Tuesday, November 29, 2005
What is a Bahamian Name? A Poor Substitute for Moral Fiber
Writes Thomas Sowell on "What is in a name?": People have always sought distinctions but the ways they have tried to distinguish themselves have varied widely. Some have let their achievements speak for them but others have let their clothes, their tattoos, their pierced body parts, or just their loud and strident talk establish their claims to be noticed. ...One of the ways some people seek special distinction today is in the names they give their children. Not only are the names themselves distinctive, these names remain distinctive only in so far as other people do not give their children the same names.
...Maybe we don't even understand what an achievement is. There was a time when people who were neither rich, nor celebrities, nor outlandish in name or appearance, were nevertheless noticed and well regarded as pillars of their communities because of their personal qualities and character.
Names are just one of the superficialities of our time that have replaced character, wisdom and achievement.
...Blacks and whites used to give their children pretty much the same names. No more. Since the 1970s, racial segregation has returned, this time in names. California is one of the most extreme examples of this, as it is of so many other extreme trends. More than 40 percent of the black girls born in California during a given year have a name not found among even one white girl born in the same state. Asian Americans have not joined this name fad, as they have by and large avoided other fads. Maybe their emphasis on achievement has made these other claims for attention unnecessary.
I remember there was some lady, who wrote for the local newspaper, on how she could judge people by their name! Apparently those who did not have "Bahamian" sounding names (i.e., the same names as past Bahamians) were something less -- and she thought she was being original and clever. She was just being a collectivist bigot. Everyone has a name -- but what really counts is character. And if you don't have moral fiber, having the most "Bahamian" name in the universe is not going to make up for it. And if you do have moral fiber? Then perhaps one day parents will probably want to name their kids after you.
Thursday, November 24, 2005
Annual Junkanoo Jam Grand Bahama Island Women's Collegiate Basketball Tournament
 Eight Division I women’s basketball teams will take their game to Grand Bahama Island this Thanksgiving to compete in the 3rd Annual Junkanoo Jam. With six of the field’s eight teams advancing to the 2005 NCAA Tournament, one as far as the Elite Eight, the 2005 Junkanoo Jam will again be one of the most competitive tournaments in women’s college basketball. The 2005 field includes Iowa State, NC State, North Florida, and Rutgers in the Freeport Division and Purdue, George Washington, South Carolina, and Texas in the Lucaya Division. The games for both divisions will take place November 25 -26, 2005 at St. George’s High School on Grand Bahama Island. The 2006 tournament, includes Texas, George Washington, Purdue and South Carolina in the Lucaya Division, while Iowa State, North Carolina State, North Florida and Rutgers will compete in the Freeport Division. Each team will play two games. Teams do not cross divisions. The Lucaya Division will be first up each day 1:00p.m. through 5:00p.m.; and the Freeport Division will compete from 6:00p.m through 10:00p.m. In the Freeport division, Rutgers brings to the Bahamas the field’s most impressive resume from the 2004-05 season, after making its fifth Elite Eight appearance in the NCAA Tournament. The Scarlet Knights will look to the three returning starters for leadership, including Kodak Honorable Mention All-American Cappie Pondexter. As a 5-9 junior guard, Pondexter averaged a team-high 14.7 points per game, as well as 3.1 assists per game. 5-8 sophomore guard Matee Ajavon (12.4 ppg and 3.5 apg) and 6-2 senior forward Michelle Campbell (11.0 ppg, 5.7 rpg) are also expected to contribute big for Rutgers. They will be joined by sophomore guard Essence Carson (6.6 ppg. 5.5 rpg), a U19 World Championship Team member for the USA. Iowa State expects to contend for the Freeport Division championship after an impressive 2004-05 season which led to a first-round NCAA appearance. Coach Bill Fennelly was named Region Five Coach of the Year as he guided the Lady Cyclones to a 23-7 season. Iowa State lost their top three point producers to graduation and will rely on returning starters Lyndsey Medders and Megan Ronhovde for early leadership. Medders, a 5-9 junior guard, averaged 9.7 ppg and Ronhovde, a 6-1 junior forward, contributed 9.2 ppg and 5.3 rpg. NC State travels to the Bahamas with a strong nucleus of returning players intact, including their top five leading scorers from 2004-05. The Wolfpack’s no-star roster competed in the first round of the NCAA tournament and posted a 21-8 record on the season. As All-ACC honorees last year, seniors Tiffany Stansbury (11.4 ppg, 6.9 rpg) and Billie McDowell (11.5 ppg, 2.0 apg) will be expected to lead the team this year. Also contributing to the Wolfpack’s success last season was ACC All-Freshman team pick Khadijah Whittington (8.4 ppg, 5.1 rpg) and ACC All-Defensive pick Ashley Key (8.8 ppg). Rounding out the Freeport Division is the University of North Florida, who make their Division I debut at Junkanoo Jam 2005. Last year they competed in the Division II Peach Belt Conference, finishing with a 13-16 record. The Lady Ospreys return eight seniors, who will be expected to impart experience and leadership to the 6 incoming recruits inked for the 2005-06 season. The Lucaya Division appears to be just as competitive as the Freeport Division, with perennially tough teams George Washington, Texas, Purdue, and South Carolina competing for the Lucaya crown. Three of the four teams in the division advanced to the 2nd round of the NCAA tournament. The George Washington Colonials bring their game back to Grand Bahama Island after competing in the inaugural Junkanoo Jam in 2003. Coach McKeown led the team to a 23-9 finish and a second round NCAA tournament appearance during the 2004-05 season. The colonials lost three starters and will look to Atlantic-10 Rookie of the Year Kimberly Beck for floor leadership. Beck, a 5-8 sophomore guard, averaged 8.0 ppg and led the conference in assists at 5.12 per game last season. 5-10 junior guard Kenan Cole ( 7.3 ppg, 3.5 rpg) will also be a contributor. Also advancing to the second round of the 2005 NCAA tournament, the Texas Longhorns will battle the field for the Lucaya division title. The Longhorns finished their season 22-9, and lost 6 seniors to graduation. Texas will look to last year’s high scorer, 6-3 junior forward Tiffany Jackson to power their offense, leading the team with 18.3 ppg and 8.7 rpg last season. Texas boasts an impressive incoming freshmen recruiting class, including 6-1 forward Ernesia Williams and 5-10 guard Erika Arriaran, both of whom were invited to participate in the U-19 USA team trials. Arriaran, named by both Parade Magazine and State Farm/WBCA as the 2005 High School Player of the Year, earned a spot on the U-19 USA World Championship team. The Purdue Boilermakers joined Texas and George Washington with a 2nd round appearance in the NCAA tournament, losing to eventual Final Four participant Tennessee. Purdue returns four starters from last year’s 17-13 squad, as well as the top-five leading scorers on the season. The Boilermakers, under head coach Kristy Curry will look to leading scorers Erin Lawless and Katie Gearlds for offense. Lawless, a 6-2 junior forward, averaged 14.2 ppg and 5.3 rpg, while Gearlds, a 6-1 guard/forward, was just behind her at 14.1 ppg and 3.8 rpg. Coming off of what head coach Susan Walvius called “a rebuilding year,” the University of South Carolina returns every player for a much-anticipated new season. The Gamecocks finished the 2004-2005 “baptism by fire” season with a 8-21 record. They competed in the SEC, arguably America’s toughest conference, with a roster comprised of 11 freshmen and sophomores and only one upperclassman. Coach Walvuis will look to leading scorers Lauren Simms (11.8 ppg, 3.8 rpg), a 5-9 junior guard, and Stacy Booker (8.5 ppg, 3.7 rpg) a 5-8 junior guard for early leadership. The 2004 Junkanoo Jam champions Duke (Freeport Division) and Iowa (Lucaya Division), each earned berths into post-season play. Duke advanced as far as the Elite Eight in the NCAA tournament and Iowa made it to the Final Four in the WNIT. The Junkanoo Jam perennially hosts many of the nation’s strongest teams, earning a reputation as one of the best pre-season tournaments for tough early season competition. The 2005 field appears to be the strongest yet in the three year history of the Junkanoo Jam, once again promising intense basketball competition on the courts of Grand Bahama Island.
The tournament hotel is The Westin and Sheraton Grand Bahama ("Our Lucaya") which has over 1300 hotel rooms, 2000 feet of white sand beach, 14 themed restaurants, 2 golf courses, and a brand new Casino all on hotel grounds!!!
Wednesday, November 16, 2005
Tuesday, November 08, 2005
GB Children's Home Pirate's Adventure
Friday 11th November 2005 at 7:00pm
On the grounds of the children’s home compound off jobson avenue (back of town). Tickets $35.00 advance and $45.00 at function
Saturday, November 05, 2005
Importing Relief Supplies From Abroad into the Bahamas Duty Free
The Controller of Customs in Freeport provides the following procedure for allowing the importation of relief supplies from abroad duty free: 1. Contact NEMA 2. Explain to them what goods are to be imported and NEMA will sanction it 3. Once sanctioned, Customs will let the goods in under the exigency order 4. Contact Alexander Williams, Chief Administrator in Grand Bahama at (242) 352-6332
Friday, November 04, 2005
Bahamian Apartheid and the "Hyphenated-Bahamian"
A response to Carroll's letter to the Freeport News. The money quote: Passing laws that treat Bahamian citizens differently based on their race or ancestry is a moral abomination. Carroll's [separatist] Apartheid policy will further break Bahamians into warring pressure groups -- fighting for the title of "true-true" Bahamian. The loser in such a "caste" system is the greatest minority that exists: the individual, who deprived of his rights as an individual, is forced to join a political pressure group to lobby for government granted privileges for his tribe. If you want to divide the Bahamas into warring pressure groups and balkanize us like Rwanda, Nazi Germany and Bosnia -– Carroll's prescription is the poison to do just that.
Politically, the overriding national interest of the Bahamian government should not be to establish bigotry as a "national imperative," but to protect the inalienable rights of all individuals equally. Morally, the proper method to deal with anyone -– is to judge each person not as a member of some race, group, tribe or class, but as an individual with all the uniqueness and creativity that the individual possesses. To paraphrase Martin Luther King: judge a man not by some non-moral trait -– like race, ancestry or nationality -- but by the content of his character -- his words and deeds.
Tuesday, November 01, 2005
Oliver! The Musical
Directed by Kay Hardy. Produced by Jacqueline Dack. A presentation of the Freeport Players Guild"Please sir, I want some more." Oliver’s innocent request lands him in trouble with the workhouse Matron and the Beadle and sets him on his famous adventure. He is sold to a local undertaker, but runs away and is picked up by the Artful Dodger who invites Oliver to Consider Yourself one of us! Fagin’s Gang set out to Pick A Pocket or Two and take Oliver along, but he is arrested and taken before the magistrates. When he finds Oliver was an innocent bystander, Mr Brownlow, the victim of the gang, takes Oliver in. Fagin’s Thief, Bill Sikes is afraid Oliver will give away their set-up and sends his girlfriend, Nancy to get Oliver back. Eventually Oliver is restored to Mr Brownlow, who by a million to one chance, happens to be his Grandfather. Fagin sets out to rebuild his gang with the Dodger. Food, Glorious Food and Where is Love are just two of the popular songs from Lionel Bart’s lively musical based on Charles Dickens' Oliver Twist. And now it all comes to life on the stage of the Regency Theatre starting Thursday, November 3. With a wonderful cast, rousing music and a compelling story of innocence, love and loyalty, Oliver! is a fine play that everyone can enjoy. Evening performances are November 3, 4, 5, 10, 11 & 12 at 8:00 p.m., with matinees on Sundays, November 6 and 13 at 3:00 p.m. Tickets are $15 for adults and $8.00 for students and are available at Seventeen Shop, Sweet P's and Cool 96.
|
Talk, ask questions, and discuss the Bahamas for free on our online
Bahamas Discussion Boards. |
Top Prize: A seven day vacation for two at
Starwood's Westin/ Sheraton at Our Lucaya Resort on Grand
Bahama Island. Plus lots of other prizes. Learn more
about The Bahamas
Guide Sweepstakes! |
Get the inside scoop on the latest deals, breaking news,
and security alerts by signing up for our email newsletter. |
|