Showing posts with label Racism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Racism. Show all posts

Thursday, January 14, 2021

Martin Luther King Jr. Anniversary - 2021

Martin Luther King, Jr. was born on January 15th 1929. Following in his father's and grandfather's footsteps, he was ordained as a minister in 1948. Dr. King became one of the most important leaders of the civil rights movement in the U.S., advocating a nonviolent approach to fighting for equal rights. He received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964. Dr. King was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee, on April 4, 1968.



Listen to his famous speech I have a dream or read it:
I am happy to join with you today in what will go down in history asthe greatest demonstration for freedom in the history of our nation.Five score years ago, a great... (click to read the full transcript)

If you want to know more:

No copyright infringement intended. For educational purposes only

Sunday, January 14, 2018

Martin Luther King Jr. Anniversary - 2018

Martin Luther King, Jr. was born on January 15th 1929. Following in his father's and grandfather's footsteps, he was ordained as a minister in 1948. Dr. King became one of the most important leaders of the civil rights movement in the U.S., advocating a nonviolent approach to fighting for equal rights. He received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964. Dr. King was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee, on April 4, 1968.



Listen to his famous speech I have a dream or read it:
I am happy to join with you today in what will go down in history asthe greatest demonstration for freedom in the history of our nation.Five score years ago, a great... (click to read the full transcript)

If you want to know more:
Wikipedia article on M. Luther King
No copyright infringement intended. For educational purposes only

Saturday, October 14, 2017

The Privilege Walk

The typical classroom version of this activity involves between 10-40 participants. Throughout the privilege walk, some statements are read by the facilitator and the participants are asked to take a step forward or backward based on their responses. This activity forces participants to confront the ways in which society privileges some individuals over others. It is designed to get participants to reflect on the different areas in their lives where they have privilege as well as the areas where they don't.


(Full video transcription at the end of this post)

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

ESO 2 1st Term PBL - Stop Bullying!

ESO 2 Students,

This is your 1st term PBL assignment. You have to translate this mind map into Spanish: 

(From www.michellenhenry.com)

Monday, January 17, 2011

Newsy: 25th Anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr. Day

American's observe the 25th Anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr. Day to honor the legendary civil rights leader.


It’s a day dedicated to the legacy of one of the most influential leaders in American history. On the 25th anniversary of the federal holiday honoring Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the media is paying tribute to the man- and his dream.

We’re analyzing coverage from the Los Angeles Times, WJBK, MSNBC, and The Guardian.

In honor of the holiday, President Barack Obama encouraged Americans to participate in “appropriate civic, community, and service programs.” The Los Angeles Times quotes the president as saying: “Dr. King devoted his life to serving others... Commemorating Dr. King's life is not only a tribute to his contributions ... but also a reminder that every day, each of us can play a part in continuing this critical work.”

It seems the president’s request didn’t fall on deaf ears, as Detroit’s WJBK shows, many are spending the day trying to spread his message: “There is so much more to do when it comes to the dream. The dream of students like this being able to walk down the street as black Americans, as white Americans, as Asian Americans and say ‘I am equal to everybody else’. It is something they are so striving for and on this day, it is not just a day off, it’s a day to wake up early, hit the streets -- all for this reason.” 

And MSNBC featured Reverend Horace Sheffield as a guest. The Reverend advocates- as a society, we need to reevaluate ourselves, and look toward King for guidance: “He died fighting for peace and here we have people in our country who may not use bullets, may not use guns, but use press releases to be as violent and uncivil towards other people. So I think we gotta find a way to be a little bit more civil toward one another.”

In the Guardian, scholar and former speech writer for Dr. King, Clarence Jones, says despite the progress America has made, we must continue the fight to keep Dr. King’s dream alive: “The essence of his dream for African Americans...was this: a United States where every person has the equal opportunity... But this ‘all other things being equal’ is the lie of race relations in America. Because our country has not leveled the playing field at all.”

The government has set up a website with information on how you can volunteer in your community-- you can check that out in the transcript section of this story.

Written by: Maurice Scarborough



No copyright infringement intended. For educational, non-commercial purposes only.

Monday, December 6, 2010

Stop Cyberbullying

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What is cyberbullying, exactly?

"Cyberbullying" is when a child, preteen or teen is tormented, threatened, harassed, humiliated, embarrassed or otherwise targeted by another child, preteen or teen using the Internet, interactive and digital technologies or mobile phones. It has to have a minor on both sides, or at least have been instigated by a minor against another minor. Once adults become involved, it is plain and simple cyber-harassment or cyberstalking. Adult cyber-harassment or cyberstalking is NEVER called cyberbullying.


It isn't when adult are trying to lure children into offline meetings, that is called sexual exploitation or luring by a sexual predator. But sometimes when a minor starts a cyberbullying campaign it involves sexual predators who are intrigued by the sexual harassment or even ads posted by the cyberbullying offering up the victim for sex.

The methods used are limited only by the child's imagination and access to technology. And the cyberbully one moment may become the victim the next. The kids often change roles, going from victim to bully and back again.

Children have killed each other and committed suicide after having been involved in a cyberbullying incident.

Cyberbullying is usually not a one time communication, unless it involves a death threat or a credible threat of serious bodily harm. Kids usually know it when they see it, while parents may be more worried about the lewd language used by the kids than the hurtful effect of rude and embarrassing posts.

Cyberbullying may arise to the level of a misdemeanor cyberharassment charge, or if the child is young enough may result in the charge of juvenile delinquency. Most of the time the cyberbullying does not go that far, although parents often try and pursue criminal charges. It typically can result in a child losing their ISP or IM accounts as a terms of service violation. And in some cases, if hacking or password and identity theft is involved, can be a serious criminal matter under state and federal law.


When schools try and get involved by disciplining the student for cyberbullying actions that took place off-campus and outside of school hours, they are often sued for exceeding their authority and violating the student's free speech right. They also, often lose. Schools can be very effective brokers in working with the parents to stop and remedy cyberbullying situations. They can also educate the students on cyberethics and the law. If schools are creative, they can sometimes avoid the claim that their actions exceeded their legal authority for off-campus cyberbullying actions. We recommend that a provision is added to the school's acceptable use policy reserving the right to discipline the student for actions taken off-campus if they are intended to have an effect on a student or they adversely affect the safety and well-being of student while in school. This makes it a contractual, not a constitutional, issue.

If you want to know more, click on the following icons:


About stopcyberbullying.orgInformation for kids aged seven to tenInformation for tweens aged eleven to thirteenInformation for teens aged fourteen to seventeenInformation for parents and carersInformation for educatorsInformation for law enforcement


No copyright infringement intended. For educational, non-commercial purposes only.

NY Times: In Spain, Gypsies Find Easier Path to Integration

The following article by SUZANNE DALEY and RAPHAEL MINDER was published on The New York Times online yesterday, Sunday 5th December:

Encarnación Rómero Bastante, a manicurist, was not sure what to expect when she was hired by a government-financed program to train a 33-year-old Gypsy woman.

But within a few weeks, Ms. Romero said her student, Emilia Jiménez González, knew all there was to know about cuticles and French tips. She was so good and so nice that Ms. Romero went a step further than required and persuaded a friend to give Ms. Jiménez a job.

“She proved herself to be a real professional,” said Ms. Romero, who had never gotten to know a Gypsy before.

Throughout Europe, Gypsies (who are often called Roma, but not in Spain where the Spanish word for gypsy, “gitano,” is uttered with pride) frequently survive in isolated encampments, reviled as beggars and petty thieves. In some Eastern European countries, they face such deep prejudice that they are chased off municipal buses, and in school their children are relegated to classes for the mentally handicapped.

Even in Western Europe, France’s president, Nicolas Sarkozy, could count on shoring up his popularity when he decided to deport thousands of Roma to Romania earlier this year.

But things are different in Spain.

Here, more than 30 years of government programs to help Gypsies have begun to show signs of success. Virtually all young Gypsy children are in elementary school. Nearly half of their parents own their own homes. And like Ms. Jiménez, many are holding down mainstream jobs, moving away from more traditional Gypsy livelihoods like selling cattle and other goods.

Spain has become so successful, in fact, that it now serves as a model for other European countries, including Romania, Bulgaria and Hungary. Some experts say Spain’s secret is that it has concentrated on practical issues, such as access to housing and jobs. In contrast, they say, some European institutions have concentrated too much on issues of prejudice and political rights.

“Perhaps as a result, a lot of money has been spent in other parts of Europe to integrate Gypsies but with few results,” said Isidro Rodríguez, director of Fundación Secretariado Gitano, a state-financed organization that administers the Acceder, or “to access,” job program that helped Ms. Jiménez. “The Spanish approach has really been different because it has been first and foremost about improving living standards.”

There are still problems. The school dropout rate for Gypsy children between 12 and 18 is a staggering 80 percent. Nearly 4 percent of the population still live in shacks.

And tales of day-to-day indignities are not hard to come by. At present, for instance, a troupe of Gypsy women is touring the country in a production of “The House of Bernarda Alba” by the poet Federico García Lorca, a performance that has been widely covered by the news media and won largely rave reviews.

But in Madrid, the actresses — who live in a shantytown in Seville and dress in traditional long Gypsy skirts — had trouble getting a taxi. Though accompanied by government officials, they were also refused service in a local bar.

Still, even advocates for the Roma say that Spain is way ahead of the rest of Europe.

One 2009 study conducted for the Fundación Secretariado Gitano looked at the housing of Gypsies in Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Greece, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, and found that over all a third lived in substandard housing, mostly apartments lacking heat, hot water or electricity. But in some countries, the situation was much worse. In Portugal, for instance, nearly a third of the Roma population still lived in shacks.

In Spain, 92 percent of Gypsies live in standard apartments or houses, according to the same study. Another survey, in 2005, found that 50 percent were formally employed, government officials said.

“Something like that is so important,” said Juan Mato Gómez, a director general in the Ministry of Health, Social Policy and Equality. “It addresses one of the basic myths about Gypsies — that Gypsies cannot hold down a steady job.”

Gypsies, who originally came from India, have been in Spain since the 15th century. Their traditions, such as their contributions to flamenco, have become part of Spain’s identity. Yet, until recently they faced persecution, sometimes intended to drive them out of the country, sometimes intended to force assimilation. At one point, they were required by law to marry non-Gypsies; at another, they were forbidden to gather in groups of more than four.

Under Franco’s dictatorship, Gypsies lived in fear of the military police, or Guardia Civil, which often brutally broke up their encampments and forced them to keep moving around the country.

But Spain’s democratic Constitution embraced the country’s diversity and for the first time gave Gypsies rights as citizens. By the 1980s, the Guardia Civil was being deployed near schools to protect Gypsy children from Spanish parents who did not want them in the same classrooms as their own children.

Since then, the government, whether leaning left or right, has consistently financed integration programs for Spain’s estimated 700,000 Gypsies. Spain has spent more on social programs for Gypsies than any other country in the European Union. Between 2007 and 2013, it will spend more than $130 million on such programs — about $60 million from European Union funds.

“Our efforts have had some very positive results,” said José Manuel Fresno, a European Union adviser on Roma issues who is also chairman of the Spanish government’s Race and Ethnic Equality Council.

At first, some programs were wrongheaded, officials said. Gypsies were moved directly from shanties into special public housing just for them and their children went to transitional schools. The results can still be seen in some parts of Seville, where housing blocks for Gypsies became broken down tenements. The transitional schools failed, too, as Gypsies shunned them and educators decided that Gypsy children should not be isolated.

Now, government policy is to scatter Gypsies in public housing and send their children to neighborhood schools. Mediators have been set up in the schools to help if problems arise. And social services help with the transition.

But whether the Spanish models can be translated elsewhere is unclear. Experts say that some countries — particularly Romania and Bulgaria, which have large Roma populations — do not have the capacity to administrate them.

“The fact is that Gypsies in some countries have lower living standards today than 15 years ago,” Mr. Fresno said.

In Spain, Acceder has helped more than 37,000 Gypsies get jobs since 2001.

On a recent day, Ms. Jiménez, who was wearing blue eye shadow and had glittery nails, was waiting for customers in a mall on the outskirts of Madrid. She said she turned to Acceder whenever she needed a job, taking advantage of the wide range of training it offered.

“It’s like a bridge for me,” she said. “Because sometimes if you are a Gypsy, it is not so easy.”

No copyright infringement intended. For educational, non-commercial purposes only.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Newsy: Celebrities vs. Bullies: “It Gets Better”

“It gets better”
“It gets better”
“It gets better”
“It gets better”
“It gets better…there’s hope and there’s help”

“People are here for you, people who care and understand”

It gets better – that’s the message of the new Trevor Project PSA designed to help put an end to gay bullying and bullying in general. And celebrities are coming out to put a stop what is becoming a deadly epidemic.

REPORTER - “Other stars like Neil Patrick Harris and Glee’s Chris Colfer are also appearing in new public service announcements.

COLFER – “I know what it’s like to be bullied and teased every single day”

This campaign comes after the death of five different teens across the country because of gay bullying – the latest being Rutgers student Tyler Clementi, who killed himself after being outed online.

HLN’s Showbiz Tonight talks to radio psychology expert Cooper Lawrence asking why celebrities are coming out so strongly for this particular issue.

REPORTER - “This is something you just don’t often see in Hollywood. Today we’re seeing hard-partying reality show stars, sarcastic stand-ups joining together to stop bullying. So Showbiz Tonight has got to ask: what is it about the tragic Tyler Clementi case that’s inspired Hollywood so much?”

LAWRENCE - “The story of Tyler Clementi has really hit a cord with all of us – celebrities and non-celebrities alike. And the reason is because everybody has experienced bullying either on one end since they’ve done the bullying or they’ve been bullied.”

Access Hollywood reports cult favorite Glee will also tackle teen bullying on an upcoming episode to try and reach its target audience – teens and young adults.

MORRISON - “School bullying and stuff are things we actually talk about on the show in the future.”

REPORTER – “Glee’s Matthew Morrison told us the shows creator Ryan Murphy is also planning a themed episode tackling bullying as well as gay suicide”

JONES – “I think there are a lot of parents who need their asses kicked because it starts at home.”

Fox affiliate WFTX highlights one celebrity who can personally relate to the young men who took their own lives: “Project Runway star Tim Gunn says he tried to kill himself as a teenager after being bullied because he was gay. Gunn says he took more than 100 pills when he was 17 years old in a botched suicide bid.”

Sarah Silverman posted a video of her own, in which she blames the government, saying it sets a bad example with its policies: “Dear America. When you tell gay Americans that they can’t serve their country openly or marry the person that they love, you’re telling that to kids too, so don’t be ******* shocked and wonder where all these bullies are coming from that are torturing young kids and driving them to kill themselves because they’re different, they learned it from watching you.

If you are interested in learning more about this campaign or you need someone to talk to, click on the link  The Trevor Project.


No copyright infringement intended. For educational, non-commercial purposes only.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Newsy: Researchers Discover New Language 'Koro'

Researchers David Harrison and Gregory Anderson discovered a new language while visiting a remote village in Northeast India.

There are currently 6909 official living languages in the world. When linguists David Harrison and Gregory Anderson travelled to India to document indigenous languages, they weren’t planning to add another one to the list. But they ended up doing just that.

The researchers travelled to a remote village in Northeast India to work with the Aka people to expand the documentation of their language. When they got there, they had a surprise discovery waiting for them: “When we began talking to the Aka people, they said there’s another dialect of our language. If you go down to this other village, you’ll hear this other dialect. We went down to the village and sat down with the speaker, and after hearing just a few words of the language, which turned out to be Koro, we realized it wasn’t a dialect, it was completely different in every possible way.” (YouTube / FordCochran)

Harrison said in the LA Times, Koro had not yet been discovered because the speakers are culturally identical to the other people in the region: “The speakers of Koro had remained invisible to outside observers because their bright red garments, the rice beer they made and other details of their lives seemed no different from that of the speakers of Aka, the socially dominant language in the region.”

CNN reports comparing Koro to the other languages of the region is like comparing English to Japanese. Koro shares more similarities with tongues spoken in farther eastern Asia. The linguists speculate the language could have been brought over by slaves: “Aka is the traditional language of the region's historic slave traders, and they hypothesized that Koro may have sprung from the slaves; though they said more study is needed to determine the origin.”

Today only 800 people are believed to speak Koro. There are no speakers under 20 and many children of Koro speakers are opting for Hindi or English—meaning the language faces extinction. Harrison says losing the language could mean losing valuable information about the region: “It contains very sophisticated knowledge that these people possess about this valley, the ecosystems, the animals, the plants, how they survived here, how they adapted. So if they switch over to another language, a lot of that knowledge will simply be lost.” (National Geographic)

The expedition was conducted as part of the National Geographic’s Enduring Voices project. The project tries to preserve poorly understood and indigenous people by documenting the languages and cultures within them.

Writer: Grace Meiners


No copyright infringement intended. For educational, non-commercial purposes only.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Newsy: Saggy Pants Ban Targeting Black Men?

The mayor of Dublin, Georgia, USA, recently signed into law a ban on saggy pants. Opponents say the new law directly targets the city’s African American males.

MAYOR PHIL BEST: “We'll gain maybe a little more mutual respect for each other and realize that everybody don’t want to see your underwear.” (HLN)

That’s Phil Best, the mayor of Dublin, Georgia -- who recently signed into law a ban on saggy pants. Best says the ban is in response to community complaints about indecent exposure, but opponents say the new law directly targets the city’s African American males.

According to the new law, pants or skirts can’t be more than three inches below the top of the hips.

Portland’s KATU features a community activist who says it’s obvious the city is going after black men: “If they are the ones wearing the saggy baggy pants. They're the only ones wearing the saggy baggy pants.”

But BV Black Spin’s Paul Shepard says that might not necessarily be the case: “Well, a quick visit to just about any mall will tell you that young white males model just about everything they see from their black counterparts, including saggin'. So it's up to the community to make sure that young black boys aren't the only ones getting pinched for this infraction.”

In a segment on Atlanta’s NBC-affiliate WXIA, an anchor says making a law against saggy pants might be a little extreme -- but in the end it makes sense: “I have to agree, one does look rather foolish with their low slung baggy pants though I admit I'm on the fence about a law saying how people should dress. On the other hand, though, I can't think of one good reason why people should have to see your underwear when you're out in public. True, there could be some problems with Dublin's ordinance. A pathway to profiling perhaps or local government overstepping its boundaries perhaps. ... Call me old school, but pull up your pants for crying out loud.”

But on All Voices, Veronica Roberts says every generation has its fads. She writes - though saggy pants might be considered “unslightly,” parents should be careful what they wish for: “... police in Dublin, Georgia, are in charge of enforcing this law. ... Are police going to ... hang out by schools with tape measure in hand, and randomly pull over your kids to enforce this 3 inches sagging rule? ... Shouldn't our children's attire be our responsibility? ... the price might just be too high to appease our sensibilities.”

Riviera Beach, Florida passed a similar ban in 2008, but it was later deemed unconstitutional.

Writer: Christina Hartman


No copyright infringement intended. For educational, non-commercial purposes only.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Newsy: DEA to Hire Ebonics Translators

The Drug Enforcemnt Agency's plan to hire nine translators to interpret conversations between African American drug dealers is causing controversy, as many don't consider Ebonics a language.
The U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency is recruiting nine translators — in Ebonics. 
That revelation is reigniting the debate over whether the DEA is unfairly targeting African-Americans, and whether Ebonics is a legitimate dialect of its own.
The DEA says the translators will help decipher wiretapped communication between African-American drug suspects. For some in the media, the very idea is laughable. Fox News’ Bret Baier quotes an anonymous DEA official: “The official added there is nothing racial about it, describing rapper Eminem as ‘one of the best speakers of Ebonics there ever was.’ No word whether Eminem has actually applied for any of these openings.”
But on BV Blackspin, Boyce Watkins says this isn’t a joke. And Ebonics isn’t the official language of black people: “The first thought that came to mind was whether the agency is presuming that drug dealers speak a dialect of English that matches that of the rest of urban black America? ... most of my urban friends don't understand drug dealers either. ... the DEA would be better off hiring a former drug dealer.”
San Francisco’s KPIX-TV says the revelation should remind its viewers of the firestorm of criticism Oakland, California’s school board faced in 1996, when it tried to mandate some instruction in Ebonics, which ended up sparking a nationwide debate over whether Ebonics should be sanctioned as a legitimate dialect.
REPORTER: “... many linguists have concluded Ebonics actually is its own language variety with its own set of rules. ... Alim, who has written books on black language and hip hop culture says there’s a rich irony in the fact that teachers were not able to use Ebonics, but now police are.”
H. SAMY ALIM: “So rather than legitimizing African-American language in schools in order to help students learn, we legitimize it in the streets in order to imprison them.”
A reporter for Memphis Fox affiliate WHBQ-TV spoke with a University of Memphis professor who says the specific hiring of Ebonics experts raises a troubling question: “The very fact the agency at the forefront of the country’s war on drugs should ask for aid in this fashion should send up at least one immediate red flag.”
DR. LARRY MOORE: “We’ve entered in this country in which people with degrees have a total lack of common sense. If they don’t have some undercover agent, maybe black inner-city, that can’t speak inner-city hip-hop language. For them to advertise is very scary. It means, how are you busting people right now?”
But the non-profit, Blog Critics says the recruitment of Ebonics experts ISN’T a bad thing. An article on the organization’s website makes a historical comparison: “This situation is not unlike that of Native American code talkers ... who especially distinguished themselves in the South Pacific during World War II. Major Howard Connor, 5th Marine Division signal officer, went so far as to declare, ‘Were it not for the Navajos, the Marines would have never taken Iwo Jima.’”
So is the DEA recruitment of Ebonics experts offensive, practical or a little bit of both? 
Writer: Christinga Hartman


No copyright infringement intended. For educational, non-commercial purposes only.

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Newsy: World Cup a Turning Point for Africa?

The stage is set for the worlds largest sporting event, the World Cup. This year to be held in South Africa. And as many are pointing out, this may be a turning point for the nation and the continent.
There has been much anticipation and preparation leading up to the opening match, and the host nation is in full World Cup fever.
As a writer for the Christian Science Monitor points out, this is a South Africa that the world hasn't seen before: "The South Africa that will go on display this month is a country that has completed its transformation from a racist pariah state into a multicultural majority-led state, with many of the accouterments of a European first-world powerhouse. It is a country that has achieved much in little time."
Six African nations are set to compete in the tournament and have an entire continent's hopes on their backs.
But a Malawi writer for the Huffington Post says it doesn't really matter if an African team wins the world cup or not, because the continent as a whole has already won: "Africa will win, in ways that are incalculable... In ways perhaps coming generations might look back and thank us for. ... [W]here different people across the country look towards the camera and smile and say 'I was there.'"
The author of bestseller "Invictus" agrees, telling Al Jazeera, change will come... just not overnight: "Whatever is gonna to happen in this country, for better or for worse is gonna be gradual. There isn't gonna be some instant boom, but I think a sense of national pride, a sense of hope, a sense of you know we did the World Cup, we are potentially a world class nation is something which can infuse, can provide a new energy for the country."
But Kenya's Daily Nation says, no matter how long it takes, this event will make history for Africa. The magazine quotes one of South Africa's former presidents, Thabo Mbeki: “We want, on behalf of our continent, to stage an event that will send ripples of confidence in our land. We want to ensure that one day historians will reflect upon the 2010 World Cup as a moment when Africa stood tall and resolutely turned the tide on centuries of poverty and conflict.”
So what do you think? Will the World Cup be Africa's turning point?
WRITER: Kelly Chase


No copyright infringement intended. For educational, non-commercial purposes only.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Newsy: Venus Causes Wardrobe Stir at French Open

Venus Williams dominated on the tennis court in her opening Sunday against Patty Schnyder. But her attire, criticized as "skimpy," is what got all of the attention.


Tennis, welcome to the world of fashion. That's the message after Venus Williams displayed her outfit Sunday at the French Open. Who knew one's attire could cause such a stir on the tennis court?
“Wait, what is that? Is that lingerie?”

“What in the world!!!”
 (MSNBC)
Williams says her outfit was about illusion. She says that the concept has been a lot of her motif this year. But some people aren't too happy about what Williams is bringing to the sport. A writer for Gather.com writes: “Williams might as well have walked onto the courts of the French Open with a giant flashing attention to me sign. Venus is an talented tennis player who does not need to resort to this sort of thing to draw attention to her game play.”
But others see nothing wrong with bringing a sense of fashion to the game. Or a lack thereof. A writer for thefrisky.com writes: […] “I think Venus should be able to show her style in anything that isn’t vulgar, which I don’t think this outfit is. I do, however, think her French Open outfit is ugly. It reminds me of a cheesy Halloween costume.”
This isn't the first time Williams has caught flack for the way she dresses on the court. In January at the Australian Open, she wore a neon green dress that also drew attention.
So what do you think? Are Venus Williams' fashion statements good for the game of tennis? Or is she trying to draw too much attention to herself by what she wears on the court?
WRITER: Cordell Anderson


No copyright infringement intended. For educational, non-commercial purposes only.

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Tiger Returns

Tiger Woods returns to the field of play at The Masters
"Coming into today, I didn't know what to expect with regards to reception, but I'll tell you what, the reception couldn't have been better...it was incredible."(NBC Sports)
He's back. Tiger Woods will be teeing off once again this week at The Master's -- after enduring weeks of criticism about his personal life.
A CNBC host interviews Golf.com's David Dusek -- who followed Woods through his entire first practice round today. And he was surprised by the reaction Woods got: "It was dead silent for the first four holes. There wasn't a peep out of anyone. People didn't know what to do. They didn't know if it was going to be okay to clap. Was it cool? Now, since Tiger Woods is right there. They didn't know what to do. Is it morally wrong, somehow, to show support for this guy?" 
CNN talked with another analyst from Golf.com -- who saw a nervous Woods: "I thought Tiger showed a human side. He looked humble. He looked nervous at first. He actually called his playing partner from today, Fred Couples, by the name Craig. And his voice squeaked when he did it."
And while some criticized the crowds, the press and the PGA for treating Woods with kid gloves... Steven Smith told ABC's The View -- people wouldn't want him on the sidelines: "Oh no -- because you wanna see Tiger play. You wanna see Tiger win. I don't care how much people despise him or find him repugnant at this moment in time. When it comes to him playing golf -- you wanna see him out on the course. I don't want to see no Ernie Els."
ESPN's Gene Wojciechowski says that might be so, but Woods' trustworthiness does still matter. He suggests Woods press conference was a good first step: "Woods has gone from baby steps to fuller steps, but I'm still not prepared to take that full Tiger plunge. ... Let's see if Woods can sustain this personal transformation. Talk is cheaper than an Augusta National pimento sandwich. Time for Woods to prove the actions match the words."

Writer: Tracy Pfeiffer


No copyright infringement intended. For educational, non-commercial purposes only.

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Newsy: India Announces Largest Census in the World

Big Brother is here, again: India is conducting a biometric census of its 1.2 billion people, collecting fingerprints, and taking photos of everyone over the age of 15:
“India's launched a massive biometric census to gather information on its billion-plus population. Some two million people will work to photograph and fingerprint every citizen over the age of 15. (Flash) This biometric card is what you will need to have in order to authenticate your identity. (Russia Today /Bloomberg)
That’s right, the worlds largest head count is happening in India. Its the first biometric census to be done on a colossal scale. India hopes to create a database for its people – recording as much information as possible. 
We’re following coverage from Russia Today, Bloomberg, the BBC, and the Hindustan Times.
A Bloomberg correspondent in India reports how the country is making an effort to eliminate the caste system: “The government has no intention of opening the Pandora’s box by going in for a caste-based census. According to the government, there is no way of authenticating the caste of individuals besides what he or she claims. … The census itself is not going to conduct the caste. At least let me be blunt, I think in the future, you have to go into a casteless system in India.” 
With a census of this magnitude and level of intricacy the Hindustan Times says -conducting the survey will be extremely difficult: “The exercise has formidable challenges -- coverage of a vast geographical area, left-wing rebels and separatists, widespread illiteracy, and people with a bewildering diversity of cultures, languages and customs.”
But as the BBC shows, India’s home minister is determined: “An exercise of this kind has not been attempted anywhere in else in the world. This exercise must succeed. This exercise will succeed, but I need your support… (flash) We will leave no stone unturned, to reach every village, every habitation in this country, and count every person.”
So what do you think? Can India pull off the massive census?


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Thursday, April 1, 2010

Newsy: Belgian Parliament Passes Burqa Ban

Belgium is one of several European countries attempting to enact laws banning full-face covering. Government officials say people should be identifiable when in public, meanwhile human rights activists feel a ban is a violation of rights.
“Belgium could be the first European country to ban the burqa in the street. Parliament is to debate prohibiting the wearing of any clothes or veils that don’t allow citizens to be fully identified." (France 24)
The Belgian Parliament voted unanimously to pass the bill, and it's 'very likely' to become law.
In January Newsy reported that France was nearing a ban on burqas- but now several other European countries are following France’s lead and making swift moves to enact bans.
France 24 reports on what others besides France and Belgium are doing to limit face covering: “In the Netherlands several bills are in preparation to prohibit wearing burqas in education and public services. Meanwhile in Denmark the government expressed its intention to limit the wearing of burqas in public in January. ... Italy is perhaps the most repressive European country with regards to the country.
The bans are extremely controversial, as supporters of the legislation say people should be identifiable in public. But The Daily Mail explains some ban's pitfalls: “Making the full veil illegal could be viewed as discriminatory and tricky to put into practice, in particular as the majority of women who wear it do so of their own free will.' … [And] even a limited ban would be difficult to enforce.”
And in the Times Online a Muslim representative in Belgium believes the ban could open some dangerous floodgates: “Today it is the full-face veil, tomorrow the veil, the day after it will be the Sikh (Seek) turbans and then perhaps it will be mini skirts.”
The proposed law says a fine for wearing a burqa in public would be 15 to 25 euros (20-33 American Dollars) and a prison sentence of one to seven days - with the judge deciding between fine or prison.


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Thursday, January 14, 2010

Martin Luther King Jr. was born on January 15th 1929

Martin Luther King, Jr. was born on January 15th 1929. Following in his father's and grandfather's footsteps, he was ordained as a minister in 1948. Dr. King became one of the most important leaders of the civil rights movement in the U.S., advocating a nonviolent approach to fighting for equal rights. He received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964. Dr. King was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee, on April 4, 1968.



Listen to his famous speech I have a dream or read it:
I am happy to join with you today in what will go down in history asthe greatest demonstration for freedom in the history of our nation.Five score years ago, a great... (click to read the full transcript)

If you want to know more:
Wikipedia article on M. Luther King
No copyright infringement intended. For educational purposes only

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