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Welcome To The BadgerBrigades

An Upper-Midwest Scenario Paintball Network

Mission Statement

The BadgerBrigades are a WI based Scenario Paintball Network. Consisting of Teams, Fields, paintball related Businesses and Individuals who play or support scenario/woodsball style paintball. Currently most, but not all members reside within the State of Wisconsin.

It is our express purposes to build and support the sport of scenario/woodsball style paintball within the State of WI and the surrounding Upper-Midwest states by:

1. Primarily playing at and promoting fields/games within WI and the surrounding region.
2. Supporting WI and surrounding region Businesses that enrich the sport of scenario/woodsball.
3. Assisting WI and surrounding region scenario/woodsball teams in their effort to grow and improve while encouraging spirited, but friendly competition between the "Brigade Unit" teams.
4. Organizing cookouts, camping trips, etc. and, of course, playing paintball together to encourage comaraderie.
5. Actively discouraging cheating and poor sportsmanship by "Promoting Courage, Honor and Integrity in the Sport of Paintball".
6. Providing a framework for those who seek to start a new scenario/woodsball team to get the ball rolling with solid, real world experience and advice.
7. Helping individuals who are looking for a team in their area to find one.
8. Providing new and/or younger players of our sport with the tools and information they need to become better players and encouraging them to represent themselves and their respective teams in a professional manner.
9. Representing WI and the surrounding region whenever our network works with similiar paintball organizations or travels to other locations.
10. And in general supporting the scenario/woodsball efforts of our members.

To accomplish this, we have banded together in a network that will help build close bonds between players, teams, fields and paintball related businessses. By promoting courage, honor, integrity and sportsmanship, pushing each other to be the best we can be, we believe that the sport of scenario/woodsball in Wisconsin and the surrounding region will grow and thrive for the benefit of all players, fields and paintball related businesses in our state and region.

The BadgerBrigades proudly supports and encourages our Teams and Members to participate in and support charitable games such at the Huntington's Disease Society of America's annual "Hunt For The Cure" hosted by The Wild Bunch.

The BadgerBrigades members are truely a "Band of Brothers and Sisters" who seek the well being of each others' teams, fields and paintball related businesses and help each other out whenever possible.

Scott "Ghostwolf" Hubbard
Founder and President of The BadgerBrigades


AXIS VS. ALLIES AT APOCALYPSE PAINTBALL
gildisc writes "

AXIS VS. ALLIES AT APOCALYPSE PAINTBALL

by

Paul "Gildisc" Maitrejean

 

August 10, 2008 began with cool breezes and a clear sky that promised brutal heat later in the day, but at Apocalypse Paintball in Poynette, Wisconsin, nearly 140 scenario paintball players suited up to relive the roiling stormclouds of World War Two.

The game followed events from both the European and Pacific theaters of the Second World War. The Allied players, marked by their blue armbands, would alternately represent the Americans, British, and Russians. Likewise, the white-armband-wearing Axis would play either the Japanese or Germans as events warranted.

The first mission, The Siege of Corregidor, began at 1000. Allied General Alex Phinney and Axis General Paul “Gildisc” Maitrejean debriefed their troops, who soon afterward pulled on their goggles and hit the field.

Axis moved quickly to occupy the trench systems in front of the enormous Castle (Corregidor), where American Rangers, stranded and cut off, awaited the attack. General Phinney responded to the Japanese demand for surrender by posting his troops in the woods and bunkers surrounding the Castle, as well as setting experienced snipers to hold the land bridge across the swamp behind.

Determined to break the Allies’ defiance, General Maitrejean sent Squads Three and Four to circumvent the Allied bunkers and attack the Castle from the rear. When the assault commenced, he hoped to send in Squads One and Two to attack from the front and take the Castle’s central keep.

But General Maitrejean had not realized how recent rains had swollen the swamp on one side of the Castle and the pond on the other. Squads Three and Four found themselves forced straight into the Allies’ waiting line of fire and quickly chewed to pieces.

Knowing Axis had lost substantial strength in that initial maneuver, General Phinney sent a heavy counterattack against the trenches, pushing Squads One and Two far back from the Castle.

By this time, the end of the phase ticked rapidly closer. In a desperate attempt to salvage their point deficit, Axis regrouped and blasted back into the trenches, driving the Allies to the Castle. With that region under control, General Maitrejean then arranged for an air drop well behind the Castle, in hopes that, with troops safely established in front and rear, he could make a two-pronged attack and gain a foothold inside. Just as his troops landed, however, the phase ended at 1130. Victory went to the Allies for their valiant defense.

The next phase took place in North Africa, where, broken up and isolated, the Allied and Axis troops struggled to take and hold vital points on the map. The Trench Field served as the Allied home base – the Castle as the Axis home base. For either side, to lose their home base meant substantial point loss.

General Maitrejean started the game holding the Tank Shop, which lay just on the other side from the Trench Field. As long as he held the Tank Shop, he controlled the tank, a modified go-cart with devastating capabilities. Far on the other side of the map lay the V-2 launch site, a difficult-to-support location that offered little in the way of points or abilities. He therefore decided to sacrifice the V-2 site, bringing the troops from that sector to the Castle by way of the swamp’s land bridge. He amassed his troops at the Tank Shop. At the game’s outset at 1200, he launched a two-point attack on the Trench Field from both the Shop and the Castle. By taking and holding the Shop, Trench Field, and Castle, he hoped to create a line of opposition that would hold the Allies back and maintain a chain of communication.

The Allies swept across the map, falling hard on the Tank Shop and overrunning it in the first fifteen minutes of the phase. Now that he controlled the tank, General Phinney immediately deployed it against the Castle, along with wave after wave of supporting troops. He sent troops across the land bridge to the Castle’s rear, only to have them beaten back repeatedly. Flanking Allies found themselves mowed down by a hearty Axis response from the Castle.

The tank, however, advanced unhindered, as the one Axis anti-tank weapon was not on the scene. Desperate, General Maitrejean called in an air drop at the Tank Shop, hoping to regain control of the tank before it entered the Castle and wreaked chaos.

His gambit worked. The airborne troops seized the Tank Shop just as the tank approached the Castle door. The tank switched flags and stormed onto the Trench Field. Taking this opportunity, General Maitrejean followed up with an air strike that cleared a large number of Allies from the brush-strewn medium between the Castle and the trenches.

Despite the brutal Axis retaliation, General Phinney continued his offensive. Wave upon wave of Allied attacks broke against the Castle walls, each time meeting heavy repelling fire. He launched an assault on the Tank Shop and soon regained it, but by the time the phase ended at1300, Axis still held the Castle and the tank had been unable to resume its approach. Axis lost substantially, giving the Allies a lead of over 100 points.

After a quick lunch break, the game resumed.

At 1330, Guadalcanal returned the players to the Pacific theater, where the American and Japanese troops vied for control over a partially-assembled Airfield. Meanwhile, five pieces of machinery lay hidden throughout the entire playing field. The side that managed to find at least three of the five items and return them to the plywood bunker in the Airfield’s center, then hold the Airfield at the end of the phase, would win.

Determined to regain their lost points, Axis launched an all-out offensive as soon as the game commenced. General Maitrejean set a hand-selected group to plug up the land bridge, then sent three squads to bottle up the Allied forces in the Castle. The remaining squad scoured the field for the remaining pieces. A heavy firefight erupted across the Trench Field and Airfield as advancing Allies crunched into the three attacking Axis squads. The Allies held onto the Airfield with admirable tenacity, compelling Axis to store all items they found in a Trench Field bunker. The moment the Allies lost control of the Airfield, Axis rushed in and delivered all the items they’d found: a tire, a satellite dish, and even a kitchen sink.

With the Trench Field and Airfield secure in Axis hands, and only a few minutes left to the phase, Axis decided to go for the gold. They launched an attack on the Castle. Though they understood the low odds of taking the highly defensible Castle, they hoped the maneuver would at least keep the Allies busy until the end of the phase.

When the phase ended at 1430, the Allies had found further assaults thwarted, and Axis held the Airfield. Axis had closed the score margin to within a few points.

1500 found the players in the wilds of Germany. Allied paratroopers dropped into the German forest in search of AA guns that had been playing havoc with bombers and fighter squadrons. They combed the woods and found two guns with nominal Axis protection, quickly driving them out and blowing up the guns with C4. Meanwhile, at the main Firebase, Axis caught sight of the smoke and intruders slipping through the trees, and braced themselves for the onslaught.

The Allied assault on the Firebase came from three directions, driving the defenders back gradually. Axis players caught in the open found themselves quickly eliminated. General Phinney moved his men in with deliberation, recognizing his chance to regain the large score lead he previously held. General Maitrejean urged his troops to dig in and bide their time, waiting for careless Allies to step into range. With the Firebase ringed in on all sides, reinserting Axis troops attacked the Allied besiegers from behind, giving those in the Firebase opportunities to strike out. Once, a particularly brave Allied player dove into the Firebase and raised the blue Allied flag, only to be eliminated and see his opponent replace it with Axis white.

The phase ended at 1530 with Axis hanging onto the Firebase by their fingernails, but still holding out. That, with Axis players retrieving the remaining two Guadalcanal machinery pieces (a roll of firehose and a propane tank), brought the Axis a solid five points over the Allies.

The final showdown commenced at 1600, with all troops restricted to the interior of the Castle – the Siege of Stalingrad. The Allies (Russians) started on the second level of one tower, while Axis (Germans) started in the lower level of the same tower. On the other end of the courtyard, the Allies started on the lower level of another tower, while Axis started on the second. Each team’s respective starting point also served as their respawn point. Each player had five minutes to respawn. The objective: To plant a C4 charge on the enemy’s second-level starting point.

The phase opened with a mad rush. Paintballs stitched the courtyard. On the enclosed catwalks, Axis and Allies fought over the keep and other towers, struggling to drive each other back.

Can you say “chaos”?

Finally, a daring Axis lad made a heroic charge up to the second level. Block of C4 in hand, he dove onto his belly, sliding across a catwalk slick with paint, and slapped his charge inside the Allied respawn point. The phase ended with Axis victory.

Axis would have won the day by five points had the Allies not stumbled across a couple of hidden objectives, which pushed Axis back and set the final score at 495 to 505, Allies.

Though disappointed to have lost, Axis satisfied themselves with the knowledge that their efforts gave the Allies a run for their money. The administrative and ref staffs both proved efficient and highly capable, making for a great game.

Axis and Allied players shook hands and shared chuckles about the day before packing up and leaving the field, all of them looking forward to next year’s Apocalypse event.

Paul “Gildisc” Maitrejean is a writer and avid paintballer. He captains Gilligan’s Disciples, a scenario team based near Hillsboro, WI.

"
Posted by rogue on Saturday, August 16, 2008 @ 20:24:13 PDT (14 reads)
(comments? | Score: 5)
Paintball 2Xtremes magazine article
Site NewsBadger writes "Below is the article written for Paintball 2Xtremes magazine about the BadgerBrigades. An article usually takes about 5-6 months to be published after submittal, so look for it around September or October of this year.

~Badger

**************************

The BadgerBrigades: Unifying Wisconsin Scenario Players into a Dominating Force.

When you think of scenario paintball in the United States, certain parts of the country immediately spring to mind. States like Oklahoma, Florida, Pennsylvania, Texas, and even Illinois pop into your head. However, have you ever considered Wisconsin to be on your list? “What’s in Wisconsin that I might take notice,” you might ask.

No one thinks of Wisconsin as a scenario hotspot. They think of cheese, beer and the Green Bay Packers – not paintball. One man in Waupun, Wisconsin would like to change all that. Waupun? What’s that? Can I even buy paintballs and get my air tanks filled there? Can I at least fill my gas tank when I drive through?

Scott “Ghostwolf” and Priscilla “Zo” Hubbard would tell you to think again. They’ll tell you Wisconsin has more scenario paintballers and fields than breweries and cheese shops combined. They’re looking to put their organization on the paintball map and be a force to be reckoned with at coming national events. They’re saying if you mess with one badger, you mess with an entire brigade of them!

I had a recent opportunity to travel to a small town deep in the heart of cheesehead-land called Portage to spend some time with Ghostwolf and Zo. They were having their first-annual BadgerBrigades meeting to discuss their 2008 schedule and formation of the organization.

When I could find time during his busy meeting, I sat down with Ghostwolf to learn more about this state-wide umbrella and where he plans to take it. For the record, this organization is in no way a following of mine because of my callsign, but rather I am a member of them. Below are excerpts from my interview.

(B) What is your full name, and the name of your spouse who helped you create the BadgerBrigades?

(GW) Scott "Ghostwolf" and Priscilla "Zo" Hubbard. Zo came on-board in the summer of 2007, initially to help with fund raising for my team WIP-SOG. After I handed the command of WIP-SOG off to Kurt "Little Brother" Brzezinski (so I could focus on running the BB), she got much more involved in the running of the organization.
 
(B) Tell us a bit about yourself, and how you got into paintball, as well as how you joined your team.

(GW) I'm 41 years old. Although I had played a few times right after I got out of high school, I didn't begin playing the game regularly until 2000.

By that time I was working at a cream cheese factory in Beaver Dam, WI where I met Kurt Brzezinski who had just started playing in a winter league at JungleCat Paintball (Juneau, WI) and others (who played occasional outlaw games). The summer of 2000 saw the birth of "The Cheese Underground", aptly named seeing as most of us worked at a cheese factory. We played in a small patch of woods on the edge of town owned by Kurt that we called "Cheeseburger Hill". We continued to play at Cheeseburger hill through 2006.

In May of 2006, Matt "Wiseman" Schwantes, and Adam "Skuzzlenut" Neils traveled with me to a game at Splat Tag in Hudson, WI called "The Hunt for the Cure", which was a charity game benefiting the Huntington's Disease Society of America and hosted by The Wild Bunch Paintball Team. This was our first "big" game and it made a huge impression on us. Seeing teams like Warfare, The MN Rebels and others made us realize that The Cheese Underground could be much more that just a dozen or so friends knocking around in small games amongst ourselves. The concept of The Wisconsin Paintball- Special Operations Group (WIP-SOG) was born. That was also the weekend that the BadgerBrigades Network was born, sitting around a campfire at Willow River State Park with some other paintballers we had met.

The BadgerBrigades Scenario Paintball Network began to grow by word-of-mouth as a very loose knit group through the SpecOps forum. By April of 2007, there were four teams that called themselves a part of the BB.

Also in April, WIP-SOG (formerly The Cheese Underground) picked up field sponsorship from Jungle Cat Paintball. The partnership between WIP-SOG and JCP owner John "Jungle Cat" Simon has enabled WIP-SOG to grow to almost 30 members and to attend a number of games held throughout the state. 

(B) At what point did the BadgerBrigades truly begin?

(GW) May 4th, 2006 The night before The Hunt for the Cure, in JD's (Charlie1 from ETAC) campsite at Willow River State Park.

(B) How large is the BadgerBrigades, currently?
 
(GW) There are currently 20 teams on our roster and 105 members in our forum. However, we know that many of the teams have members who, for various reasons, haven't joined the forum yet. We also currently have six fields affiliated with us. We expect all of these numbers to grow considerably in 2008.

(B) Are there stringent criteria to meet if a new Wisconsin team decides to join?

(GW) Actually, we try to keep things pretty simple. Our primary concern is that our member teams be honorable players. Our motto is "Promoting Courage, Honor, and Integrity in the sport of Paintball" and we are quite serious about that. Beyond that, we ask that teams be at least three members strong and that the members of the team register and be active in our forum, The Badger Den (www.badgerbrigades.com/den/index.php.)

We encourage (but don't require) our member teams to attend various "BB Big Events" and games hosted by other BB teams. We also encourage our teams to support a charity of their choice. Our teams range from very organized and highly competitive to loose knit and just looking to have a fun time.
 
(B) What are some of the bigger scenario games the BadgerBrigades has attended?
 
(GW) Well, considering that 2007 was more or less our rookie year, and that trying to coordinate teams from all across the state is tricky to say the least, the only games that we have had substantial numbers of Brigadiers attend were The Hunt for the Cure and Resident Evil, both held at Splat Tag.

2008 will see us at Risk IV at Sherwood Forest in La Porte, IN, The Hunt for the Cure, the Battle of Serenity Valley and Giant Big Game XIII at Splat Tag in Hudson, WI, the Battle of Bocage at Hidden Valley Paintball in Ettrick, WI and possibly The Hitman Project at CPX in Joliet, IL. Some of our member teams will be traveling to other big games in the state and region. We are seriously considering taking a large contingent of the Brigades to OK D-DAY in 2009.

There are a number of small to medium games within the state that we will be featuring this year, either because a member team, or an affiliated field hosts them. These include: the Spring and Fall Combat Missions Challenges and Merc Wars II held at Jungle Cat Paintball in Juneau, WI, Red Dawn III and Terror Tag at ShaWack Paintball in Bancroft, WI, and On Your Honor II at Jim Bovee's field, also in Bancroft. We will most likely add more games as the year progresses.

(B) Is the BadgerBrigades only for scenario teams, or can Wisconsin-based speedball teams seek status?
 
(GW) The BadgerBrigades focus is on scenario games and woodsball in general. However, there are certainly members who play the various forms of tourney-ball (speedball, airball, etc.) and a few of our teams which “swing both ways.” Having said that, I should mention that I strongly dislike the separation that exists in our sport. While I only play airball on the rarest of occasions, I can definitely appreciate the skills it takes to play the game.

I have even been approached by Dustin Nelson, the owner of Nelson Field in Green Leaf, WI with the idea of creating a speedball arm of the BB, with the intent of networking speedball teams together and encouraging the core values of courage, integrity and honor within that branch of the sport. I am not opposed to the idea, but I do not have the time or the inclination to head up that organization. So, for now, the BB is a scenario/woodsball network.
 
(B) I know that Minnesota teams are trying to follow in your footsteps. Have any other states tried to do something like which you’re attempting?

(GW) I have heard about a similar organization in Michigan, and I'm sure that there are others around. It would be great if there were a “network of networks!” An umbrella organization of various states’ networks could get a lot done in terms of coordinating state vs. state events or increasing the leverage of the individual member networks in terms of buying power. I could definitely see the BB belonging to something like that. I suppose I'll have to be the one to start it, eventually, after I manage to clone myself a few times...

(B) What made you think of starting up such an organization?
 
(GW) On the trip to The Hunt for the Cure in 2006, I got to thinking that there must be other groups like The Cheese Underground around the state. And, if there were a network of these teams, then instead of going out into the woods and shooting my friends I could go out in the woods and shoot someone else's friends! Not surprisingly, most of "someone else's friends" that I have met these past couple years have become some of my very good friends. I like to say that, "nothing shows your friends how much you care like taking them out into the woods and hunting them like animals!".

(B) Will you always remain at the helm, or is there an election process in years to come for someone else taking over command of the BadgerBrigades?
 
(GW) Good question. For the foreseeable future, the BadgerBrigades will remain a "benevolent dictatorship" with yours truly as “president for life,” mainly because I don't see anyone else crazy enough to take on the hundreds of hours of work it takes every year to keep something like this going. That added with the fact that the BB is my baby; I'm not ready to let her go just yet.

Having said that, I realize that this organization has grown beyond my ability to run single-handedly. Truth be told, I have been assisted for about nine months by two indispensable people; Misty "Rogue" Strickland (our web-site designer) and my wife Priscilla (aka "Zo"). In fact, we are planning on creating a number of volunteer positions within the organization to help distribute the workload.

(B) Are you guys mainly a paintball organization, or do you do other things as well, such as charitable work or fundraising off the field?
 
(GW) We are primarily a paintball organization, but as I stated earlier, we actively encourage our member teams to choose a charitable cause to support with a portion of their fund raising efforts. We also encourage our teams to go to charity games, such as The Hunt and The Battle of Serenity Valley.

As far as fund raising for the BB itself, we didn't really do any in 2007, but we will be in 2008 through sales of various BB items such as patches, shirts, hats and the BB Membership Discount Program. We are currently working on getting all the details worked out so we are legal in the state of Wisconsin to do business.

(B) What sort of player/team are you looking for as new members, or is it completely open to anyone who picks up a marker and heads off into the woods?
 
(GW) It's all about growing our sport here in Wisconsin. New players, experienced players, teams or individuals, if it's woodsball or scenario and it's in Wisconsin, we're behind it as long as they adhere to the code of courage, honor and integrity.

(B) What sort of occupational talent has entered the BadgerBrigades, to help out with the emergence of the Network or offering skills for the betterment?
 
(GW) As I stated earlier, Rogue is our web-designer and Zo brings a wealth of managerial skills to the network. We are definitely putting out a call for help, though. We are specifically in need of more people with experience in web-design, as one of the benefits we offer our teams is a free web page. We're a little behind on getting those pages up at this moment due to the fact that Rogue has a "real job" that keeps her pretty busy.

We also need someone with experience either running a retail business or someone who knows how to set up a non-profit organization. We haven't decided which way we are going to go yet. There are plenty of other things to be done as well, so anyone who wants to volunteer to help will be welcome.

(B) Is there an overall marker preference inside the BadgerBrigades, or do you guys prefer a myriad of marker styles?
 
(GW) Being a network of teams and individuals, the choice of markers is as varied as the industry itself. I've seen everything from hardcore "MIL-SIM" markers to slick anodized "space guns" in our members’ hands.

(B) Do you have an internal ranking structure, and if so, what are criteria that allow someone to be promoted?
 
(GW) That is something we are working on putting together right now. I just put out the word to the members that we are looking to form a committee to create a rank system, both for individuals and teams.

(B) What are your overall goals for the BadgerBrigades in the coming year?

(GW) First and foremost to better organize the network. This includes updating our web site and forum as well as adding an online store for BB merchandise. Also, by adding new volunteer positions within the organization, such as additional web-designers and event coordinators.

Next is to grow the network. I would like to see the BB grow to 30 teams/200 individual members on board by the end of 2008. To build membership and strengthen existing teams/members, we will be implementing various incentives throughout the year such as awards, prizes and monthly "BB group outings" to various games/fields in Wisconsin and the surrounding area.

Another way in which we will be growing the network is to bring fields and other paintball related businesses into the fold. Our forum lists all of the in-state fields (and select nearby fields) that we know of and field owners are encouraged to join our forum and post all of the games happening at their field for the year under their field's thread.

Other businesses, such as military surplus stores and screen printers/embroiderers are also coming into the network. This year we will be introducing a new BadgerBrigades Membership Discount Program through which affiliated fields and businesses are offering Program members discounts on such things as field fees, paint costs, camouflage clothing (BDUs), and having team patches and t-shirts made.

(B) Where do you see yourself, and your BadgerBrigades, going in the coming years? How big do you estimate, with the current enlistment, the BadgerBrigades will become?

(GW) I plan on being involved in this sport until the retirement home nurses have to tie me to the bed to keep me from playing! Of course, at some point I won't be able to run around as much and will probably be more involved with organizing big games and such, maybe being a General for the occasional game or driving a tank... one of our members has already offered to build me a motorized armored wheelchair with a place to mount a Double-Trouble!

It is my sincere hope that the BadgerBrigades will long outlive me. I think the coming years will see the BB name being synonymous with scenario paintball in Wisconsin. As we grow and further refine our organization we'll be able to do a lot more, more benefits for our members and affiliated businesses, bigger games at our affiliated fields, more prizes at our raffles, and better support for our teams as they host games. With any luck, some of the big names in the paintball industry will take notice of us and decide they want to sponsor us. That would be great.

As far as how big do I see the BB becoming? I would love to see a BB team in just about every town in Wisconsin and a forum membership in excess of 2500 members. It'll take a few years to get there, but I believe it's very possible. Our goal is to make Wisconsin the paintball capital of the world.

So there you have it. Wisconsin is more than a fly-over state offering beer, cheese, deer hunting, and Lambeau Field. Plenty of paintball fields throughout the Badger State will suit your needs, and are full of scenario enthusiasts.

As Ghostwolf and the BadgerBrigades grows by leaps and bounds each year, more states will probably follow suit. At your next nationally-known game, it’s quite certain you’ll see an influx of badgers, golden gophers, wolverines, and even hawkeyes come out of the Great Lakes area and show America that there’s something more to these sleepy upper-Midwest states.

Don “Badger” Grubish is the author of two scenario paintball books; Scenario Paintball: Tips, Tools, and Tactics from the Trenches, and Advanced Scenario Paintball. You can find them at www.scenariopaintballbook.com."
Posted by Zo on Friday, May 02, 2008 @ 20:05:13 PDT (94 reads)
(comments? | Score: 4.75)
2 New Features
Site NewsThe BB now has it's own chat room! Just click "Chat Room" in the Main Menu and give the page a moment or two to load. Just log in with your username and you're good to go.
I also activated the Journal too. To post to your own journal just go to "Your Account" and the little red book above your icon gives you access to your journal. Keep track of games, share pics or whatever you want. It's just a personal type blog on the site.
Posted by Rogue on Tuesday, April 29, 2008 @ 18:49:01 PDT (98 reads)
(comments? | Score: 3)
The BadgerBrigades On-Line Magazine Fundraiser
Site NewsZo writes "
The BadgerBrigades Network
On-Line Magazine Fund raiser

Order your favorite magazine subscription online.
Shop from our online store and save up to 85% off the cover price!


40% of the profits will go to The BadgerBrigades Network.

Visit our store located here: www.supportourgroup.com/ZM1202
"
Posted by Rogue on Monday, April 21, 2008 @ 22:15:21 PDT (66 reads)
(comments? | Score: 1)
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