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Handbook Highway - 1972 Traditional Cache

Hidden : 12/11/2011
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   micro (micro)

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Geocache Description:

Welcome to the Handbook Highway

This is a new version of the Handbook Highway. When it was originally published, it was in celebration of the BSA’s Centennial program – Get in the Game! and in dedication to the BSA for bringing us to this game. And with that …...we give you a little history of the Boy Scout Handbook.


You are mainly seeking 35mm film containers placed at the base of a metal post or in a guard rail. However there are a few magnetic key holders. They are only hidden in areas with wide shoulders and/or ample parking and they tend to shy away from homes and businesses. As always, be careful as you hunt them, the world can be a dangerous place.

Eighth Edition / 1972

The Eighth Edition had two covers. First three printings were a two-tone green cover (the Scoutmaster Handbook, Patrol and Troop Leadership book, Leadership Corps book, Troop Committee Guidebook, and other manuals of this era all had the same boring two-tone green cover). The Scout Handbook has a color sketch in the upper right corner of four Scouts in blue neckerchiefs and red berets looking through a telescope at the moon. This was the first and only Scout Handbook not to have a complete cover picture. The artist is unknown. The back cover has a brief paragraph about the handbook.

The last two printings (pictured below) were of a 1976 Joseph Csatari painting "All Out for Scouting,", featuring Scouts walking across the white cover dressed and equipped for Scout-like activities (backpacking, burro-packing, skin diving, archery, canoeing, fishing, cooking, rappelling, map & compass). This picture also appears inside the Ninth Edition. The back cover continues the picture. Csatari was an understudy to Norman Rockwell.

This edition represents the most radical change in Handbook content the BSA ever made. It introduced more new concepts and deleted more traditional subjects than any other edition. The drastic program changes it presented were a disastrous failure for Scouting.

From September 1, 1972, through the end of 1977, the "Improved Scouting Program" de-emphasized camping by making outdoor skills optional in the lower three ranks and by eliminating outdoor merit badges from the required list for the higher three ranks (the Eagle list dropped Camping, Cooking, Nature, Swimming, Lifesaving). The new program also extended inner-city programming to ALL of Scouting. (The Handbook's entire section on "Lost" shows a drawing of a boy talking to a policeman, with the text: "Ask for directions to find the way."). The Scouting program represented by this Handbook stands in sharp contrast to Scouting before 1972 or since 1978.

The Eighth Edition leaves out a lot of other traditional Handbook information: how to wear a neckerchief, when to wear the uniform, lashings, stars, fire without matches, tracking/trailing, silent signals, semaphore and Morse signaling, edible wild plants, finding directions without a compass.

Until 1972, Scouts working on the first three ranks had to complete a long list of basic skills to earn each rank. The Eighth Edition groups the skills into 12 "skill awards" (Camping, Citizenship, Communications, Community Living, Conservation, Cooking, Environment, Family Living, First Aid, Hiking, Physical Fitness, Swimming), each represented by a metal loop to be worn on the belt. These provided "instant recognition" as Scouts worked toward ranks. The BSA discontinued skill awards and returned to the previous system at the end of 1989.

The Eighth Edition is the first Scout Handbook to discuss ethnic groups. Non-white Scouts are obviously in evidence throughout the book, not just a few background characters as in the Seventh Edition. The discussion of abusable drugs is extensive; earlier editions barely mention them. The Handbook adds sections on general communication (in lieu of signaling), family living, and community living. It contains all the merit badge requirements for the first time in 14 years.

The book finally adds modern conservation emphases long overdue. It de-emphasizes pioneering and advocates modern knife and axe practices; this is the first Handbook not to include information on the destructive and unnecessary practice of tent ditching. This Handbook also adopts the international Scout handclasp as recommended by Baden-Powell (standard handshake with the left hand). Previously, the BSA had used a left handshake with three fingers extended.

This edition contains new wording for the explanatory part of the Scout Law, the first such change since the Law was written more than 60 years before (although this wording has been slightly altered a couple times since). The BSA said that this was done to bring the reading level of the material down to the Sixth Grade level (although the wording for Loyal only confuses this point with Trustworthy in a boy's mind: "A Scout is true to his friends,...").

There were almost 4,000,000 copies printed.

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

ovxr ebhgr

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)