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TITLE: SCOUTING magazine
[For all Boy Scout Leaders -- Published by the BSA, Boy Scouts of America! -- See FULL contents below!]
ISSUE DATE: May June 1971; Vol. 59, No. 3
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11oe". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
[Use 'Control F' to search this page. MORE MAGAZINES' exclusive detailed content description is GUARANTEED accurate for THIS magazine. Editions are not always the same, even with the same title, cover and issue date.] This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17

POLICE AND TV EXPLORERS . . . William B. McMorris.
THE BSA IN OUR CHANGING SOCIETY . . . Robert Calvert.
BOY ON A BIKE--FUN OR FOLLY? . . . Joe Orlando.
BAKER'S BLUEJAY YARN . . . Mark Twain.
GET SET FOR CAMP . . . Russell A. Turner.
KEEP AMERICA BEAUTIFUL . . . David Reynolds.
SCOUTERS' DIGEST.
YOUR NATIONAL SUPPLY DIVISION . . . Lex Reed.
FELLOW SCOUTERS: . . . Alden G. Barber.
THE COURAGE TO OVERCOME . . . Fred Bauer.
TIMBUKTU: LAND OF NOWHERE . . . Bob Deindorfer.
A NEW UNIFORM FOR ANGEL . . . Robert Kistler.
FRONT LINE STUFF.
WORTH RETELLING.
THE NEW EXPLORING MAGAZINE . . . Oliver S. Johnson.
GOODWILL AMBASSADOR . . . Robert Peterson.
LETTERS.
FAMILY QUIZ . . . Myles Callum.

PREVIEW:
I don't know how it was with you, but when I was a senior in high school many long years ago, the most frightening prospect I can recall was getting up to make a five minute speech. There sat my glazed classmates waiting for me to lurch into my subject: Should Baseball Players Wear Protective Helmets? I was grimly armed to tell them more than they wanted to know, but when I opened my mouth to speak, the words seemed to stick to my lower lip, and I sounded--as my friends later told me--like Donald Duck. But that was then. Now there's Exploring, budding across our land. And when I learn about teen-agers in a post in South Bend, Indiana, writing, directing, producing and emceeing their own radio and TV show with verve and expertise, I gawk in awe. Talk about opportunity knocking! And out in Portland, Oregon, I find there's a law enforcement post, career-bound teenagers, working with men who put their lives on the line eight hours a day. (Some of the post members are on our cover, dredging up a tossed-away pistol used for some sort of skullduggery.) But enough said. Writer Bill McMorris, in his light and easy way, has the full story for you beginning on the next page. - - Alden Barber, our Chief Scout Executive, and Bob Calvert, our Director of Planning and Communications, are each on hand to tell us about some of the new directions in Scouting. We are on course and perking along full speed to an even brighter program than before, and not--repeat, not--shifting with every wind that blows. - . - Beginning about age six, most kids want bike wheels under them so that they can get from here to there, fast. And that's OK. But you'd do well to look over some bike safety tips by Joe Orlando in his story called A Boy On a Bike--Fun or Folly? - . . Litterbugs are the worst bugs of all. We can't squash them, but we can shame them. One potent way to do this is to join the Keep America Beautiful Day crowd on June 5. David Reynolds, who's heading it all up, tells us how. . . - Mark Twain pays us a visit this month with his short, tall tale about the rascal of birdland--the bluejay. See if you don't like it.


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