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Idaho City Community
Tae-Kwon-Do/ Beginners Tae Kwon Do-Monday
3:30pm Advanced Tae Kwon Do-Monday
7:00 pm Tae Kwon Do-Wednesday
7:00 P.M. |
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| Mike
Nussgen |
Mrs.
Lee Nussgen |
Mr.
Ronald Latten |
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| Michele
Alseth 1st Degree Black Belt Tae-Kwon-Do |
Ron
Arnel 2nd Degree Brown Tae-Kwon-Do |
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| The Community Center in Idaho City and the Basin Elementary multi-purpose room is being offered to our class as a community service. This spirit of community cooperation is very much appreciated and since 1993 has allowed us to offer quality martial arts training at a very low cost. Students are asked to pay ten dollars per quarter or forty dollars per year. In addition, all uniforms and equipment are made available at whole-sale cost. |
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| This money is spent entirely on equipment, certificates, training-aids, and a donation to the community center each year to help defray the costs of heating during the winter months. We donate our services to the community , and special arrangements for students who are unable to pay. Our school operates in conjunction with Boise Community Tae-Kwon-Do under the direction of Master Bob Sutter 5th dan, and offers training through the Black Belt level. |
Martial Arts Training will:
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The founders of virtually every style of martial art have inferred, if not actually stated, that the goal of their followers should be to develop a refined moral character. |
Since traditional martial arts such as Tae-Kwon-Do are invariably influenced by their cultural heritage, each style of martial art has its own version of the code of ethics by which the student should live, both while practicing the art and in daily life. On close examination, we find that the codes of conduct and tenets of any martial art are closely tied to the code of military behavior for the ancestors of each art. As the Code of Bushido is evident in the Japanese martial arts, so the Code of Hwarang is evident in the Tenets of Tae-Kwon-Do as developed by General Choi Hong-Hi, the “Father” of Tae-Kwon-Do. From The History of Tae-Kwon-Do Patterns By Richard L. Mitchell (Gultch 1987, page one. |
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Tenets of Tae-Kwon-Do Courtesy
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Tae-Kwon-Do Student Oath
Observe the Tenets of Tae-Kwon-Do
Respect the Instructor and Seniors
Never Misuse Tae-Kwon-Do
Be a Champion of Freedom and Justice
Build a More Peaceful World