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Volume: 2 |
Issue: 6 |
June 2002 |
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I am proud to announce many of the new features and content now available at InsaneScouter. Below you will find a list of what these updates are and where to find them.
I am proud to announce several new features recently added to Insanescouter's Web Site
Materials Needed:
Egg Cartons
paint
Glue
Misc Supplies (wiggle eyes, felt, pipecleaners, sequins, etc)
Instructions:
Use egg carton cups to make a variety of bugs! Cut a long row of cups and make
a caterpiller. Use two sections and some tissue paper and make a butterfly.
Make a spider with long, pipecleaner legs! Use your imagination and I bet you
can think of a lot more!
Acorn Finger Puppets
Very quick and easy! Pull the tops off of acorns and use them as hair or hats
for finger puppets. Simple stick them on your fingers and draw a face on your
finger. Presto! Instant finger puppets!
Daisy Chains
Kids can either do this by themselves or together, to create one long chain,
see who can make the longest chain, or just to make pretty natural jewelry for
themselves. This can also be done with other wild flowers - ones with stiff
stems work the best.
First you have to start by picking a lot of daisies (or whichever flower you
are using). Next you make a cross out of two daisies laying one over another
sideways. Bend the stem of the top daisy under the stem of the bottom daisy,
then up and over both stems. Pull the stem tight so that it makes a knot. Keep
adding daisies in the same manner - tying them on, until you run out of flowers.
You can make necklaces, bracelets and head pieces by tying the end daisy back
to the beginning daisy to make a complete circle.
Indoor Twig Relay
Have a group of winter twigs scattered at one end of the room, as many of each
kind as there are players. Show a twig, as the white ash. The players may look
as long as they wish. Samples are then passed back and they are given 30 seconds
to get a white ash twig. Everyone back in his seat with a white ash twig at
the end of 30 seconds gets one point.
Nature Sounds
The group is given five minutes to see who can make the longest list of things
heard in the woods during that time. It may be a raindrop, crow, cow, rooster
in distance, rustling leaves of oak or the swish of the pine, tapping of the
woodpecker, or song of the brook.
Sand Tracking
Make puzzles on the beach, such as: someone has a piggy back ride, someone falls
down and is helped up, someone crawls on hand and knees to view a bird, etc.
Most of these gadgets are Pioneering (knots and lashing) in nature and may require a fair amount of lashing skill, rope and other lashing materials.
General
Gadgets
Hammocks
Camp
Gadgets
Utencils
In warm-weather camping, pay close attention to your bodys response to the heat. A rapid, weak pulse, rapid, shallow breathing or red, hot, dry skin are all indications of a heatstroke, a serious medical emergency. If you recognize any sign of a heat-related illness in you or another camper, get out of the heat immediately. Loosen clothing. Apply cool, wet cloths. Drink cool water, but slowly. Seek medical help.
The he asks her to jump to the ceiling. His eyes lose her and she doesn't return. He looks high and low (perhaps with the help of a friend) but can't find her. Finally he looks in someone's hair.)
Performer: (Delighted) Flora! There you are! I'm so glad to have you back.
(looks more closely.) But say ... this isn't Flora!
Have you ever wondered if you are following all of the tax rules when you give your donors their donation receipt?
Example
Your organization hosts a banquet for a donation of $25 per seat. The dinner
costs $10. What is the allowable deduction for the donor and what amount should
you have on your receipt that you issue to them?
Since your donor will not know what the dinner costs or any other benefits they receive, you will have to specify for them what is the allowable donation deduction. Find out how to figure your donor receipts at the IRS Contributions section.
-- Taken from the "Profit Quests' Fundraising News Weekly" newsletter http://www.profitquests.com/Newsletter.html
Who can tell me what "salt of the earth" means? That's right, it
means a person who has a fine character and is a nice guy to be around. The
expression "salt of the earth" probably came from the fact that common
salt improves the taste of a lot of foods. As you young Scouts will discover
while you are working on your Cooking skill award, salt is used in many recipes
- maybe most of them for breakfast and dinner dishes.
Just as the salt improves the flavor of many foods, a person who is the salt
of the earth improves the lives of those around him. He lives every day by the
Scout Oath and Law, even if he's not a Scout. He does his daily Good Turn and
he deals fairly with everyone he meets.
You can be the salt of the earth, too, just by living the Oath and Law. Let's remind ourselves of what it takes by repeating the Law now (Lead Law. )
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