WarChild Riding Group


Sandy's Toddle Inn - Chaffee MO
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Patriot Guard

 Patriot Guard Riders Mission Statement

Notice - The PGR store is open since the first of the new year. 

Thank you for your patience.

 The Patriot Guard Riders is a diverse amalgamation of riders from across the nation. We have one thing in common besides motorcycles. We have an unwavering respect for those who risk their very lives for America’s freedom and security. If you share this respect, please join us.

   We don’t care what you ride, what your political views are, or whether you’re a "hawk" or a "dove". It is not a requirement that you be a veteran. It doesn't matter where you’re from or what your income is.  You don’t even have to ride. The only prerequisite is Respect.

   Our main mission is to attend the funeral services of fallen American heroes as invited guests of the family. Each mission we undertake has two basic objectives.

1. Show our sincere respect for our fallen heroes, their families, and their communities.

2. Shield the mourning family and friends from interruptions created by any protestor or group of protestors.

   We accomplish the latter through strictly legal and non-violent means.

Folks, this is not just important…

It’s what we do!

Join Us!

RD - SE Missouri Ride Captain

Mailing List

Stars & Stripes Museum

 
babystar.gif (941 bytes)This Day
      in History

The stars and stripes logo
Museum / Library Association, Inc.®

 


To those in military service and to our veterans, The Stars and Stripes represents much more than our American flag.  They recognize it as the newspaper that serves as a medium between soldiers and their families, as well as a reporter of news. 

Over the last 139 years, millions of copies of The Stars and Stripes have been distributed throughout the world.  And, it all began during the Civil War in the town of Bloomfield, located in southeast Missouri.

It was here on November 9, 1861 that ten Illinois Union soldiers, using the vacated press of The Bloomfield Herald, published the first "Stars and Stripes" which they named after the American flag.  One of the original copies of that 1861 paper is now owned by the Stoddard County Historical Society and to be put on loan with the museum.

The Stars and Stripes flourished during each of the five major wars this country has fought.

General John J. Pershing

General John J. Pershing, a fellow Missourian, recognized the value of The Stars and Stripes during World War I, as a great morale builder.


During World War II, General George C. Marshall referred to The Stars and Stripes "as a symbol of the things we are fighting to preserve...free thought and free expression of a free people".

Many famous people have been connected with The Stars and Stripes:  Cartoonist Bill Mauldin; Andy Rooney and Steve Kroft of "Sixty Minutes" were former Striper's as was Harold K. Ross, founder of the New Yorker magazine.  Grantland Rice, Ernie Pyle and other war correspondents have also contributed to the newspaper.

Several former S & S staff members and various war veterans have donated personal letters, unpublished behind-the-scenes reports, back issues of The Stars and Stripes and other interesting war-related items to be displayed or filed as reference material.

All this history will be preserved.   A Stars and Stripes Museum/Library with climate-controlled storage, handicapped accessibility, display and meeting rooms will be invaluable for research.  The facility serves historians, students and writers, as well as the general public.

Motorcycle Safety


  • Get trained and licensed. Research has shown that more than 90 percent of all riders involved in crashes were either self-taught or taught by friends.
  • Ride sober. Alcohol is a factor in almost half of all single-vehicle motorcycle crashes. Prescription and over-the-counter drugs can diminish visual capabilities and affect judgement.
  • Ride responsibly: Wear protective gear, including a helmet, eye protection, jacket, full-fingered gloves, long pants and over-the-ankle boots. Keep the bike well maintained. Maintain proper lane positioning to further increase visibility to motorists, keep a "space cushion" between the bike and other traffic and obey speed limits.
    Source: Motorcycle Safety Foundation
    Motorist safety
  • Be aware of the blind spot. Motorcycles can often fit completely in the driver's "blind spot," the area of vision behind the rear pillar of most cars. Signal before changing lanes and check again before making the maneuver.
  • Wet roads and adverse weather have a greater affect on motorcyclists. Always keep plenty of distance (at least four seconds at higher speeds) if following a motorcycle, more in bad weather.
  • When approaching a motorcycle from the rear or passing another vehicle with a biker in the oncoming lane, it can be difficult to gauge the speed of motorcycles because they take up less of a vision field, which makes depth perception more challenging.
  • Look for road hazards. A significant portion of motorcycle accidents involve swerving suddenly to avoid hazards. If there is a large pothole, a rough train-track crossing or an area with water puddles, anticipate that the rider might take evasive action.
  • Give motorcyclists a full lane for travel and don't pass bikers with a minimal amount of space because the force of the buffeted wind could cause a rider to lose control. Motorcyclists also might choose to ride near one side of a lane to maximize the view of the lane ahead.

    Source:
    www.TheCarConnection.com
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    Remembering Bill Veeck

    posted Tuesday, 2 January 2007

    National Baseball Hall of Fame Logo

                

       
    Bill Veeck  
     
    Died on this date 1986

    Bill Veeck
    William Louis Veeck Jr.


    Induction Information
    Elected to Hall of Fame by Veterans Committee in 1991, Executive/Pioneer
    Hall of Fame plaque for Bill Veeck

    Born: February 9, 1914, in Chicago, Illinois
    Died: January 2, 1986, in Chicago, Illinois

    Bio
    As owner of the Indians, Browns and White Sox, Bill Veeck consistently broke attendance records with pennant-winning teams, outrageous door prizes, enthusiastic fan participation and ingenious promotional schemes. An inveterate hustler and energetic maverick, he introduced the concept of honoring fans, a midget player (Eddie Gaedel), Bat Day, fireworks, exploding scoreboards and player names on backs of uniforms. He signed the American League's first black player - Larry Doby in 1947 - and its oldest rookie - 43-year-old Satchel Paige in 1948.

    Quote
    "Veeck was born into baseball and belongs there. He is an independent thinker, imaginative, uninhibited, innovative. He is a promoter at heart but a baseball guy at bottom."
       — Red Smith

    Did You Know... that while employed in various capacities by the Chicago Cubs, Bill Veeck Jr. was responsible for the planting of ivy on Wrigley Field's outfield wall in September 1937?

    Baseball's Showman
       
      By Nick Acocella
    Special to ESPN.com

    Just as he predicted, Bill Veeck, for all his accomplishments, is best remembered as the guy who sent a midget to the plate. And yet, Eddie Gaedel's lone major league appearance, while the most famous of Veeck's stunts, may not even have been his most bizarre. And it hardly ranks among his significant contributions to the game.

    Far more important were his innovations in the financial operations of his various franchises - almost all of them initially deplored by other owners. In stints with the Cleveland Indians, St. Louis Browns and Chicago White Sox (twice) between 1946 and 1980, Veeck was the last person to purchase a major league team without an independent fortune.

    Born on Feb. 9, 1914, in Chicago, Veeck grew up in the suburb of Hinsdale. When Bill was four, his father, sportswriter William Veeck Sr., became president of the Chicago Cubs. By the time he was 11, Bill was working as a vendor, ticket seller and junior groundskeeper. When his father died in 1933, Veeck left Kenyon College to work for the Cubs, rising to club treasurer. In 1935, he married Eleanore Raymond.

    He left Chicago in 1941 when he bought the financially-troubled American Association Milwaukee franchise in partnership with Charlie Grimm. Arriving in Milwaukee with $11 in his pocket, Veeck turned his promotional genius loose. He gave away live animals and birds and a 200-pound block of ice, scheduled morning games for night-shift workers, staged weddings at home plate and presented manager Grimm with a birthday cake out of which popped a much needed southpaw pitcher.

    After Milwaukee won three pennants in five years, Veeck sold the franchise for a $275,000 profit in 1945.

    While still a half-owner of the Brewers, Veeck spent almost three years in the Marines during World War II. An accident cost him his right foot and, even after 36 operations over the rest of his life, his leg as well.

    Before entering the military, Veeck secured backing to buy the Philadelphia Phillies in 1942. His revolutionary plan was to stock the club with Negro League stars. His mistake was revealing his plans to Commissioner Kenesaw Landis, who rejected the idea.

    When the "Sport Shirt," as he came to be known for his favorite attire, finally reached the majors - with the Indians in 1946 - he did it with a creative bit of financing. He used a debenture-common stock group that made remuneration to the partners non-taxable loan payments rather than taxable income.

    He broke new ground of a different sort by signing Larry Doby in 1947 to be the first African-American player in the American League and 42-year-old Satchel Paige in 1948 as the oldest rookie in major league history.

    Veeck almost lost the goodwill he had accumulated when he tried to trade popular shortstop-manger Lou Boudreau to the Browns. When word of the negotiations got out, there were protests and petitions in support of Boudreau. In response, Veeck went from bar to bar in Cleveland to admit he had made a mistake and announce personally that the deal was off.

    Boudreau rewarded his boss and the fans in 1948 when Cleveland won its first pennant and World Series since 1920.

    Among Veeck's more popular stunts in Cleveland were the ceremonial burial of the 1948 flag after it became apparent that the team could not repeat in 1949 and "Good Old Joe Earley Night," staged for a fan who complained that Veeck was honoring everyone but the average "Joe."

    After selling his shares in Cleveland to settle his obligations from an expensive divorce, Veeck reemerged as the owner of the Browns in 1951, a year after marrying Mary Frances Ackerman. Expressing a desire to drive the Cardinals out of town, Veeck succeeded merely in annoying Cardinals owner Fred Saigh by hiring former Cardinal stars Rogers Hornsby and Marty Marion as managers (as well as Dizzy Dean as an announcer). He also decorated Sportsman's Park, which the Browns owned but which both teams shared, with Brownie memorabilia.

    The Gaedel gimmick took place on Aug. 19, 1951, and was followed five days later by "Grandstand Manager's Day," perhaps Veeck's most elaborate stunt. With himself, former Philadelphia Athletics manager Connie Mack, and thousands of fans holding placards that said yes on one side and no on the other, publicity director Bob Fischel held up cards with proposed moves - steal, bunt, change pitchers - to which the grandstand managers flashed their opinions.

    While manager Zack Taylor puffed a pipe and relaxed in a rocking chair, the fans called an excellent game: The Browns won, 5-3, to stop a four-game losing streak.

    The end of the Browns began after the 1952 season with a Veeck suggestion that American League clubs share radio and television revenue with visiting clubs. Voted down 7-1, he refused to allow broadcasts of games when the Browns were on the road. The rest of the league retaliated by eliminating lucrative Friday night games in St. Louis. Then, when Saigh sold the Cardinals to Anheuser-Busch breweries with its unlimited resources, Veeck realized he had to move his franchise.

    And the only way that would happen would be if Veeck sold the team, which he did. The franchise then moved to Baltimore.

    In 1959, Veeck popped up as head of a syndicate that bought a controlling interest in the White Sox, who won their first pennant in 40 years as well as establishing a team home-attendance record with 1.4 million. They broke that mark with 1.6 million the following season when Veeck installed the first exploding scoreboard in the majors. The ostentatious 130-foot scoreboard in Comiskey Park produced fireworks, sound effects and 10 electric pinwheels; all went off after White Sox homers.

    Poor health forced Veeck to sell his share of the team in 1961. But 14 years later, Veeck reappeared as White Sox owner. Showing that he hadn't lost his touch for irritating other owners, Veeck and general manager Rollie Hemond set up shop in a hotel lobby and made four trades in full view of passers-by.

    Two weeks later, arbitrator Peter Seitz ruled in the Messersmith-McNally case and ushered in the age of free agency. Though the cards were stacked in favor of richer owners, Veeck still hung on for five more seasons.

    During this period, Veeck's most creative gimmick was a Bicentennial-inspired Spirit of '76 parade on Opening Day 1976 - with himself as the peg-legged fifer. His "rent-a-player" scheme for taking other clubs' stars in their option years helped the White Sox win 90 games and finish third in 1977 behind leased sluggers Richie Zisk and Oscar Gamble.

    In 1976, Veeck reactivated 54-year-old Minnie Minoso for eight at-bats, so Minoso could say he had played in four decades. Four years later, he again reactivated Minoso, who went 0-for-2 but could say he had played in five decades.

    Veeck's longest surviving idea was having announcer Harry Caray sing "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" during the seventh-inning stretch. His most copied idea was having players take curtain calls after homering. His least copied idea was putting his players in short pants.

    And the worst idea was Disco Demolition Night. On June 12, 1979, a disc jockey's plan to explode disco records between games of a doubleheader resulted in thousands of fans jumping onto the field, policemen futilely trying to restore order and the umpires postponing the second game. The next day, the Tigers got the victory via forfeit.

    Finally giving up, Veeck sold the White Sox in January 1981. He spent much of his final years sitting in the Wrigley Field bleachers, enjoying the sunshine, the baseball and the ivy on the outfield walls he is alleged to have planted.

    Veeck died at 72 of cancer on Jan. 2, 1986. Five years later, he was elected into the Hall of Fame.