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MPSAA ’ LANTERN S LIGHT by the Many Point Staff Alumni Association EST. 1985 Vol. 27 Issue 1 FALL 2012 Message from the This Issue 1 - Message from the President 2 - Beginning Doctor Care President 3 - Where Are They Now? 4 - Contributing Members Thanks any Point Scout Camp had the evening. Overall, it was an honor to another record year in 2012. With work with each staff member this past 5 - 2012 TC Song Lyrics Mover 4,300 Scout participants, the summer. 6 - 4,363 Scouts in 2012 summers continue to be getting more and This year, we have added some new 7 - Many Point Chronicles more exciting. Not only is it getting exciting things to the Alumni. We’ve launched 9 - Cute Baby for current staff, the Alumni Association a new website, which is continuously continues to improve its outreach and 10 - The Tradition Continues... being updated, and have introduced an connection to Alumni members. Thank electronic payment method for making you. your contribution. Upcoming Events This year, I was able to take some time Enclosed with this letter, you have from my full time job in Medina, MN to Thursday, December 27th, 2012 received some annual contribution work at camp for a few weeks. During supplies. Please join the team of over MPSAA Holiday Party Many Points 3rd Week, Alumni Dan 180 members who contribute each year. Check Facebook and the Website Williams, Andrew Bickel, Scott Scheiller Any contribution amount to the MPSAA and I hosted the All Things Wilderness Friday, April 19th, 2013 directly impacts the program that our Response Program….a great success. Spring Fling - Location TBD staff delivers to the thousands of Scouts Some traditions we have reintroduced each year. Thank you for your continued Thursday, August 1st, 2013 is the Hootenanny held at the Jolly support. Hootenanny 2013 at the Jolly Fisher- Fisherman. If you missed out on it this man - Michael Kuklok, MPSAA President year, make sure to set some time aside Friday, August 23, 2013 to Sunday, for it next year. It was August 25th, 2013 a great time to listen to Alumni Campout, Ten Chiefs, Many some older and newer Point Scout Camp tunes from our talented group of guitar players on staff. Another tradition that is on its third year is the LumberJack Rendezvous held in Ten Chiefs. Since the week is lighter, we bring all Scouts from all camps to Ten Chiefs, and have a good ole LumberJack themed competition. This year featured even more events like log rolling, a corn feast (yes that is a Hop on www.mpalumni.org to canoe) and an evening sign-up on the secured site to slideshow of the different Photo: Cooking Corn on a Canoe - Scott Kuhlamn, 2012 get email updates. activities throughout this world for Rusk, who didn’t need to feed the children. Beginning Doctor Care at Rusk: Well it was wonderful for the family. Meals were furnished - three meals a day. And we had only to walk Many Point Scout Camp up through the woods to the dining hall to be served those meals. They were xcerpts from an interview on 7-30- if as you can imagine. I heard about this good meals and we had fun hiking up 12 “Many Point” and I called up somebody and back. E With Arnold S. Anderson, M.D. in the Many Point office and it came up that they had an opening for a doctor the Arne: We went up there for ten years. a prominent pediatrician in the Twin 1950 to t960. Cities. He started the St. Louis Park last two weeks of the camp. So I applied Clinic (now Park Nicollet) and founded and got the position. It turns out that the staff people were very the Minneapolis Childrens Hospital. He So we went out to Many Point, and it congenial. Wonderful group of people to is a distinguished graduate of the Mayo was beyond our wildest dreams. They meet with - a lot of teachers were staff Clinic and of the University of Minnesota provided us all our meals. They provided people at the camp. We would have so- Medical School. For his contributions to us a row boat. We could sit down on the cials out at the family camp, I think every , he received the Silver Beaver dock and fish, and go swimming, things Saturday night, where we would have a Award. like that. It amounted to about one hour a little dance, and a talk by Wint Hartman, who was Director at that time. Wint gave and Rusk Dalton Anderosn met Arne day of work, what they called “sick call,” and to be at the camp for emergencies 24 us the history of Many Point, and he was Anderson when they were students at St. - to my way of thinking - a very, talented Olaf College. She is the mother of their hours a day. But we didn’t have that many emergencies, actually. man. Because he talked about the strategy ten children, six of them Eagle Scouts, of Many Point. Of course the strategy of including Many Point staff member Tyler We went out there and it was like we went Scouting was primarily character building Anderson, who died in L973 in an auto to a dream, because when we vacationed of boys of that age, and then giving them accident just before his 18tr birthday before that, we vacationed in a tent. And an education of things that they weren’t [see Meller, Bill, “Anderson, TYLER” in they provided us an Adirondac cabin, taught in school. What was essential for A Biography of Buckskin Area Campsite a very nice place to eat, sleep, read and living: the Scout Oath and Law and that names. pp 7-8. Many Point Staff Alumni things like that. They also provided us type of thing. So we went to family night Association. 2011.) worked in the Many three meals a day, which was just out of Point Conservation Lodge by E. Daniel Eckberg, PhD, worked in the Many Point Conservation Lodge (‘54), was Field Sports Director (including the rifle rangeJ [‘55J, and Pioneer Area Director [‘58). He was a teacher and administrator in the Hopkins, MN Public Schools for thirty-five years. rne: We came up here (MN) on July Afirst 1950. We had an office which was on the back porch of an old duplex in Hopkins. My colleagues gave us a stipend of $400 per month to run the practice on, and also to pay for the house and feed the children. And Rusk was, of course, busy taking care of the children - she had her hands full with three little boys. I wanted to Photo: Rusk Anderson (left) and Arne Anderson (right). July 30th, 2012. Arne, Camp Doctor in have a vacation that sum- the 1950s started Park Nicollet and founded the Minneapolis Childrens Hospital. mer, but couldn’t afford 2 things and Wint talked about the strategy Dick Raile [Ed. Note: Chief of Pediatrics I also developed a questionnaire for the of Many Point, and teaching boys char- - Hennepin County Medical Center), John parents, which answered everything we acter and knowledge they should have. It LaBree [Ed. Note: U. of M. Professor of needed to know. I was concerned about was very well thought out. It really gave Internal Medicine & Cardiology). the camp examinations done everywhere. you the purpose of Scouting. To my way Dan: You said sick call was about an hour They were so quick, the whole Scout of thinking Scouting has been the best long? Troop would come to see a doctor and boy-development institution that I’ve run they didn’t take any history of real conse- into. Arne: About an hour long in the morning. quence. So I got a way of taking a history And then we’d have some lacerations and One of the main ideas of the camp was in which I had five or six questions. One things like that. We always went back in that they were going to have these troop was immunizations. Two was any chronic the afternoon to see how the two to three sites, and it was to teach the boys to live in diseases. Three would be any medications patients we had in the little hospital (health a community and be self-supporting. they were taking. I don’t know what the lodge) were doing. other two were. I figured out that these The children enjoyed it tremendously. I Dan: How about poison lvy? would cover anything. And that gave us a remember we had a lot of socials on the very good pre-camp health evaluation. beach. Breaking the watermelon. I forget Arne: Poison Ivy was rampant. That was what they called watermelons. most of what we had. The preventatives Dan: Did you ever have to send any prob- they had developed before I came there lems to the hospital in Detroit Lakes? Dan: Deevils! was that after they had been out in the Arne: The only people we sent in were Arne: The next year, the Director asked woods, they had to go swimming before Scouters, older people. One scouter had a me to recruit doctors. Of course, Rusk had they had supper. And when they went heart attack and another had appendicitis. tremendous enthusiasm, I had tremendous swimming they had a Fels Naptha bath. I In ten years! enthusiasm. So we recruited a group of think that stopped quite a bit of it. Henry young doctors to come up there, each tak- Staub did research of cortisone lotion on I remember the C.l.T.s, their involvement. ing a two week period. And subsequently, one leg and the standard lotion [a very The spirit of the camp you felt as soon as many years later, somebody told me that sticky lotion) on the other leg; and the you came through the opening gate. There the list of doctors that went to Many Point cortisone was no better than the other. was always a C.l.T. there to welcome read like a “Who’s Who” of Minneapolis you. And they asked me to get the drugs and (physicians). supplies for the place. They didn’t order There are some organizations that have es- Dan: Do you remember the names of the supplies according to their needs. They pirit de corps that when you get involved some of the doctors that you recruited? had too much of some things and too little with it or come as a guest you know it of other things. So I went through the re- right away. And the Scouting organization Arne: Oh sure. Frank Johnson was one was an organization like that. It was just of them. He became a prominent cardiac cords from the camp dispensary and wrote down what each patient had. So I really one of those organizations that the people surgeon in Minneapolis. Henry Staub (Ed. you encountered made you better. Note: Staub Pediatric Group & Clinical got a profile of patients which gave us a Professor of Pediatrics at the U of M.), profile of supplies. Where are they Now? It’s amazing the different avenues that Staff members take as they develop throughout camp. Where are they now? We’ll tell you. • Officer Neil Dolan staffed on from 2005 to 2012, and is now a Deputy Sherif for Clearwater County in Minnesota. Pictured to the right, Dolan explains to 2012 Wilderness Response Scouts law enforcement techniques. • Al Boyce (1973- 79,81,2000) recently retired from US Bank to work full time as co-owner of the popular Pedal Pub. Opening in April, 2007, Al’s venture has several routes in the Twin Cities, St. Peter, and Chicago.... and more expansion plans. www.pedalpub.com

3 Thank You to the Contributing Members in 2012

Paul Abraham Albert J. Clemmens Curtis W. Frank C. Wilson Anderson Murray Cooper James Freid Dennis P. Anderson James P. Cordes Shawn Frey Troy J. Anderson Lee D. Cornell Thomas A. Friedl Joseph Anglim Valerie (Jo) Cornell Isaac Gaetz John C. Bachmann Jimmy Cornish Thomas Galarneault Efthimois (Tim) Bakalakos Katie Cornish Robert T. Gavigan William A. Baker Forster Davis Rick Giles Geffrey C. Bares Ina Davis Joseph F. Glaccum David Barness Raymond M. Davis Gordon M. Griller David T. Barth Ronald W. Davis Charles Guthrie Merritt Bartlett Thomas F. Delano Cliff Hagman Leonard (Lee) Bay Corwin Diamond Matthew J. Halverson Charles J. Beckman Thomas G. Dibble Barbara Hamry Richard F. Beggs Donald E. Dinesen Dave K. Hamry Thomas N. Bell Tylor Dobey Gwen Hartman Hogan Jean E. Benson Neil (Buttons) Dolan Gregory D. Hawkins Robert C. Birkemeir Steve Donaldson John Heenan Rolf F. Bjelland Sean Dooley Glen Hentges John R. Boice Thomas Dooley Lawrence G. Hintgen Alan R. Bongaarts Jerry Downes Terry Holman Matt Boudreaux Lawrence (Larry) Downes Tyler Howell Josh Boudreaux Dan J. Doyle Jeffrey S. Isaacson Al Boyce Evan Dunbar John W. (Jack) Jaglo Chad Brancamp E. Daniel Eckberg David E. Jansen Paul Brancamp John S. Ehresmann John G. Jarvis Kelly Brancamp Rachael Ehresmann Thomas A. Joas Mike Burke Steven R. Englund James S. Johnson Kenneth A. Burt Jimmy Eriksson Alan D. Johnson William Campanella Kenneth Ewald Eric Johnson David R. Carlsen Jason Ewing Thomas B. Johnson Harold W. Carlson Alex Fish Richard J. Josephson Jay R. Carlson Chuck Fisher Paul A. Joubert Curtis J. Cheese William O. Foelker Ted F. Jusell

Peter Larsen, Ten Chiefs Camp Director in 2012 - Walking on the Dock to his Life Guard station. 4 Thomas Kalvestran Donald C. Myers Jacob Stonesifer Roger W. Karlson Robert R. Nelson Amelia Stonesifer Doron Kaynar-Kissinger Norman R. Nelson Wayne A. Stroman Bill King Steven Nelson Philip T. Stromberg Harold F. Kloster Todd Neuman Steve R./Skip Stromberg Keith Knapp Thomas J. Nicol Bruce Sund Richard Koechlein Michael D. Niesen Becky Sutten Heather M. Koshiol John Nixon Travis Sutten Aaron D. Kringler David O'Denius Thomas M Sutton Connie Krueger Cordell Olson Craig A. Swanson Scott Kuhlman Josh Owens Michael G. Swanson Michael L. Kuklok David D. Palme Wallace H. Swanson Gregory La Fontaine Douglas E. Palmer Alex Symes Gregory W. Langley John Paulson Chris Tashjian Sveinar Y. Larsen Timothy J. Paulson Gary W. Taylor Gerald (Tip) Lausen Alan James Perrault Alan L. Thomas John P. Lausen Frank B. Perry Barbara Tindle James R. Lewis E. Eugene Peterson Mitchell E. Turner Michael G. Looby David G. Price Chris L. Turner Jon F. Luebke Tim D. (Teeps) Pryor Erik W. Vanderbilt Neill H. Luebke Paul Quist Ray Donald Vogtman Todd Lundquist Robert W.(Bill) Reutiman Mark Vonderharr Mark Madland Kurt A. Richards James D. Voytovich Tom Marcy Marcus D. Roening Thomas Walker David Markwardt Matt J. Roening Daniel J. Wallerius Brent L. Martin Peter A. Rognli Jeff H. Walton Diane K. Martin Michael J. Rumppe Andy M. Wangstad Jason Mcclintic Gale L. Running Brad Welle Mike Mccollor David L. Rutlen Scott Wentworth Fred C. Mccormick Jay Sandgren Ronald E. Werdin Dennis Medd Bill Scheig Jay Wescott Bill H. Meller Kalman M. Schellenberg Roscoe White Matthew (Rock) Mencke David Scott Schreiner Martin E Wick Mary E. Merlin Frederick J. Schroeder Nick Yearous Gerald Metzler Michael M. Sebek Mark Yelich Scott Everett Miller Kenneth W. Smith Joel Richard Young Bill Mittendorff Irene Sonju William James Mohr Thomas H. Sopoci Chris Monson Brad Stewart David L. Myers Rick Stone

Boats Under the Sunset - Ten Chiefs Sunset in 2012 5 “Many Contacts Mike Kuklok, President 763-234-7642 - [email protected] Point Al Boyce, Director 952-927-8968 - [email protected] Scout Chad Brancamp, Communications Crew 320.761.7889 - [email protected] Curt Cheese, Roster and Photos Camp” 612-886-1074 - [email protected] Brent Martin, Historian 651-483-0694 - [email protected] Doug Palmer, Historian (to the tune of Big Rock Candy Mountains) 952-831-5006 - [email protected] Rewritten by Matt Boudreaux (right) and Peter Larsen (left) for the Ten David Price, Membership Cheifs Staff 2012 952-926-5883 - [email protected] Michael Sebek, Spring Fling Chairman One evening as the sun went down and the Ten Chiefs fire was burnin’ 952-926-2055 - [email protected] Down the path came a Scouter hikin’, and he said “Boys, I’m not turnin’” Travis Sutten, Many Point Camping Director 651-254-9139, [email protected] I’m headed to the land that’s far away, beside the wildlife refuge So come with me and we’ll go see Many Point Scout Camp Send in a Story

At Many Point Scout Camp, there’s a land that’s fair and bright or Article Where you’ll earn some merit badges, and sleep out every night If you have an article or story that you Where the staffers all are friendly, and the sun shines every day would like to share, feel free. Email One the camp and the scouts and the floating boats your story to [email protected]. The sandy beach springs where the bluebird sings At Many Point Scout Camp Wanted

At Many Point Scout Camp the wood is always dry, We are looking for some additions to And the campfires burn real easy, they start on the first try our newsletter. Please send in “Where Your breakfast nearly cooks itself and granny makes the dinner Are They Now?” Oh I’m bound to go where the where there ain’t no snow Would also like to find some Alumni Where the rain don’t fall and the wind don’t blow that would like to interview some At Many Point Scout Camp other Alumni for feature articles.

At Many Point Scout camp, you always change your socks

And the beach is always sandy, it doesn’t have no rocks FF ALU TA M S N T I The sailboats all are rigged up, the aqua tramp is full N A I S O S

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MPSAA Interlude You’ve now got a peek of the coming week at Many Point Scout Camp EST. 1985

6 and spar pole climbing. 2012 Brings In • 1,573 adults took a week off of work so they could focus their entire attention and time on developing strong young leaders. 4,363 Scouts • One adult leader shared that “We had a Scout in our troop who did not want to climb the tower – no ifs, uring the past year the Boy Scouts have certainly ands or buts - but he did it and when he got down he made headlines in the press. Unfortunately, not all started crying and said ‘I can’t believe I did it!’ and Dof the coverage has been favorable. However we did you know what he was the first one up that tower for experience many successes that were absent from those the rest of the week.” same stories. • Though the Scout’s name and circumstances were So, in the spirit of positive disclosure, here is what you different each time, countless versions of the above may have missed about Scouting at Many Point in 2012… story were retold about the thousands of young people who overcame an obstacle (mental, emotional • Many Point has had an 18% increase in attendance or physical) while at camp and as a result grew in in the past two years. confidence and character. • 4,363 young people participated in safe, fun activities You should know and feel proud that Many Point has that simultaneously fostered the growth of teamwork, long been and remains committed to providing meaningful citizenship and fitness. experiences for all young people. Know that we will always • 775 Scouts earned one of seven new merit badge work to ensure that we provide a safe environment with offerings that could spur lifelong interests or careers the support of caring adults. Know that your proud legacy in journalism, ceramics, finance, fitness and digital created as a staff member will continue as we strive to arts. make an ever more powerful positive impact in the coming • 1,009 young people challenged themselves in our new years. program sports of catamaran sailing, paddleboarding - Travis Sutten, Camping Director, MPSC 2012

Photo: Scout Repels from the Spar Pole Climbing activity as a part of the Tree House Overnight Program. Some of much footage taken by Mike Kuklok with GoPro Hero 2 Cameras - August, 2012.

7 Preview the By: Doug Palmer Premium Gift 1954-1964 y the 1920s the present Ten Chiefs of America The history, skills, and way with a youth group called the “Sons of waterfront was ownedby many of life of the American Indians has had Daniel Boone”. In Beard’s words the Bsmall land owners. The beautiful a profound influence on the Boy Scouts were to encourage sand beach wasa natural attraction. of America. Even today this influence is sport, healthful living, the study of The lack of forest cover is mystery. Did seen in programs like the Order of the wood crafts, outdoor recreation, and the early Sportsmen landowners clear Arrow, and in various Scouting Merit the preservation of wild plants, birds, the land or was it a natural clearing. Badges and basic requirements. Just and animals. how did this come about? The Ten Chiefs Camp along with the Beards program did not use themes Buckskin Camp were the first camping At the time the Boy Scout program from American Indians as such but areas when Many Point opened in 1947. came to America at the turn of the from the culture and Spread along the sand beaches ten 20th century from England experiences of life camping areas were developed. Who the country was on the frontier. This decided the name “Ten Chiefs” and u n d e r g o i n g movement was loosely decided on a Native American theme is major social and organized but by 1910 not known for certain. economic changes. it was estimated that The western there were over The best guess is the first Camp frontier had been 20,000 boys in this Director, Wint Hartman made the settled with the program. decision. At the time of Mr. Hartman’s states of Nevada death the book, Wigwams and Warpath, Another social , New Mexico, and Minute Stories of the American Indian, critic was Ernest Oklahoma joining the by Isabel Juergens, Grosset and Dunlap, Thomson Seton. Union. America was New York, 1936 was discovered in his (A Buckskin becoming an urban library Mr. Hartman must have shared campsite is industrialized country this books because in his handwriting named in his as more and more was the statement, “These books are honor.) Seton people flocked to cites the property of Winston Hartman.” spoke out and towns from rural against “money This book contained short biographies areas. Many leading g r u b b i n g , of the original “Chiefs”. In 1947, Ten politicians and social m a c h i n e Chiefs was designed for established leaders were concerned p o l i t i c s , troops with strong leadership. Unlike about how these changes degrading sports, town Buckskin which was patterned after were effecting the nations life of the worse kind that had turned a Camp Tonkawa on Lake Minnetonka manhood as more and more b o y s large proportion of our youth into nation with its centralized beach, permeant grew up in town and cites cut off from of flat chested , cigarette smokers with shelters, and meals in a dining hall, nature and ignorant of the skills of the shaky nerves and doubtful vitality”. To Ten Chiefs troops were expected to be former frontier. counter these trends Seton held up the more self sufficient. Each troop had An early social critic and famous example of the traditions of life of the it’s own waterfront that consisted of a illustrator Dan Beard was horrified American Indians. In the book, “The dock with boats and canoes. The only when he came to New York to see Birch Bark Roll of the ” shelter were canvas tarps over picnic newsboys sleeping on the street. (A Seton laid the ground work for a youth tables. A hot prepared evening meal campsite in Buckskin is named in his group. His plan was to create a boys was delivered in an insulated food honor.) This was in stark contrast to movement devoted to the promotion containers called a “hot stack”. Troops the healthy outdoor life he had enjoyed of interests in the out of doors, woods purchased their other groceries from as a boy in Ohio and Kentucky. So as craft skills, the preservation of wild life a Trading Post in the main area. Most the 19th century turned into the 20th and the promotion of good fellowship conservation/nature/rifle programs Beard channeled his talents and energy among its members . The plan’s aim were shared with Buckskin at the into creating a national boys movement was to give young people something Conservation Lodge. with the themes of the frontier heritage to do, something to think about and The influence of Native Americans and the new conservation movement. something to enjoy in the woods, and the frontier on the Boy Scouts Beards movement took form in 1905, with a view to always build character

8 for manhood. In July 1902 the first of Europe began. While the Spanish Skenandoa (1716-1816) organized tribe of “Woodcraft Indians” were interested in South America and Tribe: Oneida started up in Summit, New Jersey. The what would be the southern part of the “Woodcraft Indians” organization would United States other Northern European Location: New York later have a big impact on the future Counties would look to North America. One crisp fall morning in the year American Boy Scouts. An examination The Dutch were the first followed by the 1755 the good burghers of Albany of Seton’s book, looks very similar to the French and then English. Each coming out on their early Boy Scout handbooks. Woodcraft country looked at North America stoops beheld the Tribes spread across the nation. By differently. Without gold or silver limp body of an Indian 1910 it is estimated that there were riches these groups looked to “soft lying in the street. He over 200,000 “braves” in the woodcraft gold”, the fur of native animals was not dead, merely Indian movement. partially the beaver, for wealth dazed with drink, face and fortune. The Dutch located The early success of Seton “Woodcraft down in the refuse in what is today New York city Indians” attracted the attention of and littered with mud were mostly traders. The French President, Theodore Roosevelt, the of the street. As he based in Montreal, Canada naturalist, John Burroughs, and even roused himself to created a vast trading system that General Robert Baden-Powell who was sit up they turned depended upon Native Peoples in the midst of forming an organization away from him with to trap and transport beaver pelts. called the Boys Scouts in Britain. Both disgust. Looking down at his filthy body, They were not interested in settlements Beard’s “Sons of Daniel Boone” and he too was filled with loathing. “How as such The English on the other hand Seton’s “Woodcraft Indians” would later low has sunk Skenandoa, the deer, the were interested in settlements. Each merge into the . great huntsman! My clothes have been group treated the Native Peoples very stripped from me. My beaded moccasins These early youth programs gave differently. The French became very and my sharp knife gone. Stolen are my American Scouting a distinct body of involved in the lives of the Native Peoples. tokens of chieftainship. skills and ideas that exist to this day. It was common for French traders to Even the necklace of bear’s claws, Native Americans intermarry with the Native women. They formed alliances with the Native emblem of prowess, has been taken As Europeans established People to counter English settlement. from me while I lay here like a slug settlements along the eastern coast of The French and Indians Wars would be under a log.” From that moment the North America they encountered many the result of these alliances and land Oneida Chief changed his way, and different tribes of Native Peoples. These claims. The English acquired land by never...... encounters proved to be both peaceful treaties and by conquest forcing Native You’ve Previewed only the beginning and contentious. Many of the “Chiefs” Peoples to the West. of this 44 page booklet on the history in Ten Chiefs provide an early history of of Ten Chiefs Campsite Names by Doug these encounters. Palmer. Please take some time, and After the discovery of North America contribute to our cause. Thank you for a competition among the great powers your Support.

Tyler Phillips, Nick (‘99-’12) and Erin Phillps (‘08-’11) son Mike Kuklok (‘99-’12) Preparing for the Corn Feast in Ten enjoying some corn. August 2012. Chiefs. August 2012.

9 the Tradition Continues....

Photo (above): Matt Boudreaux helping a Scout with the Log Roll.

Photo (above): Scout scales the TC Tower with his Lumberjack attire. Photo (below): Steve Jones (2009-2012) pours a Scout some samples of Many Point brewed root beer. Photo (above): Erik Vanderbilt (1982,84-89) as Scout Master with his Scouts and son. Photo (below): Slide show from the evening with over 300 Scouts watching.