THE APPA Newsletter
April 2, 2007
A month late, but
WomenÕs History Month was
March
http://www.infoplease.com/spot/womensintro1.html
http://www.history.com/minisites/womenhist/
See This Weekend
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. (substitute in
your Enterprise and company, etcÉ)
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ed. by Douglas Ikemi
(dkikemi@pacbell.net)
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Back issues of the
newsletter for all of 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, and 2005 are available at http://www.ikemi.info/APPA/newsletters.html
if you want to look up some past event. The website www.apa-pro.org
no longer exists. This newsletter was originally published under the auspices
of the Hughes Asian Pacific Professional Association (no longer extant). It
currently has no affiliation and is available to anyone who is interested in
downloading it.
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Please send in
information on cultural events and news items to dkikemi@pacbell.net or dkikemi@mac.com . Thanks to those who have.
Long range calendar
items:
Chinatown Farmers Market EVERY
THURSDAY FROM 2-6PM, the Chinatown Farmers' Market takes place at Hill &
Alpine bringing fresh fruits and produce by California Farmers to the Chinatown
Community. FRIED BANANA, FRIED YAM, HAWAIIAN CHICKEN. We invite you to come and
experience the Chinatown Farmers' Market. Free parking with purchase.
The Downtown Arts
District/Little Tokyo Farmers' Market
Weller Court 2nd & San
Pedro in
Little Tokyo Summer Hours
10-3pm
Features fresh produce,
Hawaiian Chicken, more food gifts...and live jazz band.
Tuesdays from 10 a.m.- 3
p.m.
The weekly market is held
every Tuesday from 10 a.m.- 3 p.m year round, rain or shine.
Sponsored by LARABA
the market will include farm-fresh produce, Asian produce, organic produce,
eggs, seafood, cheese, olives, olive oils, flowers, plants, bread and prepared
foods and more.
Hawaiian Chicken, Roasted
corn on the cobb
Local businesses
interested in having a prepared food booth at the market or individuals
interested in volunteering at this non-profit event, please contact Susan
Hutchinson at 323-660-8660 for more information
Los Angeles Public
Library Celebrates our DiverseCity
http://www.lapl.org/kidspath/events/diversecity/index.html
March 17 - July 29,
2007
Tokyo ADC Exhibition
A blend of pop,
tradition and innovation, this exhibition provides a glimpse into the world of
Tokyo Advertising Director's Club. Tokyo ADC promises to showcase some of the
most trend-setting minds in commercial visual arts in the world today through
examples of logos, print and television advertising, and book and product
design.
Simple avant garde,
comedic and crisp; the competition to stay ahead of the game is so intense,
that these commercial artists explore and discover new ways, and new twists on
a few old ways of delivering their products to the consumer market.
George J. Doizaki
Gallery
Admission Free
Gallery Hours:
Tuesday - Friday, 12
noon to 5pm
Saturday &
Sunday, 11am to 4pm
Closed Mondays &
Holidays
Tales of Krishna Exhibition
at LACMA Through July 2007
The South and Southeast
Asian Art Department presents an exhibition on the representation of Krishna
and his legendary deeds in the visual arts throughout India. Drawn primarily
from LACMA's renowned collection of South Asian art, the exhibition consists
principally of opaque watercolor paintings and drawings, but also includes
sculptures in a variety of media, decorative artworks, and ritual objects
associated with annual festivals devoted to Krishna. The thematically organized
exhibition explores various aspects of Krishna's life, Including his miraculous
birth, childhood pranks, heroic exploits, and romantic dalliances.
10:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Los Angeles County Museum
of Art
5905 Wilshire Boulevard
Los Angeles, CA 90036
Cost: Free
FACES OF BATTLE: Japanese
Prints from the Permanent Collection
On display from May 26 -
September 26, 2006
This installation explores
the themes of samurai virtue in conflicts ranging from legends of pre-history
to epic moments of civil war in the late 19th century.
The thirty woodblock
prints from the installation are also presented online in an interactive
feature with stories of the protagonists, zoom screens enabling
close inspection of the images, and a brief biography of the influential printmaker
Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (1839-92).
http://collectionsonline.lacma.org/MWEB/about/japan_about.asp
Los Angeles County Museum
of Art
5905 Wilshire Boulevard
Los Angeles, CA 90036
323 857-6000 (general
information)
323 857-0098 (TDD)
http://www.lacma.org
An Urban Oasis: The Orange
County Agricultural and Nikkei Heritage Museum at the Fullerton Arboretum
Spotlighting the rich
agricultural legacy of Orange County and the Japanese American communityÕs
contributions to that chronicle.
Sowing Dreams, Cultivating
Lives: Nikkei Farmers in Pre-World War II Orange County.
Opens February 10, 2007.
The Orange County
Agricultural and Nikkei Heritage Museum has been built on the grounds of the
Fullerton Arboretum and has been designed along the lines of a packing house.
California State University, Fullerton, and the Fullerton Arboretum are working
together to open the museum to the public. The inside of the building is
divided into four sections: Nikkei, Pioneer, Educational, and Transportation
and Geography. There is a small bookstore and the Potting Shed will move its
plant sales adjacent to the bookstore alcove.
The museum will highlight
the history, development, and impact of agriculture, as well as the
contributions of the Japanese American community and the local pioneer
families, to the growth of Orange County. This introductory exhibit will be a
peek into upcoming planned exhibitions and will be open throughout the summer.
The first major exhibit
will focus on the Nikkei. Sowing Dreams, Cultivating Lives: Nikkei Farmers in
Pre-World War II Orange County will journey with the early Japanese immigrants
to California, and follow their stories as they establish permanent communities
in Orange County by marrying, raising families, founding schools and social
groups, and above all, cultivating the land.
Fullerton Arboretum,
California State University, Fullerton
1900 Associated Road
Fullerton, California
92831
The
Sculpture of Ruth Asawa: Contours in the Air
March 10-May 27
As one of America's most
important women artists of the 20th century, Ruth Asawa produced a body of work
celebrating the richness and beauty of everyday life through the use of
graceful and intricate forms as demonstrated in her famous wire sculptures.
Born on a truck farm in
Southern California, Asawa was incarcerated at Rohwer concentration camp in
Arkansas during World War II. In the 1940s, she attended Black Mountain College,
the famous experimental art school in North Carolina. The Sculpture of Ruth
Asawa begins with her earliest sculptures, drawings, and paintings created at
Black Mountain College, and highlights the signature wire sculptures that
formed her visual vocabulary of looped and tied open forms, which she continued
to experiment with throughout her career.
Organized by the Fine Arts
Museum of San Francisco, this exhibition of approximately 43 sculptures and
over 20 works on paper constitutes the first complete retrospective of the Ruth
Asawa's enduring and richly varied career.
This exhibition is curated
by Daniell Cornell, Curator of Fine Arts at the Fine Arts Museum of San
Francisco.
In the Weingart Foundation
Gallery, Dr. & Mrs. Edison Miyawaki Gallery and Taul & Sachiko Watanabe
Gallery
The Los Angeles
presentation of The Sculpture of Ruth Asawa: Contours in the Air is made
possible, in part, by the generous support of The Henri & Tomoye Takahashi
Charitable Foundation, the Aratani Foundation, and The James Irvine Foundation.
Additional support was provided by Ernest & Kiyo Doizaki, Mariko O. Gordon
& Hugh Cosman, and Hazel & Kokki Shindo. Media sponsors: Los Angeles
Downtown News, LA 18 KSCI-TV, and The Rafu Shimpo.
JAPANESE AMERICAN NATIONAL MUSEUM
369 East First Street
Los Angeles, California
90012
phone: (213) 625-0414
fax: (213) 625-1770
April 14 Ruth Asawa and
the Alvarado Art Workshop
Ruth Asawa started an art
program at Alvarado Elementary School, the public school her children attended.
Co-founded by Sally Woodbridge in 1968, the program included classes in
sculpture, ceramics, drawing, mosaic, and painting, and was integrated into the
school's curricula. Teachers and parents are invited to learn innovative ways
of teaching art to children in an enlightening afternoon that includes a
screening of Each One Teach One: The Alvarado School Art Program (directed by
Valerie Soe and Asawa), and a presentation by Woodbridge and Paul Lanier,
Asawa's son and former Alvarado School student and teacher. Light refreshments
to follow. Reservations recommended. 2PM
Made possible, in part, by
the Department of Cultural Affairs, City of Los Angeles.
In
conjunction with the exhibition The Sculpture of Ruth Asawa: Contours in the Air
JAPANESE AMERICAN NATIONAL MUSEUM
369 East First Street
Los Angeles, California
90012
phone: (213) 625-0414
fax:
(213) 625-1770
April 16, 2007 Torgams
& Tantras: The Ritual Uses of Furniture in Tibetan Buddhist Practices
A talk by Khen Rinpoche
Lobzang Tsetan, at LACMA
Khen Rinpoche Lobzang
Tsetan was recently appointed by the Dalai Lama as the head abbot of Tashi
Lunpo Monastery in Karnataka, India. In addition, he heads the Siddhartha
School in Ladakh, India. Khen Rinpoche will present a lecture on the ritual use
of furniture in Tibetan Buddhist practice.
The lecture is open to the
public. Free, no reservations or tickets are required.
Free parking after 7 pm in
the lot at Wilshire Blvd. and Spaulding Ave.
Monday, 8:00 PM - 9:30 PM
Brown Auditorium
Los Angeles County Museum
of Art
5905 Wilshire Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90036
April 20, 2007 Vietnamese
International Film Festival Day at UCLA, Part 2
Feature film JOURNEY FROM
THE FALL (VUOT SîNG) Ham Tran, Director/Writer/Editor, 99 minutes
Inspired by the true
stories of Vietnamese refugees who fled their land after the fall of SaigonÑand
those who were forced to stay behind, Journey From The Fall follows one
familyÕs struggle for freedom.
April 30, 1975 marked the
end of Vietnam's two-decade-old civil war and the start of the exodus of
hundreds of thousands of refugees. Despite his allegiance to the toppled South
Vietnamese government, Long Nguyen (as Long Nguyen) decides to remain in
Vietnam. Imprisoned in a Communist re-education camp, he urges his family to
make the escape by boat without him. His wife Mai (Diem Lien), son Lai (Nguyen
Thai Nguyen) and mother Ba Noi (Kieu Chinh) then embark on the arduous ocean
voyage in the hope of reaching the U.S. and freedom.
Back in Vietnam, Long
suffers years of solitary confinement and hard labor, and finally despairs that
his family has perished. But news of their successful resettlement in America
inspires him to make one last desperate attempt to join them.
Film website at http://www.journeyfromthefall.com/.
For more information about
the entire film festival see http://www.vietfilmfest.com/home/home.htm.
Friday, 7:00 PM - 9:15 PM
James Bridges Theater
Melnitz Hall
UCLA Campus
Los Angeles, CA 90095
Cost: Free and open to
the public.
Special Instructions
Parking in UCLA's Lot 3
costs $8.
For more information
please contact
Barbara
Gaerlan
Tel:
310-206-9163
www.international.ucla.edu/cseas/
April 21 ''Mizuhiki'' with
Ryosen Shibata
Rescheduled 1-3PM
Design elaborate knots using
paper cords--the perfect accessory for decorating a card or gift for that
special someone. $8 for National Museum members and $13 for non-members,
includes supplies and Museum admission. Reservations recommended.
Made
possible, in part, by the Department of Cultural Affairs, City of Los Angeles.
JAPANESE AMERICAN NATIONAL MUSEUM
369 East First Street
Los Angeles, California
90012
phone: (213) 625-0414
fax:
(213) 625-1770
April
21, 22 Monterey Park Cherry Blossom Festival at Barnes Park
The 2007 Cherry Blossom
Festival Committee and the City of Monterey Park are pleased to present the 10th Annual Cherry Blossom Festival on April 21& 22, 2007 at Barnes Park,
located at 350 S. McPherrin Avenue; Monterey Park, CA. Entry to the
Festival is FREE.
Planned and coordinated by
community volunteers, the Cherry Blossom Festival strives to provide a cultural
arts event that offers a forum for learning, entertainment, fun, and support of
community.
So
take the time to see, hear, and taste a bit of the Japanese and Japanese
American culture through a
first-hand experience of watching traditional Japanese dancing, hearing the
resounding beats of the taiko drums, observing the mastery and various skills
of martial arts, participating in the ancient art of the tea ceremony, or
buying hand-made crafts or food with an Asian flair. Other highlights of the
Festival include games & crafts for children, and numerous cultural
displays.
Barnes
Park: 350 S. McPherrin Avenue
(directly behind Civic Center)
http://www.ci.monterey-park.ca.us/home/index.asp?page=812
Saturday, April 21, 2007
Conserving Culturally Specific Art Works: Conversations and Practice
A
discussion around cultural conservation and preservation, this panel is in
conjunction with the National Museum's NEA grant to support the conservation
treatment of paintings by Benji Okubo, a Nisei artist who painted while
incarcerated at Heart Mountain, Wyoming during World War II. Panelists includ Rushmore
Cervantes, chief deputy controller -- City of Los Angeles and former general
manager of El Pueblo de Los Angeles Historical Monument; Jo Hill, director of
conservation, Fowler Museum at UCLA; Jill Moniz, program manager, Visual Arts,
California African American Museum; and Linda Strauss, senior director of
Collections, Autry National Center of the American West. Moderated by Leslie
Rainer, senior project specialist, Getty Conservation Institute. Following this
discussion, Scott M. Haskins, conservator, Fine Art Conservation Laboratories,
focuses on the work he performed on the Okubo paintings. A unique opportunity
to get a behind-the-scenes view of the conservation process. 2PM
JAPANESE AMERICAN NATIONAL MUSEUM
369 East First Street
Los Angeles, California
90012
phone: (213) 625-0414
fax:
(213) 625-1770
April
21 & 22 Bunka Sai Cultural Festival
Torrance
Cultural Center
3330
Civic Center Dr. N
Torrance,
90503
Saturday April 21, 2007,
8Pm: The Stars Of Tomorrow!
Norris Theatre for
the Performing Arts
27570 Crossfield
Drive, Rolling Hills Estates, CA 90274
Eleven year-old
violinist Eleanor Dunbar makes her debut with the Asia America Youth Orchestra.
Also featured is twelve year-old virtuoso cellist Zachary Wong.
Music Director David
Benoit conducts works by Bernstein, Mendelssohn, Benoit, Bizet, and the 1st
prize winner of the 5th Annual International Composition for Orchestra
Competition.
This
concert also features a musical tribute to the incomparable Henry Mancini.
http://www.asiaamericasymphony.org/season.html
Asia
America Symphony Association ¥ 608 Silver Spur Road #320 ¥ Rolling Hills
Estates, CA 90274
tel: 310-377-8977
¥ fax: 310-377-8949 ¥ aasa@asiaamericasymphony.org
April 26, Jazz Concert:
Keiko Matsui
94.7 the WAVE's Live Jazz
Thursdays
8:00
& 10:30 pm
Advanced Price: $25.00
Mezzanine
Price: $25.00
The
Vault
350
Pine Ave
Long Beach, CA
562-590-5566
April 27, 2007 A World of Conflict
AsiaMedia presents veteran
war reporter Kevin Sites' documentary about Yahoo!'s international experiment
in online journalism
Over the course of one
year, solo journalist Kevin Sites covered 22 conflict zones in 19 countries,
seeking to understand the real costs of a world perpetually at war. A World of
Conflict -- the documentary film about that project -- chronicles Sites'
journey, starting with the anarchy of Somalia in September 2005 and culminating
with the explosive war between Israel and Hezbollah in summer 2006.
As Yahoo!'s first news
correspondent, Sites helped pioneer solo journalism, working completely alone,
traveling and reporting for Kevin Sites
in the Hot Zone across Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and Latin
America. Instead of reporting with a crew, he carried a backpack of portable
digital technology to shoot, write, edit and transmit multimedia reports.
In November 2004, Sites
became a flashpoint of controversy for one of the biggest stories of the
current war in Iraq. As an NBC News correspondent, he videotaped a U.S. Marine
shooting a wounded Iraqi insurgent in a Falluja mosque. He was honored with the
Payne Award for Ethics in Journalism and was recently nominated for a national
Emmy Award for his television and web coverage of the mosque shooting. In 2006,
he was given the prestigious Daniel Pearl Award for Courage and Integrity in
Journalism by the Los Angeles Press Club.
Time Magazine calls
"Kevin Sites in the Hot Zone" one of 50 Coolest Websites on the
Internet and Forbes Magazine lists Sites in The Web Celeb 25 this year.
The screening of A World
of Conflict will be followed by a Q&A with Kevin Sites and a coffee
reception.
Please RSVP to erwin.c.ong@gmail.com.
Parking on the UCLA campus
is $8. You can purchase a pass for Parking Lot 3 at the kiosk on Wyton and
Hilgard. Click here
for parking information for Melnitz Hall.
Friday, 7:00 PM - 8:30 PM
James Bridges Theater
Melnitz Hall, UCLA Campus
Los Angeles, CA 90095
Cost: Free and open to the
public
For more information
please contact
Erwin
Ong
Saturday, April 28, 2007
Little Tokyo Walking Tour
Relive
history and learn about present-day Little Tokyo with National Museum docents
on this historic walking tour. $8 for National Museum members and $13 for
non-members, includes Museum admission. Reservations along with comfortable
walking shoes and clothes are recommended. Weather permitting.
JAPANESE AMERICAN NATIONAL MUSEUM
369 East First Street
Los Angeles, California
90012
phone: (213) 625-0414
fax:
(213) 625-1770
Aprial
28 West Covina Cherry Blossom Festival
West Covina Civic Center
Courtyard
1444 W. Garvey Ave.
West Covina, 91793
Festival highlights
include cultural demonstrations, exhibits, a tea ceremony, martial arts, taiko
(Japanese drums), odori (Japanese folk dancing), iikebana (flower arrangement)
and much more.
Rounding out the
festival will be exhibits, crafts, foods, refreshments and children's games.
Free parking at Civic
Center
No public parking in
marked employee spots
or more information,
please contact the East San Gabriel Valley Japanese Community Center at
626-960-2566 or www.westcov.org/events/cherry.html
April
28-29 The Los Angeles Times Festival of Books On the UCLA campus
Come join us at the 12th
Annual Los Angeles Times Festival of Books. Free to the public, it occurs the
last weekend in April Ñ Saturday, April 28 10am-6pm and Sunday, April 29
10am-5pm Ñ and offers something for
all ages and interests. Every year, it adds up to be America's largest and
grandest literary eventÉ
130,000+ Passionate
Readers
370+ Famous Authors
300+ Popular Exhibitors
900+
Loyal Volunteers
6 Exciting Stages
2 Interactive ChildrenÕs Areas
And on Friday, April 27,
also join us for the 27th Annual Los Angeles Times Book Prizes, a renowned
awards ceremony honoring great and noble writers and their works for 2006. For
more information, click here.
DonÕt
miss the 2007 Festival of Books and Book Prizes Ceremony. Over two festive days
and one fascinating evening, come fall in love with the written word in lots of
special ways!
http://www.latimes.com/extras/festivalofbooks/
April 28 "Issei: The
Shadow Generation" by Tsukasa Matsueda, Ed.D.
Issei:
The Shadow Generation brings to light the subtle cultural teachings of the
first Japanese immigrants in American. With profound insight, deep
understanding of language, and years of conversation with the pioneers,
Matsueda shares the way of the Issei, who amidst struggle and adversity learned
not only to survive, but also thrive in America. Book signing to follow. 2PM
JAPANESE AMERICAN NATIONAL MUSEUM
369
East First Street
Los
Angeles, California 90012
phone:
(213) 625-0414
fax:
(213) 625-1770
http://www.janm.org/
April 28 Writing Your Life
Story with Loren Stephens
Each
one of us has unique stories to tell. Loren Stephens, president of Write
Wisdom, Inc. and Emmy-nominated documentary filmmaker, is an expert at helping
both first time and experienced writers transform memories into memoirs. $20
for National Museum members and $30 for non-members, includes Museum admission.
Space is limited. Early registration with payment recommended. 10:30-5
JAPANESE AMERICAN NATIONAL MUSEUM
369
East First Street
Los
Angeles, California 90012
phone:
(213) 625-0414
fax:
(213) 625-1770
http://www.janm.org/
April
29 Screening of The Homeland featuring Mako Iwamatsu.
(2005) 108min., color
Directed by Tonko
Horikawa
Takaya Kamikawa,
Mako, Yoshino Kimura
Japanese Version (No
English Subtitles)
Master director Yoji
Yamada, acclaimed worldwide for the "Twilight Samurai," and Mako, teamp up in this new dram about
war, homeland, and family. A young man meets an old former Kamikaze pilot (Mako) on a southern island, and becomes involved
in a poignant mystery.
For
more information visit: www.jlsf.aurora.org
1pm at the Aratani/Japan America Theatre
in Little Tokyo. No subtitles, $10, 213-680-3700
Japanese
American Cultural and Community Center
244
South San Pedro Street, Suite 505
(between
2nd and 3rd Streets)
Los
Angeles (Little Tokyo), CA 90012
(213)
628-2725
Aratani/Japan
America Theatre Box Office Info: (213) 680-3700
May
3, 6, 9 & 10 L.A. Asian Pacific Film Festival
23rd Anniversary Edition
VC FILMFEST 2007
The Los Angeles Asian
Pacific Film Festival features over 100 new and exciting film and video works
by Asian and Asian Pacific American Filmmakers. Complete program information
will be available April 2007. Ticket and program info VC FILMFEST line (213)
680-4462 x68 or visit www.vconline.org.
Thursday, May 3, 8pm
Opening Night
Directors Guild of
America
Sunday, May 6, 8pm
"Tribute to
Mako"
Wednesday, May 9, 8pm
World Premiere, VC
Digital Posse 2007
Thursday, May 10, 8pm
Closing Night &
Awards Ceremony
Aratani/Japan America
Theatre
$10 General Admission
$8 JACCC Members,
Friends of VC, Students
Aratani
/ Japan America Theatre
244
S. San Pedro St.
Los
Angeles, CA 90012 (Little Tokyo)
213-680-3700
ww.jaccc.org
May
5 Lotus Steps 2007
10745 Dickson Plaza,
Westwood
The Chinese Cultural Dance
Club at UCLA celebrates the diversity within Chinese culture with a program of
dances from the Han, Dai, Mongolian, Uygur, Wa and Taiwanese aboriginal
minorities.
Saturday,: 7 p.m.
Price: Free.
Information:
714-860-0860
May
6 16th Biennial Awaya-kai Koto Concert
$10
2:00 p.m. at Marsee Auditorium, El Camino
College,
16007 Crenshaw Blvd., Torrance.
310-329-5965
Awaya Kai
awayamusic@msn.com
May 08, 2007 Lecture:
Rocks in Chinese Culture
At The Huntington Library,
Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens
Robert Mowry of the
Sackler Museum at Harvard University will give a slide lecture that explores
the use of rocks in Chinese gardens, where they serve as building materials, as
sculpture, and as symbolic representations of mountains. Tai Hu rocks, such as
those used in the HuntingtonÕs Chinese Garden, are among the most prized. Free.
FriendsÕ Hall. (626) 405-2100.
Tuesday,
Time: 7:30 PM - 9:30 PM
The Huntington Library,
Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens
1151 Oxford Road
San Marino, CA 91108
Cost: Free
Tel: (626) 405-2140
Saturday, May
12, 2007, 10am - 4pm
24th Annual
Children's Day Celebration
Family FunFest
Annual Children's Day
celebration or Kodomo no Hi!
Join us for a
fun-filled day for the entire family.
Activities for
children of all ages include the Chibi-K: Kids for Kids Run, the San Tai
San: 3-on-3 Basketball Tournament. And, the Asian Pacific Arts and Crafts
Faire features cultural entertainment, demonstrations, crafts, and games.
This event is
co-sponsored by the Little Tokyo Service Center, Little Tokyo Rec Center, and
the JACCC.
Asian Pacific Arts
and Crafts Faire
Admission Free
Chibi-K: Kids for
Kids Fun Run
For more information
and to register call jessie Kikuchi (213) 628-2725.
San Tai San: 3-on-3
Basketball Tournament
For ages 7 to 12
years
For more information and
to register call Thomas Yee (213) 473-3030.
244
S. San Pedro St.
Los
Angeles, CA 90012 (Little Tokyo)
213-680-3700
ww.jaccc.org
Saturday, May 12,
2007, 10am - 4pm
Nikkei Community Day
The First Annual
Nikkei Community Day invites Japanese and Japanese Americans from all over the
greater L.A. area to come together to celebrate who they are and what they do!
Japanese and Japanese community centers and community organizations will
share information about their groups, sell food, and participate in a showcase
featuring performances and demonstrations including taiko, martial arts, dance, and more.
This event is
co-sponsored by the Little Tokyo Service Center, Little Tokyo Rec Center, Ties
That Bind, the Nikkei Federation, and the JACCC.
For more information
visit the Nikkei Federation website: www.nikkeifederation.org.
Saturday, May 19,
2007, 7:30pm
Special JACCC Benefit
Performances
Sounds & Voices
of J-Town
June Kuramoto (of
Hiroshima)
Daniel Ho with
members of Kilauea
Amy Hill ("Tokyo
Bound", "Cat in the Hat")
Zendeko Zenshuji
(Taiko Ensemble)
Alison De La Cruz
(multi-disciplinary artist)
This special
celebration features artists from our J-Town Beat Series who have come together
to share the stage and show their support for the JACCC.
Proceeds will support
JACCC community programs.
There will be a post
performance reception following the concert on the JACCC Plaza.
Aratani/Japan America
Theatre
Special VIP Seating
$100*
$50 Orchestra, $45
Balcony
This production is
*(tax deductible to the extent of the law)
JACCC Plaza
Admission Free
May 27 & 28 Exhibition: Santa Anita Bonsai Society
Ayres Hall & Gate
& Kitchen
Arboretum of Los Angeles
County
301 N. Baldwin Ave.
Arcadia, CA, 91007
626-821-3222
Saturday, June 9, 2007, 8pm
Asia America Symphony
Orchestra
David Benoit, Music
Director and Conductor
Special Guest Keiko Matsui
Jazz Superstar and
Japanese treasure Keiko Matsui performs with Orchestra. Works by Ravel,
Copeland and others will complete the program.
For more information
visit: www.Asiaamericasymphony.org.
Aratani/Japan America
Theatre
$75 VIP orchestra and
reception
$35 Premiere orchestra,
$25 orchestra and balcony
Aratani
/ Japan America Theatre
244
S. San Pedro St.
Los
Angeles, CA 90012 (Little Tokyo)
213-680-3700
ww.jaccc.org
Dec 1, 2 Japan Expo 2007
See LA
Library DiverseCity events at http://www.lapl.org/kidspath/events/diversecity/index.html
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This Weekend (and earlier/later)
April 5 Voices from
Okinawa
A Staged Reading by East
West Players' Writers Gallery
Kama Hutchins, an American graduate student
of one quarter Okinawan descent, teaches English in Okinawa and receives an
unexpected education in Okinawan-American relations. From the author of
Leilani's Hibiscus and Lucky Go Hawaii. 7:30PM
Developing
new work and introducing new talent is vital to the creative process at East
West Players. Promising new scripts are presented to the public as staged
readings that offer a tantalizing glimpse of works that may be developed for
the main stage.
JAPANESE AMERICAN NATIONAL MUSEUM
369 East First Street
Los Angeles, California
90012
phone: (213) 625-0414
fax:
(213) 625-1770
Saturday, April
7, 2007, 8pm
Top Winners of the
International Taiko Contest!
TAIKOPROJECT:
(re)generation
Back by popular
demand, this exciting ensemble brings its 'state-of-the-art' theatrical
production that blends taiko with storytelling, spoken word, music, hip-hop
choreography, video multi-media and dance.
For information
visit: taikoproject.com.
Aratani/Japan America
Theatre
$35 orchestra, $30
balcony
$30,$27 JACCC
Members, Groups of 10 or more
$20
Students and children under 15
Japanese
American Cultural and Community Center
244
South San Pedro Street, Suite 505
(between
2nd and 3rd Streets)
Los
Angeles (Little Tokyo), CA 90012
(213)
628-2725
Aratani/Japan
America Theatre Box Office Info: (213) 680-3700
Saturday, April 07, 2007
"A Thousand Miles of Dreams:The Journeys of Two Sisters" Book Reading
Los Angeles Book Reading
by Sasha Su-Ling Welland, Assistant Professor, University of Washington
ABOUT THE BOOK
A 2006 Booklist Editors' Choice, A Thousand Miles of Dreams is an intimate biography of two Chinese sisters
who took very different paths in their quest to be independent women. Ling
Shuhao arrived in Cleveland in 1925 to study medicine in the middle of a U.S.
crackdown on Chinese immigrant communities, and her effort to assimilate
began. She became an American named Amy, while her sister Ling Shuhua
burst onto the Beijing literary scene as a writer of short
fiction. Shuhua's tumultuous affair with Virginia Woolf's nephew
during his years in China eventually drew her into the orbit of the
Bloomsbury group. The sisters were Chinese "modern girls" who
sought to forge their own way in an era of social revolution that unsettled
relations between men and women, and among nations. Daughters of an
imperial scholar-official and a concubine, the two sisters followed
professional trajectories unimaginable to their parents' generation.
Sasha Su-Ling Welland
stumbled across their remarkable stories while recording her grandmother's oral
history. She discovered the secret Amy had hidden from family in the
U.S. -- her sister's fame as a Chinese woman writer -- as well as intriguing
discrepancies in the sisters' versions of the past. Shaped by the social
history of their day, the journeys of these extraordinary women spanned the
twentieth century and three continents in a saga of East-West cultural exchange
and personal struggle.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Sasha Su-Ling Welland grew
up in St. Louis, Missouri. As an undergraduate at Stanford University,
she began recording her grandmother's oral history and investigating her
great-aunt's career as a writer. She received a PhD in anthropology from
the University of California, Santa Cruz, and is currently assistant professor
of anthropology and women's studies at the University of Washington in
Seattle. The Artist Trust, Blue Mountain Center, Bread Loaf Writers'
Conference, Hedgebrook Retreat for Women Writers, and Millay Colony for the
Arts have supported her works.
2:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Dutton's Brentwood
Bookstore
11975 San Vicente Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90049
For more information
please contact
Sasha Su-Ling Welland
Tel: (206) 221-4725
November 5, 2006 - April
8, 2007 Three exhibits at CAMLA:
Growing Up Chinese
American: Childhood Toys and Memories
Our childhood toys and
experiences can deeply influence how we remember the past, understand our place
in the world in the present, and lead grown up lives in the future. Growing Up
Chinese American: Childhood Toys and Memories is an exhibit that explores this
relationship by presenting childrenÕs toys from the Chinese American Museum
permanent collection and the personal stories of their owners.
By exploring facets of everyday
life for children of Chinese descent coming of age in a rapidly changing 20th
century America, Growing Up Chinese American presents a complex picture of how
childhood can shape our grown up lives in subtle but meaningful ways. The toys
and stories featured in the exhibit also suggest by their multiple and varied
frames of reference that a broad spectrum of Chinese American childhood
experiences exists, and it is from this rich diversity which Chinese American
history and Chinese American futures stem.
Exhibit made possible in
part through the generous support of Union Bank of California and Megatoys.
Chinese American Citizens
Alliance
The Chinese American
Citizens Alliance is a national organization whose purpose has been for more
than a century to advocate for the rights and promote the well being of the
Chinese American community. A group of young men, born in America of Chinese
ancestry, formed the Alliance in San Francisco, California in 1895 to fight
discriminatory laws fueled by wide spread anti-Chinese sentiment in the late
19th Century. Since its inception, the Alliance has generated a broad range of
political, social and cultural activities based on its abiding commitment to
the Chinese American community. Youth programs focusing on civic duty,
community awareness, and cultural pride have been a large part of the
Alliance's repertoire of community-wide activities. On display in this new
exhibit are objects ranging from artifacts to historic collateral materials
provided by the various Alliance Lodges located throughout the Unites States.
Celebrate! Chinese
Holidays Through the Eyes of Children
The Chinese American
Museum and the Chinese American Citizens Alliance (CACA), a pioneering national
civil rights organization, present Celebrate! Chinese Holidays Through the Eyes
of ChildrenÑan exhibit of original artworks about Chinese festivals and
celebrations made by school children across the United States. Ten years after
the CACAÕs original 1995 National Art Competition, these vibrant winning images
are brought together again in Celebrate! to signal the exciting return of this
nation-wide art contest in 2007, a joint project between CAM and the CACA.
The childrenÕs images
featured in this exhibit, all of which garnered awards and special mention in the
CACA National Art Competition, celebrate Chinese tradition, the diversity of
American culture as seen from a young personÕs point of view. Celebrate! also
honors the creativity of all the contestants whose artful interpretations of
Chinese festivities demonstrate that customs can link us to our history and
inspire wonder about what our future holds.
Exhibit made possible
through the generous support of the Nissan Foundation and the Chinese American
Citizens Alliance.
http://www.camla.org/exhibits/exhibits.htm
Museum Front Desk: (213)
485-8567
Last
weekend (or so) I went to:
Part
of the Cherry Blossom Festival in Little Tokyo
------------------------------------------------------
Links to selected
articles from the LA Times. To actually access the articles, you may have to
sign up for a free account.
Diversity program
mostly benefits Asians
Beverly Hills High looks
to L.A. Unified to increase minority enrollment but can't ask applicants about
race or ethnicity.
By Joel Rubin, Times Staff
Writer
April 2, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-permit2apr02,1,7096309.story?ctrack=1&cset=true
Their true names die
with them
Jill Leovy chronicles Los
Angeles County victims
JILL LEOVY
April 1, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-homicide1apr01,1,4648534.story?ctrack=2&cset=true
In 1943, Census
released Japanese Americans' data
By Teresa Watanabe, Times
Staff Writer
March 31, 2007
THEATER REVIEW
'I Land' shows the
influence of hula
Keo Woolford explores
themes of heritage and assimilation in his solo show at East West Players.
By David C. Nichols,
Special to The Times
March 26, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-et-land26mar26,1,7790821.story
Assimilation plays no
part in this history lesson
March 26, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-schoolme26mar26,1,7581577.column
Yoko Ono dedicates
'wish tree' to encourage the public to get involved in art
Viewers can write their
wishes on small pieces of paper and tie them onto the "Wish Tree for
Washington D.C."
From the Associated Press
April 2, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/celebrity/la-et-yoko02apr02,1,438401.story
Baseball haikus
Over the years, writers
have applied the Japanese poetry style to America's pastime.
From "Baseball Haiku:
The Best Haiku Ever Written About the Game," edited and translated by Cor
van den Heuvel and Nanae Tamura, which will be published April 1 by W.W.
Norton.
March 31, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-haiku31mar31,1,2281386.story
Longest concert
record set in Japan
From Associated Press
March 31, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/music/la-et-concert31mar31_wr,1,3127719.story
Chase J. Nielsen, 90;
aviator captured after Doolittle raid
By Dennis McLellan, Times
Staff Writer
March 30, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-nielsen30mar30,1,324462.story
R.A. Myers, 54;
warned of overfishing
By Kenneth R. Weiss, Times
Staff Writer
March 29, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-myers29mar29,1,192207.story
The future of
American opera finds its roots in the heartland
A trek to stages around
the country reveals big change afoot -- and much of it happening away from the
coasts.
By Mark Swed, Times Staff
Writer
April 1, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-ca-opera1apr01,1,6798619.story
'Killed Cartoons:
Casualties From the War on Free Expression' edited by David Wallis
Killed Cartoons Casualties
From the War on Free Expression Edited by David Wallis W.W. Norton: 282 pp.,
$15.95 paper
By Tim Rutten, Times Staff
Writer
March 30, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-et-book30mar30,1,3854062.story
Accused spy's defense
bolstered by e-mails
Defense says the Anaheim
company knew what the engineer was planning to present at symposiums. Officials
say no permission was given.
By H.G. Reza, Times Staff
Writer
March 30, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-chimak30mar30,1,2978998.story
L.A. SUBCULTURE
Save gas. Avoid traffic.
See art. And you're not riding the Metro because ... ?
By Chris Lee, Times Staff
Writer
March 29, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-wk-cover29mar29,1,7096439.story
Janet Nguyen sworn in
as O.C. supervisor
At 30, she becomes the
youngest member of the board in history and the first Vietnamese American on
it.
By David Reyes, Times
Staff Writer
March 28, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-nguyen28mar28,1,3091721.story
Thom Filicia goes
solo in 'Dress My Nest'
The makeover show
featuring the former 'Queer Eye' consultant is nothing special, and that's OK.
By Robert Lloyd, Times
Staff Writer
March 28, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-et-nest28mar28,1,109337.story
Charlotte L. Winters,
109; U.S.' last female veteran of WWI
By Frederick N. Rasmussen,
Baltimore Sun
March 30, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-winters30mar30,1,6541210.story
Tuskegee Airmen are
saluted at the Capitol
The all-black unit of
World War II pilots is awarded the Congressional Gold Medal.
By Adam Schreck, Times
Staff Writer
March 30, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-tuskegee30mar30,1,5920414.story