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Saturday, February 21, 2009

CONSTANTINE'S SWORD

Feb. 27: Constantine’s Sword (2008). 95 min. This film by
Oscar-nominated documentarian Oren Jacoby, is an astonishing exploration
of the dark side of Christianity, following acclaimed author (National
Book Award) and former priest James Carroll on a journey of remembrance
and reckoning. His search for truth leads him to confront persecution
and violence today and in the Church’s past. At its heart, this film is
a detective story, and an appeal for religious and cultural tolerance
and respect. http://constantinessword.com/

Discussants: Dr. Robert Maldonado, Dr. Terry Winant & Jim Grant

Film Screening
Date: Friday, Feb. 27
Time: 5:15 P.M
Place: McLane 121

Cineculture Club promotes cultural awareness through film and
post-screening discussions.

CineCulture is a film series provided as a service to the Fresno State
campus students, faculty, and staff, and community, at no charge. In
addition, CineCulture is offered as a 3 unit academic course in the Mass
Communication and Journalism Department.

For further information contact Professor Mary Husain at
mhusain@csufresno.edu

For more information:
CineCulture Club: http://cineculture.csufresno.edu/
Fresno Filmworks: http://www.fresnofilmworks.org/

Club President: Roxanne Villaluz lokaane3@csufresno.edu
Faculty Advisor: Mary Husain mhusain@csufresno.edu

Thursday, February 19, 2009

KING OF MASKS

SPRING 2009
Film Screening

Feb. 20: King of Masks (1996). Wang is an aging street performer who practices the change-mask opera art of bian lian. Seeking to pass his art to a grandson, one night he is sold a young boy by a slave trader posing as the boy's parent. "Grandpa" finds new joy in life as he plans to teach "Doggie" (an affectionate term often used for young children in China) his art. All is well until Doggie is found out to really be a girl. 91 min. In Mandarin with English subtitles.

Date: Friday, February 20, 2009
Time: 5:15 P.M
Place: McLane 121
Discussant: Dr. Ed EmanuEl

CineCulture is a film series provided as a service to the Fresno State campus students, faculty, and staff, and community, at no charge. In addition, CineCulture is offered as a 3 unit academic course in the Mass Communication and Journalism Department.

For further information, contact Professor Mary Husain at mhusain@csufresno.edu.

Cineculture Club promotes cultural awareness through film and post-screening discussions.

For more information:
CineCulture Club: http://cineculture.csufresno.edu/ Fresno Filmworks: http://www.fresnofilmworks.org/

Club President: Roxanne Villaluz lokaane3@csufresno.edu Faculty Advisor: Mary Husain mhusain@csufresno.edu

Friday, February 13, 2009

OPERA HEROINES: THE PRICE OF LOVE

FRESNO STATE MUSIC ALUMNI CHAPTER presents

OPERA HEROINES: THE PRICE OF LOVE
with Melissa Wolfmann, lirico spinto soprano and Matthew Horton, piano

Date:Sunday, February 15, 2009
Time: 3:00 p.m.
Place: Concert Hall on the Fresno State campus

Tickets are $12 general admission, and $7 seniors/students. For tickets call 559-278-2654 or visit www.csufresno.edu/music

Tickets will also be available at the door one hour before the performance.

The recital will feature arias from well-known operas such as Tosca, Aida, Otelleo, Madama Butterfly, Turandot, and Don Giovanni.

"HAVE A HEART" FOOD AND FUND DRIVE

Communication Department Student Group Launches "Have A Heart" Food and Fund Drive Benefiting Community Food Bank

Each year the period right after the Holidays is a difficult time for the Community Food Bank. Food supplies are always low, but the current economy makes the situation worse than ever. As you may know, the Community Food Bank not only supports Fresno but also outlying areas in the San Joaquin Valley that might be in need.

The "Have a Heart" food and fund drive was launched last February near Valentines Day. When the Fresno State community learned that every dollar donated allowed the Food bank to purchase $8 in food, they generously donated. Last year the campus donated over $1,200, allowing the Community Food bank the power to purchase almost $10,000 worth of food for needy families throughout Central California

This year's "Have a Heart" drive will take place from Tuesday, Feb. 17- Friday, Feb.20. Students from the Professional Communication Association will be taking donations in the Free Speech area those 4 days between 11:30 and 1:00. Every donation will make a huge difference!

If you prefer to write a check, please make it out to the Community Food Bank and send it to the Communication Department, Attention Craig Fowler - PCA. If you have questions, please contact Craig Fowler at crfowler@csufresno.edu or Evan Halstead at evan.halstead@gmail.com

AN EVENING WITH TUCKER SMALLWOOD, ACTOR, AUTHOR, VIETNAM VETERAN

Theatre Arts Department presents
An evening with Tucker Smallwood, Actor, Author, Vietnam Veteran

Reading and discussing his book Return to Eden

Date: Saturday, February 21st
Time: 7 p.m. Free
Place: Woods Theatre, Speech Arts Building

Reception and book signing to follow

Limited Seating
R.S.V.P. to 278.5109 or pamd@csufresno.edu by February 18th

ABOUT TUCKER SMALLWOOD
Born in Washington, D.C. his early years included living for two years in Greece and two more in college in Munich, Germany. He received a BA in Speech/Television Production, from the University of Maryland. He began directing television and was then drafted into the Army in 1967.

Following his training, his service as an Advisor to Vietnamese troops in the Mekong Delta and his recovery from wounds received, he resigned his commission and moved to New York to study acting. He studied under Sanford Meisner and Stella Adler. After being cast in the soap opera Somerset, he was required to leave school, because students were not allowed to work professionally.

He had an enduring relationship at Joseph Papp’s Public Theater, as well as other roles in Broadway and regional theater productions. Additionally, he filmed more than 1000 television and radio commercials and PSA’s during that decade. During the ‘80’s, he appeared in The Cotton Club and Presumed Innocent.

In 1991, he moved to Los Angeles and began his work in prime time television. After several years of guest starring roles on dramas and sit-coms, he chanced into the universe of science fiction with roles in the series SPACE: Above and Beyond, The X-Files and Babylon 5, as well as in the films CONTACT and DEEP IMPACT. Theatrically, he performed in several productions for the Mark Taper, Cast Theater and Odyssey Theater.
Tucker spent a season as a Xindi diplomat for Star Trek: Enterprise. He's generated controversy as God on the Sarah Silverman Program and the film Black Dynamite that premiered at Sundance in January '09.

Following his return to Vietnam in 2004, in the late summer of 2006, he published an anthology of essays entitled RETURN TO EDEN

The listing of all of his shows and characters can be accessed by typing his name (Tucker Smallwood) into IMDb.com.
Pamela Dyer
Business and Promotions Manager
Theatre Arts Department
California State University, Fresno
5201 N Maple Avenue
Fresno CA 93740
559.278.7512
pamd@csufresno.edu

Friday, February 6, 2009

SO YOU WANNA BE A BROADCAST JOURNALIST?

The College of Arts and Humanities Presents Distinguished Alumnus

Nancy Osborne, B.A. Speech and Communications – Theatre Arts 1976
Anchor Reporter
KFSN-TV ABC30 Action News

So YOU wanna be a Broadcast Journalist?

Date: Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Time: 7:00 PM – 8:30 PM
Place: Alice Peters Auditorium

If so you better want to win, beat the competition every day and look good doing it. As a daily reporter and news anchor for ABC30 for three decades Nancy Osborne has the ultimate insider’s view of what it takes to succeed.

In an age where faces come and go hers remains steady. That is a source of great pride for one of the first women to join the ranks of broadcast journalism in the Central Valley.

For more information visit: http://www.csufresno.edu/artshum/lecture_series/NancyOsborne.htm

"ARMENIAN CONSTANTINOPLE/ISTANBUL: CHURCH, SOCIETY, AND CULTURE" BY DR. RONALD MARCHESE

Professor of Ancient History and Archaeology, The University of Minnesota Duluth

Date: Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Time: 7:30 p.m.
Place: University Business Center Alice Peters Auditorium
Free Admission

Dr. Marchese has spent the last several years documenting the rich cultural history of the Armenians in Constantinople, by studying the works of art that the Armenians produced. He will present an illustrated lecture on his research.

(Partially funded by the Associated Students, Inc.)

Barlow Der Mugrdechian, Coordinator
Armenian Studies Program
5245 N Backer Ave PB4
Fresno, CA 93740-8001
Email: barlowd@csufresno.edu

ASP Office: 559-278-2669
Office: 559-278-4930
FAX: 559-278-2129

"PLATO'S POLITICAL PESSIMISM: WHY THE IRONIC INTERPRETATION OF THE REPUBLIC ISN'T AS CRAZY AS IT SEEMS".

Date: Monday, February 9, 2009
Time: 5:00 - 6:00pm
Place: Speech Arts, Room 151

Mark Ralkowski, Ph.D.
University of New Mexico, Albuquerque

Abstract: There are several obstacles -- what I call the ontological, epistemological, moral, and political problems -- blocking the standard interpretation of the Republic as a work of utopianism. The first three of these problems are sufficient to show that the ideal state cannot come into existence, and the fourth informs us that an approximation of it is improbable and extremely undesirable. To make this last point, I describe the philosophic nature, explain how it is corrupted, and argue, on the basis of historical evidence and textual evidence from Plato's Republic, that this account applies to Alcibiades. Then I show that the Republic makes three references to Alcibiades, and that the second and third of these links the Republic with the conclusion of the Symposium, where Plato presents what one scholar describes as "the most indelible portrait of Alcibiades from antiquity." This portrait of Alcibiades gives us the best evidence that Plato thought of Alcibiades as a potential philosopher. In his speech, he is portrayed as possessing a significant degree of philosophical insight, despite being ruined by moral weakness. Once we link the Republic and the Symposium in this way, we can see the true tragedy of the Symposium, which is the fate of philosophy in society.

Monday, February 2, 2009

BEFORE THEY DIE: THE STORY OF THE SURVIVORS OF THE 1921 TULSA RACE RIOT AND THEIR QUEST FOR JUSTICE

CELEBRATING AFRICAN PEOPLE’S MONTH

Feb. 6: (2008). 92 min

Before they die: The story of the survivors of the 1921 Tulsa race riot and their quest for justice. (2008). Director & Producer Reggie Turner. In 1921 white vigilantes looted and burned

America’s most prosperous black community. This documentary follows the Survivors, and their legal team headed by Professor Charles Ogletree, through the court system all the way to the Supreme Court and on to the US Congress. http://www.beforetheydiemovie.com/

Post screening discussant: Dr. Malik Simba & Dr. Hasan Johnson

Cineculture Club promotes cultural awareness through film and post-screening discussions.

For more information:
CineCulture Club: http://cineculture.csufresno.edu/
Fresno Filmworks: http://www.fresnofilmworks.org/

Club President: Roxanne Villaluz lokaane3@csufresno.edu
For more information contact -Faculty Advisor: Mary Husain mhusain@csufresno.edu