TOP 10. Best Museums in San Jose, California
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TOP 10. Best Museums in San Jose, California: Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum, The Tech Museum of Innovation, Children's Discovery Museum, San Jose Museum of Art, New Almaden Mercury Mining Museum, Japanese American Resource Center-Museum, San Jose Museum of Quilts & Textiles, History Museum of San Jose, San Jose Institute of Contemporary Art, Ira F. Brilliant Center for Beethoven Studies,
2019 U.S. Women's Amateur: Championship Match
Watch the full broadcast of the 2019 U.S. Women's Amateur championship match between Gabriela Ruffels, of Australia, and Albane Valenzuela, of Switzerland. Played at Old Waverly Golf Club in West Point Miss., Ruffels became the first Australian Women's Am winner with a 1-up victory over Valenzuela, whow as playing in her second Women's Amateur final in three years.
For more from the USGA, visit
Best Attractions and Places to See in San Jose, California CA
San Jose Travel Guide. MUST WATCH. Top things you have to do in San Jose. We have sorted Tourist Attractions in San Jose for You. Discover San Jose as per the Traveler Resources given by our Travel Specialists. You will not miss any fun thing to do in San Jose.
This Video has covered top Attractions and Best Things to do in San Jose.
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List of Best Things to do in San Jose, California (CA)
Cathedral Basilica of St. Joseph
Municipal Rose Garden
Children's Discovery Museum
Los Gatos Creek Trail
Almaden Quicksilver County Park
Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum
Happy Hollow Park and Zoo
Santana Row
SAP Center
J. Lohr Vineyards & Wines
LOOKING FOR JIRO ONUMA: Queer Perspectives on WWII Incarceration (Part 2)
Part 2) LOOKING FOR JIRO ONUMA: Queer Perspectives on Wartime Incarceration by Tina Takemoto (Part 2 includes film screening and question & answer session).
The film, LOOKING FOR JIRO ONUMA, explores the hidden
dimensions of same-sex intimacy and queer sexuality for
Japanese Americans incarcerated during World War II.
Queer accounts of Japanese American wartime history are
rare because of the atypical structure of the incarceration
camps organized by family units. Jiro Onuma, a gay Issei
immigrant, was imprisoned by the federal government in
central Utah, worked in the prison mess hall, and was an
avid fan of homoerotic male physique magazines.
Onuma's Topaz photographs, which reside at the GLBT
Historical Society archive in San Francisco, might be the only
known pictures of an adult gay Japanese American in the
American concentration camps.
Tina Takemoto, Ph.D, is an artist and associate professor
of visual and critical studies at California College of the Arts.
She has exhibited internationally and her film, LOOKING FOR
JIRO (2011), was awarded Best Experimental Film Jury Award
at the Austin Gay and Lesbian Film Festival. Professor Takemoto
is board president of Queer Cultural Center.
Info: ttakemoto.com
A Japantown Community Forum
Lecture & Video Screening
@ Hospitality Room
Union Bank, Ground Floor
Japan Center
1675 Post St.
San Francisco Japantown
Saturday, April 26, 2014
Sponsor: Japanese American National Library
(janlibrary.org)
Moderator: Ben Kobashigawa, PhD, Asian American Studies
San Francisco State University
Contacts: Karl Matsushita at (415) 567-5006
or
Ben Kobashigawa at bk7585@sfsu.edu
10 Archaeological Mysteries of the United States
10 Archaeological Mysteries of the United States.
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These ancient American relics remain unexplained.
A centuries-old stone wall, stretching for miles; enormous pictures scratched into the ground of a desert; rocks arranged in a circle. You know what these landmarks are, right?
Guess again. Instead of the Great Wall of China or Stonehenge, these are all ancient American ruins and landmarks. The United States is a relative newcomer to the world stage, but there have been people long living on this continent, and they’ve left traces of their presence just as mysterious as those found in other countries.
1. Mystery Hill: America’s Stonehenge.
SALEM, NEW HAMPSHIRE.
About 40 miles north of the city of Boston, and about 25 miles inland from the Atlantic Ocean...
2. Casa Grande Ruins.
COOLIDGE, ARIZONA.
This is an artist's depiction of the Casa Grande (Great House), and its surrounding compound as it may have appeared around 1350 C.E....
3. The Blythe Intaglios.
BLYTHE, CALIFORNIA.
The Blythe Intaglios, often called America’s Nazca Lines, are a series of gigantic geoglyphs found fifteen miles north of Blythe California in the Colorado Desert....
4. Judaculla Rock.
SYLVA, NORTH CAROLINA.
Buried in the mountains of Jackson County, just outside of Sylva, there exists a very, very strange rock....
5. Bighorn Medicine Wheel.
LOVELL, WYOMING.
Located high in the Bighorn Mountains of Northern Wyoming, the centuries old Medicine Wheel....
6. Dighton Rock.
BERKELEY, MASSACHUSETTS.
In the fall of 1680, John Danforth – with his freshly minted degree from Harvard College – visited the South Shore of Massachusetts in Taunton and took a side trip to see one of the curiosities of the age....
7. The Great Serpent Mound.
HILLSBORO, OHIO.
The Great Serpent Mound is a 1,300 foots long, and 3 foots high prehistoric effigy mound located on a plateau of a crater along Ohio Brush Creek in Adams County, Ohio....
8. Berkeley Mystery Walls.
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA.
The ancient Berkeley walls remain an ancient unsolved enigma. Often referred to as the “Great Wall of California”...
9. Miami Circle.
MIAMI, FLORIDA.
The worst place in Florida to discover an ancient mystery is on prime real estate in downtown Miami....
10. Hemet Maze Stone.
HEMET, CALIFORNIA.
Near the town of Hemet in the Reinhardt canyon, of southern California there is a curious petroglyph known as the Hemet maze stone...
Music: Kevin Macleod
Artist:
Taiko Drumming in Asian American Los Angeles
Ethnomusicologist Deborah Wong offers a vivid introduction to the Japanese American and Asian American taiko scene in the greater Los Angeles area. Taiko is a contemporary form of ensemble drumming that is built on the foundation of traditional Japanese festival music. This new tradition is called kumi-daiko, or group taiko, because taiko ensembles usually feature numerous drums of at least three different sizes played in a fast, loud, virtuosic, athletic style. Taiko is very old, but in most of the ways that matter, it is a modern, transnational, globalized, dynamic heritage tradition that changes by the day.
For transcript and more information, visit
International Hotel (I-Hotel) protest rally against San Francisco Mayor George Moscone
Description: International Hotel (I-Hotel) protest rally against San Francisco Mayor George Moscone in front of the St. Francis Hotel in San Francisco, California. Protest was in support of the largely Filipino American tenants evicted by the Four Seas Investment Corporation.
Collection Guide: Henry Williams Jr. Film Collection
Rights: Copyrighted. Rights are owned by the African American Museum and Library at Oakland. Transmission or reproduction of materials protected by copyright beyond that allowed by fair use requires the written permission of the Copyright Holder. In addition, the reproduction of some materials may be restricted by terms of gift or purchase agreements, donor restrictions, privacy and publicity rights, licensing and trademarks. Works not in the public domain cannot be commercially exploited without permission of the copyright owner. Responsibility for any use rests exclusively with the user.
Credit line: This digitization project was supported by a Recordings at Risk grant from the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR). The grant program is made possible by funding from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
Legions of Boom: Filipino American Mobile DJ Crews in the San Francisco Bay Area
“Jumping music
Slick DJs
Fog machines
And laser rays”—Debbie Deb
“Filipino-Americans are to turntablism what East Africans are to winning marathons or the Irish are to literature: a statistically small group that has contributed a preponderance of the art’s elite. From the Bay Area came the legendary DJ Qbert, Mix master Mike, DJ Shortkut and DJ Apollo. In L.A., the Beat Junkies furnished DJ Babu, D-Styles and DJ Rhettmatic. Each ranks as an all-time great at making Technics turntables speak in tongues.”—Jeff Weiss, L.A. Weekly
This is a story that’s never told. Not even by the people who scripted and lived it. It takes place from the mid-1970s to mid-1990s—at christening parties, school gym parties, weddings, church hall dances. It vibrates to a self-generated soundtrack of funk, disco, new wave, electro, and hip hop created by teenage mutant ninja turntablists: “Many began so young that they could not yet apply for a driver’s license. Yet these same youth could install a performance stage, spin for a crowd of hundreds, earn thousands of dollars, and still be ready for Sunday Mass in the morning, plotting next weekend’s party while waiting for Communion.”
Legions of Boom: Filipino American Mobile DJ Crews in the San Francisco Bay Area is an important work of revival, revision and redress. This event features author Oliver Wang in conversation with Hua Hsu.
Oliver Wang is associate professor of Sociology at California State University, Long Beach. A DJ and founder of the blog soul-sides.com, he has also written for NPR and numerous publications including Vibe, Wax Poetics, Los Angeles Times, and Village Voice.
Hua Hsu teaches at Vassar College. He contributes to The Wire, The New Yorker, and Grantland. His first book, A Floating Chinatown, is forthcoming from Harvard University Press.
Presented by THE COLLOQUIUM FOR UNPOPULAR CULTURE. Cosponsored by the Asian/Pacific/American Institute at NYU, Asian/Pacific/American Studies Program in the NYU Department of Social & Cultural Analysis, and FAM (Filipino American Museum).
This event took place on November 5th, 2015.
The Tech Museum with Bay Area Science Festival at SACNAS 2011
The Tech Museum demonstrated design challenge learning principles at the SACNAS (Society for Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in Science) annual convention across the street at the San Jose Convention Center. This was part of Bay Area Science Festival events.
About The Tech Museum
The Tech Museum is a hands-on technology and science museum for people of all ages and backgrounds. The museum-located in the Capital of Silicon Valley -is a non-profit learning resource established to engage people in exploring and experiencing technologies affecting their lives. Through programs such as The Tech Challenge presented by Cisco, our annual team design competition for youth, and internationally renowned programs such as The Tech Awards presented by Applied Materials, Inc., The Tech Museum celebrates the present and encourages the development of innovative ideas for a more promising future.
Street Names of Los Angeles (Full Video)
You may ride, drive, bike, run and walk your L.A. streets, but do you know the history behind L.A. street names?
The Street Names of Los Angeles A History is a series of videos presented by the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, featuring historic photographs and documents from the Seaver Center for Western History Research.
Listen to an explanation of the layers of history of El Pueblo de la Reina de Los Angeles since its founding in 1781, and set your eyes on a visual feast of museum images.
When you have concluded watching the six episodes, your new understanding of the city will match your abilities to navigate your daily courses to work, school, play, and even museum-going!
For more information about the Seaver Center for Western History Research.
Please visit:
Bamboo Ceilings? Model Minorities? Let's Talk About It! | Talks at Google
Panelists Quyen Dinh, Valarie Kaur, and Phil Yu join moderator Lorrie Ma in a conversation that guides us into a deeper understanding of Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) experiences, the model minority stereotype, the concept of the “bamboo ceiling,” and how AAPI communities show up in the racial justice movement.
NewSpace Trends - Bob Richards
Now focused on the Moon, Mars and beyond, space exploration has changed dramatically and has shifted from government-driven strategies to partnerships and commerce-driven initiatives.
On Sunday, March 18, The Tech Museum in San Jose hosted a conversation about current trends in humanity's ongoing exploration and discoveries in Space, as well as new research opportunities and the quest to go further. The public lecture, called New Trends in Space Exploration: Partnerships, Commerce, and Beyond, was moderated by Angie Coiro and featured Dr. Bob Richards, Dr. David Livingston, Kenneth E. Washington, Ph.D, and Sophie-Charlotte Moatti.
This excerpt video is a compilation of commentary by Moon Express co-Founder and CEO Bob Richards detailing his views and thoughts on the various subjects discussed.
The full video of the conversation can be viewed at
The panellists included:
Angie Coiro (Moderator)
Angie Coiro is an award-winning journalist and interviewer. Her work has aired nationally on Mother Jones Radio on Air America, and on public radio. Locally she's known for her hosting work on Live From the Left Coast/The Angie Coiro Show; KQED's Friday Forum; KGO radio; and for many years of news and traffic reporting around the dial. She has a parallel career as a voiceover talent, with a long and varied resume. Angie is represented by JETalent in San Francisco.
Dr. Bob Richards
Dr. Robert (Bob) Richards is a Co-Founder of the International Space University, Singularity University, SEDS, the Space Generation Foundation and Google Lunar X PRIZE competitors Odyssey Moon Ltd. and Moon Express, Inc., where he currently serves as CEO. Bob studied aerospace and industrial engineering at Ryerson University; physics and astronomy at the University of Toronto; and space science at Cornell University.
Dr. David Livingston
Dr. David Livingston is the founder and host of The Space Show®, the nation's only talk radio show focusing on increasing space commerce, developing space tourism, and facilitating our move to a space-faring economy and culture. He earned his BA from the University of Arizona, his MBA and his Doctorate in Business Administration from Golden Gate University.
Kenneth E. Washington, Ph.D.
Dr. Kenneth E. Washington is VP of Advanced Technology Center (ATC) at Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company (SSC). In this role Ken is responsible for leading an organization of approximately 600 scientists and engineers performing more than $150M of programs in space science and related R & D in adjacent markets. Ken has a BS, MS, and PhD in Nuclear Engineering from Texas A&M University.
Sophie-Charlotte Moatti
Sophie-Charlotte (SC) Moatti is the founder of Spatial Ventures, a professional network advocating for space-related investment & entrepreneurship. Prior, SC has launched award-winning mobile consumer products used by millions of consumers. She was general manager of a top 1% app at Nokia and before that, a game producer at Electronic Arts. She holds a Stanford MBA and an MS in electrical engineering.
About The Tech Museum Lecture Series
Get in depth perspectives. Participate. Exchange ideas. Topics reflect the rich diversity of our community. Designed to explore, enrich and bring awareness of the many different intersections science and technology make with culture, arts, politics, math.... you get the idea - our entire world. Created to support our mission to inspire the innovator in everyone. The Tech Museum does this through content and programs featuring inspiring people, inventions and mind-set that continues to make this region the leading source of science and technology innovation.
About The Tech Museum
The Tech Museum is a hands-on technology and science museum for people of all ages and backgrounds. The museum—located in the Capital of Silicon Valley —is a non-profit learning resource established to engage people in exploring and experiencing technologies affecting their lives. Through programs such as The Tech Challenge, our annual team design competition for youth, and internationally renowned programs such as The Tech Awards presented by Applied Materials, Inc., The Tech Museum celebrates the present and encourages the development of innovative ideas for a more promising future.
Follow The Tech Museum on Twitter @TheTechMuseum and view more videos at
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Recent show of Between Folds of Tea by Sha Sha Higby
Sha Sha Higby approaches dance through the medium of sculpture. The work explores a whimsical journey of life, death, and rebirth through mesmerizing intricate ephemeral images and light evokes the passage of time and day, or the shifting of the seasons. Using the painterly manipulation of hand crafted materials and textures made interwo¬ven with a labyrinth of delicate props and puppets, Higby's work creates a journey in which movement and stillness meet. Shreds of memory lace into a drama of a thousand intricate pieces, slowly moving, and stirring our memory toward a sense of patience and timelessness. She is an icon in her generation in establishing the sculptural object as a body costume that can be integrated with theater and dance to create its own poetic plot in solo performance.
Higby received a BS in art from Skidmore College and, 5 years in Indonesia under a Fulbright Scholarship 5 years of documented research for her MFA, she also studied for 1 year in Japan, and 6 months in India under an Indo-American Fellowship. She has received numerous awards and grants, including multiple grants from the Zellerbach Family Fund, the Marin Arts Council, Inter-Arts, New Langdon Arts and LACE (Interdisciplinary N.E.A.), California Arts Council Touring Subsidy, the Ludwig Vogelstein Foundation, Inc. (Brooklyn, NY), both Fulbright and Indo-American fellowships to India, the U.S. Travel Fund for Artists, the National Endowment for the Arts in Solo Theater Fellowship, the N.E.A. RIARP program, U.S. Artists at International Festivals and Exhibitions, the Flow Fund, California Arts Council Artists Fellowship Program., the Japan -United States Friendship Commission , and The Japan Foundation for collaborative work with Japan-U.S. artists .
She has performed internationally Festival Internazional delle Marionnnette, Divaldo Korzo: Bratislava, Slovakia, Festival of Sydney: Sydney, Australia; Singapore Festival of the Arts, Hong Kong Fringe Festival, Tokyo National College Of Art, Tokyo Textile Institute, Tokyo, International Puppet Theater Festival, Stara Zagora
Bulgaria;, exhibited at the Portland Art Museum, Bellevue Art Museum, Arizona State University, Portland State University, California State Summer School For The Arts, Center For The Arts At Yerba Buena Gardens, Honolulu Academy of Arts, HI, University of Massachusetts at Amherst, Columbia College,Inter-Arts Program, San Francisco Asian Art Museum,, The Glass Museum,Tacoma,Washington, Virginia Arts Festival,, COCA,St Louis. Colby College; Maine; Evergreen State College, CSUB San Bernardino Dept of Music, Olympia Washington Michigan Technological University, San Jose Museum of Art Japanese-American Museum, Baltimore College of Art, Mc Callum Theater, Palm Desert San Diego Museum of Art Duke Institute of the Arts Allegheny College, Meadville, PA Scottsdale Center for the Arts, and so on.
???????? San Francisco USA 4K - Interesting facts about San Francisco and California | Best Cities
In this video we are going to talk about San Francisco! California's forth largest city and home to the Golden Gate Bridge. It is also very close to San José and the Silicon Valley. This video shows you which places you have to visit when traveling to California / San Francisco. If you want to move to California, this video also fits your needs. In addition, you can find some interesting facts about San Francisco and California. (SF)
This video also covers things to do in San Francisco.
Which cities / countries should I cover next? :)
Sources:
#SanFrancisco #USA #California
'Finding History in Our Own Back Yard' - 3/4/2008
Western Washington University Professor Chris Friday will present Finding History in Our Own Backyard: Georgia Pacific, Your House, Your Neighborhood and Public History at WWU from 7 to 8:30 p.m. on Tuesday, March 4, at the Bellingham City Council chambers, Bellingham City Hall, 210 Lottie St.
The lecture, which is free and open to the public, is offered as the second event of the annual WWU College of Humanities and Social Sciences Dean's Lecture Series.
Writer Maxing Hong Kingston once noted that America and especially the American West was a place devoid of history because it was a land without ghosts. As true as that may have been from her Chinese American perspective growing up in the 1950s, Kingston missed an opportunity to understand that the landscape around us is filled with many ghostscapes - the layered meanings and perspectives we create about places across cultures and times. What happens when we consider our own local, familiar landscape in historical perspective? What happens when we disagree on the meaning of familiar places, especially because we see them through lenses we create out of our own peculiar understandings of history and place? How do Western students, the University, and the community benefit from thinking about the local landscape historically?
This lecture will attempt to answer these questions. Friday will also present the Georgia Pacific/Waterfront Oral History project and the current Bellingham Historic Neighborhood project that connect WWU students with the local community in the exploration of history outside the classroom.
Chris Friday is a professor of History at Western Washington University. Friday grew up near Mount St. Helens, got his bachelor's degree at Lewis and Clark College in Portland, then received his master's degree and doctorate in American History from UCLA. He lived in China for nearly two years in the early 1980s and taught in the Boston area prior to coming to WWU in 1992. At WWU, Friday's teaching and research/publication areas are Pacific Northwest History, American Indian History, and Asian American History. For most of the last decade, Friday has also been director of the Center for Pacific Northwest Studies at Western Washington University (an archives and small research institute). Most recently, Friday started a Public History minor at WWU, which is designed to help students see the connections between their interest in history as an academic subject and history as a discipline practiced in settings well beyond teaching in any classroom.
The purpose of the Dean's Community Lecture Series is to foster connections between the College of Humanities and Social Sciences and the local community. What better way to make such connections than learning about our city from our own historians, such as Chris Friday, said Ron Kleinknecht, CHSS dean.
Friday's presentation will also be taped and rebroadcast on Bellingham BTV 10.
DoubleTree by Hilton Modesto 3 Stars Modesto, California
DoubleTree by Hilton Modesto 3 Stars Modesto, California Within US Travel Directory One of our top picks in Modesto. This Modesto, California Within US Travel Directory hotel features completely non-smoking guest rooms. On-site dining is available at the Maxis Restaurant. The Gallo Center for the Arts is a short walk from the hotel.
The DoubleTree by Hilton Modesto offers guest rooms with a coffee maker and a mini-refrigerator. A work desk is available in each room as well.
An outdoor pool and a fitness center are on-site at the Hilton DoubleTree Hotel Modesto. The hotel offers an on-site beauty salon and a gift shop.
The McHenry Mansion and Museum is within walking distance of the DoubleTree by Hilton Modesto. The Sierra Railroad Dinner Train is a short drive from the hotel.
Booking now :
Hotel Location :
DoubleTree by Hilton Modesto, 1150 Ninth Street CA 95354, USA
Hotels list and More information visit U.S. Travel Directory
ch 19) Surprises
chapter 19: A People's History (Of The United States) Howard Zinn.
~
Chapter 19, Surprises, covers other movements that happened during the 1960s, such as second-wave feminism, the prison reform/prison abolition movement, the Native American rights movement, and the counterculture. People and events from the feminist movement covered include Betty Friedan's The Feminine Mystique, Women's International Terrorist Conspiracy from Hell, Patricia Robinson, the National Domestic Workers Union, National Organization for Women, Roe v. Wade, Susan Brownmiller's Against Our Will, and Our Bodies, Ourselves. People and events from the prison movement covered include George Jackson, the Attica Prison riots, and Jerry Sousa. People and events from the Native American rights movement covered include the National Indian Youth Council, Sid Mills, Akwesasne Notes, Indians of All Tribes, the First Convocation of American Indian Scholars, Frank James, the American Indian Movement, and the Wounded Knee incident. People and events from the counterculture covered include Pete Seeger, Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Malvina Reynolds, Jessica Mitford's The American Way of Death, Jonathan Kozol, George Dennison, and Ivan Illich.
February 2016 | Asian American Life
Correspondent Minnie Roh gives us the latest update on the backlash surrounding the deal to provide reparations to the Korean sex slave victims of World War II. Protests have been staged all across the world, including here in New York. Exclusive interviews with one of the comfort women Lee Ok-Sun who shares her personal story and struggles, and Phyllis Kim, Director of the Korean American Forum of California who represents many of the victims.
One of the top Supreme Court cases to watch this year is Abigail Fisher vs. The University of Texas, which raises the issue of affirmative action and does it keep qualified applicants from getting into elite schools based on race. How will the justices’ decisions affect Asian American admission into the Ivy Leagues? Reporter Paul Lin has an in-depth report and interviews legal scholars and educational experts.
In March, thousands of middle school students will learn of their fate as they wait for word on admission into New York’s elite public high schools. Tested is a documentary that examines high stakes testing and reporter Kyung Yoon gives the latest on this competitive process.
(Taped: 01/15/2016)
Ernabel Demillo is the host of Asian American Life, a monthly half hour series about the fastest-growing immigrant group in the country, focusing on Asian Americans in the tri-state area from over 40 countries who speak more than 150 different languages and dialects. Every month, an Asian enclave and neighborhood within the tristate area is featured. Cutting edge issues like racial profiling and stereotyping are examined and explored. Successful Asian Americans who are forging new identities in business, politics and the arts are also be profiled. Asian American Life is reaching new frontiers in the quest for understanding and acknowledgment among tri-state Asian Americans.
Watch more at
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The Secret Society of the Illuminati
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101 Facts About California
As Phantom Planet once sung, California, California, Califooooorrrrrniaaaaa. Also as the Eagles sung, Welcome to the Hotel California. And Katy Perry did a song about girls from California. Point is, Cali is a popular place, so here's some facts all about its history, strange laws and kind of crazy stats. Here's 101 Facts About California.
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