Archive for the ‘Word Press’ Category

Correa could deny Belarus blogger's extradition

Ecuador's President Rafael Correa said he could have the last word on the extradition of a dissident blogger and former soldier from Belarus now before the country's high court.

Alexander Barankov, a former army captain, fled to Ecuador in 2009 after being charged with fraud, allegations he says were trumped up after he blogged about widespread corruption linked to people close to Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, often referred to as "Europe's last dictator."

Ecuador granted him asylum in 2010 after he argued that he faced the death penalty for treason in Belarus, but imprisoned him for 52 days later that year after an extradition request from Minsk that was eventually rejected.

"Ecuador will put the emphasis on not extraditing a citizen whose life is at risk, from facing the death penalty or life in prison," Deputy Foreign Minister Marco Albuja said.

Correa said that if the high court, which is due to issue a ruling in the coming days, decides to grant the extradition request from Belarus, he could overrule that decision "as a last resort."

"We reject any attack on human rights (or) political persecution," Correa told foreign reporters.

Ecuador's much-criticized record on press freedom has come under renewed scrutiny following its decision to grant asylum to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, holed up at its London embassy to avoid extradition to Sweden.

Barankov, 30, is wanted by Interpol for fraud. He has been detained for 70 days pending the court decision.

His lawyer Fernando Lara told AFP that the Lukashenko regime is out to silence Barankov -- a former member of a military anti-corruption investigation team -- after he uncovered illicit activities embarrassing top officials.

The European Union and the United States have accused Belarus of detaining dissidents and committing other human rights abuses, and tightened sanctions in the wake of a disputed election in December 2010 that handed another term to Lukashenko, in power since 1994.

See the article here:
Correa could deny Belarus blogger's extradition

'American Bible Challenge' a fun way to gather around the Word

The American Bible Challenge Premieres 8 p.m. Eastern, Thursday, Aug. 23

When I first heard of the Game Show Network's idea for a new game show, I wondered: How is it no one ever thought of it before? There is so much material in the scriptures that if the producers play it right, they could have many seasons. It could be a way to bring Christians together around the Word.

On the set of Game Show Network's "The American Bible Challenge" with host Jeff Foxworthy. ((c) GSN)This hourlong show that tests Bible knowledge is hosted by comedian Jeff Foxworthy ("Are You Smarter than a 5th Grader?"), who told journalists in July he has been teaching Bible classes for years. I asked him: What Bible character is most like Shrek? Jeff knew the answer. (Both the Bible character and Shrek had a talking donkey that annoyed them with the truth.)

The format of "The American Bible Challenge" is framed to be lightly competitive: three teams of three people compete to answer questions that are presented in a variety of ways. The teams all play for charity. The contestants move around the set, go out for a Bible study and take turns answering in lightning rounds. The contestants are not so restrained (or straight-laced) as in "Jeopardy," where people stand rooted to one spot. This show should appeal to people who want to test their own knowledge of the Old and New Testaments.

There's always a threat to a respected topic when popular television gets hold of it, and what is sacred can become profane. In "The American Bible Challenge," ordinary folks, dressed in casual down-home attire, get genuinely excited every time they know the answer. There is a warmth about the show that reverences the Word of God and living the Word in charity. The Word is prominent -- the contestants stand behind lecterns made in the shape of large Bibles. In the pilot episode, it was very moving to see the reaction of the winning team and to imagine the good that will be done with the prize money. The fact that the money is for others rather than the players sets the show apart from the start and is the reason Foxworthy agreed to host the show after initial misgivings.

Last spring when the show was announced, it asked for applications from teams of three. So three of us sisters formed a team we named "The Real Sister Act." We sent in our application, went to the audition (it was fun), and our backgrounds were vetted. As the weeks ticked by, it seemed we did not make the cut. And then we got a call to come in for a "run-through," or a dry run, a way for the network to figure out the kinks. We had a very good time. We met a man in the elevator who looked rather serious. I asked, "Are you a reverend? Coming for the Bible show?" He said yes, and I looked at the other nuns and said, "We are so dead." Protestant Christians do know Bible details better than most Catholics, I think. Alas, we did not make it on the show this time around. If "The American Bible Challenge" is picked up for another season, maybe we will.

A team from the Chicago area, "The Horns of Jericho," is made up of three brothers of an Italian-American Catholic family. They are playing for the American Cancer Society. Some of the other charities the teams play for include food pantries, a performing arts academy, an organization that provides aid to victims of human trafficking, and a camp for children in foster care. A team of firefighters from Los Angeles plays for St. Baldrick's Foundation, which funds research to discover cures for children's cancers. For a list of the teams and their charities visit the show's website.

I don't know how many Catholic groups sent in applications. But when I asked around, in view of forming other teams, there was reluctance from Catholics because of two things. First, most ordinary Catholics didn't feel they could compete with Protestants when it comes to Bible knowledge and trivia. Second, there was a lack of trust that Hollywood could produce a reverent show about the scriptures.

Sr. Rose Pacatte with Jeff Foxworthy, the host and producer of "The American Bible Challenge," at a press conference ((c) GSN)Our "Real Sister Act" team's one concern when we applied was which translation of the Bible the show would base the questions on. This is because some biblical names are spelled differently from one translation to another, and the number of books -- and the verses in a book -- can vary. As of this writing, I think it is the King James or the New International Version, but I was unable to find out this information despite repeated queries. However, from what I observed, anyone with slightly above-average Bible knowledge would be able to answer most questions. I cannot give any details about the run-through (we had to sign a release form), but I was very impressed at how important the Bible was to the teams, how much they knew, how fast they could hit that red button, and how genuinely friendly everyone was. The competitive spirit kind of fell away because everyone was happy when anyone got the right answer.

I think the Game Show Network has produced a show that honors the Bible and how believers can and do put their faith into practice. It will seem simplistic to some. Indeed, the nature of television prevents much depth using this format. It might spark interest, however, in those who do not know the answers. The show might provide an entry point into learning more about God and Christianity. From the pilot and the day I spent on the set, I don't think our Jewish brothers and sisters would consider themselves included unless the network plans a special based on the Jewish scriptures we have in common. I don't know if word got out to Orthodox Christians, either. Maybe next time.

Read more from the original source:
'American Bible Challenge' a fun way to gather around the Word

Free Pussy Riot: When 'Vulgar' Words Become Acceptable

There's a word we keep seeing in the news of late, a word it seems like we weren't supposed to say in mixed company, much less in "family" newspapers. Now it's everywhereor, at least, in way more places than it used to be.

Today, we get Michael Goodwin's piece in The New York Post headlined"Press Pussies Soft on O." Goodwin is talking, or more accurately, ranting, about how he feels a "lackey from the Associated Press" represents an overall trend in not questioning President Obama, a trend, as his piece so loudly announces from its headline, of "pussiness." Pussies! They're all pussies!, you can imagine him bellowing as he types on his IBM Selectric, fingers beating doggedly in hard-boiled fashion against the keys. The opposite of anything courageous and strong and (the subtext goes) manly, is what he's talking about: Press pussies.

Prior to this use, the most immediate and frequent way "pussy" had found its way onto our newspapers and computer screens had been with regard to another kind of talk of another kind of pussies. Pussy Riot, of course, the Russian punk band found guilty of"hooliganism motivated by religious hatred" for the 40-second anti-government protest they held in a church and for which they were punished with two-year jail sentences by the Russian government. These are the members of a punk band who, aware of the word's vulgar connotations in English, took it and paired it with the word riot to create tension. That's a punk thing to do, and it reclaims the cowardly, stereotypically wimpy and female insinuation of "pussy" that is, essentially, what Goodwin harks back to. Appropriately, they "laughed and rolled their eyes as the sentences were read"not "pussy" at all, actually.And in Russia, editors are tough enough to call them Pussies.

By being news, though, Pussy Riot brought the word toall sorts of media venues that would have been far too demure to print it otherwise. And there was even some debate about how they did print the words. The New York Times,asThe New York Observer's Foster Kamer noted on Friday, had previously been charged with being too pussy to use the word. With Pussy Riot, no longer! (In fact, though, the word had previously been printed as part of a restaurant's name, as part of a trulyobscenity-laced album review, as a part ofmovie titleswhere it happens to appear, and of course as the plantand, we're pretty sure, cats. Unsurprisingly, we can find no use of the term as used by Goodwin in The Post.) The point is, though, that facts are facts, and you can't ignore them, or, you shouldn't, simply because the word might have a certain connotation.That doesn't mean some won't be pussies:On TheTodayShow, according to The Guardian'sAmanda Holpuch, presenter Michelle Kosinski said, with regard to the story, "the punk rock girl band, whose name we can't say on morning television."

One of the common concerns that comes up with words and phrases is that something that once had the power to offend or shock has lost that ability. It's that sort of feeling we lend to a discussion of the "f-word" or other vulgaritieswhat if curse words mean nothing? If that happens, does it mean that we have become impervious to what we once considered bad, and therefore, are immoral or maybe worse, just numb ourselves? When we dare to make the word equivalent of a wardrobe-malfunction not only part of daily life, but something we don't even bother to look away from, are we hopelessly lost? We tend not to look on the bright side about this, for some reason, which is that the meanings of words are always changing. If the "bad" or "vulgar" edge to a word goes away, maybe we've actually made some progress.

The word pussy, way back in its reported first use or uses in 1726, meant either "cat" or "a catkin of the pussy willow," per Merriam-Webster. Since then any number of additional definitions have sprung up, from vulgar to belittling to sexist (a "cowardly man," for instance) to the horrifying, circa 1890 meaning, "full of or resembling pus," as in, "apussywound." With Pussy Riot, we get it as the subject of a news story, yes, but the frequency with which a word meets our ears and eyes means it becomes ever the more acceptable, somehow, or ground into our psyche, and certainly less cover-your-mouth-and-gasp-worthy, which might be why Goodwin has gathered up the bravery to use it today. It still shocks a little, but not as much as it might have in the past.

It's not the word's fault, either: A word is just a word, or, more appropriately, a string of letters, a vessel with which to convey meaning that humans have put upon it. (As Merriam-Webster's Peter Sokolowski told us, "Only dead languages are static.") That's good, because we're a little bit tired of the way in which Goodwin uses it, as related to "not masculine" behavior, not to mention the way in which the Internet tends to use it, as referring in an objectifying way to a female body part.If "pussy"could go back to being a word that means a plant, or a cat, primarily, and not something that brings frat-boy guffawsor if it means something else entirely, maybe rebellion or standing up for rights or simply something punkthat would be a good thing.

One piece of this story remains missing, however, and it's a biggie: What about the cats? Can anyone speak for the cats? Oh, here we go.

Want to add to this story? Let us know in comments or send an email to the author at jdoll at theatlantic dot com. You can share ideas for stories on the Open Wire.

Read the original post:
Free Pussy Riot: When 'Vulgar' Words Become Acceptable

Incarnate Word added to Southland Conference, Abilene Christian could be next

Related Story: Football 'unlikely' as WAC struggles to remain as a conference

It was announced Monday that Incarnate Word, located in San Antonio, will become a Southland member effective July 1, 2013.

Meanwhile, Abilene Christian announced Monday that it has received an invitation to join the league and shift to Division I affiliation in all sports.

Abilene Christians board of trustees and administration will discuss the Southland invitation during a regular scheduled board meeting this week. If ACU accepts, an announcement will come during a Saturday press conference.

Incarnate Word is currently a member of the Lone Star Conference in NCAA Division II, but the university will begin a four-year transition to Division I, according to a release from the Southland Conference.

The release, which dealt only with the Incarnate Word verdict, said it is expected that, for scheduling purposes, UIW will count as a Division I team during the 2014-15 academic year and the school will be fully eligible for NCAA championship events in 2017-18.

Commissioner Tom Burnett said Southland presidents studied membership additions and the impact of Division I conference realignments for two years. He said the conference was only interested in adding insitutions that clearly bring added value to the league in terms of academics, athletics, facilities, geography, fan support media market size and presence in the market.

UIW is a historic and accomplished institution and has the potential and resources to be a competitively successful member of the Southland Conference and NCAA Division I, Burnett said.

The Southland made site visits to three potential new members -- Incarnate Word, Abilene Christian and New Orleans -- prior to making the UIW announcement.

The Southland remains active in its discussions with other universities that we have been engaged with in recent months, Burnett said. We expect resolution on these membership options in the near future.

Read the original:
Incarnate Word added to Southland Conference, Abilene Christian could be next

A word to the dejected ejected: never say lie Save

Aug. 21, 2012, 3 a.m.

THE Deputy Opposition Leader, Julie Bishop, famously has a death stare that can pulverise diamonds at 50 paces and crack the skulls of grown men.

Has she been offering private tuition to her leader? Yesterday, as the Opposition Leader, Tony Abbott, left the chamber, having been chucked from question time by the Deputy Speaker, Anna Burke, he threw Burke a look that could have split an atom.

Abbott, the sixth opposition leader to be ejected from Parliament, and the first since 1986 (that was John Howard, not a man known for his maverick behaviour, but we all have bad days), is usually quite affable, as long as you're not the Prime Minister or a tax on carbon emissions.

But yesterday Abbott grew incensed at Gillard's repeated assertions that he intended to rip money from public schools, her defence of the carbon tax, and her defence of government spending on policy measures including the National Disability Insurance Scheme and border protection. (The government would continue to invest in the ''instruments of fairness that Australians want'', Gillard said, somewhat opaquely.) ''That's a lie,'' Abbott said in response to Gillard's claims about his alleged hostility towards public school funding.

The L-word, of course, is classified as ''unparliamentary language'', a term for the collection of words and idiom that describe what everyone really thinks about politicians but which are impermissible inside the actual Parliament.

Therefore imputations of dishonesty and dishonour are out, as is profanity and, sadly, the term ''fuddle-duddle'' (which, according to Wikipedia, caused quite the scandal when allegedly mouthed by the Canadian prime minister in Canada's House of Commons in 1971).

Thus, while outside Parliament Abbott can refer to Gillard's lies (as he did in a quick-fire press release which landed in email inboxes directly following his ejection), inside Parliament he speaks of ''broken promises''.

Likewise, the Climate Change Minister's word of the month is ''mendacious'' - the adjective he uses to describe the opposition's fear campaign against the carbon tax.

Mendacious, of course, means lying, but the Deputy Speaker has said she is cool with synonyms for liar, just not the word liar itself. Perhaps she is just seeking to expand the nation's vocabulary.

See the article here:
A word to the dejected ejected: never say lie Save