Month: August 2004

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    KOREA OR COREA?
    (Updated Friday, Mar 7, 2003, 08:35:34 AM.)


         American and English books published during the latter half of the 19th century generally referred to the nation as "Corea" as recently as the years immediately preceding Japan's formal annexation of Corea in 1910. An 1851 map of East Asia by Englishman John Tallis labels the nation Corea.


    The same spelling is used in The Mongols, a 1908 history of the Mongol race by Jeremiah Curtin, the world's foremost Asia scholar of the day, as well as in several books by American missionaries published between 1887 and 1905.


     


    In 1897 Japan defeated China in a war over Japan's ambition to exercise control over Corea. The only other power willing to contest Japan's supremacy in the Corean peninsula was Russia. When it was easily defeated by Japan at Port Arthur in 1905, the annexation of Corea became a fait accompli.


     Anxious to avoid a costly Pacific conflict, President Wilson ignored the pleas of a delegation of Corean patriots and their American missionary supporters and turned a blind eye to Japan's acts of formal annexation and colonization of Corea.



     During that period Japan mounted a campaign to push for the "Korea" useage by the American press. Why? For one of Japan's prospective colonies to precede its master in the alphabetical lineup of nations would be unseemly, Japanese imperialists decided.


         Japan's colonial rule over Corea ended on August 15, 1945.



     


    Now that Corea is eagerly shedding the last vestiges of the colonial period, even demolishing public buildings erected by the Japanese, forward-thinking Corean and Corean American journalists, intellectuals and scholars are urging the American media to revert to the original, more natural rendering of Corea.



        The changeover will pose a problem only in English-speaking nations as other western nations never accepted the "K" spelling. For example, France, Spain, Italy, Brazil, Argentina and Mexico, among many others, use the "C" rendering.


         English convention, too, is on the side of the Corea rendering. Non-European names are romanized with a "C" (Cambodia, Canada, cocoa, Comanche, Congo, and even old Canton, for example) except where the first letter is followed by an "e" or an "i", (as in Kenya). Other than that, the "K" spelling is used only in connoting childlike ignorance of spelling conventions ("Kitty Kat" and "Skool", for examples).




         Therefore, the American "K" spelling is



    1. offensive from a historical standpoint;
    2. violates western rendering conventions;
    3. suggests a lack of sophistication toward Corea; and
    4. by connoting naiveté, imputes a lack of sophistication to Corea and its people.

    http://goldsea.com/Air/Issues/Corea/corea.html


     

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    Pregnant Inmate Forced To Undergo Abortion To Be Eligible for Death Penalty in China


    27 Aug 2004


    Chinese prison officials have forced a pregnant inmate found guilty of transporting heroin to undergo an abortion so that she could be eligible for the death penalty


    Under Chinese law, pregnant women and people younger than age 18 cannot be executed.


    Officers from the anti-drug task force at the Chengguan police substation in February signed a consent form ordering an abortion "on her behalf."


     

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    Matthews band sued over waste dumping


    Thursday, August 26, 2004 Posted: 8:58 AM EDT (1258 GMT)


    CHICAGO, Illinois (AP) -- The State of Illinois accuses the Dave Matthews band and one of its bus drivers of violating state water pollution and public nuisance laws. It seeks $70,000 in civil penalties.


    According to the lawsuit, as a bus leased by the band crossed the Kinzie Street bridge, the driver allegedly emptied the contents of the septic tank through the bridge's metal grating into the Chicago River below.


    More than 100 people on an architecture tour were showered with foul-smelling waste.


    From tokenscot


     

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    By Rachel Forrest
    news@seacoastonline.com

     

    This is the second year of the lobster-eating championship here, but the first year as a competitive event sanctioned by the International Federation of Competitive Eating (IFOCE), the governing body of "stomach-centric" sports.

    The 409-pound ice cream and pasta eating champion Ed "Cookie" Jarvis proudly wore his championship coat listing dozens of world eating records - including matzo balls and chicken wings - alongside fellow competitors from Brooklyn and Long Island, N.Y., Eric "Badlands" Booker and "Hungry" Charles Hardy.


    Hometown favorite Kevin Cross ate his way to victory and The Claw Belt last year with 16 lobsters in eight minutes.


    Eaters had 12 minutes to eat as much tail, claw and knuckles as possible. Cheeks were full, jaws moved with rhythmic regularity.

    At last the feeding frenzy was over. As the chairman announced the winners, there was madness, heat, lightning and electric anticipation.

    In third place, with 6.83 pounds (approximately 28 lobsters), Ed "Cookie" Jarvis. In second, with 7.03 pounds, "Hungry" Charles Hardy.


    And in first, with 38 lobsters down, weighing 9.76 pounds, the new world lobster-eating champion Sonya "The Black Widow" Thomas, the smallest person in the entire competition at a mere 100 pounds.


     

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    Aspen Girl Denied Permission To Play Golf On Boys' Team



    A 17-year-old girl has lost her bid to play for the Aspen High School boys' golf team.


    School officials again refused Kristin Walla's request on Monday, and the Colorado High School Activities Association is backing that ruling.

    State rules don't allow girls to play on boys' teams if schools offer a girls' team.




    In Aspen, the boys' team plays in the fall and the girls play in the spring.

    But school officials aren't sure there will be enough girls to form a team, meaning Kristin may not get to play at all during her senior year -- even though she's been called "the best girl golfer at Aspen High School."

     

    From QuidProQuo

     

     

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    The Birth of a Candybar



    From Kindred_Spirit


     

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    Wed Aug 25, 4:51 PM ET

    Iraqi policemen rounded up dozens of journalists at gunpoint in a Najaf hotel and took them to police headquarters before later releasing them.


     Firing their guns in the air, the dozen odd policemen, some masked, stormed into the rooms of journalists in the Najaf Sea hotel and forced them into vans and a truck. An AFP correspondent, who was also forced into a van, said the police pushed and pulled many reporters at gunpoint.


    The reporters were taken to the office of the police chief. "You people are not under arrest," Najaf police chief Ghaleb al-Jezari told them. "You are brought here because I want to tell you that you never publish the truth. I speak the truth, but you never broadcast what we are."


     

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    Tala










    Video game gals take it off for Playboy
    August 25, 2004: 7:09 PM EDT
    Game Over is a weekly column by Chris Morris


    NEW YORK (CNN/Money) – She's a statuesque redhead with green eyes who stands 5'7". Her measurements are 36-22-36 and she's posing topless for the October issue of Playboy magazine.







    Oh, just one thing... she's a video game character.


    BloodRayne


    Her name's Bloodrayne and she'll make her naked debut alongside a feature in the upcoming issue of the men's magazine.



    Joining her in the CGI photospread (which will accompany an article about the changing face of gaming) will be a handful of gaming characters.


    Nina


     While not all the characters will appear in the pixilated buff, you can expect a lot of come hither looks from some butt-kicking women, including familiar faces from Midway's (MWY: Research, Estimates) "Mortal Kombat" and Namco's "Tekken" series as well as Vivendi's (V: Research, Estimates) upcoming "Red Ninja" and "Leisure Suit Larry: Magna Cum Laude" and Sammy Studios' forthcoming "Darkwatch: Curse of the West".


    From MissJSerenity


     

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