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National Endowment for the Arts Annual Report 1990
National Endowment For The Arts Annual Report National Endowment For The Arts 1990 Annual Report National Endowment for the Arts Washington, D.C. Dear Mr. President: I have the honor to submit to you the Annual Report of the National Endowment for the Arts for the Fiscal Year ended September 30, 1990. Respectfully, Jc Frohnmayer Chairman The President The White House Washington, D.C. April 1991 CONTENTS Chairman’s Statement ............................................................5 The Agency and its Functions .............................................29 . The National Council on the Arts ........................................30 Programs Dance ........................................................................................ 32 Design Arts .............................................................................. 53 Expansion Arts .....................................................................66 ... Folk Arts .................................................................................. 92 Inter-Arts ..................................................................................103. Literature ..............................................................................121 .... Media Arts: Film/Radio/Television ..................................137 .. Museum ................................................................................155 .... Music ....................................................................................186 .... 236 ~O~eera-Musicalater ................................................................................ -
Partners Handbook 2020/2021 Season
The cast of Cambodian Rock Band; photo by Jim Carmody. Partners Handbook 2020/2021 Season Mission Statement La Jolla Playhouse Partners shall: Promote La Jolla Playhouse Donate time and services to the Playhouse Strengthen Playhouse ties with the community by participating in special projects of the Playhouse and community TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. HISTORY OF LA JOLLA PLAYHOUSE ............................................................................................................................. 3 2. GENERAL INFORMATION ........................................................................................................................................... 4 2.1 Additional Benefits ...................................................................................................................................... 5 2.2 Partners Board ............................................................................................................................................ 5 2.3 New Member Services ................................................................................................................................. 7 2.4 Name Badges .............................................................................................................................................. 7 2.5 Ticket Opportunities .................................................................................................................................... 7 2.6 Volunteer Hours ......................................................................................................................................... -
Chamber Orchestra Tackles "Star Wars"
VOLUME 50, ISSUE 7 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2017 WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORG UCSD CAMPUS CHAMBER !"#$%&'()*+*"( ORCHESTRA ,#+%+-'.(/'+01( 2%&'"(!*3*( 4567888(9"#:( ;<"*%. The men’s water polo team visited Croatia, Hungary, and London this past summer. G()A(1,-))?E$-"') "#$%&'()%'$*!+01/50 PHOTO COURTESY OF UCSD This past summer, the UC !"#$%&$'()$*+#,-$&"(./#0$ San Diego men’s water polo team 102"#340($-55#03$3467#)43$($ traveled to Europe to compete in 2"()2#$4-$2-)4+)6#$89(:+),$ Students squat, stand, and sip for a photo at a Bear Garden event. Photo by Eugenie Juan // UCSD Guardian various matches and to immerse .63+2$+)$2-99#,#;$.(<#$ in water polo culture. The team )#=$50+#)73$="-$3"(0#$4"#+0$ made stops in Croatia, Hungary, +)4#0#343;$()7$89(:$()$#>2+4+),$ CAMPUS and England, countries in which 0#8#04-+0#? water polo is very popular. The trip was funded largely by a private 2,E'$-,+<)))/E3,)))F !"*C'11*"(!"*:*1'1(='D(=%E'(C*"(@#F&A(>*33'G' donation. Deputy Director of Athletics GB)+H=9I8))JH=K5) !"##$%&'())*&++,-.&!, !"#$%&'()%'$*!+&'%,& Wendy Taylor May said that the Athletics Department worked *&+&%3,%$"$+))."1$%',,-+ proposal to rename Sixth College to Cesar approach the Sixth College Student Council.” Chavez College was met with swift student In light of these concerns, Graeve said she in accordance with UCSD’s "/&%&"%<))/=95)))> resistance at an Associated Students will be meeting with SCSC in two weeks to International Center faculty, Ameeting on Wednesday, Nov. 8. The proposal further discuss the proposal. She believes that the NCAA, as well as Federation Internationale de Natation, /0&1&//&%,))1&2, was made by Dr. -
PRESS RELEASE (858) 228-3094 | [email protected]
Contact: Becky Biegelsen PRESS RELEASE (858) 228-3094 | [email protected] LA JOLLA PLAYHOUSE ANNOUNCES HUNDRED DAYS, THE BENGSONS’ “LUMINOUS MUSICAL MEMOIR,” AS FINAL PRODUCTION OF 2018/2019 SEASON RUN DATES SET FOR FULL SEASON SLATE La Jolla, CA – La Jolla Playhouse announces Hundred Days, book by The Bengsons and Sarah Gancher, music and lyrics by The Bengsons, directed by Anne Kauffman, and movement direction by Sonya Tayeh, as the final production of its 2018/2019 season, to run September 22 – October 21 in the Mandell Weiss Forum. Dubbed “a luminous musical memoir” and a Critic’s Pick by The New York Times, Hundred Days is an exhilarating and heartrending autobiographical piece, written and performed by husband-and-wife team Abigail and Shaun Bengson, about embracing uncertainty, taking a leap, and loving as if you only had a hundred days to live. With their magnetic chemistry and unique musical style, the Bengsons explore the fundamental question of how to make the most of the time you have. “This deeply honest and life-affirming show is a terrific addition to the 2018/2109 season,” said Playhouse Artistic Director and 2017 Tony Award winner Christopher Ashley. “I’m always looking for vibrant and distinct new voices – as well as unique ways of storytelling – and the Bengsons speak to both these aims, culminating in a singular piece of theatre that defies genres. I can’t wait to share with our audiences.” Hundred Days joins the previously-announced 2018/2019 season productions of The Squirrels (June 5 – July 1), queens (July 3 – 29), Seize the King (August 21 – September 16), The Year to Come (December 4 – 30) and Diana (February 19 – March 31, 2019). -
Price Center • Level 4 Lecture/Theaterdining/Banquet Classroom Board/Conf
Maximum Capacity Price Center • Level 4 lecture/theaterdining/banquet classroom board/conf. hollow square u-shape reception/open room sq ft Governance Chambers 700 40 15 22 22 20 49 governance chambers open to Student Leadership 740 20 below Chambers student the leadership terrace chambers the forum The Forum 2270 120 80 42 30 46 45 150 Price Center • Level 3 warren college room open to below Earl Warren Room 644 40 40 21 22 28 20 50 one stop university to level 2 centers to administration level 2 university open to centers below event services sixth college room to level 4 Sixth College Room 322 12 alumni affairs lecture/theaterdining/banquet classroom board/conf. hollow square u-shape reception/open room sq ft Price Center • Level 2 green table room dance studio sun god bear lounge east Green Table Room 670 40 40 21 22 28 20 40 room to level 3 ballroom S.P.A.C.E.S. Patio comunidad room Bear Room 700 50 40 21 22 28 20 50 red shoe roosevelt room college to level 3 ballroom Red Shoe Room 700 50 40 21 22 28 20 50 room east snake path marshall room college room Snake Path Room 517 30 16 20 15 30 revelle college art to room john muir space level 1 Dance Studio 1290 49 college lounge room Roosevelt College Room 734 60 40 21 22 28 20 60 to level 3 cross cultural Marshall College Room 747 60 40 21 22 28 20 60 center Revelle College Room 375 12 ballroom west — a John Muir College Room 1000 70 48 27 22 36 24 70 the loft Ballroom East 5971 425 240 *200 600 lactation uc san diego bookstore room green Green Room 325 16 10 20 room ballroom west — -
PRESS RELEASE Contact: Becky Biegelsen (858) 228-3092 | [email protected]
PRESS RELEASE Contact: Becky Biegelsen (858) 228-3092 | [email protected] LA JOLLA PLAYHOUSE ANNOUNCES CAST AND CREATIVE TEAM FOR WORLD PREMIERE OF PUT YOUR HOUSE IN ORDER PLAYHOUSE KICKS OFF 2019/2020 SEASON WITH NEW WORK BY ACCLAIMED CHICAGO PLAYWRIGHT IKE HOLTER La Jolla, CA – La Jolla Playhouse announces the cast and creative team for its world-premiere production of Put Your House in Order, by acclaimed Chicago playwright Ike Holter (Lottery Day), directed by Lili-Anne Brown. The show kicks off the Playhouse’s 2019/2020 season, running in the Playhouse’s Mandell Weiss Forum June 2 – 30 (press opening: Saturday, June 8 at 8:00pm). The cast features Behzad Dabu (TV’s How to Get Away with Murder) as “Rolan,” local actress Linda Libby as “Josephine” and Shannon Matesky as “Caroline.” The creative team includes Arnel Sancianco, Scenic Designer; David Israel Reynoso (Playhouse’s Queens, Waking La Llorona, and many others), Costume Designer; Amanda Zieve, Lighting Designer; Victoria Deiorio, Sound Designer; Steve Rankin (Playhouse’s SUMMER: The Donna Summer Musical, Jersey Boys, and many others), Fight Director; Gabriel Greene, Dramaturg; Phyllis Schuringa, Casting; and Marie Jahelka, Stage Manager. “Rising Chicago playwright Ike Holter has created a funny yet suspenseful, genre-bending piece that I’ve never seen on stage – a play that had me laughing out loud and made the hair stand up on the back of my neck. I can’t think of a better way to launch our new season,” said Playhouse Artistic Director Christopher Ashley. In Put Your House in Order, Caroline and Rolan’s first date begins as a pretty average night that ends at her house in an upscale Chicago suburb. -
Conan O'brien Comes to Ucsd
SAVING THE WORLD ONE NOTEBOOK AT A TIME. PAGE 6 VOLUME 45, ISSUE 47 MONDAY, APRIL 23, 2012 WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORG UC SYSTEM STUDENT LIFE KUMEYAAY REMAINS Record UCSD Number Sued Over Admitted Human in 2012 Remains BY JAVIER ARMSTRONG BY ZEV HURWITZ Staff Writer Associate News Editor Native American tribes are According to the most recent suing the University of California admissions data, 2012 marks the over human remains found at the first time in several years that UCSD University House in 1976. The is not the third most selective UC Kumeyaay Cultural Repatriation campus. Committee filed the complaint on According to data released last April 13 with the United States week, UCSD, which ranked third District Court. The lawsuit says in the UC system in the number that the University of California of applications received, admitted has refused to repatriate, or return, 22,939 students, or 37.7 percent of the 9,000-year-old remains to the the 60,000+ applications for Fall CONAN O’BRIEN Kumeyaay tribe, on whose land the 2012. UCSD had the fourth most bones were found. selective admission rate, after UC According to the Courthouse Berkeley, UCLA and UC Irvine. News Service, UCSD prepared to UC Irvine overshot UCSD in give back the human remains in selectivity for applications from the January 2012, following the guide- class of 2016. According to an April COMES TO UCSD lines of a National Park Service 17 statement on the UCI website, regulation. The return was blocked the university chose to adhere to a By Nicole chaN • Associate News Editor by three University of California strict admissions guideline which professors who had prepared to file may have led to its increased selec- a temporary restraining order. -
Directional Map
A B C D E 1 1 d a Lane Point North o Torrey Pines R s Genesee Avenue Gliderport e North Point Drive n i P y ? e r A r B o h t Torrey Pines Scenic Drive T r o h N t r e v i o r D N s r a l o h P357 c 1 S 1 RIMAC Field 2 Salk Institute Road 2 C 2 Hopkins Drive D RIMAC 3 M Pangea 6 Parking Structure Hopkins Pangea Drive Thurgood Marshall Lane Parking Structure 5 P502 e an F L 5 ty Voigt Drive li a u q E E 4 L 0 5 P G / P304 Marshall e College P308 n a Ridge Walk L Field e Scholars Drive North Drive Scholars c i t s u J P303 P302 Canyonview P701 Aquatics Muir College Drive GEISEL P703 LIBRARY P704 3 3 P705 P208 P207 Voigt Drive Warren P782 Matthews Lane Field (Bus Parking) PRICE CENTER Library Walk Library BOOKSTORE H 4 P401 North Torrey Pines Road NorthTorrey T 2 Russell Ln. I Gilman Drive Myers Drive Scholars Lane Mandeville Lane h t u Gilman o S Parking e v i Structure r D Muir s r Field Main a l ? o Gym Gilman Drive h c P406 S Ridge Walk Ridge 4 4 ve ri 5 D 4 s re o h Gilman Drive S a ll o 3 J a L e an L e er iv sl r O D a ll o J La Jolla a L J th a l u l o i Shores S V K e v i r D s r a d l ho a P103 Sc o R s e n i Scholars Drive South P y e r r o P102 T h t La Jolla Village Drive r e v ri o D e N g lle Co lle ve 5 Birch Re 5 Aquarium ay La Jolla W n io it Playhouse d e p x E 52 A B C D E Directional Map GENERAL AREAS & INFORMATION RESTAURANTS & MARKETS HOUSING COMMUNITIES The Village / North Campus 1 The Village Market A The Village West H Muir Residence Halls Eleanor Roosevelt College 2 Café Ventanas B The Village East I Muir Apartments -
National Endowment for the Arts Annual Report 1989
National Endowment for the Arts Washington, D.C. Dear Mr. President: I have the honor to submit to you the Annual Report of the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Council on the Arts for the Fiscal Year ended September 30, 1989. Respectfully, John E. Frohnmayer Chairman The President The White House Washington, D.C. July 1990 Contents CHAIRMAN’S STATEMENT ............................iv THE AGENCY AND ITS FUNCTIONS ..............xxvii THE NATIONAL COUNCIL ON THE ARTS .......xxviii PROGRAMS ............................................... 1 Dance ........................................................2 Design Arts ................................................20 . Expansion Arts .............................................30 . Folk Arts ....................................................48 Inter-Arts ...................................................58 Literature ...................................................74 Media Arts: Film/Radio/Television ......................86 .... Museum.................................................... 100 Music ......................................................124 Opera-Musical Theater .....................................160 Theater ..................................................... 172 Visual Arts .................................................186 OFFICE FOR PUBLIC PARTNERSHIP ...............203 . Arts in Education ..........................................204 Local Programs ............................................212 States Program .............................................216 -
Eleanor Roosevelt College Thurgood Marshall
ERC Res HallsEarth Geneva North Biology Europe Field Ridge Walk Ridge Eleanor RooseveltERC Hopkins Drive Drive Hopkins Station Residence Life Institute of ERC Apts the Americas RIMAC Arena Earl Warren Latin RIMAC Arena Residential America AptsOceania Housing Kathmandu Earth EARL’S North South America PLACE & MARKET Harlan ELEANOR Cuzco Canyon Vista ELEANOR Residence Warren & Earl’s Place Halls ROOSEVELTROOSEVELT San Diego CANYON Frankfurter College Pangea Parking Asante IR/PS Supercomputer Structure VISTA Stewart Res Halls COLLEGECOLLEGE WaterCenter International Earl Warren House Residential Life Great Hall Social Graduate Brown Pangea Drive Sciences Thurgood Marshall Lane WARREN Apts Thurgood e Thurgood GOODY’S an TMC Residence Halls y L Marshall COLLEGE Parking lit Marshall a Bates Thurgood PLACE & MARKET u Residential Res Halls q Thurgood E Douglas Housing Marshall SINGLE GRAD MarshallUpper Voigt Drive ApartmentsUpper Apts Ridge Walk Goldberg Warren APARTMENTS Thurgood OceanView Thurgood Marshall College Residential Life MarshallThurgood Undergraduate Brennan Terrace Marshall ApartmentsApts OCEANVIEW LowerLower Apts THURGOODMarshall Apartments Student TERRACE College Field Economics Activities Center THURGOOD MARSHALLSequoyah Justice Lane Justice Hall PARTY Black MARSHALL Scholars Drive North Powell-FochtWARREN Mail Services ThurgoodCOLLEGE Marshall STATION Bioengineering Bldg. A COLLEGE Provost Engineering-I Hall Marshall Media Center & #1 COLLEGE College Communications Eucalyptus Admin. Point Jacobs School of Engineering Canyonview -
Campus Reacts to Racial Slur
DID IT HURT? YOU KNOW, WHEN YOU FELL FROM HEAVEN? PAGE 16 VOLUME XLII, ISSUE XXXV MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2010 WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORG >/,530),9;0,:*6330+, Affirmative +IUX][:MIK\[\W:IKQIT;T]Z Action Under ▶ .7+=; ▶ -,1<7:1)4 New Review By Angela Chen News Editor ,QITWO]M Low minority representation at UC Two words aired on campuses motivates one organization Student-Run Television ;PW]TL*M to file a lawsuit against Prop. 209. Thursday night brought UCSD into the national -VIJTML By Hayley Bisceglia-Martin spotlight — and into yet News Editor another campus free- 6W\.ZWbMV speech debate. After Kris Fourteen years after Prop.osition 209 banned Gregorian, editor in chief i Kappa Alpha and the affirmative action in California in 1996, a pri- of humor newspaper the less publicized frater- Koala, marily student-based coalition called “By Any said that protestors nities responsible for Means Necessary” is filing a class-action lawsuit of last week’s controversial P the “Compton Cookout” are — which names Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger “Compton Cookout” party breathing a deep sigh of relief and UC President Mark Yudof as defendants — were “ungrateful niggers” right now, because — just in to overturn Prop. 209 and reinstate affirmative on Channel 18, the Black the nick of time — the Koala action in California’s public schools. Student Union declared a has dependably swooped in to The lawsuit, filed on Feb. 16, argues that Prop. “State of Emergency” and WEB POLL steal the spotlight. 209 is unconstitutional, as it violates students’ issued a six-page list of NO YES All anger directed toward 14th Amendment rights by mandating separate demands to the university. -
Choose the Right Dining Plan for You
Choosing Your Choosing Your DINING PLAN DINING Everything you need to know about HDH Dining Services at UC San Diego 1 2021/2022 WELCOME TO HOUSING DINING HOSPITALITY @ UC San Diego Congrats! UC San Diego Dining Services is committed We are excited that you’ve chosen UC San Diego. If you to the health and safety of our students, choose to live on campus, your housing package will include faculty, and staff. a Dining Plan that is good for use at multiple Dining Services We are following guidelines set by local, state, and national restaurants, markets, and specialty locations across campus. health officials and we are consistently evolving to meet current county health guidelines. Our HDH Dining Facilities operate like any restaurant or market located outside of campus—decide to purchase as We routinely monitor our Dining Facilities and have much or as little as you need, and pay only for those items. implemented the following additional measures to ensure Table of Contents This “à la carte” style of service is designed to provide customer safety. flexibility, so that you’re not charged a flat rate just to walk For our current health and safety guidelines please visit through the door. hdh.ucsd.edu to review our HDH Covid-19 FAQ The Dining Plans . 4 Choosing the Right Plan for You + ACF Certified Chefs . 5 Sample Menu Items . 6 Allergen/Specialty Diets . 7 Markets + Special Events . 8 Triton2Go . 9 Employment + Triton Card Account Services . 10 Checklist + Quick Contacts . 11 Dining Index . 12 Campus Map . 13 2 3 THE DINING PLANS CHOOSING THE RIGHT The Dining Plans are designed to provide flexibility, with the understanding that “I love the convenience of being able you will occasionally be eating off campus, going home for weekends, or cooking PLAN FOR YOU to use my Dining Dollars whenever I in your residential unit.