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Rumsfeld Receives Scouting's Highest Commendation

 

http://www.defenselink.mil/news/May2006/20060526_5239.html

 

http://tinyurl.com/otj68

 

By Steven Donald Smith

American Forces Press Service

 

WASHINGTON, May 26, 2006 – Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld

received scouting's highest honor from the Boy Scouts of America here

today.

 

"I'm very honored to accept scouting's Silver Buffalo Award," Rumsfeld

said during a breakfast sponsored by the National Eagle Scout

Association. "Since its earliest days, the Boy Scouts have cultivated

leadership and good citizenship, a service that has been recognized

since the United States Congress first chartered the Boy Scouts back in

1916."

 

The Silver Buffalo Award, created in 1925, is bestowed upon those who

give "truly noteworthy and extraordinary" service to America's youth.

Notable recipients include Charles A. Lindbergh, Norman Rockwell, Gen.

Colin Powell, Walt Disney, Hank Aaron, Bob Hope, Vince Lombardi, Neil

Armstrong, Charles M. Schulz and 14 U.S. presidents.

 

Rumsfeld became a Cub Scout in 1941 and rose to Eagle Scout in 1949. In

1975, he received the Distinguished Eagle Scout Award, an award that

acknowledges Eagle Scouts who have distinguished themselves in

business, professions and service to their country, Boy Scouts

officials said.

 

The secretary said that outside of his Pentagon office door is a small

folded American flag that Boy Scouts distribute to servicemembers.

 

"The flag has a little note with it that says, 'Here's a flag for your

pocket, so you can always carry a bit of home.' That small flag shows

<!-- D(["mb","that so many Americans and so many Boy Scouts recognize the importancethat so many Americans and so many Boy Scouts recognize the importance

of the duty of each members of the military," he said. "That

recognition is greatly appreciated by all those in uniform."

 

He said tens of thousands of Scouts have gone on to join the military.

"By putting on our county's uniform, they are living up to the highest

ideals of the Scout oath," he said. "Our country is truly blessed to

have such wonderful young people, willing to sacrifice so much for the

cause of freedom."

 

The secretary said many people throughout the U.S. government have been

Scouts. "I'm told that about half of the current members of the

Congress have participated in scouting in one way or another," he said.

"And 27 were Eagle Scouts."

 

Life is not always a "smooth, steady" upward climb, he said. Life is

"filled with choices, and often one does not know the impact of a

decision until a good many years later," he said.

 

The secretary said one of his life's important choices came when he was

12 years old and wanted to quit the Scouts. He sent a letter to his

father, who was on a Navy carrier in the Pacific during World War II,

saying he wanted to leave the Scouts. Rumsfeld's father sent a note

back to his son telling him that is was OK for him to quit.

 

"After all, he said, quitting is easy," Rumsfeld said. "He said, 'You

can quit one thing, and then quit another. And soon you're a quitter.'

Even at age 12 I got the message. I stayed in scouting and it was one

of the best decisions I've made."

:headbang

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