Table
of contents
1.) FACTS
a) Area
b) Population, Inhabitants
c) Parts of the city
d) Languages
e)
Nicknames
2.) INFRASTRUCTURE
a)
Mountains
b)
Rivers
c) Streets, Roads, Freeways
d) Climate, Weather
3.)
SITUATION TODAY
a) Economy
b) Tourism
c) Poverty
4.) SIGHTS
a) Disneyland
b) Little Tokyo
c) Hollywood
d) Universal Studios Hollywood
e) Walk of Fame
f) Beverly Hills
g) Farmers Market
h) Forest
Lawn
i) Griffith Park
j) Old Town
k) Mann´s Chinese Theatre
5.) HISTORY
a) Where did the name "Los Angeles" come from?
b) Discovery and settlement
c) Chronology of the founding of L.A.
d) Mayors and city councils
6.)
IMPORTANT PEOPLE
a) Coolio
b) Leonardo Di Caprio
c) Richard Pancho Gonzales
d) Theodore Harold Maiman
e) Isamu Noguchi
f) Adlai Stevenson
g) Michael Tilson Thomas
h) Earl Warren
1.) FACTS
a) Area
Los Angeles lies in the south of California.
L.A. county has
an area of more than 10 000 square kilometres. L.A.
county consists of the city of Los
Angeles and about 50 other cities around, for example Beverly Hills, Malibu and Santa Monica.
L.A. county
consists altogether of 88 cities.
The heart
of Los Angeles
is Downtown.
The lowest
point is 3 m below sea level at Wilmington the highest point is 3054 m above sea level on top of Mount San
Antonio.
A great
part also is desert, for example in the east of Los Angeles
there is the Mojave Desert. Two of the most
interesting "stations" in the desert are the Joshua
Tree Monument
and Death Valley.
b) Population, Inhabitants
The
population of the city of Los Angeles is about
3.8 Million, in L.A.
county there live about 9.9 Million people.
45 % of
these people are Latinos
32 % are
Caucasians
9.4 % are
Blacks
12.6 % are
Asians and Pacific Islanders
c) Parts of the city
The city of
Los Angeles is
split up into different parts. In general there are 6 areas, and in each of
them there are many famous towns, parks and hills.
In the north
there is the so called "San Fernando Valley."
Just to
name some areas there: North Hollywood, Sun Valley,
Sunland
"Westside",
the name says it anyway, is in the western part of the city.
It consists
of Bel Air, Westwood and West Los Angeles.
The next
part of the city is "Downtown/Central": it lies in the east.
Chinatown,
Downtown L.A., Griffith Park, Hollywood or Westlake are only a few of the famous areas in this part of the city.
In the
southwest of Los Angeles
there is the area which is called "Beach/Airport Area".
Here you
can find the famous L.A.
International Airport
(LAX)
"Harbor
Area" lies in the south of the city.
Harbor City or San Pedro are
some famous areas there.
At last I
want to mention the "South Central": it´s in the southeast.
Hyde Park
and Jefferson Park are famous and popular areas in the
South Central.
d) Languages
Los Angeles is a melting pot of many different
cultures and there are also many different languages.
About 42.2
% of the population speak the spanish language
41.1 %
speak only English
16.6 %
speak other languages, for example Asian and Pacific Island
languages
e) Nicknames
There are
some positive and negative nicknames of Los
Angeles.
The most
famous nickname, which we all know, is "L.A."-
it´s only a short version of Los Angeles.
Another
name is "City of Angels": Los Angeles is a spanish name and it means "The Angels"
Los Angeles is also called "Southland", this name
is commonly used by Los Angeles
radio and television media.
"Lalaland",
"Lotusland" and "Lotusville" are three more nicknames for this city.
Los
Angelesis also called the "Double Dubuque", which is a put-down on the city, it was used after World War 2.
The last
nickname I want to mention, is "El Pueblo".
It´s the spanish word for "The town". This was the
most famous name for Los Angeles
during the Spanish period (around 1800)
2.) INFRASTRUCTURE
a) Mountains
Los Angeles county is limited by the Santa
Monica Mountains
and the Santa Ana
Mountains.
The most
famous are the San Gabriel mountains.
They are in Southern California and they also reach over the Mojave
desert, which I´ve mentioned before, and
have a length of about 63 miles from west to east.
The highest
mountain of this trail is the Mount
San Antonio, which is
also called Old Baldy, this mountain is 3054 meters
high.
b) Rivers
In the city
of Los Angeles
there are not many rivers, because it´s a very dry area. But to mention the
most important ones: There is the Los Angeles
River, the San
Gabriel River- it flows near the mountains, and the Santa
Ana River it flows also
along the Santa Ana
Mountains.
But they
are not real rivers anyway, because for the most part they are canalized.
c) Streets, Roads, Freeways
The main roads
are:
Ventura Boulevard: It reaches from east to west and
goes through the San Fernando Valley.
Sunset Boulevard, Santa Monica Boulevard and Wilshire Boulevard: These are
parallel roads. They reach from east to west, go
through the city of L.A., along the beaches to
the other corner of L.A.
Sepulveda Boulevard It reaches from the north to the south of Los Angeles.
There are
also a lot of Freeways in Los
Angeles, they are not named, but they are numbered:
101 Freeway:
It reaches from the north to the south. First, it goes along the coast of
North- California, cuts the San Fernando
Valley and goes finally to the south of Los
Angeles.
5 Freeway:
It comes also from the north of California and
goes through the middle of the state, cuts San Fernando Valley and goes through
South- California
to the Mexican frontier.
405 Freeway:
It reaches from north to south. It begins at the northern end of the San
Fernando Valley and goes along the beach till southern Los Angeles.
10 Freeway:
It´s the main Freeway from the east to the west of Los Angeles. It begins in Santa Monica.
1 Freeway:
It goes from north to south. It begins in Washington
and goes along the beach through California.
d) Climate, Weather
Los Angeles lies in the Subtropical
climate-zone. The elimate is characterized by cool to mild winters and warm to
hot summers.
The year is
divided into a wet and a dry season. The wet months are from October to April,
the dry months from May to September.
Rainfall
averages only about 300 mm at Los
Angeles.
The average
temperature in January is about 19° and in July 25°.
The Mojave
Desert or Death Valley, which I´ve mentioned
before twice, are extremely hot, especially in summer.
It rains only 50 mm per year and the average temperature in July lies over 30°.
The record
temperature in Los Angeles was recorded there,
in Death Valley, there were about 57°.
3.) SITUATION TODAY
a) Economy
Los Angeles and economy- the size of its
population alone makes this area California´s biggest economic center.
The city is
also the financial center for the western United States and a principal
importer and exporter of international trade goods.
One of Los
Angeles´ most famous activities is the television and musical entertainment
industry. Many American movies and television programs are produced by local
studios.
In 1990 Los Angeles became an
important center for multimedia production. The city is also famous for food
products, instruments, printed materials, clothing, fabricated metal goods and
chemicals.
The L.A. metropolitan is very
important for the transportation industry, including automobile, aircraft and
aerospace production.
The city
became the financial gateway between Asia and the United States of America.
Tourism is
an important part of the city´s economy.
A big
problem of Los Angeles
is the need to keep the city supplied with water. Only a little part can be
taken from the Los Angeles
River, but they need
other sources of water. The city got water rights in the Owens
Valley it is in Eastern-
California.
b) Tourism
Los Angeles is the worldwide capital of
entertainment. The city earns a lot of money because of the tourism. It offers
theatre, ballett, concerts and much more. Some of the best museums of the United States are in Los Angeles and also many famous restaurants
and parks.
Hollywood, located in the north of L.A.
county, is the capital of the film industry. Most of
the world-famous films and shows are produced there.
The
westside of L.A. county
constists of very famous cities: Beverly Hills, Century
City, Westwood, Brentwood
and Bel Air.
In Beverly Hills there is a
film and TV museum.
Santa Monica is attractive for tourists, because
of its tall and beautiful palms and the small town- atmosphere.
The main
beaches are these of Santa Monica
and Willen- Rogers. It´s the oldest tourist center on the westcoast.
The beach-
area of Los Angeles
is recommendable for every tourist. You can take a sunbath or you can ride your
bike or go inlineskating along the Santa
Monica Boulevard.
Malibu is a popular center for art- fans,
because there you can visit many art- museums.
c) Poverty
These facts
are from the year 1999!!
% (1,6 Mill) of the population in Los Angeles are poor people.
That´s very
much, compared to the national rate of 11,8 % and a California rate of 13,8
%.
The poverty
line is $8500 per year for a single individual and $17000 per year for a family
of 4.
These poor
people live in 529 000 households.
Most of the
poor people live in central Los Angeles, on the South Bay,
the San Gabriel, and the San
Fernando Valley.
All regions
have poverty rates higher than the national and the US metropolitan rates.
The prices
for monthly housing are $555 for poor households, but the quality of housing is
often not that good, for example there are incomplete kitchens or such things.
Poor
households are often overcrowded but if you think intensively about this topic
you will find it logical anyway.
A statistic
says that most of the poor people work in the low wage sectors, while housing
prices continue to rise.
One
example: A fulltime worker earns about $ 6,25 (it´s
the minimum!!)
4.) SIGHTS
a) Disneyland
50 years
ago, Walter E. Disney decided to build an amusement park, and it became a great
success. He had the idea, that the visitor should get
into different dreamworlds.
In 1955 the
Disneyland in Anaheim
opened. It´s about 30 km southeastly of Downtown L.A.
Over 60 000
people visit Disneyland daily.
b) Little Tokyo
Little Tokyo is the center of
the Japanese- American area, with more than 80 restaurants, lots of interesting
shops and Buddhist temples.
c) Hollywood
Hollywood is a city, which was founded by
religious farmers in 1900.
Standing 13,6 m tall and 136 m long, it´s the biggest name of the city
and a place for tourists.
It´s THE city of film industry, actors and tourists. Most of the world- famous films and
shows are produced there.
d) Universal Studios Hollywood
Universal
Studios Hollywood offers rides and attractions inspired by our favourite TV-
movies, which you have never seen before.
The Back to
the Future flight simulator, Jurassic
Park are
essential theme park experiences.
Many film
studios were built in Burbank, it´s northerly of
Hollywood, and there could even be built more bigger studios than in Hollywood.
e) Walk of Fame
There you
can see many stars on the ground in which the names of famous people
preergraved. Now there are more than 2500 stars.
It´s very
popular, because where else but in Hollywood
can you stand on top of such famous people?
f) Beverly
Hills
Beverly Hills is the home of many famous film
stars and rich people. You can see the most beautiful houses and gardens there.
The center of Beverly Hills
is the Rodeo Drive-
it´s a shopping street, but a very expensive one.
g) Farmers Market
Also this
area belongs to Los Angeles.
Today, there are around 160 beaches.
You can buy
fresh food, take a snack or drink a cup of coffee there. It´s the most famous
place for the freshest food, because in earlier times, farmers came there to
sell their food and today it´s the same.
h) Forest Lawn
Forest Lawn
is a graveyard, the main attraction is the Great Mausoleum, where famous people
like Walt Disney, Clark Gable or Jean Harlow lie.
On this
ground there are many churches.
One window
in the church Memorial Court of Honor even shows "The last communion"
i) Griffith
Park
It´s a 1600 ha big park in the east of the Santa Monica Mountains. It´s the USA´s
biggest city park.
Here you
will find the Los Angeles Zoo with more than 2000 animals.
For those
who like sport, there is a lot to see and do in the park.
At
different times of the year you can also see American football, ice hockey,
horse racing and basketball.
j) Old
Town
Old Town is the origin of Los Angeles.
In 1781, 11
families from Mexico
founded this city.
The oldest
street of the town is Olvera
Street, and the oldest house- the Avila Adobe.
The Pico
House is now a big hotel. You can also visit the Merced Theatre, the Sepulveda
House and the Pelancoli House.
k) Mann´s Chinese Theatre
The Mann´s
Chinese Theatre is part of the Hollywood
Boulevard. It´s a Premiere-
cinema (Premiere- theatre).
It opened
in 1927 with the Premiere of "King of Kings".
In front of
the cinema there are hand and footprints of famous
5.) HISTORY
a) Where did the name come from?
The name "Los Angeles" is spanish and means "The Angels". But there is much more to
this name, a whole history!
It began on
Wednesday, 2nd August, 1769:
Father Juan
Crespi, a Franciscan priest was a member of the first European land expedition
through California,
which was led by Captain Fernando Rivera Y Moncando.
First, they
founded a river which they called Nuestra Senora de los Angeles de la
Porciuncula. Father Crespi described this river as a "beautiful river from
the nothwest located at 34 degrees 10 minutes".
In the
Franciscan calendar, 2nd August was the day of the feast of the Perdono
at the tiny Assisi chapel of St. Francis of Assisi. Early in St.
Franci´s life, the Benedictines had given him this tiny chapel for his use near
Assisi. The chapel, ruined and in need of repair was located on what the
Italians called a porciuncola or a "very small parcel of land".
Painted on
the wall behind the altar was a fresco of the Virgin Mary surrounded by angels.
At this time, the chapel was named Saint Mary of the Angels at the little
portion.
The newly
discovered river was named in honor of this celebration and this chapel.
In 1781 a
new settlement was established along that river. The settlement became to be
known as El Pueblo de Nuestra Senora la Reina de los Angeles or The town
of our Lady the Queen of the Angels of the little portion (river), although its
official name was simple El Pueblo de la Reina de los Angeles. (The town of the queen of the Angels.)
By the
time, the area became known as the Ciudad de Los Angeles,
"City of Angels", and on April 4, 1850 became
the City of Los Angeles.
b) Discovery and Settlement (+ 20th
century)
When
Spanish occupation of California began in
1769, an exploratory of more than 60 persons moved through the area now known
as Los Angeles.
They camped by a river, which was named El Pueblo de Nuestra Senora la Reina
de los Angeles de la Porciuncula, which means The River of our Lady the
Queen of the Angels of Porciuncula.
The
new governor of California, Felip de Neve,
recommended to the viceroy in Mexico
that the place suggested by Father Crespi as an ideal place for a mission be
developed into a pueblo. King Carlos III of Spain in turn took the
recommendation and ordered Governor de Neve to establish the pueblo.
De
Neve took the job of establishing the settlement very seriously. He drew up
plans for the pueblo, including a plaza, fields, pastures, and royal lands.
This surely is the first time a city has been planned before the first settler
arrived, and ironic in view of the unfettered growth of Los Angeles.
Persuading
settlers to come here from Mexico
was another matter. In spite of many inducements, such as money and land, it
took months before he was able to get enough settlers, and he had to go to Sonora to get them.
Finally,
a group of 11 men, 11 women, and 22 children were gathered together at the
Mission San Gabriel. On September 4, 1781, they left San Gabriel, accompanied by de Neve,
soldiers, mission priests, and a few Indians to settle the site along the
river.
There
was a speech by Governor de Neve, a blessing and prayers from the mission
fathers -- all watched by the Yang-Na Indians. Thus did El Pueblo de Nuestra
Senora la Reina de los
Angeles de Porciuncula (The Town of Our Lady the
Queen of the Angeles of Porciuncula) come into existence.
The
new pueblo grew slowly, and amenities were few. The houses were very small,
usually of adobe with flat roofs -- glassless windows, and rawhide doors. The
narrow streets were almost impassable when it rained. There were, of course, no
sidewalks or lawns, and the trees along the river rapidly disappeared.
By
1790 Los Angeles
had 28 households and a population of 139. By 1800 the population was 70
households and a population of 315. There were also a town hall, guardhouse,
army barracks, and granaries.
This
Spanish town neither knew nor cared that the United States had been born and was
already moving relentlessly across the continent.
Over
time, the area became known as the Ciudad de Los Angeles, City of Angels, and on 4th
April, 1850 became the City Los Angeles.
California was ruled by Spain
until 1822 when Mexico
assumed jurisdiction. After a two- year period of hostilities with Mexico beginning in 1846, the area came under U.S. control.
In 1848 the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo made California
a United States
territory.
The
county of Los
Angeles was established on February 18, 1850 as one of the 27
original counties, several months before California
was admitted to the Union. It derived its name
from the area known as Los Angeles,
already a large community, and made it the designated "seat "
of County government.
On
1st April, 1850 the people of Los
Angeles asserted their newly won right of self-
government and elected a three- man Court of Sessions as their first governing
body. A total of 377 votes were cast in this election. In 1852 the Legislature
dissolved the Court of Sessions and created a five- member Board of
Supervisiors. In 1913 the citizens of Los Angeles County
approved a charter recommended by a board of freeholders which gave the county
greater freedom to govern itself within the framework of state law.
LOS
ANGELES IN THE EYE OF THE 20th CENTURY
Many
famous cities became unique by the time, and also Los Angeles was one of them.
There
is no American city which has evolved so rapidly in the span of a century as
has Los Angeles.That fact makes this city truly unique.
In
1900 Los Angeles
had a population of 102 479, while the county totaled only 170 298. In 1900 Los Angeles ranked 36th in size in the nation,
behind Omaha, Nebraska,
but ahead of Memphis, Tennessee.
In
contrast, Los Angeles began the millennium with
a population of 3 831 754, the
second largest city in the United
States, with the county numbering 9 828 861.
Today,
Los Angeles is the seventh largest city in the
world, being surpassed by Tokyo, Mexico City, San Paulo,
New York City, Bombay
and Shanghai, but it´s larger than Calcutta, Buenos Aires, Seoul, Osaka, Lagos, Rio, New
Delhi and all European capitals.
And
here are the explanations for the extraordinary rising of the city in the last
century: First, the city´s geographic and geological setting, second, the
extraordinary influence of technological innovation. Third, the major role
played by the federal Government in the development of urban cities, Los Angeles amongst them.
Fourth, the evolution of local politics. Last, the city´s inhabitants, the human factor.
6.) IMPORTANT PEOPLE
a) Coolio (Rap Artist)
Coolio was
born in Los Angeles
on 8th January 1963.
His lyrics
express ideas about family, respect, love, Aids and revolution.
After getting his start in
the South Central Los Angeles rap scene during the early 1980s, he signed with
Tommy Boy Records (1993). The debut release, It Takes a Thief (1994),
went platinum. His song " Gangsta's Paradise,"
was the best-selling single of 1995 and won him a Grammy
Award for Best Rap Solo Performance. In 1997 he released My Soul
(1997). He has six children, two with wife Josefa Salinas, whom he married in
1996.
b)
Leonardo Di Caprio (Actor)
Leonardo Wilhelm Dicaprio
was born to George and Irmalin DiCaprio on November 11, 1974 in Los Angeles, California.
He grew up in Los Feliz, California,
which Leo describes as "the ghettos of California".
He is an onlychild, though he has a step brother named Adam. His parents
divorced each other within a year after he was born. Leonardo gets his Italian
background from his father George, who produces underground comic books and
comicarts out of his garage. George now helps Leo sift through the many scripts
and discarding all of the mainstream roles that most actors take to gain
quickfame. Leo prefers the darker more challenging roles. He gets his German
background from his Mother Irmalin who was a legal secretary until she began
managing her son's rising career. Leo was educated at the Centre fo Enriched Studies and John Marshall High, both located in Los Angeles. He did not likes chool, and often cheated. He was more interested in
entertaining his classmates than doing work. His raucous behavior often got him
in trouble. He was kicked off the set of Romper Room at age 5 for is
uncontrolable behavior. But his troubles with school didn't stifle his
aspiration to be an actor. He appeared in over 30 commercials, the first being
Matchbox Cars, and at 14 years old he was finally signed. He was dicouraged, however, when his agent told him his name was
too long and ethnic sounding (his Mother named him Leonardo after he swiftly
kicked inside the womb while she was looking at a DaVinci painting in La Louvre
in Paris) and
suggested he change his name to Lenny Williams. Leonardo refused. He did many
educational films such as "How to Deal With Parents Who Take Drugs", and
"Mickey's Safety Club", and appeared in many TV shows like Lassie and The
Outsiders. He landed his first screen role in 1991 on Critters III (though he'd
like to forget that). At 16,Leo landed the role as a
homeless boy named Luke on the last two seasons of Growing Pains. Finally, Leo
got his big break in the "coming of age movie This Boy's Life as Tobias Wolf,
opposite Robert DeNiro. Now, at 23, LeonardoDiCaprio has earned his fame. Has completed over 11 motion pictures, including "What's Eating
Gilbert Grape" (for which he recieved an Oscarnomination for Best-Supporting
Actor. The Basketball Diaries, The Quick and the Dead,
William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, Marvin's Room and the blockbuster
Titanic. Titanic has already grossed over $6 million worldwide, and has
boosted Leo's popularity to the top. Looking at all the different roles Leo has
portrayed over the years shows his great capability of playing many different
kinds of roles and his natural acting skills. He knows how to bring emotion and
reality to his roles, and has touched the hearts of millions of people all over
the world.
c)
Richard Pancho Gonzales (Tennis Player)
He was born on 9th
May, 1928 in Los Angeles.
When Gonzales was twelve years old, his mother gave him a fifty-cent
tennis racket for Christmas to discourage him from playing rougher sports. At
fourteen, he was playing and frequently winning junior tournaments.
Gonzales quit school in the
tenth grade and joined the Navy as soon as he was old enough, in 1945. He was
discharged in 1947 and less than a year later became the second youngest player
ever to win the national singles title.
Some thought his
championship was tainted because defending champion Ted Schroeder didn't play
in the 1948 tournament, but Gonzales beat him in the 1949 final. After losing
the first two sets, Gonzales won the last three. He also won the 1949 Wimbledon singles championship.
Gonzales then turned
professional, joining Jack Kramer on a nationwide tour. He played badly, losing 96 matches while winning only 27, and was
dropped in favor of Pancho Segura. After Kramer's retirement, Gonzales rejoined
the pro tour in 1954 and during the next eight years he consistently beat the
best professionals around, including Lew Hoad, Ken Rosewall, Frank Sedgman, Segura, and Tony Trabert. The 6-foot-3 Gonzales was
especially noted for his great serve, which was once clocked at 112 mph.
After retiring from
competition, Gonzales became a top instructor and non-playing captain of the
Davis Cup team. He had one last moment in the spotlight, though. In the 1969
Wimbledon tournament, which had been opened to professionals, the 41-year-old
Gonzales beat 25-year-old Charles Pasarell in a 112-game match that lasted 5
hours and 12 minutes, the longest in Wimbledon
history.
d)
Theodore Harold Maiman (Inventor)
He was born in Los Angeles in 1927. He
is a US-
physics who constructed the first working laser in 1960.
Maiman was born in Los Angeles and studied at Columbia and Stanford universities. From 1955
to 1961 he worked at the Hughes Research Laboratories. In 1962 he founded the
Korad Corporation to manufacture lasers; in 1968 he founded Maiman Associates,
a laser and optics consultancy; he cofounded the Laser Video Corporation 1972.
In 1975 he joined the TRW Electronics Company, Los Angeles.
In 1955, Maiman began improving the maser (microwave amplifier), first designed
in 1953 by US physicist Charles Townes. Townes had also demonstrated the
theoretical possibility of constructing an optical maser, or laser, but Maiman
was the first to build one. His laser consisted of a cylindrical, synthetic
ruby crystal with parallel, mirror-coated ends, the coating at one end being
semitransparent to allow the emission of the laser beam. A burst of intense
white light stimulated the chromium atoms in the ruby to emit noncoherent red
light. This red light was then reflected back and forth by the mirrored ends
until eventually some of the light emerged as an intense beam of coherent red
light - laser light. Maiman's apparatus produced pulses; the first
continuous-beam laser was made in 1961 at the Bell Telephone Laboratories.
e)
Isamu Noguchi (Sculptor)
Isamu Noguchi was born
November 17, 1904, in Los Angeles.
His Japanese father was a poet and his mother an American writer. In 1906, the
family moved to Japan.
He was sent to Indiana for schooling in 1918, and
in 1922 he apprenticed to the sculptor Gutzon Borglum in Connecticut. For the next two years, he was
a premedical student at Columbia University, New York, and took sculpture classes at the Leonardo da
Vinci School, also in New York.
Noguchi decided to become an artist and left Columbia in 1925. A John Simon Guggenheim
Memorial Foundation fellowship in 1927 enabled him to go to Paris, where he worked as Constantin Brancusi's studio assistant. In Paris, he became friendly
with Alexander Calder, Stuart Davis, and Jules
Pascin. Noguchi returned to New York
in 1928 and the following year showed abstract sculpture in his first solo show
at the Eugene Schoen Gallery.
In 1930, Noguchi traveled
in Europe and Asia, studying calligraphy in China
and pottery in Japan.
In New York
during the early 1930s, he associated with Arshile Gorky, John Graham, Chaim Gross,
and Moses and Raphael Soyer and introduced social content into his work. He
began to design playgrounds, furniture, and theater decor, executing the first
of numerous sets for Martha Graham. Noguchi spent six months in 1941-42 in a
Japanese-American relocation camp. In 1949, he was given a solo show at the
Egan Gallery, New York. In Japan
in 1950-51, he designed gardens, bridges, and monuments and developed his paper
lanterns (akari). He showed at the Stable Gallery, New York, in 1954 and
1959.
In 1961, Noguchi moved to Long Island City. Noguchi's first solo exhibition in
Paris was held
at the Galerie Claude Bernard in 1964. The Whitney Museum of American Art, New
York, honored him with a major retrospective in 1968. Throughout the 1970s,
Noguchi continued to make large outdoor sculpture and fountains. A
comprehensive show of his sculpture, theater sets, and environmental works took
place in 1978 at the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis. Noguchi
lived in New York and spent part of each year
in Japan.
He died in 1988 in New York City.
f)
Adlai Stevenson (Governor)
He was born in 1900 and
died in 1965.
Stevenson, a leading Democrat of the 1950s, was famed for his quick wit
and deep intellect and for his eloquence in support of liberal causes. (Those
same qualities led detractors to nickname him the Egghead.) He was the
Democratic candidate for president in 1952 and 1956, losing badly both times to
Dwight
Eisenhower. Stevenson was governor of Illinois from 1949-53 and served as the
American ambassador to the United Nations during the John
Kennedy administration. Stevenson's son, Adlai III, later was a U.S. senator from Illinois (1970-81).
g)
Michael Tilson Thomas (Conductor & Composer)
Born
in Los Angeles
on 21 December 1944, Michael Tilson Thomas is the third generation of his
family to follow an artistic career. Internationally acclaimed as both
conductor and composer, Tilson Thomas composes in a colorful, eclectic style
that reflects his passion for the diversity of American musical life. He began
his formal studies at the University
of Southern California
where he studied piano with John Crown and conducting and composition with
Ingolf Dahl. At age 19, he was named Music Director of the Young Musicians
Foundation Debut Orchestra. In 1969, after winning the Koussevitzky Prize at
Tanglewood, Tilson Thomas was appointed Assistant Conductor of the Boston
Symphony Orchestra. He has served as Principal Guest Conductor of the Los
Angeles Philharmonic, Principal Conductor of the Great Woods Festival and
Principal Conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra.
Tilson
Thomas began his tenure in September 1995 as the San Francisco Symphony's 11th
Music Director in a contract that extends through the year 2005. He and the
orchestra have also signed an exclusive contract with BMG Classics/RCA Victor
Red Seal which will yield 15 recordings over the next five years. He is also
the Founder and Artistic Director of the New World Symphony.
Tilson
Thomas is one of the busiest conductors on the international scene, but,
throughout his career, he has devoted considerable time to composing. His From the
Diary of Anne Frank, for narrator and orchestra, was
commissioned by UNICEF and given its world premiere at Philadelphia's
Academy of Music in 1990 by the late Audrey Hepburn
and the New World Symphony, conducted by the composer. Since then the work has
been played by the London Symphony Orchestra, televised throughout Japan in a new Japanese translation, played by
the Israel Philharmonic in a Hebrew version, performed in Holland
in the original Dutch, in South Africa,
in Spain by the Orquestra
Simfonica de Barcelona, at the Ravinia and Aspen Music Festivals and throughout
the United States.
Tilson
Thomas was commissioned by the city of Hiroshima
to compose a piece for the commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the bombing
of that city. Shówa/Shoáh,
a work for orchestra, is the result. It was premiered on 6 August 1995 by the
Pacific Music Festival Orchestra, and will become part of the composer's First
Symphony. Agnegram
is the composer's short (4') 90th birthday orchestral tribute to longtime San
Francisco Symphony patron Agnes Albert. Described as buoyant and exuberant with
shades of Stravinsky, Walton, Bernstein, and Spike Jones, Agnegram
was premiered by the San Francisco Symphony on 14 May 1998.
Other
compositions include Three Poems by Walt Whitman for baritone and
orchestra; Five Songs, for voice and piano; We Two Boys
Together Clinging, recorded by baritone Thomas Hampson and pianist Craig
Rutenberg for EMI; Street Song, written for the Empire Brass
Quintet and also available in a version for symphonic brass. A song cycle on
Emily Dickinson's poems for Reneé Fleming, was
premiered by the San Francisco Symphony in February 2002, and the soprano will
perform the voice and piano version on an upcoming tour. Urban Legend,
for contrabassoon and orchestra, will receive its premiere by the San Francisco
Symphony in October 2002.
h) Earl Warren (Lawyer)
A native of Los Angeles, Earl Warren
was born in 1891. He studied law and after service in the U.S. Army he became
City Attorney for the city of Oakland.
He then served as Deputy District Attorney and ultimately District Attorney for
the County of Alameda. In that position he became
known for his brilliant and tenacious investigative skills. Warren was elected Governor in 1943, and
re-elected twice. Although he was a Republican, he made his political
appointments based on merit rather than on political loyalties. As Governor, Warren became more and
more concerned with social justice. During WWII, however, he supported internment
of Japanese-Americans, a position which he came to regret deeply in his later
years. In 1953, President Eisenhower appointed Warren Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court. Warren
died in 1974.