<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
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            <title>Korean Arts - Warrior Pages Martial Arts Society</title>
            <link rel="self" href="http://warriorpages.com/forum/categories/korean-arts/listForCategory?feed=yes&amp;xn_auth=no"/>
            <updated>2012-09-23T21:18:55Z</updated>
                        <id>http://warriorpages.com/forum/categories/korean-arts/listForCategory?feed=yes&amp;xn_auth=no</id>
                            <entry>
                    <title>Korean Terminology</title>
                    <link rel="alternate" href="http://warriorpages.com/xn/detail/2256436:Topic:30038"/>
                                        <id>tag:warriorpages.com,2009-11-03:2256436:Topic:30038</id>
                                        <updated>2009-11-03T14:57:08.160Z</updated>
                    
                                            <author>
                            <name>Bart Scovill</name>
                            <uri>http://warriorpages.com/profile/BartScovill</uri>
                        </author>
                    
                    <summary type="html">
                        To all practitioners of Korean Martial Arts,&lt;br /&gt;
I would like to begin a Korean terminology page on the Warrior Pages. I have no experience with Korean Terminology and would greatly appreciate it if you would add any terminology you can here. I will add your submissions to the Warrior Pages. Thank you.                    </summary>

                                            <content type="html">
                            To all practitioners of Korean Martial Arts,&lt;br /&gt;
I would like to begin a Korean terminology page on the Warrior Pages. I have no experience with Korean Terminology and would greatly appreciate it if you would add any terminology you can here. I will add your submissions to the Warrior Pages. Thank you.                        </content>
                    
                                    </entry>
                            <entry>
                    <title>The &quot;Sine Wave&quot;</title>
                    <link rel="alternate" href="http://warriorpages.com/xn/detail/2256436:Topic:29352"/>
                                        <id>tag:warriorpages.com,2009-10-20:2256436:Topic:29352</id>
                                        <updated>2009-10-20T23:36:39.497Z</updated>
                    
                                            <author>
                            <name>Art for Art&#039;s sake... Sake?</name>
                            <uri>http://warriorpages.com/profile/ArtforArtssakeSake</uri>
                        </author>
                    
                    <summary type="html">
                        The subject of the ITF &quot;sine wave&quot; form of movement was recently broached in another thread. I am far from an expert, but have had some training with it. Does anybody else have any extensive training with this form of movement? If so, could you please enlighten us all?&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
I have included a small diagram to get things started.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Perhaps this should go in a different category, but since the ITF is the only organization to have institutionalized it&#039;s teaching, I put it here.                    </summary>

                                            <content type="html">
                            The subject of the ITF &quot;sine wave&quot; form of movement was recently broached in another thread. I am far from an expert, but have had some training with it. Does anybody else have any extensive training with this form of movement? If so, could you please enlighten us all?&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
I have included a small diagram to get things started.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Perhaps this should go in a different category, but since the ITF is the only organization to have institutionalized it&#039;s teaching, I put it here.                        </content>
                    
                                    </entry>
                            <entry>
                    <title>Can Taekwondo be saved?</title>
                    <link rel="alternate" href="http://warriorpages.com/xn/detail/2256436:Topic:14605"/>
                                        <id>tag:warriorpages.com,2009-01-10:2256436:Topic:14605</id>
                                        <updated>2009-01-10T04:23:38.303Z</updated>
                    
                                            <author>
                            <name>Art for Art&#039;s sake... Sake?</name>
                            <uri>http://warriorpages.com/profile/ArtforArtssakeSake</uri>
                        </author>
                    
                    <summary type="html">
                        After browsing around the net and visiting with a number of martial artists who I am acquainted with, I&#039;ve found that most serious martial artists discount Taekwondo as non-effective at best or at worst, a gimmick style used to make money off of the uneducated.&lt;br /&gt;
What I see today, bears very little resemblance to the style my uncle taught me when I was a kid. It has gotten softer and more watered down.&lt;br /&gt;
Can this style&#039;s reputation be rehabilitated or has Teabo and the proliferation of black belt…                    </summary>

                                            <content type="html">
                            After browsing around the net and visiting with a number of martial artists who I am acquainted with, I&#039;ve found that most serious martial artists discount Taekwondo as non-effective at best or at worst, a gimmick style used to make money off of the uneducated.&lt;br /&gt;
What I see today, bears very little resemblance to the style my uncle taught me when I was a kid. It has gotten softer and more watered down.&lt;br /&gt;
Can this style&#039;s reputation be rehabilitated or has Teabo and the proliferation of black belt factories doomed this descendant of Karate to a slow and pitiful end?                        </content>
                    
                                    </entry>
                    </feed>
        