Monday, September 16, 2013

Wedding Palace: Matinee and Lunch Film Discussion in Irvine

San Diego area and Fullerton College APIA met up for the movie and film discussion afterwards.

Meet with members of APIA on Sunday, Sept. 29th for a matinee showing of the movie, Wedding Palace. Afterwards, there will be a lunch discussion of the film. After the showing times are released, a specific time will be set.

In the movie, Jason Kim, a 29-year old advertising executive (Brian Tee, D.K. from THE FAST AND FURIOUS:TOKYO DRIFT), feels the pressure from his parents and other relatives to wed before his 30th birthday in order to avoid an ancient curse placed on his family.  

Please RSVP by contacting Karyn Nguyen at (714) 992-7254 or KNguyen1@fullcoll.edu



Jason Kim, a 29-year old advertising executive (Brian Tee, D.K. from THE FAST AND FURIOUS:TOKYO DRIFT), feels the pressure from his parents and other relatives to wed before his 30th birthday in order to avoid an ancient curse placed on his family.  - See more at: http://laapff.festpro.com/films/detail/wedding_palace_2011#sthash.aeDuM3lq.dpuf
  Jason Kim, a 29-year old advertising executive (Brian Tee, D.K. from THE FAST AND FURIOUS:TOKYO DRIFT), feels the pressure from his parents and other relatives to wed before his 30th birthday in order to avoid an ancient curse placed on his family.  - See more at: http://laapff.festpro.com/films/detail/wedding_palace_2011#sthash.aeDuM3lq.dpuf
  Jason Kim, a 29-year old advertising executive (Brian Tee, D.K. from THE FAST AND FURIOUS:TOKYO DRIFT), feels the pressure from his parents and other relatives to wed before his 30th birthday in order to avoid an ancient curse placed on his family.  - See more at: http://laapff.festpro.com/films/detail/wedding_palace_2011#sthash.aeDuM3lq.dpuf
  Jason Kim, a 29-year old advertising executive (Brian Tee, D.K. from THE FAST AND FURIOUS:TOKYO DRIFT), feels the pressure from his parents and other relatives to wed before his 30th birthday in order to avoid an ancient curse placed on his family.  - See more at: http://laapff.festpro.com/films/detail/wedding_palace_2011#sthash.aeDuM3lq.dpuf

Asian Pacific Festival Sept. 21 & 22nd



September 21 & 22nd 
10 am to 10 pm
Newport Dunes Waterfront Resort and Marina


If you're interested in Asian Pacific culture, check out this festival!




Friday, May 31, 2013

Hesed Kim -- 2013 APIA Scholarship Recipient




 
The Asian Pacific Islander Faculty & Staff Association awarded the 2013 scholarship to Hesed Kim in recognition for his community service, leadership, and academic performance. On campus, Hesed keeps active performing in most of the theatrical productions. He has demonstrated leadership abilities through his position as secretary of Alpha Gamma Sigma, the California Community College honor society. As an officer of the honor society, Hesed has organized a number of events and is responsible for intra-club communication. In the community,  Hesed volunteers at the Dongshin Presbyterian Church where he leads a weekly bible study session and mentors high school freshmen.  In addition, he volunteers at the First Evangelical Church of Fullerton where he serves as a teacher in the children’s dept. and helps with various church events. The Compton Initiative also benefits from Hesed’s community service; he helps paint and renovate dilapidated houses in the City of Compton.  In fall of this year, he worked as a tutor at a private academy. While volunteering and working, Hesed has maintained a high grade point average as a Theater Arts major.  He was a recipient of the SRO (Standing Room Only) summer theater conservatory scholarship and he is on the President’s Honor list. In the future, Hesed hopes to transfer to Julliard, Yale or UCLA to earn a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Theater. He would like to achieve success in film and theater and break down barriers that Asian Americans have faced in this field.

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

ASIAN & PACIFIC ISLANDER FORUM with guest speaker, Curtis Chin

Documentary maker, Curtis Chin, will be the keynote speaker.  Mr. Chin produced the documentary, "Vincent Who?", about a young man named Vincent Chin, 27, who was murdered in Detroit in 1982. He had been celebrating during his bachelor party with friends at a local bar when they got into an altercation with two white men. “It’s because of you we’re out of work,” they were said to have shouted, blaming them for the success of Japan’s auto industry. The men tracked Vincent down after he left the bar and bludgeoned him with a baseball bat.The men pleaded to manslaughter (down from second-degree murder) and were sentenced to three years of probation and fined $3,000. “Remember Vincent Chin” became a rallying cry for Asian-Americans of every background who protested in cities across the country for the first time.

Students will have the opportunity to break into group discussions after the keynote address.




Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Film Screening: Among B-Boys



APIA and the Cadena Transfer Center Present the Film Screening of:

AMONG B-BOYS
Q & A with Director, Chris Woon following the film

Date: Thursday, April 25th, 2013
Time: 2:00-4:00 pm
Location: Cadena Transfer Center

Free for students, faculty, staff, and community members

Among B-Boys is a documentary feature exploring the intersection between urban b-boying breakdancing and the traditional roots of Hmong culture. But instead of the usual generational conflict, Among B-Boys unveils a story of the modern and the traditional actually affirming each other, visually weaving between the older generation's memory of ethnicity and war and the younger generation's toprocks, footwork, freezes and power-moves. The movement began in the 1990s with the first wave of Hmong youth in the California Central Valley coming of age as Hmong Americans. Director Christopher Woon's short film documented a new movement of Hmong youth getting immersed in not only breaking/B-Boying, but also Hip Hop culture. It has since become an hour long feature documentary focusing on two main story lines, that of B-Boy Sukie and the Velocity/Soul Rivals and twin brothers, Bboys Mpact and Villn of Underground Flow. The documentary takes us geographically from Merced, Fresno and Sacramento in the California Central Valley, to Long Beach, California to as far as Tulsa, Oklahoma. 

APIA would like to thank the Fullerton Foundation for its generous funding of this event.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Book Discussion: Balancing Two Worlds

Date: Thursday, May 2, 2013
Time: 5:00-6:00 pm
Location: Library 820P

Dinner afterwards--restaurant to be announced

APIA members will meet to discuss the book:

Balancing Two Worlds: Asian American College Students Tell Their Life Stories edited by Andrew Garrod and Robert Kilkenny    

Balancing Two Worlds highlights themes surrounding the creation of Asian American identity. This book contains fourteen first-person narratives by Asian American college students, most of whom have graduated during the first five years of the twenty-first century. Their engaging accounts detail the students' very personal struggles with issues of assimilation, gender, religion, sexuality, family conflicts, educational stereotypes, and being labeled the "model minority." Some of the students relate stories drawn from their childhood and adolescent experiences, while others focus more on their college experiences at Dartmouth.  

Annie Liu is ordering copies of Balancing Two Worlds. If you're interested in getting a copy, please email Annie Liu. 

Please RSVP Annie Liu at aliu@fullcoll.edu for the book discussion and/or the dinner.

APIA hosts Author Nicky Sa-eun Schildkraut

Date: Wednesday, April 10th, 2013
Time: 11:30-1:30 
Location: Room 228, Building 200



As a Korean adoptee (KAD), Nicky Sa-eun Schildkraut grew up in New England, a circumstance that inevitably prompted an early fascination with the diaspora that followed the Korean civil war. She observes that, accordingly, “many of my poems repeat and return to the themes of inarticulable loss, separation, and reimagination of the family and kinship.” As the title of this debut collection suggests, Schildkraut locates these themes in a formal expression oriented between refrain as song and refrain as restraint–”a nuanced method of expressing the equivocal and uncertain” that produces a tense flexibility in the look and feel of her poems. Schildkraut’s provocative and intensely lyrical poems seek to both unsettle and complicate presumptions about what binds people together in times of longing and loss. They do not draw solely on personal experience, but also tell the larger tale of the Korean diaspora–particularly the experiences of its women–in stories of war brides, defectors, birth mothers and other adoptees.

A copy of Magnetic Refrain is on reserve in the library under LIBRARY Ishibashi. The loan period is two days.