The following excerpt is from the July issue of Townhall Magazine. Subscribe today and receive the new Glenn Beck book The Overton Window free with your order!
Townhall of Fame Honoring the Leaders Among Us | |||
Drumming Up Support for Our Vets by Katie Pavlich | |||
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Top lef!: Army Spc. Troy Yocum is pictured (center) with fellow soldiers during one of his Middle East tours of duty. |
From there, the company agreed to make a genuine Louisville Slugger bat: solid black with silver encoding reading, “Honoring Military Families.” Yocum is taking one of the custom-made bats along with him on his route as a petition for mayors and governors to sign in favor of enacting an official National Day of the Deployed before presenting it to the White House on May 11, 2011. "We don’t have a day to honor those who are fighting for this country as of today," he said. "If we're going to be successful helping people, we need something like this." Yocum knew going into this project that unless he had a way to get people to pay attention to what he was trying to accomplish, it would go nowhere, and he came up with a creative way to turn heads. "Maybe if I snap a drum to my backpack and play it, people will start to pay attention," he thought. "I see myself as a town crier who is alerting people about what is going on." Yocum also gained attention from other corporations willing to contribute. Yamaha is providing Yocum with drums, so that no matter how many times it rains during his journey, he'll always have a solid, working instrument. Merrell has stepped in to provide comfortable shoes, and Green Beans Coffee Company donated $12,000 to advertise the project on a support vehicle that follows Yocum, purchased with money donated by Acme Truck Line Inc. | “I almost cried when these people helped me, because there is no way I could have done this by myself,” he says. “All of these companies are really helping me out.” The hike itself will take 16 months with an end goal of raising $5 million for struggling veterans.. Yocum started walking from Louisville on April 17, 2010, heading north to Chicago, and will continue down to St. Louis, west to San Antonio and all the way to California before heading back East to Washington, D.C., up to New York City, north to New England, then back to finish in his hometown. His dog, Emmie, will also be by his side for each of the 50 million steps of the journey. "I'm not walking alone, and struggling military families should never walk alone either," he says. After the hike is over, Yocum has goals of becoming employed with a charity to continue his work to help military families. "My heart is in it to help the people." • Katie Pavlich, a May 2010 journalism graduate of the University of You can also get daily updates on his trek across America via Twitter @MyDrumHike |
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