Culture & Art

Culture & Art (145)

"Scenarists, directors, producers, opera singers, painters,mastery of cello, actor, actress, musicians, and dance groups are all in this section.  Their performans, exhibitions, films, music, show, biennials... "

NJ Legislature Recognized Turkish-American Organizations for Accomplishments, Contributions

Image On Dec 3rd and 20th, New Jersey General Assembly and Senate in Trenton recognized Turkish-American organizations for their tireless efforts trying to make a difference in the state of NJ. Peace Islands Institute, Turkish Cultural Center, Turkish American Business Development and Improvement and the Pioneer Academy of Science were honored by both the Assembly and the Senate.

Little Change in U.S. Newspaper Circulation Numbers

Image NEW YORK (AP) — A media industry group says U.S. newspaper circulation was almost unchanged in the six months ended Sept. 30. The Wall Street Journal kept its position as the No. 1 newspaper. Its average circulation grew 9.4% to 2.3 million. USA TODAY was second at 1.7 million, followed by The New York Times at 1.6 million. Circulation at the Times grew 40% from a year ago. More than half of the Times' circulation was for digital editions Average daily circulation in the April-September period slid 0.2% for the 613 newspapers included in the semiannual study by the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Sunday circulation for the 528 newspapers in Tuesday's report increased 0.6%.

Ahiska Turkish Communities Opens Its New Facility

Image On Novermber 30 , with recognition of American and Turkish Anthems began the grand opening of the new facility of Ahiska Turkish American Community Center, located at 1306, E Fifth street, Dayton,Ohio. Not only all top officials of Dayton but also those from Montgomery County, Ohio State, Turkish Embassy and heads of many international organizations attended the event: State Senator Bill Beagle,State Representative Roland Winburn, Consul General of the Republic of Turkey Fatih Yildiz,the former governor of Ohio Bob Taft, Secretaries of Azerbaijan Embassy Rashad Najaf and Emil Safarov, , Past President of Assembly of Turkish American Assocuiations Gunay Evinch, General Secretary of Federation of Turkish American Associations Turan Atabek Ayaz, Former president of International Committee for Crimea Inci Bowman, Director of Karabakh Foundation Adil Bugairov,Representatives of World Union of Ahiska Turks Sadyr Eibov and Abbas Hamza,Leaders of Dayton Communities, Dayton University and Wright State University Officials, Businessmen, and many other guests.

Archaeologists Explore Site on Syria-Turkey Border

Image Few archaeological sites seem as entwined with conflict, ancient and modern, as the city of Karkemish. The scene of a battle mentioned in the Bible, it lies smack on the border between Turkey and Syria, where civil war rages today. Twenty-first century Turkish sentries occupy an acropolis dating back more than 5,000 years, and the ruins were recently demined. Visible from crumbling, earthen ramparts, a Syrian rebel flag flies in a town that regime forces fled just months ago. A Turkish-Italian team is conducting the most extensive excavations there in nearly a century, building on the work of British Museum teams that included T.E. Lawrence, the adventurer known as Lawrence of Arabia. The plan is to open the site along the Euphrates river to tourists in late 2014.

Turkish Cypriot Day Big Success on Capitol Hill

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Turkish Cypriot Day Hosts, ATAA Gunay Evinch, NCCS Bahri Aliriza FTAA Gizem Salcigil White, MATA Orhan Suleiman
The Assembly of Turkish American Associations (ATAA) lead a coalition of leading Turkish American organizations to host the inaugural Capitol Hill Turkish Cypriot Day, on October 2, 2012.  Over 200 Member and committee staffers from over 50 Congressional Offices, as well as experts from Congressional Research Services (CRS), attended the all-day drop-in event that featured Turkish Cypriot cuisine, Turkish Coffee, Turkish Delights, Turkish Cypriot music, and displays of Turkish Cypriot art and history.
 

Book Review: Why Nations Fail: The Origins of Power, Prosperity, and Poverty

Image Somewhere in Beijing there must be an incinerator for burning reports from outsiders telling China’s leaders what to do. In February the World Bank, in cooperation with an arm of the Chinese government, issued a report called China 2030 that included this gem: “Where contract disputes arise … the disputants should have access not only to legal recourse but also to a transparent and effective judicial system that imparts justice without fear or favor.” It’s hard to imagine President Hu Jintao slapping his forehead in wonderment upon reading this: “But of course! Why didn’t we think of that? Stop the theft of intellectual property at once!”

As silly as it is, the “ignorance hypothesis”—the assumption that people in power would do right by their citizens if only they knew better—“still rules supreme among most economists and in Western policy-making circles,” Massachusetts Institute of Technology economist Daron Acemoglu and Harvard University political scientist James Robinson write in their new book, Why Nations Fail: The Origins of Power, Prosperity, and Poverty. Nations fail, the authors argue, because “those who have power make choices that create poverty. They get it wrong not by mistake or ignorance but on purpose.” For the brutal few, hanging on to power and wealth outweighs all else.

'Classified Woman': Sibel Edmonds Finally Wins

Image By David Swanson -  Sibel Edmonds' new book,"Classified Woman: The Sibel Edmonds Story" (352 pages, $21.95 trade paperback, available from Amazon.com in print and Kindle editions) is like an FBI file on the FBI, only without the incompetence. The experiences she recounts resemble K.'s trip to the castle, as told by Franz Kafka, only without the pleasantness and humanity. I've read a million reviews of nonfiction books about our government that referred to them as "page-turners" and "gripping dramas," but I had never read a book that actually fit that description until now.

Local Turkish Group Holds 3rd Annual Turkish Festival

A Tulsa-area non-profit group hosted a Turkish festival on Saturday. The Tulsa area is home to between 400 and 500 Turkish people, according to Raindrop Turkish House.  Most are Turkish-Americans with American citizenship, around 300, and the rest are Turkish ex-patriots. The Turkish-American community in Tulsa held its third annual Raindrop Turkish Festival on Saturday, which included the grand opening of its new building in the 4400 block of West Houston in Broken Arrow.

Lincoln Center to Present Panorama of Turkish Cinema

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Nuri Bilge Ceylan?s 2006 drama ?Climates? is among 29 movies to be featured from April 27-May 10 by the Film Society of Lincoln Center in the program ?The Space Between: A Panorama of Cinema in Turkey.?
A selection of the best examples of Turkish cinema -- spanning the heyday of Yeşilçam in the 1960s to the present day, when a thriving Turkish movie industry is making a name for itself overseas -- will be presented in New York City in a screening program that kicks off this weekend at Lincoln Center. Titled “The Space Between: A Panorama of Cinema in Turkey,” the program will get under way April 27 and run for two weeks, until May 10, presenting 29 films from Turkish filmmakers in what is billed by its organizers as the “most comprehensive showcase of Turkish films in the US to date.”
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