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HAMBANDY top story in local news

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by movingviolation, Aug 9, 2008.

  1. stillkruzn
    Joined: Apr 10, 2007
    Posts: 980

    stillkruzn
    Member
    from Conway, AR

    Great job guys...
     
  2. Acme Speed Shop
    Joined: Mar 31, 2007
    Posts: 1,755

    Acme Speed Shop
    MODERATOR
    from so cal

    Now this is the kind of news I like to read. Great story.

    I read this out loud to my wife. We both teared up. I have been folowing Andy's story on the HAMB and it always reminds me that we are surrounded by good people doing good things, I gues we just dont focus on that enough.

    Thanks to everyone that has been a part of this. It is truly inspirational!

    Andy, I have a son, Spencer, that is 13 also. Reading about all you have been through has made me stop and do a gratitude check every time. You are a real inspiration. Your gifts of courage are reaching around the world and touching many. Thanks.

    John
     
  3. BBYBMR
    Joined: Apr 27, 2007
    Posts: 612

    BBYBMR
    Member

    Fantastic story about a very fantastic young man. Andy, you ROCK!! God Bless you.

    To all that helped to make this hot rod a reality, you are what American Freedom is all about. Hands that are never quite clean. A smile not always noticed. But a heart that listens, feels, and, more than anything, gives.
     
  4. Guess it's Not important enough for our evening news..........They would rather show us Paris Hilton........First I've heard about it this effort. My hat goes off all you guys for making this happen...As my late friend used to say " I'll send up a word for you guys tonight".
     
  5. Keep
    Joined: May 10, 2008
    Posts: 662

    Keep
    Member

    What a great story. Its nice to see something that is not doom and gloom.
     
  6. All Happy tears, even the sky was crying when this momentus HAMBANDY day was being shared, there were a lot of cameras shuttering today,,,,,,WOW
     
  7. Hambandy rules!
     
  8. Weasel
    Joined: Dec 30, 2007
    Posts: 6,695

    Weasel
    Member

    Not only congratulations to Andy for having the vision and determination in making it through, but an object lesson to all of us how strength of character, selfless devotion to the task and generous donations of parts and money have made the darkest days of Andy's life the most memorable days of his life. He will never forget this and nor should any of us.

    Hats off to Andy's crew and three cheers for all who contributed to make this dream come true. We're immensely proud of you guys.
     
  9. Vance
    Joined: Jan 3, 2005
    Posts: 2,135

    Vance
    Member
    from N/A

    If there is a human interest category for the Pulitzer, this guy Rob Antle is a shoe-in. What a great story! What a great group of guys, both there in the Great White North and across the HAMB.

    Now, if someone would be kind enough to pass the Kleenex box...

    Vance
     
  10. I SMELL SMOKE
    Joined: Mar 6, 2008
    Posts: 1,527

    I SMELL SMOKE
    Member

    god bless you andy and may god bless all of you!!!
     
  11. 562roadster
    Joined: Mar 2, 2008
    Posts: 1,370

    562roadster
    Member

    Simply Awesome! Great story.
     
  12. jersey fink
    Joined: Feb 11, 2005
    Posts: 385

    jersey fink
    Member
    from jersey

    to all that made this happen,,,,keep up the good work!!!! you guys kick ass!!!!!!!!
     
  13. 57tony31
    Joined: Jul 20, 2008
    Posts: 632

    57tony31
    Member
    from Woods

    Great stuff i been reading stuff on here and this takes the cake.
    Nice site seems like a ton of cool guys here.
     

    Attached Files:

  14. Bob K
    Joined: Mar 3, 2001
    Posts: 5,772

    Bob K
    Member Emeritus
    from Antigo Wi.

    I just clicked on the link and the story no longer comes up.

    B:(B
     
  15. awesome write up!!
     
  16. sodbuster
    Joined: Oct 15, 2001
    Posts: 5,065

    sodbuster
    Member
    from Kansas

  17. fab32
    Joined: May 14, 2002
    Posts: 13,985

    fab32
    Member Emeritus

    It's truely amazing that what started out being a helping hand to a young guy caught up in unfortunate circumstances has turned out to affect so many. Being a part of it has been the highlight of the year for me. Hardly a day goes by that I don't think about Andy and how he is doing. The only downer for me is the fact I don't live near enough to to give a personal hand in the project.
    It's nice to see how a story with the potential for much saddness has turned out in such a positive way. I hope this chapter in Andy's life will be reflected in how he interacts with people that cross his path in the future.

    Frank Burrell (fab32)
     
  18. Boyd Who
    Joined: Nov 9, 2001
    Posts: 2,196

    Boyd Who
    Member

    Incredible write-up! Good thing I put a towel across my keyboard...gotta go wring it out now.
    You guys rock, and Andy is my new hero.
     
  19. movingviolation
    Joined: Feb 19, 2005
    Posts: 1,177

    movingviolation
    Member

    Dream car believers [​IMG]
    Community unites to build hot rod for teen fighting cancer

    ROB ANTLE
    The Telegram

    The dream is being created in a garage in Newfoundland, aided by people with handles like Doc and Atch, Jambottle and Fab32, from across North America and beyond.

    There was the bottle drive in Michigan to buy tires. The antique car body, found in Saskatchewan and donated by a Louisiana emergency-room physician. The cash and goodwill that flowed from further afield, New Zealand and Australia and England.

    The parts and money trundled across electronic highways and twisted-ribbon blacktops to this garage on the outskirts of a small city at the edge of a continent.

    This is where the dream is being put together.

    Andy Dunn surveys the progress. "Wicked," he says, his voice quiet - a side-effect of his cancer.

    Andy is 13. He has been fascinated with cars since he started playing with dinkies as a toddler, his father Chris says. That interest grew as Andy did, the youngster handing his father wrenches as Chris worked on his 1948 Ford.

    Today, Andy is overseeing a new project, made possible through thousands of hours of volunteer labour and decades of expertise. On the floor of the garage sits a partially assembled hot rod - a 1930 Model A, to be precise.

    The project began a year ago. But the clock is now ticking. There is a car show in Carbonear, and the plan is to have the Model A ready to roll, with Andy behind the wheel.

    Days to go, and a list that fills up a full three pages is taped to the garage wall.

    Time to get to work.

    Saturday, Aug. 2. Seven days to show time. The Topsail Road garage is a cacophony of noise, an orchestra conducted by men in jeans and coveralls. There is the clank-clank-clank of metal on metal and the high-pitched grinding whine of the dentist's office. Don Henley croons in the background, a lament about the "Boys of Summer."

    Tony "Fitz" Fitzpatrick and Bill Norris are deep in the bowels of the building, working on body mounts. Monty Murrin is moving around from job to job - wheel cylinders, shoes. Leon House is fussing with the shifter bracket.

    Andy Dunn peers down over Leon, asking if he's done yet. Leon glances up, and grins. "Sure you're like a woman."

    Fitz pipes up from the other side of the garage. "Andy keep an eye out. Make sure he puts it together right."

    There is a problem with the shifter linkage, Leon concludes. They are going to have to modify it. "Word of the day," he says. "Modified."

    Building a hot rod, it seems, is like assembling a puzzle - only you have to create some pieces from scratch, and use others thrown together from a dozen different boxes. And when the pieces don't come together correctly, you make them fit. "Modify" them.

    Three years ago, Andy began complaining to his father about a pain in his neck. He visited the hospital, did physiotherapy. Nothing worked. Finally, the undiscovered tumour separated his skull from his spine on the right-hand side. Andy had emergency surgery to fuse his spine. Then it was off to Toronto for six months, where surgeons removed the tumour through his mouth.

    The type of cancer, chordoma, is extremely rare. Five cases in Canadian children in the last 15 years. Less than a one-in-10-million longshot.

    Months passed - good months - until the tumour came back in January 2007.

    Then Leon House went online with a simple request. He asked members of the H.A.M.B. message board - an Internet home for serious hot-rodders - to send T-shirts and the like to cheer Andy up during his renewed battle against cancer.

    The shirts and souvenirs came in, boxes upon boxes. Andy joined the website, under the moniker "Hambandy," to talk cars and say thanks.

    Then a new idea hit the board, posted by a Wisconsin H.A.M.B.er. Why not solicit donations from members to send Andy and his father to that summer's annual hot-rod drags in Joplin, Mo.?

    The board lit up with pledges of donations. Leon House was the point man on the Newfoundland end. Two years earlier, his brother Brian, a pro motocross rider, died in a practice session at the Canadian nationals. After the accident, people from all over the world reached out to his family. "It opened my eyes to a kinder mankind," he wrote on the message board at the time. "For this I have to pass it forward."

    Months passed. Excitement grew.

    Then, bad news. Another tumour. Instead of hot rods, it was more surgery, this time in Seattle. Afterwards, cutting-edge cyberknife radiation treatment not yet available in Canada.

    But the car enthusiasts had a new idea. If they couldn't bring Andy to the hot-rod drags, why not bring a hot rod to Andy?

    °°°

    As the hot-rodders converged in Joplin last summer, they brought car parts and cash along with their good wishes. Everyone signed a vintage dash for Andy. The members relayed the parts to Newfoundland.

    Meanwhile, a group of a half-dozen local car enthusiasts - Fitz, Bill, Leon, Geoff Bursey, Terry O'Neil and Glen Thomas - set into motion the plans to build Andy's hot rod. Rick Murphy organized the body work; Don Ryan provided engine expertise.

    They jumped the first hurdle when Kevin "Doc" Huston, an ER doctor in Shreveport, La., bought the 1930 Model A body from a seller in Saskatchewan.

    "I get to see more than my fair share of gloom and misery," he says. "So, I knew from the start that I wanted to be involved in building a project for Andy. I saw the situation as kind of a make-a-wish foundation for hot rodders. If we could give this kid, that lives half way around the world, a little bit more to fight for then that is what we wanted to do."

    Others quickly pitched in.

    Nineteen-year-old Jordan Graham of Solvang, Calif., was touched when he read about Andy on the board. He works as a custom fabricator, and donated a Model A drop axle to the cause. But it wasn't just any axle - it was the first one he ever worked on three years earlier, when he was just 16. "I figured I'd keep it forever, but it would (have) meant so much more to Andy, so it went to him."

    Dan Bowles has two boys around Andy's age - 13 and 15. "My wife and I have been blessed with two very healthy young men and it just didn't seem right not to do something," he says. He helped organize a bottle drive from his hometown of Blissfield, Mich. End result? A set of four tires valued at more than $1,000 - "some nice wide whites for the hottest rod around."

    Things were starting to come together.

    Back home, a reconnaissance team liberated the roof of a 1963 Valiant that had been dumped in the woods near Makinsons. The candy-apple red seat was salvaged from an old school bus and modified.

    The build began a year ago. Fitz and Bill began working on Thursday nights to create a chassis from scratch. Thursday nights soon became Thursdays and Saturday afternoons. Then more often, and more.

    For the past month - as work progressed, and a host of others, too many to name, came onboard - it's been a seven-day-a-week endeavour. It's all volunteer, all during off hours, burning the midnight oil and beyond.

    Andy is overseeing the specifications of the entire build. No fenders. Wide whitewalls. Satin black body, with red accents on the wheels and engine. No hood. A '32 Ford grill. A five-inch chop, to make the body sit low. Old-school big-drum brakes.

    Andy's father Chris says construction of the Model A has kept his son's spirits up. Andy recently went through another round of cutting-edge treatment, this time in California. "This car has meant to Andy a reason to live," Chris says. "So the battle continues."

    °°°

    Wednesday, Aug. 6. Only a few days to go now.

    Tony Fitzpatrick acknowledges he originally had his doubts. He thought the idea was "a bit outlandish" at first. Build a hot rod for Andy from scratch?

    A year later, there is a nearly-complete Model A on the floor of his garage. How many hours did he put into this project? He shrugs. "I wouldn't be able to comprehend it."

    Later in the evening, a crowd of eight or nine people have gathered to do last-minute work: mounting the headlights, getting the wiring in place, bolting on the fuel block.

    Bill Norris is still amazed at how things came together. He says there is no way it could have been done without a lot of helping hands.

    "The local car community is really tight. The H.A.M.B. itself is really tight. It's an odd kind of a message board. You go about it the wrong way, you're going to get kicked in the ass. But I think that's what drew me to it - in that these guys, they don't just talk the talk ... If you're going to play the game, you've got to play the game right."

    Hot rodders can seem like a different breed, Leon House acknowledges. "We ain't bad guys. We look different. We drive different cars. We're very different people. Andy's a great kid."

    °°°

    Thursday night. A message hits the board: "It's alive!!" The engine is running.

    °°°

    Friday. The last frantic stretch. The garage bustles again. Bill Norris says the Model A is no longer just a collection of parts, since the engine has been running.

    Now it's a car.

    °°°

    Is the car everything Andy Dunn expected when he first explained what he wanted, all those months ago?

    No, he says, as the build enters its final stages. "It's better."

    °°°

    Today, Andy Dunn will sit behind the wheel of the 1930 Model A when it rolls into the car show in Carbonear.

    There will be a line of cars following him. And a trail of goodwill stretching across the globe that got him there.

    rantle@thetelegram.com

    <!-- ADDTHIS BUTTON END -->​
     
  20. movingviolation
    Joined: Feb 19, 2005
    Posts: 1,177

    movingviolation
    Member

    <TABLE height="100&#37;" cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=994 align=center border=0><TBODY><TR><TD class=noprint vAlign=top width=10 height="100%"></TD><TD vAlign=top width=510 height="100%"><TABLE class=main height="100%" cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD vAlign=top height="100%"><!-- google_ad_section_start --><TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD vAlign=top><SCRIPT language=JavaScript1.2> function viewPhoto(id) { window.open('photoView.cfm?id=' + id + '#' + id,'PhotoViewer','width=885,height=610,toolbar=0,location=0,directories=0,status=0,menubar=0,scrollbars=0,copyhistory=0,resizable=0'); } </SCRIPT><TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD><TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>A HOT ROD FOR ANDY</TD></TR><TR><TD background=images/dash.gif height=1>[​IMG]</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

    A year ago, a group of car enthusiasts decided to build a 1930 Model A hot rod for 13-year-old Andy Dunn, who is battling cancer.
    They were helped by an outpouring of donations and support from across North America and beyond.
    Telegram journalist Rob Antle spent the last 10 days of the build &#8212; from late July through the first week of August &#8212; hanging out at the garage.
    He watched as the volunteers pressed to compete their work on deadline, to roll out the Model A at a weekend car show in Carbonear &#8212; with Andy behind the wheel.
    Here are some of the moments captured during those visits.
    Photos by Rob Antle/The Telegram

    <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=2 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD vAlign=top align=middle width="25%" height="100%"><TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=0 bgColor=#e8e8e8 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD id=pictureframe29009 style="BACKGROUND: #e8e8e8" vAlign=center align=middle width="100%">[​IMG]</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD><TD vAlign=top align=middle width="25%" height="100%"><TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=0 bgColor=#e8e8e8 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD id=pictureframe29011 vAlign=center align=middle width="100%">[​IMG]</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD><TD vAlign=top align=middle width="25%" height="100%"><TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=0 bgColor=#e8e8e8 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD id=pictureframe29012 style="BACKGROUND: #e8e8e8" vAlign=center align=middle width="100%">[​IMG]</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD><TD vAlign=top align=middle width="25%" height="100%"><TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=0 bgColor=#e8e8e8 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD id=pictureframe29014 style="BACKGROUND: #e8e8e8" vAlign=center align=middle width="100%">[​IMG]</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR><TR><TD vAlign=top align=middle width="25%" height="100%"><TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=0 bgColor=#e8e8e8 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD id=pictureframe29015 style="BACKGROUND: #e8e8e8" vAlign=center align=middle width="100%">[​IMG]</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD><TD vAlign=top align=middle width="25%" height="100%"><TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=0 bgColor=#e8e8e8 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD id=pictureframe29016 style="BACKGROUND: #e8e8e8" vAlign=center align=middle width="100%">[​IMG]</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD><TD vAlign=top align=middle width="25%" height="100%"><TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=0 bgColor=#e8e8e8 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD id=pictureframe29018 style="BACKGROUND: #e8e8e8" vAlign=center align=middle width="100%">[​IMG]</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD><TD vAlign=top align=middle width="25%" height="100%"><TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=0 bgColor=#e8e8e8 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD id=pictureframe29019 style="BACKGROUND: #e8e8e8" vAlign=center align=middle width="100%">[​IMG]</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR><TR><TD vAlign=top align=middle width="25%" height="100%"><TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=0 bgColor=#e8e8e8 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD id=pictureframe29020 vAlign=center align=middle width="100%">[​IMG]</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD><TD vAlign=top align=middle width="25%" height="100%"><TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=0 bgColor=#e8e8e8 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD id=pictureframe29022 vAlign=center align=middle width="100%">[​IMG]</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD><TD vAlign=top align=middle width="25%" height="100%"><TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=0 bgColor=#e8e8e8 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD id=pictureframe29023 vAlign=center align=middle width="100%">[​IMG]</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD><TD vAlign=top align=middle width="25%" height="100%"><TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=0 bgColor=#e8e8e8 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD id=pictureframe29064 style="BACKGROUND: #e8e8e8" vAlign=center align=middle width="100%">[​IMG]</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
     
  21. What an inspiring story. I'm glad that Andy and his car are getting the recognition that they deserve. We've always known here on the HAMB that Andy is a special fella, and it's nice to see that others are noticing this too.

    I thought that this was a great excerpt from the story, especially when written by a non-car enthusiast (I'm assuming the writer is a non-car person):

    "Building a hot rod, it seems, is like assembling a puzzle - only you have to create some pieces from scratch, and use others thrown together from a dozen different boxes. And when the pieces don't come together correctly, you make them fit. "Modify" them."
     
  22. Salty
    Joined: Jul 24, 2006
    Posts: 2,258

    Salty
    Member
    from Florida


    exactly what I was thinkin....from a rough and tough cop...

    I'm guilty of the wet eye condition....good job guys.....good job....
     
  23. old beet
    Joined: Sep 25, 2002
    Posts: 5,750

    old beet
    Member

    Great story about a Great kid!! I was lucky enough to meet ANDY and his parents while in Seattle. He is one tough guy. Thanks to all that helped the "A" build!!!!!!
     
  24. Magnus
    Joined: Apr 30, 2006
    Posts: 904

    Magnus
    Member
    from Sweden

    You guys and Hambandy are my Heroes. You just made the world a better place. Cudos on you
     
  25. jambottle
    Joined: Apr 11, 2003
    Posts: 564

    jambottle
    Member

    great thread;any pictures from the show?
     
  26. hotrodladycrusr
    Joined: Sep 20, 2002
    Posts: 20,765

    hotrodladycrusr
    Member

    Yep, I've got a blury scereen as well.
    Fantastic writing, fantastic group of folks participating. Kudos to everyone involved.:cool:
     

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