Davenport, Iowa - August 2011 - On Saturday, September 3, an exhibition of original nineteenth century posters from the Krannert Art Museum will open at the Figge Art Museum.  The exhibition highlights original posters by artists including Pierre Bonnard, Alphonse Mucha, Jan Toorop, and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, and illustrates how artists utilized lithography for different purposes and with varying regional stylistic characteristics.

In the late nineteenth century, the rise of color lithography along with an increasing demand for advertisements presented artists with an alternative space to exhibit their artworks. Mass-produced posters ranged from large-scale ads for consumer products such as lamp oil and bicycles, to promotional materials for cabaret performances at the Moulin Rouge or the Divan Japonais. Artists were also sought after to create intimate, small-scale prints for literary journals, playbills, and exhibition announcements, enabling their art and reputations to reach an ever-broadening audience.

The Figge will host a number of events in conjunction with this exhibition.  On Wednesday, September 7, Figge docents will lead an Art Lovers Book Club discussion at 1pm in the Figge's Arts Café.  The club will discuss Toulouse-Lautrec: Scenes of the Night by Claire Freches-Throy and Jose Freches; this compassionate narrative is combined with reminiscences of the artist's friends to vividly evoke Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec's tragic, bohemian life.

A public reception for the exhibition will be held on Thursday, September 8 at 6pm.  A cocktail reception will begin at 6pm and at 7pm Kathryn Koca Polite, the exhibition curator from the Krannert Art Museum, will lead a talk that will explain how posters reflect changes in society and how the new technical developments in lithography inspired painters to use the largely commercial medium for artistic purposes.  Following the talk, Joseph Lappie and Allison Filley from St. Ambrose University will introduce lithography, and provide an opportunity to draw on lithographic stones and plates.

On Thursday, September 15 at 7pm Dr Dorothy Johnson will offer the art talk "Entertaining Visions: Toulouse-Lautrec and Fin-de-Siècle Paris".  This talk will explore the fascinating career of Toulouse-Lautrec with particular emphasis on his engagement with the entertainment culture of Montmartre in fin-de-siècle Paris.   On September 22, Zaiga Thorson will lead a gallery talk at 7pm that will highlight elements of good design demonstrated in the exhibition.

Families are invited to a Free Family Event on October 1 from 1-4pm to celebrate the exhibition with studio art activities, stories, refreshments and more.  This event is sponsored by John Deere and Butler Insurance Services.

This exhibition and its programs are supported, in part, by Humanities Iowa and the National Endowment for the Humanities. The views and opinions expressed by this program do not necessarily reflect those of Humanities Iowa or the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Turn of the Century Posters from the Krannert Art Museum Collection is curated by Kathryn Koca Polite, organized by Krannert Art Museum, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and sponsored in part by Illinois Arts Council, a State Agency; Krannert Art Museum Director's Circle; and Krannert Art Museum Council.

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

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Event will Prepare Participants to Aid Those Who are Dealing with Pain and Loss

Moline, Iowa, August 30, 2011 - From personal tragedies like disease and financial difficulties to catastrophes on a massive scale such as tornadoes, fires and floods, many Christians may feel unprepared to offer comfort to the weary and hope to those in despair. 

On Sept. 10, the Billy Graham Rapid Response Team - a nationwide network of crisis-trained chaplains ready to deploy whenever disaster strikes - will join with the Quad Cities Association of Evangelicals to host a training to prepare local Christians to practice what the Billy Graham Rapid Response Team has done since its inception: appropriately respond with the love and hope of Jesus Christ in times of crisis. 

"So often one's first instinct is to pull away from disasters and avoid pain and suffering," said Rev. Michael Beresford, managing director of the Billy Graham Rapid Response Team. "But these are the times that all Christians - not just pastors - need to be prepared to be a shoulder to cry on and a friend to listen. This training will teach them how to do that." Beresford will lead the training on Sept. 10.

The training event, titled "Sharing Hope in Crisis," will be held at Calvary Church, 4700 53rd St. in Moline. Seminar topics include "A Mission to Respond," "Suffering and Trauma," "A Message of Hope," "A Message to Share," "Communication to a Diverse Community," and "A Model to Respond."

The training will take place 8:30 a.m. to 4:15 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 10. There is a registration fee of $35. For more information and to register online, visit www.billygraham.org/rrtshic_moline.asp.

The Billy Graham Rapid Response Team was developed by the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association following the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. It has since grown into a nationwide network of chaplains in 40 states who are specifically trained to deal with crisis situations. They have deployed to more than 120 disaster sites, including shootings, floods, hurricanes, wildfires and tornadoes.

For more information on the Billy Graham Rapid Response Team, visit www.billygraham.org/rrt. For videos, photos and news articles from recent Billy Graham Rapid Response Team deployments, visit www.billygraham.org/response. Up-to-the minute reports can also be found at www.facebook.com/BGRapidResponseTeam.

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Le Claire, Iowa, August 30, 2011 - Mississippi River Distilling Company invites the public to come to Le Claire on Friday evening, September 2 from 5:30-8:00 PM for our Labor Day Weekend First Friday Feature! MRDC is teaming up with the crew from Irish Dog Blood Mary Mix to get you ready for football season. Benny's Bloody Mary Beef Straws from Coralville, IA will be at the distillery to show off their ingenious product.Try our Bloody Mary chili recipe and sample our margarita tailgating cooler made with River Baron Vodka. We'll do an abbreviated tour at 6 pm and 7 pm. There will also be specials on bottles of River Baron Vodka, River Rose Gin and the summer seasonal Wide River Wheat that night. Several other Le Claire store favorites will be staying open late that night as well. The entire evening is free and is the perfect opportunity to join us in Le Claire to kick off the holiday weekend right!

Mark your calendars now for several other big upcoming events at MRDC. October's First Friday, October 7, will also be the launch party for our new River Pilot Vodka. This vodka features MRDC's signature, hand crafted grain to glass and will be 100% local corn vodka with a crystal clear smoothness. November's First Friday feature will be the release of our next seasonal product, coffee liqueur made from River Baron Vodka and coffee from Iowa Coffee Company.

Mississippi River Distilling Company was also recently handed a big honor when named as one of the best in the nation when it comes to fine vodka. TheFiftyBest.com recognized River Baron Vodka as one of the top 10 vodkas made in the United States.River Baron was named as eighth best in a sampling held in New York City. A panel of 28 judges participated in a blind taste test to determine the nation's 50 best handcrafted vodkas.

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

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Highlights Importance of Agri-Business in Economic Growth  

   

SPRINGFIELD - August 30, 2011. Governor Pat Quinn today highlighted the success of the record-breaking 2011 Illinois State Fair, "We've Got a Good Thing Growing." Attendance increased by 10 percent this year, with 817,393 fairgoers visiting the 11-day event. In addition to offering families affordable entertainment, the fair showcases the best in Illinois agricultural products, from livestock to wine, produce and agricultural technology.  

   

"Illinois has a proud agricultural heritage, and agri-business is key to our long-term economic growth," said Governor Quinn. "This year, record numbers of families came to the fair to enjoy affordable entertainment, food and to learn about the importance of agriculture to our state's history - and our future. The state fair is a tradition that will be around for years to come."  

   

The state fair began 158 years ago as a way for Illinois farmers to showcase their labor. The fair continues to feature Illinois livestock, as well as produce and other Illinois products at the Farmers' Market Tent. This year saw a 10 percent increase in attendance, with more than 817,000 individuals visiting the fair - up by more than 74,000 last year. In fact, this year's attendance levels were the highest since 2002.  

   

"I thank fairgoers for coming out to support the fair," Agriculture Director Tom Jennings said.  "It's their support that has made the Illinois State Fair a premiere summer festival. To borrow this year's theme, we really do 'Have a Good Thing Growing'."  

   

Governor Quinn this year hosted the Governor's Sale of Champions, the annual auction of prize-winning junior livestock, with proceeds going toward scholarships and the state's 4-H and FFA youth education programs. The grand champion junior steer shown by Sherman teenager Austin Burris sold for a record $51,200, surpassing the previous high of $50,100. It was one of three record prices at the sale: the grand champion sheep ($12,500) and Land of Lincoln barrow ($10,100). The event raised $135,200, not only for the youths who raised the animals, but also for the state's 4-H and FFA youth education programs.   

   

Records were not only set in the livestock arena: music fans flocked to the fair en masse to enjoy the affordable entertainment available at the Grandstand. Country music star Jason Aldean attracted a record 15,329 people. Aldean's ticket sales surpassed the previous record set in 1995 by Hootie and the Blowfish. Collectively, the Grandstand performers, who ranged from comedian Jeff Dunham to rap icon MC Hammer, sold 49,649 tickets, the highest sales in 11 years.  

 

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Davenport, Iowa - August 2011 - Architecture students in Iowa State University's College of Design created designs for the construction of a fictional museum in Columbus, Indiana's already architecturally diverse community and a selection of those designs will be on view at the Figge Art Museum starting September 3 in the exhibition, Innovative Objects of Design: Museum Proposals for Columbus, Indiana.  The student exhibition was preempted by a tour of the Figge last fall as part of a senior design course. Students were asked to design architecture based on several factors: creating an environment that goes beyond the traditional museum structure and one that has the ability to both stand out and blend in to a community that is already known for its architecture. Of the 75 proposed designs, only ten were chosen for display at the Figge.  

   

The exhibition will be on display in the Mary Waterman Gildehaus Community Gallery from September 3 until October 23. An exhibition reception is scheduled from 2-4 pm Saturday, September 24. At 2 pm, Rod Kruse, FAIA, LEED AP, Principal at BNIM Architects, will give a talk entitled, "Design Reflections." A second talk, "Eponymous Exhibition: Developing Innovative Objects of Design," will be presented by Rob Whitehead, AIA, LEEP AP, Principal at Whitehead Design Workshop and lecturer at Iowa State University Department of Architecture, and curator ofInnovative Objects of Design. The two short talks will last about an hour, and will be followed by a reception.  

   

With its strong commitment to art and design education, the Figge is committed to exhibiting the highest quality student work by area students in the Mary Waterman Gildehaus Community Gallery. Innovative Objects of Design was sponsored by Iowa State University, College of Design, and selected Department of Architecture students.  All exhibitions in the Mary Waterman Gildehaus Community Gallery are sponsored by the Brand Boeshaar Foundation Fund.  

   

Figge admission is $7. Admission to the talks and reception is free to Iowa State University students and alumni and their guests.  

   

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

 

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Waterloo, IA - Today, Congressman Bruce Braley (IA-01) wrote to President Obama urging him to take action on veterans' unemployment.  Rep. Braley's letter called on the president to include business tax incentives to hire veterans in any upcoming jobs plan.

"In today's difficult job market, one in four of our post-9/11 veterans is currently unemployed," said Rep. Braley.  "After their distinguished service to our country, we should do all we can to help our veterans find employment in their civilian lives."

Last week, Congressman Braley introduced the Combat Veterans Back to Work Act which exempts businesses from paying the employer's share of the Social Security tax for up to one year through December 31, 2012 - if they hire current members of the National Guard or Reserve, or any veteran who has returned from deployment within the last 18 months and is currently unemployed. Employers who keep eligible employees on the payroll for 52 consecutive weeks will receive an additional $1,000 tax credit.

Congressman Braley currently serves on the U.S. House Committee on Veterans Affairs, and as Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on Economic Opportunity.  

   

A copy of the letter is pasted below and available here:  http://go.usa.gov/ktx

 

 

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Dear President Obama,

 

I write today with increasing concern over unemployment in our veteran community.

 

As you know, unemployment among veterans in general, and particularly post-9/11 veterans, is far outpacing the national unemployment levels.  I appreciate your attention to this issue in your August 16, 2011 address in Peosta, IA, and your commitment to connect our Iraq and Afghanistan veterans with businesses who can put their talents to work.

 

As one way to pursue this goal, I recently introduced the Combat Veterans Back to Work Act to encourage employers to hire recently returned veterans.  This legislation would provide a one-year payroll tax exemption to employers for each veteran they hire, and offer an additional $1000 credit per veteran after 52 weeks of employment to encourage long-term employment.  My legislation also extends the credit to our citizen soldiers in the National Guard and Reserve who have been called on to make substantial sacrifices in our post-9/11 military responses.

 

As Ranking Member of the House Veterans Affairs Economic Opportunity Subcommittee, I am committed to finding ways to help our veterans once they leave the service, and helping them put their valuable experience to work to improve their communities.  As such, I urge you to include business tax incentives for hiring veterans in any upcoming job creation proposals.

 

I look forward to your response, and thank you for your attention to this matter.

 

Sincerely,

Bruce Braley

   

cc: Secretary Eric Shinseki, Department of Veterans Affairs

 

 

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People, Businesses in Carroll, Jo Daviess, Ogle, Stephenson and Winnebago Eligible to Apply for Low-Interest Loans

SPRINGFIELD - August 29, 2011. Governor Pat Quinn today announced that the state's request for a U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) disaster declaration has been approved for several counties in Northwest Illinois that were hit by severe storms and flash flooding July 27-28. The declaration makes low-interest loans available to homeowners, renters and businesses in the primary counties of Jo Daviess and Stephenson, as well as the contiguous counties of Carroll, Ogle and Winnebago.

"This SBA declaration will support many people and businesses in these five counties who are recovering from devastating losses from the severe storms and flooding," Governor Quinn said. "The low-interest, long-term loans available through SBA will provide a much-needed helping hand as they repair and rebuild their homes and businesses."

Governor Quinn submitted the request for an SBA disaster declaration on Friday. In that request, Governor Quinn noted that Jo Daviess and Stephenson counties each had at least 25 homes or businesses that sustained uninsured losses of 40 percent or more.

"This SBA disaster declaration will help many people and businesses with their recovery efforts," said Jonathon Monken, director of the Illinois Emergency Management Agency (IEMA). "We appreciate the SBA's quick action on Governor Quinn's request."

Also on Friday, Governor Quinn requested federal assistance to help local governments in Carroll, Jo Daviess and Stephenson counties recoup 75 percent of their disaster-related expenses. That request is still pending with the federal government.

On August 10, Governor Quinn declared the three counties state disaster areas and pledged the state's commitment to helping the area recover from the severe storms and flooding.

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PEORIA, Ill. (August 29, 2011) - Since Hurricane Irene began its path along the East Coast, the storm has forced the cancellation of nearly 60 American Red Cross blood drives, resulting in a shortfall of more than 2,000 blood and platelet donations. Additional blood drives are expected to be canceled or postponed in the coming days due to storm damage and power outages. To help boost already low blood supplies, the Red Cross is urging blood and platelet donations in unaffected areas.

In appreciation of those who come out to donate and refuel the Red Cross blood supply, through September 7, all presenting blood donors in the Heart of America Blood Services Region are eligible to win one of three $500 gas cards.

"Blood donated through the Red Cross can help patients locally and throughout the country, wherever there is a need," said Shelly Heiden, CEO of the local Red Cross Blood Services Region. "When disaster strikes, the need does not diminish, but blood donors in affected areas may find it difficult or impossible to get to a blood drive. By giving blood through the Red Cross, donors can help ensure all patient needs can be met. Blood and platelet donations of all types are needed. "

How to Donate Blood
Simply call 1-800-RED CROSS (1-800-733-2767) or visit redcrossblood.org to make an appointment or for more information. All blood types are needed to ensure a reliable supply for patients. A blood donor card or driver's license, or two other forms of identification are required at check-in.  Individuals who are 17 years of age (16 with parental permission in some states), weigh at least 110 pounds and are in generally good health may be eligible to donate blood. High school students and other donors 18 years of age and younger also have to meet certain height and weight requirements.

Disaster Relief
The Red Cross has relief operations ongoing in more than a dozen states and thousands of disaster workers helping people from North Carolina to New England. The Red Cross has provided more than 48,000 overnight shelter stays since Friday and every Red Cross feeding truck east of the Rocky Mountains - more than 250 - are set to go into neighborhoods as soon as conditions permit. Tens of thousands of pre-packaged meals are in position, and the Red Cross is working with its community partners to have feeding kitchens in place after the storm moves through.

If people would like to help, they can click or text to support American Red Cross Disaster Relief. Donations can be made by visiting www.redcross.org or texting the word REDCROSS to 90999 to make a $10 donation. Contributions can also be sent to someone's local Red Cross chapter or mailed to the American Red Cross, P.O. Box 37243, Washington, DC 20013.

About the American Red Cross
Governed by volunteers and supported by giving individuals and communities, the American Red Cross is the single largest supplier of blood products to hospitals throughout the United States. While local hospital needs are always met first, the Red Cross also helps ensure no patient goes without blood no matter where or when they need it. In addition to providing nearly half of the nation's blood supply, the Red Cross provides relief to victims of disaster, trains millions in lifesaving skills, serves as a communication link between U.S. military members and their families, and assists victims of international disasters or conflicts.

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State Fair Presence Connects With Many Inside the Statehouse

DES MOINES, IOWA | Friday morning,  August 26th, Jonathan R. Narcisse will be meeting at the state house with Representative Ralph Watts and House Republican staff.  Earlier this week, the recent gubernatorial candidate and leader of the Iowa Party was asked to meet and discuss with staff more details concerning existing governance solutions.

Narcisse, an independent publisher and former Des Moines school board member, distributed thousands of copies of the Iowa Party's proposed governance solutions at their 2011 Iowa State Fair booth, located in the Varied Industries Building. "People who come to the fair are looking for something new and exciting. The Iowa Party is not a tough sell. And, when you have the chance to white board some facts and figures with your neighbor, the bells start going off."

The Iowa Party's state fair booth inside the Varied Industry building provided Narcisse the opportunity to meet and speak with tens of thousands of Iowans, including many state legislators and statehouse staffers. "It's apparent that the legislature didn't review annual reports for departments and divisions appropriated hundreds of millions of tax dollars. That borders on misfeaceance, malfeasance and dereliction of duty by legislators who are voting billions of dollars in annual spending," stated Narcisse.  

A state representative's assistant who visited the fair shared that, "It gets worse. We vote on bills and appropriations and the next day party leadership sends us memos on what we voted for, especially towards session's end."

"When Ralph Watts invited us to meet with him and House staff this Friday, we were pleased," said Narcisse. "Most Iowans may not know him but he's a well placed and influential legislator." ??In addition to serving on the Appropriations, Labor, Commerce and Transportation Committees, Watts chairs the powerful Administration and Regulations Appropriations subcommittee with oversight of key departments such as Commerce, Administrative Services, Revenue and Inspections and Appeals. Watts also serves on the joint House and Senate State Government Efficiency Review Commission.

"How do you tell a cop, a nurse, a teacher working the graveyard shift at a convenience store to make ends meet they have to pay taxes on overtime while statehouse leaders can't even bother to find out if a staffer at the Alcohol Bureau is giving out massive no bid contracts to his wife's best friend's husband?" stated Narcisse.

"It is clear our message of honest, efficient and accountable government is resonating. We have common sense solutions rooted in Iowa values and over the coming months and the next legislative session we are going to aggressively advocate for those solutions."

The Iowa Party Strategy
by Jonathan Narcisse

The Iowa Party has three main goals:
•    Improving how government operates,
•    Improving the structure of government, and
•    Following the money.

In order to achieve our mission we focus on boards and commissions, school boards, city and town councils and county office holders. Our legislators appropriate funds but they are not the ones that spend
the money or manage the details of governance.

We are not conservative or liberal, Republican or Democrat leaning. We are not ideologically driven at all. We are about the nuts and bolts of governance at the state and local level. This translates into an emphasis on eliminating waste and inefficiency in state and local governance and improving accountability.

During last year's campaign I was painfully reminded of where the resources for operating government come from. One morning at 3:22 a.m. I stopped at the Hardees on S.E. 9th and Army Post Road. The young lady who took my order recognized me from my time on the Des Moines School Board and started a conversation. She had an infant, a daughter in high school and a second job she had to be at at 8:00 a.m.

When she buys diapers she pays an extra penny of sales tax. She deserves to know the $57 million addition to an area high school she's helping to build is being constructed in the most honest, efficient and accountable way. When a grandmother on fixed income buys her grandbabies bandages to cover scraped wounds she deserves to know her tax dollars are not going to a tax credit scheme or funding corruption at the Iowa Association of School Boards.

An examination of the 2011 legislative session confirms core issues of governance and accountability were not priorities of our Republican governor, the Democratic controlled Senate or the Republican controlled House. The political class in Iowa has lost its way. Both parties focus on distractions like dove hunting while pandering to special, vested and powerful lobbyist funded interests.

We focus on fixing government, fixing education and fixing the economy in our state. We do not ask Iowans to stop being Republicans or Democrats. In fact, we encourage Iowa Party people to be members of the two main parties, especially on February 6th at the caucus next year. We encourage them to become leaders within their parties at the precinct level. And we encourage them to challenge incumbents at the statehouse, if necessary, in the Democrat and Republican primaries, much like the Tea Party nationally has used primary challenges to transform the national G.O.P.

Statehouse leadership must embrace data driven governance.

For example, in FY 2010 the state spent $13.5 billion dollars.
Of that 39.6% was spent on Health and Human Services.

Yet there was no meaningful discussion about fixing Iowa's broken, wasteful, fraudulent and unaccountable welfare system. You would think an area that commands 40 cent of every dollar spent by our state government would warrant attention from our legislative leaders. Instead, they spent their time on matters most Iowans would consider trivial at best and costly distractions, too - such as dove hunting.

Equally egregious is how our governance leaders do business. Too many members of school boards and municipal councils are rubber stamps. Our legislators are rubber stamps, too. While members of the House and Senate are elected to represent Iowans from their districts they, by custom, first serve party leadership, second serve lobbyists and cronies, third spend time on their pet political priorities and last, if at all, deliberate on the real issues Iowans care about:

Efficient and accountable government,
Effective schools and educated Iowans,
A strong economy built around a responsible tax structure.

Jonathan Narcisse, the Iowa Party's gubernatorial candidate finished third in the six person field behind Governors Branstad and Culver. He received nearly 22,000 votes from all 99 counties in Iowa and 1,720 of Iowa's 1,774 precincts.

For more information contact Iowa Party spokesperson Jonathan R. Narcisse at 515-770-1218 or go to: www.iowaparty.org.

More Photos Available in .zip File Here

FUNDRAISER FOR THE KARLI ROSE KELL MUSIC SCHOLARSHIP FUND AT RME  

Wed., Oct. 12, 2011 - 6 pm in the  Redstone Room  at RME  

Admission: $15 per person - Tickets Available Now at RME  

or Online at www.redstoneroom.com

Please join us October 12, 2011 for Moondance - a benefit to raise funds for the Karli Rose Kell music scholarship fund in the  Redstone Room .  Enjoy an evening of live music, silent auction, great food from the Woodfire Grill and cash bar. All proceeds will benefit the Karli Rose Kell Music Scholarship Fund at RME.

Over $43,000 has been raised in Karli's memory since Karli's passing in 2002, including the original scholarships awarded to music students at   Rock Island   High School  . Find out how your donations benefit students and young musicians throughout our community, in financial assistance with fees for music lessons and educational programs at RME, to the thousands of kazoos distributed to school children at RME and at special RME outreach programs in our area.

This fund was established by Ellis Kell, the RME's Director of Programming and Education, and his wife Kristi, in memory of their late daughter Karli Rose, who died in an auto accident in 2002.  


We sincerely hope you will join us at Moondance 2011. However, if you can't make it, donations may be made to Karli's fund at:  

  

KARLI ROSE KELL MUSIC SCHOLARSHIP FUND AT RME
c/o River Music Experience,   129 N. Main Street  Davenport  IA   52801  
For more information phone: 563-326-1333 ext. 113,  

or email: ekell@rivermusicexperience.org


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