CA VI President – San Diego, CA
SWC Vice Chairman – West
Presented by Harley Davidson of Tucson and The Hog Pit. Starting at 6pm. Bike Night is the 3rd Thursday of every month. We have exclusive bike parking in the east parking lot, various vendors and plenty of give-aways. While there, try our Slow and Low smoked BBQ, Original BBQ sauces and rubs, all made in house by chef John Mertes. Food & Bar specials. Come early and avoid traffic problems. Free Admission
The Hog Pit
6910 E. Tanque Verde
Tucson, AZ
520-722-4302
Omaha Police follow a robbery suspect who fires on officers during the pursuit as well as a shootout at the end, where one cruiser ends up in a less than desireable position.
One of the best police chase videos I’ve seen in a long time.
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Bike Night at Fox and Hound with Arizona Victory and KIIM-FMPresented by Arizona Victory and KIIM-FM. Join us for Bike Night at the Fox and Hound on La Cholla every 3rd Tuesday of the month starting at 6pm for great specials, Dyno runs and bike games, door prizes and best of all win — CASH PRIZES. Meet up at Arizona Victory Tucson, Kickstands up at 5:30pm. 6pm.
Arizona Victory
1102 N. Anita Ave.
Tucson, AZ
520-770-9500
Fox and Hound
7625 N. La Cholla Blvd.
Tucson, AZ
520-575-1980
Nice sidecars. Some I have posted before but some are new. I could see some of these attached to some of our members bikes.
Bike Nite at The LOOP! Presented by The LOOP, Taste of Chicago. Come and enjoy the only Bike Night in Oro Valley. The Loop, Taste of Chicago is where you want to be on the first and third Tuesday of each month! Come in and enjoy our Bike Nite menu featuring Biker Babe Brats, Harley Hoagies, Pan Head Pizza and Road Rash Ravioli. AWESOME drink specials all night long! Biker-Only parking on the north side of The LOOP. Bike wash when weather looks great. Enjoy sports on one of our many HD TVs around the bar, or chill on the patio (smoker friendly) with an ice-cold beverage. Win The LOOP Gift Certificates. “Best V-Twin” in Show Certificate awarded at every event! Don’t miss the fun, food and friendships only at The LOOP. Starts at Dusk.
The LOOP
10180 N. Oracle Rd.
Oro Valley, AZ
520-878-0222
On Saturday July 10th our monthly breakfast was held at the Vail Steak House. In attendance was Stan, Harry, Twan, Brenda, Ray, and The Rev.
Got this from a fellow retired TPD Officer
This is chilling…
Both of these SOB’s should have been put to death instead of us paying their room and board for the rest of their lives.
“Anyone against the AZ law 1070 should see this video. Tell me our bill should not be passed! These people are coming to our State, but they may very well end up in yours. Don’t let the sob stories fool you.
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MILWAUKEE – It’s the roar that made Milwaukee famous — the distinctive throaty rumble of a Harley-Davidson motorcycle. But that much-loved racket could be rumbling away to another state if the company cannot bring down its labor costs.
Harley-Davidson warned employees in April that it will move its Wisconsin manufacturing operations elsewhere if it cannot cut millions of dollars at the factories that build the bikes known as “Milwaukee Iron.”
Harley’s corporate headquarters would remain here, but that’s small consolation to a community that has already endured repeated blows to its civic identity.
“When you think of Milwaukee you think of beer, brats and Harley-Davidson,” said Steve Daily, a researcher at the Milwaukee County Historical Society. “Right or wrong, that’s what it is.”
But that’s been changing. For example, the corporate parent of beer giant Miller parent moved its U.S. headquarters to Chicago in 2008 after joining its domestic operations with Molson Coors Brewing Co. Then there was Schlitz, which billed itself as “the beer that made Milwaukee famous” until financial and labor problems forced it to sell out to a Detroit company in the 1980s.
That leaves Harley-Davidson Inc. as the city’s lone signature brand. It’s also a magnet for tourists, many of whom want to visit the factories where Harley engines are made.
“We get asked frequently where the plants are,” said Paul Upchurch, the president of the VISIT Milwaukee tourism bureau. “A lot of people around the world associate Milwaukee with the home of Harley.”
Harley chief executive Keith Wandell said the company will make its decision on whether to move in the next two months. Harley executives are already scouting out other states, though Wandell will not say which ones.
The company, he said, would also be open to incentives to keep the 1,630 manufacturing jobs in Wisconsin. But the idea that it could move production elsewhere stuns many Harley loyalists.
“You can’t describe it. They’ve got so much history here. They’ve just become the blood of the community,” said Tom Steepy, a lifelong rider and the director of the suburban Milwaukee chapter of the Harley Owners Group, or HOG. “If they moved their manufacturing, it would just create a void you can’t fill.”
Harley has been a local fixture for more than a century. It all started in 1903 when 23-year old William S. Harley and 22-year old Arthur Davidson began selling motorcycles built in a cramped wooden shed.
The company later built motorcycles for the U.S. military in both world wars, which helped introduce the bikes to a global audience that saw them as an American icon.
“They symbolize the classic American values of independence and hard work, freedom, all those values,” said Kanti Prasad, a marketing professor at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee business school. “Harley-Davidson is a uniquely American phenomenon.”
And a Milwaukee phenomenon. Prasad said when he travels to Europe, China or Japan most people respond blankly when he says he’s from Milwaukee. Then he points out it’s Harley’s hometown and their faces light up with recognition.
As storied a company as Harley has been, it’s weathered some rough spots, too, most notably in 1984, when a banker had the option of allowing the company to refinance a $90 million loan or forcing them to declare bankruptcy.
At the last minute, the banker allowed the company to refinance. According to the story, it’s because he owned a Harley.
The famed motorcycles have also had a long history with Hollywood. They’ve appeared in films from “Easy Rider” to the more recent “Simpsons” movie. Elvis Presley rode one. And so did the Fonz in the very early episodes of “Happy Days” — the classic TV sitcom set in Milwaukee.
So if the Milwaukee-Harley marriage is so solid, how could the company even think of straying?
Company spokesman Bob Klein said Harley wants to remain faithful, but its production schedule needs to be more closely aligned with seasonal demand, a change that would require approval from labor unions.
Negotiations with the unions began in late July. The president of Harley’s largest union did not return multiple messages seeking comment.
Prasad, the UW-Milwaukee professor, doesn’t see Harley’s threat to move simply as a negotiating tactic. A company with a 107-year history is more concerned with the next 100 years than with making idle threats to extract short-term advantages, he said.
Harley benefits the city’s image and its bottom line. When the company turned 105 two years ago, some 100,000 fans from around the world joined the Milwaukee celebration.
But even if Harley’s production goes elsewhere, there’s still a tourist draw here — the popular Harley-Davidson Museum. Whether that’s enough to help Milwaukee cling to the brand that keeps it on the map is another question.
Either way, the loss of Harley production would be another painful drop of water in the erosion of the city’s proud working-class history, Milwaukee historian John Gurda said.
“It’s important to have that identity. You need a certain level of civic self-confidence,” Gurda said. “And Harley-Davidson, that’s a brand that’s been imprinted on America’s imagination unlike any other Milwaukee-made product.”
Branding Iron North Presents a nite for the guys. Its a hot n Sexy Lingerie show. Ladies are also welcome to come enjoy the show. Drink Specials: $2.00 corona’s $4.00 jack n cokes for the fellas and $4.00 cosmos for the ladies. “only at the BI” The Show will last one hour and the ladies will hang around in there lingerie to mingle for at least another hour. 2pm.
Branding Iron North
2660 W Ruthrauff Rd
Tucson, AZ
520-205-1292