams throughout the state will be selling raffle tickets, and for every 25 tickets that are sold by an individual, chapter or youth shooting team, a four hundred dollar gift certificate to Sportsman's Warehouse will be awarded for their efforts! If individuals in the state want to work together and participate in the raffle to earn the gift certificate, they will be required to prepay for 25 tickets. Once the tickets are purchased, the gift certificate will be sent immediately along with the 25 tickets that need to be sold and turned in by the individual(s).

Iowa PF State Council Forever Shooting Sports 52-Gun Raffle

  • Impressive gun list includes a Browning Citori Maple White Lighting, Remington VersaMax, Browning Maxus Ultimate, Remington Model 700 CDL and many more!
  • Limited to 3,000 tickets.
  • Winning tickets placed back in drawing, meaning every purchased ticket has an opportunity at all 52 guns.
  • Tickets are fifty dollars each and are available through your local Iowa Pheasants Forever or Iowa Quail Forever chapter.
  • Gun winners posted one week after drawing on the Iowa PF website.

In 2011, Pheasants Forever launched its Forever Shooting Sports Program, which was made possible by a five-year pledge from Larry and Brenda Potterfield of MidwayUSA. The program's intention is to develop a sustainable comprehensive shooting sports program that works closely with chapters and partners. In year one, the program doubled its initial goal and provided 17,000 youth participants the opportunity to experience the thrill of shooting sports.

Iowa is home to over 20,000 Pheasants Forever and Quail Forever members and 104 combined PF/QF chapters. To learn more about the raffle and for complete rules and regulations visit Iowa PF. For questions regarding the raffle, please contact Jared Wiklund at (515) 423-4747 or Email Jared.

Pheasants Forever and Quail Forever are the nation's largest nonprofit organizations dedicated to upland habitat conservation. Combined, Pheasants Forever and Quail Forever have more than 130,000 members and 700 local chapters across the United States and Canada. Chapters are empowered to determine how 100 percent of their locally raised conservation funds are spent, the only national conservation organization that operates through this truly grassroots structure.

-30-

bcarter at aaae podium.jpg

Bruce Carter, Director of Aviation, Quad City International Airport  was just named as Chair for 2012-2013 of AAAE, the American Association of Airport Executives. It's a very prestigious role, as he will be involved at the regional and national levels, representing the membership of this organization. (I have included the AAAE history below.)

I have included a link to the AAAE release (below).  I have also included his biography which we typically use for introductions prior to speaking engagements, for more detail about his career history.

ABOUT AAAE: Founded in 1928, AAAE (www.aaae.org) is the world's largest professional organization representing the men and women who work at public-use commercial and general aviation airports. AAAE's 5,000-plus members represent some 850 airports and hundreds of companies and organizations that support the airport industry. Headquartered in Alexandria, Va., AAAE serves its membership through results-oriented representation in Washington, D.C., and delivers a wide range of industry services and professional development opportunities, including training, conferences, and a highly respected accreditation program.

BIOGRAPHY:

Bruce Carter started his aviation career in 1975 as an FBO fueler and later became a charter pilot in Mankato, Minnesota.  In 1978, he was hired as an air traffic controller until the PATCO strike in 1981. Bruce owned a Fixed Based Operation in Clarion, IA, before becoming involved in the airport management field in 1984 when he became the Operations Manager at the Waterloo Airport. In 1986, he became the Airport Director at Waterloo Airport. He was Director of Aviation in Springfield, Illinois, for three years and Director of Airports in Peoria, Illinois, for five years.  Since 1999, Mr. Carter has served as the Director of Aviation at the Quad City International Airport.  Mr. Carter is an Accredited Airport Executive (AAE) and has served as President of the Great Lakes Chapter of AAAE, chaired the NAC and the Airport Ground Handling Association (AGSA). He currently serves on the Executive Committee of the American Association of Airport Executives as Chair, as well as serving on the International Association of Airport Executives.   Mr. Carter is also a commercial pilot, holding an instrument and multi-engine rating, and was previously a certified flight instructor logging over 2800 hours.

Personal:  Bruce is married to Faith Carter and they have two grown sons and two grandchildren.

Born:                            Kanawha, IA

Graduate:                      Waldorf College, Forest City

Airport Manager:          Clarion & Waterloo, IA

Dir. Of Aviation/Dir. Of Airports:  Springfield, IL, Peoria, IL, Quad City International Airport, Moline, IL

Friday, May 4, 2012

Sen. Chuck Grassley and Sen. Herb Kohl, authors of the Physician Payments Sunshine Act, today made the following comments on news that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) needs more time to implement the act and will not begin data collection until 2013.  CMS' statement is available here.

Grassley said, "It's disappointing that CMS won't even collect data at all this year.  The process has dragged on long past the statutory deadline for implementation.  Consumers need to know more about the financial relationships between their doctors and drug companies sooner rather than later.   It's important that CMS get this right in every way, including the usefulness and accuracy of the information.  Given all of the extra time, CMS will have no further excuses for not accomplishing these goals."

Kohl said, "While I am disappointed by this delay and the timeline, I do look forward to working with CMS to finalize the rules so that data collection can begin in January 2013."

The senators developed the Physician Payments Sunshine Act, which was signed into law in 2010, after revelations of significant under-reporting of the amount of payments received by certain doctors from drug and device companies.  The new law requires public disclosure of the financial relationships between physicians and the pharmaceutical, medical device and biologics industries. The law required the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to establish reporting procedures for applicable manufacturers to submit information, as well as procedures for making that information available to the public, by October 1, 2011. CMS issued the guidance in December after more than a year of pushing for a timely release from Grassley and Kohl.

Grassley and Kohl have written to the acting CMS administrator with questions about implementation, including when CMS will begin data collection.

The text of the Grassley-Kohl April 4 letter to the acting CMS administrator is available here.

The acting CMS administrator's May 3 response is available here.

Circus performing In Illinois is target of federal charges following In Defense of Animals' complaints

East Moline, Ill. (May 4, 2012) - Following multiple complaints made by In Defense of Animals (IDA), the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has filed numerous charges against the Liebling Brothers Circus (aka Great American Family Circus) for willful violations of the Animal Welfare Act that include inhumane care and unsafe handling that put the public at risk. The circus will be performing this weekend in East Moline and at the Rock Island County Fairgrounds on May 5 and 6.

"The Liebling Brothers Circus has finally been exposed for its flagrant mistreatment of animals and for subjecting families and children to unsafe conditions," said IDA Elephant Campaign Director Catherine Doyle. "Families that care about being kind to animals should avoid the Liebling Brothers Circus and any other circuses that force wild animals to perform."

The more than 30 violations cited by the USDA include repeated noncompliance with federal requirements for veterinary care, safe handling, and housing from 2007 through 2011. The charges specifically cite:

•       Failure to provide veterinary care for elephant Nosey's chronic skin condition, leaving her with thickened layers of dry, cracked dead skin
•       Chaining Nosey so tightly that she could not move or lie down, and keeping her in filthy conditions
•       Handling Nosey in a way that was dangerous to the public
•       The escape of a spider monkey

The USDA has also confirmed that yet another investigation is pending on Liebel, following recent complaints filed by IDA that concerned his children, who are minors, handling a dangerous wild animal in public (the elephant Nosey). This could lead to even more charges being filed. Nosey has a history of aggression, and seriously injured an inexperienced adult handler in 2004.

IDA has been monitoring this circus owned by Hugo Liebel for several years and has filed multiple complaints with the USDA for willful violations of federal animal protection law that endangered the animals and families attending the circus.

"This is just one more example of why wild animals do not belong in circuses, where they are cruelly trained, chained and intensively confined, and forced to travel and perform," added IDA's Doyle. "No compassionate family should want to be a part of that."

For more information, please visit www.HelpElephants.com.

###
Closed-End Funds a Good Investment Option

Baby boomers stand to inherit $10 trillion in the next few years and women will get the bulk of it, according to a Cornell University study, because they outlive men an average of seven years.

"Women already control 60 percent of the nation's personal wealth - they outnumber men and they are traditionally the shoppers," says financial expert Scott T. Schultz, author of Scott Schultz's Guide to Closed-End Funds (www.closedendfundguru.com).

"It's sad that, despite the fact that nearly a third make more money than their husbands and they're starting businesses at twice the rate men are, 38 percent of women ages 30 to 55 worry they'll eventually live in poverty because they can't adequately save for retirement," he says.

With the first of the boomers hitting 65 this year, the nation will see an even greater number of retirement-aged women holding the country's purse strings.

"Many will inherit money and property from their parents and/or their husbands, and many will live another 30 to 40 years," Schultz says, citing the Cornell study. "They'll need to invest their money to ensure they have enough to avoid that impoverished retirement they fear, but they - and the nation - have lost confidence in the stock market; April 2011 saw the lowest number of investors since 1999."

What brokers don't tell clients about, he says, is closed-end funds. Schultz, ranked the No. 1 Separate Account Money Manager for three consecutive years by USA Today, says he earned that national honor by relying almost solely on these limited-issue stocks. Because they're available only in finite numbers and because watchful brokers can find them "on sale," they're a better bet as an investment for those who are willing to sit on them awhile.

Why is the American public so in the dark about closed-end funds? Noting his book is the first written on the topic in more than 20 years, Schultz says there are a few reasons:

• Brokers can't generate a lot of commissions from them. Brokers move open-ended funds quickly because they earn a commission with each transaction. It's easy money for them, Schultz says. Closed-end funds require a longer term investment strategy, so brokers who want to get rich quick won't use them.

• They require more effort from the broker, who has to work to find the "sales." One advantage of closed-end funds is that they can sometimes be purchased at a discount, so the investor starts off ahead of open-end investors who are paying full price for stocks, Schultz says. Even if the fund never gets back up to its full value, any increase at all is a gain. But the broker has to be willing to work to find the good investments with good discounts. And then he or she has to be willing to sit on them.

• Closed-end funds are boring! For a lot of brokers, it's just plain fun to trade stocks in products and initiatives with an exciting ring to them, whether it's Facebook or a treasure-hunting ship. These brokers are constantly trading stocks - and generating transaction feeds, lawyer fees and underwriting fees every time - because that's what they like to do. Closed-end funds require thoughtful, sometimes tedious research before buying, and then the patience of a saint as both the broker and the investor wait for the bid price to increase.

About Scott T. Schultz

Scott T. Schultz began his career in 1983 at E.F. Hutton and was ranked the nation's No. 1 Separate Account Money Manager by USA Today for three consecutive years using GIPS verified/audited performance numbers supplied by Morningstar, Inc. Schultz was a GOP nominee for U.S. Congress in 1988, and met with Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush at the White House. He graduated from Michigan State University with a degree in journalism.

Washington, D.C. - Congressman Dave Loebsack today issued the following statement in response to the Department of Labor's announcement that the unemployment rate dropped slightly to 8.1 percent in April and 115,000 jobs were added.

"Unfortunately, the economy is nowhere near where it needs to be for Iowans who are out of work and still looking for a job.  To truly address this problem, Congress must put aside the games that have continually plagued any progress, and work together.

"It is frustrating when even legislation such as the Highway Bill, which has traditionally been done in a bipartisan fashion, has fallen to the Republican's political games.  This legislation would not only make our roads safer for families and more efficient for businesses and farmers, it is also an issue central to job creation and economic development in Iowa and across the country.  I have crossed party lines to try and pass this bill and I personally urged the President to become more engaged on a bipartisan basis to move forward a long-term transportation plan.

"It is critical to Iowa families, business and farmers that we move forward on both the Highway bill and a real jobs bill.  The games must end."

###

by U.S. Senator Chuck Grassley

 

The taxpaying public's confidence in the federal government suffered more setbacks recently with two scandals:  excessive spending by the General Services Administration and allegations of misconduct within the Secret Service.  The actions by employees in these agencies have led to internal and congressional investigations that call into question the culture of the bureaucratic hierarchy.

 

Americans may not be as familiar with the GSA, which was established in 1949 to streamline the administration of the federal government, from purchasing paper clips to managing leases for office space.  In effect, it is an agency that is supposed to help other agencies operate efficiently and should therefore be a model of fiscal rectitude.  The GSA's lower-profile, behind-the-scenes work was elevated to a higher-profile public square when its $822,000 "retreat" in Las Vegas made the GSA the most recent example of excessive, wasteful spending by the federal government.

 

Showing blatant disregard for taxpayers who would foot the bill for its over-the-top conference in 2010, the GSA pulled out all the stops with lavish entertainment (including clowns and a psychic), gifts and luxurious accommodations knowing full well the taxpayers were picking up the tab.  Somehow I don't think the GSA needs to re-hire the mind-reader to figure out how taxpayers feel about paying for 300 federal employees to viva Las Vegas on their dime.

 

Yet another shoe dropped amid reports of alleged delinquency by federal agents on assignment in Colombia.  This time the scandal affected a federal agency that until now has enjoyed longstanding repute with the American public for its code of professional conduct.  The Secret Service has earned a prestigious reputation for its protective services to American presidents beginning after President McKinley's assassination in 1901.

 

Now the esteemed law enforcement agency, whose no-nonsense, clean-cut agents are renowned for wearing tinted sunglasses and corralling rope-lines at presidential events, is suffering a black eye from alleged carousing by a dozen agents soliciting prostitutes while on assignment in Colombia.  By any measure, Secret Service agents who would hire foreign female escorts for nighttime entertainment while on assignment exhibit the judgment skills of a class of nitwits.  The security risks associated with U.S. agents' allowing strangers into their hotel room in a foreign country are obvious.  Let's hope the President is correct when he claimed it was a few knuckleheads exercising poor judgment.

 

If the Secret Service incident is not isolated and instead exposes a broader culture within military, law enforcement and security forces that says this type of behavior is okay, that is a big problem.

 

That's why I'm asking more questions.  I'm glad the Secret Service acted swiftly to fire agents, revoke security clearances by those involved, and issue new rules explicitly prohibiting agents from hosting foreign nationals in their hotel rooms when traveling overseas.  The Homeland Security Department's Inspector General will be independently reviewing the Secret Service's internal inquiry.  An independent and transparent review will help restore credibility to the Secret Service.  As Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, I take seriously my constitutional oversight responsibilities.  It would be negligent to sweep this incident under the rug and forget about it. Getting the facts on the table will help determine whether there is a broader cultural problem that needs fixing.

 

A Washington culture of overspending, mismanagement and layers of ineffective leadership within the vast federal government begs for enforceable accountability and transparency.

 

Taxpayers are reminded over and over again about the $15.6 trillion national debt and unrestrained spending that racks up deficits year after year.  Looming shortfalls in the nation's entitlement programs demand more effective stewardship of tax dollars.  And when scandals such as clowns in Vegas and prostitutes in Cartagena keep cropping up, the people's trust is further violated.

 

From many years of oversight work, I'd say Washington's modus operandi is that it's easier to go along to get along.  As an advocate on Capitol Hill for whistleblowers and watchdogs, I work for sunshine laws and reforms that will keep public the people's business and strengthen our system of checks and balances.  My oversight isn't based on the political party of the President.  Over the years, I have been an equal opportunity watchdog.  Leaving no stone unturned is the surest way to root out wrongdoing and hold the government accountable to the people it serves.

 

May 4, 2012

CANTON, MO (05/04/2012)(readMedia)-- Culver-Stockton College freshman Megan Miehe became the first Heart of America Athletic Conference champion in program history on Tuesday, winning by one shot at Hail Ridge Golf Course in Boonville, Mo.

Miehe, of Davenport, Iowa (Hempstead HS - Dubuque, Iowa), shot a 12-over 84 to finish with a 36-hole total of 19-over 163. She made a birdie on her final hole and then had to wait for four groups to finish before finding out she won by a single shot.

With the victory, Miehe qualified for the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) national tournament, which will be held May 15-18 at Links Hill Country Club in Greenville, Tenn.

As a team, C-SC finished fourth in the six-team field. The Lady Wildcats' 750 total put them 35 shots behind champion Avila University (Mo.).

Pages