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Baden-Powell's and experiences
Important elements of traditional Scouting have their origins in Baden-Powell's experiences in education and military training.

Baden-Powell's and India
Baden-Powell's 1915 " Memories of India ".
The name Guides was chosen from Baden-Powell's military background, " Guides " had operated in the north-west frontier in India, their main task was to go on hazardous expeditions.

Baden-Powell's and him
Meanwhile, Baden-Powell's elaborate telephone network provided him with timely and accurate information.

Baden-Powell's and for
Scouting in Texas unofficially dates to the publication of British lieutenant general Robert Baden-Powell's popular book, Scouting for Boys, in 1908.
Scouting in Pennsylvania began in 1908 in Pottsville, Pennsylvania, when a Superintendent with the Pennsylvania State Police, Lynn G. Adams, formed a troop using Baden-Powell's handbook, Scouting for Boys.
Following the successful camp, Baden-Powell's published his first book on the Scouting movement in 1908, Scouting for Boys, and the international Scouting movement grew rapidly.
The Kibbo Kift ( archaic Kentish dialect for ' proof of great strength ') has been described as ' the only genuine English national movement of modern times ' and was certainly very different from Baden-Powell's Boy Scouts.
The book was one of a number of influences for Baden-Powell's Scouting for Boys.
The 1, 200 Canadian troops serving under Baden-Powell were the first to wear the Campaign Hat as a part of their official uniform, and this very likely influened Baden-Powell's decision to order 10, 000 of the hats for the British troops.
It is a descendant of Baden-Powell's original handbook, Scouting for Boys, which has been the basis for Scout handbooks in many countries, with some variations to the text of the book depending on each country's codes and customs.
Ernest Thompson Seton combined his Woodcraft manual, the Birch Bark Rolls, with Baden-Powell's Scouting for Boys.
It was written by Ernest Seton and drew greatly on Baden-Powell's Scouting for Boys, it included information on the organization of Scouting, signs and signaling, and camping, as well as Scouting games and a description of several Scouting honours.

Baden-Powell's and Cub
The BSA obtained the rights to Lord Baden-Powell's The Wolf Cub Handbook in 1916 and used it in unofficial Wolf Cub programs starting in 1918.

Baden-Powell's and Scouts
However, Edwardian principles could not allow young girls to participate in the rough and tumble, and " wild " activities of the Scouts, and so the Girl Guides were created by Baden-Powell's sister, Agnes, to provide a more " proper " programme of activities.
Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell | Baden-Powell's sketch of Chief of Scouts Frederick Russell Burnham | Burnham, Matobo Hills, 1896.
According to Aron, he modeled Habonim after Baden-Powell's Boy Scouts.

Baden-Powell's and ;
The origin of the Scouting neckerchief seems to be in Robert Baden-Powell's participation in the Second Matabele War in 1896 ; where he worked with Frederick Russell Burnham, an American-born scout employed by the British Army.
In that book, he combined Baden-Powell's system of education ; ideas of the American writer, traveller and painter E. T.
Baden-Powell's force amounted to less than 1, 500 men and officers ; he realised that deceit would be key to holding the town.

Baden-Powell's and Scout
The main policy is Traditional Scouting – which is taking Baden-Powell ’ s 10 Scout Laws and using them, along with Baden-Powell's original training programme and rank system.
In very short time, Scout Patrols were created up and down the country, all following the principles of Baden-Powell's book.
His father's sister Henrietta Grace Powell was Robert Baden-Powell's mother making Baden-Powell, the founder of the Scout Movement, Smyth's first cousin.
Prior to 1968, a Rover Scout who had gained the Queen's Scout Badge was allowed to wear a miniature replica of the badge on his left arm sleeve before he gained the Baden-Powell's Award.
Following the creation of Robert Baden-Powell's Boy Scout movement and their first rally, at the Crystal Palace, it became apparent that many girls wanted to join the movement.

Baden-Powell's and was
In the United Kingdom, the public followed Baden-Powell's struggle to hold Mafeking through newspapers, and when the siege was broken, he had become a national hero.
He was Prime Minister of Hungary twice and a friend of Baden-Powell's.
Henry Warington Smyth Baden-Powell KC ( 3 February 1847 – 24 April 1921 ), known as Warington within the family, was Robert Baden-Powell's oldest brother.
Among the relief forces was one of Baden-Powell's brothers, Major Baden Fletcher Smyth Baden-Powell.
The original edition of the handbook was based on Baden-Powell's work.
Probably one of the most eponymous deceptions of the modern era was Robert Baden-Powell's defence of Mafeking during the Second Boer War.

Baden-Powell's and .
Baden-Powell's sketch of Burnham in 1896, wearing a neckerchief.
They were first run as the youngest group in the Guide Association by Agnes Baden-Powell, Lord Baden-Powell's younger sister.
In 1900 he began serving with Baden-Powell's police against the Boers in South Africa.
The next year he served in Colonel Sir Robert Baden-Powell's campaign against the Matebele, after which he joined the Cape Police.

personal and experiences
Men continuously at the head of growing enterprises can acquire experiences of the most varied, complicated and trying type so that at maturation they have developed the competence and willingness to accept the personal responsibility so sorely needed now.
In representing part of this new picture, I will be recounting some of my own personal experiences, reactions and judgments ; ;
The characters in this book in particular are also based on archaeologists Christie knew from her personal experiences on excavations sites.
According to Hartshorne people do not experience subjective ( or personal ) immortality in the afterlife, but they do have objective immortality because their experiences live on forever in God, who contains all that was.
However, in that decade, progressive reformers such as Alcott, influenced by Pestalozzi as well as Friedrich Fröbel and Johann Friedrich Herbart, began to advocate writing about subjects from students ' personal experiences.
Since the objection regards the words " Red " and " Juicy " as simply abstractions of previous experiences, it contends that they contain only a personal summary concept of one individual.
The practice of smallpox inoculation was eventually accepted by the general population due to first-hand experiences and personal relationships.
According to the standard interpretation of Hume on personal identity, he was a Bundle Theorist, who held that the self is nothing but a bundle of experiences (" perceptions ") linked by the relations of causation and resemblance ; or, more accurately, that the empirically warranted idea of the self is just the idea of such a bundle.
Winter, M. D., originally an associate of Hubbard and an early adopter of Dianetics, had by the end of 1950 cut his ties with Hubbard and written an account of his personal experiences with Dianetics.
Yutaka Katayama ( Mr. " K "), former president of Nissan's American operations, would have had his personal wartime experiences in mind supporting the name Datsun.
Eisenhower's profit on the book was substantially aided by an unprecedented ruling by the Treasury Department that Eisenhower was not a professional writer, but rather, marketing the lifetime asset of his experiences, and thus only had to pay capital gains tax on his $ 635, 000 advance instead of the much higher personal tax rate.
Declarative memory can be divided into two categories: episodic memory which stores specific personal experiences and semantic memory which stores factual information.
English Dominican mysticism in the late medieval period differed from European strands of it in that, whereas European Dominican mysticism tended to concentrate on ecstatic experiences of union with the divine, English Dominican mysticism's ultimate focus was on a crucial dynamic in one's personal relationship with God.
The commercials featured ex-Windows users discussing their various bad experiences that motivated their own personal switches to Macintosh.
Without understanding, there cannot be true faith and that understanding is built on the foundation of the community of believers, the scriptures and traditions and on the personal experiences of the believer.
; Books based on personal experiences
While the substance of many of Orwell's novels, particularly Burmese Days, is drawn from his personal experiences, the following are works presented as narrative documentaries, rather than being fictionalised.
* Robin Dunbar, Coevolution of neocortical size, group size and language in humans ( pre-publication version ) " Analysis of a sample of human conversations shows that about 60 % of time is spent gossiping about relationships and personal experiences.
Gonzo journalism tends to utilize personal experiences and emotions to achieve an accurate representation of a phenomenon, as compared to traditional journalism that favors using a detached writing style and relies on facts or quotations that can be verified by third parties.
Acting is seen as altering most of the 14 dimensions of changed subjective experience which characterize ASCs according to Farthing, namely: attention, perception, imagery and fantasy, inner speech, memory, higher-level thought processes, meaning or significance of experiences, time experience, emotional feeling and expression, level of arousal, self-control, suggestibility, body image, and sense of personal identity.
Thus, although there is an esoteric tradition in Judaism ( Kabbalah ), Rabbinic scholar Max Kadushin has characterized normative Judaism as " normal mysticism ", because it involves everyday personal experiences of God through ways or modes that are common to all Jews.
The Painted Bird, Kosiński's controversial 1965 novel, is a fictional account that depicts the personal experiences of a boy of unknown religious and ethnic background who wanders around unidentified areas of Eastern Europe during World War II and takes refuge among a series of people, many of whom are brutally cruel and abusive, either to him or to others.
In contrast to Abraham — who illuminates the world with knowledge of God and earns the respect of the inhabitants of the land of Canaan — and Isaac — who continues his father's teachings and also lives in relative harmony with his neighbors — Jacob experiences many personal struggles both in the land and out of it-including the hatred of his brother, Esau ; the deception of his father-in-law, Laban ; the rape of his daughter, Dinah ; the death of his favorite wife, Rachel ; and the sale of his son, Joseph.
" She has undertaken a signature personal element of traveling around the country and talking to women at hospital and community events featuring the experiences of women who live, or had lived, with the condition.
The fallacy applies only to objective facts, or what are alleged to be objective facts, rather than to facts about personal tastes or subjective experiences, and only to facts regarded in the same sense and at the same time.

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