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The summit is part of a campaign aimed at getting comprehensive, bipartisan national community service legislation passed by Congress and signed into law by Sept. 11, 2009. The groups plan to push for that by working with the next president in the transition, on the State of the Union address and during the budget process.
Stengel said he will encourage the candidates to be "both eloquent and intimate about their beliefs in this area."
"I hope they will be able to blend the personal with the political on this subject, so that they can talk about what is it in their own lives that made them believe and care about this, as opposed to just saying, ‘Here's my policy,' " Stengel said.
"Their lives have revolved around service. Both men, from an early age, had the idea of service built into their own view of their lives and what they would do with their lives. I think whoever is president will make service a big part of their administration."
Bridgeland said that to an encouraging degree, Americans have sustained the spirit of service after the attacks of Sept. 11. According to Census Bureau calculations based on a 100,000-household survey, 59.8 million Americans regularly volunteered the next year through workplaces, schools, faith-based institutions and non-profits - a figure that grew over the next four years to 65.4 million. Now, it's about 61 million.
"We want to get to 100 million Americans serving every year," Bridgeland said, adding that he hopes Americans who hear the candidates' personal stories will ask: "What am I going to do to help shape American history?"