Thursday, September 29, 6:30 pm to 8:00 pm

South Park Presbyterian Church, 1501 30th Street, Rock Island

 

Business and property owners, residents, community leaders, and college and high school students are invited to participate in a Visual Preference Survey Workshop designed to gather instantaneous electronic opinions from participants that will eventually be incorporated into conceptual streetscape designs for the College Hill District.

The City of Rock Island has been engaged in a planning process with College Hill business stakeholders to create a future vision for this eclectic neighborhood business district centered around two nodes along 14th Avenue at 30th and 38th Streets. The City has commissioned The Lakota Group, a Chicago-based planning, urban design and landscape architecture firm, to help craft a Visual Preference Survey and facilitate a community Open House.

The purpose of the Visual Preference Survey is to introduce community character concepts that can influence streetscape and building facades and gauge stakeholder opinions regarding aesthetics of various elements and ideas. The survey will take the form of a PowerPoint presentation, using electronic key pad polling to create an interactive process with instantaneous results.

The survey will focus on the following design categories and/or elements:

  • Overall District Character
  • Streetscape/Landscape Design
  • Building/Façade Improvements
  • Building Height, Bulk and Setbacks
  • Traffic Calming/Pedestrian Realm
  • Public Spaces
  • Branding/Signage and Identity

Following the survey, the consulting team will facilitate small group discussions concerning the character of the College Hill District and the preferences of the participants.

In addition to the conceptual streetscape designs, The Lakota Group will prepare a summary report of the findings that will help guide decisions about future College Hill District improvements. These elements will be incorporated into the College Hill District Revitalization Plan that is expected to be completed in late fall or early winter.

Support your neighborhood businesses, bring your ideas, and help mold the future of the College Hill District.


We are proud to announce the addition to The Institutes's Advisory Board of Douglas Cannon:
Attorney Douglas Cannon specializes in the area of  Entertainment law, and will be able to advise our Independent Scholars and Artists about the nuances of  publishing, the publicity of  originals works of Art, Intellectual Property Rights and any allied questions in the area of  Independent and original work. A member of  the prestigious Chicago Literary Club, Douglas has an extensive practice in law and is a writer himself, presenting his work frequently at the Chicago Literary Club.
Additionally, as we are growing, we have added a new email account which is linked to a Facebook and Twitter dedicated to The Institute. Scott Klarkowski, our Social Media and Public Relations Executive, whose addition to The Institute you are familiar with, is actively working on the Internet and social networking and of The Institute.
The added email is institutecht@gmail.com
We will be sending emails for our weekly and other announcements from this new email.  The email narveen@qcinstitute.org is still active, and will continue to be used by me.
Its exciting to see the unfolding of  The Institute occurring with all our joint support, good wishes and endorsements.

Installation of Plastic Debris Sculptures Opens Saturday

Davenport, Iowa - September 2011 - Environmental recovery is an issue that begins with pollution and affects each person. For some, it is a subject for inspiration. Brooklyn-based artist, Aurora Robson, uses pollution as a vehicle to communicate her nightmares, while converting the negative into something positive. She creates large scale sculptures from plastic bags, bottle caps and similarly discarded materials and shapes them into masses, composed of unique forms. Each sculpture in Everything, All at Once, Forever is unique, and when placed together, acts as visual commentary on the movement of artists against pollutants. The relayed messages of good growing from bad, light sprouting from darkness and new ideas stemming from old challenges are strong, yet poetic. In her own words, "in nature, everything occurs at once, always" and change is constant: what is negative and dark has the potential to become positive and light.

Robson's work shines a light on a growing theme in contemporary art circles. Environmental awareness and problem-solving has impacted the art community just as it has the science community. It's a topic that students are learning more about in schools, which gives this installation another facet of purpose at the Figge. The exhibition is an educational example of the power of art, as well as a thought-provoking ensemble reflecting passionate creativity.

The exhibition Everything, All at Once, Forever opens on September 24 and will be on view until January 14, 2012. The installation pieces will supplement Up Drop, a piece that the Figge has on loan from Gallery 212 in Denver. The exhibition will be located in the Orientation Gallery on the first floor.

Everything, All at Once, Forever is sponsored by Iowa American Water.

The Figge Art Museum is located on the riverfront in Downtown Davenport at 225 West Second Street. Hours are from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, Sundays noon to 5 p.m. and Thursdays 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.  To contact the museum, please call 563.326.7804, or visit www.figgeartmuseum.org.

-end-

New Iowa Made "River Pilot" Vodka Debuts September 23

Le Claire, Iowa, September 20, 2011 - Mississippi River Distilling Company is excited to announce the release of their latest product River Pilot Vodka on Friday, September 23.  Building on the local distillery's line of award winning white spirits, River Pilot is a crystal clean smooth vodka.

River Pilot Vodka is the fourth product released under the Mississippi River Distilling Company (MRDC) label.   The new vodka is made from 100% corn and is distilled to be a traditional smooth vodka with little to no flavor or aroma.  River Pilot is the second vodka made by Mississippi River Distilling Company.  The first, River Baron Vodka, has a unique sweet flavor that highlights the locally grown corn and wheat used to make it.

"We have a beautifully unique product in our River Baron Vodka." said distiller Garrett Burchett.  "We know there are a lot of vodkas out there.  But to drink something that is handmade, high quality and completely local is something totally different.  We already knew that we could make a spirit as smooth as anything on the market.  So it wasn't a big jump to polish the flavor out and create a second vodka. "

River Pilot Vodka uses a blend of local ingredients.  First, vodka is distilled using corn harvested just outside LeClaire.  That vodka is blended with a neutral corn spirit distilled at a local corn processing plant.  The two spirits are combined and then run through a carbon polishing filter.  Finally, the blended spirit is redistilled for the ultimate in smoothness.

Distiller Ryan Burchett says the blend is meant to showcase a booming, but little known Iowa industry. "Iowa is the number one beverage alcohol producing state in the country.  Literally hundreds of brands of vodka worldwide are made with spirits distilled at Iowa corn processing plants.  Because it isn't bottled in Iowa, people don't know about the industry.  We sell our alcohol byproducts to a local processor who redistills them into alcohol fuels.  When we found out they also made spirits, we thought it might be interesting to blend their spirits with ours to make another great local product."

The name of the spirit is meant to highlight the local history of LeClaire, Iowa, the home of Mississippi River Distilling Company.  The image on the bottle is a likeness of Philip Suiter, LeClaire's first licensed River Pilot. These famous river pilots were instrumental in opening the upper Mississippi River to trade.

To be one of the first to taste River Pilot Vodka, join distillers Ryan and Garrett Burchett at "It's On The River" in Port Byron, IL on Friday, September 23.  Stern Beverage, MRDC's distributor in the Illinois Quad Cities, is hosting a River Pilot Preview Party from 5:30-7:30 PM.  The evening will feature samples of River Pilot Vodka and drink specials.  Full bottles will also be available for purchase.

Mississippi River Distilling Company in LeClaire is open from 10 AM to 5 PM Monday through Saturday and from 12 to 5 PM Sundays.  Free public tours are offered daily on the hour from 12 to 4 PM or by appointment.  The tour takes isitors through the entire distilling process and ends in the Grand Tasting Room with free samples for patrons over 21 years old.

ALBANY, NY (09/20/2011)(readMedia)-- The following Quad Cities area students have graduated from Excelsior College:

Ramon I. De La Fuente, a resident of Bettendorf, IA, has earned a Bachelor of Science.

Amanda Maria Sansone, a resident of Davenport, IA, has earned a Bachelor of Science.

Excelsior College is an accredited, private, nonprofit institution that focuses on the needs of working adults. Its primary mission is to increase access to a college degree for adult learners by removing obstacles to their educational goals. Excelsior's unique strength is its acknowledged leadership in the assessment of student knowledge. It does so by providing working adults multiple avenues to degree completion that include its own online courses and college-level proficiency examinations, and the acceptance of credit in transfer from other colleges and universities.

Donation is part of five-year, $25 million Eagles donation to University of Iowa

September 20, 2011

Iowa City, Iowa - The peel of an apple has long been inconsequential. A tasteless buffer between the hungry human and the deliciously healthy interior, few ever gave the waxy exterior a second thought. Thanks to The Fraternal Order of Eagles Diabetes Research Center, things are about to change.

A recent study done by researchers at the University of Iowa with funding from the Diabetes Research Center has found that ursolic acid, a substance found in apple peel, reduced fat, blood sugar levels, cholesterol and triglycerides in mice and may be useful in treating diabetes.

The research was made possible by a five-year, $25 million commitment made by The Fraternal Order of Eagles (F.O.E.). A $5 million check presentation will be made Saturday, Sept. 24, at Kinnick Stadium as part of the football game between the University of Iowa and Louisiana-Monroe (Noon EST, 11 a.m. CST). This will bring the F.O.E. donation total to $15 million.

Though the John and Mary Pappajohn Biomedical Discovery Building, future home of the Diabetes Research Center, is currently little more than dirt and steel, the center is already making significant medical breakthroughs.

Endocrinologist Christopher Adams, M.D., Ph. D., led the study which found that ursolic acid helped insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF1) and insulin, hormones that help to build muscle and prevent muscle atrophy. Unexpectedly, the study also found that the substance reduced body fat in mice and lowered blood sugar levels and cholesterol - a key to preventing type-II diabetes.

Following his work, Adams was named the Diabetes Research Center's first Faculty Scholar, an honor which will award him $250,000 over the next five years to help further his research.

The Fraternal Order of Eagles is also funding the future of diabetes research as four promising young doctors have received $50,000 research grants to develop studies related to diabetes. Recipients include Anne Kwitek, PhD; Andrew Norris, MD, PhD; Kamai Rahmouni, PhD; and Leonid Zingman, MD. Leading doctors and researchers in the field will join the staff of the Diabetes Research Center in the coming months as the Eagles and the University of Iowa begin to fill a roster with medical talent equipped to make even more significant strides.

These steps are further pieces in the puzzle that has been coming together since members of The Fraternal Order of Eagles voted to make the five-year, $25 million commitment in August of 2008 at the organization's International Convention in Louisville, Ky. In the years since, the nearly 850,000 Eagles across the United States and Canada have worked tirelessly to meet each year's goal and make their dream a reality.

Eagle dignitaries scheduled to attend the presentation include Grand Aerie Chairman of the Board Mike Lagervall, Sr., Past Grand Madam President and DRC co-director Jean Kerr, DRC co-director Tom McGrath and Grand Trustee Chuck Lang. University of Iowa President Sally Mason will also be on hand for the event.

To learn more about The Fraternal Order of Eagles Diabetes Research Center, visit http://www.foe.com/charities/diabetes.aspx.

About the Fraternal Order of Eagles
The Fraternal Order of Eagles, an international non-profit organization, unites fraternally in the spirit of liberty, truth, justice, and equality, to make human life more desirable by lessening its ills, and by promoting peace, prosperity, gladness and hope. Founded in 1898, the Eagles fund research in areas such as diabetes, heart disease, kidney disease and cancer, and raise money for neglected and abused children and the aged, as well as work for social and civic change.

About the Fraternal Order of Eagles Diabetes Research Center
The Fraternal Order of Eagles Diabetes Research Center will be housed at the John and Mary Pappajohn Biomedical Discovery Building on the campus of The University of Iowa in Iowa City. The state-of-the-art center will host leaders in the field of diabetes research in an effort to find a cure for the disease. The F.O.E. has pledged to donate $25 million over a five-year period to help with research efforts.

WASHINGTON --- September 20, 2011 - Legislation authored by Senator Chuck Grassley today won unanimous approval of the Finance Committee as part of a larger proposal to extend federal child and family services programs.

Grassley's initiative involves regional partnership grants which are competitively distributed by the Administration on Children, Youth, and Families in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.  The grants are used to improve the safety, permanency and well-being of children who are not in their homes or are likely to be removed from their homes because of substance abuse by their parents.  The proposal advanced today by the Finance Committee reauthorizes the grant program for five years along with Grassley's provision that would allow current grant recipients to pursue a two-year grant extension.  He said this would help to prevent any lapse where the program is making a positive difference.

"In the many years that I've been working on child welfare issues, especially for children in the foster care system, so many young people have told me what they want most of all is a mom and dad and a permanent, loving home," Grassley said.  "These grants help to keep families together, when possible, so that children are not subjected to the many difficulties that they face in the foster care system."

Since the regional partnership grant program was last reauthorized in 2007, 53 grants have been awarded to partnerships covering 29 states and six tribes.  More than 8,000 adults and 12,000 children have been served by the grants.  The grants support family treatment drug courts, better system-wide collaboration, family-centered treatment, evidence-based practice approaches, parent advocates, and drug treatment monitoring.

The Commissioner of the Administration on Children, Youth, and Families has said that the grants help to discharge children from the foster care system at a faster rate because families are more likely to be reunified within 12 months and are more likely to stay that way after 12 months.

Grassley said his legislation this year also includes a five percent cap on administrative expenses for the grants.

"These grants have helped to bring back together families torn apart by substance abuse," Grassley said.  "Substance abuse is one of the leading reasons why children are forced into the foster care system.  Long term, those kids benefit tremendously if foster care can be avoided or, at the very least, be a short-term detour, with family reunification and, when necessary, adoption."

The legislation included in the overall package passed in the Finance Committee today was part of a bill that Grassley introduced in June, the Partners for Stable Families and Foster Youth Affected by Methamphetamine or Other Substance Abuse Act (S.1234).  The regional partnership grants were created by legislation Grassley authored and moved through the Finance Committee as Chairman in 2006, the Promoting Safe and Stable Families Act.

"Passage of the law in 2006 was a big step forward in efforts to help the young people in the foster care system," Grassley said.

 

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Tuesday, Sept. 20, 2011

Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa today made the following comment on the report from the Securities and Exchange Commission inspector general on the agency's former general counsel's actions in the Bernard Madoff fraud case.  Grassley, a long-time watchdog of making sure the agency does its job, earlier this year urged the agency to account for its actions in this matter.

"First, the SEC missed the Madoff scam.  Then, the SEC was tone-deaf to Madoff victims.  It let a top SEC employee who profited from a Madoff account craft the commission's position on how to treat Madoff victims.  It's hard to see how the agency could have let such a major conflict of interest slide.  The SEC needs to reform its ethics polices top to bottom.  The consequences of a haphazard approach are clear.  Public confidence in the agency's ability to do its job of protecting investors is undermined by slipshod work.  The SEC needs to make sure nothing like this happens again."

When one hears the term wiretapping, normally one thinks of secretly recording phone calls of others; some may have thoughts of Watergate. However, under some crafty interpretations of the legal definition of wiretapping, several people have found themselves as suspects of this offense for filming their encounters with public officials. Most people familiar with the Free State Project are aware that Pete Eyre and Adam Mueller (aka Ademo Freeman) were recently acquitted of the felony wiretapping charges in Massachusetts. Some people may even be aware that the 1st Circuit Court ruled that filming public officials while on duty is a "basic and well-established liberty safeguarded by the First Amendment."

While, the 1st Circuit Court ruling only applies to the States that are part of that Court's jurisdiction, it was cited by a judge in Illinois as a "pervasive authority" for ruling on similar cases. Specifically the case of an Illinois man, Michael Allison, who was recently convicted of five counts of felony eavesdropping and sentenced to 75 years in prison. The Illinois law makes it a felony to record a conversation without consent of ALL parties involved, regardless of the circumstances. Allison's troubles began when he recorded his encounters with police who were seizing cars from his front yard. Allison then attempted to record his court appearance and was arrested for supposedly violating the Judge's privacy. However, there is good news for Mr. Allison, another Judge (David Frankland) dismissed the charges against Michael Allison and ruled, "A statute intended to prevent unwarranted intrusion into a citizen's privacy cannot be used as a shield for public officials who cannot assert a comparable right to privacy in their public duties... Such action impedes the free flow of information concerning public officials and violates the First Amendment right to gather information."

Additionally, the ACLU is challenging the Illinois law in the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals, with the court expected to issue a decision in the next month. And a Chicago jury recently acquitted a woman for secretly recording a conversation with police regarding a sexual harassment complaint she was attempting to file against the department.

It seems police officers have no issues if they are filmed during parades or doing something good, such as getting a kitten out of a tree; it's only when the officer is being "less than cordial" that it becomes an issue. Why should someone film a police encounter? Doing so, and presenting the film as evidence during his trial, helped Dave Ridley win an acquittal for trespassing at a public event in New Hampshire.

It's good to see courts, and juries, recognizing the fact that filming cops is not a crime. I encourage everyone to carry a camera (or two) just in case the need arises to film an encounter with a "public servant." You may be able to hold them accountable, and possibly protect yourself from jail.


--
In Peace, Freedom, Love & Liberty,
Darryl W. Perry
Chair Boston Tea Party National Committee
http://BostonTea.us
Owner/Managing Editor Free Patriot Press
http://FreePatriot-Press.com
2016 candidate for President of the United States of America
http://dwp2016.org


Darryl W. Perry is an Activist, Author, Poet & Statesman. Darryl writes a weekly article for the Mountaineer Jeffersonian, a monthly article for The Sovereign and has appeared on various alternative media talking about his books, political career and goals. Darryl is the Chairman of the Boston Tea Party National Committee and Owner/Managing Editor of Free Patriot Press.

PLATTEVILLE, WI (09/20/2011)(readMedia)-- Tyler Fisher of Rock Island, IL has been selected to be a resident assistant for Brockert Hall at the University of Wisconsin-Platteville for the 2011-12 academic year.

It is the job of an RA to help residents in adjusting to university life. The RA informs students of university resources and programs, works with different parts of hall government, gives and receives personal feedback, promotes an educational atmosphere, encourages involvement in campus functions and responds to personal and disciplinary concerns. RAs also work to provide students with a sense of identity, growth experiences and the feeling of responsibility toward others.

UW-Platteville is located in the southwest corner of Wisconsin. The school reached a record-breaking enrollment with 7,212 students in 2011-12 and looks to surpass that record this year. UW-Platteville provides 41 majors and 70 minors to students, as well as the Tri-State Initiative program, a tuition savings program offered only at UW-Platteville. This program offers competitive pricing for students in Wisconsin, Illinois and Iowa when annual tuition, fees, room, board and books are included.

On the web: http://readabout.me/achievements/Tyler-Fisher-chosen-as-UW-Platteville-Resident-Assistant/3010928.

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