China Seminar: Changing Trends in Chinese Investment in the U.S.

Friends of East-West Center cordially invites you to the spring 2016 sessions of the

CHINA SEMINAR

Thursday, 10 March, 2016, 12 noon
Maple Garden Restaurant
909 Isenberg Street, Honolulu

$20.00 for Friends of the East-West Center members, EWC and UH students
$25.00 for non-members
Luncheon served after the talk

Changing Trends in Chinese Investment in the U.S.

Lawrence C. Foster

Chinese foreign investment around the world continues to break records every year.  What is happening with Chinese investment in the U.S., in Hawaii?  What are the future trends?  Are there any political or legal barriers?  For example, what happened to the lawsuit against President Obama after he blocked the sale of an Oregon wind farm site to a Chinese buyer, citing national security concerns?  Professor Lawrence Foster will address these questions.

Lawrence C. Foster started to learn Chinese and made his first trip to Asia (Japan, Taiwan and Hong Kong) in the 1960s. His education includes a Ph.D. in Chinese language and literature and a law degree.  Larry’s professional career includes a professorship of Chinese language and literature, a lawyer and Dean and professor of the UH Law School.  From 2005 to 2013, while living in Shanghai, Larry was a Senior Consultant at a major international Chinese law firm and a mentor for young Chinese lawyers.  He has also been an affiliate professor at Beijing University’s School of Transnational Law in Shenzhen, China.  Larry is an elected member of the governing council of the Inter-Pacific Bar Association, a past-President of the international alumni association of EWC, a member of Law Asia and the American Bar Association’s China Law Committee, and a trustee for Tokai University in Honolulu.

To RSVP, please call 944-7111 or email friends@eastwestcenter.org.

Click here to download the event flyer.

China Seminar: US-China Security Cooperation: “You Really Ought to Give Mil-to-Mil a Try”

Happy New Year 恭贺新禧

Friends of East-West Center cordially invites you to the spring 2016 sessions of the

China Seminar

Thursday, 11 February, 2016, 12 noon
Maple Garden Restaurant
909 Isenberg Street, Honolulu

$20.00 for Friends of the East-West Center members, EWC and UH students
$25.00 for non-members
Luncheon served after the talk

US-China Security Cooperation:
“You Really Ought to Give Mil-to-Mil a Try”

Dave Stilwell

Of the many changes that came with the transition from Hu Jintao to Xi Jinping, PLA interest in Mil-Mil exchanges with the US is one of the most notable.  The so-called “ardent suitor” phenomenon – which had the US fairly begging a hard-to-get PLA to engage – reversed itself in November 2012.  Xi’s frequent admonitions to the PLA to “prepare for combat” weren’t orders to increase China’s combat footing – instead he was telling the generals that they should focus on building a professional fighting force.  The only way to accomplish this quickly would be for the PLA to pursue closer contact with their American counterparts.  The US seeks increased interaction to foster mutual understanding and trust as well as to reduce the potential for unintended conflict due to miscalculation.  BrigGen Stilwell will elaborate on the PLA’s very obvious about-face, offer thoughts on the current state of the relationship, and propose areas for greater cooperation.

Brigadier General Dave Stilwell recently retired from the Air Force after 35 years in uniform.  He began his career as a Korean linguist and later majored in Asian Studies and Chinese language as an East West Center participant 1987-1988.  BrigGen Stilwell has flown 2500 hours in the F-4 Phantom II and the F-16 Fighting Falcon with deployments to South Korea, Japan, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, and Qatar.  He most recently served as the Base and Wing Commander at Misawa Air Base, Japan; as Defense Attaché to the People’s Republic of China 2011-2013; and most recently as the Policy and Strategy advisor to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff for all Asia security issues.  He is married to former East West Center staff member Jan Watanabe, and they have two children, Dane and Janae.

To RSVP, please call 944-7111 or email friends@eastwestcenter.org.

Click here to download the event flyer.

China Seminar: A Chinese Kitchen What I Learned in Writing a Cookbook about Chinese Food in Hawaii

China Seminar
Thursday, 10 December, 2015, 12 noon

Maple Garden Restaurant
909 Isenberg Street, Honolulu

$20.00 for Friends of the East-West Center members, EWC and UH students
$25.00 for non-members
Luncheon served after the talk

A Chinese Kitchen
What I Learned in Writing a Cookbook about Chinese Food in Hawaii

Lynette Lo Tom

Lynette Lo Tom wrote the fourth cookbook in the Honolulu Star-Advertiser’s series on ethnic foods in Hawaii. Using dishes from good family cooks; her mother, grandfather and grandmother, she put recipes to their favorite foods. In her research, she compared Hawaii-style food with that in Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore and specifically in Zhongshan, China. She visited those locations in her quest to find out if there is a unique Chinese-Hawaiian food (the answer is yes).

She earned a BS in Journalism with honors from University of Colorado at Boulder, attended graduate school at University of Michigan, Ann Arbor and earned an MBA degree from the University of California at Berkeley. She is a graduate of Punahou School.

Returning to Hawaii, she worked in radio journalism at KHVH Newsradio 99, was a general assignment editor and then reporter at KGMB – TV. At Hawaii Public Television, she was a reporter and anchor. She also served as public information specialist at GTE Hawaiian Tel and marketing manager at Hawaii Public Radio. Before writing the cookbook, she oversaw 15 employees at Bright Light Marketing, her public relations and marketing company she started 25 years ago.

To RSVP, please call 944-7111 or email friends@eastwestcenter.org.

Click here to download the event flyer.