THE APPA Newsletter

June 1, 2004

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)

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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 2004:

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

(coming soon)

Detailed, updated calendar is available on the internet at www.apa-pro.org in Acrobat and Excel formats [IÕll update it someday when I have some more time] . 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 

 

March 5-June 20 The Arts of Japanese Sake at the Pacific Asia Museum.

 

June 17-26 Los Angeles Film Festival, at Laemmle Sunset 5, Argyle Hotel, ArcLight Cinerama Dome, Regent Showcase, John Anson Ford Theatre, Wadsworth Theater, Laemmle Town Center 5 (Encino), and Laemmle Playhouse 7 Cinemas (Pasadena). http://www.lafilmfest.com/venues.htm. Includes Asian track: After the Apocalypse, Goodbye, Dragon Inn, Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle, Hero, Imelda, Invisible Light, Ju-on, The Grudge, Pyaasa, South of the Clouds, Untold Scandal, Vibrator

 

 

June 19 Little Tokyo Walking Tour from the JANM, 10:15AM-12:15PM The Little Tokyo community in Los Angeles was once a thriving residential, business, and cultural center of the largest Japanese American community in the United States until World War II. Relive history and learn about present day Little Tokyo with National Museum volunteers on this historical walking tour. Fees are $5 for National Museum members and $11 for non-members, includes Museum admission. Reservations and comfortable shoes and clothes are recommended. Weather permitting.

 

June 19-July 25 Contemporary Japanese  Crafts at the George J. Doizaki Gallery, JACCC. This exhibition explores the heart of late 20th century Japanese applied arts combining centuries of rich tradition with contemporary aesthetics. Highlighted are more than 60 striking examples of ceramic, wood and iron works providing insights into contemporary Japanese crafts. This exhibit examines the themes of functionality, artistic expression and the use of materials. Concurrently, the works of contemporary bamboo artist Hajime Nakatomi will be on special exhibit. Hours:

Tuesday- Friday, 12noon- 5pm

Saturday and Sunday, 11am- 4pm.

Closed on Mondays and Holidays

For more information, call (213) 628-2725. http://www.jaccc.org/event_%20related/jaccc_calendar.html#anchor1193502

Admission Free 

 

Jun 19 - Chinese Food Festival. The first ever Chinese Food Festival is scheduled to take place in Chinatown on Saturday, June 19th, from 2PM - 8PM and Sunday, June 20th, from 11AM - 6PM. There will be numerous food booths to sample from, arts and craft, entertainment, food related exhibits, etc. Along with the Food Festival, there will be a ÒGourmetÕs Taste of ChinatownÓ on June 27th. Please visit our website regularly for additional information or contact the BID Office at (213) 680-0243. http://www.chinatownla.com/

 

Jun 20 - Chinese Food Festival. The Chinese Food Festival is scheduled to take place in Chinatown on Saturday, June 19th, from 2PM - 8PM and Sunday, June 20th, from 11AM - 6PM. There will be numerous food booths to sample from, arts and craft, cooking demonstration, entertainment, food related exhibits, etc. Along with the Food Festival, there will be a ÒGourmetÕs Taste of ChinatownÓ on June 27th. Please visit our website regularly for additional information or contact the BID Office at (213) 680-0243. http://www.chinatownla.com/

 

June 26 Family Day: Journeys: The Issei Story at the JANM. Allen Say's touching tale of his grandfather's travels to America and his love for both America and Japan in Grandfather's Journey will serve as a basis for understanding the immigrant experience. Children and their families will have an opportunity to create a book recounting their own stories. Participants will also don period costumes and use their imagination to travel back in time to the early 1900s. Especially for children 4 through 12. 11AM-4PM.  http://www.janm.org/events/m_2004-06.html

 

June 27 Taiko Jam Session with Hydaiko at the JANM, 2-4 PM Join Hydaiko, the network of taiko players, for a brief overview about taiko in North America. Drummers from different Southern California groups will host this workshop and jam session where participants will have an opportunity to gain hands-on experience with different instruments and participate in a jam session.http://www.janm.org/events/m_2004-06.html

 

Jun 27 - Gourmet's Taste of Chinatown. In addition to the Chinese Food Festival outdoor activities, the festival will also include an evening of gourmet dinners at pre-selected Chinatown restaurants. The festival gourmet dinners will showcase the best cooking by the best chefs in Chinatown, supported by high-quality of service. Menus and prices will be set in advance and publicized. Aside from food, each individual menu courses during the gourmet dinner will be matched with tastings of fine wines. Please check back frequently for reservation information and to learn more about participating restaurants at www.chinesefoodfestivalla.com or www.chinatownla.com.

 

July 10-11 2004  Lotus Festival sponsored by the City of Los Angeles Department  of Recreation and Parks. Saturday- 12:00 Noon to 9:00 pm, Sunday - 12:00 Noon to 9:00 pm (The dates coincides with the blooming of the Lotus Flower) Echo Park in Los Angeles, California, located on Park Avenue between Glendale Avenue and Echo Park Boulevard, just north of the Hollywood (101) and Pasadena (110) freeway junction, near Dodger Stadium. GENERAL PARKING LOCATIONS:

LOGAN  STREET SCHOOL: 1711 W. Montana Street, Los Angeles. Cross streets Lemoyne St. and Montana St.

ECHO PARK BASEBALL DIAMOND: 1632 Bellevue  Ave, Los Angeles. Cross streets Temple St. and Glendale Blvd

CITY OF ANGELS MEDICAL CENTER:1711 W.  Temple St, Los Angeles. Cross Streets Temple St. and Glendale Blvd. For info call  (213) 485-8743, FAX (213) 485-8746, Mary Bingham, Festival Chairperson, Irena Seta, Festival Assistant. Email:  Lotus@rap.lacity.org, www.laparks.org/grifmet/lotus.htm

 

June 13 Okinawa Style Koto Association Koyokai 40th Anniversary, 11:30 luncheon at the Torrance Marriott Hotel, 3635 Fashion Way, 90503. 40 performers of koto, shanshin and dance from Okinawa and local performers. $30, call Itsumi Jacomo at 714-963-4171, Jane Kuniyoshi at 310-530-0208, or Helene Shimane at 310-323-7965.

 

June 19, Painting Demo, Gongbi Demonstration 1pm-2pm Zhou Ping-guang, featured artist in A Modern Pursuit of Ancient Feelings (on display at Pacific Museum from May 7 through July 4, 2004) will demonstrate his skill in the "gongbi" technique of painting exquisite images of birds and flowers. A professor at the Sichuan Art Institute, Zhou Ping-guang is a Senior-Level Artistic Scholar of China, and immigrated to the United States in 1998 as an "Outstanding Artist with Extraordinary Achievements." His work possesses elements of traditional Chinese paintings while incorporating modern sensibilities. The program is free with museum admission. Please call ext. 31 for reservations and information. The Pacific Asia Museum (46 N. Los Robles Ave., Pasadena, 91101, 626-449-2742

 

July 24 Ho'ike 2004 Halau Hula a Kawka Laua 'o Leinani and the Kalika Band 8th Annual Fundraiser Concert at the George & Sakaye Aratani/Japan America Theatre. Dances of the South Pacific to be performed by the students  of  Halau Hula a Kawika laua 'o Leinani. Over 100 dancers, children and adults, will be on stage along with the Hawaiian band Kalika.  A great 2 hours on Entertainment!! Bring the Ohana for this  colorful and lively performance. Tickets: $15 per person, general seating. To charge by phone contact the box office or call (909) 396-4775. More info: call the Box Office at 213.680.3700

 

July 24-25 Tofu Festival http://www.tofufest.org/

Aug 7-15 Nisei Week http://www.niseiweek.org/

 Sept 11-12Festival of Philippine Arts & Culture, Pt. Fermin, San Pedro. For more info call 213-389-3050, fpac@fialamarts.org, www.filamarts.org+

 

 

This Weekend (and earlier)

 

June 4th, Sake Talk and Tasting 7pm  In conjunction with Kampai! The Arts of Japanese Sake, Pacific Asia Museum will hold its second sake tasting. The event will include an exhibition tour and introduction to sake by museum curator Meher McArthur followed by a tasting of ten types of sake presented by Pacific International Liquor. Pacific Asia Museum members, Japan America Society and Asia Society members are $25; non-members are $30. Reservations are required, please call ext. 19. The Pacific Asia Museum (46 N. Los Robles Ave., Pasadena, 91101, 626-449-2742 http://www.pacificasiamuseum.org/calendar/events.htm 

 

June 5 Asia America  Symphony Orchestra at The George & Sakaye Aratani  Japan America Theatre, David Benoit, Conductor, performing Gabriel FaureÕs Pavanne Opus 50 and MendelssohnÕs Symphony #4 in A Mino\Opus 90 Italian Symphony. HIROSHIMA, guest artists. This is truly a once in a lifetime event  ­ a rare opportunity to  hear HIROSHIMA one of the greatest Asian American bands  of all time, jamming with David Benoit and the Orchestra. Season Finale, with reception to follow Tickets: $35 Premier Orchestra seating,  $25 orchestra, balcony. More info: call the Box Office at 213.680.3700

 

June 6 Genkai Ryuji, top actor of JapanÕs Popular Theater Circle, will perform at 1PM at the Aratani/Japan America Theatre in Little Tokyo as a guest star of the 3rd Oedo-Ichiza Charity Show. $30. Call Matsubara Senryu at 909-628-5854.

 

June 6 Recital by soprano Hei-Kyung Hong at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, 1PM, losangelesopera.com, 213-365-3500

 

Photo Exhibit: Through My Father's Eyes: The June 6 Filipino American Photographs of Ricardo Ocreto Alvarado"Opening Day lectures "A Daughter's Perspective" by Janet Alvarado, daughter of the artist; and "Cultural History of 1940s-50s Filipino American Life" by Gina Inocencio, Smithsonian Institution. "Through My Father's Eyes: The Filipino American Photographs of Ricardo Ocreto Alvarado" On exhibit at the UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History from June 6 to August 1, 2004. Noon-5 p.m., Sunday, June 6 (Opening Day), 2 p.m. The photographer's daughter, Janet Alvarado, will provide background for the images in the exhibition, while Gina Inocencio, program specialist, Smithsonian Institution Asian Pacific American Program, will offer a cultural history of 1940s-50s Filipino American life. Free, no reservations required.

 

Filipino Americans are one of this nation's largest and fastest-growing Asian American ethnic groups, yet their history in this country is not well known. "Through My Father's Eyes: The Filipino American Photographs of Ricardo Ocreto Alvarado" - on view at the UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History from June 6 through Aug. 1 - is a rare collection of 51 black-and-white photographs taken by Ricardo Alvarado (1914-1976) in Northern California during the 1940s and 50s. Selected from more than 3,000 negatives, these affectionate images of ordinary people at work and at play provide an intimate view of Filipino life and history in the United States.

 

Alvarado immigrated to San Francisco in 1928 from the Philippines. He was part of the wave of Filipino immigrants known as the Manong ("older brother") generation, who came to the United States between 1901 and 1935, after the Spanish American War of 1898 made the islands a U.S. Territory. At first, Alvarado made a living working as a janitor and houseboy. During World War II, he served as a medical technician in the Army's highly decorated First Filipino Infantry Regiment. When he returned from the Pacific, he supported himself as a cook.

 

Alvarado satisfied his passion for photography by capturing on film special events and daily life of the Filipino American community in San Francisco after the war. He canvassed the Bay Area's city streets and rural back roads for subjects. His camera gave him entree into large social functions - weddings, funerals, baptisms, parties and dances - as well as intimate family gatherings. He recorded street scenes, beauty pageants, cockfights, agricultural workers tending crops and entrepreneurs on the job.  When he died in 1976, he left behind a rich trove of historically significant and visually arresting images, yet they remained hidden until his daughter, Janet Alvarado, found his vast collection and recognized their importance. She formed the Alvarado Project to ensure that her father's unique record of Filipino American life would be preserved and seen.

 

This exhibition is curated by Janet Alvarado and Franklin Odo, director of the Smithsonian Asian Pacific Program. Created by the Alvarado Project, it was developed by the Smithsonian Institution Asian Pacific American Project in collaboration with the National Museum of American History, Behring Center, and circulated by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service. Additional support has been provided by FedEx and a circle of friends. The Los Angeles showing is co-presented by the UCLA Fowler Museum, the UCLA Asian American Studies Center, and the Filipino American Library, Los Angeles. Local support is provided by the Wells Fargo Foundation and the Filipino American National Historical Society, Los Angeles.

 

"Through My Father's Eyes" will be on view in the Fowler Museum's Goldenberg Galleria. The Fowler is open Wednesdays through Sundays, noon to 5 p.m.; and on Thursdays, noon until 8 p.m. The museum is closed Mondays and Tuesdays. The Fowler Museum, part of UCLA's School of the Arts and Architecture, is located in the north part of the UCLA campus. Admission is free. Parking is available for $7 in Lot 4. For more info, the public may call (310) 825-4361.  For more info view http://www.fowler.ucla.edu.

For a community review of the exhbit visit http://www.asiansinamerica.org/museum/0403_museum.html

2:00 PM - 4:00 PM, Fowler Museum, UCLA Campus, Los Angeles, CA 90095. Free and open to the public. Parking at UCLA costs $7.

 

 

June 4 - Wednesday, June 9 Thai Film Festival - "Bangkok: Cinema City" - BEAUTIFUL BOXER & NANG NAK. Exciting Films from Thailand with English subtitles 7:30pm

 Los Angeles Premiere BEAUTIFUL BOXER (2003)  Directed by Ekachai Uekrongtham. Based on an amazing true story, this absorbing and heartfelt film follows a young kickboxer who rises to the top of his sport in order to pay for a sex-change operationÑhis own.  BEAUTIFUL BOXER inventively brings together the conventions of the sports movie and the coming-out story as exciting kickboxing sequences alternate with vignettes from the athleteÕs life.  Thai tolerance towards transsexuality has led to a string of films with transgendered protagonists, with IRON LADIES (also a sports film based on a true story) the best-known example in this country.  Unlike many of these films, the hero here is not a comic figure but an inspiring individual. Producer: Ekachai U. Screenwriters: Ekachai U., Desmond Sim Kim Jin. Cinematographer: Choochart Nantitanyatada. Editor: Dusanee Puinongpho. With: Asanee Suwan, Sorapong Chatree, Orn-Anong Panyawong, Kyoko Inoue. 35mm, in Thai with English subtitles, 116 min.

 NANG NAK (1999)  Directed by Nonzee Nimibutr A TITANIC-sized hit in Thailand and a critical success abroad, NANG NAK breathes new life into a haunting Thai folktale about undying love.  After recovering from the brink of death, Mak returns home from war to be greeted by his wife Nak and their newborn sonÑonly something isnÕt right.  Evoking the ethereal beauty of rural Thailand, director Nonzee builds a mounting sense of unease and danger as Mak comes to realize what the audience already knows: his wife and child died months before.  An epic romance by way of a chilling ghost story, NANG NAK was hailed by Tony Rayns as Òa landmark of Southeast Asian cinema.Ó  The same production team went on to make the delirious homage to the Spaghetti Western, TEARS OF THE BLACK TIGER (2001). Cinematographer: Nattawut Kitikun. Editor: Sunji Asavinikul. With: Intira Jaroenpura, Winai Kraibutr, Pramote Suksatit, Pracha Thawongfia. 35mm, in Thai with English subtitles, 100 min.

All films screen at the James Bridges Theater in Melnitz Hall, located on the northeast corner of the UCLA campus, near the intersection of Sunset Boulevard and Hilgard Avenue. Tickets are available at the theater one hour before showtime.  Admission is $7 general, $5 students, seniors and UCLA Alumni Association members with ID.  KidsÕ Flicks general admission is $5. Advance tickets for all programs are available for $8 at www.cinema.ucla.edu. Parking is available adjacent to the James Bridges Theater in Lot 3 for $7; there is free parking on Loring Ave. after 6:00 p.m. daily. 310.206.FILM.

 

 

 

 

Last Weekend(s)

 

I went to:

 

Pacific Media Expo

LACMA exhibit

 

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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. Calendar articles are usually only accessible with a paid subscription.)

 

May 30 DESIGN LINE

Asian influences impacting western design

Rita St. Clair, Tribune Media Services

http://www.latimes.com/classified/realestate/designline/la-designline040530,1,1135089.story

 

May7 A veteran's trip back in time

By Rick Liebermann

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/pilot/features/la-dpt-traveltale27may27,1,3026544.story

 

June 1 It's Now, It's Zen and It's Life-Changing

 Buddhists who turned a gun training site into a monastery tackle even harder transformations.

By Teresa Watanabe, Times Staff Writer

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-monastery1jun01,1,2507786.story

 

May 31 INDIANAPOLIS 500 NOTEBOOK

Odd Trip for Rahal, Honda

By Shav Glick and Mike Kupper, Times Staff Writers

http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-indynotes31may31,1,6503079.story

 

may 30 Saluting a Modest WWII Hero

 Ship commissioning in Port Hueneme pays tribute to a black Navy Cross recipient.

By Steve Chawkins, Times Staff Writer

http://www.latimes.com/la-me-pinckney30may30,1,3470872.story

 

May 28 THE WORLD

No Male Heir Is Apparent, So Japan Shifting

 The nation considers changing the law to allow a ruling empress. Many people favor it.

By Colin Joyce, Special to The Times

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-empress28may28,1,4288913.story

 

May 28 COMMENTARY

'No-Communist Zone' Has No Place in America

 A hard-core few in Orange County's Little Saigon need a civics lesson.

By Thuy Reed

http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/opinion/la-vo-reed29may29,1,5782429.story

 

May 29 Hardship Ruled, but This Grad Stayed on Course

 UCI student kept her goal in sight despite neglect and abandonment.

By Jeff Gottlieb, Times Staff Writer

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-ucigrad29may29,1,4788781.story