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DESCRIPTION:In the second of a three-part reading series, writer-teachers and youth 
 poets share the stage with some of our most esteemed literary icons. In a 
 truly multigenerational literary exchange, co-founder of the groundbreaking 
 Royal Chicano Air Force and current Poet Laureate of Sacramento Jose 
 Montoya joins us.    Date & Time: 				Tuesday February 24, 2004 at 7:30 PM  
    Event: 								Readings by Jose Montoya with   Toussaint Haki, Beto 
 Palomar, Jime Salcedo-Malo & WritersCorps Youth Poets    Location: 
 						Intersection for the Arts, 446 Valencia (btwn 15/16) Mission 
 District, San Francisco    Cost: 									$5 - $15 (your choice) sliding 
 scale    Information: 				(415) 626-2787, http://www.theintersection.org    
   "[Montoya’s] approachability is wonderful. An incredible cross 
 selection, from punks to the elderly to students to academics, come to hear 
 him speak." – Traci Gourdine  INTERSECTION FOR THE ARTS is proud to 
 present, as part of our Spring 2004 Literary Series, a three-part 
 intergenerational reading series featuring some of the Bay Area's most 
 esteemed literary icons and writer-teachers and youth poets from 
 WritersCorps, an organization that has transformed and strengthened 
 individuals and communities through the written and spoken word.  Since its 
 inception in 1994, WritersCorps has helped nearly 10,000 young people from 
 neighborhoods throughout San Francisco improve their literacy and increase 
 their desire to learn.  Originating from a reading that Intersection 
 programmed in 2002 pairing together WritersCorps writer-teachers and half a 
 dozen WritersCorps youth poets with legendary fiction writer Tillie Olsen, 
 where readers ranged in age from 7 to 91 years old, this current series 
 explores the themes and styles of writing across three different 
 generations over the course of several months - writers in their teens, 
 writers in their 20's and 30's, and writers who have been impacting the Bay 
 Area community for decades not only through their published work, but also 
 through their teaching, mentoring, and tireless advocacy of transformation 
 through literature.  The first reading in the series featured legendary 
 Beat author Diane di Prima.  This reading, the second in the series, 
 features current Poet Laureate of Sacramento Jose Montoya with WritersCorps 
 writer-teachers Toussaint Haki, Beto Palomar, and Jime Salcedo-Malo and 
 their students from the Bayview Public Library, International Studies 
 Academy, and Instituto Familiar de la Raza.   The third reading in the 
 series will feature the current Poet Laureate of San Francisco devorah 
 major.  Admission is $5-$15 sliding scale.  JOSE MONTOYA is a true 
 renaissance man.  He is a widely published poet, one of the premiere 
 cultural activists in the Chicano movement, a well-known visual artist, and 
 highly respected educator.  Born in New Mexico but having grown up in 
 central California, he witnessed the struggle for migrant farm workers 
 rights first hand. His involvement with organized labor, his collaboration 
 with Cesar Chavez and the United Farm Workers movement, was only the 
 beginning of his lifelong commitment to artistic inquiry and an unwavering 
 dedication to artistic activism. Montoya co-founded one of the 
 groundbreaking Chicano Art Collections in 1969, a group that came to be 
 known as the Royal Chicano Air Force.  The RCAF set the standard for using 
 art as a tool of Chicano historical exposition and education for young 
 people; their murals, posters, and actions are a big part of California's 
 rich cultural history. Montoya entered San Diego City College as an art 
 student soon after the Korean War, and later transferred to California 
 College of Arts & Crafts in Oakland, where he graduated with a B.A. in 
 1962. He began his career by teaching high school until he earned his M.A. 
 in 1971 at California State University of Sacramento.  He then taught for 
 25 years in the Department of Art Education at CSUS, where he is now 
 Professor Emeritus.  Montoya is also a noted painter, muralist, musician 
 and graphic artist who has exhibited internationally in Cuba, Mexico, and 
 Paris, as well as all over the U.S.  His collections can be found at Yale 
 University, California State Library, and Academia de San Carlos, Mexico.  
 He is, however, known most for his works as a poet, and has given readings 
 at top universities around the country. His poignant and often humorous 
 verse can be found in three collections of poetry, including the highly 
 acclaimed In Formation: 20 Years of Joda and Sol Y Los de Aba. He is 
 featured in over 40 anthologies, and his influence over several generations 
 of Chicano poets cannot be underestimated.  His use of Spanish, English, 
 and barrio slang poetry can be seen in the styles of countless Chicano 
 writers who followed him.  He is currently working on his fourth book, 
 entitled How I Came to America.  TOUSSAINT HAKI is a community cultural 
 worker born and raised in Oakland. He is a self-published poet and 
 journalist, theater and spoken word performer, workshop facilitator, and 
 educator. Haki founded SEEDS, an eight page bi-monthly newsletter 
 documenting the spoken-word movement of the East Bay, and founded 10 Poets 
 Plus a Mic, a collective that fuses spoken word, poetry, live music, and 
 theater. In 1998, he published his first book, Stretch Marks. Haki has 
 facilitated spoken word and manhood workshops with young men in two groups 
 homes and through Project Reconnect's Future Father's Program. He's taught 
 hip-hop performance workshops in an elementary after-school program in 
 Alameda, and toured with The Recovery Theater Troup. This is his second 
 year with WritersCorps.  BETO PALOMAR learned and taught poetry for the 
 first time in June Jordan's Poetry for the People at UC Berkeley, where he 
 graduated with a degree in Interdisciplinary Studies with a self-designed 
 major, "Political Poetry of the World." He has also taught poetry, 
 computers, Spanish, and art at Berkeley High School, UCLA, Napa Valley 
 Upward Bound, and D.U.S.T.Y (Digital Underground Storytelling for Youth). 
 He is working this year on his first manuscript of poetry for publication.  
 This is his first year with WritersCorps.  JIME SALCEDO-MALO is a writer, 
 performance poet, teacher, and cultural worker. For the past 8 years, he 
 has worked with many civic, youth, and non-profit community organizations, 
 and has a strong commitment to the arts, education, and self-empowerment.  
 He has performed throughout the country, as well as in Chiapas and Mexico 
 City, and has recorded 2 spoken word CD's.  He combines hip-hop and spoken 
 word to teach writing, expression, and self-determination with youth. He is 
 certified in facilitative leadership and conflict resolution, and received 
 a B.A. in social psychology from San Francisco State Univ. in 1999.  This 
 is his third year with WritersCorps.  WRITERSCORPS has helped thousands of 
 people in some of America's most disadvantaged neighborhoods improve their 
 literacy and self-sufficiency. This achievement has been substantiated by 
 leading educational evaluators; WritersCorps was only one of two programs 
 in the country honored at a recent White House event for exemplary programs 
 for at-risk youth.  San Francisco, Washington, D.C. and Bronx, N.Y. were 
 selected as the three initial sites for WritersCorps, chosen for their 
 cities' exemplary art agencies with deep community roots and traditions of 
 community activism among writers.  Managed by Associated Writing Programs 
 in 1994, WritersCorps was brought in-house by the NEA in 1995, while 
 administered locally by arts and humanities agencies in each of the three 
 cities. In 1997, WritersCorps successfully transitioned from being a 
 federally-funded and administered organization to an independent program.  
 Fully integrated in their respective communities as projects of the San 
 Francisco Arts Commission, Bronx Council for the Arts, and the Humanities 
 Council of Washington, D.C., WritersCorps has developed a national 
 structure administered by the three sites to provide greater cooperation 
 and visibility, while allowing the independence for each site to respond 
 most effectively to their communities.    INTERSECTION’S LITERARY SERIES 
 - Intersection has the distinction of programming the oldest, continuous, 
 independent reading series in California (est. 1965).  The program features 
 a remarkable and diverse array of emerging and established writers who are 
 committed to expanding the notion of literature, testing cultural and 
 discipline-based boundaries, and building new audiences for live, intimate 
 literary experiences.  Intersection works with writers in every genre and 
 style, providing a comprehensive context for contemporary literature.  In 
 recent years, Intersection has worked with new and seasoned writers 
 including Aya de León, bell hooks, Mike Davis, John Trudell, Tillie Olsen, 
 Alice Walker, Martín Espada, Diane di Prima, Jimmy Santiago Baca, and 
 Denis Johnson.  UPCOMING READINGS IN THE SERIES  Tuesday March 23, 2004 at 
 7:30 PM 	 			devorah major with Mahru Elahi, Michelle Matz & WritersCorps 
 youth poets    Intersection for the Arts is San Francisco’s oldest 
 alternative art space and presents challenging new works in literature,   
 theater, visual and interdisciplinary arts.  Intersection is an art space 
 where experimentation and risk are still possible,   where debate and 
 critical inquiry are embraced, and where issues are thrashed about in the 
 heat and immediacy of live art.     \n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2004/02/18/31283.php
SUMMARY:Jose Montoya and WritersCorp
LOCATION:446 Valencia, bt 15th and 16th
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2004/02/18/31283.php
DTSTART:20040225T033000Z
DTEND:20040225T043000Z
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