Kari Aas: Difference between revisions
c-e, fix article order, add defsort, cn tags, bare urls, tag shoddy sourcing, Category:Norwegian schoolteachers, Category:1886 births, Category:People from Farsund, Category:1978 births, refimprove tag, use English, |
m Dating maintenance tags: {{Unreliable source}} {{Bare URLs}} {{Refimprove}} {{Cn}} |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{for|the athlete|Karl Aas}} |
{{for|the athlete|Karl Aas}} |
||
{{Refimprove}} |
{{Refimprove|date=November 2016}} |
||
'''Karen Marta Inanda "Kari" Aas''' (6 October 1886 in [[Farsund]]-2 January 1978) was a [[Norwegian]] teacher and Scout leader, and served as the [[Chief Scout]] of the [[Norsk Speiderpikeforbund]] from 1927 to 1935.{{cn}} |
'''Karen Marta Inanda "Kari" Aas''' (6 October 1886 in [[Farsund]]-2 January 1978) was a [[Norwegian]] teacher and Scout leader, and served as the [[Chief Scout]] of the [[Norsk Speiderpikeforbund]] from 1927 to 1935.{{cn|date=November 2016}} |
||
Aas graduated from teacher's college in [[Tromsø]] and found work as a teacher there in 1909. In 1910 she moved to [[Trondheim]].{{cn}} |
Aas graduated from teacher's college in [[Tromsø]] and found work as a teacher there in 1909. In 1910 she moved to [[Trondheim]].{{cn|date=November 2016}} |
||
Aas attended the 1928 [[World Scout Conference]] in [[Budapest]] as one of the [[Norwegian]] delegates, and was a witness to the first casting of [[B-P's footprint]], documented in her memoirs. She designed the World Trefoil emblem of the [[World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts]] that was adopted at the World Conference in 1930, a gold trefoil on a blue background.<ref>http://www.vintagegirlscout.com/intWAGGGS.html</ref> |
Aas attended the 1928 [[World Scout Conference]] in [[Budapest]] as one of the [[Norwegian]] delegates, and was a witness to the first casting of [[B-P's footprint]], documented in her memoirs. She designed the World Trefoil emblem of the [[World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts]] that was adopted at the World Conference in 1930, a gold trefoil on a blue background.<ref>http://www.vintagegirlscout.com/intWAGGGS.html</ref> |
||
Aas wrote several books about Scouting and was the recipient of the [[Silver Fish Award]].<ref>http://leksikon.speidermuseet.no/wiki/Kari_Aas</ref>{{Unreliable source}} |
Aas wrote several books about Scouting and was the recipient of the [[Silver Fish Award]].<ref>http://leksikon.speidermuseet.no/wiki/Kari_Aas</ref>{{Unreliable source|date=November 2016}} |
||
Aas was a member of the Trondheim [[school board]] and executive board ''Trondhjems konsertforening'', the Trondheim concert association.{{cn}} |
Aas was a member of the Trondheim [[school board]] and executive board ''Trondhjems konsertforening'', the Trondheim concert association.{{cn|date=November 2016}} |
||
==References== |
==References== |
||
{{Bare URLs}} |
{{Bare URLs|date=November 2016}} |
||
{{Reflist}} |
{{Reflist}} |
||
Revision as of 23:24, 18 November 2016
This article needs additional citations for verification. (November 2016) |
Karen Marta Inanda "Kari" Aas (6 October 1886 in Farsund-2 January 1978) was a Norwegian teacher and Scout leader, and served as the Chief Scout of the Norsk Speiderpikeforbund from 1927 to 1935.[citation needed]
Aas graduated from teacher's college in Tromsø and found work as a teacher there in 1909. In 1910 she moved to Trondheim.[citation needed]
Aas attended the 1928 World Scout Conference in Budapest as one of the Norwegian delegates, and was a witness to the first casting of B-P's footprint, documented in her memoirs. She designed the World Trefoil emblem of the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts that was adopted at the World Conference in 1930, a gold trefoil on a blue background.[1]
Aas wrote several books about Scouting and was the recipient of the Silver Fish Award.[2][unreliable source?]
Aas was a member of the Trondheim school board and executive board Trondhjems konsertforening, the Trondheim concert association.[citation needed]
References
Bibliography
- Norske skulefolk, editor Arne Espeland, Dreyer 1934.
- Hvem er hvem? 1934, published by Hj. Steenstrup, Aschehoug, Oslo 1934.