Episode Transcript
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(00:00):
Welcome to Quad City Forum, aweekly community service program produced by iHeartMedia to
look at the issues and opportunities thatexist in our community. Now here's your
hosts for Quad City Forum, PotLuke and Denny Linnhowe. Victoria Klein,
the marketing director. Now I've gotthe acronym fm WR, Victoria, what
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does that all stand for? FamilyMorale, Welfare and Recreation? And every
time something happens on the Arsenal,we've always it's a great thing because it's
not just for the Arsenal. Everybody'sinvited and big stuff going to be happening
right about the middle of May,all a part of Armed Forces Day on
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the Arsenal. Yeah, so we'rehaving a big event May sixteenth to the
nineteenth. We invite everyone to comejoin us to our Enforces Day celebration.
And I'm liking this because it's alittle bit of everything for everybody, one
of them. First off, youget I see it's kind of buried here,
but I see honor among wrestling,So exactly tell me what's going on
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there. And we're going to seegreco wrestling. Are we going to see
professional wrestling? What are we goingto see on that live performance from Honor
among Wrestling. They're a veteran ownwrestling company, so it's like the wwea
style wrestling in the ring, tellingthe story, all the fun stuff,
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getting the crowd hyped up. We'revery excited to have them this year.
It's exciting. Okay. So thatagain is on Saturday the eighteenth, and
that'll be in the late afternoon ataround five thirty. Kind of give us
the lineup of what people are goingto be able to see when they show
up to the island for Armed ForcesDay on Thursday. We are starting off
Thursday. We will have the carnivalfestivities starting at four o'clock. On Friday,
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May seventeenth, again, starting atfour o'clock, we'll have our packet
pick up for the racers will berunning the race on Saturday, they can
pick their packets up. Friday,the carnival will be going on at four.
We're going to do our big openingkeg tapping ceremony around then, and
then the Matt Fuller Band. It'sgoing to take us through the night.
At five o'clock they'll get on onstage. Well end the events around ten
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o'clock Saturday, we've got the bigAmerica's Kids Run starting us off in the
morning. That's the opportunity for thekids to run the Rock, and then
it goes into our five k andour ten k Run the Rock big races,
followed by the carnival, food trucks, vendors, more bands, Moonshine
Run and Superfly Samurai and then we'reending the night with a fireworks display that
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takes us to Sunday, more carnivaland more live wrestling. It really is
something for everybody. I like thatit's a full family event. Now,
wait, the big question everyone's goingto ask, oh do it? You
know, sometimes it's hard to getonto the island because you got to do
the visitors plat passes and all that. But is this right you're waving at
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people? You can just come on. Yeah, so this weekend you will
not need a visitors pass. You'lljust show your ID at the gate.
They're going to verify the ID tothe person and you'll be able to get
right onto the island and come joinus at our Armed Forces Day. Oh
this is perfect. This would begreat for the whole family. Yeah.
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Yeah, I forgot to mention onSaturday there's a car show, so even
another another element. Yeah of fun, you've got you've got wrestling and the
Quad City Cruisers. Yeah, which, yeah, yeah, I love that.
Well. Now, for people thatwant to even though it's like basically
I would say a fairly easy wayto get onto the island, if they
want to be a part of theruns, what do they have to do
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to get registered? Yes, sothey want to go to www dot get
me registered, dot com, slashr i a Run the Rock, go
online register for the race. Weare so so excited for this. We're
excited about it. We're excited aboutArmed Forces Day again. So for people
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that want to be a part ofthis, again, give us the dates
and just just kind of a rundownand we're exactly, are you going to
be singing or doing stand up oranything like that, Just checking me personally.
No, I'm going to be runningaround making sure everybody's got what they
need this day. But May sixteenthor May nineteenth, the Armed Forces Day
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Celebration on the Rock Island Arsenal opento the public. We're always open to
the public, but this weekend it'sgoing to be a very special event.
We hope to see everybody there.If you want to get registered for the
run. Come Run the Rock.That's that get Meregistered dot com slash ri
Run the Rock. We are reallylooking forward to this event and we want
to make it one of those bigstaple events in the community, and we
can't do that without all you communitymembers and lovely people come into these events.
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This is an exciting little segment.It's kind of like all the arsenal
all the time here because love itMay is such a busy month, and
really every month is busy on theisland, and for so many of us,
we end up driving by and wethink, oh, we can't go
on, but you're always welcome ontothe island. Matt Tomes, the director
of Rock Island National Cemetery, ison the phone talking to us right now
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with big stuff that's happening later onthis month. On Thursday, the Thursday
before Memorial Day, which is Maytwenty third, at four pm, we
are asking volunteers to come out andhelp us put flags on every grave site
we have at the cemetery, andwe have approximately twenty seven thousand headstones here,
so as you can imagine, thattakes some time if it was just
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our staff doing it. So wetypically get you know around I would say
four to five hundred volunteers every yearto do this, and we can we
can get through it in about fortyfive minutes with the help of all the
great Quad City folks out there.Yeah, whoa, Matt, you're blowing
my mind right now. Did youjust say, first off, twenty seven
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hundred gravesites. No, it didn'tbecause said twenty seven thousand, thousand,
Yeah, twenty seven thousand, yes, and you can get through that in
forty five And that's really impressed.That just to me says a lot about
one the organization that you have forthis, and two just the fact that
people pour out for that four orfive hundred people. That's amazing. It
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is amazing. It's awesome to seeit. And when everybody's when we're all
done, the cemetery looks awesome withthe flag on every grave site. So
it's really cool to see. Andif the folks haven't been out to be
part of this event, it's agood event. I was out a few
years ago and I was amazed too, because you will look and you'll see
those tombstones. Now, this isat probably what between three or four o'clock
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in the afternoon, you'll see thecemeteries set up, the different ones,
no flags, and you're looking atit like there's no way you're going to
get this done. Yeah, andyet at the same time, it goes
along so quickly and how many peoplethat are maybe they want to visit.
This is the first visit that they'vemade to a relative or a family member,
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and they're going to go visit thattombstone, and they want to make
sure that they go and put theflag on that tombstone. You probably have
some personal requests sometimes, hey canit where can I go? Can I
put the flag over here? Wedo, and that's not a problem at
all. We just ask people tolet us know, you know, if
they can give us a call aheadof time or something, just let us
know and we'll make sure that wecan say that for them to put the
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flag there. Yeah, with somany people coming out and the fact that
you know, I think a lotof people would you know, think,
oh, this is like an allday event. I'm going to be there
all day. A better like beprepared when you're talking a forty five minute
to an hour commitment for the actualwork time. That makes it doable for
a lot of people. And Idon't think they're aware of that always.
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Yeah, it's really it goes bypretty quick. I mean it's it's a
good time. A lot of peoplecome out here, so you know,
there's a lot of conversations going on, and it's it's you know, it's
not you know, cemetery is asomber place, but it's not a somber
event. It's a good event.And yeah, we just we really appreciate
all the help we get. Nowthe year I went, now, I
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don't know if that still happens,but the year I went. You also
take care of people with some foodand drink there at the end too.
Yeah, we're doing that again thisyear. We'll have hot dogs available and
bottled water and it's all free.That is a great thing. So for
people that want to be a partof this again, run down maybe the
times in the date because well thisinterview will run a couple of times before
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the big date. But what dothey have to do and what time do
they have to start doing it?All you got to do is show up
at the cemetery. The event ison Thursday, May twenty third, at
four pm. We asked that youstart showing up a little bit early,
because I'd say around try to behere by three point thirty because you know
traffic it's backed up closer to four. It's rain or shine, So if
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it's raining, we're still going tobe out there putting flags out. Severe
weathers in the forecast we will pushit to Friday the twenty fourth at the
same time, and then also we'regoing to be picking the flags back up
on Tuesday, May twenty eighth ateight am. We get a lot less
people for that event, and that'stotally understandable because everyone's got to work.
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But if there's anybody that's available tocome out Tuesday morning at eight am to
help us pick them up, thatwould be that would be awesome. Do
people need to have a visitors pass? Yeah, they can just show up.
This event is considered a special specialrequest, so there's all they got
to do is show their ID whenthey get to the guard check and then
tell them to tell the guards thatthey're here for flag placement event and at
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the National Cemetery, and then theyshould let them right in as we keep
our great segment of the arsenal goinghere. We've got Donald Wren, Director
of Public Affairs US Army Garrison rocketon the Arsenal on the phone today and
Donald, this is exciting because it'snot like it's a bouncing little baby boy,
but it's a tank. And nobody'sgoing to be strong enough to be
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able to lift this thing on theirknee and bounce it on their knee.
But this is an amazing a symmetryin this with this tank that started actually
at the Arsenal a long long timeago. Yeah, that's right, Pat.
The tank was originally produced here backin nineteen nineteen or nineteen twenty,
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so it's returned to its home herein at the Arsenal and to its home
here in the Quad Cities. We'reproud to have this on display here on
the installation. It came back tothe Installation in twenty twenty one and has
been restored by the folks that originallymanufactured it over at the Joint Manufacturing and
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Technology Center here on the Arsenal.So they've they've touched it up and we've
got it out and on display foranybody that visits the installation, they can
they can drive by and walk upand take a look at it and get
up close and personal. It's likea touch a truck event. Well,
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we've got we've got several displays acrossthe installation with with military equipment that they
can visit and take a look at. So it's just another added display on
the installation. So and tell usexactly the name of this tank, because
this is really an oddity because there'snot many left. Right. This is
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the Mark eight Liberty Tank, asyou alluded to. It's one of three
that are still in existence. We'vegot the one here, there's one more
in the Army Historical Inventory at FortMoore, Georgia, and the other one
is on display over in England intheir Tank Museum. Well, I just
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think that it's so great talk aboutyou know, I can pull out from
Lion King and do a Circle ofLife kind of a thing. But yeah,
yeah, we could do something forthat, but we didn't pay for
any of those songs. We appreciatethat. But it's so great that it's
here, and certainly it's great.I'm sure maybe it's coincidental, but just
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with all the other things that aregoing on on the arsenal this month,
that people can check that out overthere, you know, anytime, whether
it's Armed Forces Day or it's aflag placement event later in the month.
They can just stop by any timeand check this out. Well, and
Pat, you bring up a greatpoint. Another message that I'd like to
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get out there is the Arsenal isopen to the public at any time.
All you have to do is goto our visitor Welcome Center at the Mouline
Gate with either two forms of IDor if you happen to have a real
ID, you just need one formof ID and know your Social Security number.
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They'll they'll do their magic and theywill issue a pass that's good for
a year for you to be ableto come on the installation. That opens
up a lot of things that wehave here to include our museum, the
Lock and Damn Visitor Center down atthe Mississippi River Visitor Center, the Davenport
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House Historical home here on the installationfor the guy that you know Davenport is
named after, and our Rock IslandArsenal Museum. So that's just to name
a few of the things that areavailable here on the installation that anybody can
do at any time once you visitand get a path. Yeah, you
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say, you know a few ofthe things. There is so much wonderful
history that people don't know about alwaysthat's on Arsenal Island, and you know,
this is just a piece of it. And since there are only three
in the whole world, why wouldn'tyou want to come and check out this
tank and all of the other thingsassociated with the Arsenal. Definitely agree,
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you know, history, If wedon't acknowledge our history, we've become doomed
to repeat it being aware of andthe Arsenal has added history to this area
and the people of this area area part of that history. So we
want to be able to open upthe things here on posts to be able
to come in and see it forthe community. If you or your organization
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would like to be featured on QuadCity Forum, please visit the contact page
and our station website. Now backto that, Luke and Danny Lynn Howe.
We have Kelly Craft with us rightnow on QC Forum. She's the
program manager at Gilda's Club. Kelly, welcome into the show. I love
talking about Guildness Club. So incase people are like, wait a minute,
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Guildness Club, what in the worldis this? Just give a little
background on what Guildness Club is anddoes here in the Quad Cities. Yeah,
absolutely. Guild's club Quad Cities isa cancer support community and we provide
social and emotional support at no costto anyone impacted by cancer. So that
means someone with an active diagnosis.Now that survivors, friends and family,
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kids and teens. And then wehave programs like support groups, educational workshops,
healthy lifestyle activities like yoga and meditation, social events, and then we're
also a hub for resources and referrals. Well, and speaking of supporting,
you've also got a cancer support communityworkshop, helpline, specialized navigation. It's
a lot in there. What's thatall about? Yeah, So on Monday,
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May thirteenth, twelve to one atour Davenport Clubhouse, we're having a
workshop about a cancer support community resource, their Cancer Support Helpline, So we'll
be talking about how their team canbe a resource to patients and families who
need information. They can help withthings like resources and referrals. And then
they also have navigators that specialize inclinical trials, genetics, pediatric oncology and
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finances, which is a big need. And that workshop can be joined in
person or via zoom. It's notjust for adult you provide those resources for
children too. And what I loveis you're providing at least coming up with
Camp Genesis that support in a muchmore kid friendly atmosphere. Yeah, I'm
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so excited. We're offering Camp Genesisagain this year. It's a week long
overnight camp for kids impacted by cancergoing into fourth through ninth grade next year.
So the kids can have cancer themselvesor they can be impacted by a
loved once diagnosis. And it's completelyfree for those kids thanks to Genesis Cancer
Care Institute support through the Genesis Foundation. And it's a free week of residential
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camp at Camp Shalom and the Cocoawhere they can make connections with other kids
who are also impacted by cancer andthen do all the other fun camp stuff
like archery and canoeing and campfires andsongs and all that good stuff. And
this year camp is June sixteenth throughthe twenty first, and applications are due
on May seventeenth, so get thoseapplications in asap. Another program that's on
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the way here is Cancer Transitions.Yeah. Cancer Transitions is a free two
hour, four week workshop designed tohelp cancer survivors transition from active treatment to
survivorship. So we talk about allsorts of things like getting back to wellness,
emotional health, eating, well staying, active, medical management, all
sorts of things. And then wehave speakers. We get active in each
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of the sessions and we make connectionswith other people in a really similar situation.
So we have a wait list startedfor people who are interested in it,
and once we get enough people onthe list, we can start planning
a series. I love that,and that's really it's such a different mindset
when you're making that transition. It'sgreat to have that support out there.
Yeah, we're excited. A lotof times folks are so focused on their
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treatment during that active treatment phase thatwhen that drops off, it's like,
oh no, what do we donow getting Yeah, getting back to a
new normal. Thanks to Anger Eat, you're able to provide some meals to
a little sustenance. This is stillpretty new. I know we talked about
it last time, but we're justso excited about it. I want to
get the word out again. Thanksto the generosity of Anger Eats, we're
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able to offer anyone impacted by cancerfree frozen meals. So we know cancer
can be expensive, so it's food, and we also know that sometimes people
in treatment are just too tired ornot feeling well enough to prepare meals for
themselves or their family. So ifanyone needs them, they can stop by
either of our clubhouses Davin Porter orMoline and pick up free meals to take
home and heat up in the oven. Again, anyone impacted, so the
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loved ones, the person with adiagnosis, survivors, anyone impacted. I
mean we have individual and family sizedmeals. Merry Anger kind of started all
of this and she fundraised for ourfree and she comes each week to refill
it. So it's really exciting.So, Kelly, you've talked about all
these programs free free to free free. All the things are free, free,
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meals free, It's going to bea cost. There is a cost
somehow, and we would love forpeople to donate. Where should they go,
Kelly, and what can they doto help out if they want to
donate? Of course, we wouldlove that. Our website is the best
place to do that, Gildas CLUBQCdot org or you can give us a
call five six three three two sixseven five zero four. So again that's
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GILDASCLUBQC dot org. And Kelly,thank you, some program manager at Gilda's
Club. Thanks for letting us knowabout all these great services. Yeah,
thanks for having me. If youor your organization would like to be featured
on Quad City Forum, please visitthe contact page and our station website.
Now back to Pat Luke and DannyLinnew talking with former NASCAR driver, current
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racing analysts, philanthropist, TV starand all around great human being Kyle Petty.
Kyle, thank you so much forbeing here on QC Forum today.
Hey, thank you for having metoday. This is really big doings.
We're just so happy to have youcoming into town with your huge charity ride,
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the Kyle Petty Charity Ride across Americaand this year, just describe a
little bit about where you start,why you end up, where you end
up, because this is just sucha great event we want everyone to know
about it. Thank you very much. Yeah, we've been doing the Kyle
Petty Charity Ride across America for thisour twenty eight year. In the last
few years we've gone to doing regionalroutes, but this year we're doing something
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a little bit special, a littlebit different. We're leaving Dead with South
Dakota. We're going over to MountRushmore, then we're headed down to North
Platte, Nebraska, and then overto Omaha and then you get there in
Benton door to stay on the Mississippi. That was a big, big,
big thing for us. We wantedto be close to the Mississippi. And
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then we leave there and we goto Indianapolis, Indiana. That same day
we're having lunch at Churchill Bounds.We go through Kentucky and then into Bowling
Green, Kentucky, to the NationalCorvette Museum, spend the night there,
and then we go into Bristol,Tennessee, where we race the fastest half
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mile in the world, and thenback to Victory Junction. The Victory Junction
is a camp in North Carolina forchildren with chronic and serious medical needs that
our family founded when my oldest sonAdam, was killed in a racing accident
in two thousand and It is justan amazing place. We've seen one hundred
and twenty five thousand kids have eitherwalked through the gates or we've touched with
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camp in some way, shape orform. It's our twentieth anniversary for Camp.
It's hard to believe it's our twentiethanniversary, but it's the twentieth anniversary
for Camp and we're just so excitedto be doing the ride. And we
call this I said, I'll goback and mention it. We call this
our Mayor Icon Ride because we are. The icons of this ride are Rushmore,
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the Mississippi, Indianapolis Motor Speedway,Churchill Downs, the Corvette, and
Bristol, Tennessee. These are Americanicons that we feel like we're going to
spend some time visiting with. Ilove the fact that you're coming across what
I consider to be you know,your flyover states, and I just think
it's so important for people to understandthat there's so much great stuff, Like
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you're talking about iconic things that arehere right in the middle of the US,
and when you're talking about the charityride, so you're doing more than
just visiting iconic things, but you'reyou're raising awareness and money for Victory Junction.
And I just think that's so importantto get that message across. Yeah,
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listen, it has been. Ithas been obviously, it's been my
mission since since we lost our son, and it'll be twenty four years this
year. We started raising money instantlyto build a camp. The camp was
up and running in two thousand andfour. Like I said, we've touched
the lives of one hundred and twentyfive thousand other kids. It's totally free
of charge to all kids that cometo camp, and that is the important
piece that sometimes sometimes is overlooked.We've seen kids from all fifty states,
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from four or five foreign countries,again totally free of charge to them and
their family. And because that wedidn't want to be We didn't want camp
to be a burden for a family. You know that obviously everything that a
family goes through with a child thathas a child, or that the child
has chronic medical conditions or serious medicalneeds, that's that's enough for a family.
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We didn't want to add to that. So the totally free of charge
things is while we're always raising money, always looking for opportunities to sink kids
the camp. So if anybody's listeningand knows a kid that can come to
camp, go to the website fixJunction dot org and please fill out the
form, put their name on it, and we'll get in touch with them
and get them the camp. Ilove that. And now say somebody now
probably a little late this year toget involve the ride if somebody wants to,
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because you've been doing this for awhile if they want to be a
part of the charity ride and theyobviously can't get to South Dakota and get
you know, get all that happening. That's the reason you're doing these stops
all along the way is for peopleto be able to participate like that.
Yo, shoot yeah, yes.Go to go to the website Kylepittycherity Ride
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dot com. You'll see where we'regoing to stop for fuel, where we're
going to be, the things we'regonna do. Uh. And we want
fans to come out. We won'tWe're staying at the Ale Casino there and
Bettendorf, and we want fans tocome out to the parking lot to say
hello. I'll have my dad,Richard Petty will be with us, or
Kenny Wallace, Mike Wallace, KennySchrader, David Reagan, Max PAPIs who
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ran Formula one and and Indy Cars, Rutledgewood from top Gear America and Herschel
Herschel Walker who's the Heisman Trophy WinterNFL Superstar. He'll be there with us.
So they'll sign autographs and take pictures. So it was funny. I
was there on our site and andI ate over it. Sports fans pizza.
Oh yeah, great pizza. Letme go ahead and just give them.
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They've given a big and ran intolike two or three NASCAR fans over
there and they were like, noway, Kyle Petty's standing in here.
This is the off season. Hewouldn't come to Betton door file and I'm
like, yeah, I'm ready formy motorcycle ride. So that was pretty
cool. There are race fans there, so I know you're there. Come
out and see it. Oh absolutely, yeah. They probably thought it was
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like dinner drive or something like where'sthe camera? Yeah, exactly. They
thought I was going to have anothercelebrity there, a bigger celebrity there.
I was going to have dinner with. Let me tell you the pizza is
a celebrity there. I will tellyou that. Okay, well good,
Yes, So people should come outand they should see you, And yes,
you're right, there's some huge NASCARfans that are right here in the
Quad City area, including Danny,who is talking to you right now.
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Oh So if I get a littletongue tied, it's just because I'm just
so darned excited to talk to youand to get the message out about this
because I've been following the Kyle PettyCharity Ride for like a long time,
but this is the first time it'scoming into our area, so I definitely
want people to come out. Soagain, I ow Casino and you're there,
just check the website and maybe you'regoing to be somewhere else along the
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route. We would love you tostop out at those places and get involved.
How can people donate Kyle, Yeah, listen. You can go online
to Kylepitty Charity Ride or dot comor Victory Junction dot org, or just
come out and see us. Wedo a program called because we stop at
a lot of gas stations inconvenience stores, and we do a program called Small
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Change, Big Impact. And youknow, you go in to buy a
pack of gum or buy a coffeeand you got an extra twenty nine cent
in your pocket, just drop itin the tire at twenty nine cent will
help send a kid to camp andhelp change a child's life, and that
that small change has a huge impacton these children. So please, you
know, if you fill it inyour heart to donate, please do If
you're fill it in your heart topray, please do that too, because
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these kids and us on the roadand what we're doing. Prayer always helps
us along the way. It kicksoff on May fourth. And if you're
wondering where they're going to be at, and you all of a sudden see
like a load of motorcycles, that'swhere they are all the way to.
Yeah, that's you, guys.I assume that you're going to have maybe
some kind of an escort or doyou just sort of go just with the
(27:23):
wind. No, So here's whatwe do. We have a paid car
that goes with us, my wifeand another guy riding the pace car and
they pace us in. And aDodge loll Dodge Chargers that looks you'll know
it's you know it's a cop carwhen you see it. We bring one
from from North Carolina that escort usand help us along the way. We
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have two doctors and two nurses thatgo with us. We have two or
three paramedics that ride bikes that arein the pack with us. We have
our own group, We have ourown We're we're a moving city in a
lot of ways. But yes,the local jurisdictions listen that hour, State
Patrolled and the local sheriff's department,the local municipalities there, their police force.
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Have these guys have gone over andbeyond, been over backwards to help
us get into the city and getout of the city, so you'll know
we're there. We don't want tocause havoc, but we want you to
know we're there. Yes, yes, absolutely So again, it's kicks off
May fourth. It ends up inNorth Carolina on May tenth. Around this
area. You're probably gonna start seeingthem on Monday, May sixth, and
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then seeing them depart sometime on Mayseventh. So be looking for them.
Make sure you get out and donate, get an autograph or two, but
make sure you support Victory Junction.It's so important for the Kyle Petty charity
right across America. Kyle, thankyou so much. You just made my
day, my year, my lifetime. Thank you. Thank you so much.
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Dandy, thank you for having usand listen. You get a chance,
come out. We'll get a picturetaken with you between me and my
dad. Oh my gosh. Wellwell yes, I might faint, but
I'll be there. I promise youthat. Thank you. You've been listening
to Quad City Forum, a weeklycommunity service program produced by iHeartRadio. If
you were your nonprofit organization would liketo be featured fleas, visit the contact
(29:17):
page in our station website or contactQuad City Forum in carab iHeartMedia Quad Cities
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