Archive for February, 2011

Creative Arts with TAPS in Seattle

Date: Sunday, February 27, 2011
Time: 3:30pm – 6:00pm
Location: Creatively Yours Store (Place II) inside of the Crossroads Mall
Address: 15600 NE 8th, Bellevue, WA
Facebook event page: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=155676277820556

WANT TO PAINT? Join TAPS Taiwanese American Professionals Society of Seattle (TAPS) to create something unique for you or your special one. Choose from a large selection of unfinished ceramics then create your own art with brushes, stencils, sponges, stamps, and books.

They’ve booked the party room from 3:30 PM till 6:00 PM. Friends, family, kids are welcome!

And they’re serving bubble tea.

Remember 228

Remember 228

My heart feels heavy this time of year. Thoughts race through my mind as to how best to tackle the topic of “228” – short for February 28, 1947, the date which marked the massacre of an estimated 20,000 Taiwanese and the imprisonment of approximately 140,000 more who were suspected of opposing the newly established Nationalist KMT’s Republic of China government after 2 million people fled China to Taiwan after losing the Civil War.

What do I write to acknowledge this piece of still recent history which has shaped the story of a country now with over 23 million people without offending the sensibilities of our diverse community today? There will be no right answer, as anything I say or do will either be too little or too much for my fellow Taiwanese Americans, depending on who you ask. And anything I write can be countered with another perspective or argument.

All too often, the mere mention of “228” understandably draws forth the raw emotions connected to memories of family histories and stories.

On one hand, our green-leaning and independence-minded friends may argue that although we’ve come a long way as a democratic society, there have been many backward steps that the current KMT-controlled government has taken that continues to threaten the foundations of true democracy. And, how do you dissociate blame of a genocidal massacre of a people from its government or forget 40 years of martial law that exceeded any other in the history of the world? Furthermore, the power and media structures that exist today are still remain heavily controlled by the pan-blue side.

On the other hand, our blue-leaning friends may remind us that the KMT party of today has markedly changed in the past decades, and that perhaps the past is something that we should acknowledge and never forget. Perhaps only then can we move forward without always using this piece of history as a tool for divisiveness. After all, KMT presidents Lee Teng-hui and Ma Ying-jeou have already offered formal apologies on behalf of the government. With China as a looming superpower next door, we must focus on our position and place in this world today in order to bring a more productive relationship across the Taiwan Strait.

And in this over-simplified dichotomy of perspectives, the folks who lean towards other colors of the political spectrum representing varied perspectives will have something else to chime in because, well, they just don’t agree with any of the viewpoints or perspectives of the major political parties in Taiwan.

But really, I suspect, there is a huge group in the middle who have either tuned out this article from the start simply because of the reference to “228” or who simply avoid all things perceived as “political” for whatever reason. And I don’t blame them, because sometimes living in ignorance or avoiding the messiness of politics is just a whole lot easier than “taking sides.”

I know it would be easier to not write anything about the topic of “228,” as I my mind considers several excuses. However, I recognize that it is part of our collective identity as a Taiwanese American community, and it’s our responsibility at TaiwaneseAmerican.org to acknowledge this defining moment in the history of Taiwan, and thus, our immigrant history in America.

I know that whatever I write, though, will never do justice on the topic. There is just too much to say, too many perspectives to consider, and so much depth of history intertwined with personal stories that must be represented, never forgotten.

I think these notes on my thoughts will have to do for now. It’s a start. And the story of Taiwan’s democracy is still being written today. At the very least, maybe just breaching this topic may open the eyes of fellow young Taiwanese and Taiwanese Americans to a piece of their own history. Maybe they’ll be curious enough to learn more on their own, or track down others’ more eloquent essays.

So maybe the best I can do is perhaps tell you what I plan to do on February 28, also known as Peace Memorial Day in Taiwan.

I will wake up and remember “228.” I will take a deep breath and reflect on my family’s history and friends’ histories, no matter how different they may be from mine. And then I will continue to acknowledge my pride in being a 2nd generation Taiwanese American. I’ll go a step further, and I will remember the struggles of oppressed peoples around the world recognizing that our story is not the only one.

But most importantly, I will continue to respect everyone around me, hoping they’ll at least do the same for me. That is how we will begin to write a more positive history together… everywhere around the world.

Read more:

The 228 Massacre: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/228_massacre
About Taiwan: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taiwan
New York Times Article, March 29, 1947: “Formosa killings are put at 10,000” http://www.taiwandc.org/hst-1947.htm

TAO Lantern Festival & Night Market at UC Irvine

Date: Saturday, February 26, 2011
Time: 6:30pm – 9:30pm
Location: UCI Student Center- Pacific Ballroom C & D
Facebook event page: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=184850891546534

**For more information, please visit: http://taouci.com/lanternfestival/

Taiwanese American Organization @ UC Irvine proudly presents to you the 2011 Lantern Festival and Night Market in celebration of Chinese New Year! Come celebrate the year of the rabbit at the second annual Lantern Festival & Night Market, hosted by Taiwanese American Organization (TAO UCI) with other participating organizations including UCR TASA, USC TAO, UCI VSA, UCI Konnect, JTASA & TAP/TACL! Traditionally held in Taiwan on the fifteenth day of the first month of the Chinese calendar, the Lantern Festival marks the end of the Chinese New Year celebrations. It is a night where children go out to temples carrying all types of paper lanterns and families celebrate with traditional Chinese food.

We invite you for a night of delicious food, exciting games and activities, and wonderful performances! Enjoy our many food booths, including minced pork rice, tapioca milk tea, popcorn chicken, brick toast, and more! Try your luck at fishing for live fish with paper nets, mahjong bingo, or many of our other games! Decorate your own lanterns (that you can keep!) and show off the artist in you while enjoying performances from Jennifer Chung, Charlie Chang, UCI Chinese Association Dance Crew (CADC), and more! Regardless of if you come for the food, games, or performances, this is a night of guaranteed fun and culture!

::Highlights::

**Tasty Taiwanese Food & Drinks including: tea eggs, minced pork rice, Taiwanese sausages, fan tuan (Taiwanese breakfast), dry rice noodles, spicy wonton, green onion pancake, gua bao, lemon clear jelly, egg tarts, boba milk tea and MUCH MUCH MORE!

**Fun Games & Activities including: gold fishing, karaoke room,
da dan zhu, shot pong, lantern painting, calligraphy, photo booth & MUCH MORE! There will also be awesome prizes and raffle prizes given out!

**Performers: CADC, Surreal Crew, CAMA, Dance Impressions Productions, Charlie Chang, VSA’s Lion Dance Team and Jennifer Chung!

And the best part is, admission is completely free (but you must purchase tickets for food/games/activities) so just come out and celebrate with us! We can’t wait to see all of you there!

Directions:

The Lantern Festival will be located on the first floor of the Student Center in Pacific Ballroom C & D (Student Center map: http://www.studentcenter.uci.edu/files/Directory-letter.pdf)

The Student Center is labeled as building 113 on the campus map: http://today.uci.edu/pdf/UCI_10_map_campus.pdf

Parking is available at the Student Center Parking Structure which is located right across from the Student Center (labeled SCPS on the map, which is right across from building 113)

For more info, please visit our website or email us at taouci@gmail.com!

228 Peace Memorial Concert in the SF/Bay Area

Date: February 26, 2011
Time: 2:00 pm
Location: Formosan United Methodist Church
Address: 788 Lewelling Blvd., San Leandro, CA 94579
Admission: $20/Adult; $10/Student

The Taiwanese American Federation of Northern California hosts its annual 228 commemoration concert.

The history behind February 28, 1947 otherwise known as “228″
On February 27, 1947, Chinese agents confiscated the merchandise and life savings of a Taiwanese cigarette vendor because she was being pushed to the edge and had no option but violating the state monopoly on tobacco to make a living, which sparked a riot that left at least one dead. The following day Chinese troops turned machine guns on a peaceful demonstration against the corruption of the Chinese administration of Taiwan. In the ensuing days several cities and towns were taken over by native Taiwanese groups. A week later a large force of Chinese troops arrived to retake control of the island through a campaign of rape and summary public executions. Between 10,000 and 20,000 Taiwanese were killed. Called the “228 Incident” because of the date of the initial massacre, this grim episode in Taiwan’s history is commemorated every February 28.

Featured performers include several young talented musicians from the Bay area:

Yingwen Lewis was born in Kaohsiung, Taiwan and began her piano studies at the age of four. She studied at the National Taiwan University of the Arts in Taipei before coming to the United States to study in Boston with Randall Hodgkinson, Hae-Sun Paik, and Benjamin Zander. Yingwen received her diploma in piano performance from the New England Conservatory in 1996. Yingwen’s repertoire includes an extensive list of representative works by Brahms, Mozart, Beethoven, Bach, Chopin, Liszt, Schumann, Debussy, and many others from the Baroque, Classical, and Romantic periods. Marked by fluid technique, focused style, and flawless execution, she is a well sought-after soloist, instructor, and accompanist.

Patricia Cheng is an active soloist and chamber musician who has performed in recitals and festivals throughout the United States and abroad. Her recent appearances in the San Francisco Bay Area include performances at the Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts, Stanford University, the Palo Alto Art Center and Foothill College. She earned a master’s degree in 2005 from the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, where she studied with Paul Hersh and was named a finalist in the school’s annual piano concerto competition. Ms. Cheng was born in Lincoln, Nebraska to Taiwanese parents. She earned her undergraduate degree with honors in English from the University of Chicago. She also won the prestigious Donnelley Cambridge Exchange Fellowship, which enabled her to study music for one year at Cambridge University. Ms. Cheng then attended Yale Law School, where she earned a J.D. while actively continuing her piano studies. Ms. Cheng currently teaches piano at the New Mozart School of Music.

Po-Wei Lai, a native of Taiwan, began his violin study at the age of six. Mr. Lai has also studied piano, Chinese violin and Chinese viola. At the age of 11, he was a soloist with the Gwung-Fu Orchestra; and at the age of 14, he was a soloist with the Double-Ten Orchestra in Taichung, Taiwan. In the same year, he performed in Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln Center in New York, as a concertmaster with the Double-Ten Orchestra. Mr. Lai completed his undergraduate and graduate violin studies with merit scholarships at the Peabody Conservatory of Music at Johns Hopkins University, and has won first prize in various competitions, including the Taiwan National Competition and the String Competition of Niagara International Chamber Music Festival.

Amy Hsieh, a native of Taiwan, is a member of the faculty at the Community School of Music and Arts. In 2002, she gave her New York debut Recital at Carnegie Hall’s Weill Recital Hall, as the winner of the Young Artists Cello Award of the 2001 Artists International Competition. As the founder of the Nuance Chamber Ensemble, Ms. Hsieh was invited by the Formosa Chamber Society to perform at Weill Recital Hall in 2004. After earning a bachelor’s degree from The Juilliard School and a master’s degree from the Manhattan School of Music, Ms. Hsieh was accepted as a scholarship student in the Doctor of Musical Arts program at Boston University, where she studied with Michael Reynolds and completed her degree in 2007.

Stephanie Lai, a Taiwanese American cellist raised in Virginia, made an acclaimed debut with the National
Symphony Orchestra in 2002 at the John F. Kennedy Center Concert Hall as the winner of their Young Soloists’ Competition. Recently, Stephanie was selected as one of ten cellists worldwide to perform in the YouTube Symphony Orchestra at Sydney Opera House in March 2011. She has performed throughout Japan as principal cellist of the Pacific Music Festival Orchestra. Stephanie holds a B.A. in Social Studies and Music from Harvard University, where she graduated magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa. She also earned her Masters in Cello Performance from the Royal Northern College of Music as a scholarship student in England. As an active community leader, Stephanie serves as a National Officer-at-Large for the Taiwanese American Citizens League, a counselor for Leading Youth Forward, and the Assistant Principal Cellist of the Berkeley Symphony.

Tyson Mao began violin lessons at the age of four and piano lessons at the age of six. He grew up in the Bay Area, and his music teachers include Phillip Levy, Leonid Gesin, Francesca Anderegg, and JoAnn Stenberg. Tyson was a member of the California Youth Symphony for 12 years, and won the senior concerto competition in 2002. He attended Caltech in Pasadena and was an active member of the chamber music programs, and was also concertmaster of the Caltech/Occidental Symphony Orchestra. Tyson was also winner of the Caltech Orchestra concerto competition in 2003 and 2005, and performed as soloist with the Caltech Mozart chamber orchestra in 2006. While living in New York, Tyson was a member of Camerata Nocturna. Most recently, Tyson participated with the Stanford chamber music program, and continues to pursue music as a hobby while working as a trader in San Francisco.

Catherine Leu graduated from Soochow University in Taipei with a B.M degree in piano performance and a minor in voice as a soprano. She has been a conductor for thirty years. Previously, she was the music director for Chun- Shen Lee Memorial Presbyterian Church, Sugar Creek Baptist Church, and Houston Chinese Christian choir. Since then, she has been the music director of East Bay Formosan United Methodist Church. Under her direction, the choirs have performed major works such as Handel’s Messiah and Vivaldi’s Gloria. As a soprano soloist, she has sung solo parts in many oratorios and folk songs. With many years of teaching experience in music institutions such as Yamaha as well as private music schools, Ms. Leu currently teaches privately in her studio at Walnut Creek.

TaiwaneseAmerican.org at BANANA 2 Conference in LA

TaiwaneseAmerican.org at BANANA 2 Conference in LA

A most wanted list of Asian Pacific Islander American bloggers from across the country will participate in BANANA 2 on February 26, 2011, from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. on the back lot of CBS Studios in Studio City, California.

Date: Saturday, February 26, 2011
Time: 8:00am – 6:00pm
Location: CBS Studio Center
Address: 4024 Radford Avenue, Los Angeles, CA
Facebook event page: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=180721625288318

TaiwaneseAmerican.org is proud to support this historic in-person gathering of prominent Asian American voices from across the Net! Also, TaiwaneseAmerican.org’s very own founder, Ho Chie Tsai, will also be speaking on an early morning panel entitled “Building Online Communities.”

*EDIT* Watch the recorded live-stream here:

*EDIT* Watch the other recorded live-stream panels here: http://www.ustream.tv/user/banana-2/videos

Register at http://www.banana-2.com/register/

BANANA 2 is a follow-up to the inaugural convening in Nov. 2009 co-hosted by Lac Su, author of I Love Yous Are For White People (HarperCollins, 2009) and Steve Nguyen, a television/film producer and head of the ChannelAPA.com’s Los Angeles division, who enlisted the help of a small group of bloggers and community activists to produce an event highlighting and amplifying the online voices of Asian Americans.

“We are excited to have a talented group of established and up-and-coming bloggers from the APIA community at this second annual gathering to share their voices, knowledge, endeavors and visions with others – bloggers and non-bloggers, APIAs and non-APIAs,” said Su. “All of the bloggers expected to attend have unique views of their own community, and will share their progression as an APIA blogger.”

The conference will provide an opportunity for bloggers and their readers to build a stronger community by beginning conversations and building relationships beyond the conference. Conference panels will include topics on using blogs and social media to create meaningful social change, working with businesses and corporations and defining the role of Asian American bloggers.

The first gathering featured bloggers from Angry Asian Man, Minority Militant, 8Asians, Neaato (Network of Entertaining Asian American Talent), Hyphen Magazine, Mochi Magazine, Channel APA, Bicoastal Bitchin’, AArising, Antisocial Ladder, Nikkei View, VisualizAsian, Kimchi Mamas, Asian Pacific Americans for Progress, DVAN (Diasporic Vietnamese American Network), bigWOWO, and Sepia Mutiny.

Conference admission is $20 per person. Participants will be able to register online at http://banana-2.com/ now until Feb. 25, 2011.

TO THE TOP: An Evening with the Bay Area’s Taiwanese American All-Stars

TO THE TOP: An Evening with the Bay Area’s Taiwanese American All-Stars

Date: Friday, February 25, 2011
Time: 8:00 pm – 11:00 pm. Doors open at 7:30 pm
Location: Glas Kat
Address: 520 4th Street, San Francisco, CA
Facebook event page (TAP-SF): http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=194531967241190
Facebook event page (RAMA): http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=198717113475787
General Admission $15; TAP members $10

TaiwaneseAmerican.org and TAP-SF present…

TO THE TOP: An Evening with the Bay Area’s Taiwanese American All-Stars
powered by RAMA

***Portion of proceeds will be donated to the Taiwanese American Citizens League (TACL) “Leading Youth Forward” Summer Camp and the Intercollegiate Taiwanese American Students Association (ITASA) West Coast Conference***

Taiwanese Americans are rising TO THE TOP, and TaiwaneseAmerican.org and TAP-SF invite you to celebrate along with five of the Bay Area’s very best Taiwanese American musicians. Come meet, mingle, and connect with the community (and with the artists themselves) in an intimate venue while listening to the most cutting edge music the community has to offer. Join us on the way to the top!

FEATURING:

::::|||| CYNTHIA LIN ||||::::
http://www.cynthialin.com
Drawing comparisons to Edith Piaf and Joni Mitchell, Cynthia Lin captivates audiences with a rich, outsized voice and witty, honest storytelling. Since 2003, Cynthia has released three albums independently. Her first album Blue and Borderlined was featured on NPR’s Open Mic series, and her second album Doppelganger was named one of the Top 5 Asian American Albums of 2007 by AsiaXpress.com. The uncommon blend of retro jazz with acoustic fingerstyle guitar and a bluesy vocal delivery makes Cynthia’s style unmistakable yet classic.

::::|||| JOHNNY HI-FI ||||::::
http://www.johnnyhi-fi.com/
Lead singer Eric Hsu formed his first indie rock band in 1992, and since then has performed hundreds of shows both in the US and around the globe. With numerous US and Asia tours under their belt, Johnny Hi-Fi’s alternative rock sound has captured fans all over. From the House-of-Blues US tour to the band’s video reaching #8 on MTV Chi’s top 10 video charts, all the attentions helped them land the “Artist of the Month” spot on Billboard Magazine’s Underground series and a feature in the magazine. In 2006, the band made appearances on CBS News, publications such as the New York Times and World Journal, also radio stations from Texas to Taipei. The band then went on to open for Placebo and Supergrass in front of 20,000 fans at the Beijing Pop Festival.

::::|||| ALICE TONG ||||::::
http://alicetongmusic.com/
After earning her Masters in Social Work from Columbia University and her Bachelor’s in Ethnomusicology from UCLA, Alice Tong has combined her experiences into a fresh new sound on her album “please be brave before the lions they come.” Alice is singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist living in Oakland, CA. Her piano, guitar, ukelele, and harmonica playing are influenced by indie folk rock, jazz, and alt country, while her rich vocals are inspired by jazz, soul, and blues. Alice’s studies in both Ethnomusicology and Social Work can be heard in the depth of her lyrics, soulfulness of her performances, and the genre-crossing nature of her songwriting.

::::|||| JACK TUNG ||||::::
http://jacktungmusic.com/
Jack Tung’s songs are precisely composed instrumentals performed by Jack alone in real-time on an electric guitar, a drum machine, synthesizers, and a sampler. His moody aesthetic is equally informed by the exhilarating and harsh thrash of his youth in the Long Island hardcore scene, and by the atmospheric film soundtracks absorbed as a lifelong cinephile. In live performance, Jack uses no pre-recorded parts and no backing tracks, save for the spare drum machine patterns which propel his arrangements. His precise execution and control of multiple layers of sound is a feat to witness.

::::|||| THE SOONEST ||||::::
http://www.thesoonest.com/
Andrew plays some drums. Greg plays guitar. Young tries to sing and play guitar at the same time but has trouble doing it well sometimes. Alex is good at the bass. Young and Andrew like music and burritos so they formed a band. Greg likes music too so he came along for the ride. We found Alex on craigslist. We thought he was going to be crazy but he turned out alright. We like what we do and we hope you enjoy our music or at least not want to throw things at us. If you do, please throw sandwiches. Thank you.

WITH YOUR HOST:

::::|||| RYAN TAKEMIYA ||||::::
www.gostudiorama.com

Brought to you by:
TaiwaneseAmerican.org www.taiwaneseamerican.org
Taiwanese American Professionals – SF tap.tacl.org
RAMA www.gostudiorama.com

Apply to be a Delegate for Strait Talk at Berkeley

Apply to be a Delegate for Strait Talk at Berkeley

Are you a student or young professional committed to international peace? Interested in conflict resolution, international relations, East Asia, or constructive dialogue? Ready to participate in an intensive, skill-building week to invest in a future based on mutual understanding?

Founded by undergraduate students, Strait Talk is a nonpartisan, youth-focused program that fosters peaceful progress and constructive dialogue in the Taiwan Strait. We achieve this by educating, connecting, and empowering young leaders from both sides of the Taiwan Strait and the United States. We look for student leaders who are committed to peace, social justice, and activism to participate as symposium delegates.

We are now accepting applications for Berkeley’s 3rd annual Strait Talk Symposium from April 7tth to 13th. A week long session that uses Interactive Conflict Resolution as a method for fostering dialogue between students from the US, China and Taiwan. We are looking for passionate students to represent the United States perspective of the cross-strait issue. Attending the symposium as a delegate is a unique experience to participate in peace-building dialogue, work with interested and equally committed people and make a small step towards peace. The Strait Talk symposium is an excellent way to meet other student leaders outside the US and become involved in a real and important effort to foster peace between the US, China, and Taiwan.

Applications are available on our website at straittalk.org. Applications will be accepted until February 21st, 2011. If you have any questions e-mail us at straittalk.berkeley@gmail.com

If you would like to participate in Strait Talk without being a delegate, students are more than welcome to join the organizing committee. Send us an email at straittalk.berkeley@gmail.com

Strait Talk is a nonprofit, student-run, student-centered conflict transformation and dialogue program focused on the Taiwan Strait conflict and US-China relations. We bring together university leaders from Taiwan and Mainland China, as well as the US, to help jump-start a movement toward sustainable peace in the region through forming powerful communities and facilitating meaningful dialogue.

Founded in 2005 at Brown University, Strait Talk partnered with the UC Berkeley campus in 2008 and ran an incredibly successful symposium in March, 2009 and April, 2010. See the write-up we got in Asian Week magazine: http://www.asianweek.com/2009/04/22/straight-talk-from-strait-talk/ . We are looking to build on last year’s success and give Cal’s emerging student leaders the opportunity to help this Symposium blossom into something not only worthwhile, but historic.

Lantern Festival Night Market at Stanford University

Date: Sunday, February 20, 2011
Time: 6:00 PM – 8:30 PM
Location: I-Center courtyard, Stanford University
Facebook event page: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=189268427763401

Do you miss the night market in Taiwan? Would you like to share some authentic Taiwanese street food with friends? Stanford Taiwanese Students Association is going to set up a booth in the Lantern Festival Night Market event.

The Lantern Festival is celebrated 15 days after the Lunar New Year where under the Full Moon, there will be a multitude of lanterns for the community to appreciate. It is also regarded as the East Asian version of St. Valentine’s Day. The Nightmarket event is a chance to showcase the many cultures that celebrate the Lantern Festival with food and performances. The many organizations involved will host booths that will either be selling food or leading an interactive event such as fortune telling or lantern decoration. During the festival, we will hang the lanterns around the courtyard to demonstrate the diversity and creativity of the community.

During the festivities of the Nightmarket, we will also have dance performances by the various cultural organizations and dance groups on campus. With the energy of this event, we hope that it instills further interest in the Asian community and strengthens the interactions between the organizations involved.

This event is being cosponsored by the Asian American Graduate Students Association (AAGSA), Asian American Students Association (AASA), Association of Chinese Students and Scholars at Stanford (ACSSS), Chinese Women Collective at Stanford (CWCS), Hong Kong Students Association (HKSA), Stanford Taiwanese Students Association (STSA), Stanford University Nikkei ( SUN ), Stanford Tzu Chi, and Undergraduate Chinese American Association (UCAA). These organizations represent graduate and undergraduate groups representing students from East Asia, Southeast Asia, and Asian Americans.

FAPA-YPG Regional Advocacy Conference in Houston

Want to learn how to effectively advocate for Taiwan? It’s as simple as telling your friends how good Taiwanese food is! Spare an afternoon, and we’ll show you how. Learn the ABCs of grassroots lobbying including how to express yourself efficiently to Members of Congress. You will gain knowledge on issues relevant to the Taiwan-U.S.-China triangular relationship including history and politics that dictate current cross-strait relations. Don’t miss the chance to network with other supporters. Take this opportunity to make a difference for Taiwan. FAPA Young Professionals Group is bringing its popular advocacy conference, which happens annually on Capitol Hill, to a place near you! Sign up by Feb 13 to be guaranteed with a spot. Each conference is limited to 50 participants – first come, first served. Taiwanese-style lunch box included. This conference is free of charge.

Date: Sunday, Feb 20, 2011
Time: 10:00AM~3:00PM
Venue: Houston Taiwan Institute for Senior Citizens
Address: 6100 Corporate Dr. #110, Houston, TX 77036

For more information, speaker bios, and registration: http://fapaypg.org/regional-advocacy-conference-2011/

Program

09:30 Registration starts
10:00 Intro of FAPA and FAPA-YPG
10:20 Short film on Development of Taiwan’s Democracy
10:40 Break
10:50 Guest Speaker – Dr. Bob Yang (link to his bio)
11:50 Lunch/Networking
01:00 Issues of Concern
01:45 Break
01:55 ABCs of Grassroots Advocacy
01:25 Preparation for Mock Congressional Visits
01:55 Mock Congressional Visits
02:30 Discussion on American Outreach
03:00 Conclusion

FAPA-YPG Regional Advocacy Conference in Dallas

Want to learn how to effectively advocate for Taiwan? It’s as simple as telling your friends how good Taiwanese food is! Spare an afternoon, and we’ll show you how. Learn the ABCs of grassroots lobbying including how to express yourself efficiently to Members of Congress. You will gain knowledge on issues relevant to the Taiwan-U.S.-China triangular relationship including history and politics that dictate current cross-strait relations. Don’t miss the chance to network with other supporters. Take this opportunity to make a difference for Taiwan. FAPA Young Professionals Group is bringing its popular advocacy conference, which happens annually on Capitol Hill, to a place near you! Sign up by Feb 13 to be guaranteed with a spot. Each conference is limited to 50 participants – first come, first served. Taiwanese-style lunch box included. This conference is free of charge.

Date: Saturday, February 19, 2011
Time: 10:00AM~3:00PM
Venue: Formosan Christian Church of Dallas
Address: 6700 Independence Parkway, Plano, TX 75023

For more information, speaker bios, and registration: http://fapaypg.org/regional-advocacy-conference-2011/

Program

09:30 Registration starts
10:00 Intro of FAPA and FAPA-YPG
10:20 Stories of White Terror Victims
10:40 Break
10:50 Guest Speaker – Dr. Don Rodgers
11:50 Lunch/Networking
01:00 Issues of Concern
01:45 Break
01:55 ABCs of Grassroots Advocacy
01:25 Preparation for Mock Congressional Visits
01:55 Mock Congressional Visits
02:30 Discussion on American Outreach
03:00 Conclusion

Registration Fee
FREE!