Posted on 09/26/2004 4:28:56 PM PDT by Ragtime Cowgirl
Wal-Mart Hosts Appreciation Picnic for Walter Reed PatientsBy Samantha L. Quigley WASHINGTON, Sept. 26, 2004 Good weather, good music and great food combined for one picnic full of thanks and appreciation from Walter Reed Army Medical Center patients.
The Military Appreciation Picnic, sponsored by Wal-Mart on Sept. 25, was the result of a company official's visit with a Walter Reed patient and former Wal- Mart employee. Ray Bracy, Wal-Mart's vice president for federal and international public affairs, had stopped to chat with Henry "Austin" Reed and asked what he'd like most while he were in town. Bracy said Reed's request was simple: He wanted to go out and have lunch somewhere other than the cafeteria. "Somewhere" turned out to be a civilian restaurant near Walter Reed, which made Reed start thinking. He wanted to give fellow patients a new dining experience too. That spurred Bracy and Lee Scott, Wal-Mart's chief executive officer, who was also on that visit, into action. Three months later they had the food, the music and servicemembers at the picnic held in the Mologne House courtyard at Walter Reed. And that brought excitement from patients like Sgt. Dawn Adamson, with the 157th MP Company, West Virginia National Guard, who has been at Walter Reed for a little over a year. "I think it's awesome (and) the food is excellent," she said. Adamson, a veteran of Operation Iraqi Freedom, thinks the recreational events, like the picnic, are important to remind the patients that the "outside" world hasn't forgotten them. "There are soldiers here, including myself, that are stuck here," she said. Adamson added that "people do appreciate what we've done, that they do recognize that we are here." "It gets you out of your 'poor me,' you know, 'all my problems' mode," she said. "It gives a chance to meet with other soldiers and other people, civilians, that really do appreciate you. It makes you feel good." Others said such events are good from the "something different" aspect too. Army Staff Sgt. Ron Lawler, 660th Transportation Company, said the recreational events are big morale boosts to those who have been at Walter Reed for a while. "If you're here day in and day out, you get so bored yeah it helps," Lawler said, whose wife usually drives six-and-a-half hours from Ohio to visit him on the weekends. Servicemembers who attended the picnic to show their support emphasized another importance to events like the appreciation picnic. "It's important to keep supporting our soldiers when they come back from Iraq and Afghanistan -- show them that we're still with them even after they return," said Kye Allen, who works in aviation systems at Army National Guard offices in Arlington, Va. Wal-Mart's Bracy said the picnic feedback was positive. The one thing that surprised him was an echo from the Vietnam era. "As a veteran myself during the days of the Vietnam War, I found it interesting that some of the feelings that some of these folks have are similar to those days, that they're worried that people here don't appreciate them," Bracy said. "(They) sort of all said that they realize through events like this one, and others, there's a lot of people doing nice things for them." One person who did nice things for the wounded servicemembers at the picnic was songwriter Chuck Cannon. He performed a brief concert for the crowd, including "American Soldier," which he wrote for country music star Toby Keith. Those working at the event were there to show their appreciation too. And in return people like Jerry "Chef Bubba" Womble received thanks from troops for preparing the feast. Womble, who said he's fed the Dallas Cowboys, three presidents and a prince and princess, noted that "nothing has felt as good to me as coming here today to do this." He is new products director for Club Marketing Services. "It's just been a wonderful experience," he said. "I'm just one old fat boy from Texas that represents millions and millions of people out there, and man, we love you guys," he told the patients. Chef Bubba worked with his team, including Club Marketing Services CEO, Dalton Lott, to cook enough food for 1,000 people. By the end, most serving dishes were empty. Lott's company provided food for the picnic, and he provided the words of appreciation directly to the servicemembers. "People across America appreciate what you're doing and back you 100 percent. Mainland America - the people in the heart of America - love, appreciate you and thank you for what you've done."
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"As a veteran myself during the days of the Vietnam War, I found it interesting..they're worried that people here don't appreciate them... they realize through events like this one, and others, there's a lot of people doing nice things for them."
... Jerry "Chef Bubba" Womble received thanks from troops for preparing the feast.
Womble, who said he's fed the Dallas Cowboys, three presidents and a prince and princess, noted that "nothing has felt as good to me as coming here today to do this."
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(Click for Walter Reed Guest Book)
~YPing!~
God bless them, what a wonderful thing to do. I wish I lived closer to that part of the country, I'd love to visit our wounded warriors. They DO need to know how much we love them and how often we think of them.
I'm thinking $1000 shopping certificates each would be better.
You will enjoy this story.
The vets thought the dinner was very nice.
Why don't you drop a mil and get them the certificates?
I think the folks that have destroyed are manufacturing base and Ma and Pop stores can pony up that money. God, you are such a prostitute.
And you're a classless, ignorant woman.
Wal-Mart gives the injured soldiers a nice meal and an evening of entertainment, and you have the gall to trash the company.
Are you ever going to grow up?
No, I said beans and franks is nice, but they could do a lot more. Apparently, you don't think military families deserve more than a picnic. I do, I guess we'll agree to disagree.
Of course they do. There are plenty of other companies out there that can do the "more."
Wal-Mart did a very good thing. Maybe it'll kick-start some others.
But it's graceless to criticize them.
I said, "Yeah, that's nice, but some of these families are really feeling a pinch. Some generous gift certificates would help out a lot."
Shame on you for having a problem with that.
I think it's wonmderful, but do you get it? There is a local steakhouse owner that treats the folks at Walter Reed to free dinners all the time. Steaks and all the works. And he is just a small business owner. The fact that you don't think a multi-national--practically the richest corporation on the planet-- can do more than a local small business owner shows how out of whack your thinking is.
When someone invites you for dinner, do you ask them for $20 when you're headed out the door?
It shows a lack of manners to not be grateful for a kind gesture.
You could learn a lot from these injured veterans.
The fact that you are graceless enough to upbraid Wal-Mart because they gave these veterans a nice evening instead of a Cadillac indicates to me that you are not a grateful person.
I spent 2 days at Walter Reed recently and must agree that these special picnics and visits from "personalities" are so important. The young man I was visiting had lost a foot, severely injured his right hand, lost sight in both eyes, has a ruptured ear drum which will require surgery. He has undergone 11 surgeries in 6 weeks while at Walter Reed. Sight has been partially restored to his right eye following one surgery. Left eye is patched until next week following 4 hours of surgery last week. He never saw the land mine that was remotely triggered that day in Iraq. He is fearful of "packages" that are delivered to his room. A thoughtful UPS deliveryman gently reassured us that they check the packages too. The box he had just delivered, and that I opened, contained great cookies.
Mologne House is where I was able to stay with his Mom during my visit. This HOTEL is beautiful. Many who are there have been discharged from the hospital proper and are living there while undergoing therapy and continuing to heal.
Don Imus was there the day I arrived and saw my friend in Physical Therapy. The following day Imus mentioned that he had met this great young man wearing a Boston Red Sox T-shirt. Can't tell you how much that lifted the spirits of this 21 year old. The following day Imus noted that the equipment in the Physical Therapy unit really should be updated. Hope that message got through, perhaps to a corporation that might choose to donate to that cause.
16 operating rooms working 7 days a week...5 helicopters landing in about 5 hours one day I was there...hope,sorrow,tears shed for both... A picnic to lift spirits had to be a special treat and an aid to healing. Thank You Wal-Mart..
They didn't give anything to me. I am speaking out on the behalf of others, or don't you see that? You can give a gift and the thought can be commendable and it can still look cheap. They look cheap. I'm glad they are doing somthing. Something is better than anything, but they could do a whole lot more. If they gave gift certificates to these Walter Reed families, it would be great publicity for them anyway.
They gave the Walter Reed families a picnic?? Hello, a local Girl Scout troop could've done something of that magnitude. I think they're cheap.
Didn't Pontiac just give hundreds of cars away to bored housewives? You demand too little of these companies. And you should expect them to do more for America's heroes.
You're the one with the problem, not me.
You are cheap, so you think it's ok. You have no clue what they could've down. They are awash in money-- and all they could swing is a picnic. They're cheap. And they didn't give it to me, I'm not biting the hand that fed me. I am trying to get them to do more-- and they can do so much more. You're content with them being cheap, I'm not.
Not bored housewives. Poor housewives.
Pontiacs were given, but these women now ow $7000 in income taxes for their "gift."
I just think it's crass to criticize a company for doing something nice.
My momma raised me better than that.
Say, when you have a picnic for a thousand people, can I come?
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