by Karen Nikos-Rose
December 17, 2020
All ready for the holidays and nowhere to go? Don’t despair. Lots of virtual events are on tap throughout the region: attend a virtual concert or play, or make something. And it’s virtual, so you can wear your comfortable home clothes. We even have events listed up through New Year s. Tie definitely optional. Read on.
Also, the Arts Blog, like UC Davis, will be on hiatus from Dec. 21 until Jan 4. So, we’ll catch you in 2021. This blog compiled my Michelle Villagomez, UC Davis Media Relations Intern
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Cello Ensemble: Flight of Freedom, free
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private. Discuss in the forum, contribute to the Encyclopedia, build your own MyAnime lists, and more.
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Two Ohio Lawmakers Put Dr. Susan Napier s Anime from Akira to Howl s Moving Castle On the Naughty List
posted on
2020-12-15 16:45 EST by Lynzee Loveridge
Lawmakers up in arms about allegedly pornographic book after Kent State assigns it to teen undergrad
Ohio State Rep. Reggie Stoltzfus and Representative Don Jones are calling for Kent State University to not assign adult-oriented material to minors. A parent of a high school student who attends the college was furious to discover racy material between the covers of Dr. Susan Napier s
Housing and Development Newsletter
Fabio Rambelli, professor of religious studies, interim chair of EALCS and International Shinto Foundation Chair in Shinto Studies, said the award was a well-deserved acknowledgment of Ikeuchi’s first-rate scholarship.
“The Department of East Asian Languages and Cultural Studies is enormously proud of this accomplishment by one of its faculty members; it is a very meaningful prize, one of the most important in the field of anthropology of East Asia,” he said.
“This prestigious achievement is a further indication of the vitality and creativity of the research being carried out by my colleagues, which places our department among the top in the nation for the quality and originality of its research output,” he said.
Hong Kong security law challenges free speech in U.S. classrooms
6 minute read
Hong Kong activists form a human chain in 2019 in front of the photographer’s former high school. Courtesy photo.
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Law criminalizes criticisms of China
When UC Davis students enroll this spring in professor Eddy U’s class on inequalities in contemporary China, they’ll be given the option to conceal their identities during Zoom discussions and submit work under a secret alias. Still, some students told The Enterprise the course may be too risky for them to take.
A law passed this year by the Chinese government threatens harsh punishments up to life in prison for broadly defined crimes related to criticism of the Chinese Communist Party. Introduced to crack down on Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement, the national security law applies to offenses committed anywhere in the world, including in the United States.
The U S And China Juggle For Soft Powers Through Film – Bwog bwog.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bwog.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.