Just two-and-a-half years ago, the QC Theatre Workshop was founded by a small group of passionate artists who believed that the Quad Cities deserves intimate, powerful, and accessible theatre. Thanks to your support, we have been able to make that happen!

Not only have thousands of our community members experienced our productions, but many of you have decided to support our work with generous donations. So far this season, we have raised more than $4,000! For a small company like ours, this is a big step. But there's so much more to do.

The best way to make great theatre is by hiring professional artists. Theatre is a massively time-consuming endeavor, and hiring artists not only allows a company to support local talent, but it provides a higher quality theatrical experience to you, our community.

Thanks to your support...
the QC Theatre Workshop is now a professional theatre company!

Beginning with our next production - A Steady Rain - all Workshop actors, staff, and designers will be paid for their time and talents. Initially, these stipends will be very small, as we simply do not have the financial ability to pay artists what they're worth...yet! But this is an important step, and as we grow our financial resources - with your help - we will increase these stipends and continue to secure the brightest talents in the Quad Cities.

Think of what we have accomplished so far with an all-volunteer staff...

  • the dynamic two-man drama RED
  • the groundbreaking and powerful locally-written A Green River
  • the heartwarming and heartbreaking concert revue Last Call
  • the wacky and hilarious blockbuster Bat Boy: The Musical

...and those are just four of the ten shows we have presented, all under our "Pay What It's Worth" ticket pricing policy, which guarantees every member of our community equal access to theatre, regardless of financial means.

Just think of what we can accomplish as a professional theatre company!

The future is bright for the Workshop. We're glad you're along for the ride!

Tyson Danner
Moline, IL -Are you ready for this! World's Toughest Rodeo returns this weekend to the iWireless Center, this Friday & Saturday. Prepare to take a ride on the wild side as the iWireless Center goes out west for two nights featuring bareback riding, saddle bronc riding, bull riding, and women's barrel racing ... all of the fan favorites.

World's Toughest Rodeo, the premiere national rough stock only tour, presents this two and a half hour event starring professional cowboys and cowgirls from across the nation. Fans will once again get the opportunity to cheer on the world of rodeo's top bucking horses and bulls as well as enjoy some of the nation's most talented entertainment acts.

Want to see a little local talent? World's Toughest Rodeo invites some of the toughest little buckaroos to hold on tight in the "Mutton Bustin!"   These little buckaroos will spice up the show with the fan favorite event of sheep riding. Who knows, you may be witnessing a new future World Champion in action!

Fans will be served up an exciting slate of competition but only at World's Toughest Rodeo will the top two in each event return in our feature event of the night, the Showdown Bonus Round. The toughest cowboys will be matched with the rankest bucking horses and bulls in our supercharged finale event. It's edge of your seat action, 8 seconds at a time.

Fun is on the menu whether you are 6 or 66. World's Toughest offers a plate of hospitality served up with a western experience fans of all ages will never forget. The arena opens from 6 - 7 p.m. nightly so fans can get "down in the dirt" with World's Toughest Rodeo.  Both educational and entertaining... fans can meet cowboys, cowgirls and entertainers for autographs.  Pony rides for kids are free!!! Have you ever wanted to sit on a live bull? Midnight, the 2000lb bull and the World's Toughest Rodeo's superstar, will be in the chutes for an experience you can only get at World's Toughest Rodeo. Don't forget your camera. Take a behind the chutes tour and meet and visit with the World's Toughest Rodeo staff and see the beautiful animal athletes up close and personal.

Tickets are $18.00, $25.00, 35.00 or 57.00 for Gold Buckle Seating and kids are half price(excluding Gold Buckle seating). For additional savings LIKE them on Facebook www.facebook.com/worldstoughestrodeo and save $5 with code WTRFB. Don't miss an exclusive opportunity to purchase a Gold Buckle package (limited number) which includes chute side seats, a World's Toughest Rodeo Tour t-shirt and VIP meet and greet from 5:45 - 6:00 each night... all for just $57. Make it a night you won't forget at World's Toughest Rodeo.

Get you tickets for World's Toughest Rodeo at the iWireless Center, located at 1201 River Drive in Moline. For ticket information please see iwirelesscenter.com or ticketmaster.com, order by phone at (800) 359-2525. For group rates and information,call Lindsey at 309.277.1356 or email llobur@iwirelesscenter.com.

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Connect to the natural world like never before in the Figge Art Museum's new exhibition "Yuriko Yamaguchi: Interconnected in Art, Nature, Science, and Technology" opening Saturday. Prepare to be "wowed" by organic, web-like sculptures from dried potatoes, onion ends, leaves, and other nature-found items. If you haven't had the chance to see the Turned Wood Exhibition at the Figge, make sure you check it out this weekend before it closes on Sunday.

 

 Where might one find bacon, bacon, and more bacon? At Me & Billy's Beer and Bacon Tasting, of course! Brace yourself for a sampling of three separate pairings of bacon with beer on Thursday starting at 7 p.m. SPOILER ALERT: We heard the dessert round includes Guinness, "doughnettes," AND ice cream...

 

 Treat yourself to a movie night over at River Music Experience for this Tuesday's Redstone Reels. Watch Dazed and Confused on their NEW HD projectors and participate in a discussion and trivia games after. Also at RME this week- Eleven Fifty Two with Drama Major and Asbigasamouse, Songwriters in the Round, and The Coop with Genome and The Tripp Brothers.

 

 Mark those calendars for January 25, because Gallery 114's 25/25 event is back! With an opportunity to find the perfect small painting for only $25, this is one show you don't want to pass up. Can't make it Saturday? No worries, Gallery 114 is open Tuesday - Sunday, too! Plenty of time to find that perfectly unique piece of art.

 

 Gather up your favorite seeds and head down to the Food Hub on Saturday for their Seed Saving and Seed Swap event. Starting at 10 a.m., expert seed saver Glenn Drowns will give tips on how to best preserve your seeds. Following her talk, participate in a seed swap with various gardeners and farmers from the area. Later than evening, swing back with some friends for games, raffles, door prizes, and more during Trivia Night at the Freight House.

 

 Calling all brides-to-be - the biggest bridal show in the region takes over the RiverCenter next Saturday! Get your tickets today for the Davenport Jaycees Bridal Expo and spend a day visiting with vendors, learning from lectures, and sampling luscious cakes.  This year's event even has a record-breaking number of vendors. Happy planning, fair ladies!

 

See you downtown! Sponsored by the River Cities' Reader!
for more events, please click here.
Feb. 10, 2015 Commercial Ag Weed, Insect, and Plant Disease Management, Scott County Extension Office, 9:00 am-11:45 am

Feb. 12, 2015 Master Gardener 2015 Webinar Series: Supporting Local Food Systems, Scott County
Extension Office, 6:30 pm-8:30 pm

Feb. 18, 2015 Seed Treatment, Scott County Extension Office, 9 am-11:30 am

Feb. 24, 2015 Scott County Extension Council Meeting, Scott County Extension Office, 7 pm-9 pm

Visit our events calendar at our web site: http://dbs.extension.iastate.edu/calendar/
"Doing honor to the memory of our friend and liberator"

Frederick Douglass' impassioned eulogy to Lincoln to be presented by nationally-acclaimed actor at annual Abraham Lincoln Symposium banquet February 12

    SPRINGFIELD, IL- When Frederick Douglass spoke, people listened. He was a former slave who purchased his freedom and became one of Abraham Lincoln's most vocal critics and supporters at the same time. And when Douglass delivered a eulogy to the 16th President at the dedication of a memorial in 1876, the speech he made has come to be known as the most stirring remembrance of Lincoln's legacy ever made.

    That impassioned speech will be presented on Lincoln's 206th birthday, Thursday, February 12, by a nationally-acclaimed actor at the annual Abraham Lincoln Association Symposium Banquet. Fred Morsell, a veteran star of stage and screen, will headline the banquet and perform Frederick Douglass' famous speech, Eulogy to Lincoln. The New York Times praised Morsell's performance of a Douglass speech on PBS saying, "the standing ovation given to Mr. Morsell, whose sonorous voice stems in large part from his background as lyric baritone, is clearly and deservedly heartfelt."

    The banquet will be held at the President Lincoln Hotel in Springfield on Thursday, February 12. The reception starts at 6 p.m. followed by a dinner at 7 p.m. Tickets are $85 each and can be obtained online at www.abrahamlincolnassociation.org or by calling (866) 865-8500.

Parts of Douglass' speech continue to echo through time: "...under his wise and beneficent rule we saw ourselves gradually lifted from the depths of slavery to the heights of liberty and manhood...we saw that the handwriting of ages, in the form of prejudice and proscription, was rapidly fading away from the face of our whole country; under his rule, and in due time, about as soon after all as the country could tolerate the strange spectacle, we saw our brave sons and brothers laying off the rags of bondage, and being clothed all over in the blue uniforms of the soldiers of the United States responding to the call of Abraham Lincoln, and with muskets on their shoulders, and eagles on their buttons, timing their high footsteps to liberty and union under the national flag...

"Any man can say things that are true of Abraham Lincoln...He was a mystery to no man who saw him and heard him. Though high in position, the humblest could approach him and feel at home in his presence. Though deep, he was transparent; though strong, he was gentle; though decided and pronounced in his convictions, he was tolerant towards those who differed from him, and patient under reproaches. Even those who only knew him through his public utterance obtained a tolerably clear idea of his character and personality."

    The Abraham Lincoln Association (ALA) will also celebrate President Lincoln's birthday with its annual Abraham Lincoln-Benjamin P. Thomas Symposium that will begin on Wednesday, February 11 at 7 p.m. at The Old State Capitol State Historic site with a keynote address by Dr. Matthew Holden, Jr., the Wepner Distinguished Professor in Political Science at the University of Illinois Springfield. His presentation is titled The End and the Beginning: Emancipation and Counter-Emancipation.

The Symposium on Lincoln's presidency in 1865 continues on Thursday, February 12 at the Old State Capitol State Historic Site in Springfield. The 11 a.m. speakers will be James B. Conroy, author of Our One Common Country: Abraham Lincoln and the Hampton Roads Peace Conference of 1865 and fellow of the Massachusetts Historical Society and Chris DeRose, award-winning author of Congressman Lincoln: The Making of America's Greatest President, as well as several other books. A round table featuring all of the Symposium speakers begins at 2:30 p.m. at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library. These Symposium events are free and open to the public.

The Thomas F. Schwartz Symposium luncheon, which begins at 1 p.m. Thursday, February 12 at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library, features speaker Dr. Ronald White, Jr., author of A. Lincoln: A Biography a New York Times bestseller and Lincoln's Greatest Speech: The Second Inaugural, a New York Times notable book. The luncheon is $25 per person and reservations can be made online at www.abrahamlincolnassociation.org or by calling (866) 865-8500.

The Abraham Lincoln Association Symposium is co-sponsored by the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, The University of Illinois Springfield, The Old State Capitol State Historic Site and the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency. For more information about the Abraham Lincoln Association, visit www.abrahamlincolnassociation.org.

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KEY MESSAGES:
  • The best way to prevent the flu is the influenza vaccine.

  • The best way to lessen complications of the flu is antiviral medication.

  • The best way to prevent the spread of flu is to stay home when ill.

All three strains currently circulating are covered by this year's vaccine - A(H3N2), A(H1N1) and B.

  • Some of the A(H3N2) viruses circulating nationally and in Iowa are a drifted strain.

  • Although the drifted strain is not an exact match, the vaccine should provide partial protection.

Vaccination is still the best defense against the flu. IDPH and the CDC recommend all Iowans older than age 6 months receive the vaccine.

  • Even if you have already had one strain of the flu, you can still get sick with the other two strains of the flu circulating in Iowa so vaccination would still be recommended.

  • It is not too late to be vaccinated. The flu season typically peaks in February and can last until May.

Seasons in which A(H3N2) viruses dominate tend to be more severe, with more hospitalizations and more deaths.

    • Those at highest risk of developing serious complications of the flu include the very young, very old, pregnant women and those with chronic conditions such as heart or lung disease. Beginning antiviral medications early for these individuals is particularly important.

      Antiviral medications are not a substitute for vaccination, but are an important second line of defense to treat the flu.
        • Most effective if started as soon as possible and within 48 hours of the beginning of flu symptoms. (If those with serious illness, those who are hospitalized or those at high risk of complications do not seek medical attention within 48 hours, starting antiviral medications is still recommended.)

        • Call your doctor right away if you develop symptoms of the flu.

        • Antiviral medications make influenza illness milder, shorter, and reduce the risk of ending up in hospital or dying from influenza.
        • Receiving antiviral medications quickly is especially important for those at risk of complications.

       

      The flu is a respiratory illness caused by viruses. The flu comes on suddenly and symptoms may include fever, headache, tiredness, cough, sore throat, nasal congestion, and body aches. Illness typically lasts two to seven days. Influenza may cause severe illness or even death.

       

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German American Heritage Center Presents:

Iowa Op Platt with Kathi Hofmann onSunday, January 25, 2015 at 2pm
This Sunday at GAHC we are showing a film from German Television about Scott County and its impressive German Heritage. The film is in German but we will be providing handouts in English of what is being said! Follow along or just enjoy the views of Scott County as seen by Germans!
Iowa op Platt
is part of a series produced by the German NDR (Norddeutsche Rundfunk) TV station. Yared Dibaba and Julia Westlake traveled all around the USA as well as to Africa, Australia and South America talking to people with family connections to northern Germany and the Low German dialect.  In 2006 they visited Iowa. This 45-minute film features farmers Glenn Sievers and Bill Stohrjohan. Jack Schinkel, Lee Moeller and other members of the American Schleswig Holstein Heritage Society join them in Walcott.  Erna Cielecki shows them around the I-80 Truck stop. They also stop in Davenport at the German American Heritage Center.  DeWitt resident Karl Maass meets Yared and Julia in Manning, Iowa, at the Hausbarn he helped rebuild.
Mark your calendars for next weekend too! We are hosting Tami from Cotton Creek Mill in West Branch as she shares the history of her "signature" quilts and demonstrates new quilt products on Sunday, Jan. 31 at 2pm!

SPRINGFIELD, IL (01/21/2015)(readMedia)-- PEORIA, Ill. ? The Illinois Air National Guard (ANG) 566th Band of the Midwest will perform a free concert Jan. 28, at 8 p.m., at the Peoria Civic Center auditorium in Peoria, Illinois.

The band, conducted by Maj. Bryan Miller of Naperville, Illinois, will perform for the 2015 Illinois Music Education Association conference opening night as part of its community outreach mission.

The ANG Band Program trains and deploys professional Airmen musicians to foster patriotism in audiences within the U.S. and in forward-deployed locations. The band cultivates American cultural and military musical heritage.

"Audiences can expect a world-class show with exciting and dynamic music," said Miller.

More information about the ANG Band of the Midwest can be found at www.BandoftheMidwest.ang.af.mil and on Facebook at ANG Band of the Midwest (566th AFB). More information about the ILMEA conference can be found at http://www.ilmeaorg/events/15imec.

AMES, IA (01/21/2015)(readMedia)-- Several ISU students volunteer every year with the Iowa FIRST LEGO League Championship, held at the Iowa State University College of Engineering.

Sara Dohrmann (senior in industrial engineering and engineering sales) of Davenport, Iowa

Emily Knight (junior in civil engineering) of Moline, Illinois


OSKALOOSA, Iowa (January 21, 2015) - William Penn University is pleased to announce that [Name] of [City], [State] has been named to the President's List for the fall 2014 semester. To be included on the President's List, a student must complete at least 12 hours of credit with a minimum grade point average of 3.9 on a 4.0 scale.

Wlliam Penn University in Oskaloosa, Iowa offers both post-secondary and adult education programs. Founded by Quakers in 1873, we strive to provide a vibrant learning community where all students grow intellectually, socially, and spiritually through academic, creative and athletic pursuits.

For more information, visit the university's website at www.wmpenn.edu or call 1-800-779-7366.

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HOMETOWN, STATE; NAME

Bettendorf, IA

Carmen Wetzel

Davenport, IA

Margaret Doud
Amy Roefer
Erica Smigo

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