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The Troop 1954
Wednesday Newsletter
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Wednesday, August 25,
2004
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Hi Folks,
Well, we're baaack! Thanks to everyone who came to last night's
meeting. It's nice to see the crowd up to full strength again.
Of course, the more scouts we have the crazier it gets....
Thanks much to Dr. J. who gave us the second of his three part
presentation on Oceanography. Next week we have the slide show!
I handed out workbooks for the Oceanography Merit Badge last night.
The workbooks (as well as those for other badges) look kind-of long and
intimidating. Actually, they are a relatively easy way to complete
your merit badge requirements. They spell them out in detail and
give you a way to organize your knowledge (as well as to make sure you've
really got it). You'll find virtually everything you need to
complete your workbook in the Oceanography pamphlet. Some of you
already have this. For those who do not, I will make the book
available on the web in pdf format. You'll get an email later today
telling you how to access the booklet.
It's time for the patrols to start really thinking about the Halloween
Carnival coming up in another month or two. We won't actually start
building our haunted house until mid October, but if it's going to be
good, we need to start thinking about what we're going to do.
Our winning patrol this week: The Biohazards! The competition
between the VBs, Biohazards, and HFPs is really tight. The
Fromage...well...... The prize for the competition will be
announced next week and awarded at our Court of Honor on October 12th.
As always, the Troop
1954 events calendar, this and all back newsletters, and all sorts
of other useful information is available on our website at
www.sanmarcos1954.org
| Attendance |
| SPL Zach
Painton presiding, assisted by ASPL Corey Collier |
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| Vicious Badgers |
Mason
Daniel
Tony
John
David |
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| Biohazards
Patrol Leader, Mason R-K.
Coached by Mr. Painton |
Alexey
Philip
Ben
Mason
Justin |
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| Crimson Fromage
Patrol Leader, Joshua Rose.
Coached by Dr. J. |
Sean
Johnny
Josh
Ben |
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| Highly
Flammable Piffs
Patrol Leader, Dane Rasmussen.
Coached by Ms. Patty |
Lee
Corey
Daniel
Zach
Dane
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Patrol |
Attend. |
Uniform |
Behavior |
Spirit |
Meeting |
6 Mo |
| V. Badgers |
4 |
4 |
3 |
5 |
16 |
236 |
| Biohazards |
4 |
5 |
4 |
5 |
18 |
234 |
| Fromage |
4 |
4 |
2 |
2 |
12 |
202 |
| Piffs |
5 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
17 |
237 |
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Behavior, subtract for each incident.
Fails to come to order when scout sign given
-1
Fighting with each other -1 per incident
Bad language -1 per incident
Failure to treat others with respect -1
Asked repeatedly to do any task -1
Fails to clean up -1
Shows poor sportsmanship -1 |
Participation: Add for each, highest score is
a five.
All members cooperate with game +1
Members make progress on meeting’s task +1
Members show enthusiasm for tasks +1
Members show good organization (listen to PL and Coach) +1
Members exemplify Scout Law +1
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Announcements |
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1) Sign up and payment
for the trip to Galveston will be at next week’s meeting. Check the
meeting announcement on Monday for the cost of that trip.
2) Some of you submitted your merit badge choices last night.
Thanks much. For those who did not, please email me your
choices. I hope to have at least one merit badge workbook for
each scout at next week's meeting. My thought is that, in
addition to the merit badges we are working on at meetings, each scout
should be trying to finish up the partials they have and working on a
new one at home.
3) There will be a Committee Meeting this Sunday, August 29
at the Painton residence at 2:30.
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| Essay |
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More Scouts In The News
These Boy Scouts live behind prison walls
BRETT BARROUQUERE, Associated Press Writer
LA GRANGE, Ky.
Robert Jackson stood with the two dozen other members of Boy Scout
Troop 825, raised his right hand in the traditional Boy Scout sign,
and took the oath to do his best for God and country.
Unlike other scouts, Jackson and the other members of his troop aren't
allowed to earn merit badges through mastering camping and other
outdoor skills.
That's because they are prison inmates.
"We're trying to teach more long-term planning, how to live when they
get out," said Mike Pitzer, who serves as adviser and scout master to
the troop at the Kentucky State Reformatory.
The inmates are part of a rehabilitation program for emotionally and
mentally disturbed prisoners serving time for everything from murder
to sex crimes.
Becoming a member of Troop 825 isn't easy. Inmates must have a mental
or emotional problem that renders their mental age at 18 or lower -
the Boy Scouts require scouts to be under age 18 - stay clear of
disciplinary violations, have or work toward a high school degree and
be willing to follow the rules of the club.
The Boy Scouts sanction the use of their name, logo and methods, so
long as the inmates do not have any association with the scouts upon
their release, Pitzer said.
Brandi Mantz, a spokeswoman for the National Council of Boy Scouts in
Irving, Texas, said the prison program has been successful in the past
decade.
"It's always good to help those individuals work their way back into
society," Mantz said.
Mantz said the Kentucky scout program is the only one in the state,
but others have been chartered around the country.
There are things the prison-based scouts cannot do. Instead of hiking,
swimming and camping, members of Troop 825, who wear khaki inmate
uniforms along with tan-and-red baseball caps with the Boy Scout
fleur-de-lis to meetings, earn merit badges for personal hygiene,
balancing a checkbook and learning CPR and first aid. They also raise
money to help other inmates and, occasionally, fund a trip by an
outside Boy Scout troop.
"Some guys get here, find out it's work, and don't want to come back,"
Pitzer said.
The inmates who did make it past the initial introduction, though,
said the program is helping them work past the issues that landed them
in prison in the first place.
William Hiemstra, a tattooed 32-year-old serving 10 years for
attempted murder, said the program is teaching him to work better with
other people.
"That was always a problem I had," Hiemstra said.
Jackson, who speaks in a slow, deliberate manner and worries about how
he sounds, said the troop has taught him practical skills as well as
how to trust people.
"There's a better life out there for me than doing crime and going to
prison," Jackson said.
For others, such as former Louisville paramedic Paul Hurt, who is
serving three life sentences for sodomy, or Marion Butler, an Oklahoma
man in the midst of a 95-year sentence for murder and burglary in
Johnson County, the Boy Scouts are a way to occupy some time in prison
that might otherwise not be well spent.
"It kind of tames the beast," Hurt said. "I want to see the other guys
succeed."
The Kentucky prison scout program, which started in 1989 as a way for
prisoners to raise money and to keep inmates occupied, is part of what
corrections officials call a national move toward preparing inmates
for their eventual release from prison.
Both state-run and private prisons are now offering some sort of
prerelease program for inmates ranging from therapy to job training to
education, said Cole Carter, director of educational service for
Corrections Corporation of America, which runs 65 prisons in 20
states.
"The programs give them some hope and at least makes them less likely
to reoffend," Carter said.
Jim Dailey, Kentucky state advocacy director for the National Alliance
for the Mentally Ill, said the programs don't do enough to prepare the
inmate for release or help them once they are out of the prison
environment and on their own.
"That's the disconnect," Dailey said.
Dailey said the Boy Scout troop is an "interesting idea" but without
some post-release help, which the troop cannot provide, he's afraid
inmates will fall back into their old lives.
"Many, unfortunately, will go back to the situation they had before
they went into prison," Dailey said. "They don't know anything else."
But members of Troop 825 insist that the work they've done is
preparing them for life outside the fence.
Jackson, a 40-year-old Louisville man serving 24 years for murder and
burglary, said the lessons he learned as a member of Troop 825 will
keep him from going back to prison, even without help on the outside.
"I grew up in the ghetto. I didn't have no respect for nobody,"
Jackson said. "I learned a lot about how to live in this little
meeting right here. I'm ready for society."
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| Upcoming Events |
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District Round Table, September 9
The usual at First United Methodist, 7:00
Galveston Trip, September 10-12
We'll be headed to Galveston to enjoy the beach and the seafood and do
work on the oceanography merit badge. The trip will be led by
Dr. J.
Popcorn Sales, Starting September
Great way to help the Scouts and earn money for your scouting
adventures.
Texas Wildlife Expo, October 2-3
Troop Elections, October 5.
Troop Court of Honor, October 12.
Camping trip with Webelos Scouts, October 15-17 (tentative)
Cub Scout Halloween Carnival, October 28
Sights and Sounds of Christmas, December 2-4.
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