Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, May 02, 2012, Page 13, Image 13

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    ®*!t Fortiani» (Observier
M ay 2, 2012
P ag e A I3
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Interacting with Artists at Art Beat
ALBERTA
ROSE
THEATRE
G r eat F o o d
I
M
u s ic
B eer
a w in e
F r id a y , M a y 4 t h
3 LEG TORSO PRESENTS
MENAGE A TROIS
with JESSICA FICHOT
and WANDERLUST CIRCUS
SHOWTIME AT THE ROSE
SOUL REVUE &
FUNDRAISING KICKOFF CAMPAIGN
with
;
Community invited
to celebrations
on PCC campuses
All of Portland Community College's main
campuses will host dozens of art displays, per­
formances, demonstrations and workshops in
music, literature, sculpture and painting for the
annual Art Beat celebration, during the week of
Monday, May 7, through Friday, May 11.
All events, which will feature more than 100
artists, are free and open to the public.
"Art Beat week provides a great opportunity
T u esd a y , M ay 8 th
LEAKY ROOF COMEDY
Portland Community College Art Instructor Mark Smith creates a mural at last year's Art
Beat. The annual community event returns to all o f PCC main campuses, Monday, May
7, through Friday, May 11.
for people to interact directly with local artists,"
said Charles Washburn, district Art Beat Chair
and ceramics instructor.
This year's featured artist, internationally
recognized printmaker Yuji Hiratsuka, created a
special, limited edition print entitled "Beet Meets
Meat" exclusively for PCC. The graphic work
fuses old Japanese ukiyo-e tradition with mod­
em Western elements, resulting in him winning
numerous national and international awards.
Bom in Osaka, Japan, he currently works as an
art professor at Oregon State University.
Hiratsuka will discuss his printmaking pro­
cess from 11 a.m. to noon, Monday, May 7,
Room 221, Moriarty Arts and Humanities Build-
OCEAN 503 & MORE!
OPEN MIC
30TH ANNIVERSARY SHOW
W EDNESDAY, M AY 9TH
Japanese printmaker Yuji Hiratsuka's work
‘Beet Meets M eat.' Hiratsuka is the
featured artist for Portland Community
College's weeklong festival o f arts — Art
Beat.
ing, Cascade Campus; 2-3 p.m., Monday, May
7, The Forum, Building 3, Rock Creek Campus;
9-10 a.m., Wednesday, May 9, Little Theatre,
Sylvania Campus; and at the Multi-Disciplinary
Art Demo Fair, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., Wednesday,
May 9, Mt. Tabor's Great Hall, Southeast Center.
For a complete schedule of Art Beat activi­
ties, visit artbeat.pcc.edu.
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TRACE
BUNDY
JOSH
GARRELS
T h u r s d a y , M a y 1O t h
FOUR BITCHIN' BABES
PRESENT
HORMONAL IMBALANCE
,
F r id a y , M
ay
11 t h
Courting Young Votes with Rolling Stone
Obama talks on
politics to pop culture
(AP) — Offering riffs on Mick Jagger and
reflections on race, President Barack Obama
capped a week devoted to courting young votes
with a Rolling Stone magazine cover interview
that segues from presidential musings on poli­
tics to foreign policy to pop culture.
Sounding an election-year theme, Obama tells
the magazine that Mitt Romney can't disavow
the conservative views he embraced as candi­
date during the Republican presidential prima­
ries. At the same time, he acknowledges that he,
too, is struggling against public skepticism be­
cause of the slow economic recovery.
The interview, conducted earlier this month
by Rolling Stone publisher Jann Wenner, ap­
peared in the issue of the magazine that hit
newsstands on Friday.
Obama avoided characterizing Romney as a
flip-flopper, a common criticism Romney faced
President fl
The Rolling
Interview
B y fan nS . Uirm
BzaiBJ
Boxing j Lui
(kampien .
during the Republican primary contests, and
instead tagged him as a candidate who fully
embraces the Republican Party's most conser­
vative views.
"I don't think that their nominee is going to be
able to suddenly say, 'Everything I've said for
the last six months, I didn't mean,"' Obama said.
"I'm assuming that he meant it. When you're
running for president, people are paying atten­
tion to what you're saying."
Obama's answer underscores an approach
his advisers have been emphasizing lately, cast­
ing the race as one of sharp contrasts between
two distinct candidates, parties and ideologies.
He said his own political burden is describing
to Americans the progress that has occurred
during his administration and how, if sustained,
it could lead to economic security. "There's
understandable skepticism," he said, "because
things are still tough out there."
Discussing his relationship with the military,
Obama said, in the clearest terms yet, that he had
to rein in the Pentagon as he sought to close
down the war in Iraq on schedule and re-focus
the military effort in Afghanistan. He said that
with the help of then-Defense Secretary Robert
continued
on page A17
S a tu
rday
,
m ay
12 t h
AN EVENING WITH
THE SUGAR BEETS
S unday ,
m ay
13 t h
ftcARy.
home got
A solo show about
growing up
with GEORGE
Written &
K E LLY
CARLIN,
A l b e r t a R o se T h e a tr e
(5 0 3 ) 7 6 4 -4 1 3 1
3 0 0 0 NE* A l b e r t a
A l b e r t a R o s e T h e a t r e . c o m
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