On Thursday, April 19, the Family Museum in Bettendorf will celebrate its 10th anniversary with an open house from 5 to 8 p.m. The evening will include music by Ellis Kell and light hors d'oeuvres and refreshments. The open house will also include an awards ceremony celebrating the successes of the facility, the people who have helped make it what it is today, and the museum's millionth visitor. Admission to the Family Museum is free during this open house. For more information, visit (http://www.familymuseum.org).

 

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.

Iowa Public Radio News has won four awards from two prestigious news associations. The Radio & Television News Directors Association presented its 2007 Edward R. Murrow Regional Award for News Documentary (Small Market) to Jeneane Beck for her documentary on child-abuse investigations in Iowa. The documentary aired in December 2006 on Iowa Public Radio. Iowa Public Radio was also the recipient of three awards from the Northwest Broadcast News Association. In the Association's 2006 Radio & TV Sevareid Awards, Iowa Public Radio won in the Investigative category for Beck's stories on laboratory-waste disposal at Iowa State University; Beck was also given an Award of Merit in the Documentary/Special category for her documentary on child-abuse investigations. Iowa Public Radio also took an Award of Merit in the Newscast category.

 

On August 31, four outdoor locations in downtown Davenport will collectively house the traveling exhibit Coexistence, a series of 45 nine-by-15-foot panels - created by 43 international artists - exploring themes of compassion and empathy on a global level. Portions of the exhibit will be displayed in front of the Figge Art Museum, RiverCenter, and sky bridge, with the remainder displayed in LeClaire Park, and the exhibit is expected to attract 25,000 visitors - including more than 10,000 students - between August 31 and its close on September 27, 2007. Initiated by Jerusalem's Museum on the Seam in 2001 and sponsored by the Riverboat Development Authority, the artworks will be shown in conjunction with the Quad Cities' community-wide project "Coexistence: The Art of Living Together," and more information on the exhibit is available at (http://www.coexistence.art.museum). - Mike Schulz

 

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."

Reader Short Fiction Contest What do a fortune cookie, a photograph, and a few missing letters have in common?

They're the Starting Points for the River Cities' Reader 2007 Short Fiction Contest.

 

Kathleen Lawless Cox - Journal of the Unconscious Kathleen Lawless Cox's new book, Journal of the Unconscious, is a necessarily self-indulgent affair. The title is perfectly descriptive rather than being arty, and the volume - less than 80 pages - is a collection of recorded "visions" from 1973 and 1974.

The Rock Island Healthy Homes Program has received a $1.8-million grant from the U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development to assist in the risk-free removal of lead-based paint from homes in the Illinois Quad Cities. That money is enhanced by more than $2 million in additional leverage and matching funds. Households with lead-poisoned children will be referred to the program by the Rock Island County Health Department. People enrolled in a housing program operated by the City of Rock Island, the City of Moline, Project NOW. or the Rock Island Economic Growth Corporation will automatically be considered for this program if eligibility criteria are met. People not currently enrolled in a housing-rehabilitation program may contact the City of Rock Island lead-program manager for more information at (309) 732-2900.

 

Kim Paulsen, a longtime supporter of Davenport riverfront concerts and festivals, passed away on Friday, March 16. She was 46. Kim loved attending the Bix Fest, Blues Fest, Ribfest, and all other activities at LeClaire Park that involved good music, good food and drink, and, above all, good times. If it was possible, Kim would have had a lifetime pass to all things LeClaire Park.

The City of Davenport will be holding a series of focus groups and community workshops to guide the design of its riverfront, including the expansion of LeClaire Park. A public kickoff will be held on Monday, March 26, at 6:30 p.m. This will be a 90-minute presentation held at the River Music Experience. The event will cover the project scope (including specific parcels), River Vision, the area's history, and the city's application for a state Community Attraction & Tourism grant. People are also welcome to provide their feedback at the Design Center (102 East Second Street), by phone (563-888-2252), or through the City's Web site (http://www.cityofdavenportiowa.com).

 

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