Store offers a wide range of parts, recognized national brands and free services including windshield wiper and battery installation

DAVENPORT, IA (September 14, 2010) - Advance Auto Parts, Inc., a leading automotive aftermarket retailer of parts, batteries, accessories and maintenance items, today announced it will open its first store in Davenport at 902 W. Kimberly Road, Suite 21 on September 16th.

Company officials said they chose this location for the store because it's convenient to where their customers live and shop as well as the garages where they take their vehicles for LaCinda Bader is the new General Manager and works with nine other Team Members there.  A 25-year veteran of the automotive and retail sales industries, Mrs. Bader has been with the Advance Auto Parts Team for almost seven years.

The new store offers customers a wide range of parts and recognized national brands as well as several free services. Store Team Members will install windshield wipers for free, and also install batteries following a complimentary check of the vehicle's electrical system and old battery. The store offers fast parts delivery to local commercial customers, such as professional mechanics and garages. Customers also can drop off used motor oil and batteries for recycling - ensuring that these materials don't end up in landfills where they could harm the environment.

Vehicle know-how is made easier than ever by Advance helping customers master their machines. The company's Web site, www.AdvanceAutoParts.com, offers articles, online videos and audio and video podcasts in the Web site's "Advance Know-How" section.  "These free automotive know-how tools, and the expert advice the new store's ten Team Members provide, help customers to keep their wheels turning and their lives on track," said Paul Braswell, District Manager for Advance Auto Parts. "The right parts at the right price are as important as the right advice and educational tools to finish the job."

The store is open Monday through Saturday from 7:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. and on Sunday from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Other area stores are located at 4114 Avenue of Cities in Moline, IL and 3813 18th Avenue in Rock Island, IL.



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About Advance Auto Parts

Headquartered in Roanoke, Va., Advance Auto Parts, a leading automotive aftermarket retailer of parts, accessories, batteries, and maintenance items in the United States, serves both the do-it-yourself and professional installer markets. As of July 17, 2010, the Company operated 3,497 stores in 39 states, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands.

Advance Auto Parts supports a variety of non-profit organizations at the corporate and local levels and encourages its Team Members to become actively involved in various community- based charitable organizations. Nationally, Advance Auto Parts is a strong supporter of United Way and the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF). Since 1994, Advance Auto Parts has raised more than $20 million for JDRF, including a record-breaking campaign in 2009 which raised $3.8 million for diabetes research, making Advance Auto Parts JDRF's number one corporate partner.

Additional information about the Company, employment opportunities, customer services, and on-line shopping for parts and accessories can be found on the Company's web site at www.AdvanceAutoParts.com.

NEW STORE INFORMATION:

Advance Auto Parts
902 W. Kimberly Rd., Ste. 21
Davenport, IA 52806
563-391-0204

BEING AN AMERICAN ESSAY CONTEST
FOCUSES ON AMERICAN CITIZENSHIP

Students and Their Teachers Compete for Cash Prizes Up to $5,000;

Nearly $115,000 and 54 All-Expenses Paid Trips toNation's Capital to be Awarded

Arlington, VA - U.S. high school students and their teachers are invited to compete for nearly $115,000 in prize money by participating in the Bill of Rights Institute's fifth annual Being an American Essay Contest. Top prize winners and their teachers will also receive all-expenses paid trips to the nation's capital.

The largest high school essay contest in the country, awarding 180 students and teachers with cash prizes and attracting more than 50,000 essays last year, explores the rights and responsibilities of American citizenship. The contest is administered by the Bill of Rights Institute,a non-profit educational organizationin the Washington, D.C. area devoted to educating children about the Constitution and Founding principles. The sponsors include the History Channel and the Stuart Family Foundation.

"This contest is unique in that it gives students the opportunity to think about the important civic values communicated in our Founding documents, and embodied by American civic heroes," said Dr. Jason Ross, Bill of Rights Institute Vice President of Education Programs. "This context is vital to helping students see their own acts of good citizenship as a meaningful part of the American experiment of self-government."

Specifically, students are asked to share their thoughts on American citizenship by answering the following question: "What civic value do you believe is most essential to being an American?"

The top three student winners and their teachers from each of the nine geographical regions will be announced at a special Washington, D.C. Awards Gala in the spring of 2011, where they will be awarded cash prizes of $5,000 (First Place), $1,000 (Second Place), and $500 (Third Place). The winning students willalsoexplore the nation's capital, meet contemporary American heroes and national leaders, and visit national landmarks.

Additionally, the contest will award 126 honorable mention prizes of $100 to seven students and their teachers from each region.

"The contest not only honors and awards sponsoring teachers, but also equips them with free lesson plans and other supplemental materials that meet state and national academic standards so they can easily incorporate the essay contest into their classrooms," said Being an American Essay Contest Director John Croft.

Nearly 100,000 students have participated in the essay contest since it began in 2006. Now in its fifth year, the contest is the largest high school essay contest in the country.

"The Being an American Essay Contest is a wonderful way to awaken students' interest in the ideas of the American Founding. The Stuart Family Foundation is honored to be one of the Contest's supporters," said Stuart Family Foundation Executive Director Truman Anderson.

Complete contest details can be found below. Further information, including submission criteria, lesson plans and background information on the Constitution, Bill of Rights, Founders and other Americans who have contributed to America's shared civic values, are available at www.BeingAnAmerican.org.

MEDIA FAST FACTS:
BEING AN AMERICAN ESSAY CONTEST

2010-2011 SCHOOL YEAR PARTICIPATING REGIONS:

  • New England: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont
  • Mid-Atlantic: New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania
  • South Atlantic: Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, Washington, D.C.
  • Mid-South: Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi, Tennessee
  • South Central: Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Texas
  • Great Plains: Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota,  South Dakota
  • Great Lakes: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin
  • Mountain: Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming
  • Pacific: Alaska, California, Hawaii, Oregon, Washington, U.S. Territories, American Armed Forces Schools Abroad

SPONSORING ORGANIZATION: Bill of Rights Institute, Arlington, VA.

The Bill of Rights Institute, founded in 1999, is a nonprofit educational organization. The mission of the Bill of Rights Institute is to educate young people about the words and ideas of America's Founders, the liberties guaranteed in our Founding documents, and how our Founding principles continue to affect and shape a free society.

FUNDING PROVIDED BY: History Channel (New York City, NY) and The Stuart Family Foundation (Chicago, IL).

CONTEST GOAL: To explore the rights and responsibilities of citizenship and the civic values that unite us as Americans.

ESSAY QUESTION: "What civic value do you believe is most essential to being an American? Trace the enduring importance of this value throughout the American story by discussing: a Founding document that reflects this value; a figure from American history who embodies this value; and examples of how you have and/or could put this value into practice."

ELIGIBILITY: Students in grades 9-12 who are U.S. citizens or legal residents and are either attending public, private, religious, or charter schools, being home-schooled, or participating in a GED or correspondence school program but are no older than 19 years of age. Military bases and U.S. territories are also invited to participate.

ESSAY LENGTH: No more 750 words.
JUDGING CRITERIA:
  • Adherence to Essay Question
  • Originality
  • Organization
  • Writing Style
  • Depth of Analysis

JUDGES: High school teachers

STUDENT CASH PRIZES: Ten cash prizes per region will be awarded to students:

  • First Prize: $5,000 each
  • Second Prize: $1,000 each
  • Third Prize: $500 each
  • Seven Honorable Mentions: $100 each

TEACHER CASH PRIZES: Ten cash prizes per region will be awarded to the teachers of the winning students:

  • First Prize: $5,000 each
  • Second Prize: $1,000 each
  • Third Prize: $500 each
  • Seven Honorable Mentions: $100 each

WASHINGTON, D.C. TRIP: The top three winners (first, second and third places) from each region, their teacher, and a guardian will be awarded an all-expenses paid trip to Washington, D.C. in the Spring of 2011.

CONTEST START DATE: September 1, 2010

DEADLINE FOR ESSAY SUBMISSIONS: December 1, 2010. All essays must be submitted by a high school teacher at www.BeingAnAmerican.org.

WINNERS ANNOUNCED: Spring 2011

WEB SITE AND CONTEST GUIDELINES: www.BeingAnAmerican.org

Dwight, Ill. (Sept. 13, 2010) - ALDI hosts two open house and grand opening events, Sept. 27.  Join community leaders and ALDI officials welcoming the newest Moline and Davenport ALDI stores. Open house activities include product sampling from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.  Both stores will also be officially open for business.

WASHINGTON - Sept 10, 2010 - Senator Chuck Grassley today said that the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Division of Grants Operations Management awarded a $396,000 grant to Palmer College of Chiropractic in Davenport.

Palmer College will use the money to fund a research focused initiative.

Each year, thousands of local Iowa organizations, colleges and universities, individuals and state agencies apply for competitive grants from the federal government.  The funding is then awarded based on each local organization or individual's ability to meet criteria set by the federal entity administering the funds.

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WORLD CHAMPION HOCKEY TOWN TO GET WORLD'S HIGHEST RINK

John Hancock Observatory Announces Plans for State-of-the-Art "Ice" Rink More Than 1000 Feet Up

CHICAGO (Sep. 9, 2010) - Against a fairytale background of endless sky and water, officials of John Hancock Observatory today announced plans for the world's highest skating rink to open in January 2011 on the 94th floor of one of Chicago's most legendary landmarks.  The rink, which will be approximately 50 feet by 20 feet and constructed of a state-of-the-art synthetic substance called XTRAICE, will be more than 1,000 feet above The Magnificent Mile, and will overlook sky-high views of the city's lakefront skyline and bustling Lake Shore Drive.

"Our guests already feel like they're floating on air, so now they can literally glide around the sky," said Daniel Thomas, General Manager.  "We are constantly looking for ways to innovate, for new ways to entertain our guests and give them a unique story to share with their friends and family.  This rink is going to provide our visitors with an opportunity you just cannot get anywhere else in Chicago, or the world."

Thomas was joined in his announcement by skating stars of Disney On Ice, currently in town with its Princess Classics production, and local children-many of whom sported World Champion Chicago Blackhawk jerseys-who enjoyed the inaugural sky-high skate on a temporary replica of the rink that will be open to the public from January 1, 2011 thru March.  Thomas also announced that tickets for the Princess Classics and future Disney On Ice shows will now be sold at the Observatory's concierge desk.

"Chicago has a rich tradition of public skating rinks and now more than ever families are enjoying the fun of being on the ice," said Thomas.  "Who knows, maybe a future Stanley Cup or Olympic Gold Medal Champion will lace up his or her skates right here."  The Observatory will rent skates at the rink and will also offer private skating parties (for inquiries call Andrew Apa at (312) 654-5021).  Bleachers will be constructed to allow families and friends to watch skaters against the skyline background of Lake Michigan and Lake Shore Drive.

About John Hancock Observatory

Located inside the iconic John Hancock Center, John Hancock Observatory is open every day from 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. and, at 875 North Michigan Avenue, stands in the heart of the Magnificent Mile next to hundreds of shops, restaurants, attractions and entertainment venues. Highlights include spectacular 360° views spanning 80 miles and four states and the city's only open-air Sky Walk, all accessed by the fastest elevators in the country. John Hancock Center and John Hancock Observatory are owned and operated by affiliates of Golub & Company. More information at www.hancockobservatory.com

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Expansion to Support 3,000 Jobs; Navistar's $205 Million Investment will Spur Economic Growth Across Northeast Illinois

LISLE - September 8, 2010. Governor Pat Quinn today announced that Navistar International Corporation will keep its headquarters in Illinois and is moving forward with its plans to expand its Illinois operations, which will create and retain 3,000 permanent jobs and 400 construction jobs over the next several years. Governor Quinn proposed, helped to pass and signed legislation into law in June to expand the Economic Development for a Growing Economy (EDGE) tax credit that specifically benefits Navistar, which was the company's determining factor to stay in Illinois.

"Navistar knows that there is no better place to expand its operations than Illinois, and we tailored a targeted investment package to meet the company's needs and keep thousands of people working," said Governor Quinn. "By being innovative and aggressive, we're seeing significant investment in Illinois, which is creating more jobs and moving our economic recovery forward."

Navistar's $205 million investment will help the truck and diesel engine manufacturer relocate its headquarters from Warrenville to Lisle and assist with upgrades to an existing manufacturing and research and development facility. In addition, Navistar will make a significant investment to relocate its parts distribution center, currently located in West Chicago, to Joliet.

The announcement comes following the company's decision to terminate its initial plans to open a new headquarters in Lisle after meeting local opposition. Governor Quinn and Attorney General Lisa Madigan immediately stepped in to help resolve those issues, and the reconfigured project is now moving forward.

"At Navistar, we like to say that we always want to stand up and stand tall for what we believe, we're here today because Gov. Quinn did just that," said Navistar Chairman, President and CEO Dan Ustian. "He stood up for good paying jobs, for economic development and for Lisle and Navistar. We are grateful to his administration and to Attorney General Lisa Madigan for her leadership."

The Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) is administering the state's $64.7 million business investment package. The package includes EDGE tax credits and Employer Training Investment Program (ETIP) job training funds that will help enhance the skills of Navistar's workforce. The enhanced EDGE tax credit enables companies in the auto manufacturing industry, which is among Illinois' largest employers, to retain employee income tax withholdings as an alternative to the current EDGE corporate tax credit and reinvest those funds into operations that create more jobs.

"We're giving companies like Navistar the tools they need to increase their competitiveness and keep this economy moving forward," said DCEO Director Warren Ribley. "This project is a great example of how Illinois is nurturing an environment where companies can grow and thrive."

Illinois' manufacturing sector has added more than 12,000 jobs in 2010, which is a higher growth rate than the national average.  In total, Illinois has added more than 43,000 jobs this year.

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Sen. Chuck Grassley today made the following comment on tax proposals from the White House that are meant to encourage business investment:

"It's the old saying, the devil is in the details. Business investment incentives sound fine, but will they be paid for in a way that hurts job creation? The White House and congressional Democrats enacted a big state aid package in August that was paid for with a permanent tax increase on companies with overseas operations. Some of the biggest employers in Iowa -- John Deere, Rockwell Collins, and IBM - opposed the August bill.  The National Association of Manufacturers said the tax increases in that bill 'will jeopardize the jobs of American manufacturing employees and stifle our fragile economy.' So if the offsets for this new package are other tax increases, then it's a non-starter.  And it's disturbing that small businesses continue to get short shrift.  According to a November 2009 study from the Government Accountability Office, most of the benefits of the research and development tax credit go to large corporations. According to the non-partisan Joint Committee on Taxation, 50 percent of all small business flow-through income will be subject to a tax increase in January under the White House and congressional majority's plans. Small businesses create 70 percent of new jobs.  Raising taxes on job creators is the worst thing we could do right now."

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High-Fidelity Interface touted as the closest thing to osseointergration without the surgery.

THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. - biodesigns inc., a company specializing in the most biomechanically advanced upper and lower limb prosthetic systems, is introducing a revolutionary socket - the High-Fidelity Interface - to improve the comfort and functionality for persons with limb loss. The patent-pending design was developed by biodesigns' CEO and chief prosthetist, Randall Alley.

Alley explains that the High-Fidelity Interface was developed in response to patients' complaints that their socket is not fitting snugly or comfortably, resulting in poor positional, operational, and functional control. "A person can have the most technologically advanced prosthetic foot, knee, hand, or arm, but if it doesn't connect to or 'interface with' the body properly, it won't deliver the performance it should and the individual is less likely to wear it and enjoy all the benefits it is intended to deliver," he said.

The High-Fidelity Interface for both upper and lower limb applications offers a radical departure from the traditional model in that it imparts a high level of intrinsic bone control. "The term High-Fidelity refers to the precision with which the interface captures and reproduces skeletal motion," Alley said.

"The High-Fidelity Interface addresses wearers' desire to have a more efficient, better performing and more comfortable socket. In fact, we don't even consider it a socket. The technique mimics many of the benefits of osseointegration (where the connector to the prosthesis is embedded in the bone) - without the surgery," he said. "In our patients' own words, the design not only makes it seem that it feels more like a part of their body, but the perceived weight of the prosthesis is also significantly less."

Feedback

"I've been an amputee for 35 years, and I am very, very particular about the fit and finish of the socket. In fact, when I was asked to try Randy's new interface socket, I thought, okay, I'll agree to have him mold his new and improved, whiz-bang socket?and then I will show him why it won't work on a VERY active amputee. Now when I see Randy, I can hardly talk to him because my mouth is so full of black feathers from eating crow," said Ron Currier, a retired chief of prosthetics at the Manchester, N.H., Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Medical Center.

"In this new technology, there's no more slushy skin. I have more freedom of movement and more stability and better control of the arm," said Chuck Hildreth, Gifford, N. H. who has a left short humeral and right interscapulothoracic amputation.

Both Currier and Hildreth are participating in a clinical study involving the "Luke Arm" developed by famed inventor Dean Kamen's DEKA Research and Development, Manchester, N. H., and the High-Fidelity Interface with DEKA enhancements, as part of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) Revolutionizing Prosthetics program.

High-Fidelity Interface vs. traditional socket design

Alley explains that in traditional socket designs, a patient's soft tissue is simply encapsulated or surrounded by the socket, restricting the amount of control the socket can impart upon the bone buried beneath the soft tissue. He compared it to trying to control the motion of a metal cylinder (the intrinsic bone) within a fluid-filled balloon (soft tissue and associated fluids) by merely wrapping your arms around it.

"This soft tissue 'barrier' allows significant skeletal motion within the interface prior to the interface responding, and hence the prosthesis partially absorbs rather than captures and efficiently transferring this motion. This inner skeletal motion decreases prosthesis stability, the wearer's positional precision, functional range of motion and overall efficiency of movement, thus increasing energy expenditure while concurrently increasing the perceived weight of the prosthesis," he said.

An alternating combination of precise compression coupled with release of tissue is design key

In contrast, the High-Fidelity Interface provides a high level of bone control by optimizing soft tissue flow and applying local and focused compression on the soft tissue overlying the intrinsic bone.

This skeletal stabilization is accomplished by using a series of alternating soft tissue compression and release areas oriented carefully along the long axis of the intrinsic or target bone. A specialized sensor can be used to ensure adequate blood flow at the interfacial boundary where compression occurs.

"In between these longitudinal areas of compression that travel nearly the entire length of the bone are areas or windows - depending on whether the interface is a solid body or an open cage-style interface - where soft tissue can flow out of the way or out of the interface entirely. This allows increased compression on the intrinsic bone, far greater than can be achieved in a traditional hydrostatic (uniform pressure distribution) socket," he said.

He emphasized the compression must be very precise. "That is why I have applied for a patent and why I often employ a blood perfusion sensor to ensure a safe compression level," he said. "Above a certain level, you lose adequate blood flow; below a certain level, you minimize the benefits."

The chief benefits to the patients are increased prosthesis stability and more energy efficiency as the interface preserves motion rather than absorbing it so that more of the wearer's input is converted to prosthetic output. In its most radical version, the exposed skin also eliminates the problem of heat and moisture dissipation, a problem with encapsulated sockets when over the course of a day trapped moisture and heat causes the socket to get hot, sweaty, and slippery.

The High-Fidelity Interface can be used for prostheses in upper and lower limb applications alike, with any control system including myoelectric, body-powered, or hybrid, and with any type of suspension system, from self-suspending to auxiliary suspension to negative pressure and elevated vacuum.

High-Fidelity Interface utilized in advanced research projects

Alley is working closely with Matt Albuquerque, Vice President of Next Step O&P, Manchester, N.H., on the DEKA/DARPA project. "Matt instantly recognized the benefits of the High-Fidelity Interface and it has been a real joy to work beside him refining this design for our DEKA test pilots and mutual patients we have consulted together on" Alley said. Albuquerque noticed the immense change this design had on Hildreth: "It was heartwarming to see a patient go from rarely wearing a prosthesis because it was uncomfortable and didn't give him the functionality he desired to now not wanting to leave home without it and wearing it all day. The High-Fidelity Interface is going to have an incredible impact on the way we fit prosthetics from now on," he said.

Currently biodesigns is licensing this technology to a select number of prosthetic offices. "I will be holding certification courses for the High-Fidelity Interface in the near future and we are currently collecting names of those prosthetists and therapists who are interested in learning this design," Alley said.

Alley is also working with T. Walley Williams of Liberating Technologies, Inc. and Matt Garibaldi of UCSF (University of California San Francisco) on a jig for lower limb applications that will assist in ensuring a more standardized approach and hence quality control for creating an interface in the weight-bearing environment, which has its own requirements and challenges. "We are very pleased with the initial prototype casting jig and will soon be instrumenting it for interfacing with a computer. In this way we will be able to discern more information during the initial impression taking about the limb under weight-bearing and compression that will help us refine the design even further," states Alley. "It is our hope that we gain IRB (Institutional Review Board) approval to initiate a formal clinical study at UCSF that will undertake analysis of energy efficiency, gait quality, including stride length, speed and positional control, perceived prosthesis weight and other factors that will provide some additional answers regarding the benefits of the High-Fidelity Interface."

About Randall Alley

Randall Alley, CP, LP is the creator of the High-Fidelity Interface, the XFrame and ACCI (Anatomically Contoured and Controlled Interface), three  prosthetic interface designs that brought superior biomechanical principles to the O&P field. Alley has contributed to five prosthetic textbooks, is a clinical columnist, international speaker, and received a Certificate of Appreciation from the Department of the Army for his upper limb training of military personnel. Alley received both his bachelor of science in kinesiology and his prosthetic certificate from UCLA, and is a licensed and board certified prosthetist.

About biodesigns inc.

Southern California-based biodesigns inc. is a technology-driven prosthetics company specializing in the most advanced upper and lower limb prosthetic solutions.. The company's proprietary approach utilizes high tech laser scanners, innovative clinical techniques, and the most biomechanically advanced prosthetic interfaces (sockets) available..  biodesigns works with all levels of upper and lower limb patients, but especially caters to highly active individuals who demand more from their prostheses. For more information, visit www.biodesigns.com.

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A live, educational event about redemption, forgiveness, and betrayal from someone personally affected by the death penalty.

In 1974, Delbert Tibbs was convicted of murder and rape near Fort Myers, Florida. His trial was riddled with corruption, including testimony by a jailhouse informant who later acknowledged that

he provided false testimony in the hopes that his own sentence would be reduced. After spending years on death row as an innocent man, Delbert is now free and lives in Chicago. His story is featured in the play "Exonerated," and he is currently realizing his lifelong dream of becoming a writer.

St. Ambrose University at the Rogalski Center, 518 W. Locust St., Davenport, IA

Tuesday, September 21at 7 p.m.

Sponsored by Churches United of the Quad Cities and the Illinois Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty

For more information, contact Colleen Cunningham at 314-249-1159 or colleenc@ejusa.org

Box Office Now Open

Dracula and It's a Wonderful Life Tickets Available.

Clinton, IA - 9/10/2010 - The Clinton Showboat's box office at 303 Riverview Drive in Clinton, Iowa is now open. The box office hours are as follows:

Monday-Thursday  -  Closed

Friday  -  4pm-7pm

Saturday & Sunday  -  Noon-4pm

Tickets for Dracula and It's A Wonderful Life are available for $15 as well as season tickets for the 2011 season for a major discount of $100 for 6 shows.  Tickets and season tickets can also be purchased online at www.clintonshowboat.org.

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