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Andrea [Mrs. Greenspan] Mitchell nets $20,000 for speaking to Girl Scouts
Financial Markets Center ^
| 8/15/2
Posted on 08/15/2002 12:35:51 PM PDT by NativeNewYorker
This links directly to a .pdf file that includes the nugget in the headline. It's a site/report based on financial disclosure forms submitted by Federal Reserve officials.
TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: bsalist; federalreserve; finance
To: NativeNewYorker
All I want to know is how much she has made in the Market since she married Kemit the Frog Greenspan..."Oh honey do I go long or short today?..." "short today dear gonna raise the rates again..."
2
posted on
08/15/2002 12:51:40 PM PDT
by
kellynla
To: NativeNewYorker
Does that stink or what?
To: FryingPan101
With the $$ she and her husband have, she should have given the Girl Scouts $20,000, instead of taking it.
4
posted on
08/15/2002 1:23:16 PM PDT
by
RicocheT
To: RicocheT
I was stunned the Scouts *paid* more than token honoraria to anyone.
To: NativeNewYorker
Andrea Mitchell is the most powerful woman in America.
6
posted on
08/15/2002 2:26:00 PM PDT
by
Xenalyte
To: NativeNewYorker
First, I'm surprised she would agree to speak to the Girl Scouts. Second, I'm sure she took the money with the good intention of spending it to improve the economy.
7
posted on
08/15/2002 4:34:23 PM PDT
by
Fracas
To: NativeNewYorker
I can't believe that the GSUSA paid anyone to speak in front of them, or that Mrs. Greenspan demanded/accepted the money. What was she thinking? Why wouldn't she donate $20,000 to the GSUSA?
8
posted on
08/16/2002 2:11:17 PM PDT
by
RonF
To: RonF
So, all those little girls are out on the streets pushing cookies to raise funds for their scout troop, while at the same time, the headquarters squanders $20,000 on a TV news reporter. Absurd.
9
posted on
08/16/2002 2:25:31 PM PDT
by
CdMGuy
To: CdMGuy
In the Chicago suburbs, two GSUSA councils were forced to merge, and a camp sold, because one of the Councils squandered a quite large sum of money building a new HQ building that wasn't properly budgeted. I'm not terribly impressed with what I've seen of money management in the GSUSA.
10
posted on
08/16/2002 2:32:34 PM PDT
by
RonF
To: NativeNewYorker; *bsa_list
The Library of Congress
On my honor I will do my best to do my duty to God and my country and to obey the scout law; to help other people at all times; to keep myself physically strong; mentally awake, and morally straight. The Boy Scout Oath
|
On August 21, 1912, Arthur R. Eldred of Oceanside, New York achieved the rank of Eagle Scout, the highest rank in the Boy Scouts of America. He was the first person to earn the award.
The Boy Scout movement began with the 1908 publication of British Lieutenant General Robert S.S. Baden-Powell's Scouting for Boys. In 1902, nature writer Ernest Thompson Seton advocated organizing a boys' club called "Woodcraft Indians." Seton inspired Baden-Powell's efforts to marshall existing boys' groups into scout patrols. Baden-Powell's book describes the games and activities he developed to train cavalry troops during the South African War and suggests an organizational framework for scouting. The appeal of Scouting for Boys reflected the popular fascination with nature-based recreation as a means of character development.
The Boy Scouts of America was founded in 1910 with President William Howard Taft as honorary president. By 1912, every state could claim a band of Scouts. Soon, the organization inaugurated its program of national civic Good Turns--promotion of a "sane and safe" Fourth of July was among the earliest of these campaigns. Congress granted the Boy Scouts a Federal Charter in 1916, authorizing a Scout uniform similar to a U.S. armed services uniform.
In the 1930s, Vito Cacciola, an Italian immigrant living in New England, extolled the virtues of scouting to Merton Lovett in an interview for the Writers' Project of the Works Progress Administration. According to the conventions of the day, Lovett attempted to capture Cacciola's accent by transcribing his words in dialect: I thinka de Boy Scouts is good for boys . . . de Italian boys maka good Boy Scouts . . . It maka de boys strong. It maka them acquainted with nature. Some Italian boys does not know de flowers and de trees. The wilds animals and birds they does not recognize. Yes, it is better than playa on de street. And I thinka they learna some good lessons, what?"Interview with Vito Cacciola," circa 1936-1940. American Life Histories, 1936-1940
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In 1912, Juliette Gordon Low started the Girl Scouts in Savannah, Georgia. Her efforts to bring fresh-air activities to girls proved popular. By the following year, national headquarters were established in Washington, D.C. The Girl Scout cookie sale quickly became an important fund raiser for the organization. Initially homemade, by the 1930s Girl Scouts peddled precursors of the commercially-baked delicacies we know today.
Use the American Memory Collection to learn more about the roots of Scouting in the United States:
- Learn more about the conservation movement and its influence on scouting. Track down Ernest Thompson Seton's best-selling book Wild Animals I Have Known (1898) in the American Memory collection Evolution of the Conservation Movement, 1850-1920.
- The South Texas Border: The Robert Runyon Photograph Collection contains a wonderful panoramic photograph of Texas Boy Scouts from May 20, 1916.
- Architecture and Interior Design for 20th Century America, 1935-1955 holds a series of interior and exterior shots of the Girl Scouts of America's former headquarters at 3rd Avenue and 51st Street, New York City. Search the collection on Girl Scout to access these photos.
- Search on the keyword boy scout in the collection Prosperity and Thrift, 1921-1929 to find an address given by President Calvin Coolidge to the National Council of the Boy Scouts of America in 1926, and to see an image of Coolidge with 1500 boy scouts who visited the White House in 1927.
- Search across all the American Memory collections on the term scout to see images, not only of boy scouts and girl scouts but also military scouts. See, for example, A Gentleman of the "Old West": Scout, Indian Figher, Hunter, Trapper from the collection The Northern Great Plains, 1880-1920 and Scouts Report from Edward S. Curtis's The North American Indian.
Sources
Yesterday |
Archive |
American Memory |
Search All Collections |
Collection Finder |
Learning Page
11
posted on
08/23/2002 6:30:39 PM PDT
by
Coleus
To: NativeNewYorker
This is ridiculous.
12
posted on
08/23/2002 6:32:16 PM PDT
by
jwalsh07
To: Fracas
First, I'm surprised she would agree to speak to the Girl Scouts.Not surprising to me. The Girl Scouts are as leftist as Mitchell -- and vice versa.
America's Fifth Column ... watch PBS documentary JIHAD! In America
New Link: Download 8 Mb zip file here (60 minute video)
13
posted on
08/24/2002 3:28:12 PM PDT
by
JCG
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