THE APPA Newsletter

November 25, 2003

Thanksgiving, http://www.holidays.net/thanksgiving/, http://www.2020tech.com/thanks/, http://pilgrims.net/plymouth/thanksgiving.htm

 

See This Weekend

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MISSION STATEMENT:

Promote full utilization of the capabilities of the Enterprise's employees and champion the betterment of the company and community. Promote interest in Asian Pacific issues and culture and act as a bridge to all groups within our community.

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ed. by Douglas Ikemi

(dkikemi@pacbell.net, dkikemi01@sprintpcs.com)

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The internet site is at:

www.apa-pro.org                                      

Our own domain name, apa-pro.org, stands for Asian Pacific American Professionals. www.apa-pro.org/ gives you a menu of AP organization websites.

Back issues of the newsletter for all of 2000, 2001, 2002, and 2003 are available on the website if you want to look up some past event.

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APPA Board Meeting Schedule for 2003:

Evening meetings open to the public will be at the Hilton Garden Inn, 2100 Mariposa Ave.(corner of Nash)‎‎ 310/726-0100.

(finished for the year)

Detailed, updated calendar is available on the internet at www.apa-pro.org in Acrobat and Excel formats . Please send in information on cultural events and news items. Thanks to those who have.

 

Long range calendar items:

Chinatown Farmers Market Every Thursday, 3:00pm to 7:00pm Chinatown Business Improvement District http://www.ChinatownLA.com/  For Information (213)‎ 680-0243 

Nov 1-Feb 1, Korean Costumes Exhibit at the Pacific Asia Museum, 46 N. Los Robles, Pasadena 91101, 626-449-2742.

Nov 17-21 Victims of Pacific Wars Photo Exhibition 9:00 AM - 6:00 PM, 214 Kerckhoff Hall Art Gallery, Los Angeles, CA 90095. For more information please contact Center for Korean Studies, 825-3284, koreanstudies@ucla.edu,  http://www.internationalucla.edu/korea

 

Dec 6 Fine Arts - Flowers in Harmony: The Japanese Art of Ikebana At the UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History, World of Art Family Workshop. Hisoko Shohara, president of the LA chapter of the Ohara School of Ikebana, will teach participants how to create their elegant arrangements while learning the design elements key to this art form. $5 material fee for Fowler members; $10 for non-members. Reservations required; call 310-825-8655. Not intended for young children.  1:00 PM - 4:00 PM, UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History, UCLA Campus, Los Angeles, CA 90095, Free, $5 material fee for Fowler members; $10 for non-members. Reservations required; call 310-825-8655. For more information please contact UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History  Tel: 310-825-8655, fowlerws@arts.ucla.edu, www.fowler.ucla.edu

 

Dec 7 Music of Edo Concert at the JACCC Garden Room, 2PM, $20. Japanese Traditional Performing Arts Organization, 310-378-3550

 

Dec 11 Cultural Affairs - APEX Pages and Plates, Thursday. APEX is proud to host Pages & Plates, a Cultural Affairs series to celebrate Asian Pacific American heritage. Pages & Plates is a combination of a book club and a restaurant club. APEX members are invited to dine at a restaurant and to discuss the book of the month. By tying together the love for literature with the love for food, APEX hopes that Pages & Plates enables its members to

discover a new dimension of Asian Pacific American heritage. Pages and

Plates are held every first Thursday of the month. The book for December is "In Full Bloom" by Carolyn Hwang. We encourage members to finish the book and contribute to the discussion. However, folks who want to participate without having read the book are welcomed. 7pm-9pm at The Dragon, 966 S. Vermont Ave., Koreatown, LA, 213-387-8833. Free, RSVP required as seating is limited. APEX members get priority seating. Contact: Charles Ferrari, APEX Associate Chair of Cultural Affairs, at jcharlesferrari@mac.com

 

Dec 20, 21 "The Spirit of the Season" HIROSHIMA in Concert, Aratani/Japan America Theatre. In "The Spirit of the Season" join our favorite Asian American jazz band Hiroshima for our annual holiday concert. This is an  opportunity to gather the family together, young and old, to celebrate and honor relationships, community and the Japanese American culture. Songs of the season from Hiroshima's CD "Spirit of the  Season" and new songs from their latest release, "The Bridge" will be featured. A J-TOWN BEAT Event. $30, $25 JACCC Members, $35 orchestra, $30 balcony, Holiday Family Special $30, $25 (Groups of 6 or more) For information and tickets call the box office at 213.680.3700. www.jaccc.org

 

Dec 28 Little Tokyo Community Mochitsuki, JACCC Plaza. Join in the Japanese tradition of making mochi, pounded rice cakes, for the new year. Traditionally in rural areas, families would pound their own mochi for the New Year ozoni, or good luck soup. Participants can purchase mochi to take home. To register to particpate.call Miles Hamada at 213.628.2725, ext 114 or email at hamada@jaccc.org. Free to the public 

 

Dec China Expo, LA Convention Center [ I have not heard anything more about this.]

 

March 21, 2004 Live at the Armstrong - George Takei. 4:00 pm Tickets $30.

As part of the American Perspectives Series ...Salute to Liberty

Recognized worldwide as a member of the original Star Trek cast, Los Angeles native, George Takei is an actor, community and political activist, author, long distance runner and lecturer.   Mr. Takei spent most of his childhood behind the barbed-wire enclosures of United States internment camps during World War II.   His optimistic vision is a world where people from all backgrounds work together to overcome problems. Armstrong Theatre at 3330 Civic Center Drive in Torrance.   Questions: 310-738-8011.  Box Office: 310-781-7171

 

April 3, 2004 Also the Peanut Gallery Series which is especially popular with children two to six years of age is featuring Korean Classical Dance, Saturday Morning 10 am. Tickets $5.50 - $8.00, Armstrong Theatre. The Company performs graceful and elegant ceremonial and social dances that present a stunning vision of traditional Korean art.   A thrilling drum dance is featured in a rich and vaired repertoire of exciting dances that are an integral part of the Korean culture.

 

The Pacific Asia Museum (46 N. Los Robles Ave., Pasadena, 91101, 626-449-2742) Family Festival schedule for 2003, Saturdays, 1-4:

Dec 13 Pasko Sa Nayon

From: "Kristine Minami" <dc@jacl.org>

Subject: Fw: cover story honoring JA vets

This month's issue of Soldiers (the official publication of the US Army) magazine's cover story is "Go for Broke!" honoring the Japanese American WWII vets.    The 9-page feature does a pretty good job of telling the story of several HI vets and the context in which they fought.  The editor introduces the story with: "THIS month's issue of Soldiers is dedicated to veterans - both past and present - who have answered our nation's call. Perhaps no group of veterans has shown more patriotism, valor and fidelity than the men of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team and the 100th Infantry Battalion. These Japanese-Americans, many of whom had loved ones in U.S. government detention camps, fought courageously in some of the most horrific battles of World War II. " The issue is available on-line at http://www.army.mil/soldiers/  and I have attached the PDF file of the story for your convenience. Please forward to anyone who might be interested.

 

Kristine Minami

Japanese American Citizens League

1001 Connecticut Avenue, NW

Suite 730

Washington, DC  20036

ph: (202) 223-1240

fax: (202) 296-8082

Please visit our website at www.jacl.org

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This Weekend (and earlier)

 

Nov 28 Lecture - Chronicle of a Blood Merchant, Part of the Pacific Asia Museum's November Authors on Asia Program. The Pacific Asia Museum Authors on Asia Program presents "Chronicle of a Blood Merchant," a reading and book-signing by Yu Hua. Internationally acclaimed aithor Yu Hua will discuss and sign his powerful new novelChronicle of a Blood Merchant, and his brilliant novel To Live, translated into English for the first time and the basis of the award-winning film of the same name.  Chronicle of a Blood Merchant is the disturbing story of a struggling factory worker forced to undergo the physically and emotionally demanding burden of selling his own blood to support his family.  This will be the author's only Los Angeles engagement. Books will be available for purchase and signing.  Please call 626-449-2742, ext. 20 for reservations and more information.  Authors on Asia programs are presented free with museum admission: $7 adults, $5 students and seniors, free for museum members and children under 12. 7:00 PM - 9:00 PM, Pacific Asia Museum, 46 N. Los Robles Ave., Pasadena, CA 91101.  www.pacificasiamuseum.org

 

Nov 29 Fugetsudo 100th Anniversary of Little Tokyo Confection Shop. Japanese American National Museum. In honor of the 100th anniversary of this Little Tokyo landmark, a slide show presentation and conversation with the family of Fugetsudo will explore the history of this confectionary business and its impact on the community. It will also shed light on how a Japanese American family-run business has endured for a century, overcoming the World War II incarceration and other obstacles. A mochi pounding and fortune cookie mold demonstration will follow the program. Fugetsudo lays claim to the invention of the fortune cookie. A cookie mold is currently on display in the exhibition Object Lessons. 2:00-4:00pm. 369 East First Street, Los Angeles, California 90012

phone: (213) 625-0414, fax: (213) 625-1770,  www.janm.org

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Doug -  Please include in your next APPA publication

DAY OF INDEPENDENCE

This is a "docudrama" about a Japanese American family in the internment camps of the World War II era. For those attending, please look for my cousin, Lisa Joe, who sings the National Anthem in the opening scenes and also is the "choir director". As piece of "inside information", Lisa plays the part of a young woman named "Frances", in memory of her later mother (my aunt) Sue Okabe (Frances was Sue's "real" first name). I encourage all of you to go see this docudrama, both to learn about an aspect of Asian American Heritage, and to support a production from  an Asian American company starring an Asian American cast. This is playing in limited release in public theaters to qualify for Academy Award nomination.

http://www.cedargroveproductions.com/doipostproduction.htm

Jeff Dohzen

[And what do you know, guess where the Asian Ski and Board Club of Los Angeles is going?]

Saturday, November 29th - 10:30am - "Day of Independence" screening

Join the club for a special screening of "Day of Independence", a short film about a Japanese American family in the internment camps of World War II. The film is showing at the Redondo Beach Cinema 3, 1509 Hawthorne Blvd, adjacent to the South Bay Bowl. After the screening, we'll get together for dim sum at a local restaurant.

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Last Weekend

I dropped very quickly in on the Manjuro exhibit at the JANM. Looked interesting enough to back for a slower look.

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LA Times: (The Times are requiring registration again, but you might as well sign up for the free on-line access to their articles. This week they may even be accessible without registration)

 

Nov 25 Selling Eel and Chicken Feet -- Plus M&Ms and Sony TVs

 Wal-Mart is growing fast in China, where its stores are local attractions. The firm's overseas empire is changing buying habits in 10 nations.

By Tyler Marshall, Times Staff Writer

http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-retail25nov25,1,1697024.story

 

Nov 23 Study finds widespread landlord bias against Native Americans

 From Inman News Features

http://www.latimes.com/classified/realestate/printedition/la-re-short23nov23,1,7594457.story

 

Nov 22 South Korea's Lee Visits Dodgers

Ross Newhan

http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-dodgers22nov22,1,3328503.story

 

Nov 20 UCLA, Cal Rejections Baffle High SAT Scorers

By Stuart Silverstein and Rebecca Trounson, Times Staff Writers

http://www.latimes.com/la-me-reject20nov20,1,2258912.story 

 

Nov 24 Scouring the Globe to Give Shoppers an $8.63 Polo Shirt

 Wal-Mart, once a believer in buying American, extracts ever lower prices from 10,000 suppliers worldwide. Workers struggle to keep pace.

By Nancy Cleeland, Evelyn Iritani and Tyler Marshall, Times Staff Writers

http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/la-fi-walmart24nov24,1,1843381.story

 

Nov 23 THE WORLD

Mystic Turtle in Need of a Miracle

 Giant species that stars in a Vietnamese folk tale faces extinction. Only one is believed to remain in Hanoi lake.

By Margie Mason, Associated Press Writer

http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-adfg-turtle23nov23,1,5665227.story

 

Nov 20 OBITUARIES

Tung-Yen Lin, 91; Engineer Advocated a Novel Way to Build

http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/california/la-me-lin20nov20,1,2971279.story

 

Nov 23 L.A. THEN AND NOW

A New Take on Earhart Mystery

By Cecilia Rasmussen, Times Staff Writer

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-then23nov23,1,5810795.story

 

Nov 22 EDITORIAL

Museum's Duty to History

http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/opinion/la-ed-enola22nov22,1,5069581.story

 

Nov 25 Jailed Chaplain Decries Treatment

 Army captain, a Muslim who worked with terrorist suspects at the U.S. prison in Cuba, says he's been blocked from practicing his faith.

By Richard A. Serrano, Times Staff Writer

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-yee25nov25,1,3651949.story

 

Nov 23 Bush's Inaction Over General's Islam Remarks Riles Two Faiths

 Muslims call for rebuke of Boykin, but such a move could isolate key Christian supporters.

By Johanna Neuman, Times Staff Writer

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-boykin23nov23,1,1999740.story