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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Andersonville National
Historic Site, Rolling Thunder®
Chapters from 11 States, Georgia Southwestern State
University to Honor Nation's POWs/MIAs, Sept. 17-20,
2008
Andersonville, Ga.
(Aug 28, 2008) - Rolling Thunder's 2008 Ride
Home - a multi-day annual activity held in
conjunction with the National Park Service's
Andersonville National Historic Site and Georgia
Southwestern State University to recognize and honor
the nation's Prisoners of War (POW) and those
Missing in Action (MIA) - will be held in
Andersonville and Americus, Ga., Sept. 17-20, 2008.
"The 2008 Ride
Home, which is supported this year by Rolling
Thunder®
chapters from 11 states, is part of a series of
events conducted jointly with the National Park
Service in Andersonville to honor those former POWs
from all wars who have returned home and remember
those who are still listed as MIA," said Jim Moyer,
Ride Home board chairman.
According to Moyer,
more than 1,000 Rolling Thunder members are expected
to gather in Andersonville and Americus to honor an
estimated 100 former POWs scheduled to attend this
year's program of events as guests of Rolling
Thunder.
While Friday,
Sept.19, is the official National POW/MIA
Recognition Day, the four days of recognition
activities begin at 11 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 17,
with a convocation sponsored by the National Park
Service and hosted by Georgia Southwestern State
University at the Student Success Center in
Americus.
The guest speaker
will be Joseph Hudson of Alamogordo, N.M. He was a
23-year-old U.S. Army specialist with the 507th
Maintenance Group, Fort Bliss, Tex., who was shot
three times, captured and held by Saddam Hussein's
Iraqi Army from March 23, 2003 until April 13, 2003.
On Thursday, Sept.
18, through Saturday, Sept. 20, the Park Service
will host Bataan Death March survivor Colonel Glenn
Frazier at the National Prisoner of War Museum at
the Andersonville National Historic Site. Frazier,
who was an underage U.S. Army volunteer from Fort
Deposit, Ala., in 1941, will be autographing his
book, "Hell's Guest", which is his account of three
harrowing years as a prisoner of war.
On Friday, Sept.
19, the official National POW/MIA Recognition Day,
Rolling Thunder's formal activities will begin at 10
a.m. with a tribute service, "Keeping the Promise,
We Will Not Forget" at the First Baptist Church in
Americus.
Scheduled speakers
include: U.S. Air Force Major General Albert G.
(Jerry) Rodgers whose final active duty assignment
was Deputy Chief of Staff for Logistics at Tactical
Air Command Headquarters at Langley, AFB, Va.; U.S.
Navy Captain Ronald Harrell, Commander of the FFG
(Fast Frigate) Class Squadron 14 at Naval Station
Mayport, Fla.; Stephen E. Thompson, Family and
Veteran Liaison for the Joint POW/MIA Accounting
Command in Honolulu, Hawaii; and, Dr./Rev. Chuck
Gass, the staff chaplain at the VA Medical Center in
Gainesville, Fla.
A Rolling Thunder
escort to the tribute service for the former POWs is
scheduled to depart for the Baptist church from the
Wal-Mart parking lot in Americus at 9 a.m.
At 1
p.m. that afternoon the National Prisoner of War
Museum in Andersonville will unveil a commemorative
plaque honoring POWs from the U.S. Army's 42nd
"Rainbow" Division.
Formed
in August 1917, the "Rainbow" nickname was given to
the division after Colonel Douglas MacArthur, the
new division's Chief of Staff (and ultimately its
commander), remarked that "the 42nd Division
stretches like a Rainbow from one end of America to
the other" because it was comprised of National
Guard units from 26 states and the District of
Columbia.
The division, which saw service in both World Wars
was deactivated in 1946; however it returned in 1947
as a National Guard Division for New York, the state
of its birth.
Currently headquartered at the
Glenmore Armory in Troy, N.Y., the division includes
Army National Guard units from 14 states:
Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts,
Michigan, Mississippi, New Hampshire, New Jersey,
New Mexico, New York, Rhode Island, South Carolina,
Vermont and Wisconsin.
Activities on Friday
will continue at 4:30 p.m. with Rolling Thunder's
annual tribute dinner followed by a candlelight
remembrance ceremony scheduled to start at 7 p.m.
Both activities will be at the Windsor Hotel in
Americus.
The Missing Man
Table, which honors the nation's POW/MIAs, will be
the focal point of the evening. The single round
table with six empty place settings symbolize
Americans from each of the five services - - Army,
Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, Coast Guard - - and
civilians who cannot attend and will be
participating in the evening's activities in spirit
only.
On Saturday, Sept.
20, Rolling Thunder's Annual POW Recognition will
begin at 10 a.m. at the Rostrum at Andersonville
National Cemetery. The ceremony honors POWs who have
returned home from World War II, Korea, Vietnam and
the Gulf wars.
A Rolling Thunder
Heroes Escort Ride is scheduled to depart for the
Andersonville National Historic Site from the
Wal-Mart parking lot in Americus at 9 a.m.
The 1-14th
Aviation Regiment from Fort Rucker, Ala., will open
the 10 a.m. ceremony with a helicopter flyover of an
AH-64D Apache Longbow and an OH-58D Kiowa Warrior.
A Roll Call of
former POWs attending the ceremony will precede a
special presentation to each.
Music will be
provided by the U.S. Marine Band stationed at the
Albany Marine Corps Logistics Base, SSgt Kristine
Streng conducting.
Rolling Thunder
chapters sponsoring the 2008 Ride Home are
located in Melbourne, Fort Myers, Jacksonville,
Gainesville, Inverness and Sanford, Fla.; Waverly
Hall, Ga.; Hartland, Mich.; Oxford, Miss; Neshanic
Station, N.J.; Newburgh, N.Y.; Statesville,
Fayetteville, Franklinton, Wilmington, Morrisville
and Jacksonville, N.C.; Cleveland, Ohio; Coweta,
Okla.; Cheltenham, Penn; Shelby and North Myrtle
Beach, S.C.
The national
organization, Rolling Thunder, Inc. was organized in
1987 to raise awareness of POW, MIA and Veterans
rights issues. It is known for its annual
demonstration "Ride For Freedom" in Washington, D.C.
during Memorial Day weekend.
For more
information visit both
www.POWRideHome.org and
www.nps.gov/ande/planyourvisit/things2do.htm
Editor's Note:
Rolling Thunder contacts
are Jim "Moe" Moyer, chair, (407) 448-1181,
moehog@verizon.net , or Fran Harrison, media
liaison, (727) 398-3984,
faharrison@earthlink.net .
The National Park
Service, Fred Boyles, superintendent, Andersonville
National Historic Site, (229) 924-0343,
fred_boyles@nps.gov .
At Georgia Southwestern
State University, Stephen Snyder, (229) 931-2037,
ssnyder@gsw.edu .
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