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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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    Total: 832,640
    since: 29 Jan 2005

    Tattoo Parlars Winning Over Skeptics

    posted Monday, 30 October 2006

    The family that tattoos together . . .

    More parents are welcoming teens' body art--and taking part

    By Meg McSherry Breslin
    Tribune staff reporter

    LAKE STATION, Ind. -- Families are flooding into a quaint tattoo studio here on a crisp fall day. Mothers and teenage daughters. Dads and young sons. Granddaughters and grandmothers.

    Pearl Scott, a 72-year-old grandmother in white tennis shoes, is standing at the front desk scanning her next design. She waits for a touch-up on the dove at her neckline and wants a new tat to match her daughter-in-law's ankle flowers.

    Scott started this process a few years ago, after her husband of 42 years passed away. She said she always wanted one, but her sweetie was "old-fashioned" and wouldn't go for it.

    "He always said, `You can't have a tattoo. Over my dead body!'" said Scott. "So here I am."

    The tattoo studio in America today is more of a family affair, and it has come a long way from the days when bikers and military men dominated the scene. A study published this year in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology found that 24 percent of adults age 18 to 50 have a tattoo. A 2003 Harris poll reported that 36 percent of 25- to 29-year-olds have body art.

    Studies of tattoos among teens are tougher to find, but a quick glance around many high schools today--particularly in less regulated states in the West--tells the story. Plenty of teens love body art, and their parents aren't threatening to kick them out of the house. Instead, they're welcoming it.

    Take Kaelyn Marcus, down the hall from Scott on a recent day at the bustling Personal Art tattoo studio in Lake Station, Ind. She just turned 17 and is getting her first tattoo. Hers--a four-leaf clover on the ankle--is a replica of her mom's, grandmother's and two aunts'. The design is in honor of Kaelyn's grandfather, who died six years ago. Kaelyn's mom--Lorna Marcus--is all for it.

    "I just think tattoos are pretty," her mom said, sitting beside a nervous Kaelyn just before the tattoo needle fires up. "I'm fine with it."

    Myrna Armstrong, a professor at the School of Nursing at Texas Tech University in Lubbock, is a national researcher on tattooing. She has studied the rise of tattooing over nearly two decades.

    Her first report, published in the Journal of Nursing Scholarship in 1990, explored the growing number of career women getting tattoos. At the time, she thought of the women as pioneers, defying stereotypes about the type of person interested in body art. Now, nothing about the exploding tattoo industry surprises her.

    In two studies of adolescents in the 1990s, she found 8 percent to 10 percent of teens had a tattoo. One student reported getting his first tattoo at age 8.

    "Our teenagers today--really anyone over 11 years old--can tell you all about tattoos and body piercing. They know where they can get them, or they have friends who will self-inflict them, or they even know how to do it themselves," Armstrong said. "Today, it's just a mainstream activity."

    A handful of states prohibit anyone younger than 18 from getting a tattoo. Most states have age restrictions but still allow tattoos with the written permission of a parent. Other states are silent, leaving it up to cities or the tattoo studios to set rules.

    Illinois previously prohibited tattoos until age 21. But legislators last year made the age limit 18. State Rep. Jerry Mitchell (R-Rock Falls) pushed the change in response to complaints from police, who said teens were loitering around tattoo and piercing studios anyway because body piercing at 18 was legal.

    "Some of the tattoo parlors around here were kind of unsavory places," Mitchell said. "Police here were concerned about drug trafficking."

    Still, many tattoo artists say the legislative change of heart has been a boon for business, as teens no longer have to go to neighboring states for a tat.

    Even before the law change, Illinois teens seemed to have no problem getting tattoos, said Cynthia Mears, co-director of the adolescent medicine program for Children's Memorial Hospital. She's seen "plenty" of 14- and 15-year-olds with tattoos, some of them self-applied and some in places Mears would rather not describe.

    Different vibe at conventions

    One real indicator of the popularity of tattoos now is the atmosphere at tattoo conventions, said Bob Baxter, editor in chief of the national tattoo magazine Skin & Ink.

    Baxter, who has been covering the tattoo business for more than a decade, said conventions are full of young mothers--a rare sight even five years ago. At a recent convention in Calgary, Alberta, Baxter was taken aback by the crowd hovering around Kat Von D, the 24-year-old female tattoo artist and star of TLC's "Miami Ink."

    "When I walked down the sidewalk years ago, mothers used to cross to the other side with their children," said Baxter, who is covered in body art. "Now, you've got them lined up to see Kat Von D. It's really a turnaround."

    Tattoo fans look at their inks as the perfect way to express themselves in an impersonal world. And for many, getting the tattoo is a deeply symbolic, emotional act.

    Tom Webel, a 22-year-old in the Army, got his first tattoo at 18. While on leave from active duty in Iraq, he recently showed up at Electric Art Tattoo in Fox Lake, Ill. He wanted tattoos of the last names of three young guys in his company, all of whom died in the war.

    Sharon Hurdlow, who is 64, started getting inked at Sacred Chao tattoo studio in Valparaiso, Ind., in the midst of breast cancer treatment two years ago.

    "I just said I have to go get that tattoo," she said. "I have to express myself in this way. Life is too short."

    She now has 18 tattoos, many of them symbols of growth and renewal--a cardinal, a rose, a bumblebee by a sunflower.

    The variety of clients she sees now is downright heartwarming for Jeanne Fritch, owner of Personal Art, the Indiana studio that's a favorite of Scott, the grandmother.

    Fritch laughed the other day when a mothers' group called asking to rent her studio for a play date. The group plans to bring kids age 18 months to 6 years for temporary tattoos.

    Fritch has been tattooing since 1978. This is after graduating from Hillsdale College in Michigan, interning for a congressman in Washington, and then flooring her conservative parents with the announcement of her chosen career.

    "When I grew up, I didn't even know anyone with a tattoo," she said. "But it's way more respected now. When I buy a house, I can actually say I'm a tattoo artist."

    Fritch is even starting in on the fourth generation for some of her loyal, longtime customers.

    Her shop is inviting, with yellow, faux-painted walls, wood floors and private rooms with massage tables and chairs with headrests. Fritch chats quietly with her clients, the tattoo drill buzzing away, as if she's a dentist preparing to fill a cavity.

    Many of Fritch's clients are hoping to build a family tradition, and the young ones seem to put a lot of thought into their artwork. Lauren Curtis came in with her mom for her first tattoo before Halloween last year. She was 15, and Curtis says she thought a lot about placement.

    "I tried to think about my professional career. I want to be a marine biologist," she said, pointing out the rose on her shoulder, matching the string of roses inked across her mother's belly. She said she didn't want anything she couldn't cover up for an employer, and she's now looking to expand her inks.

    Still some skeptics

    Despite such openness to tattooing among all ages, some tattoo artists still have work to do in bringing along the skeptics.

    Marianne Gonzalez, now owner of Electric Art Tattoo, saw that firsthand three years ago when she asked about a business license. She was fuming after her first phone call to Village Hall.

    "The lady on the phone told me tattoo studios were considered adult entertainment," Gonzalez said. "We weren't welcome here."

    But Gonzalez fought back and eventually opened a studio along the main street in downtown Fox Lake, across the street from the post office. The shop has a wide range of clients today, including police officers and firefighters. Free tattoos at her shop get raffled off at the police officers' ball, Gonzalez said.

    Indeed, facing the critics--and then turning them around -- is pure fun for tattoo lovers.

    For instance, Scott was tickled by the shocked reaction from her doctor in an exam before a recent hip replacement.

    "He was like, `What do you call this, Grandma?' And he was laughing," Scott said. "But I've got to tell you, it makes me feel younger."