THE APPA Newsletter
April 24, 2007
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
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
May 4 Global Jazz at the
National Center: Iraida Noriega & Trio
8:00pm
Jazz
is widely considered to be the quintessential American art form. Musicians from
Nairobi to Tokyo have embraced its porous inventiveness by adding new sounds to
make it their own. In keeping with the spirit of celebrating the best of
American cultural contributions to our world, the National Center is launching
Global Jazz @ the National Center. The occasional series opens with a rare
visit by Mexican vocalist and composer, Iraida Noriega. Her voice has been
called nothing short of "incandescent" and an exciting glimpse into
the future of Mexican jazz. Tickets $10. Advance purchase recommended by
calling 213-625-0414.
JAPANESE AMERICAN NATIONAL MUSEUM
369
East First Street
Los
Angeles, California 90012
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
Rakugo
artist Bill Crowley will be the host of the event. The Koto performers of the
Yoko Awaya Koto Music Conservatory are under the direction and instruction of
Madame Awaya who is a 10th Degree performing artist. Yoko Awaya Kai is a
non-profit organization dedicated to promoting the art of Koto and Jiuta Sangen
music and to contributing to Japanese cultural awareness. The ConservatoryÕs
members have performed in over 1000 engagements throughout California and the
United States.
$20
[corrected price], $10 under 12 and seniors
2:00
p.m. at Marsee Auditorium, El Camino College,
16007
Crenshaw Blvd., Torrance.
310-329-5965
Awaya Kai
awayamusic@msn.com
May 05, 2007 Situ-Asian
Dance Performance
ÒSitu-AsianÓ An evening of
new dance works by Jia Wu.
In Situ-Asian Jia Wu
directs 23 artists and draws on 15 years of training in Beijing Opera, Tai Chi
and Chinese folk dance to create biting social commentary through contemporary
inter-media dance works. Hypocrisy in international political relations and the
changing role of women in an era of rapid modernization are among the themes
explored. Situ-Asian features original music by Derric Spivak Jr., David
Karagianis and Jeff Hayman, three video collaborations with filmmakers Mariel
Louise McEwan, Cari Ann Shim Sham, Pinar Yoldas, and animator Xiaojin Bao.
Situ-Asian,
the two-part work which opens the program, is an autobiographically inspired
video set in China in the late 1970Õs, which tracks a girlÕs life from age 5 to
18, followed by WuÕs performance of a classic solo from Bejing Opera, ÒAn
Imperial Concubine Gets TipsyÓ (Gui Fei Zui Jiu). In Poker Face, her duet with
dancer Ally Voye, Wu employs slapstick humor and a table to explore the two
faces of diplomacy in international political relationships. A second duet
titled Bird Cage, a collaboration with Jose Reynoso, exposes the situation of
Chinese women struggling with traditional and modern female roles, employing
the theory of helplessness from social psychology. Delicious Trees, a
trio made for the camera inspired by JiaÕs studies with Eiko & Koma, embraces
a cycle of life that includes tree spirits and human beings. The Other Shore is
a floating dreamscape which explores the confusion of what we want versus what
we need.
Saturday, 8:00 PM - 10:00
PM
Glorya Kaufman Dance
Theater
UCLA
Los Angeles, CA 90095
Cost: $15 Admission $5
Students
Special Instructions
Parking: $8 in Structure 4
adjacent to Kaufman Hall (From Sunset Blvd., turn onto Westwood Plaza and park
in Structure 4)
Tel:
310-825-3951
May 5,6 19th
Annual Pacific Islander Festival
10AM-5PM
Ken Malloy Harbor
Regional Park
25820 Vermont Ave.
Harbor City, Wilmington,
CA
Featuring
Marshall Islands
Rarotonga
Samoa
Tonga
Hawaii
Tahitit
Fiji
Guam
New Zealand
Sponsored by the Pacific
Islander Community Council
http://www.hiccsc.org/members/picc/
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
May 8, 2007 VC FilmFest
2007: The Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival
VC
FilmFest is an annual production of Visual Communications, the
nation's premier Asian Pacific American media arts center. The 23rd edition of
the Festival exemplifies the organization's mission to promote intercultural
understanding through the creation, presentation, preservation, and support of
media works by and about Asian Pacific Americans. A complete program schedule
will be available starting early April. For tickets and information, please
visit www.vconline.org.
The National Museum and the National Center for the Preservation of Democracy
are honored to support their efforts by hosting a program that explores the
diversity of the Asian American experience.
3:00pm
JAPANESE AMERICAN NATIONAL MUSEUM
369
East First Street
Los Angeles, California
90012
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 19, 2007 Voices Gone
Wild Semiscon
A performance by an award
winning A Capella group from Taiwan at Ford Theatres
In celebration of Asian
Pacific American Heritage Month and Taiwanese American Heritage Week, The
Taiwan Center and TUF present a performance by the winner of International A
Capella Competition and Asia's top music award. This "East meets
West" ensemble whirls movie themes, Taiwanese melodies, golden oldies and
pop favorites into a spell binding array of sound and motion. Performance will
also include a guest appearance by the White Heron Dance Ensemble.
TICKET INFORMATION:
Tickets $40, $25
Please visit:
www.FordTheatres.org
Or Call: 323.461.3673
Saturday, 8:00 PM - 10:00
PM
Ford Amphitheatre
2580 Cahuenga Blvd. East
Hollywood, CA 90068
May 19, 2007 Bureaucracy
and the Arts of Rulership in Historical Asia and the Modern World
Commentaries on Alexander
Woodside's "Lost Modernities: China, Vietnam, Korea, and the Hazards of
World History," in Conversation with the Author
A one-day workshop
presented by the UCLA Asia Institute, in collaboration with the University of
Washington East Asia Center
This brief book based on
four Reischauer Lectures delivered at Harvard University in 2001 offers a
lively and learned study of bureaucratic principles and policies that represent
important and distinctive traits of states in late imperial China, Korea and
Vietnam. Alexander Woodside, Emeritus Professor of History at the
University of Brithish Columbia and a specialist of both China and Vietnam,
extends his range to include Korea where bureaucratic rule was based on the
same repertoire of ideas and institutions available in China and Vietnam.
He invites us to consider connections among these three cases of bureaucratic
government that develop their capacities and priorities separate from those
that would later characterize the more familiar Euro-American developments of
bureaucratic administration.
During the morning
session, specialists from the three countries considered in the book will offer
perspectives on the features of bureaucratic and state development in local and
historical context. During the afternoon session, scholars will offer additional
theoretical insights from the broader Asian and world historical contexts.
There will be ample time for discussion during the sessions, with responses by
Professor Woodside. By viewing his contribution from both regional and more
global perspectives we are challenged to consider how his arguments and
evidence can affect the kinds of research that specialists pursue and the ways
in which teachers at the secondary and college levels teach the histories of
China, Korea and Vietnam.
Program Schedule
9:00-12:00
Lost
Modernities: Perspectives from China, Vietnam, and Korea
Opening Remarks Ð R. Bin
Wong, History & Asia Institute, UCLA
Introductory Presentation
Ð Alexander Woodside, History, University of British Columbia, Emeritus
Response from China Ð R.
Kent Guy, History, University of Washington
Response from Vietnam Ð
Charles Wheeler, History, UC Irvine
Response from Korea Ð John
Duncan, Asian Languages & Cultures, UCLA
Discussion
12:00-1:30
Lunch 10367 Bunche
Hall
1:30-4:30
Perspectives
from World History
Japan Ð Luke Roberts,
History, UC Santa Barbara
India Ð Sanjay
Subrahmanyam, History, UCLA
Comparative Social History
Ð Daniel Chirot, Jackson School of International Studies, University of
Washington
Response from Alexander
Woodside
Discussion
Saturday,
Time: 9:00 AM - 5:30 PM
10383 Bunche Hall
Los Angeles, CA 90095
Cost: Free
Special Instructions
Lunch will be provided
to those who RSVP by May 11 to kanara@international.ucla.edu.
For more information
please contact
R. Bin Wong
rbwong@international.ucla.edu
May 23, 2007 "Angry
Monk": An Evening of Film and Poetry
Tibetan Buddhist Studies
Presentation with Donald Lopez and Khen Rinpoche Kachen Lobzang Tsetan
Screening of "Angry
Monk: Reflections on Tibet," (2005) a documentary by Luc Schaedler about
the life of Gendun Choepel (1903-1951), the legendary dissident monk of early
20th-century Tibet who criticized the religious conservatism and cultural
isolation of his country. The film was screened at the 2006 Sundance Film
Festival.
Donald Lopez, Arthur E.
Link Distinguished University Professor of Buddhist and Tibetan Studies at the
University of Michigan, has written and edited over twenty books on Buddhism
and Asian religions, including The Madman's Middle Way: Reflections on Reality
of the Tibetan Monk Gendun Chopel. His is currently a Visiting Scholar at the
Getty Research Institute, working on the topic, "Uses of the Buddha."
Prof. Lopez will read his translations of the poetry of Gendun Choepel,
accompanied by Khen Rinpoche Kachen Lobzang Tsetan, Abbot of Tashi Lhunpo in
Karnataka, India, who will recite the poetry in the original Tibetan.
Wednesday, 7:00 PM - 10:00
PM
314 Royce Hall, UCLA
Los Angeles, CA 90095
Cost: Free
Special Instructions
Seating is limited. RSVP
required to rharwood@support.ucla.edu or (310)206-3072.
For more information
please contact
Robert Buswell
May 26, 2007 Conference on
21st Century Perspectives on China
US-China 2nd Annual Sister
Cities Conference, sponsored by Pasadena Sister Cities, hosted by the
Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens, underwritten by
Morning Bridge International.
CONFERENCE SCHEDULE:
Registration and Coffee:
8:30-9:00 a.m.
Guest Speakers: 9:00
a.m.-12:30 p.m.
> John E. Wills Jr.,
Emeritus Professor of History, USC: ÒMaritime China: Pasts, Presents, and
FuturesÓ
> Agatha Fung, Head of
International Banking, East West Bank: ÒBanking on China: Facets of a Big
FutureÓ
> George De Roza,
Professor of Chinese Literature and Film, Whittier College: ÒThe Marketing of
Chinese Cinema: Self- Representation and the Western GazeÓ
Lunch: 12:30-1:30 p.m.
Garden Terrace
ÒShowcaseÓ 1:30-2:30 p.m.
Tabletop exhibits by
California sister cities, highlighting their exchange activities with China.
Chinese Garden
Presentation: 2:30-3:00 p.m.
The development of the Chinese Garden at
the Huntington.
Tour of the Chinese
Garden: 3:00-3:45 p.m.
Wear comfortable shoes.
REGISTRATION:
Registration, $30.00
Student registration,
$10.00
Registration at the door,
$40.00
Registration fee includes
morning coffee and lunch.
Please return registration
form with your check by May 18th.
Mail to:
Pasadena Sister Cities
Committee
Alan Lamson, China
Sub-committee
2459 Brigden Rd.
Pasadena, Ca 91104
Make checks payable to:
Pasadena Sister Cities Committee
Registration will be confirmed by
e-mail.
FOR REGISTRATION FORM, http://www.international.ucla.edu/china/papers/flyer_china_conference07.pdf
Please arrive by 8:30 a.m.
to sign-in and collect your lunch ticket.
Saturday, 8:30 AM - 4:00
PM
Huntington, Friends Hall
1151 Oxford Road
San Marino, CA 91108
For more information
please contact
Alan Lamson
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 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/
Sunday, April 29, 11:00 AM
- 3:30 PM
IMAGINATION CELEBRATION:
JAPANESE CHERRY BLOSSOM FAMILY FESTIVAL
Calling all Families! Come
celebrate springtime and discover the traditions of Japanese culture. Begin the
day by curling up in the Fluor Gallery with San Francisco-based children's
author Marlene Shigekawa and listen to her delightful stories while watching
images from the pages of her books appear on the screen. Then be sure to hop on
over to the Norma Kershaw Auditorium for a play with puppets! Based on a
beautiful Japanese legend, The Crane's Daughter will be brought to you by the
Icarus Puppet Company from San Diego. Be sure not to miss music in the
Courtyard with the Taiko Drummers from the Taiko Center of LA featuring Tom Kurai.
If that isn't enough there will be cultural demonstrations, food sampling, face
painting and great art projects! Fun for the entire family! Nominal fee for art
projects and face painting. Co-sponsored by the Bollesen Family.
Admission: Child free with
accompanying paid adult
11:00 AM Marlene Shigekawa
Fluor Gallery
12:30 PM The Crane's
Daughter Norma Kershaw Auditorium
2:00
PM Taiko Drumming Demonstration Courtyard
THE BOWERS MUSEUM
2002
North Main Street
Santa
Ana, CA 92706
(714)
567-3600
www.bowers.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
Last
weekend (or so) I went to:
The
Bunka Sai Festival in Torrance
------------------------------------------------------
Links to selected articles
from the LA Times. To actually access the articles, you may have to sign up for
a free account.
Fun and funds with
LACMA's Collectors Committee
By Suzanne Muchnic, Times
Staff Writer
April 22, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-ca-lacma22apr22,1,3388419.story
Bright daughter,
brooding son: enigma in the Cho household
Silent and withdrawn boy
was eclipsed by his sister in a culture emphasizing male success. But no one
expected what was to come.
By Bob Drogin, Faye Fiore
and K. Connie Kang, Times Staff Writers
April 22, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-cho22apr22,1,6085952.story
Moving forward since
riots
Koreans, blacks and others
march in a show of unity 15 years later.
By Teresa Watanabe, Times
Staff Writer
April 22, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-march22apr22,1,5415296.story
When ethnicity brings
an unwelcome focus
Korean Americans are
praised and criticized for blaming themselves in shooting. But there is no
unified view, even among themselves.
By Sandy Banks, Times
Staff Writer
April 19, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/washingtondc/la-me-minorities19apr19,1,6102091.story
Saito is still up to
his old tricks
Hitters were supposed to
have figured out the Dodgers' 37-year-old closer by now, but his wicked slider
and quirky delivery continue to fool them. He's six for six in save chances
this season.
By Steve Henson, Times
Staff Writer
April 24, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-dodgers24apr24,1,7461860.story
Books by Wang Ping,
Robert Laxalt and Erica Wagner
By Susan Salter Reynolds
April 22, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/features/books/la-bk-discoveries22apr22,1,6428601.story
Piercing' by Ryu
Murakami
Two child-abuse survivors
act out their rage on each other.
By Karrie Higgins, Karrie
Higgins is a writer based in Portland, Ore.
April 22, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/features/books/la-bk-higgins22apr22,1,3401164.story
Buddhists bring
purification rite to U.S.
The annual Saito Homa Fire
Ritual Service in Yorba Linda marks only the second time it has been held in
this country.
By Yvonne Villarreal,
Times Staff Writer
April 22, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-firewalk22apr22,1,241535.story
How one man showed
them the light
Brilliant! Shuji Nakamura
and the Revolution in Lighting Technology By Bob Johnstone Prometheus Books,
$28, 336 pages
By Robert Matthews,
Financial Times
April 22, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-books22apr22,1,1184174.story
Mika Ninagawa on
geishas and 'Sakuran'
By Bruce Wallace, Times
Staff Writer
April 22, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-ca-geisha22apr22,1,6242155.story
U.S. Highway 395:
California's 'mother road'
The route leads to
the treasures of the eastern Sierra Nevada: scenery, serenity and trout.
By Hugo Mart’n, Los
Angeles Times Staff Writer
April 20, 2007
http://travel.latimes.com/articles/la-trw-395drive22apr22
George McGovern:
Cheney is wrong about me, wrong about war
The 1972 presidential
nominee strikes back at the vice president for comparing today's Democrats to
the McGovern platform.
By George S. McGovern,
GEORGE S. MCGOVERN, a former U.S. senator from South Dakota, was the Democratic
nominee for president in 1972.
April 24, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-mcgovern24apr24,1,1800867.story
Fu Tieshan, 76;
bishop of Chinese church
From Times Wire Reports
April 22, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-fu22apr22,1,2711177.story
Eurythmics co-founder
teams with Greenpeace
Dave Stewart launches a wide-ranging
multimedia venture that aims to make environmentalism 'sexy.'
By Chris Lee, Times Staff
Writer
April 19, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-wk-earth19apr19,1,6969958.story
Yahoo sued over data
on Chinese dissidents
By Dawn C. Chmielewski,
Times Staff Writer
April 19, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-yahoo19apr19,1,7475644.story