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星期三, 3月 14, 2018

Students Walkout to Demand Action on Gun Violence and School Funding

Students Walkout to Demand Action on Gun Violence and School Funding

Boston, Massachusetts — March 14, 2018

Students and youth walked out of school and marched on the Massachusetts State House to send a powerful message to politicians here and across the country that enough is enough, and we will not stand by as young people are killed in schools and on the streets of Boston. We will be back even louder, with even more of our friends, to keep demanding the future we deserve. A future when all young people in our Commonwealth have the right to a good education and safe neighborhood no matter where they live.

We will continue fighting until the issue is nonexistent,” said Michael Martinez, a student organizer and METCO student from Roxbury attending Weston High School. “We will persist in our advocacy until the sounds of gunshots in urban communities are replaced by the sounds of children playing, parents laughing, and people living.

While school was called off in much of the area today, groups of young people still started gathering this morning, with some walking to their closed schools to protest. At 10:00AM, students marked 17 minutes of silence for the 17 lives lost at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School one month ago today.

Massachusetts can’t simply worry about Massachusetts… most of the guns are coming from the states around us with much laxer gun laws,” said Vikiana Petit-Homme, a junior at Boston Latin Academy and student organizer. “Massachusetts lawmakers must work with surrounding officials to stop the iron pipeline that bring these illegal guns to our neighborhoods.”

In downtown Boston, over 500 students marched into Gardner Auditorium and delivered testimony to a packed room and at least 25 state lawmakers. Students demanded that lawmakers commit to passing two bills: the first would create “red flag” extreme risk protection orders that allow police to take away guns from people who are a risk to themselves or others. The second bill would fix the state foundation budget for schools, which has left school districts across the state lacking the resources they need for students.

“The prison-like atmospheres that many of us face in school are not aiding in our learning or our states of mind,” said J.D. O’Bryant Technical High School student Evelyn Reyes. “We need counselors and not cops in our schools.”

“Students are this movement,” said Charlotte Lowell, Andover High School senior and student organizer. “And we won’t stop until we feel safe in our streets and in our schools.”

The order of student speakers at the State House: (1) Vikiana Petit-Homme, (2) Michael Martinez, (3) Evelyn Reyes, and (4) Charlotte Lowell.

波士頓風雪停車禁令今日下午5點撤銷

MAYOR WALSH TO LIFT PARKING BAN AND SNOW EMERGENCY AT 5 P.M.,
REMINDS RESIDENTS TO SHOVEL SIDEWALKS AND PEDESTRIAN RAMPS
BOSTON - Wednesday, March 14, 2018 - Mayor Martin J. Walsh announced today that the snow emergency and parking ban will be lifted at 5 p.m., giving residents parked in a discounted parking lot or garage until 7 p.m. to move their cars before regular rates start to apply. The Public Works Department (PWD) will continue with snow removal operations throughout the city today. For live updates on PWD's snow removal operations, please visit Mayor Walsh's Twitter account.

"I'd like to thank residents for great compliance with the snow emergency and parking ban," said Mayor Walsh. "It allows our hardworking crews to effectively and efficiently remove snow, making our streets safer for all. I ask everyone to keep up the good work and make sure they take another pass of shoveling of the sidewalks and pedestrian ramps in front of their properties to ensure accessibility for everyone."

Sidewalks are required to be shoveled within three hours of sunrise if snow stops falling overnight. At this point, properties may be ticketed for unshoveled sidewalks.

While the blizzard has ended, there is still a fair amount of snow in Boston and there may be additional light snowfall around the evening commute. Residents are reminded to be cautious on the road and mindful of pedestrians and other drivers.

Residents are able to look up towed cars on the City of Boston's online database, call the Boston Transportation Department (BTD) at (617) 635-3900 or call the Boston Police Department at (617) 343-4629 to find out which tow company was used if it was not towed by BTD.  

Residents are encouraged to sign up for emergency notifications through AlertBoston and utilize the 311 call center for non-emergency related issues. Please follow @CityofBoston and visit boston.gov/snow for the latest updates

MAYOR WALSH ANNOUNCES SNOW ROUTE FOR ST. PATRICK'S DAY PARADE

MAYOR WALSH ANNOUNCES SNOW ROUTE FOR ST. PATRICK'S DAY PARADE
BOSTON - Wednesday, March 14, 2018 - Mayor Martin J. Walsh announced today that due to the significant amount of snow that fell in Boston during yesterday's blizzard, the St. Patrick's Day Parade route will be modified to follow the established snow route to ensure the safety of participants and spectators. The snow route starts at Broadway Station and ends at Farragut Road.

"Our number one priority will always be to keep our residents safe at all times," said Mayor Walsh. "The snow route has allowed for a safe and enjoyable celebration in other years when there has been heavy snow before the parade, and I commend the Public Works Department for working diligently to ensure that Broadway will be safe and accessible by Sunday."  

"The Boston Police Department manages numerous special events throughout the year, including parades, and reviews all aspects of public safety," said Boston Police Commissioner William B. Evans. "Yesterday's snowfall makes it more difficult to manage this weekend's parade in South Boston and it has created a situation where we do not feel that it is safe enough for children and families to watch the parade, especially on side streets, which are already difficult to navigate after a storm. It is important not to add more congestion to the roads in the neighborhood. Utilizing the snow route that has been successful in years past and will be safer for all of us."

With the parking ban in place through 5 p.m. today, Boston Public Works Department (PWD) removed 1,800 cubic yards of snow overnight from Broadway. Over the next several nights, PWD will focus on continued snow removal and opening the sidewalks on Broadway to ensure safety and accessibility on the designated snow route.

Governor Baker discuss storm recovery and thank first responders

 Governor Baker Visits Barnstable County Multi-Agency Coordination Center
Discusses storm recovery and thanks first responders

 
Governor Baker participates in a roundtable discussion with local officials at the Barnstable County Multi-Agency Coordination Center to thank first responders and address recovery efforts in the wake of the most recent nor’easter.
For high resolution photo, click here.

BOSTON – Today, Governor Charlie Baker joined Senator Vinny deMacedo, Senator Julian Cyr, Representative Sarah Peake, Representative Will Crocker, Representative Randy Hunt, Representative Tim Whelan, utility representatives and municipal officials from Barnstable County to discuss the impact of the most recent nor’easter at the Barnstable County Multi-Agency Coordination Center and to thank first responders for their efforts throughout the storm.

The most recent nor’easter has left hundreds of thousands of homes without power, dropped over two feet of snow in parts of the Commonwealth and knocked down trees and wires in several communities. Southeastern MA, especially Plymouth County, Southern Bristol County, the Cape and Islands, continue to experience significant power outages due following heavy wet snowfall and damaging winds.

Residents in need are encouraged to call 2-1-1 to identify their nearest shelter or warming center.

EOCs are actively working to clean up communities throughout the Commonwealth. Resource requests and storm related questions should be directed to MEMA’s Regional EOCs, or to the SEOC through MEMA’s 24/7 Communications Center at (508) 820-2000. 

Baker-Polito Administration Files Legislation to Enhance Department of Early Education and Care Background Check Process

Baker-Polito Administration Files Legislation to Enhance Department of Early Education and Care Background Check Process
Bill complies with new federal mandates for crucial funding and provides additional measures for protecting children in state licensed and funded child care programs

BOSTON – The Baker-Polito Administration today filed An Act to Enhance the Background Record Check Procedures of the Department of Early Education and Careto comply with new federal regulations governing Child Care Development Block Grant (“CCDBG”) funding, and to provide increased protections for children in Department of Early Education and Care licensed programs.

“Allowing the department to access important information and conduct expanded background checks will provide additional safeguards to protect our kids,” said Governor Charlie Baker. “Our administration looks forward to working with the Legislature to enact this bill to strengthen our ability to deliver safe and exceptional educational opportunities across the Commonwealth.”

“This legislation provides important measures to continue protecting children in the Commonwealth’s licensed child care programs,” said Lt. Governor Karyn Polito. “In satisfying new federal mandates tied to critical funding we remain committed to providing the best possible care to children across Massachusetts.”

To remain eligible for CCDBG funding, Massachusetts must update its background record check process relied upon by child care providers by September 30, 2018.  To ensure consistent practices relating to the safety of the Commonwealth’s children, this bill also exceeds federal requirements by extending safeguards beyond child care programs to EEC-licensed residential programs and adoption and foster agencies by September 30, 2020. 

An Act to Enhance the Background Record Check Procedures of the Department of Early Education and Care will also:
·       Require additional programs and individuals to complete a background record check through the Department of Early Education (EEC).  
·       Require all individuals in all EEC-licensed, funded, or approved programs to complete a background check record check.
·       Give EEC the authority to subject these programs to additional background record checks as part of its licensing and program funding process.  

Under the new CCDBG requirements, all individuals will first have to pass a fingerprint-based check of national and state criminal history databases before working provisionally in a supervised capacity in an EEC-licensed or CCDBG-funded program. This bill goes beyond federal requirements to require that applicants complete a Sex Offender Registry Information (SORI) check before working provisionally in a program. The legislation will also provide EEC with access to information on registered Level 1 sex offenders in Massachusetts. Currently EEC receives only Level 2 and Level 3 sex offender record information.

“An important element of this legislation is that all individuals in programs that are licensed by EEC or receive CCDBG funding will need to first pass the fingerprint check and Massachusetts SORI check before they are permitted to work provisionally in a supervised capacity,” Education Secretary James Peyser said.

A new background record check technology system to streamline business processes and to support the required changes to the review process is near completion.  Applicants seeking to apply for or renew a child care program license, or seeking new funding through CCDBG, and any new individuals in an existing EEC-licensed child care or CCDBG-funded program, will complete their background record check through the new system.

Applicants in programs subject to CCDBG requirements will be subject to a new check of the National Sex Offender Registry (NSOR), in addition to the four currently required checks of the state’s CORI, SORI, the Department of Children and Families (DCF) Registry of Alleged Perpetrators, and a fingerprint-based check of the state and national criminal history databases. All five checks will be run concurrently. 

“The safety of Massachusetts’ children is paramount, and ‘An Act to Enhance the Background Record Check Procedures of the Department of Early Education and Care’ will provide critical measures for protecting the Commonwealth’s children and staff in our state licensed and funded child care programs,” said Commissioner Tom Weber.  “These additional measures will strengthen our system and demonstrate the Department’s commitment to continuous improvement and enhance our ability to meet our mission of providing children and families with safe, high-quality early education and care.” 

CCDBG funding provides more than $277 million annually to the Department of Early Education and Care to subsidize high-quality child care for low-income children and families. In order to remain eligible for this funding, Massachusetts must update its background record check processes for all EEC-licensed child care programs and all programs that receive CCDBG funds, and to all individuals working and present in these programs, regardless of whether they have unsupervised access to children, by September 30, 2018.

EEC will phase in the additional background record check requirements for all individuals in all EEC-licensed residential programs and adoption and foster placement agencies by September 2020.

"Raise Up" to voice on paid leave and $15 minimum wage and legislators listen

Greater Boston Legislators to Hear from Hundreds of Voters at Boston Community Briefing on Paid Leave, $15 Minimum Wage

Raise Up Massachusetts’ Statewide Community Briefing Tour Comes to Boston As Grassroots Coalition Pushes for Passage of Paid Family and Medical Leave, $15 Minimum Wage Bills

BOSTON – On Tuesday, March 20 at 6:00 p.m. at the Cathedral Church of St. Paul in Boston, hundreds of local voters from the Raise Up Massachusetts coalition will be joined by Boston-area legislators for a community briefing on the coalition’s two legislative priorities: a paid family and medical leave program for Massachusetts workers, and an increase in the state’s minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2022.

At the briefing, members of local community organizations, faith groups, and labor unions will speak with Boston-area legislators about the urgent need for a higher minimum wage and the creation of a paid family and medical leave program for all Massachusetts workers. Members of the public are welcome and encouraged to RSVP at bit.ly/raiseupboston.

The briefing is part of a statewide tour pushing for passage of paid leave and a $15 minimum wage this spring, with events occurring in the South Coast, Springfield, Lawrence, Worcester, Boston, the North Shore, and Brockton throughout March and early April.

WHAT: Legislative Briefing on Paid Leave, $15 Minimum Wage
WHO: Hundreds of local voters from the Raise Up Massachusetts coalition of community organizations, religious groups, and labor unions; Greater Boston legislators
WHEN: Tuesday, March 20, 6:00 p.m.
WHERE: Cathedral Church of St. Paul, 138 Tremont Street, Boston

Last fall, the Raise Up Massachusetts coalition of community organizations, religious groups, and labor unions collected a total of 274,652 signatures to qualify paid leave and $15 minimum wage questions for the ballot, all without using paid signature gathering companies. The coalition collected 139,055 signatures for a $15 minimum wage and 135,597 for paid family and medical leave, well beyond the required 64,750 signatures for each petition.

Now that signatures are collected, members of the coalition are asking the Legislature to pass the bills before the June 2018 deadline to act. At that point, ballot question proponents must collect another 10,792 signatures to place the questions on the November 2018 ballot.

The Raise Up Massachusetts coalition is also behind the Fair Share Amendment, which would create an additional tax of four percentage points on the portion of a person’s annual income that is above $1 million. The Amendment would dedicate the new revenue generated by the tax, approximately $1.9 billion in 2019 dollars, to investments in transportation and public education. The Fair Share Amendment is already fully qualified for the 2018 ballot, because it is a constitutional amendment which followed a lengthier path to the ballot.

Background: Paid Family and Medical Leave
Raise Up Massachusetts’ paid leave legislation (H.2172/S.1048) would create a Paid Family and Medical Leave Insurance Program for Massachusetts workers, providing up to either 12 or 16 weeks of job-protected paid leave to care for a seriously ill or injured family member, to care for a new child, or to meet family needs arising from a family member’s active duty military service (family leave); and up to 26 weeks of job-protected paid leave to recover from a worker’s own serious illness or injury (medical leave), or to care for a seriously ill or injured service member.

The question prohibits employer retaliation against workers who take time off under these conditions, and workers taking paid leave would receive partial wage replacement equal to a percentage of their average weekly wages, with a maximum weekly benefit of either $650 or $1,000. Benefits would be funded through employer contributions to the new Family and Medical Leave Trust Fund, and employers could require employees to contribute up to 50% of the trust fund contributions.

While the United States is the only developed nation that does not offer paid time off after the birth of a child, California, New York, Rhode Island, and New Jersey all have paid family and medical leave, and both workers and businesses report positive effects. Because employees on leave receive their benefits from a state trust fund, businesses can afford to hire temporary replacement workers with the money they would otherwise use to pay the employee taking leave. Six years after California’s law was implemented, 89 to 99 percent of employers reportedthat paid family and medical leave had either a “positive effect” or “no noticeable effect” on productivity, profitability/performance, turnover, and employee morale.

Background: $15 Minimum Wage
Raise Up Massachusetts’ $15 minimum wage legislation (H.2365/S.1004) would raise the Massachusetts minimum wage, currently $11 an hour, by $1 each year over four years until it is $15 an hour in 2022. The minimum wage would then be adjusted each year to rise at the same rate as the cost of living.

Increasing the minimum wage to $15 by 2022 would raise the wages of roughly 943,000 workers, or 29 percent of the state’s workforce, according to a report by the Massachusetts Budget and Policy Center. 90 percent of workers who would be affected are over 20 years old or older, 56 percent are women, and 55 percent work full-time. Workers who are paid low wages include highly skilled professions, like nursing assistants, childcare providers, paramedics, and educators.

For employers, higher wages mean more efficient workers and less employee turnover, making it easier to recruit and retain workers and helping their bottom line. Business for a Fair Minimum Wage, a network of business owners and executives who believe a fair minimum wage makes good business sense, has released a statement signed by more than 250 Massachusetts business owners and executives who support gradually raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2022. Raise Up Massachusetts has also released a statement signed by 90 Massachusetts economists in support of the minimum wage increase.

Today, Massachusetts has the largest gap of any state between the general minimum wage ($11/hour) and the sub-minimum wage for tipped workers ($3.75). This sub-minimum wage for tipped workers leaves them facing financial uncertainty, and makes them vulnerable to harassment, discrimination, and wage theft. Raise Up Massachusetts’ legislation would also increase the sub-minimum wage for tipped workers over 8 years until it is equal to the regular minimum wage. That would bring Massachusetts in line with eight other states, from California to Maine, that have eliminated the sub-minimum wage for tipped workers, without seeing any harm to restaurants or a reduction in tipping.

星期二, 3月 13, 2018

波士頓市持續暴風雪停車禁令 公校14日停課

MAYOR WALSH ANNOUNCES CONTINUED PREPARATIONS, SCHOOL CLOSURES FOR WINTER STORM
Parking ban and snow emergency remain in effect, urges residents to take caution
BOSTON - Tuesday, March 13, 2018 - Mayor Martin J. Walsh today announced continued preparations for the ongoing winter storm, which is expected to bring a total of 12-18 inches of snow by midnight, with 9 inches already fallen.

Over the course of the day, Public Works crews have deployed 800 pieces of equipment to clear roadways. As of 3 p.m. this afternoon, 311, the city's non-emergency request line has received 1,089 calls, with a 98 percent service level achieved and over 30 agents taking calls.

"We are encouraging residents to stay off the roads, to assist older residents and those with disabilities, and to keep up with the shoveling of their property throughout the storm," said Mayor Walsh. "The City offers a number of resources geared towards keeping residents safe and aware of current conditions. I ask each and every single Boston resident to remain vigilant, stay safe and look after their neighbors."

Closure Updates:
  • Boston Public Schools will be closed on Wednesday, March 14.
  • All Boston Centers for Youth & Families (BCYF) community centers will be open tomorrow from 7:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
  • Boston Public Libraries will be open tomorrow.
  • All other municipal services and departments will be open, and all employees aside from BPS staff are required to report to work.
Parking:
  • A snow emergency and parking ban remain in effect on main roads, and ticketing and towing will continue for those parked in main arteries during a snow emergency.
  • Discounted parking continues to be available in designated garages. Locations and pricing information can be found at: Boston.gov/snow.
  • Residents are encouraged to stay off the roads, and take public transportation if needed. If you do have to be on the road, please be very attentive for pedestrians and other drivers.
Preparations:
  • PWD crews have deployed 800 pieces of equipment to clear roadways.  
  • Several city departments, including BPD, EMS and 311 continue to have extra support available to assist residents.
  • Tomorrow's scheduled trash and recycling collection will begin at 6:00 a.m. Residents are encouraged to shovel out a space for barrels on the street side of the sidewalk. For the full schedule and to download the Trash Day app: available online.
  • Street-sweeping is cancelled.
Rules on Clearing Snow:
  • Property owners must fully clear snow, sleet and ice from sidewalks and curb ramps abutting the property within three hours after the snowfall ends or three hours after sunrise if the snow ends overnight. Curb and pedestrian ramps to the street should be cleared fully and continually over the duration of the storm to ensure accessibility for individuals with disabilities. As the storm will last over an extended period of time, property owners are asked to continually check ramps abutting their property for compliance. Failure to comply can result in a fine issued by PWD's Code Enforcement Division.
  • Removal of snow, ice from a private property to the street or sidewalk is prohibited and can result in a fine issued by PWD's Code Enforcement Division.
  • Do not throw snow onto the street. Fines associated with improper removal of snow can be found here.
Safety Tips:
  • Remember to keep catch basins and fire hydrants clear.  For a map of catch basins and fire hydrants, visit http://www.bwsc.org
  • Shoveling snow requires significant exertion; please be cautious and pay attention to symptoms. Stop if you feel chest pain, shortness of breath, lightheaded, nauseous/vomiting. Call 911 if those symptoms do not resolve quickly when you stop exertion.
  • Snow piles can make navigating intersections dangerous for walkers and drivers, please take extra care when turning corners with snowpiles that might limit visibility.
  • Pedestrians should use caution as visibility will be diminished due to blowing and drifting of the snow caused by high winds.
  • Carbon Monoxide poisoning is a concern during winter weather, especially with the use of generators. Residents should be sure to use their home heating systems wisely and safety, and have a working carbon monoxide detector on each floor of your home. Call 911 immediately if you suspect carbon monoxide poisoning.
  • Sitting in a car while idling can be deadly if the tailpipe is blocked. Do not let children sit in an idling car while shoveling. Clear any household exhaust pipes of snow. For example, gas exhaust from heating system or dryer.
  • Please check on neighbors, especially the elderly and those with disabilities.
  • Have a contractor check the roof to see if snow needs to be removed. If roof snow can be removed from the ground with the use of a snow-rake, do so with caution. Avoid working from ladders and be mindful of slippery surfaces. 
Helping the Homeless:
  • If you see homeless individuals out in the cold who appear immobile, disoriented or underdressed for the cold, please call 911.
  • The Boston Public Health Commission (BPHC) coordinates a city-wide network of emergency shelters, outreach providers, city agencies and first responders to assist those in need of shelter.
  • Emergency shelters are open 24 hours and will accept any person in need. Men can access shelters through 112 Southampton Street, and women should go to the Woods-Mullen Shelter at 794 Massachusetts Ave. BPHC and the City are working closely with shelter providers to ensure that no client is without shelter, food, resources, and a warm respite from the cold.
  • Emergency shelters are open 24 hours and will accept any person in need.
  • During extreme cold weather, street outreach teams operate with extended hours and provide mobile outreach vans on the streets in the evening and throughout the day. Find more information  here.
Residents are encouraged to sign up for emergency notifications through AlertBoston and utilize the 311 call center for non-emergency related issues. Please follow @CityofBoston and visit boston.gov/snow for the latest updates.

###

第27屆胡桃山音樂營 4/15 截止報名


中華表演藝術基金會
 Foundation For Chinese Performing Arts  
            3 Partridge Lane, Lincoln, MA 01773
ChinesePerformingArts.net Foundation@ChinesePerformingArts.net 
go to our websitesee us in facebookemail us    
 
The 27th Annual Music Festival 
at Walnut Hill
胡桃山音樂營
July 19 - August 12, 2018
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Application Deadline: April 5
 


Detailed information, Application Form, 
Concert Master Classes event calendar (draft, 
will be updated frequently), 
photos of previous years, 
etc. at:
http://www.chineseperformingarts.net/contents/festival/index.htm
 
LOCATION: Walnut Hill School for the Arts, 
12 Highland St., Natick, MA 01760. 
About 15 miles west of Boston, Massachusetts.
APPLICATION DEADLINE
April 5, 2018
Application fee: US $70
 
AGE AND ENROLLMENT:
Age 14 or above. Total enrollment 45. No upper age limit. 
Dorm residency required. 
Audition required
Special arrangement is required for applicant younger than 13.

Faculty 2018 (alphabetically)
Piano
Jonathan Bass,  Tema Blackstone
Bruce Brubaker
Wha Kyung Byun, Piano Master Class only
Hung-Kuan Chen  陳宏寬,  Pi-Hsien Chen  陳必先
Ya-Fei Chuang 莊雅斐
Alexander Korsantia 
Meng-Chieh Liu  劉孟捷
Victor Rosenbaum
Russell Sherman, Piano Master Class only
Minsoo Sohn , Mana Tokuno

Violin
James Buswell ,  Lynn Chang 張萬鈞
Nicholas Kitchen,  Magdalena Richter
Kristopher Tong
Viola
Jessica Bodner,  Hsin-Yun Huang  黃心芸
Scott Lee 李捷琦,  Mai Motobuchi

Cello
Mark Churchill, Cello Master Class
Yeesun Kim
Laurence Lesser, Cello Master Class only
Carol Ou  歐逸青,  Sam Ou 歐维聖
Bion Tsang  章雨亭 
Composition: Yang Yong 楊勇 
Chamber Music Master Class
Yehudi Wyner
Benjamin Zander 

Clarinet:  Thomas Hill 
Flute : Sue-Ellen Hershman-Tcherepnin 
Oboe: Joyce Alper
Saxophone : Kenneth Radnofsky
 
PROGRAM:
Two to Three private lessons per week for piano, violin, viola, cello, double bass, flute, clarinet, oboe, saxophone, composition, and others (upon request).
  • Chamber Ensembles
  • Orchestral Performances
  • Master Classes
  • Stage presentation workshop
  • Concerts with faculty members and students
  • Attending concert at Tanglewood Music Center, visiting Norman Rockwell Museum
  • Visits to New England Conservatory, Harvard University, Museum of Fine Arts, and others (subject to schedule availability)
  •                                     AUDITION
Live audition and/or DVD/YouTube audition is required for all applicants except students recommended by faculty members. Returning students should contact Director Dr. Catherine Tan Chan 譚嘉陵 f or waving the audition. Application forms and fees are required for all applicants including returning students. Each applicant should prepare at least two contrasting pieces or two contrasting movements of the same piece of his/her own choice that will represent his/her musical level and achievement. Live audition is required for Taiwan and/or China. DVD/YouTube audition is required for Hong Kong, US, Canada, China, and other countries.
 
 CONTACT;
 
Taiwan:
Applicants from Taiwan will be auditioned in Taipei by Professors 黃維明林明慧鍾曉青.  The exact date and location will be arranged by Mrs. Meir Chen陳美娥 Phone:+886 2 22302162,  Fax: +886 2 22306222, Mobile: 886-910-381-528, Email: meir.chen88@gmail.com.
 
China:
Ms.  Jonie Qiuning Huang, Shanghai Conservatory of Music.  黄秋宁上海音乐学院教师
Phone: + 86-136-519-07568 (for text only). Email: huangqiuning@shcmusic.edu.cn, Wechat: Jonieplaythepiano
Dr. Haobing Zhu , Assistant Professor, Shanghai Normal University. 朱昊冰博士上海师范大学教师
Phone : +86-177-210-22602 (for text only). Email: bingpiano@foxmail.com. wechat: 17721022602   
Hong Kong, US, Canada and other countries:
Applicants should submit a recently prepared DVD or YouTube to the Foundation for Chinese Performing Arts, 3 Partridge Lane, Lincoln, MA 01773.  Foundation@ChinesePerformingArts.net. It will be presented to faculty members for evaluation.
 
Piano Concerto Competition 2018:
The concerto piece 2018 is Schumann Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 54  The concerto concert with Mercury Orchestra is on Saturday, 8/11/2018, 8 pm, at Harvard Sanders Theatre.  The competition date: Friday, July 27, 2018, 2:30 pm before faculty members, invited jury, and Channing Yu, conductor of Mercury Orchestra. The list of concerti performed since 1996 is posted online. Lang Lang, Yeol-Eum Son, Max Tan, Eric Lu, among others have played. http://www.chineseperformingarts.net/contents/festival/index-Orchestra.htm
TUITION:
There is a non-refundable application fee of US $70 for each application. The tuition is US $3,000.
Financial Aid ranging from US $500 to $1,000 will be awarded to qualified applicants with financial challenge. 
 
UPCOMING EVENTS
-----------------  
  
  
Saturday, 3/31/2018, 8 pm, Jordan Hall,

                                                   Angelo Xiang Yu 于翔 violin
 
  
 
Andrew Hsu   
  
 
  
  
徐鴻,piano 
 
The 27th Annual 
All-American Chinese 
Brush Painting and Calligraphy Competition
  Deadline for submission: 
April 15, 2018
全美青少年國畫書法比賽
  
Roger Wong 黃汝琛age 13, Liu Xiaoyong Studi, MA麻州劉曉勇畫室
 
Kaden Chen 陳萬盛age 11, Ichen Art Academy, CA 加州宜真美術學院
 
Saturday, 5/12/2018, 8 pm, Jordan Hall, 
Dang Thai-Son 鄧泰山, pianist
 
 
The 27th Annual Music Festival at Walnut Hill 
胡桃山音樂營 July 19-August 12, 2018
Application Deadline:
April 5, 2018
Concerto 2018:
Schumann Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 54
 
We Need Your Support
Support us make a   Donation
www. ChinesePerformingArts.net   
 Your tax-deductible donation enables us 
to continue presenting the best artists, 
maintaining low admission fee and free student tickets.  
Please support us especially at this time
現今社會動盪,人們生活中充滿不安。文化藝術安定人心的重要性,在此時更為明顯。但經費來源卻更艱難。
您的免稅捐款,可使我們繼續舉行高水準音樂會,提供最低票價,及免費學生票。並鼓勵青年才俊在古典音樂、傳統中國書畫、及民族國樂樂器各方面學習傳承。希望您慷慨解囊,大力支持。

Your Donation is 
appreciated: 
http://www.chineseperformingarts.net/donation/index.htm

Order Ticket Online: 
www.ChinesePerformingArts.net

Foundation For Chinese Performing Arts Cathy Chan 譚嘉陵, Founder and President