Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Janet E. Tobitt" in English language version.
Camp Fire Songs – Miss Tobitt , singing instructress for camp-fire songs (from headquarters) will visit Hull
The service will be followed by a camp-fire on Beverley Westwood, to be conducted by Miss Tobitt from Headquarters
Miss Janet Tobitt, one of the "moral adoptions" parents who had recently returned from a year in Japan, suggested that Mr. Kiyoshi Togasaki, resourceful president of the Nippon Times, might be persuaded to work on the transportation problem.
Miss Tobitt has a degree from St. Andrew University in Scotland and has also studied in France and Switzerland.
After graduation she began to collect folk songs and dances while traveling on the continent.
Miss Tobitt, an Englishwoman, will lead the girls in singing and in English dances.
Miss Tobitt came to the United States on a six-month visit I 1930, and remained to become a citizen.
"Shepherd's pipes" were introduced to the Girl Scouts organization a few years ago by Miss Janet Tobitt
On March 13, Girl Scouts will sing and play shepherd's pipes on Alma Kitchell's "Let's Talk It Over" program, Miss Janet Tobitt will direct them.
Miss Janet Tobitt, who is music instructor at Pine Tree Camp
Miss Janet Tobitt of the Folk Festival Council in New York who introduced the pipe to Scout leaders.
When she returns to England in October she will be attached to the Girl Guides Association to give courses in song-leading and music appreciation at Foxlease, Hampshire, and other training centers for leaders.
In 1938 she spent a year in England, Scotland and Wales in a survey of music recreational activities that took her to 200 cities and hamlets.
Miss Tobitt estimates that she has given similar programs before 15,000 persons and song of her groups have been as large as 1,000 at a time.
Miss Janet Tobitt, former director of the American Girl Scout Association, Far East… would be in charge of the very substantial problem of out-of-hospital care.
Assisting in the project… Janet Tobitt of the American Girl Scout Association
A talk by Janet Tobitt, Girl Scout Executive, on special medical care being supplied to victims of the 1945 Hiroshima a-bomb blast.
An inveterate traveller, Miss Tobitt has covered the length and breadth of the United States and has gone into remote areas in five continents to collect material for her books.
She has collected her material by travelling in the picturesque villages of France, Belgium, England, Scotland and Wales.
A great deal of the material in her books has been collected by her in the country of their origin.
As early as 1951, Girl Scouts meetings were being held on military bases overseas. At the time, these troops were called Troops on Foreign Soils, or TOFS… this title was used until 1980 when it was changed to Girl Scouts Overseas.