Archive | September, 2010

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Up Dharma Down

Posted on 30 September 2010 by Ronald Gilliam


Up dharma Down is an award-winning Filipino rock band. Their discography already contains two LPs, 2006′s Fragmented and 2008′s Bipolar (both under independent record label Terno Recordings). They are expected to release their third album sometime in 2010. Mark Cole’s BBC show tagged them as the Asian band to most likely cross over to North American shores, and has been featured in numerous regional shows together with bands such as Arcade Fire (Canada) and Bloc Party (UK). Their eclectic music gave them the leverage to stand above most local bands in the Philippines, enough to be featured in the July 2007 issue of Time Magazine. They have also been recognized by Paul Buchanan of The Blue Nile and Tim Bowness of No-Man. The band was the opening act for Incubus’ Light Grenades Pacific Rim Tour Manila stop at Araneta Coliseum in Quezon City on March 9, 2008. In 2005, the band won the coveted In The Raw Award at the NU 107 Rock Awards as well as Best New Artist and Best Female Award for vocalist and keyboardist, Armi Millare, in 2006. In 2008, they were awarded Favorite Indie Artist at the Myx Music Awards. -taken from wikipedia.org


Official Website
| Facebook Fan Page | Myspace | Last.fm | Twitter | Time Article

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Viet Nam Links

Posted on 29 September 2010 by Ronald Gilliam

General Information

Embassy of Vietnam
World Press
CIA World Factbook
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
Doing Business (Viet Nam)
Lonely Planet World Guide
WWW Virtual Library
Outreach World
University of Hawaii Press

Language Learning

Vietnamese Fonts
Online Dictionary

Newspapers

Vietnam News (English)
Youth News-Thanh Nien (English, Vietnamese)
The Peoples’ Paper (English)
Vietnam Net Bridge (English)

Vietnamese Versions

Dan Tri (Vietnam)
VN Express (Vietnam)

Forums

Vietnam Scholars Group
Vietnam Business Forum
Lonely Planet Thorn Tree Travel Forum

Blogs

Expat Blog for Viet Nam
Blogs by Country

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Laos Links

Posted on 29 September 2010 by Ronald Gilliam

General Information

Embassy of Laos
World Press
CIA World Factbook
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
US-ASEAN Business Council
Doing Business (Laos)
Lonely Planet World Guide
WWW Virtual Library
Outreach World
University of Hawaii Press
Thailand, Laos, Cambodian Study Group

Language Learning

Lao Language Fonts
Online Dictionary

Newspapers

Vientiane Times (English)
Vientiane Mai (Thai)
Pasaxon (Thai)
Le Renovateur (French)
Lao News Agency (French)

Forums

Forum on Laos (English)
Lonely Planet Thorn Tree Travel Forum

Blogs

Blog for Laos

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Cambodia Links

Posted on 29 September 2010 by Ronald Gilliam

General Information

Embassy of Cambodia
World Press
CIA World Factbook
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
Doing Business (Brunei)
Lonely Planet World Guide
Outreach World
University of Hawaii Press
Thailand, Laos, Cambodian Study Group

Language Learning

Khmer Fonts
Online Dictionary

Newspapers

Phnom Penh Post
Cambodia Daily
News Agency of Cambodia

Forums

Cambodia Forum
Khmer Voice
Lonely Planet Thorn Tree Travel Forum

Blogs

Expat Blog for Asia
Blogs by Country
Documentation Center of Cambodia

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Thailand Links

Posted on 29 September 2010 by Ronald Gilliam

General Information

The Royal Thai Embassy in Washington D.C.
World Press
CIA World Factbook
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
US-ASEAN Business Council
Doing Business (Thailand)
Lonely Planet World Guide
Outreach World

Language Learning

Thai Fonts
Online Dictionary

Newspapers

Asian Tribune (English)
Bangkok Post (English and Thai)
Farang Pai Nai
Thairath (Thai)
The Daily News Online (Thai)
Ban Muang Online (Thai)
Matichon Online (Thai)

Forums

Photography Thailand Forum
Lonely Planet Thorn Tree Travel Forum

Blogs

Expat Blog for Thailand
Blogs by Country
Thai Student Association of UH

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Myanmar (Burma) Links

Posted on 29 September 2010 by Ronald Gilliam

General Information

Embassy of Myanmar
World Press
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
Lonely Planet World Guide
On-line Burma Library
US-ASEAN Business Council
Outreach World
University of Hawaii Press

Newspapers

BurmaNet News (English)
Burma Project Southeast Asia Initiative (English)
Irrawaddy (English)
Myanmar Times (English)
Kachin Post (English)
New Light of Myanmar (English)
ReliefWeb (English)

Burmese Version

The Mirror (Burmese)
Democratic Voice of Burma (Burmese)

Forums

Lonely Planet Thorn Tree Travel Forum

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Fall 2010 Archive

Posted on 23 September 2010 by Ronald Gilliam

Click on the links below to access Fall 2010 weekly announcement archives:

20101222 Weekly Announcement
20101208 Weekly Announcement
20101201 Weekly Announcement
20101124 Weekly Announcement
20101117 Weekly Announcement
20101110 Weekly Announcement
20101103 Weekly Announcement
20101027 Weekly Announcement
20101021 Weekly Announcement
20101013 Weekly Announcement
20101003 Weekly Announcement
20100922 Weekly Announcement
20100915 Weekly Announcement
20100901 Weekly Announcement

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Siti Nurhaliza

Posted on 23 September 2010 by Ronald Gilliam


siti_nurhaliza_272Siti Nurhaliza was born in Berek Polis Kg. Awah, Temerloh, Pahang, Malaysia, to father Tarudin bin Ismail, a policeman, and mother, Siti Salmah Bachik, a housewife. Initially, Siti was labeled a tomboy because of her active attitude and her tendency toward boyish appearance. When Siti was young, she wanted to be a policeman like her father. As she began to attend Sekolah Rendah Kebangsaan Clifford, she took on a more feminine appearance; and her mother’s grooming shaped her into a well-behaved and elegant Malay girl. In her school-year, she’s had involved in many various school activity especially sports and speeches, that made her one of the most successful students in her school.

Siti is the fifth child in the family of of eight siblings. She came from a musically inclined family. Her grandfather a famous violinist, her mother a traditional singer famous in Pahang, her brother and almost all in the family can sing. It’s her uncle, a former singer for a local band who influenced her the most. At a tender age of 5, her parents approved of her to follow her uncle to invitational shows like wedding ceremonies and dinner parties to give her exposure performing live and she was well received by the local community in Kuala Lipis and as far as Kuantan. When children her age plays with dolls, she was determined memorizing lyrics and practicing to follow her uncle to shows as long as she could sing.

Siti Nurhaliza’s family performed at many local ceremonies at their hometown, such as weddings. At the age of twelve, Siti began to learn traditional songs from her mother. Later, as she continued to work on her singing, she participated in numerous local singing competitions. She won the Merdeka Day Singing Contest in 1991 and the another contest during the Karnival Lipis. At 16, she competed in the 1995 RTM Juara Bintang competition. While there, she met Adnan Abu Hassan, a locally-famous composer. He tutored her and helped her with her vocal performance, thereby helping her to win the contest. After that, she was granted a contract with Suria Records, where Adnan worked, and in 1996 released her first album, Siti Nurhaliza. Making her first album was a challenge because she had to balance working on her album while preparing for and taking the SPM examination. Despite this, her first album was a great success, and this would pave the way for her extremely successful future albums.

After her first album, Siti Nurhaliza became a well-known figure in Malay pop culture. She continued to have numerous hits, her songs spanning a broad range of genres, such as pop, R & B, and traditional Malay. Her voice and lyrics proved popular with teenagers throughout Malaysia. Thanks to this, she dominated national award shows for years.

In the second ‘self-titled’ album, ‘Aku Cinta Padamu’ shoots her to stardom in the year 1997. This catchy song was so good that it penetrated the demanding Indonesian market for the first time and was well received by the music lovers there. A feat, that only a handful of Malaysian artistes were capable of doing. She was then invited the same year to perform a special one-hour show for a television station there. This move made Siti even more popular in this region.

Siti’s increasing popularity meant that demand for her endorsement is high. She sung themes for movies ( i.e Puteri Gunung Ledang )and corporate jingle for Maxis. She has also been featured in various advertisements and become spokewoman to many well-established brands such as Maxis, Maybelline, PEPSI, Jusco, TMnet,Konica Minolta, Nippon Wiper Blade, Olay skin care, and Samsung. The list of her endorsements keep increasing from year to year. For her successes at her young age, Puteri Umno named her Teen Princess of Malaysia in 2002. bio taken from asiasfinest.com


Official WebsiteWikipedia Article | Facebook Fan Page (Bahasa Malaysian) | Last.fm

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Four Thousand Years of Southeast Asian Art

Posted on 23 September 2010 by Ronald Gilliam

September 9, 2010-January 9, 2011
Henry R. Luce Gallery

For its major fall exhibition, the Honolulu Academy of Arts highlights its important but little seen collection of Southeast Asian Art. On view will be approximately 150 works of art from Thailand and Cambodia, many of which have never been displayed at the museum.

Visitors will travel through time and regions via three sections: The Neolithic and Bronze ages in Thailand and Cambodia; the Khmer kingdom, which dominated the central Southeast Asian peninsula from the 9th through the 15th centuries; and the Sukhothai kingdom, generally considered the first major Thai kingdom and the progenitor of the modern Thai state, which flourished from the 13th through the 15th centuries. The exhibition will cover the artistic and cultural developments of three important Southeast Asian cultures (Ban Chiang, Khmer, and Sukhothai) over more than 4,000 years, going from vibrantly decorated Neolithic earthenware ceramics to a dazzling gold Buddhist sculpture.

This exhibition is a chance for the public to discover a major resource in Hawaii for the study of Southeast Asia, and it promotes a greater awareness and appreciation of Southeast Asian cultural and artistic traditions in the Hawaii community.

SPECIAL PROGRAMMING

Lecture series:
Public lectures by University of Hawaii professors Miriam Stark and Paul Lavy will greatly illuminate the works on view in the exhbition. Lectures will be held on Thursdays throughout October at 4 p.m. in the Doris Duke Theatre. Admission is free.

Oct. 7:From Stone to Bronze and Village to City: Southeast Asia’s Buried Past
Southeast Asia’s earliest archaeological remains date back more than 1.8 million years. Through the millennia, Southeast Asians crafted their lives and shaped their landscapes in ways that ultimately produced kingdoms and empires. This lecture surveys Southeast Asia’s history from an archaeological point of view, and highlights key developments from the Neolithic through the Classical period.Miriam T Stark, PhD; Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of Hawai’i at Manoa

Oct. 14:Vishnu’s Heavenly Realm: Angkor Wat and Ancient Khmer Architecture
Angkor Wat (12th century), one of the worlds largest and most complex religious monuments, was built as a temple dedicated to the Hindu god Vishnu and later transformed into a Buddhist sanctuary. This lecture will examine Angkor Wat’s history, architecture, and symbolism and explore its central role in Khmer (Cambodian) culture. Paul Lavy, PhD; Assistant Professor of South and Southeast Asian Art History, Department of Art and Art History, University of Hawai’i at Manoa

Oct. 21:Cultivating the Image of Compassion: Power, Propaganda, and the Statuary of Ancient Angkor
Hindu and Buddhist sculpture was central to both religion and politics in ancient Angkor. This lecture will investigate the intersection of politics, religion, and art at the peak of Angkors power during the reign of its most colorful king, Jayavarman VII, a ruler who cleverly utilized unusual Buddhist art to express both his personal piety and political ambitions. Paul Lavy

Oct. 28:Walking with the Buddha: The Art of Sukhothai
The kingdom of Sukhothai (13th-15th centuries) was the first major Thai kingdom and it is often regarded as the Golden Age of Thai civilization. This lecture will provide an introduction to the art of Sukhothai and explore the symbolism and style of Sukhothai Buddha images, renowned worldwide for their elegance and distinctive stylistic qualities.

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The Ann Dunham Soetoro Endowed Fund

Posted on 22 September 2010 by Ronald Gilliam

The Ann Dunham Soetoro Endowment is a tribute to an independent thinker who used Applied Anthropology to analyze situations and prevailing assumptions to develop creative and effective solutions. It is a living legacy to a compassionate human being who lived and worked among the people she was studying, seeking to understand their culture and values in a way that allowed her to bring about lasting change.

With a faculty position housed in the Anthropology Department at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, and fellowships administered by the East-West Center, the Ann Dunham Soetoro Endowment will support action-oriented research and teaching that seek to influence the next generation of committed scholars working in Asia and the Pacific.

A LEGACY OF LEARNING:

Ann Dunham Soetoro’s dedication to education for herself and her children, and to providing educational tools to communities in Indonesia, reflect her belief that knowledge builds the foundation by which people can help themselves and others.

Her commitment to partnering with others to create sustainable change is evident throughout her life’s work and studies. While at the Ford Foundation in Indonesia, Ann worked with non-governmental organizations to support programs addressing women and poverty; later she established extensive microcredit programs throughout Indonesia and Pakistan. Ann personally sponsored dozens of students in Indonesia so they could work with her to learn about microcredit, research and crafts.

THE ANN DUNHAM SOETORO ENDOWMENT

The endowment will honor Ann Dunham Soetoro and the work this fund will perpetuate. It is a natural extension of her studies at UH Mānoa as an East-West Center scholarship student, as well as her life as a researcher, faculty member and grant maker.

The Ann Dunham Soetoro Endowment is a collaborative effort between UH Mānoa and the East-West Center. As partners these two institutions together represent the highest concentration of Asia-Pacific specialists in the United States, making this the optimal location for the Endowment.

The Ann Dunham Soetoro Endowed Chair in Anthropology

The endowed faculty chair will support the work of faculty whose research and teaching focuses on Southeast Asia. The endowment will support the recruitment of an outstanding anthropologist with a demonstrated commitment to research that engages communities in action-oriented work capable of addressing issues of local concern and global significance.

The endowed chair will strengthen and expand that tradition of scholarship by supporting an established scholar of Southeast Asia to build a curriculum and research program that attracts students from throughout the region, as well as work with others to create new models for collaborative action relevant to contemporary issues.

The Endowment will make it possible for the Chair to turn knowledge and commitment into research and results just as Ann did by addressing cultural, economic and social realities in rural and urban Indonesia.

Ann Dunham Soetoro Graduate Fellowships

Creating opportunities for graduate students to follow Ann’s footsteps by seeking innovative solutions.

Fellowships will be granted in cooperation with the East-West Center to students who represent Ann’s values and interests in nurturing understanding, engaging in community service, and promoting empathy to encourage global cooperation. Supported by endowment funds, these fellowships will be awarded to students for generations to come.

Fellowships will be awarded to students focusing on:

* Anthropology or other social sciences, with an emphasis on action-oriented and collaborative work addressing contemporary issues of pressing concern in local communities and the region as a whole.
* Development studies with particular emphasis on communities in Indonesia and Southeast Asia, focusing on connections between economic change and the social and cultural factors that give meaning and value to people’s lives.
* Women’s studies addressing the role of women in social and economic change. There will be a preference for candidates from the U.S. or Indonesia, with secondary preference from other Southeast Asian countries.

Through the recipients and their work, Ann’s values and appreciation of an intercultural and international education will be perpetuated, and help us better understand and heal our world.

CONTRIBUTE TO THE ANN DUNHAM SOETORO ENDOWMENT

We invite you to join us as we create new opportunities for intercultural and international education to nurture future generations of critical thinkers who partner with communities to bring lasting positive change.

How you can give:

You can make a gift online.

Mail your contribution:
ATTN: Ann Dunham Soetoro Endowment Fund
UH Foundation
P.O. Box 11270
Honolulu, HI 96828-0270

For more information, please contact Leslie Lewis at Leslie.Lewis@uhfoundation.org or (808) 956-9702.

more info

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