Saturday, March 25, 2023

Pornstars Shamed by a 60 Year Old





















A quick analysis of the first seven year trends reveal that, while the award is succeeding and will quickly overtake the four decade older DESA, it is underutilized (and even unused entirely) by many local councils. Since 2014, when quotas were increased to two (2) awards per year for councils with 1–100 Eagle Scouts the prior year, the minimum number of annual awards should be around 600, as there are just shy of 300 local councils as of summer 2016 (exact numbers are hard to track due to council mergers and divisions). This does not take into account councils like the National Capitol Area Council in MD/DC/VA and the Utah-based LDS-heavy Great Salt Lake Council and Utah National Parks Council, each of which can easily award 10 to 20 NOESAs per year due to their massive sizes. NESA's website list indicates that 67 current local councils have not presented any NOESAs through the first seven years of the program.[3] The first recipient of the NOESA (Serial #1) is Phil Smith, who received his Eagle rank in 1949 in Pennsylvania. The council with the most NOESA recipients (through 2017) is the Utah National Parks Council #591 with 159 recipients, well ahead of the total of 88 received by second place National Capitol Area Council #082. UNPC's total accounts for 8.2% of all NOESA recipients nationwide from inception through 2017. Through 2016, only 16 recipients of the NOESA have gone on to receive the DESA. The first was Wayne K. Stenehjem who received his NOESA in 2011 and his DESA in 2013. Additionally, Larry A. Dale is the first (and to date only) to r







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