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Harry Howard, 94, bought his first Harley-Davidson at age 22 in 1949. He was getting parts at a local dealership in Medford when a 2021 Street Glider on the showroom floor caught his eye. “Oh, what the hell,” he told himself. “Why not?” (Photo courtesy of D&S Harley-Davidson)
MEDFORD, OR At 94, Harry Howard makes no apologies for the new 2021 Street Glider he rode off the showroom floor Tuesday at the D&S Harley-Davidson dealership in Medford.
It s ridiculous that he bought it, he said, chuckling. I have a 91 Fat Boy and an 04 Dyna Wide Glide, Howard told Patch in a telephone interview. I was in the shop getting parts, and I just happened to be walking through the showroom looking at those shiny motorcycles, and then I said, Oh, what the hell. Why not?
MEDFORD, Ore. Employees at D&S Harley Davidson say they saw something this week they’ve never seen before. A 94-year-old purchasing his very own bike.
Harry Howard is adding a 3rd Harley Davidson to his collection. He says age is just a number.
“Just so I cant get to ride that’s the most important thing it doesn’t matter where just so I can go and twist that throttle,” said Howard.
Harry Howard is 94 years young. He shows no signs of slowing down.
“Being out in the wind just to have that power at the twist of a wrist and hear the sound of that thing, feel the surge when it takes off all those things put together is just a great experience,” said Howard.
Published March 4, 2021 at 10:24 AM PST Listen • 22:03
/ Defund the police has become a trigger phrase for a lot of people, but the reactions obscure what a lot of people who use the phrase want: something other than police showing up when people are in mental health crisis.
Police freely admit they are generally not trained in mental health care, and jails are not good fits for people struggling with mental illness.
The Eugene-based CAHOOTS program (Crisis Assistance Helping Out On The Streets) is often held up as the model for an alternative to the police. Jackson County residents are working toward such a program, with partners including the local chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness,