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2006 National Veterans Wheelchair Games

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News Release

Local Veteran Competes in National Veterans Wheelchair Games

click on photo to enlarge Jamey Bollinger

       Anchorage, Alaska. -- July 5,2006 -- Jamey Bollinger, a disabled Army veteran from Alton, Ill., is competing in the 26th National Veterans Wheelchair Games, being held through July 8 in Anchorage, Alaska. With more than 550 athletes from 46 states, Puerto Rico and Great Britain, this is the largest annual wheelchair sports event in the world. All athletes are military veterans who use wheelchairs due to spinal cord injuries, certain neurological conditions, orthopedic amputations or other disabilities. Bollinger, 27, a combat-wounded veteran of Operations Iraqi Freedom/Enduring Freedom, is a quadriplegic. He is currently receiving care at the VA medical facility in St. Louis, Mo.

       Bollinger is competing in the following events:

motorized wheelchair rally
slalom (motorized, hand control)
bowling - ramp (hand control)
power chair 220 (hand control)

       "At the National Veterans Wheelchair Games, I enjoy the friendships, the sportsmanship and the opportunity to go to new places," said Bollinger. "I have been looking forward to the Games in Alaska."

       Athletes in the Games compete within three divisions -- Masters (over age 40), Novice (first-time competitors in the Games), and Open (all others, or those who chose to compete in this category). They also compete within classes according to the level of their physical ability, with three quadriplegic-level classes (IA, IB, and IC), and four paraplegic-level or amputee classes (II, III, IV, and V). Bollinger competes as a Class IA in the Novice division.

       The Games are presented by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) and the Paralyzed Veterans of America (PVA), and are hosted this year by the Alaska VA Healthcare System and Regional Office and the Paralyzed Veterans of America Northwest Chapter. Funded with help from a host of corporations and service organizations, the National Veterans Wheelchair Games are a showcase for the benefit of sports rehabilitative programs, and the remarkable athletic abilities and personal achievements of our nation's disabled veterans.

Note to Editor:
If you would like to interview Bollinger, contact Kim Byers, National Veterans Wheelchair Games Public Affairs Coordinator, at (734) 761-7824 after July 10. (Above information regarding military service and disability provided by veteran.)