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Scout-A-Rama will help celebrate 100 years

12:13 pm in Boy Scout News by

Scout Plans to Clean Up Goodleburg
Long rumored to be a haunted burial ground, the historic Goodleburg Cemetery in the Town of Wales, dating back to the early 19th century, will be given a do-over and spruced up if one local Boy Scout has anything to say and do about it.

Read more on East Aurora Advertiser

Bush earns Eagle Scout award
Kaegan Bush, the son of Duane ands Karla Bush of Saline and a member of Boy Scout Troop 416 in Saline, was given the Eagle Scout award in a ceremony April 26.

Read more on The Saline Reporter

Scout-A-Rama will help celebrate 100 years
WOODSTOCK — More than 1,000 Boy Scouts will become showmen this weekend. As part of the 100th anniversary of Scouting in the United States, the Shenandoah Area Council of the Boy Scouts of America is hosting a Scout-A-Rama at the Shenandoah County Fairgrounds, beginning Friday and lasting through Sunday morning.

Read more on The Northern Virginia Daily

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Did cub scouts change their cub order the in the past 25 years?

10:16 pm in CS Q&A by

I was in cub scouts about 25 years ago and just took my son to sign up for his first time and it seems to be done a little different when I was a kid.
I remeber starting out as a Webelo and then moving up to a Bobcat, where now Webelo is the highest ranking in Cub Scouts.
Am I remembering it wrong. I just remember feeling a little on the outside because the older boys were cool animals and we were corn.

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FAQ – Who Created Tintin? Herge The Early Years

11:06 pm in Boy Scouts by

The upcoming Tintin movie trilogy has heightened interest in all things Tintin. Herge the creator of the well known comic character Tintin will once again be in the mainstream consciousness. Herge was the pen name of Georges Prosper Remi who was both writer and illustrator of all 23 Tintin albums dying before he could finish the 24th Tintin and the Alpha-Art.


Georges Prosper Remi was born in Etterbeek in Belgium in 1907 and was to become the father of the ligne claire style of illustration that was to influence artists such as Warhol. Remi was a keen sketcher from an early age and his primary school books were filled with doodles of the invading Nazi regime who occupied Belgium during the First World War. Remi was a natural and throughout his life had no real formal training apart from a few lessons taken at l’ecole Saint-Luc during his teenage years.


On reaching the age of 13 Remi studied at the college Saint-Boniface being taught by Catholic priests and joining the Boy Scout troop of the school. He was to be given the moniker “Renard curieux” (Curios fox). It was where Remi was to initially experience his illustrations being published firstly in Jamais assez, the school scout paper and then later to a bigger audience in Le Boy-Scout Belge, the scout monthly magazine where the pseudonym Herge first appears.


It is within this environment that many believe heavily influenced Remi’s work and especially the character that became Tintin. It is clear that the ethics of the scout movement and the traveling Remi did with his group make up a great part of Tintin’s spirit.


In 1925 Herge went to work for Le Petit Vingteme a Catholic newspaper edited by an abbot Norbert Wallez. Herge was to publish his first cartoon series the following year, The Adventures of Tortor again in Le Boy-Scout Belge. It wasn’t until 1928 when Herge was put in charge of producing material for the children supplement of Le Petit Vingtieme that Herge really came into his own.


Herge began illustrating the adventures of Flup, Nenesse, Pousette and Cochonnet written by a member of the sports staff. Fortunately for the rest of the world Herge wasn’t particularly enamored by this chain of events. It led to Wallez asking Herge to create a young hero that would fight good all over the world and be a reporter to boot. Herge filled with brio created a comic strip of his own influenced by the American innovation of using speech bubbles to depict the words coming out of the characters mouths.


Herge created the now legendary Tintin in the Land of the Soviets that appeared in Le Petit Vingtieme in January 1929 and ran until may 1930. The strip was a wonderful adventure through the Soviet Union, the young reporter Tintin with his trusty fox terrier Snowy. The character of Tintin is also said to be inspired partly by Remi’s brother Paul who was an officer n the Belgium Army. Tintin was a popular stip from day one. Remi was to produce other comic strips such as Quick and Flupke but Tintin was the one character that was to make him.


In June 1930 Tintin began his second adventure, Tintin in the Congo (which was at the time a Belgian colony) to be followed by Tintin in America and the Cigars of the Pharaoh.


The first Tintin adventures would take about a year to complete and then would be released by the Casterman publishing house. Herge would continue to revise the adventure in subsequent editions, including later turning them into colour. These early works were also to age quickly as the century moved at break net pace with Tintin in the Congo having to be revised due to the fact Tintin in the original tale is seen giving a lesson to native students in a missionary school and proclaims “My dear friends, today I am going to talk about your country: Belgium” that was later edited into a math lesson.


Herge soon began to learn some of life truths as he got older and there is definite water shed in his work around the time of his 30th birthday when he introduced Tintin and The Blue Lotus to the world. It can be seen as the start of a new era in the life and works of Herge.

Herge is going to be very popular search topic as the Tintin movie draws near. Holly Franklin has been a big Tintin fan for a number of years. She is very much looking forward to the new Tintin movie trilogy due for release in 2009.

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Scouts celebrating 100 years

1:14 am in CS News by

Cub Scouts pack food to feed the starving children
Sugar Grove—Cub Scout Danny McCully and about 40 of his fellow Scouts and family members packed enough food on Saturday to feed 73 children for a year.

Read more on Elburn Herald

Four-day school week next year?
Norwood Cub Scout Troop #469, with pack leader Ken Lawrence, toured the Norwood Fire Station and cruised town last week with Norwood volunteer firefighter Joey Truelock. On Feb. 7 the Boy Scouts of America celebrated 100 years.

Read more on The Norwood Post

Scouts celebrating 100 years
The Fishlake District of the Boy Scouts of America hosted its annual leader recognition banquet Thursday in Richfield, honoring Scouting’s 100th anniversary at the event.

Read more on The Richfield Reaper

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Boy Scouts of America celebrates 100 years

1:24 am in CS News by

Boy Scouts mark 100th anniversary
Dozens of Boy Scouts and Cub Scouts from Troop 150 in Bernardsville gathered on Olcott Square Monday night, Feb. 8, to light candles in commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the Boys Scouts of America (BSA). Other Scouts from around the nation held similar ceremonies simultaneously. For more photos on the event please visit our website at bernardsvillenews.com.

Read more on The Bernardsville News

Westmont scout leader works to teach values and teamwork
Jason Hancock remembers all the fun he had in Cub Scouts, and the ethics and morals that the program taught him.

Read more on Westmont Reporter Progress

Boy Scouts of America celebrates 100 years
In February 1910 the Boy Scouts of America was incorporated with the goal of building character, encouraging good citizenship and aiding the development of physical, mental and emotional fitness in boys and young men.

Read more on The Spectrum

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