632_small.jpg To hear their directors tell it, the future of libraries has always looked bleak.

"I remember when I was in library school," recalls Moline Public Library Director Leslie Kee, "which was in 1967. They told us that by the year 2000 there would be no books."

Issue 631 Cover Most everybody agrees that spending money on education is a good thing.

But the "good" that education produces remains abstract enough to citizens and politicians that school spending often takes a back seat to more concrete projects, whether they're roads or sports stadiums or tax incentives designed to directly bring new jobs to a community.

Rob Grunewald, an associate economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, used to be one of those people who thought that education was important in a vague, general sense. "Invest in your schools. Invest in your colleges and universities, your workforce-training programs, and there you go," he told an audience at the Bettendorf Public Library last week. "You can all go home."

Reader issue #630 Both sides sound eminently reasonable.

Mike Ralston, president of the Iowa Association of Business & Industry, is an eloquent voice against Senate File 413, known as the "Fair Share" bill: "People should not have to join a union to get a job. There's 60 years of law in Iowa that says that."

Jan Laue, executive vice president of the Iowa AFL-CIO, speaks clearly for Fair Share: "You still don't have to belong to a union to get or keep a job [under Fair Share]. You're accepting all of the benefits that the union gets for you, so you are a part of it. If you don't want to be a part of it, then you ought to go work somewhere else."

Reader issue #628 Philip Bialowitz should have died 64 years ago. That he survived one day at the Nazi death camp at Sobibór was mostly a matter of luck.

That he has lived this long is a testament to a group of people - himself included - who planned and executed one of two successful prisoner revolts against the Nazis during World War II.

Reader issue #626 Bobby Green is Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich's dream spokesperson.

Green owns the Cordova-based company Bob's Blacktop. His company brings in annual revenues of roughly $750,000, he said, and he doesn't offer his three employees health insurance. He doesn't have health insurance, either.

"I myself have had a couple surgeries, and those bills are just stacking up," Green said this week. "And I'm just having to make monthly payments on them."

624-cover-thumb.jpg It wasn't televised. There were no ball gowns. And, devoid of production numbers, montages, and time-killing banter, the whole thing clocked in at just over an hour.

Yet the Quad City Presenters' inaugural awards ceremony managed to say more about the arts, and say it better, in 60-plus minutes than this year's Academy Awards telecast did in 230.

Kai Swanson Before introducing longtime mentor Don Wooten, host Kai Swanson said of his morning's duties, "My job is simply to keep things moving along, which I'll fail at right now. I understand from the program that our next speaker has five minutes, and when I saw that on the program, I told the organizer [New Ground Theatre's Chris Jansen], 'Good luck.' Because although he is one of the most gifted communicators I have ever known, he does believe - as do the ends of J.R.R. Tolkein's Lord of the Rings - that anything worth saying is worth saying lo-o-o-ong."

Reader issue #619 The history of passenger rail in the Quad Cities illustrates just how capricious - and divorced from rational decision-making - business and politics can be.

The Quad Cities lack rail service not necessarily because of a lack of demand, but because of a long-forgotten business decision.

Reader issue #618 Traditional campaign-finance reform involves contribution limits, but nobody thinks they've made a dent in the role of money in politics. Candidates who must comply with contribution limits don't seem any less beholden to special interests than other politicians.

But a new type of election reform is gaining popularity around the country, and it's likely to make some headway in Iowa during this year's legislative session. While "clean elections" - publicly financed political campaigns - probably won't pass the state legislature this year, there's a good chance they'll make it farther than ever.

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Teenagers and garbage ... and an art museum.

Matching those things sounds like a recipe for disaster. But for the Figge Art Museum, it could pay big dividends, particularly as a way to combat the perception that the institution is elitist.

This summer, in conjunction with its Artists Advisory Council (AAC), the Figge will host sculptures made from refuse and assembled by local artists with assistance from high-school classes.

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