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Jamboree Today Archive

Stories from Previous Scout Jamborees

 "BC," "Dennis the Menace," the "Wizard of ID" and "Agnes" are helping celebrate the Boy Scouts of America’s 100th anniversary. Ten nationally recognized cartoonists are participating in the tribute.

Starting today and continuing through Aug. 4, a different nationally recognized cartoonist’s work will appear in Jamboree Today, the daily newspaper of the 2010 National Scout Jamboree. Each cartoon strip or panel will feature a different newspaper cartoonist’s tribute to Boy Scouting.

{rokbox title=|A Scout walks past The White House during the Boy Scouts of America’s Grand Centennial Parade in Washington, D.C., Sunday. (Photo by Tom Copeland Jr.)| float=|right|}images/stories/2010/0727/parade.jpg{/rokbox}

Washington D.C.—Floats, balloons, dignitaries, marching bands and ethnic dancers joined more than 7,000 khaki and blueclad Scouts waving American flags in the Grand Centennial parade Sunday in the nation’s capital celebrating the 100th birthday of the Boy Scouts of America.

For the first time since the 1937 jamboree, Scouts marched along Constitution Avenue in Washington, D.C. The event was a two-mile long, two-and-a-half hour procession that highlighted Scouting’s centennial. The procession was divided into 10 “historic divisions” each representing a decade, followed by an Eagle Scout Division.

{rokbox title=|Lars 'Longstreet Lars' Lifrak broadcasts from the QBSA studio at the 2010 National Scout Jamboree at Fort A.P. Hill, Va., Saturday. (Photo by Greg Crenshaw)| float=|right|}images/stories/2010/0727/qbsa.jpg{/rokbox}The Official 2010 National Jamboree radio station QBSA is on the air. Radio station 102.9 is running 24 hours a day with music, news, weather and announcements. Beginning Tuesday, Scouts can sign up for a 15-minute time slot to send their voices, and music selections, across the jamboree’s airwaves and beyond.

“It’s almost like a window into the jamboree,” said Michael J. Thorp, of Flint, Mich., chairman of QBSA.

An on-air shot on QBSA can lead to even broader horizons.

{rokbox title=|Jonathan Odekirk and Frank J. Befay IV, of Bay-Lakes Council, present a wreath to the Army honor guard at the Tomb of the Unknowns in Arlington National Ceremony in Arlington, Va., Sunday. About 200 Scouts and adult leaders from the local Bay-Lakes Council continued touring Washington, D.C., on their way to the jamboree. (Photo by Mike King)| float=|right|}images/stories/2010/0727/heroeshonored.jpg{/rokbox}“Don’t mess up,” the four Scouts repeated to themselves—and each other—as they prepared for their role in a unique and solemn ceremony of laying a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns at Arlington National Cemetery on Saturday.

Not only were they representing their fellow Scouts, they had just been told that families of American heroes were present.