Date: Fri 12-Mar-1999
Date: Fri 12-Mar-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Quick Words:
Girl-Scouts-Brownies
Full Text:
Newtown Girls Join Scouts Across The Country In Celebrating Nat'l Girl Scout
Week
(with cuts)
BY SHANNON HICKS
Newtown Girl Scouts of all levels joined Girl Scouts around the world this
week in a celebration of Girl Scout Week and Be Your Best Day. Newtown has
troops that run from the youngest Daisies (kindergarteners) to their older
counterparts the Brownies (grades 1-3), Juniors (grades 4-6), Cadettes (grades
6-8) and Seniors (high school).
Girl Scout Week this year is March 7-13. Each year, Scouts celebrate the
beginning of the Girl Scout Movement in the United States, which began on
March 12, 1912. That was the day Juliette Gordon Low invited 24 girls to join
her at the Louise Porter Home in Savannah for tea and to talk about Scouting
for Girls. Two troops (which were first called "patrols") were formed at that
meeting; Daisy Gordon, Mrs Low's niece, was the first registered member.
From that quiet beginning, Girl Scouts USA has now grown into the world's
largest organization for girls, with over 2.5 members enrolled.
(While Juliette Gordon Low is credited with the founding of Girl Scouts of
America, it is important to know Mrs Low actually adapted a program, called
British Girl Guides, which in turn was an offspring of Boy Scouts.)
The first nationwide Girl Scout Week was celebrated in 1919, in conjunction
with the birthday of founder Juliette Low, on October 31. In 1954, the event
was officially changed to the week of March 12.
Scouts celebrated the fifth annual Be Your Best Day on Tuesday, March 9. Three
million scouts across the country called on their friends and neighbors to
help them "be your best."
Girl Scout Week, Newtown-Style
Newtown Scouts led the charge locally with a number of activities around the
town. Girl Scout Week may have opened on Sunday, but First Selectman Herb
Rosenthal made the observation official with a proclamation last week. On
Tuesday, March 2, Mr Rosenthal welcomed five Newtown Girl Scouts into Edmond
Town Hall, where he presented the girls with a proclamation announcing Girl
Scout Week in Newtown.
On Sunday, March 7, The Showtime Puppeteers, a/k/a the girls of Troop 656,
presented a puppet show they had been working on where they had transformed
many of their favorite children's stories into a puppet show for their peers.
The puppeteers made their debut presentation when they presented two of these
stories, The Town Mouse and The Country Mouse and The Prince and The Dragon ,
at C.H. Booth Library.
The performance was supplemented by jokes and a musical intermission, and was
a great hit with all the young children and their parents who trooped out in
Sunday afternoon's chilly temperatures.
On Monday afternoon, Brownie Troop 335 (Head O'Meadow School) assembled tray
favors for recipients of Meals on Wheels. Brownie Troop 820 (Hawley School)
decided to do two activities as a group this year, so their Monday afternoon
meeting was also busy this week. The girls put together an Easter basket for a
family of five that was arranged through Newtown Senior Center, and then the
Scouts assembled snow globes for the residents of Ashlar of Newtown.
The four girls, who are Junior Troop 239 (Montessori School), baked cookies
during their Monday afternoon meeting, which were then delivered to the
Dorothy Day shelter/soup kitchen in Danbury on Tuesday morning.
On Tuesday morning, the six Girl Scout troops at Middle Gate School once again
worked as a large team on a service project for Newtown's FAITH Food Pantry.
Daisy Troop 592, Brownie Troops 809, 890 and 113, and Junior Troops 134 and
236 all invited their classmates and teachers/faculty members to participate
in a paper goods/toiletries drive.
This was the fifth year Middle Gate scouts offered the challenge. Newtown's Be
Your Best Day coordinator Karen Kaechele said Tuesday night the result was
"outstanding once again.
"It went really well," Mrs Kaechele reiterated Wednesday morning. "There are
still donations coming in, so we will have another delivery on Thursday. They
are always pleased with donations like these because you can't purchase
toiletries -- shampoo, toilet paper, Kleenex, etc. -- with food stamps. So
these donations are always a big help."
Troop 127, Brownies at Sandy Hook School, collected donations during their
meeting on Tuesday afternoon to go to FAITH Food Pantry. Brownie Troop 1135,
at Head O'Meadow School, did something similar this week. The girls filled a
Friendship Basket with goodies and then presented the collection to their
school helpers.
On Wednesday night, nearly 20 of Newtown's Girl Scout troops participated in a
Thinking Day program at the high school. During the evening program, girls
were invited to dress in costumes similar to what troops around the world
might be wearing, consider what their international counterparts might be
doing this week, and also present skits concerning Girl Scouts and their
importance to the community.
Continuing Service
To Their Community
While Girl Scouts may be dedicated a little more than usual this week to
presenting special events and community service projects for Girl Scout Week,
troops are always thinking about their community around them. Not all of
Newtown's Girl Scout troops will be doing their Girl Scout Week projects this
week.
Brownie Troop 78, third graders at Sandy Hook School, planned two activities
to observe Girl Scout Week. Earlier this month, the girls made napkin holders
with wooden Easter decorations glued onto them for the residents at Ashlar of
Newtown. On March 22, the troop will be collecting for a family of three. An
Easter basket will be presented to the family, which was arranged through
FAITH Food Pantry, on March 27.
Also earlier this month, the girls in Brownie Troop 855 shared their
friendship when they baked cookies for a friend.
The Brownies in Troop 204 (Hawley School) also shared themselves with a friend
earlier this year. When troop co-leader Cathy Brophy heard of a Newtown family
whose mother had died shortly after the birth of her youngest baby, Mrs Brophy
thought immediately of the baby.
"Everyone was fixing meals and doing things for the family as a whole, but as
a mother myself, I also thought of the baby," Mrs Brophy explained. "I sat
down with the girls in the troop and explained to them that a baby has
different nutritional needs than its parents and even older brothers and
sisters, and maybe we could arrange for some baby food for the newborn."
The result was a number of donations by the individual Brownies. Girls donated
their allowances and candy/snack money for a week in order to collect enough
money to purchase baby food for one of Newtown's youngest residents.
Junior Troop 157 had planned to be out along Scudder Road on March 4, picking
up discarded trash from errant drivers, but the inclement weather that
afternoon forced the troop to reschedule its Be Your Best activity.
The Junior Troop 143, fifth grade girls at Hawley School, recently performed
at Ashlar of Newtown. A number of the girls are members of the string section,
or the band at their school, and so the scouts offered a performance for the
residents of Ashlar.
The Cadettes in Troop 382 (Newtown Middle School) took on The Gift of Caring
during the Girl Scout Cookie Sales season. Earlier this year, while making
their rounds to sell Girl Scout cookies, these girls asked those who were
purchasing cookies to consider purchasing an extra box that would be given to
Newtown's FAITH Food Pantry on behalf of the troop.
Junior Troop 1114, also from Hawley School, has an ongoing project. The girls
have a list of things they are to work on for the new few weeks, including
collecting canned and dry good to be donated to FAITH Food Pantry, donating
one or two books each to C.H. Booth Library, and doing good deeds around their
home for family members.
Troop 1114 has also been working on a service project for the past few years,
along with a Sandy Hook School Brownie troop, where the girls make touch books
for blind preschools students. The books are given to the Connecticut Board of
Education For The Blind, which then presents the books to appropriate children
around the state.
Junior Girl Scout Troop 157 from Head O'Meadow School will put their best feet
forward in April, even though Girl Scout Week falls in March. The troop has
arranged, through Newtown Congregational Church, to make 100 peanut butter
sandwiches for the Dorothy Day Soup Kitchen in Danbury.~
Closure On Sunday
To conclude this week's activities, over 300 girls are registered to take part
in a celebration at Edmond Town Hall on Sunday, March 14. Cadette Girl Scouts
will be leading the younger Daisy, Brownie and Junior Girl Scouts in songs,
games and crafts. The afternoon will close with an ice cream sundae social.
"This is great," said Be Your Best Day coordinator Karen Kaechele last week.
"This is a wonderful event for Girl Scouts of all ages, and an opportunity for
the girls to show the community that Girl Scouts is about a lot more than
selling cookies."
