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THE BULLETIN by the Texas Confederation of Clubs /// Issue 28 /// January 19, 2006

To Send a Reply or a Story to THE BULLETIN
Pro or Con please E-Mail: texascoc@coctexas.org

THE BULLETIN is a news bulletin that contains information written, gathered and compiled by members and supporters of the Texas Confederation of Clubs. These members and supporters are dedicated in the Fight for Freedom from ALL Oppression, Discrimination and Harassment.

The Texas Confederation of Clubs Thank You for subscribing to THE BULLETIN.

To Read Past Issues of THE BULLETIN go to: http://www.coctexas.org/TCOCBulletin.htm

Please Read Disclaimer at the Bottom of THE BULLETIN.
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This Issue of THE BULLETIN:

1) Soldiers For Jesus John & Important Houston COC Meeting This Week-End
2) KC Star & Cell Phone Companies Selling You Out!
3) Rebel Rider MC / ROCA MC & Benefit for Bandido Nomad Rotten Cotton
4) Leslie Cauley & Your Private Phone Records For Sale!
5) White Trash.com & California Helmet Law
6) Narooma News & Worried for nothing, Bikers leave it clean
7) Luke Turf & What's a Biker's life worth in Colorado?
8) In Support of the Troops & James Christopher & Semper Fi
9) This Weeks Funny & Morris W
10) Texas COC Meetings / Events
11) Disclaimer

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1)
Soldiers For Jesus John
Chairman Texas COC Houston Region Chairman

Confederation of Clubs Houston Region Saturday January 21st @ 3:00 pm
The American Legion Riders Post 644
16147 Market St. Channelview TX
Phone # 281-452-0466
Guests Speakers
U.S. Representative Ron Paul (Free constitutional handouts)
Eric Story & Texas BIKER running for a U.S. Congressional seat

Soldiers For Jesus John
Chairman Texas COC Houston Region Chairman

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2)
Information from:
The Kansas City Star

Sprint to join other companies in fighting sale of phone records

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) - Sprint Nextel Corp. said it is joining competitors Cingular Wireless and Verizon Wireless in investigating companies that sell the phone records of their customers.
Sprint said Tuesday that some of its own customer information had been accessed in "limited circumstances" but wouldn't provide details about when or how.
"It is fraudulent activity being carried out by these companies and it is not legal," said David Gunasegaram, a spokesman for Sprint Nextel, which is based in Reston, Va., and has operational headquarters in Overland Park., Kan. "We have launched a full-scale investigation engaging corporate security and our legal team. We are looking at taking legal action."
Cingular and Verizon also have requested court orders against data brokers accused of obtaining the information through fraud.
The Federal Communications Commission's enforcement bureau is looking into companies that obtain a customer's telephone records without the customer's approval or knowledge.
"These records can include some of the most private personal information about an individual," Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein said in a written statement. "Finding out who people are calling and for how long can be like picking someone's brain about their friends, plans or business dealings."
Adelstein said that besides investigating the data brokering companies, he would like to see better security practices by the phone companies to protect customer records.
"I support swift action against carriers that have not complied with our existing rules and procedures," he said.
Verizon began seeking court orders against data brokers in the fall, while Cingular got a federal judge last week to prohibit Data Find Solutions Inc. and 1st Source Information Specialists Inc. from obtaining and selling Cingular customers' information.
Cingular said it believes those companies are behind Web sites that advertise the sale of phone records. Among the services offered include providing the name and address of a cell phone number for $65 and a list of calls made from that number for $110.
The wireless company claims the Web sites get customer information through fraud, such as posing as a customer and asking for information about an account.
The Electronic Privacy Information Center has identified more than 40 Web sites selling phone records or other personal information. The Washington-based research group has asked for the FCC and the Federal Trade Commission to weigh in on the issue.

On the Net:
http://www.sprint.com/

Information from: The Kansas City Star, http://www.kcstar.com

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3)
ROCA MC DFW / S.Y.L.B.

Benefit For
Bandido Nomad Rotten Cotton
Proceeds for his Stem Cell Therapy
Saturday January 28
At the Rebel Rider MC & ROCA MC Club House
In Buleson / $5.00 Entry Includes Food / NOON till ???
Raffle Tickets For
Side of Beef processed & packaged / $10.00 Donation
Harley Davidson European Cut Leather Jacket
Size Large valued at $450.00 / $5.00 Donation
Need Not Be Present To Win Raffle Prizes
50/50 DRAWINGS ----------- DOOR PRIZES
Benefit / Party Location
Directions
Rebel Rider MC & ROCA MC Club House
Take the Alsbury exit from I-35w
Take the Southbound Service Road
Follow service road under the bridge
LOOK RIGHT--- TURN RIGHT --- YOU'RE THERE

ROCA MC DFW / S.Y.L.B.

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4)
Leslie Cauley,
USA TODAY

Firms Offer Private Mobile Phone Records for Sale

(Jan. 17) - Cingular Wireless is taking on companies that have been selling private phone records - the actual numbers dialed, that is - of unwary customers to anyone who asks.
Cingular obtained a temporary restraining order late last week against operators of Locatecell.com and others of its ilk that specialize in offering private cellphone records for a flat fee. There are dozens of such services available, mostly through the Web.
According to Cingular, these services have their employees masquerade as cellphone customers, or even Cingular employees, to wheedle confidential information out of customer-service representatives. That information - ranging from private cellphone numbers to the actual call records of cell and traditional phones - is then sold for a fee.
This new breed of service providers refer to themselves as "data brokers, but we call them data burglars," says Mark Siegel, a spokesman for Cingular, the USA's No. 1 cellphone carrier.
"This is something we take very seriously," Siegel says. "Nothing is more important to us than the privacy of our customers' records."

"We call them data burglars."
-Mark Siegel, a Cingular spokesman

In November, Verizon Wireless filed a lawsuit against a Florida-based agency and its affiliates, accusing them of engaging in similar practices.
In granting a temporary restraining order, a federal court in Atlanta has barred these sorts of agencies from "possessing any confidential customer information obtained from Cingular, regardless of the form or manner of storage." The order also bars companies from "disposing" of such customer information "other than by returning it to Cingular."
Attempts to reach Locatecell were unsuccessful. The agency's voice-mail box was full and not accepting messages Monday. Two e-mails sent to its sales staff, seeking comment, were not answered.
As of Monday, Locatecell.com was still promising that it could provide a list of up to 100 outbound calls placed from almost any phone - cell or landline - for $110-$125. For $95, Locatecell says it can supply a working cellphone number of anybody.
For $65, you can get the name and address of a cellphone customer. Getting the same information for an overseas customer costs $250. Locatecell offers similar services, for similar fees, for traditional landline phones.
Roger Entner, a wireless analyst at Ovum, says such services are "outrageous." Says Entner: "It's like having your credit card information stolen. It's not quite as bad, but it's bad enough."

Leslie Cauley
USA TODAY

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5)
From White Trash.com

Timely hearing for California helmet law
SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- "There's a particular irony in the current circumstance." _ Sen. Gil Cedillo, D-Los Angeles, on Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's lack of a proper motorcycle license after he has opposed driver's licenses for undocumented immigrants.

Perhaps it was bad timing, but the annual bill allowing bikers to ride motorcycles without helmets was in committee two days after the most famous motorcycle accident in California gubernatorial history.

One would presume that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger walking around the Capitol with a fat lip isn't exactly a ringing endorsement for allowing motorcyclists to ride without helmets.

The bill was ultimately killed _ on the same Tuesday afternoon that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger sheepishly explained that he never bothered to get a motorcycle license.

Motorcycle riders wandering through Capitol hallways to lobby legislators took a moment to sympathize with the Harley-riding governor, even if he is on record as supporting the existing helmet law.

Wayne Phillips of Orinda, Calif., carried a helmet that bore a sticker noting, "I wear this helmet under protest." He said he hoped the governor's accident might push Schwarzenegger to support biker's rights in their ongoing struggle with motorists.

Joe Schwirian of Fremont, Calif., said he felt drivers ought to face harsher laws for careless actions on the road. He also noted that in "all of (Schwarzenegger's) movies, he's not wearing a helmet while he's going 120 miles per hour."

Of course, even if the repeal of the helmet law had passed, the governor wouldn't have been eligible: It only would have applied to those with a proper motorcycle license.

Back talk

Conservative talk show hosts "John and Ken" apparently have gotten to Assemblyman Mark Leno, D-San Francisco.

During a Capitol press conference on his sex offender legislation, Leno criticized the KFI-AM hosts for making fun of him. He also blamed Sen. George Runner and Assemblywoman Sharon Runner, husband-and-wife Republicans from Lancaster, for going along with it.

"John and Ken sit with the Runners and make reference to our public safety committee as the pervert committee, and the Runners don't disabuse them of that term," Leno said.

The Runners immediately said they don't condone that opinion.

"That's not my quote and I would never say that and it's inappropriate," said George Runner. "Anybody who's elected to office has been exposed to unkind, untrue, unfair statements, especially on radio."

Arnold's crocodile boots

Schwarzenegger skirted one law this week, but he approached another legal gray area when he showed off the boots he planned to send to Texas Gov. Rick Perry after USC lost the Rose Bowl.

The boots, complete with California state seal and the governor's name, are made of hornback crocodile, according to the governor's office. State law says it is illegal to import with an intent to sell products made of crocodile, polar bear and 22 other animals.

But the boots were custom-made for Schwarzenegger by a Texas boot-maker _ and thereby likely avoids the "intent to sell" aspect of the law.

From: White Trash.com

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6)
Narooma News

Biker gangs contained on Summernats run
Thursday, 19 January 2006

The roar of motorcycles was evident throughout the shire in the last week when motorcycle gangs converged on Moruya and Batemans Bay and the local Rebels Motor Cycle Club held their annual poker run.
Last Monday, January 9, 2006 about 100 Harley Davidson motorcycles roared into Batemans Bay bringing members of the Gypsy Jokers Motorcycle Club to town.
The group gathered at the Bay View Hotel in Orient Street for about an hour before they moved to Moruya where they set up camp in Russ Martin Park much to the dismay of local residents.
There numbers later swelled to about 300 when members of the Fourth Reich motorcycle group joined them.
Although the clubs were camped in an alcohol free zone they set up a bar-tent.
Police consulted with Eurobodalla Shire Council and it was decided the best option was to let the groups camp overnight on condition they left Russ Martin Park clean the next day.
Police superintendent Jeff Loy of Batemans Bay police had spoken with the leaders of both clubs, who had said they intended no trouble while Supt Loy emphasised there would be a strong police presence.
About 30 operational police and 15 officers were on hand during the night and 12 remained to ensure a smooth departure on Tuesday morning.
Supt Loy said although the motorcycle clubs were camped in an alcohol free zone, police had contained the group to one area and had turned back several riders who had attempted to walk into town with alcohol.
"You would not have heard a motorbike engine after 6.30pm and anyone who had tried to leave would have been breath tested," he said.
Moruya Chamber of Commerce president Gabriele Harding said that as far as she could tell the club members had caused no trouble.
"I didn't hear a peep out of them overnight and they didn't cause a ruckus," she said.
After the quiet night the clubs left the park clean and roared out of town to return to their bases near Wollongong.

Narooma News

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7)
Luke Turf

What is a biker's life worth in Colorado?

On March 28, 2005, toothpaste was Eli Harris Ashby's top priority as he cruised toward home on his crotch rocket to pick up his girlfriend, Carly Drienka. The two were planning to go to Target so they could use a gift card to pick up some items -- toothpaste, first and foremost -- for his apartment.
Life had been good to Ashby in his twentieth year. He was working as a sprinkler fitter and was planning to propose to Drienka. He'd recently bought a new red Yamaha 1000 -- and a helmet to go with it. He was always careful to wear the helmet, because he wanted to be around for the family he hoped to have with Drienka.
Unfortunately, Ashby's helmet didn't save his life when 82-year-old William Groseclose collided with him that spring day.
Ashby made a right-hand turn onto Wadsworth Boulevard from West 80th Avenue in Arvada. He merged into the right lane, heading north. Groseclose, who was driving a Buick, was southbound on Wadsworth and making a left turn into the Safeway parking lot, just in front of Ashby.
The two collided before Groseclose made it into the lot.
"I could see down the street for a hundred yards, and there wasn't anyone coming," Groseclose says.
Ashby's bike crashed into the passenger side of Groseclose's car, shattering both windows; his helmet landed on the front passenger floorboard. Police noted a gouge in the concrete where the motorcycle landed. Ashby was pronounced dead on the scene.
Jake Coyle was driving on Wadsworth at the time and saw the accident. He recognized the bike and pulled over, hoping that it wasn't his friend Eli's red Yamaha. His worst fears were confirmed. Coyle took the coroner over to the Ashby family home, where he told his friend's father, Greg, the tragic news. Then he called Drienka -- on Ashby's broken cell phone -- and told her what happened.
"He was a great guy. He planned on having six kids," says Eli's mother, MervEllen Ashby. "I was really looking forward to having those grandkids and him for the rest of my life, not having him run over in the street like a dog. He was a great guy. There's this incredible hole in our life.
"We always told Eli all these horror stories about motorcycles," she continues, "but we couldn't talk him out of it, not for a lack of trying. People drive like frickin' idiots here. I've never seen a city where people drive like this, and it's because there's no penalty."
In fact, Groseclose was able to renew his license at a Division of Motor Vehicles office one week after hitting Ashby, even though he'd been driving with an expired license.
"The fact that he can't lose his driver's license for killing our son is horrifying," says MervEllen. "Right-of-way laws have no teeth."
Part of the problem was that when Groseclose went to renew his license, his ticket had not yet appeared in the department's records. "If the ticket had hit our system, given it was a fatality in this accident, Mr. Groseclose or anyone else who had been involved in a fatality would not have received a license, pending re-examination," says DMV spokeswoman Diane Reimer.
But Groseclose did get his license back, and he now faces the charge of careless driving resulting in death, which carries a possible one-year jail sentence and a fine of up to $1,000 in Jefferson County. The Ashbys asked the district attorney to offer Groseclose a plea in which he'd give up his license in exchange for the jail time; Groseclose says the deal was never presented to him. For the charges of driving with an expired license and failure to yield, he faces an additional $200 in fines.
The case is set for a jury trial on January 25, but Groseclose says he plans to plead guilty. Witness statements about the crash are inconsistent: Half of the people the police interviewed said Ashby was riding responsibly and obeying the speed limit; the other half said he was being reckless, and two said he was doing a wheelie. Additionally, Ashby wasn't licensed to drive a motorcycle at the time of the crash. He had completed the seventeen-hour motorcycle training class sponsored by A Brotherhood Active Towards Education (ABATE), which qualified him for a state license; he just hadn't gone to the DMV to pick it up. Regardless, Groseclose believes a jury would find him guilty because he turned left into Ashby.
"I'm sick about it," Groseclose says. "And I'm also sick for Eli's family and his friends."
Drienka and her mother, Lori, are working to keep Ashby's memory alive. They recently opened the Eli Ashby Healing Arts Center of Arvada in honor of the son-in-law and husband they had hoped to have. Lori had been looking at potential property for a healing-arts center just two weeks before the accident, and she almost bailed on the project after it happened, but she says a voice told her to "just do it."
Now she offers healing classes for people and animals, as well as massage and sessions with a clairvoyant. Lori also had ABATE come to the center and put on a program called Operation Save a Life, in which volunteers give motorists a 45-minute presentation to raise awareness about motorcycles and why they ride the way they do, taking up whole lanes and frequently maneuvering around cars.
"It's not that we don't know what we're doing; there's a purpose to it," says Terry Howard, Colorado's state coordinator for ABATE.
The organization counts Ashby as one of 81 motorcyclists killed in 2005 on Colorado roads; that's up from 80 in 2004 and 67 in 2003. And 2006 hasn't gotten off to a much better start. On January 10, two Harley-Davidson riders were hit by a Lexus on Speer Boulevard, causing them to crash into the two other bikes traveling with them. Though there were no fatalities, there were severe injuries, and the driver, Anna Abbott, has been charged with careless driving resulting in bodily injury.
Mike and Chris LaFore are all too familiar with this these types of tragedies -- and the light penalties served on those causing the accident ("Ride of Their Life," January 13, 2005). The LaFores own a custom-motorcycle shop in Lakewood, where their son Christian worked until he was killed in July 1999 -- while riding the bike he'd built. The woman who ran into him was never charged in his death. In October 2004, the LaFores lost their second son, Jace, to a motorcycle accident. He was hit by Gregory Nester, who was sentenced to one year in jail and a $1,000 fine, the maximum penalty.
This legislative session, state senator Lois Tochtrop intends to introduce a bill, which ABATE helped author, that would stiffen the penalties for careless or reckless driving resulting in death or serious bodily injury. Under the proposed law, a driver charged with careless driving resulting in serious bodily injury would face a six-month revocation of his license and a $500 mandatory fine. For death, the maximum penalty of $1,000 would be mandatory, and drivers would lose their license for one year, with the possibility of a year in jail.
Four years ago, when she was a state representative, Tochtrop introduced a similar bill that failed. She believes she'll have more success this time because the legislation would apply to more than just bikers; it would also include bicyclists, skateboarders, pedestrians and anyone else who is the victim of a careless or reckless driver.
"It's gotten crazy out there," says Tochtrop, who rides her own Harley-Davidson less frequently these days.

Luke Turf

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8)
In Support of the Troops: From the Texas Confederation of Clubs

We just want to say
"THANK YOU"
for all you do to preserve FREEDOM at home and abroad!

We Shall Never Forget!

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President Abraham Lincoln

Congressmen who willfully take actions during wartime that damage morale and undermine the military are saboteurs and should be arrested, exiled or hanged.

President Abraham Lincoln

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Article:
The Good Life

About 25 years ago, I saw a painting that touched a place in me that I thought I had sufficiently protected. It was at the Cowboy Hall of Fame in Oklahoma City. I don't remember the name of the artist, but I will always remember his work. The painting was a depiction of a cowboy, rough cut, sunburned, grizzled, a man with the bark still on him, clad in a yellow rain poncho and an old dirty cowboy hat. The rain poured down as he sat to eat a hard-earned meal. As he bent his head down to take the first bite, the rain water which had pooled on the brim of his hat funneled down into his tin plate of beans. The work was titled "The Good Life".

I knew what the artist meant as soon as I saw the title. I identified with the old cowboy, and knew him immediately. I didn't have to know his name, or where he was from, or his politics, or anything else about him to know that he understands about The Good Life.

I have met the spirit of this cowboy many times, many places. The circumstances were different, the clothes were different, the names were different, but the eyes... The eyes were the same. The guys who understand The Good Life come in all shapes, sizes, colors, and ages. But their eyes... Their eyes tell the story.

Their eyes reflect the cold miserable rain and the fetid, sticky mud. They tell about the oppressive heat and the dust that sticks to their sweat. Their eyes speak about the flies and mosquitoes and leeches and hookworms and malaria. They describe the taste of dirty well water and iodine tablets and green Kool- Aid.

Their eyes tell about cold C-rations and hot Carling's Black Label beer. They tell about the nights - the nights when it was so dark. The nights when their imaginations tried to sneak up on them. The nights when reality exploded all around them. The nights when they were the Hunter and the Hunted.

But their eyes also reflect the other side of The Good Life. Their eyes prove that they have been tested and that they passed the test. They have a confidence, a self-assuredness, a knowledge that they can handle anything that comes up. They have been through the fire and came out with a sharp edge.

And these men also have the ability to recognize other men who know The Good Life. They have the same sense of humor that other people just don't get. They share the memory of a maniac in a Smokey Bear who taught them the basics of The Good Life. They share the memory of Brothers lost, and of Brothers found. They share the nightmares and the laughter. They share the tears of crippling sorrow, and the tears of utter joy, and the tears of spine-tingling pride.

There is no greater honor than to sit in the rain and share a plate of beans with a group of men who understand The Good Life.

Semper Fidelis
L/cpl Smith
We don't live in freedom. Freedom lives in us!

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9)
This Weeks Funny From: Morris W

Pistol pack'n Momma
This is a true account recorded in the Police Log of Sarasota, Florida.

An elderly Florida lady did her shopping and, upon
returning to her car, found four males in the act of leaving with her vehicle. She dropped her shopping bags and drew her handgun, proceeding to scream at the top of her voice, "I have a gun, and I know how to use it! Get out of the car!"

The four men didn't wait for a second invitation.
They got out and ran like mad. The lady, somewhat shaken, then proceeded to load her shopping bags into the back of the car and got into the driver's seat. She was so shaken that she could not get her key into the ignition. She tried and tried, and then it dawned on her why. For the same reason she did not understand why there was a football, a Frisbee and two 12 packs in the front seat.

A few minutes later, she found her own car parked four or five spaces farther down. She loaded her bags into the car and drove to the police station to report her mistake.

The sergeant to whom she told the story couldn't stop laughing. He pointed to the other end of the counter, where four pale men were reporting a car jacking by a mad, elderly woman described as white, less than five feet tall, glasses, curly white hair, and carrying a large handgun. No charges were filed.

Moral of the story?

If you're going to have a Senior Moment, make it memorable.

This Weeks Funny From: Morris W

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10)
Texas Confederation Of Clubs Meetings

Jan 21
Texas COC Houston Meeting
Do You Love Your Country?
Meeting Held At 3pm
American Legion Riders Post 644
16147 Market St. Channelview TX

Jan 28
Texas COC Northwest Meeting
4pm at the Aces & Eights MC Club House

Jan 29th
Texas COC Austin Meeting
Meeting Held At 1:30pm
Cindy's Gone Hog Wild
Hwy 71 East of Austin in Garfield

Feb 18
Texas COC San Antonio Meeting
1pm at Sam's Burger Joint
in San Antonio

Texas COC Tyler Meeting
February 26th
Meetings Held at 2pm at Fatboys
in White House

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***National MRO Event***
NCOM Convention
21st Annual
May 11th, 12th & 13th
Louisville, Kentucky
For More Info: http://www.aimncom.com/page_1.html
Every Club From Texas Should Send At Least One Member!

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*** Attend a Texas MRO Meeting Near You***
Support Your Local ABATE & TMRA2
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***Texas COC Member & Texas COC Support Member Events***
for more info on EVENTS GO TO: www.coctexas.org

Jan 21
32nd Lost Alaskan Motorcycle Run
Randolph Motorcycle Association
Kirby, TX

Jan 28
Desperados MC
2nd Annual Chili Cookoff
Kilgore, TX @ County Line Club

Jan 28
Rebel Riders MC / ROCA MC
Benefit for Bandido Nomad Rotten Cotton
Fort Worth, TX

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Get Out and SUPPORT Those who keep your Rights to Ride Free & Live Free
Alive!!!!

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11)
Disclaimer:

Texas Confederation of Clubs Members and Supporters are dedicated in the fight for Freedom from ALL Oppression, Discrimination and Harassment.

The Texas Confederation of Clubs retains its right to edit all posted stories and the Texas Confederation of Clubs retains all rights to determine what is posted.

The content of THE BULLETIN "IS NOT" for commercial publication or commercial redistribution. To use information from THE BULLETIN is strictly prohibited for commercial use without the express written consent of the Texas Confederation of Clubs.

The Texas Confederation of Clubs Is Not Responsible For Content of the Stories, but is merely posting stories it has received and the Texas Confederation of Clubs "IS NOT" responsible for the validity of said content.

The content posted is not necessarily the view or opinion of the Texas Confederation of Clubs or its members, supporters or subscribers.

The Texas Confederation of Clubs hopes you will share information from THE BULLETIN with your fellow Americans for the enjoyment of reading and being informed.

Thank You ***** The Texas Confederation Of Clubs ***** texascoc@coctexas.org

Disclaimer:

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