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				Rolling Thunder, Wounded Warriors Honor 9/11 Victims(May 8, 2010)
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 |  |  | ARLINGTON, Va., May 5, 2010 – Rolling Thunder motorcyclists joined Warrior 
	Games athletes in a wreath-laying ceremony today at the Pentagon Memorial 
	here to honor the victims of Sept. 11, 2001. 
 The two parties came together with the Pentagon Memorial Fund as a reminder 
	of the possibilities to which one can aspire when faced with hardships. As 
	difficult as some challenges may seem, it's important to remember that “life 
	goes on,” James Laychak, Pentagon Memorial Fund president, said.
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				| Wounded warrior athletes and Rolling Thunder motorcyclists participate in a wreath-laying ceremony at the Pentagon Memorial on May 5, 2010, in honor of the victims of Sept. 11, 2001. The ceremony was part of the inaugural Warrior Games celebration. The games, which will feature disabled veterans and wounded active duty athletes in Paralympics-style competition, are slated for May 10-14, 2010, in Colorado Springs, Colo. |  |  | “It's always good to kind of stop and remember what happened,” Laychak said. 
	“When things happen that you don't expect, you can still beat it and go on. 
	That's what the Warrior Games is all about, right? The Warrior Games and 
	this memorial remind you that life goes on.” 
 The ceremony marked the second leg for Rolling Thunder in a five-day trek 
	across the country, in which the group that devotes itself to veterans 
	issues and the nation's prisoners of war and servicemembers missing in 
	action is transporting American flags to be flown at next week's inaugural 
	Warrior Games in Colorado Springs, Colo.
 
 The flags were flown over military locations around the globe, including the 
	USS Arizona in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, Korea's demilitarized zone and 
	Germany's Landstuhl Regional Medical Center. Rolling Thunder also is 
	carrying flags that flew over Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan, and Joint Base 
	Balad, Iraq.
 
 Rolling Thunder members transported the flags here from the site of the 
	Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attack in New York, and tomorrow will pay their 
	respects at the Flight 93 memorial in Shanksville, Pa. From there, the flags 
	will be delivered to the Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs for the 
	Warrior Games opening ceremony. Each of the flags will be flown for one day 
	during the five-day competition.
 
 Rolling Thunder's journey is a symbol of freedom in the purest form, said 
	Dale “Wrong Way” Williams from the group's Maryland chapter.
 
 “The fact that we don't sit back on our haunches and let somebody walk all 
	over us, and that we have men and women willing to go out there ensure our 
	freedom – the [Warrior Games] symbolizes freedom in the sincerest way,” 
	Williams said.
 
 The inaugural Warrior Games kick off May 10 and will feature disabled 
	veterans and wounded active duty athletes in Paralympics-style competition.
 
 Rolling Thunder is a nonprofit organization with more than 88 chapters in 
	all 50 states. It works year-round to ensure the nation never forgets that 
	American prisoners of war and missing in action still remain unaccounted for 
	in Southeast Asia. The organization raises funds to help veterans and 
	provides legislative advocacy on veterans' issues. Members volunteer to 
	visit local veterans' hospitals and educate people about the POW/MIA issue
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					photos by Army SFC Michael J. CardenAmerican Forces Press Service
 Copyright 2010
 
					
					
					
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