Traditions QUARTER 4
Transcription
Traditions QUARTER 4
SECTION GREAT AMERICAN PREVIEW The NRA Foundation Banquet at NRA’s second annual Great American Outdoor Show TRAINING FOR TEAMWORK Friends of NRA headquarters staff visit Field Staff to build relationships and experience 2015 CORPORATE SPONSORS Industry supporters make Friends of NRA’s nationwide fundraising efforts possible QUARTER 2 | 2014 Traditions 1 QUARTER 4 | 2014 Features 4 Traditions Cover Story Preserving the Past, Funding the Future Friends of NRA’s 2015 Standard Package firearms and merchandise blend history and innovation to fund the future of shooting sports. National News ON THE COVER 10 15 The 2015 Great American Outdoor Show Preview SPOTLIGHT | NRA Staff Training for Teamwork 30 32 PROGRAM PROFILE | Hunters’ Leadership Forum Regional Updates The 2015 Friends of NRA Gun of the Year is a custom Kimber Pro Carry II 1911 pistol featuring engraving, gold plating, and Crimson Trace lasergrips. 14 The Latest Stories from Friends of NRA and NRA Foundation Grant Recipients Staff Editor & Designer Christina Paladeau Mission Statement Co-Editor Nicole McMahon Board of Trustees & Officers Mr. Frank R. Brownell, III President Mrs. Carolyn D. Meadows Vice President The Honorable Joe M. Allbaugh Trustee Mr. William A. Bachenberg Trustee Ms. Susan Hayes Trustee Mr. Steve Hornady Trustee INDUSTRY CORNER | 2015 National Corporate Sponsors Mr. Eric Johanson Trustee Mr. George K. Kollitides II Trustee Ms. Susan Kriley Trustee Mr. Wayne R. LaPierre ExOfficio Ms. Anne Lee Trustee Mr. Owen P. Mills Trustee Mr. James W. Porter II Trustee Mr. Dennis J. Reese Trustee Captain John C. Sigler Trustee Mr. H. Wayne Sheets Executive Director Mr. Wilson H. Phillips, Jr. Treasurer Mr. Skipp Galythly Secretary Established in 1990, The NRA Foundation, Inc. (“NRA Foundation”) is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization that raises tax-deductible contributions in support of a wide range of firearms-related public interest activities of the National Rifle Association of America and other organizations that defend and foster the Second Amendment rights of all lawabiding Americans. These activities are designed to promote firearms and hunting safety, to enhance marksmanship skills of those participating in the shooting sports, and to educate the general public about firearms in their historic, technological, and artistic context. Funds granted by The NRA Foundation benefit a variety of constituencies throughout the United States, including children, youth, women, individuals with physical disabilities, gun collectors, law enforcement officers, hunters, and competitive shooters. Traditions is published quarterly by The NRA Foundation, Inc., for the benefit of its donors and other interested parties. 11250 Waples Mill Road . Fairfax, VA 22030 . www.nrafoundation.org Guest Editorial WITNESSING 15 YEARS OF GROWTH FOR THE NRA FOUNDATION By Christie Majors NRA Foundation Director of Finance, National Rifle Association A lot can happen in 15 years. It doesn’t feel that long, but that is how many years I have had the pleasure of being a part of the NRA Foundation finance team. During my first year in 1999, grant program funding was $5.6 million, the endowment balance reached $6 million and Friends of NRA, the grassroots fundraising program for The NRA Foundation, raised $13 million. In 2014 over $32 million in grant funding was awarded, the endowment balance grew to reach $46 million and Friends of NRA raised $66 million for shooting sports programs across the country. All of that growth and so much more is possible when you have a passionate and dedicated group of people working toward an essential and common goal—a goal tied to our Second Amendment rights, to our American heritage and to freedom at its very core. What does it really mean to grow from $5.6 million to $32 million in annual grant funding? It means funding approximately 2,000 more grants in 2014 than we were able to in 1999, tripling our reach. It means that over 15 years 30,000 programs received essential funding to conduct programs in local communities across the country, teaching firearms and hunting safety, enhancing marksmanship skills and expanding the reach of the Second Amendment to many who would not otherwise have the opportunity. Without NRA Foundation funding many of these programs would simply cease to exist. Endowment growth from $6 million in 1999 to $46 million in 2014 means a difference between $300,000 and $2,300,000 per year in available grant funding. Endowments provide a permanent source of program funding since donor contributions are invested and never spent, and only a portion of investment earnings are available for spending each year. As a result, there is a perpetual stream of income to fund crucial firearms-related programs in the future. For the Friends of NRA program to go from raising $13 million in 1999 to raising approximately $66 million in 2014, it takes a dedicated team of committee volunteers, field representatives, staff, sponsors and event attendees who all believe passionately in our Second Amendment freedoms and work tirelessly to outdo themselves year after year. Over 1,000 events were held in 2014, nearly 500 more than the number held in 1999. None of the success we’ve achieved over the past 15 years would be possible without you. Together we make a difference. Thank you for all you do to help preserve our traditions and freedoms. I wonder what new achievements are in store over the next 15 years! LEARN MORE ABOUT THE NRA FOUNDATION AT WWW.NRAFOUNDATION.ORG QUARTER 4 | 2014 Traditions 3 By Christina Paladeau Event Marketing & Communications Coordinator, National Rifle Association 4 Traditions QUARTER 4 | 2014 E ach year Friends of NRA assembles a new and unique merchandise package designed to support and inspire the program’s fundraising efforts. This year’s collection of 30 items encompasses a variety of exclusive and custom pieces as well as pieces that honor significant people, moments and traditions in American and shooting sports history. The six Regional Directors of Field Staff compose the selection committee, which chooses pieces based on quality, uniqueness, fundraising potential and compatibility with The NRA Foundation and Friends of NRA’s ideals. The desire to honor American craftsmanship also plays a major part in the selection process, and nearly two-thirds of the items in this year’s collection are made in the USA. The chosen firearms, merchandise, gear and framed décor reflect months and sometimes years of behind-the-scenes planning, preparation and production. Many represent the combined efforts of multiple contributors brought together in their support for Friends of NRA: manufacturers and embellishers, metal casters and wood craftsmen, marksmen, artists and framers, to name a few. This collaborative method truly shines in the 2015 Gun of the Year, a customized Kimber Pro Carry II. A take on the classic 1911, this pistol is smaller and lighter than the original full-size model, making it ideal for concealed carry while still packing the full stopping power of the .45 ACP cartridge. Etching and 24k gold plating by Baron Technology, Inc., and custom Crimson Trace master series lasergrips bearing the NRA logo give this piece a design unlike any other in the Pro Carry family. The Stars and Stripes Guitar autographed by Ted Nugent and the Annie Oakley Replica Target Set also represent the involvement and coordination of multiple participants. “After great success with our limited edition signed instruments, this year we are following up the Charlie Daniels pieces with this very patriotic guitar hand-signed by Ted Nugent,” says Central Region Director Chad Franklin. Thanks to the efforts of NRA-ILA Deputy Chief of Staff Scott Christman and some great volunteers in Texas, Ted Nugent signed the 1,200 guitars needed for the standard packages at every Friends of NRA banquet held in 2015. The Annie Oakley Replica Target Set features a replica of one of her heart-shot targets, which she handed out as free passes for admission to the Wild West Show. A .22 long rifle bullet and casing fired from Annie Oakley’s Stevens Offhand Target Model No. 35 pistol by NRA directors, including Executive Director of General Operations Kyle Weaver, and headquarters staff accompanies the target. “We were able to borrow the gun from the NRA National Firearm Museum’s collection and shoot 1,200 rounds at the NRA Range one day this past February,” says Merchandise Manager Kathy Purtell. “It was a fun project to take part in, being able to shoot the pistol with such history behind it.” Other items inspired by the desire to preserve the past include the Rossi Model 92 Rifle, a modern tribute to the firearms of the American frontier, and the Replica “Indian Chief ” Bullet Drawing. The bullet drawing reproduces an item in the NRA National Firearms Museum collection that showcases a popular talent of the famous “Shooting Linds,” Winchester Marksmen Dot and Ernie Lind. No one knows more about how merchandise items contribute to the fundraising success of banquets around the country than the NRA Field Representatives who auction them off at each event; 2014’s best selling item was the Dinner Bell suggested by Iowa and Nebraska NRA Field Rep Tim Bacon. This year’s collection features numerous items selected or created based on ideas from individual field reps: the Conceal Carry Robe from Eastern Pennsylvania and Delaware’s Kory Enck; the Welcome Friends of NRA Sign from Michigan’s Al Herman; the Farson Blade Survival Tool and LUCID Gen III HD7 Red Dot Sight from Dave Manzer in Wyoming; and the Tervis Tumbler Set from Tom Knight in South Florida. Friends of NRA is proud to share the 2015 Standard Merchandise Package. Attend a Friends of NRA banquet to help preserve the past and fund the future of America’s shooting sports traditions by bidding on these exclusive items! 2015 GUN OF THE YEAR Kimber Pro Carry II 1911 .45 ACP pistol with custom Crimson Trace lasergrips* *Nearly two-thirds of this year’s items are made in the USA. Look for the asterisk next to the item name that denotes American-made products! Learn more about the Gun of the Year and all of the items in the 2015 Standard Merchandise Package by following the QR code to www.friendsofnra.org/Merchandise QUARTER 4 | 2014 Traditions 5 Rossi Model 92 Rifle .44 Mag. with NRA Coin Beretta A300 Outlander Max5 Camo Shotgun* Crickett .22LR Rifle with Pewter NRA Coin* Savage Model 11 XP Predator Camo with Bushnell Scope Walther PPK/S .22 with NRA Logo Gen III HD7 Red Dot Sight 6 Traditions QUARTER 4 | 2014 Hamilton Shotgun Case M16 Patent Plaques* Annie Oakley Replica Target Set* Good Guy Lives Here Sign* Charlton Heston Commemorative Stamp Set* Replica of “Indian Chief” Bullet Drawing* Copper Tray with Pewter Eagle* QUARTER 4 | 2014 Traditions 7 Stars and Stripes Guitar Autographed by Ted Nugent Tervis Tumbler Set* “Chain Keel” Pintail Decoy Colt Bowie Knife Neon Clock* Farson Blade Survival Tool Salt and Pepper Mills 8 Traditions QUARTER 4 | 2014 Trolley Luggage Set Ranger Assault Knife* Welcome Friends of NRA Sign* Freedom Hunter Knife* H11 Handgun Case* NRA Blanket* Conceal Carry Robe* Vintage Dome Trunk and Tray* Foothold Trap* QUARTER 4 | 2014 Traditions 9 NRA FOUNDATION BANQUET AT THE GREAT AMERICAN OUTDOOR SHOW By Nicole McMahon Event Marketing & Communications Manager, National Rifle Association 10 Traditions QUARTER 4 | 2014 NATIONAL NEWS T he debut of the Great American Outdoor Show in 2014 created a lot of buzz and received positive reviews from the shooting sports community across the globe. The show attracted over 170,000 attendees and generated an estimated $70 million in revenue for the Harrisburg, Pa. region. The NRA saw a 23 percent increase in attendance, a 27 percent increase in hotel reservations and a 50 percent increase in local hotel participation from when the show was sponsored by Reed Exhibitions in 2012. Due to the overwhelming success of the show and its massive 650,000 square foot expanse of guns, gear and more, the Great American Outdoor Show is coined “the largest sporting and outdoor show in the world.” In 2015 attendees can expect the same level of excitement and greatness as 2014 thanks to presenting sponsor Outdoor Channel and associate sponsor Cabela’s. The show will feature over 1,000 exhibitors, an NRA Country concert that will blow attendees away with music by Lee Brice and Thompson Square, and the NRA Foundation Banquet and Wall of Guns sponsored by Henry Repeating Arms. In the same tradition as Friends of NRA events held throughout the country, the NRA Foundation Banquet will have an impressive live auction with hunts, firearms and exclusive gear. The silent auction, games and raffles will feature hundreds of opportunities for attendees to win quality merchandise while having fun supporting the shooting sports. To top it all off, attendees will feast on a home-style barbecue dinner with delicious smoked brisket and turkey. Banquet guests should plan on arriving at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, February 12, in the PA Preferred Ballroom. The Wall of Guns will make its appearance in the main hall of the Pennsylvania Farm Show Complex. Starting on Saturday, February 7, and running through Sunday, February 15, participants will have the chance to win their choice of over 40 firearms of different makes and models or they can select the instant-win $400 cash prize. Wall of Guns tickets are $10 each, and only 100 tickets are sold each round. Once 100 tickets are sold a winner is drawn and a new round begins immediately after. Special ticket package options will also be available, so make sure you stop by the Wall of Guns for your chance to win. (Dauphin County, Pa. raffle number 198) The Great American Outdoor Show will also feature family-friendly activities like the Family Fun Zone, Pyramyd Air Gun Range and the 3 Gun Experience. But whether folks attend the show for the exhibitors, entertainment or a day out with friends and family, all attendees will be supporting America’s shooting sports traditions and outdoor heritage. For those who can’t attend but still want to join in on the experience, NRA will be showcasing the week’s activities on social media with #WhatGetsYouOutdoors. Check out the next two pages for some of the hunts, firearms and games that will be featured at The NRA Foundation Banquet. The Great American Outdoor Show runs February 7-15 at the Pennsylvania Farm Show Complex in Harrisburg, Pa. Join The NRA Foundation at the show! Buy your tickets for the Show and the NRA Foundation Banquet at www.greatamericanoutdoorshow.org. All banquet net proceeds benefit The NRA Foundation, the country’s leading charitable organization in support of the shooting sports. Learn more at www.nrafoundation.org. For more information about the event or to learn about donation and sponsorship opportunities, visit www.friendsofnra.org or contact Nicole McMahon at nmcmahon@nrahq.org. QUARTER 4 | 2014 Traditions 11 NATIONAL NEWS RAFFLE PACKS FEATURED GAMES AUCTION HIGHLIGHTS BANQUET & AUCTION PREVIEW HUNTING TRIP FOR 2 OR 4 IN SOUTH AFRICA TROPHY WHITETAIL HUNT FOR 1 IN CENTRAL VIRGINIA Take an unforgettable trip to Limpopo, South Africa, for a hunting experience on the bushveld landscape. The location at the heart of Southern Africa’s greatest concentration of game and an abundance of fine trophy animals make this hunt an extraordinary affair. Five-day trip includes accommodations, $500 trophy fee per hunter, field preparations and a licensed professional guide. Airfare not included. 2015-2016. Take part in archery or muzzleloader season and encounter central Virginia’s beautiful farm country. Experienced guides and stands set to take advantage of the deer movement and wind direction for each day’s hunt will combine with southern hospitality to make your hunting trip a memorable one. Three-day trip includes accommodations, vehicle with guide and licensed professional hunter, trophy preparations and field preparations. Airfare not included. 2015. Donated by Numzaan Safaris AMMO BOXES 150 : Ammo Box & Knife in 4 tickets for games 1 ticket for a chance to win a Weatherby Eurosport with Brunton scope and $300 raffle pack $ cludes $100 includes: Donated by Monquin Creek Outfitters TURKEY STAB GAME TABLE OF GUNS Firearms Donated by O.F. Mossberg & Sons Featuring Henry Repeating Arms Firearms $e2r tic0ket p 702 Plinkster Duck Commander and MVP Predator with Scope 5 White Tickets NRA Foundation Hat $300 15 White Tickets, 4 Blue Tickets, 2 Red Tickets and 1 Gold Ticket NRA Foundation Hat $500 25 White Tickets, 8 Blue Tickets, 4 Red Tickets and 2 Gold Tickets NRA Foundation Hat includes: includes: 12 Traditions QUARTER 4 | 2014 Remove one of 100 knives from the turkey and receive various amounts of tickets for the chance to win a $1,000 includes: $2,000 includes: $e2r en0try p Up to 10 entries at one table will each win a Henry Lever Action Frontier Rifle 50 White Tickets, 10 Blue Tickets, 6 Red Tickets and 3 Gold Tickets NRA Foundation Hat Choose one: Savage Axis XP .30-06 Rifle Winchester SXP Extreme Defender 12 ga. Shotgun YETI Tundra 65 Cooler 50 White Tickets, 10 Blue Tickets, 6 Red Tickets and 4 Gold Tickets NRA Foundation Hat Kimber Ultra Carry II WHITE, BLUE & RED TICKETS correspond to tables featuring progressively higher-value items. GOLD TICKETS are for chances to win a SecureIt FAST Box Falcon gun safe and three surprise firearms. NATIONAL NEWS GENEROUS DONORS 2015 NRA FOUNDATION BANQUET AND WALL OF GUNS SPONSOR The 2015 NRA Foundation events at the Great American Outdoor Show and NRA Annual Meetings would not be possible without the support of all our donors. AcuSport Corporation Adams Arms Alaska Rafting Adventures Armscor USA/Rock Island Armory Big Horn Armory, Inc. Brent Weil Bullet Designs, Inc. Century Arms Colorado Gun Broker Columbia Basin Friends of NRA Cross Machine Tool Co., Inc. Daniel Bernard, NB Safaris Double Deuce Ranch Elk Bomb Shooting Supplies LLC FMK Firearms FosTech Arms LLC Gary and Devin Rauser Gettle Trophy Hunts Guns and Leather, Inc. Haggard & Stocking Henry Repeating Arms HM Defense & Technology Indiana Friends of NRA Jack Cannon Jim Shasky Joe Burnett Kempf Gun Shop Kensington Publishing Corp. Lahey Machine LLC LaserLyte Legacy Sports International Little Canyon Shooting L.T. Wright Handcrafted Knives Monquin Creek Outfitters Montana Rifle Company Mountain Rifle Shop & MW Knives NEMO Arms, Inc. Numzaan Safaris O. S. Mossberg & Sons, Inc. Ottawa Ordnance Pyramid Air, Inc. ShootSteel.com Show Me Birds Hunting Resort, LLC SilencerCo Sitka Gear Slide Fire SoCal Friends of NRA Soundcheck Nashville, LLC Springfield Armory Stan’s Body Shop Tailgates Youth Café Tamarack Sports TenPoint Crossbows The Best of the West TK Firearms Trijicon, Inc. Vision Armory LLC Visionary Marketing, Inc. Weatherby, Inc. White Lion Safaris Wild Bill’s Old West Trading Co. Wild Wildebeest Safaris QUARTER 4 | 2014 Traditions 13 NATIONAL NEWS This season on NRA All Access, you’ll hear stories of strength and courage, you’ll meet leaders, fighters and difference makers. YOU’LL SEE TODAY’S NRA. 14 Traditions QUARTER 4 | 2014 NRA All Access, Fridays at 8:30pm EST Spotlight NATIONAL NEWS Training for Teamwork NRA headquarters staff members travel from the office to the field and strengthen the Friends of NRA fundraising team By Christina Paladeau Event Marketing & Communications Coordinator, National Rifle Association Experience, perspective and mutual understanding provide the framework for seamless and successful teamwork, a crucial aspect of Friends of NRA’s operation. Like any large organization, this program relies on an extensive and intricate network of team members working both individually and collectively to achieve a shared goal. From NRA headquarters in Fairfax, Va., Volunteer Fundraising (VF) staff provides support to the Field Staff management of the local, grassroots efforts to fundraise for The NRA Foundation and America’s shooting sports traditions. The Field Staff comprises 52 NRA Field Representatives who oversee the Friends of NRA banquets held throughout the year all across the country. Field reps in each area coordinate local volunteers who organize each banquet, while VF staff provide the necessary material, merchandise, marketing and financial structures and support. This year, NRA Field Operations began a new training program for its VF and Field Staff, providing each group with the opportunity to learn more about how it affects and assists the other. A group of VF staff members travelled to different regions of the country, leaving their offices at headquarters and venturing into the field to gain perspective into the role each team member plays in the success of the Friends of NRA program. During four- to five-day trips, the VF staff shadowed field reps at local committee meetings and events. Stepping into field reps’ and volunteers’ shoes and experiencing their daily work included traveling back-and-forth across states, interacting with committee members, unpacking and packing trucks full of support materials and merchandise, setting up and working banquets, and more. Just like field trips that children take as students, the trips to the field undertaken by NRA’s Volunteer Fundraising staff members provided the best kind of learning opportunity: hands-on experience. And, as participants built a better understanding of fundraising at the grassroots level, they strengthened the relationship between staff at headquarters and personnel in the field and enhanced the teamwork behind Friends of NRA’s nationwide efforts in support of the shooting sports and Second Amendment freedoms. QUARTER 4 | 2014 Traditions 15 Nicole McMahon Event Marketing & Communications Manager SOUTHWEST REGION VISIT EASTERN CALIFORNIA & WESTERN NEVADA Field Reps Steve Wilson and Cole Beverly I’ve been working with Steve Wilson for seven years, but it wasn’t until last year that I actually saw Steve in the field. In 2013 Steve was a “million dollar” field rep, with his banquets raising more than $1 million, so visiting him meant seeing fundraising at its best. Despite my understanding of what field reps do on a daily basis, actually going out into the field and experiencing it was different story. We logged over 2,000 miles in less than a week. We drove through Placerville, Calif., to Tahoe, then three stops in Nevada in one day. In the next couple days we drove back to California where we met with the Sonora Friends of NRA committee and prepared for its event that weekend. On the day of the event I served as a volunteer, helping out wherever I could. This was an exceptional event because Steve had four groups in attendance that received NRA Foundation grants. That evening Sonora had a wonderful banquet, and I had the privilege to watch it all come together. I will never forget my field visit. I finally got the chance to see Steve in action and meet all the fantastic volunteers he works with on a daily basis, including Volunteers of the Year Barry Blaylock and Stan Rothfuss. I’d like to express my gratitude to everyone that made my visit a spectacular adventure! Christina Paladeau Event Marketing & Communications Coordinator EASTERN REGION VISIT NEW HAMPSHIRE & VERMONT Field Rep Brian Smith After working at NRA headquarters for a year and a half supporting the Field Staff who guide Friends of NRA’s grassroots fundraising efforts, I was thrilled to visit Brian Smith and have the opportunity to experience those efforts firsthand. Beginning with a pre-event committee meeting for the Tri-River Friends of NRA in New Hampshire and continuing with the Northeast Kingdom and Manchester banquets in Vermont and New Hampshire, respectively, the trip enhanced my understanding of events, committees and attendees. PHOTOS This page, from top: Eastern California Field Rep Cole Beverly recognizing the Sonora Friends of NRA committee; Nicole McMahon with Cole Beverly, Nevada Field Rep Steve Wilson and Chairman Chuck Holland; Volunteer of the Year Barry Blaylock with Steve Wilson and their wives; Brian Smith and Christina Paladeau (far left) with the Manchester Friends of NRA committee; The Manchester committee turned the Wall of Guns multiple times at their banquet. Opposite, from top: Attendees at the Medina Area banquet; Liz Foley presents a grant check to local recipients at the Medina Area banquet; Raffle tickets are drawn at the Houston Metro banquet; Manchester banquet attendees celebrate a winning ticket. 16 Traditions QUARTER 4 | 2014 Witnessing the enthusiasm and skill of Brian and his volunteers, as well as the flexibility and creativity with which hiccups in event planning and execution were overcome, was an amazing demonstration of the capabilities of the Friends program. Working alongside them as I helped to set up and run various aspects of the banquets, from staging the merchandise items for the silent and live auctions to running games and selling tickets, drove home the importance of teamwork. That teamwork truly paid off for the Manchester committee members, who put on their first High Caliber Club event; being there to celebrate that success with them was a highlight of my trip. Peter Lawless Finance Coordinator SOUTH CENTRAL REGION VISIT SOUTH TEXAS Field Rep Liz Foley My trip to visit Liz Foley was the first time I had ever been to Texas, and it felt like visiting a whole different country. Apart from the obvious difference in climate—the heat was particularly striking during an outdoor event—I immediately noticed how polite everyone was and how much pride Texans took in their home state. The widespread enthusiasm for gun ownership also provided a much-appreciated contrast to my experiences in other places around the country; I saw numerous billboards for gun shows, gun shops and firearms training opportunities. The Houston Metro and Medina Area banquets I attended during my trip were the first Friends of NRA events I had ever attended, and I was sincerely amazed by both the volunteers and attendees. All were making an effort to uphold their shooting sports traditions and the freedoms guaranteed by the Second Amendment. Being there over 1,500 miles away from home helped me realize how big Friends of NRA is and how it connects hundreds of thousands of people across the nation towards a common goal. Francisco Lee Finance Coordinator SOUTHERN REGION VISIT SOUTH FLORIDA Field Rep Tom Knight During my visit to see Tom Knight, not only did I get to live in the shoes of a field rep for a few days, but I also met a lot of great volunteers along the way. At our meeting with Chairman Jim Tooker of the West Palm committee, I learned about his dedication to Friends of NRA. Formerly a member of a New York committee, Jim continued his involvement upon moving to Florida, where he is also an instructor in shooting and teaches marketable trades to juvenile delinquents. The next meeting involved the entire Okeechobee committee as it finalized details for the event one week away. Chairwoman Carrie Muldoon got involved with the program by starting a committee in her area after the local 4-H club received an NRA Foundation grant. The Bay Area event has been chaired by the same person since its establishment at the beginning of the Friends program. The veteran leadership of Chairman Kent Dils helped the committee successfully compensate for a venue in the last stages of construction. Once the room filled with people and the games started rolling you could barely notice, and the event raised 20 percent more money than the 2012 banquet. A life of a field rep can be hectic: always on the road, driving from town to town, helping volunteers set up for an event and break it down until late at night, then sleeping in a hotel bed. Nevertheless, the reward comes from meeting the volunteers and attendees and their excitement to support not only the Friends program but also the future of shooting sports. EVENT SUPPORT COORDINATOR CATHERINE BARSANTI Watch the video footage of Catherine’s trip to visit Mid-California Field Rep Bob Anderson in the Southwest Region and learn about her training expereience! Go to www. friendsofnra.org/CA. QUARTER 4 | 2014 Traditions 17 REGIONAL UPDATE Eastern INSPIRING GENERA By Christina Paladeau Event Marketing & Communications Coordinator, National Rifle Association O n a beautiful 80-degree day in September, Putnam County Gun Club (PCGC) hosted its 19th annual Youth Day in Eleanor, W.Va. Hundreds of young and future shooting and outdoor sports enthusiasts had the chance to take part in activities ranging from .22 rifle cowboy action shooting to slingshots and fishing. 18 Traditions QUARTER 4 | 2014 “Our emphasis is always on safety, fun and education,” says Dave Thompson. He has coordinated the event since its inaugural year, overseeing everything from organizing the activities to recruiting volunteers. “We have a staff of dedicated gun club members and many range officers and qualified instructors who provide instruction for the participants.” Almost two decades ago, the PCGC president asked Thompson and fellow member Bill Shank to put on a youth day. Thompson’s decade of experience organizing similar events for the Boy Scouts made him an ideal choice for manager. The first few years saw low turnout, but the event has grown in popularity and now individuals with their parents and grandparents as well as church groups and scout troops come from far and wide to participate. When attendees arrive and register, they receive a t-shirt and a ticket for drawings held throughout the day. Prizes include mostly shooting sports related items like gun cases, bipods, targets and safety glasses along with fishing poles and other outdoor sporting gear. But the kids do not need that extra motivation to explore the many opportunities to learn and practice shooting and outdoor skills alongside their peers. After attending a safety orientation, they are free to go to any and all of the activities as many times as they want. Some participants find something they like and stay there the whole time; the .22 rifle bull’s-eye is particularly popular. Shank, coach of the PCGC Smallbore-Junior shooting team, oversees that activity and stays busy all day long as more than 3,000 rounds are fired at the paper targets. Other activities include .22 rifle cowboy action shooting, trap shooting, muzzleloaders, air rifle, BB gun, archery, slingshot, casting and lifesaver throw. Eastern REGIONAL UPDATE ATIONS OF YOUTH “Without the support of Friends of NRA it would be extremely difficult to put on this event,” Thompson remarks. “Most of the materials, firearms and ammo are made possible by The NRA Foundation grant program.” PCGC has received grants for its Youth Day every year since 1998, amounting to $66,000 in support. The vast majority of the funding each year goes to the Youth Day event, but a percentage also goes to shooting practice held throughout the year in preparation for the Governor’s Outdoor Youth Challenge. No stranger to the fundraising side of the program, Thompson chaired the Midland Trail Friends of NRA committee for more than 10 years before relinquishing the position for 2015. Many members of that committee, which was established during the first year of the Friends of NRA program, also contribute to running the Youth Day. The event provides a great example of why their fundraising efforts are so important. “The real reward is when a kid who has never shot before comes out and learns to shoot something,” Thompson shares, emphasizing that the Youth Day attracts many first time shooters, both youth participants and their parents, who learn the responsibility, safety and fun of gun handling and shooting. “Last year one little girl who had never shot was at air rifles and was initially very skeptical. She missed her first two shots, but after my son instructed her on using the sights she became a regular participant.” “As parents and youth leave, all we hear is praise for the day and the great time they had,” concludes Thompson. “The only complaint is that we should do it more often!” Support your local shooting sports program by applying for a grant at www.nrafoundation.org. QUARTER 4 | 2014 Traditions 19 REGIONAL UPDATE Central ANSWERING INTEREST WITH By Sheri McColman OPPORTUNITY Photos by Julie Wallace, HPSA-YSP Parent Coach Huron Pointe Sportsmen’s Association, Youth Shotgun Program Public Relations 20 Traditions QUARTER 4 | 2014 PHOTOS Top: Two HPSA-YSP team members compete at the ATA-AIM Nationals in Sparta, Ill. Left: Head Coach Vaughn Van Camp provides some one-on-one instruction; HPSA President Joe Burke with Jean and Vaughn Van Camp at the ATA-AIM Nationals. Right: The 2014 HPSA-YSP team at the World Recreation and Shooting Complex in Sparta, Ill. Central REGIONAL UPDATE IT STARTED WITH A SIMPLE QUESTION: “PAPA, CAN I GO WITH YOU?” Ten-year-old Clarence asked when he overheard his dad, Vaughn Van Camp, say he was going to check out the local gun club after retiring in 2000. Little did Vaughn and his wife Jean know that this would lead them to another chapter in their lives of working with young people and sharing their passion for shooting. Under their guidance as head coach and team coordinator, respectively, the Huron Pointe Sportsmen’s Association Youth Shotgun Program (HPSA-YSP) in Lenox, Mich., has grown from a small group to include more than 100 shooters each year. Coach V., as Vaughn is affectionately known, strives to be knowledgeable and to teach students the proper and most current techniques. He has taken courses to become a 4-H leader and shooting sports instructor, a Michigan DNR Hunters Education instructor and an NRA Level 1 coach, and he has encouraged many others— both adults and older youth shooters—to do so as well. Coach and Mrs. V. have always believed that every child deserves the chance to succeed in endeavors from school and scouts to 4-H and the opportunity to try new things. HPSA-YSP participants learn to shoot and may choose to become competitive shooters, and no one is ever turned away due to financial reasons. The program, designed to instill in participants safe and proper shooting techniques, teaches commitment, responsibility and leadership to youth from ages six to 23 while promoting sportsmanship, good scholarship, camaraderie, safety, and an all-around love of shooting. HPSA-YSP not only teaches American and International Trap styles, but encourages its participants to experience the other shotgun disciplines including skeet, five stand and sporting clays. It helps shooters of all skill levels from beginner to advanced hone and improve their skills. HPSA-YSP has become a family affair for many, with parents and other adults stepping up in volunteer roles too. NRA Foundation grants received over several years have under- written some of the costs of this extensive program; over the past four years, HPSA-YSP has received nearly $11,000. This funding made it possible for the HPSA-YSP to obtain 410 and 20 gauge shotguns, providing smaller, younger shooters with guns that fit them properly. Grants have also provided shells and safety equipment, making shooting accessible to many youths who may have been prevented due to the high cost. Friends of NRA and The NRA Foundation’s support of HPSA-YSP has also encouraged its parents and shooters to become more involved and to take NRA Coaches’ Training. As a result, the program has multi-tier coaching, and every child gets one-on-one training whether he or she is a brand new shooter or a very experienced one. Our shooters have competed at the local, state and national levels and have brought home many trophies and medals. This would not have been possible for many of our shooters were it not for Friends of NRA fundraising and The NRA Foundation’s grants; Huron Pointe Sportsmen’s Association Youth Shotgun Program thanks them for their selection and support. Do you know of an organization that could benefit from an NRA Foundation grant? Have them apply at nrafoundation.org. To learn more about Friends of NRA in Michigan, go to www.friendsofnra.org/MI. QUARTER 4 | 2014 Traditions 21 REGIONAL UPDATE Southern By David Helmer Event Support Coordinator, National Rifle Association R eaching and impacting youth plays an instrumental role in building a brighter future for America, and SAFE of Florida, Inc., seems to have found a formula for expanding these processes exponentially. 22 Traditions QUARTER 4 | 2014 The all-volunteer, non-profit organization focuses on marksmanship training and firearm safety education with an emphasis on youth shooting sports in central Florida. With the help of NRA Foundation grants, SAFE of Florida is able to host outreach programs related to both safety and team-building through the shooting sports, teaching the community’s youth about responsibility, goal setting, self-reliance and essential values to live by. Kent Arblaster, president of the SAFE of Florida board of directors, notes, “The community needs this youth outreach, and the [grant-supported] programs were a huge success right away.” In December 2013 The NRA Foundation awarded SAFE of Florida a $2,800 grant for an Eddie Eagle costume, which SAFE uses to offer the Eddie Eagle GunSafe® Program free-of-charge to any central Florida organization, from churches and schools to parks, libraries and youth groups. After receiving the mascot in May, SAFE reached 1,350 children with the Eddie Eagle message: “STOP! Don’t Touch. Leave the Area. Tell an Adult.” Then in August alone, it reached 1,500 children. SAFE’s Eddie Eagle program has continued to grow and expand, stretching out across central Florida to teach children proper gun safety at programs including summer camps at Orlo Vista Recreation Center, Fort Gatlin Recreation Center and Silver Star Recreation Center in West Orlando. The rapid growth and marked success of the program even inspired Central Florida Friends of NRA to invite the mascot to attend its banquet and attract more volunteers. In addition to the grant for the Eddie Eagle costume, SAFE also received over $11,000 for portable shooting range equipment and accessories, including eight pellet rifles, scopes, targets and pellets. The range can be set up or taken down in one hour either outdoors or in local gyms. Orange County Parks & Recreation supplies an indoor area that can hold all eight lanes with room for parents to sit and watch. “The students start out practicing with paper plates then move up to reactive splatter targets that they can take home,” Arblaster explains. “It puts a smile on their face four feet wide.” When the portable range program first began in May, SAFE only used one gym a month. Once the community saw how fun and rewarding the experience was, Orange County made 12 more gyms available for the program, and Arblaster started offering use of the range to other youth organizations such as local 4-H clubs and Boy Scout troops. Currently, SAFE of Florida also works with high school JROTC units to organize marksmanship teams, design shooting ranges, teach marksmanship and provide shooting equipment for the cadets. In the future Arblaster hopes to build an indoor range dedicated to youth, to train student teams in proper marksmanship and to offer college scholarships. Arblaster emphasizes that the organization’s explosive growth rate places it in desperate need of volunteers, but this is a testament to its achievements. The huge success of the NRA Foundation grant-funded projects has helped SAFE of Florida impact the lives of thousands of students. Arblaster concludes, “I would really like to thank Friends of NRA for making all of this possible!.” Apply for a grant to fund your local shooting sports programs and projects at www.nrafoundation.org! To learn more about Friends of NRA in Florida and raising money for programs like this one, go to www.friendsofnra.org/FL. QUARTER 4 | 2014 Traditions 23 Bri ght Fut ure for New s Me You x i co th Ma rks me n By Lt. Col. (Ret.) David Naber Piedra Vista High School Army JROTC Rifle Coach 24 Traditions QUARTER 4 | 2014 South Central REGIONAL UPDATE T he Piedra Vista High School (PVHS) Army JROTC Marksmanship program in Farmington, N.M., is a growing and excelling youth shooting sports team composed of 19 cadets (13 males and six females). In the last four years, it has continually improved its ranking in Sporter Air Rifle at the Army JROTC National Championships from 18th in 2011 to 13th in 2012, fifth in 2013 and fourth in 2014. Last year the team also won the New Mexico State Sporter Class Championships and ranked fourth in the nation at the Civilian Marksmanship Program’s (CMP) Regional Championships. The last four years have also seen six members qualify for the CMP’s Junior Distinguished Marksmanship Badge recognizing superior shooting over an extended period. Piedra Vista will strive to continue excelling in sporter air rifle, but it has also just begun a precision air rifle team. With the success of the sporter team many team members expressed interest in shooting competitively at the collegiate level in one of the more than 30 NCAA shooting programs. While these PVHS marksmen are fully capable of earning their place on a college team, only precisions class—and not sporter class— competition takes place at that level. As a result, the PVHS program made the decision to move into precision class. The PVHS Marksmanship program does extensive fund raising, but it never seems to be enough. Thankfully, NRA Foundation grants have not only supported the sporter rifle program, but now they also have allowed the team to make the move into precision class. Assistance from The NRA Foundation has really allowed it to grow and will help promising team members reach their full potential as collegiate level athletes. One of those talented young shooters is Cadet Captain Belle Toney. A junior with a 4.0 GPA, she recently transitioned to precision class. She has set a goal to shoot for the U.S. Air Force Academy or at a university with U.S. Air Force ROTC and NCAA shooting programs. Already an accomplished sporter class marksman who has just earned her distinguished badge, Toney now has almost two years to refine her precision class technique before trying out for a collegiate team. The opportunities available to Cadet Captain Toney and her teammates reflect the dedication of PVHS Marksmanship program participants as well as the support of The NRA Foundation. Over the last six years, the team has received more than $20,000 in grants. It has used these funds to buy needed range equipment, to defray expenses of attending summer marksmanship camps and clinics and to buy three of the four rifles needed for the new precision team. Now the PVHS Army JROTC marksmen are off to a great start in their new venture as Precision Air Rifle competitors. The new PVHS precision air rifle team. $20,000 granted over the past six years, which helped buy THREE NEW Anschutz 8001s for the new precision team. Fund local shooting sports programs by applying for an NRA Foundation grant at www.nrafoundation.org! Learn more about Friends of NRA in New Mexcico at www.friendsofnra.org/NM. QUARTER 4 | 2014 Traditions 25 REGIONAL UPDATE Western Learning Frontier History ONE SHOT AT A TIME The romance of the frontier west still lives in the hearts of many Americans. One up and coming 4-H Shooting Sports program plays on this nostalgia of the Old West to inspire in young people an interest in frontier history. By Todd Kesner 4-H Western Heritage Project Program Creator and Montana 4-H Center for Youth Development Interim Director T he dinging sounds of bullets hitting steel targets fill the air as a 4-H member dressed in period clothing works her way through an Old West façade. Welcome to the 4-H Western Heritage Project, a comprehensive study of the Old West combined with the fastest growing shooting sports discipline in the world— western action shooting. The project aims to provide an avenue for 4-H members and adult leaders to experience the lifestyles and cultures of the 1860 to 1900 period Old West while instilling the concepts of gun safety and personal responsibility. The project started as a way to retain older 4-H members in shooting sports beyond the BB gun and air rifle years. After training a few adult volunteers and several 4-H members to safely participate in Western Action Shooting, it became apparent that the project had tremendous potential. It is an advanced and action oriented discipline that quickly evolved into an effective approach to teaching American frontier history. Members dress in Old West clothing, shoot replica firearms of the frontier period, and expand their knowledge of U.S. history through a living history approach. Hands-on activities transformed the 4-H Western Heritage Project from a 4-H shooting sports program where youth learn a little history to a 4-H history program where kids get to shoot. Pilot research studies conducted by Montana State University Extension indicate an increase among participants in both interest in American history and feeling a relevant connection to the past. What began with five teenagers in Montana in 2008 has expanded to Missouri, Texas, Oregon, Oklahoma, Kansas, Colorado, Alabama and Idaho. This growth and enthusiasm prompted the inaugural 26 Traditions QUARTER 4 | 2014 Western REGIONAL UPDATE PHOTOS Courtesy 4-H Western Heritage Project. Clockwise from bottom: A young Montana 4-Her steadies her 22 rifle under the watchful eye of the range officer; JJ Stark of Eureka, Mont., wins the National 4-H Western Heritage Championship in the Central-Fire Division; A young cowboy places his shotgun ammo; Todd Kesner, project designer, at the championship shoot; A group of Montana 4-Hers dress for a day of historical education. 4-H Western Heritage Conference and Invitational Shoot held July 30-August 2, 2014, in Virginia City, Mont. Over 150 4-H members, parents, faculty and volunteer instructors from Montana, Missouri, Oregon, Alabama, Vermont and California attended two and a half days of historical workshops and tours as well as the national championship shoot which capped off the week. Thanks to generous and enthusiastic support from the Montana Friends of NRA and The NRA Foundation, 52 shooters had the targets, ammunition and range props needed to compete for a national championship. To win the national championship, 4-H members had to not only shoot well, but also exhibit their historical knowledge on an Old West history exam as well as score highly on an interview with a period clothing judge. All three facets factored into a final score for each competitor. When teens are told they have to learn history, some groan with anticipated boredom. Surveys have indicated that once 4-H members start living the history through authentic clothing and firearms, they begin studying historical areas of personal interest on their own. Many search for and purchase supplementary books, and a few have completed school projects using knowledge gained through their exposure to western heritage. This self-directed learning among the youth membership of the 4-H Western Heritage Project indicates the program’s success in exciting young people about their past. Have a shooting sports or scholarship program that needs support? Go to www.nrafoundation.org to apply for a grant! Learn more about the 4-H Western Heritage Project at www.4-hwesternheritageproject.org. QUARTER 4 | 2014 Traditions 27 THE WOLF PACK DYNAMIC By Catherine Barsanti Event Support Coordinator, National Rifle Association A pack of wolves is a formidable force. It dominates in the wilderness with a combination of strength, patience and strategy. Yet the key element to a pack’s fortitude is its emphasis on teamwork. All individual members look out for one another while utilizing resources from the entirety of the group to reinforce the pack as a whole. This dynamic, which makes wolf packs unstoppable, is reflected in the collegiate rifle team that takes its name from these powerful animals: the University of Nevada Wolf Pack Rifle Team. The Wolf Pack Rifle Team has roots on the University of Nevada campus dating as far back as 1898. However, the inception of the NCAA team came in 1995 when former-ROTC director Lt. Col. (Ret.) Frederick Harvey expanded the rifle program ingrained in 28 Traditions QUARTER 4 | 2014 the ROTC program. “One of our goals in ROTC was to tie ourselves closely to the University,” explains Harvey. “We thought we could do that as an NCAA rifle team; as a Title IX outreach, a rifle team was perfect for this.” Harvey retired as ROTC director, but he has stayed on as head coach of the rifle team for the duration of the program. The Pack has thrived in the past decade and predicts a successful upcoming season led by alpha-dog Team Captain Gretta Ochsner. The team ranked No. 17 in the September preseason Collegiate Rifle Coaches Association poll, but it jumped six spots to No. 11 by the poll taken at the end of October. Currently it is ranked at No. 13, but Harvey believes the team is capable of cracking the top ten and shooting in the national championships in mid-March. “We’re Photos by Randy Rascati and Terry Melby Southwest REGIONAL UPDATE The University of Nevada Wolf Pack Rifle Team shooting better scores; every week we attempt to go out and shoot a better score than we ever have before,” says Harvey. “We would like to go to the national championships, and we will.” Harvey credits part of the team’s success to The NRA Foundation funding awarded to the program earlier in 2014. “It’s had a huge impact on our team,” remarks Harvey. The grant provided the Wolf Pack with $11,500 of equipment and ammunition that has allowed the team to more than double the amount of shooting it was able to do. “There were kids who weren’t able to shoot before who now can; it’s a quantum leap. I couldn’t be happier or more grateful for The NRA Foundation’s help here,” Harvey continues. “It’s completely changed things. We’ve done more shooting this season than we have in the last five years combined, and that’s just Team members on the Wolf Pack Rifle range in half a season.” As the Wolf Pack’s legacy grows, Harvey has had to turn down several students who want to join the pack due to a lack of space. Believing in the significant, positive impact programs like his rifle team can have on students, Harvey has high hopes for general growth in shooting sports nationwide. “If I could only ask for one thing,” concludes Harvey, “it would be more college teams out there so these kids can find a place to shoot. I know it has made a huge difference for me and my team.” Apply for a grant at www.nrafoundation.org! To learn more about the Nevada Friends of NRA events that raise money for programs like this one, go to www.friendsofnra.org/NV. QUARTER 4 | 2014 Traditions 29 NRA’s New Hunters’ Leadership Forum Communicating with America’s 21 Million Licensed Hunters By Callie Davis Assistant Director of Advancement Communications, National Rifle Association One of NRA’s five primary objectives is to promote hunter safety and to promote and defend hunting as a shooting sport and as a viable and necessary method of fostering the propagation, growth, conservation, and wise use of our renewable wildlife resources. Hunters’ Leadership Forum President’s Founders Club member Robert Unkovic is an avid upland game hunter 30 Traditions QUARTER 4 | 2014 Program Profile NATIONAL NEWS R obert Unkovic keeps his eye on the future. President of a Pennsylvania investment management company, Unkovic has spent his adult life making critical decisions based on what lies ahead – and apparently he’s pretty good at it. His inclination for forward thinking drives even his interests and community involvement. Unkovic is a board member for several technology companies, a former trustee for the Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh, co-chairman of the Duquesne Club Rod & Gun Society, and co-founder and chairman of the Old Joe Club, a not-forprofit organization that raises funds to support disadvantaged youth, education and conservancy issues. Knowing Unkovic’s propensity for building a strong future and his enthusiasm for upland game hunting makes it no surprise that he took an immediate interest in NRA’s recently launched Hunters’ Leadership Forum (HLF). He was one of the first to join the HLF President’s Founders Club, the leadership nucleus of the Forum, and he co-chaired the inaugural Hunters’ Leadership Luncheon held in conjunction with the 2014 NRA Annual Meetings in Indianapolis, Ind. “We are at a seminal moment in history for many of our freedoms,” said Unkovic, “and we have to act now on our decision to protect not only the future of the Second Amendment, but also the future of hunting, or it will be too late.” He worries about the rights of his children and the generations that follow. So what should be done about it? “We make ourselves heard,” Unkovic said. The NRA Hunters’ Leadership Forum aims to do just that: be heard. The NRA has always stood for hunters, and, since its start in 1990, The NRA Foundation has provided essential grant funding to support programs promoting hunting education, wildlife management, conservation and the development of hunter education materials and skills training. The nation’s leading shooting sports charity, The NRA Foundation awarded 2,350 grants totaling more than $11 million to support hunter and related educational programs in 2013 alone. That is no small sum, but it is no match for the opposition. That is why the Hunters’ Leadership Fund was established. As a permanent endowment, the Hunters’ Leadership Fund will provide an annual funding source to perpetually promote and defend hunting, paving the way to enhance and grow NRA’s hunting programs and activities. A long time supporter of The NRA Foundation, Unkovic sees membership in the HLF President’s Founders Club as another good investment towards protecting the sport he loves. “Rob has really stepped into a leadership role for the Hunters’ Leadership Forum.” stated James W. Porter, II, NRA President and NRA Foundation Trustee. “He is an uncompromising leader in protecting and defending our rights as hunters, and I look forward to all that we will accomplish together.” As a young teenager Unkovic was introduced to shooting and hunting by his Uncle Dan, and the rest is history. His wife, Georgia, joined the shooting game early on in their courtship, and now, three children later, it is a family affair. The fight to protect, promote and defend hunting is ongoing but not insurmountable. Giving future generations a more robust, lively and vibrant hunting and conservation culture than has ever existed before is possible. It is time to take a lesson from Rob Unkovic: work now to protect our future. Hunters are encouraged to become a vital part of this leadership team. For more information on how to join the Hunters’ Leadership Forum, please contact Chris DeWitt, NRA Ring of Freedom Manager at CDeWitt@nrahq.org or (703) 267-1128. WHAT IS THE HUNTERS’ LEADERSHIP FORUM PRESIDENT’S FOUNDERS CLUB? The President’s Founders Club of the Forum is a group limited to 100 distinguished leaders dedicated to the future of hunting in America and the world. The Founders Club members form the leadership nucleus for carrying out the Forum’s mission: to promote and defend hunting. WHAT IS THE MISSION OF THE HUNTERS’ LEADERSHIP FORUM? The Hunters’ Leadership Forum is dedicated to the enrichment and growth of the NRA’s mission to promote and defend hunting. The Forum’s constituency brings together dedicated hunters who have distinguished themselves as leaders in their professions and in the field. QUARTER 4 | 2014 Traditions 31 NATIONAL NEWS Industry Corner By Christina Paladeau Event Marketing and Communications Coordinator, National Rifle Association F riends of NRA’s countrywide network dedicated to fundraising for the shooting sports relies on the support of not only the Field Representatives, volunteers, attendees and donors who contribute to the local events, but also a group of generous and enthusiastic corporate sponsors. In 2015 that group includes both new and continuing industry sponsors who will help Friends of NRA to continue achieving greater success and reaching more shooting sports enthusiasts. The highest level of industry support for Friends of NRA is the National Corporate Sponsor Program’s exclusive Guardian level. The Friends program is excited to have Daniel Defense in this role for the second year in a row. “Marty Daniel and his wife are very passionate about supporting shooting programs focused on education and training for youth and women in particular,” says NRA General Operations Director of Industry Partnerships John da Silva. That passion perfectly connects with The NRA Foundation’s goals to support educational programs that ensure the continuation of America’s proud shooting and hunting heritage for generations to come. After starting a relationship with Friends of NRA in 2013 by supplying rifles through the Vendor Direct program, Daniel Defense increased their support in 2014 as National Corporate Sponsor. Daniel Defense Director of Marketing Jordan Hunter explains, “NRA does such a great job supporting our industry and our platform, so we want to do anything and everything we can to support it. We’re always looking for creative ways to do that, and Friends of NRA has been really great about providing those opportunities.” Daniel Defense’s commitment to supporting Second Amendment freedoms extends beyond the Friends program as well; it has signed on for a two-year agreement as the presenting sponsor of NRA’s new AR Challenge and AR Matches. 32 Traditions QUARTER 4 | 2014 GASTON J. GLOCK style LP began its relationship with Friends of NRA in 2012 as a statewide underwriter in Georgia, home of its U.S. headquarters. Last year the manufacturer of shooting sports lifestyle gear and accessories widened its reach by becoming a National Corporate Sponsor, and GASTON continues that support in 2015. “By supporting Friends of NRA we can reach a large audience of strong shooting and hunting enthusiasts and a lot of young people,” says CEO of GASTON J. GLOCK style USA Beate Arnold. “NRA’s traditions and goals are enduring principles. It has worked hard for that stability and success, and NRA supporters contribute to the organization to continue that legacy. We do the same with our products and our philosophy to protect our environment.” Arnold highlights GASTON’s and Friends of NRA’s shared interest in preserving the shooting sports lifestyle, a goal which focuses on preserving quality of life and traditions. In addition to its 2015 sponsorship, GASTON will donate Coolmax® shooting shirts with the NRA Logo and ‘Wall of Guns’ text to the NRA Foundation events at the 2015 Great American Outdoor Show and NRA Annual Meeting. Donations to The NRA Foundation Banquet at the 2014 NRA Annual Meeting kicked off Henry Repeating Arms’ involvement with the NRA Foundation side of NRA operations. As a 2015 sponsor of Friends of NRA it will donate more than $50,000 in monetary support and firearms to the program. Henry will also sponsor the Wall of Guns and NRA Foundation Banquets at both the 2015 Great American Outdoor Show and NRA Annual Meeting. Along with its contributions to other NRA programs like Women’s Wilderness Escape, youth programs and more, Henry is the continuing title sponsor of NRA Gun Gurus TV for the second year in 2015. “My family has been in the firearms business for over 100 years,” says Anthony Imperato, president of Henry Repeating Arms. “For those ten plus decades, the NRA has been there for us: defending our Second Amendment rights, upholding our traditions of hunting and the shooting sports, and tirelessly promoting firearms safety. For that we are eternally grateful and choose to support the NRA to the best of our ability.” O.F. Mossberg & Sons, Inc., is also new as a National Corporate Industry Corner NATIONAL NEWS Sponsor for Friends of NRA. Although it has long supported the NRA with donations to national events, sponsorships of television shows and more, Mossberg sought to have more involvement with The NRA Foundation. As a Defender level sponsor and a sponsor of multiple games at the NRA Foundation Banquets in 2015, it will achieve that. “Since 1919 Mossberg has been a family-owned, American company with deep manufacturing roots,” explains CEO Iver Mossberg. “The Friends of NRA program hits home for us due to the family friendly environment with one common goal: fundraising for the shooting sports. With the understanding that future generations’ enjoyment of the shooting sports depends on how we share those traditions, supporting the dedicated Friends of NRA volunteers and programs by becoming a corporate sponsor is consistent with our values.” Numzaan Safaris, a newcomer to the national level of NRA Foundation grassroots fundraising efforts, has also already proven to be a valuable partner in supporting the shooting sports, having supported Friends of NRA fundraising on the local level for several years. Booking Agents Ed and Linda Stevens have been involved with the Numzaan outfitter for over a decade, and this year they wanted to do something big to reach a national scale. As a result, Numzaan Safaris will be a Defender level sponsor of the program in 2015 and 2016, donating 25 hunts per year to be used at local events across the country as well as at the National NRA Foundation Banquet at NRA Annual Meeting. “We are delighted to receive their contribution and support, and we look forward to having their hunts at our banquets nationwide in 2015,” says da Silva. “Numzaan Safaris is proud to be a National Corporate Sponsor of Friends of NRA for the next two years and to offer our full support in achieving its goals,” shares Ed Stevens. “This opportunity to advance to the next level of an official sponsorship is tremendously exciting and a privilege. It’s no secret that hunting rights require gun rights, and we will always need more young people involved in the shooting sports to secure those rights. Fundraising is an avenue to safeguarding the shooting sports for generations to come, and Numzaan Safaris is honored to support Friends of NRA in those efforts.” Another new member of Friends of NRA’s National Corporate Sponsor program is SecureIt Tactical, Inc. The company donated 300 Falcon FAST Box gun safes, valued at $100,000, to The NRA Foundation and NRA’s Law Enforcement Division competitions. Those Falcon FAST Boxes will be available at select Friends of NRA banquets in 2015, generating funds to support local and national shooting sports programs and bringing the SecureIt weapons storage platform to consumers throughout the U.S. “Why are we supporting Friends of NRA and The NRA Foundation?” Owner and President Tom Kubiniec asks. “It’s about goals. Friends of NRA’s goal is broader than ours, but this whole company comprises hunters, former military, first responders, and we all live and breathe this stuff. It’s an easy decision for us.” Friends of NRA also receives support from other programs within the NRA. This year NRA Outdoors Hunting & Fishing Destinations, which provides hunting and fishing guide services personalized to each client by using strong relationships developed with outfitters, is a Protector level sponsor of the Friends program. Corporate Sponsors directly impact millions of firearm and outdoor enthusiasts through their relationships with Friends of NRA, and their contributions of money, services and auction items to the program help it to raise millions of dollars for the future of the shooting sports. These sponsorships provide invaluable support to Friends of NRA’s protection of America’s shooting sports traditions and Second Amendment freedoms. Interested in becoming a Friends of NRA National Corporate Sponsor? Visit friendsofnra.org/corporate-sponsors.aspx or contact Director of Industry Partnerships John da Silva at jdasilva@nrahq.org or 703-267-1356. QUARTER 4 | 2014 Traditions 33 NRA Foundation Donors GIFTS OF $100K+ Mr. John Wistuba Maryland Dr. James P. Wallace, III Florida Mr. John D. Pearson Michigan Mr. Joseph A. Concannon Texas Mr. Mark D. Ryan Texas Mr. Donald L. Fetterolf Pennsylvania Mr. Jason D. Edwards Louisiana Mr. Anthony P. Bucciero Pennsylvania GIFTS OF $25K-$100K Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Lamb, Jr. Massachusetts Wildlife Heritage Foundation of Texas Texas Mr. Charles M. Vosburg Delaware Mrs. Janet D. Nyce Pennsylvania David F. and Margaret T. Grohne Family Foundation Illinois Mr. and Mrs. William Hayes California GIFTS OF $5K-$25K Natchez Shooters Supply Tennessee Cheaper Than Dirt Texas Mr. Loren E. Parks Oregon Mzuri Wildlife Foundation California A.P. Kirby, Jr. Foundation New Jersey Independence Tube Corp. Illinois Dallas Safari Club Texas American Conservation & Education Society Texas Mrs. Anne T. Draper Colorado Anonymous Iowa 34 Traditions QUARTER 4 | 2014 Dillon Precision Products Corp., Inc. Arizona Paul R. & Anna Lee White Family Charitable Trust Colorado Ms. Loren C. Rice Texas Laser Shot, Inc. Texas Gabriel Family Foundation & Natural History Museum California Campfire Conservation Fund, Inc. New York GIFTS OF $1K-$5K Mr. Leo H. Cecil, Sr. New York Mr. Robert M. Serrano New York Ohio Gun Collectors Association Ohio Graf & Sons, Inc. Missouri Mr. Paul Kurtz Wisconsin Mrs. Betty S. Mayes-Petty Kansas Mr. A. Ray Copeland, CPA Oklahoma Numrich Gun Parts Corporation New York Mr. Glen R. Podhola Michigan Mr. and Mrs. Walter Powell Pennsylvania J & G Sales, Ltd. Arizona Mr. Lawrence Borland Pennsylvania Wallace N. Weber, COL, US Army (Ret.) Kansas Mr and Mrs Thomas J. Strempfer Connecticut Mr. Regis J. Synan Pennsylvania Mr. and Mrs. Todd M. Kacin, Sr. Pennsylvania Mr. Joe H. Graham Virginia Mr. and Mrs. Frederic O. Vicik Washington Peil Charitable Trust Georgia The Outdoor Heritage Foundation of Alaska Alaska Dr. Jean P. Orr Indiana Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Hill Georgia Ms. Audrey H. Murtland Michigan Mr. Christopher A. Grillo New York GIFTS OF $250-$1K Mr. and Mrs. Craig Gallagher California Mr. Edward S. Martin Pennsylvania Challenge Targets, LLC Kentucky Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Ghilarducci Colorado Mr. Brian W. Clements Pennsylvania Mr. Samuel V. Washburn Massachusetts Mr. and Mrs. Steve Weninger North Dakota Mr. James L. Wattenbarger California Mr. Kevin Gately New Jersey Ruger Owners & Collectors Society, Inc. Alabama Mr. William J. Proefrock New York Mr. and Mrs. Norman E. Nabhan Texas Ms. Marjorie Joy California Owen Waske & Lynn Gampe Fund Ohio Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Gilbert Texas Mr. Joseph G. Breton Texas Mrs. Margaret L. Anderson Wisconsin Anonymous Colorado Continental Army US Florida Anonymous Arizona Ammo.net Georgia Mrs. Elizabeth Cunningham Pennsylvania Mr. Jason S. Hastings Washington Mr. David B. Murtaugh South Carolina Galco International Arizona August - October Mr. Dennis Stepanovich Michigan Mr. Thomas J. Morris, III New Jersey Mr. Daniel O. Maldonado Texas Mr. and Mrs. James S. Ferguson Ohio Mr. Randolph C. Cook California Mr. Charles B. Coffman California Mr. Robert L. Silva California Dr. Michael I. Abraham Pennsylvania Mr. William H. Grimes Arizona The von Gontard Family Foundation Missouri Mr. Jason F. Swim Iowa Mr. William R. Slavin Oregon Mr. Frederick J. Ritter, III Pennsylvania Mr. and Mrs. Arthur M. Dehon, Jr. North Carolina Mr. John C. Abshier Kansas IN KIND GIFTS Mr. John Phillips Virginia Mr. Leo H. Cecil, Sr. New York Ms. Doris Thompson Oklahoma Mr. Matthew L. Sisson North Carolina Mr. Joseph Colbert Texas Mr. William T. Gennetti, Jr. Virginia Mr. Mitchell G. Minnaert Florida Ms. Cristiana Thillmann Collins Washington Mr. Darrel White Virginia Mr. Oscar R. Jordan Mississippi Mr. James S. Burton Virginia Mr. and Mrs. Larry A. Bucklinger Kansas IN MEMORY OF GIFTS Ray Eugene Amos Findlay Machine & Tool Inc. Glenn J. Anderson Mrs. Margaret L. Anderson Matthew Alan Braun Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Adamson Ms. Janice Ramirez Ray Conner Mr. Robert Maholic Robert J. Crimmel Mr. and Mrs. Scott J. Strohm Edward Souders Home Instead Senior Care Terry W. Fisher Mr. Casey B. Crabill David F. Gilbert Mrs. Diana Fitch Mrs. Michele Gilbert John Lee Graham Ms. Phillis Banducci Mr. William Banducci Ms. Denise L. Curtis Ms. Leslie A. Steffen William H. (Suggie) Grahmann Mr. and Mrs. Glenn R. Dobbs Mr. Kelly W. Grahmann Gary Kidwell Mr. James M. Furnas Fred Martin, Jr. Telescope Casual Furniture, Inc. Ronald D. Mayer Donatic Thomas Nash Thomas and BeckySue Yackley George N. Newkirk M. Scher & Son, Inc. Laverna Ostergaard Ms. Joyce Johnson George T. Perkins Ms. Nancy S. Irish Thomas G. Phistry, Jr. Tom and BeckySue Yackley Walter Connally Powell, Jr. National Philanthropic Trust Dorothy Quick Mrs. Helen F. Malloy Art Richardson Mr. John P. Michell Eugene Siemek Mr. and Mrs. John W. Adlington Ms. Karen M. Lingle Clark Eckert Weninger Mrs. Linda D. Schnell Mr. and Mrs. Steve Weninger Edward S. Woodoth Ms. Ada A. Fennell ESTATES Estate of William Yannaccone Wyoming Estate of William L. Costello Iowa Estate of Thomas R. Jackson Michigan Estate of Raymond Ocon California Estate of Nicholas H. and Theresa Carlin Florida Estate of Michael J. Moore California Estate of Lloyd Hubbard Alaska Estate of James R. Riley Missouri Estate of Edward H. Souders Arizona Estate of Delbert Lee Streid Florida Estate of D. Lee & Dorothy H. Backenstose Pennsylvania Estate of Alton J. and Helen B. Coppridge North Carolina Listed contributions do not necessarily reflect total giving for the year. We make every effort to ensure accuracy of donor names. If you notice any errors or omissions, please contact us at 800-423-6894 or nraf@nrahq.org. QUARTER 4 | 2014 Traditions 35 THE NRA FOUNDATION 11250 WAPLES MILL ROAD FAIRFAX, VA 22030 NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION U.S. POSTAGE PAID THE NRA FOUNDATION