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May 2 - 3
Seattle Sites of the Day:

Seattle Contemporary Review of Asian American Literature

A sample of SCRAAL, excerpted from a review of Where We Once
Belonged, the first novel by a Samoan woman to be published in America:
Sia Figiel "not only captures the adolescent struggles of Samoan
girls but also reclaims a cultural narrative previously defined
by Margaret Mead's seminal (and controversial) Coming of Age
in Samoa. ... Ms. Figiel writes with a deft and evocative
voice grounded in the creole language of Samoa... Discarding
conventional narrative, Ms. Figiel's novel adopts the dream
structure of memory, drifting through seemingly unconnected
fragments which gradually settle upon each other like silt,
growing in depth and meaning as layer builds upon layer. The
novel's dénouement is thus endowed with a cumulative power that
is startling and deeply moving."
Asian American Theatre Revue
A-Fest 2000

"A month-long festival of contemporary art with innovative
music, puppetry, dance and multi-media performances featuring...
artists from the United States and Asia."

At the Theatre Off Jackson, 409 7th Ave S. (206) 340-1049
Finding Home will also be performed on Friday, May 5 at 6:00 PM at
the New Holly Gathering Hall at 7054 32 Ave S.
Eleventh Hour Productions
Seattle Poetry Festival

Tue May 2 - Sun May 7, at various locations
"May 2, noon at Green Lake Aquatheater - Elizabeth Shé will set sail a
flotilla of poems on the lake... Poetry Truck will depart... Join us at the
south end of the lake, across the street from the soccer field.
"May 2, noon-5 pm, Seattle Center - T.S. Thomas spells out giant poems across
the Flag Plaza"
Dennis Y. Ginoza

Dennis Ginoza is the editor of SCRAAL, the Seattle Contemporary Review of
Asian American Literature. His site presents photographs from parts of his
life.
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April 30 - May 6
Seattle Site of the Week:


Seattle Chapter, Japanese American Citizens League

"On Tuesday, May 9, 2000, the University of Washington's College
of Arts & Sciences invites you to join them in honoring the
extraordinary accomplishments of civil rights activist, Dr.
Gordon Hirabayashi. ... Proceeds from the evening will be used to
establish the Dr. Gordon Hirabayashi Professorship for the
Advancement of Citizenship."
In a letter to the editor in the April Seattle JACL newsletter, Robert
Shimabukuro writes, in part:
"I had heard the moans and groans from other parents checking out
schools for their kids, but I didn't know what they were going
through until I was faced with the same situation... It should be
obvious to the most casual observer that some schools and
communities in Seattle are getting shortchanged...
"... few rocket scientists and brain surgeons will be coming out
of southend schools unless drastic changes in policy are made and
carried out. ... It has to do with recognizing the inequities and
doing something about it. ... Nobody is mentioning the words
racism or classism anymore, but they obviously should be.
"... where is the outrage over the state of the school itself,
regardless of the name? ... Could the lack of outrage possibly be
because the student body is 88% non-white? Could it possibly be
because 71% of the school's students are on free or reduced
lunch? ... Somebody, convince me that this isn't about race and
money. ...
"Show that you care, that you really are concerned
about the students. Show some support, along with dig deep-down
heartfelt dollars, to help turn the school around, to help the
community around the school in improving Aki Kurose Middle
School. And when the school starts producing not only rocket
scientists and brain surgeons, but well-informed, thinking
students, prepared for high school, we can all rejoice together."
May 20 - 23
CPSR Conference:
Shaping the Network Society
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