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ANNOUNCEMENTSEmployment Opportunity The San Francisco Arts Commission is looking for a Cultural Equity Grants Program Director. Under general direction from the director of cultural affairs, the cultural equity grants director manages several grant-making and related programs that provide financial and technical assistance to local artists and art organizations. The CEG director plans, organizes, promotes and schedules each annual grant program; develops and adheres to budgets for each program; develops program policies and writes guidelines for each program; through subordinate(s), supervises the distribution of program guidelines; conducts pre-proposal workshops and provides one-to-one pre-proposal counseling; screens all incoming grant proposals and communicates with applicants; plans, prepares and manages evaluation panels; prepares reports for Commissioners; oversees grant agreement administration. Must be able to use computer databases and enhance electronic access to the grant-making process. Supervises one to two program assistant(s) and performs other duties as assigned. Reasonable accommodation to participate in the selection process may be requested by calling 415-252-2558, or by writing to Personnel Officer, Job 3544, San Francisco Arts Commission, 25 Van Ness Avenue, Suite 240, San Francisco, CA 94102. Childrens Services Fund As a collaborative between Wu Yee Childrens Services, Whitney Young Child Development Center and Childrens Council of San Francisco, the San Francisco Vendor Voucher Program assists San Francisco low-to-moderate income families in paying for licensed childcare for children 0-13 years old. It is designed to serve single-parent families who are working or have been offered employment, and two-parent families, of which either parent is working and offered employment and the other parent is working or enrolled in school or job training. Through the program, parents will be free to choose any licensed childcare provider, as well as receive childcare counseling. Registration is on-going and enrollment is based on availability of open slots. For more information and application forms, call Wu Yee Childrens Services, 415-391-8993. Computer Classes Free after-school computer classes for low-income children in the Tenderloin, Mission, Chinatown and Western Addition are available through the Career Resources Development Center in San Francisco. For more information, call 415-775-8880. Education Fund for Queer API Youth The Asian & Pacific Islander Wellness Center is accepting applications for 2-6 award scholarships, with award amounts ranging from $500 to $5,000, for API lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and questioning youth living in the Bay Area. Applicants must be 22 years old or younger; a high school senior, high school graduate, have a GED, or attending college. For more information on how to obtain an application, please call Denise Tang at 415.292.3400 x323, or go to www.apiwellness.org. Completed applications should be sent to Asian & Pacific Islander Wellness Center, 730 Polk Street, 4th floor, San Francisco, CA 94109. Deadline: May 31. Paid Research Subjects Needed Project CHAMPS invites you to participate in a research study. All participants will receive up to $30. Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco are conducting a study to examine how culture, health and mood may influence smoking habits. The information will help investigators design more effective smoking cessation programs to serve the community. Participation will involve completing questionnaires, an interview, and providing breath and saliva samples. Study procedures can be completed at the time and location that is convenient for you. You must be over 18 years old and have smoked at least 5 cigarettes in the past seven days in order to participate. The questionnaires and interviews are available in both Chinese and English. For further details, please visit the study Web page at www.ucsf.edu/smoke or call our research staff at 415-476-7319.
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| SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA |
Summer Session at Sea 2001 College students interested in combining summer school with a cruise to the Pacific Islands and Asia might want to consider Summer Session at Sea 2001, which is being offered by the Asian and Asian American Studies Department at California State University, Long Beach. Scheduled from June 20 to Aug. 21, the summer session is slated to depart from Honolulu and visit Yap Island, Cebu (the Philippines), Hong Kong, Shanghai, Sasebo (Japan), Midway Islands and Kona before returning to Vallejo, Calif., where the training ship is based. The ship will stay one to three days at each port to allow students to conduct field trips and/or do sightseeing. For more information, call CSULB Department of Asian and Asian American Studies at 562-985-4645 or CSULBs University College and Extension Services at 562-985-7754.
Know Gangs, No Gangs On Friday, June 1, the Asian Youth Center, in collaboration with the Los Angeles Chinese American Sheriffs Advisory (LACASA) and other agencies, will be hosting an Asian Gang Violence Awareness & Prevention forum Know Gangs, No Gangs. The conference is from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., and registration begins 8:30 a.m. Know Gangs, No Gangs serves to educate and assist local community leaders, school administrations, teachers, and counselors in identifying issues of gang culture, its symptoms and causes, its signs and remedies, and gang-related crime and violence. Please contact Jenny Vu at 626-309-0622 x110 for more information or reservations.
Power Wheelchairs Available Miracle on Wheels of Santa Barbara makes available power (electric) wheelchairs to non-ambulatory senior citizens (65 years old & up), usually at no out-of-pocket expense if they qualify. No deposit required. The electric wheelchairs are provided to those who cannot walk or self-propel a manual wheelchair in their home or independent living quarters, and who meet the additional qualifications of the program. This service may also be available to the permanently disabled of any age. Please call 1-800-749-8778 or visit our Web site at www.durablemedical.com for more information on the details of this program.
Free Citizen Workshop The Asian Pacific American Legal Center of Southern California (APALC), in conjunction with the L.A. County Department of Community and Senior Services, will host a citizenship application workshop on Saturday, May 26, from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. The workshop will be held at the Countys San Gabriel Service Center, located at 3017 Tyler Avenue in El Monte. Service is free for L.A. County residents, but applicants must pre-register by calling APALC at 213-977-7500 x247. Call the same number for more information.
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MIDWEST
Protest and Resistance Please join Heart Mountain Foundation, University of Wyoming and University of Colorado, Boulder, at this three-day event from June 21 -23, that will shed new light on a period in U.S. history that has been misunderstood, inaccurately reported, maligned, and left unresolved in the Japanese American community for over 50 years. Learn about Cheyenne, Wyomings own Boston Tea Party when democracy went on trial and no one seemed to care. Hear first-person accounts from draft resisters interned at Heart Mountain Relocation Center and interact with scholars, facilitators and family members for an unforgettable 3 days of discourse, discussion and dialogue. The basic registration fee is $25. Please send registration and payment to Pat Wolfe. Heart Mountain Wyoming Foundation, P.O. Box 547, Powell, Wyoming 82435-0547, or fax to 307-754-0119. For queries, e-mail pwolfe@wavecom.net, ctak@ceo.cudenver.edu, or pterophil@mail.msn.com.
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NATIONAL
Scholarship Funds for 2001 National Preservation Conference The National Trust for Historic Preservation encourages culturally diverse community activists and college students to apply for the scholarships to the National Preservation Conference 2001, which will be held in Providence, R.I., Oct. 16-21, and is considered the countrys premiere preservation event. The scholarship deadline is June 15, 2001. The conference Preserving the Spirit of Place offers tools to strengthen effectiveness and commitment to preserve historic places and revitalize communities. Participants will learn through plenary and educational sessions, field sessions, discussion groups and tours of Providence and surrounding areas. For an application, contact the National Trusts Southern Office, 456 King Street, Charleston, S.C., 29403, or call 843-722-8552. Applications are also available through the National Trust fax service at 202-588-6444, document #9006, or online at www.nthpconference.org.
Student Exchange Program The American International Youth Student Exchange Program is a non-profit high school foreign exchange program in the United States, Europe and other parts of the world. At present, AIYSEP seeks host families for 25 students from high schools in Europe and other countries for the coming school year. Students will arrive in the United States in late August, attend local schools and return home in late June next year. The students, all fluent in English, have been screened by their school counselors and will receive medical insurance and spending money. AIYSEP is also seeking American high school students, ages 15-19, who would like to spend a high school semester or year with a European family or to participate in a 4- or 6-week family stay abroad in the summer. Interested students and families are asked to please contact the AIYSEP International Headquarters: Office of the Director, 200 Round Hill Road, Tiburon, CA 94920; 1-800-347-7575; www.aiysep.com; aiysep@aol.com.
Psychiatric Abuse If you have ever been harmed or abused by psychiatric or other mental health treatments, please call the Citizens Commission on Human Rights at 1-888-738-2247.
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