CWR Gold Logo 
The College World Reporter
May 2009 - Vol. 1, No. 5a 
Asian Pacific American Heritage Month
Supplement
In This Issue
Publisher's Message

Asian Pacific
American Timeline


Feature Story:  The Great Asian Diaspora and How It Changed the World


Outstanding Asian Pacific Americans

Expressions and Opinions

Asian American Leaders in Business and Technology

Fact Versus Fiction

Major Political Issues for Asian Pacific Americans

Issues of Concern to Asian Pacific Americans on the Asian Continent and Pacific Islands

Social Issues of Concern to Asian Pacific Americans

__________________
Get The CWR Delivered to Your Email Inbox Every Month 
Just Click Here
 
Join Our Mailing List
 
 
Spread The Word!  Forward The CWR to Your Friends and Associates






APA Info Links

Library of Congress - Asian Pacific American Month

U.S. Dept. of Health & Human Services APA Timeline

Smithsonian Filipino American Timeline

Smithsonian Indian American History

Smithsonian Indian American Immigration

Smithsonian Indian American Notable Firsts

Smithsonian Filipino American Heritage Website

USAsians.net APA Historical Timeline

Smithsonian Vietnamese American Heritage Project

Smithsonian - The Korean Americans (Guide for educators)

Asian American Federation

Asians In America Magazine

Asian Week

Menzanar National Historic Site

ThaIndianNews

I Love India

110 Most Inspiring Asian Americans of All Time

U. S. Pan Asian American Chamber of Commerce

Publisher's Message
Donell EdwardsDear CWR Readers,

A few decades back there was a wine company with the slogan, "We will sell no wine before it's time."  We feel it is very appropriate to apply that principle to this belated supplement to our Asian Pacific American Heritage Month issue. 

In our efforts to carefully research, document, and make contact with the people with the knowledge and information required to produce this supplement, a decision was made to take as long as necessary in order to provide the content contained in this supplement.

We hope that you will experience as much joy and excitement reading this information and reviewing the lists as we had in producing this special supplement to The College World Reporter.

We also want to thank once again all of the people listed below who assisted us, or who inspired us, in the research, development, and completion of this supplement.

We welcome your comments which may be sent through the "Submit Comments" link:  Submit Comments to the CWR Here

Sincerely,


Donell Edwards
Founder & Publisher
The College World Reporter


SPECIAL THANKS TO THE FOLLOWING

Ideas and Concept
A. Magazine: Inside Asian America
Jeff Yang, Publisher and Founder
 
Content
Dr. Franklin Odo, Director
Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Program

Dr. Evelyn Hu-DeHart
Director of the Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity, Brown University

Monique Avakian
Best selling author
 
Ryan Chin
Japanese American Citizens League (JACL)
 
Imrana Khera
Asia Society
 
Angela Pang, Community Relations Manager
AsianWeek Foundation
 
 
Respectfully,
 
 
Donell Edwards
Founder & Publisher
The College World Reporter

 

Asian Pacific American History Timeline

This timeline is not intended to be an all-inclusive, comprehensive listing of all historical events involving Asian Pacific Americans, but is a compilation of many of the major events involving Asian Pacific Americans gathered from various sources.

Year

Event

1600s

Spanish bring Chinese and Filipinos to Mexico on ships of the Manila galleon.

1763

The first recorded settlement of Filipinos in America.  To escape imprisonment aboard Spanish galleons, they jump ship in New Orleans and flee into the bayous of Louisiana.

1790

The first recorded arrival of Asian Indians in the United States.

1830s

Chinese laborers (sugar masters) are brought to work in Hawaiian sugar cane fields.

 

Chinese peddlers are recorded in New York City.

1843

The first Japanese immigrants arrive in the United States on May 7, 1843.

1844

U.S. and China sign first treaty.

1848

Gold is discovered in California and attracts Chinese prospectors.

1842-52

China is defeated by the British Empire in the first Opium War, resulting in the Treaty of Nanjing, whereby China is forced to cede the island of Hong Kong and open ports to foreign commerce.

1847

Three Chinese students arrive in New York City for schooling.  One of them, Yung Wing, graduates from Yale in 1854 and becomes the first Chinese to graduate from a U.S. college.

1850

California imposes Foreign Miner's Tax and enforces it mainly against Chinese miners, who were often forced to pay more than once.

1852

The first group of 195 Chinese contract laborers land in Hawaii.

 

Over 20,000 Chinese enter California.

 

Chinese first appear in court in California.

1854

Chinese in Hawaii begin to organize, form a funeral society, the first community association in the islands.

 

In the People v. Hall, the California Supreme Court rules that a Chinese man cannot give testimony in court since Chinese were "inferior, and...incapable of progress or intellectual development beyond a certain point..."

1858

California passes a law to bar entry of Chinese and "Mongolians."

1859

Chinese are excluded from San Francisco public schools.

1860

Japan sends its first diplomatic mission to the U.S.

1862

Six Chinese district associations in San Francisco form a loose federation.

 

California imposes a "police tax" of $2.50 a month on those of the "Mongolian race" to discourage immigration and protect white laborers from competition.

1865

The Central Pacific Railroad Company recruits Chinese workers for the Transcontinental Railroad.

1867

Two thousand Chinese railroad workers strike for a week.

 

Fifty thousand Chinese are reported living in California.

1868

U.S. and China sign the Burlingame-Seward Treaty, affirming friendship between the two nations and guaranteeing the right of Chinese immigration.

1869

The first Transcontinental Railroad in the U.S. is completed on May 10, 1869.

1870

Chinese railroad workers in Texas sue company for failing to pay wages.

1872

California's Civil Procedure Code drops law barring Chinese court testimony.

1876

U.S. and Hawaii sign Reciprocity Treaty, allowing Hawaiian sugar to enter the U.S. duty free.

1877

People unhappy at competing with cheap Chinese labor, and fearful of being "overwhelmed" by non-white immigration, cause anti-Chinese riots in San Francisco and other California cities.

1878

Court rules Chinese ineligible for naturalized citizenship.

1879

California's second constitution prevents municipalities and corporations from employing Chinese.

 

California state legislature passes law requiring all incorporated towns and cities to remove Chinese outside of city limits, but U.S. circuit court declares the law unconstitutional.

1880

As many people blamed the Chinese for taking away jobs and causing unemployment, the U.S. successfully amends the Burlingame Treaty, winning the right to limit or suspend Chinese immigration.

1882

Congress approves Chinese Exclusion Act, banning Chinese laborers for ten years.

 

Chinese community leaders form Chinese Consolidation Benevolent Association (CCBA or Chinese Six Companies in San Francisco.

 

U.S. and Korea sign first treaty.

1883

Chinese in New York establish CCBA.

1884

Joseph and Mary Tape sue San Francisco school board to enroll their Chinese daughter Mamie in a public school.

 

United Chinese Society established in Honolulu.

 

1882 Chinese Exclusion Law amended to require a certificate as the only permissible evidence for reentry.

1885

The Irwin Convention allows Japanese contract laborers into Hawaii.

 

San Francisco builds new segregated "Oriental School" in response to Mamie Tape case.

1886

Residents of Tacoma, Seattle, and many places in the American West forcibly expel Chinese.

 

End of Chinese immigration to Hawaii.

 

Chinese laundrymen win in Yick v. Hopkins case, which declares that a law with unequal impact on different groups is discriminatory.

1888

Scott Act renders 20,000 Chinese reentry certificates null and void.

1889

Chae Chan Ping v. U.S. upholds constitutionality of Chinese exclusion laws.

1892

Geary Law renews exclusion of Chinese laborers for another ten years and requires all Chinese to register.

1893

Japanese in San Francisco form the first trade association, the Japanese Shoemakers' League.

1894

Saito, a Japanese man, applies for U.S. citizenship, but U.S. circuit courts refuse because he is neither white nor black.

 

Japanese immigration to Hawaii under the Irwin Convention ends and emigration companies take over.

1895

Lem Moon Sing v. U.S. rules that district courts can no longer review Chinese habeas corpus petitions for landing in the U.S.

1896

Shinsei Kaneko, a Japanese Californian, is naturalized.

1898

Wong Kim Ark v. U.S. decides that Chinese born in the U.S. cannot be stripped of their citizenship.

 

The Philippine Islands become a U.S. territory under the Treaty of Paris, ending the Spanish-American War.

 

U.S. annexes Hawaii on August 12, 1898.

1900

Organic Act makes all U.S. laws applicable to Hawaii, thus ending contract labor in the islands.

1902

Chinese exclusion extended for another ten years.

 

Immigration officials and the police raid Boston's Chinatown and, without search warrants, arrest almost 250 Chinese who allegedly had no registration certificates on their persons.

1903

The first group of 7,000 Korean workers arrives in Hawaii on January 13, 1903, to work as strikebreakers against Japanese workers.

 

1,500 Japanese and Mexican sugar beet workers strike in Oxnard, California.

 

Filipino students arrive in the U.S., invited to attend colleges under the Pensionado Program, an effort to modernize and democratize the Philippines.

1904

Chinese exclusion made indefinite and applicable to U.S. insular possessions.

 

Japanese plantation workers engage in the first organized strike in Hawaii.

1905

San Francisco School Board attempts to segregate Japanese schoolchildren.

 

Korean emigration ends.

 

Koreans in San Francisco form Mutual Assistance Society.

 

Asiatic Exclusion League formed in San Francisco.

1906

A major earthquake in San Francisco destroys all municipal records, including immigration records, so Chinese immigrants are able to claim they are U.S. citizens and have the right to bring their wives and children to America.

1907

President Theodore Roosevelt signs Executive Order 589, prohibiting Japanese with passports for Hawaii, Mexico, or Canada to reemigrate to the U.S.

 

Koreans form United Korean Society in Hawaii.

 

First group of Filipino laborers arrives in Hawaii.

1908

Japanese form Japanese Association of America.

1909

Koreans form Korean Nationalist Association.

 

7,000 Japanese plantation workers strike major plantations on Oahu for four months.

1910

Administrative measures are used to restrict the influx of Asian Indians into California.

 

Angel Island Immigration Station opens to process and deport Asian immigrants.

1911

Chinese men in America cut off their queues following revolution in China.

 

Pablo Manlapit forms Filipino Higher Wages Association in Hawaii.

1912

Japanese in California hold statewide conference on Nisei education.

1913

Asian Indians in California found the revolutionary Ghadar Party and start publishing a newspaper.

 

Pablo Manlapit forms Filipino Unemployed Association in Hawaii.

1915

Japanese form Central Japanese Association of Southern California and the Japanese Chamber of Commerce.

1917

The 1917 Immigration Law defines a geographic "barred zone" (including India) from which no immigrants can come.

1918

Servicemen of Asian ancestry who had served in World War I receive right of naturalization.

 

Asian Indians form the Hindustani Welfare Reform Association in the Imperial and Coachella valleys in southern California.

1919

Japanese form Federation of Japanese Labor in Hawaii.

1920

10,000 Japanese and Filipino plantation workers go on strike.

1921

Filipinos establish a branch of the Caballeros Dimas Alang in San Francisco and a branch of the Legionarios del Trabajo in Honolulu.

1922

Takao Ozawa v. U.S. declares Japanese ineligible for naturalized citizenship.

 

Cable Act declares that any American female citizen who marries "an alien ineligible to citizenship" would lose her citizenship.

1923

U.S. v. Bhagat Singh Thind declares Asian Indians ineligible for naturalized citizenship.

1924

In response to concerns about rising immigration, Immigration Act of 1924 establishes strict quotas based on national origin according to the 1880 census, effectively ending Asian immigration.

1925

Hilario Moncado founds Filipino Federation of America.

1928

Filipinos in Los Angeles form Filipino American Christian Fellowship.

1930

Anti-Filipino riot in Watsonville, California.

1934

Tydings-McDuffie Act spells out the procedure for eventual Philippine independence and reduces Filipino immigration to 50 persons a year.

1936

American Federation of Labor grants charter to a Filipino-Mexican union of fieldworkers.

1938

150 Chinese women garmentworkers strike for three months against the National Dollar Stores (owned by Chinese).

1940

American Federation of Labor charters the Filipino Federated Agricultural Laborers Association.

1941

Japanese planes attack Pearl Harbor, Hawaii on December 7, 1941, and the United States enters World War II.

 

After declaring war on Japan, 2,000 Japanese community leaders along Pacific Coast  states and Hawaii are rounded up and interned in Department of Justice camps.

1942

In the wake of anti-Japanese sentiment following the attack on Pearl Harbor, President Franklin Roosevelt signs an order to intern Japanese-Americans.

1943

Congress repeals all Chinese exclusion laws, grants right of naturalization, and a very small immigrant quota to Chinese (105 per year).

1945

Atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan on August 6, 1945, ushering in the nuclear age.

 

Japan surrenders on August 14, 1945, ending World War II.

1946

Luce-Celler bill grants right of naturalization and small immigration quotas to Asian Indians and Filipinos.

 

Wing F. Ong becomes the first Asian American to be elected to state office in the Arizona House of Representatives.

 

Philippines become independent.  U.S. citizenship offered to all Filipinos living in the United States, not just servicemen.

1949

Communist Revolution takes place in China and the U.S. breaks off diplomatic ties with the newly formed People's Republic of China.

 

5,000 highly educated Chinese enter the U.S. and are granted refugee status after China institutes a Communist government.

1950-53

Korean War

1952

McCarran-Walter Act abolishes race as an immigration criterion, sets quotas by nation.

1956

Dalip Singh Saund from the Imperial Valley, California, is elected to Congress.

1959

When Hawaii became a state on August 21, 1959, Daniel K. Inouye won election to the U.S. House of Representatives as the new state's first Congressman; the first Asian Pacific Islander to do so.

1962

Daniel K. Inouye elected U.S. senator and Spark Matsunaga elected U.S. congressman from Hawaii.

1964

Patsy Takemoto Mink becomes first Asian American woman to serve in Congress as representative from Hawaii.

1965

Immigration Law abolishes "national origins" as basis for allocating immigration quotas to various countries - Asian countries now on an equal footing with others for the first time in U.S. history.

1974

March Fong Eu elected California's Secretary of State.

1975

More than 130,000 refugees enter the U.S. from Vietnam, Kampuchea (Cambodia), and Laos, following the end of the Vietnam War.

1977

Eilberg Act restricts immigration of professionals.

1978

National Convention of Japanese American Citizens League adopts resolution calling for redress and reparations for the internment of Japanese Americans.

1979

Resumption of diplomatic relations between the People's Republic of China and the U.S. reunites members of long-separated Chinese American families, and increases immigration from China.

1981

Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians (set up by Congress) holds hearings across the country and concludes the internment was a "grave injustice" and that Executive Order 9066 resulted from "race prejudice, war hysteria and a failure of political leadership."

1982

Vincent Chin, a Chinese American draftsman, is clubbed to death with a baseball bat by two Euro-American men.

1986

Ellison Onizuka and six fellow crew mates die aboard the space shuttle Challenger when it exploded during liftoff.

1987

First formal signing of the Proclamation of Asian Pacific American Heritage Week by the White House.

 

The U.S. House of Representatives votes 243 to 141 to make an official apology to Japanese Americans and to pay each surviving internee $20,000 in reparations.

1988

American Homecoming Act allows children in Vietnam born of American fathers to immigrate to the U.S.

1989

President George Bush signs into law an entitlement program to pay each survivor of Japanese internment camps $20,000.

 

U.S. reaches agreement with Vietnam to allow political prisoners to emigrate to the U.S.

1990

Immigration Act raised the total quota and reorganized the system of preferences.  Nearly 5 million immigrants arrive from Asian countries.

1993

Connie Chung becomes the first Asian American to be a nightly news anchor for a major network (CBS).

1996

Gary Locke is elected governor of the state of Washington.  He is the first Asian American governor of a state on the mainland.

2000

Norman Yohsio Mineta is appointed Secretary of Commerce for the Bill Clinton administration.

2001

Elaine Chao is appointed Secretary of Labor.  She is the first female Asian American cabinet member.

2008

Anh Cao wins a special election for a seat in the House of Representatives, representing New Orleans, Louisiana.  He is the first Vietnamese-American to serve in Congress.

2009

President Barack Obama names Gary Locke to be Secretary of Commerce, Eric Shinseki to be Secretary of Veterans' Affairs, and Stephen Chu to be Secretary of Energy.

Compiled from the following sources:  USAsians.net, InfoPlease, U.S. Health and Human Services. 

Feature Story
The Great Asian Diaspora and How It Changed the World - By Donell Edwards

In all cultures, people have migrated to other countries because of a spirit of adventure, looking for excitement, or seeking new markets for their products, some have sought better opportunities, and others have been forced to be slaves in foreign lands.  This group migration or dispersion of people outside their homeland is known as the diaspora.

Perhaps no people have been more widely dispersed than Asians.  According to Dr. Evelyn Hu-DeHart, Director of the Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity at Brown University, "For centuries before, during and after European colonialism, multitudes of people from China, Japan, the Philippines and India left their homelands for points far and near in search of opportunity or under deception and duress. Dispersed to all corners of the world, they were traders and peddlers, entrepreneurs and laborers, artisans and coolies and, in some cases, aggressive colonizers themselves."

Wherever Asians have gone in the world, they have left their mark.  Dr. Hu-DeHart states, "There is not a spot on earth where a person of Asian descent has not once stepped foot or put down roots.  And everywhere they have landed, they've formed ethnic communities based on the cultural traditions and memories, preserved or imagined, of the homelands to which most never return."

The contributions of Asians have changed not only America, but the entire world.  Our list of "Outstanding Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders" and "Asian Leaders in Business and Industry" in this issue present some of the achievements, and demonstrates the impact, of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders on American society.

Asian Americans have influenced every area of society, from politics to religion, from science and technology to business and industry, from medicine and education to music and the arts.  Take away the contributions of Asian Americans from American society and from the global community, and the world would take a quantum leap backwards.

As a result of the Great Asian Diaspora, many inventions and products that originated on the Asian continent and Pacific Islands have been introduced to other countries, including the United States.  We have listed some of the things the world enjoys that originated in Asia and the country of origin:

Printing with metal movable type (Korea)

Seismograph (China)

Fluorescent Light (Philippines)

Paper (China)

Cotton (India)

Circulation of Paper Currency (China)

Barbecue (China)

Compact Disc/CD (Japan)

The Umbrella (China)

PC Sound Card (Singapore)

Walkman (Japan)

Chinos/Khakis (China)

DVD (Japan)

Indigo dye for Blue Jeans (India)

Soy Milk (China)

The Great Asian Diaspora has been somewhat of a dichotomy in the United States, resulting in both good and bad.  First, were the turbulent times when the first Asian immigrants came to the United States, and the decades that followed.  Commenting on the circumstances of these early Asian immigrants, Dr. Hu-DeHart says they were "Introduced in the nineteenth century to provide cheap manual labor for mines, plantations and railroads in western America and Hawaii, the largely male immigrant population was racially constructed as non-white, deemed inherently unassimilable and condemned as 'aliens ineligible for citizenship,' causing the doors for future immigrants to slam in their faces." Asians (Chinese, Filipinos, Koreans and Japanese) who were seeking a better life discovered they were treated similar to slaves, and were valued only as a source of cheap labor.

However, things changed for the better when the immigration laws in the United States were changed in 1965, allowing Asian immigration to resume.  Then, as previously, the labor requirements of the U.S. influenced who came to America.  This time the dictates of the American economy required skilled laborers and professionals.  Dr. Hu-DeHart explains!  "The nation's first boom of professionals from Asian shores drastically changed the status of Asian Americans.  No longer despised and reviled, mainstream America has placed them upon a pedestal as a 'model minority' for all to admire and emulate.  Some aim this not-so-subtle bootstrap message at other racial minorities---African Americans, Native Americans and Latinos---in order to blame them, not society, for their problems."

When one considers the many, many significant achievements of Asian Americans, and the positive impact of those contributions to American society, in view of the violent and discriminatory treatment of Asians in the past, and to some extent the present, those achievements become even more remarkable.

Most Asian immigrants in the U.S. found themselves in an unfamiliar country, with little or no means of support, unaware of the laws and customs, and with limited if any ability to speak English.  Under those circumstances, how did early Asian immigrants survive, and emerge to become the great contributors they are to American society.  Elaborating on this question Dr. Hu-DeHart says, "Asian immigrants came up against the dual obstacles of institutional racism and language barriers.  They cobbled together livelihoods by forming revolving credit unions with friends and family and working around the clock at menial---and often dangerous---jobs."

Volumes have been written about Asians and people of Asian descent, and what we have presented in this article is our tribute to the contributions of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, and with the intent to focus attention on how the Great Asian Diaspora has changed the world. 

We hope this article will pique the interest of our readers, and we encourage readers to make this a beginning in the quest to learn more about the culture, history, and people of Asian and Pacific Island descent. To aid in those efforts, we have listed some of the websites we discovered doing research for this article in the "APA Info Links" section of this issue.

The Great Asian Diaspora has resulted in the dispersion of Asians all over the world.  However, their impact on the world, and the way the world has been changed by them, is not merely because of their arrival at locations all over the planet, but instead is the result of the resilience, ingenuity, and resourcefulness of the Asian people.

Publisher's Note:  The main source for this article was, "The Great Diaspora," written by Professor Evelyn Hu-DeHart, Director of the Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity at Brown University, who at the time was Chair of the Department of Ethnic Studies at the University of Colorado in Boulder, Colorado, which appeared in the 10th anniversary issue of A. Magazine.


Outstanding Asian Americans &
Pacific Islanders 
We would like to acknowledge and thank all of those who responded to our surveys to collect information to produce this listing of outstanding Americans of Asian and Pacific Island descent.  We would especially like to thank Dr. Franklin Odo, Director of the Asian Pacific American Program at the Smithsonian Institute, and best selling author, Ms. Monique Avakian.

Heidi Shyu - Raytheon Vice President Corporate Technology

Heidi Shyu She has worked for Raytheon Company for over 20 years and led a number of significant U.S. Air Force projects including the Joint Strike Fighter and the development of other manned and unmanned aircraft systems.   As Vice President of Corporate Technology and Research for Raytheon she is responsible for determining the direction of the company's research efforts.  At a time the US was facing two overseas wars, unprecedented terrorist threats, and the greatest increase in defense spending since the 1980s, Heidi Shyu was selected as Chair of the USAF Scientific Board in 2005. That a Chinese American woman was selected for such a position is a testament to her skills and the respect with which she is viewed by the U.S. government, the military, and her scientific peers. Ms. Shyu is listed among the "Women Worth Watching in 2009" by Profiles in Diversity Journal. Women selected for this honor were nominated by colleagues, peers and mentors for their initiative and achievements and for representing diversity within organization and industry.  In many of her interviews she cites a situation in 1997 when she managed a large team of mainly men charged with the impossible task of designing a lighter version of a 325-pound electronically scanned antenna to beat out a competitor's design. Shyu lightened the mood with a challenge to design it to her weight.... the team delivered a model three months ahead of schedule weighing 112 pounds. 

Main Source:  AsianWeek - April 13, 2009 - Chinese American Heroines: Heidi Shyu


 
To view complete profiles of other outstanding Asian Americans,   CLICK HERE.
 

Outstanding Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders

Angela Perez Baraquio

First Asian American Miss America 2001.  Daughter of Filipino immigrants.

Jagdish Bhagwati, Ph.D.

Author, special adviser to the UN and the World Trade Organization.

Mohini Bharadwaj

Indian American gymnast.

Sabeer Bhatia

One of the co-founders of Hotmail.

Benjamin Cayetano, Jr.

Former governor of Hawaii.

Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, Ph.D.

1983 Nobel Prize winner in Physics.

Ming E. Chang

Retired U.S. Navy Rear Admiral and business leader.

Franklin Chang-Diaz, Ph.D.

Former astronaut, veteran of seven space flights including three spacewalks.

Elaine Chao

24th U.S. Secretary of Labor.

Kalpana Chawla, Ph.D.

Astronaut, and first Indian American woman in space.

Leroy Chiao, Ph.D.

Former astronaut and veteran of four space flights.

Steven Chu

U.S. Secretary of Energy and 1997 Nobel Prize recipient in Physics.

David S. C. Chu, Ph.D.

Former Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness.

Connie Chung

Network news anchor and talk show host.

Ann Curry

News anchor of NBC's Today and anchor of Dateline NBC.

Margaret Fung

Co-founder and Executive Director of the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund.

Dr. Sanjay Gupta

Asian Indian American neurosurgeon and media personality.

Gordon Kiyoshi Hirabayashi

Japanese American activist.

David Ho, M.D.

Medical Researcher and 1996 Time Man of the Year.

Daniel Inouye

U. S. Senator from Hawaii.

Bobby Jindal

Indian American governor of Louisiana.

Andrea Jung

Chairman and CEO Avon Products.

Vinod Khosla

One of the co-founders of Sun Microsystems.

Maxine Hong Kingston

Chinese American author.

Jennifer Koh

Grammy nominated American violinist.

Fred Korematsu

Japanese American Activist.

Michelle Kwan

American Olympic figure skater.

Daphne Kwok

Former Executive Director Organization of Chinese Americans.

Jhumpa Lahiri

Pulitzer Prize winning American writer of Bengali Indian descent.

Li Young Lee

American poet of Chinese descent.

Ang Lee

Taiwanese American Academy Award winning film director.

Loida Lewis

Founding member of the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund.

Maya Lin

American architect and artist of Chinese descent.

Gary Locke

U. S. Commerce Secretary and former governor of Washington.

Edward Tsang Lu, Ph.D.

Astronaut and research physicist.

Lucy Lui

American actress of Chinese descent.

Yo-Yo Ma

Multi Grammy Award winning Chinese American virtuoso cellist and composer.

Zubin Mehta

Award winning Indian American conductor.

Norman Mineta

Former U. S. Secretary of Transportation and former U. S. Secretary of Commerce.

Mira Nair

Accomplished Indian American film director, writer, and producer.

Karen Narasaki

Nationally renowned civil rights leader and human rights activist.

Colonel Ellison Onizuka

Astronaut and mission specialist.

Chan Ho Park

First Korean American to play major league baseball.

I. M. Pei

Pritzker Prize winning Chinese American architect.

Kal Penn

American film and television actor of Indian descent.

Christine Poon

Current Dean of the Fisher College of Business at Ohio State University.

Mike Shinoda

American musician, record producer, and artist.

General Eric Shinseki

Retired U. S. Army Four Star General and former U. S. Army Chief of Staff.

David Sun

Co-founder of Kingston Technologies, Inc.

Amy Tan

Award winning American novelist of Chinese descent.

Daniel C. Tsui, Ph.D.

American physicist of Chinese descent.

John Tu

Co-founder Kingston Technologies, Inc.

Charles B. Wang

Co-founder Computer Associates International (CA).

Tiger Woods

American golfer whose achievements rank him among the most successful golfers of all time.

Kristi Yamaguchi

American figure skater of Japanese descent.

Jerry Yang

Billionaire co-founder and former CEO of Yahoo!

Fareed Zakaria

Editor of Newsweek International.

 
Copyright 2009, Donell Edwards Media.  All Rights Reserved.
Expressions and Opinions
Loida N. Lewis,  from FirstFilipina.com
"Race will always be a factor in America. But it's up to us, people of color, whether to allow it to be a factor in our actions, in our decisions. Once we allow people to dictate to us, to tell us we can't do this or that, we'll never succeed."

Black Panther/Asian American Activist Richard Aoki
Field Marshal, Black Panther Party - Asians In America
"...Based on my experience, I've seen where u
nity amongst the races has yielded positive results. I don't see any other way for people to gain freedom, justice, and equality here except by being internationalist."


Daphne Kwok, Executive Director of the Organization of Chinese Americans - http://tinyurl.com/mamnon-org
"We're constantly having to rebut the perception that we're foreigners,...It really is a recognition that we are full participating Americans.  It shows to the world that America fully embraces its diversity. 

Naomi Oren, a senior art history major and Chinese minor at UC Berkeley.  From What Happens to Asian American Identity When the 'Home Country' is Criticized? - By Lynda Lin, Associate Editor, Pacific Citizen
"I think the times are different because people feel more comfortable with their own identities and make a distinction between being Asian and being Asian American.... Living in China and seeing it grow to what it is today helped me realize how much I do have in the States, such as a freer access to information and freer press.  I know that there are many people who feel that the Olympics is the chance to prove China can compete economically on a global scale.  But I also know some people who are Chinese American who believe that, okay, so the Olympics shouldn't be boycotted but China has some serious civil rights issues to deal with and the protesting is good because it puts the Chinese government to shame when it needs to shine."


Lucy Liu Interview, Code Name The Cleaner - By Sheila Roberts - Moviesonline
"I think when you grow up Asian-American it's difficult because you don't know if you're Asian or you're American. You get confused..."

Ziwei Hu - International political economy major at the University of California, Berkeley.  From What Happens to Asian American Identity When the 'Home Country' is Criticized? - By Lynda Lin, Associate Editor, Pacific Citizen
"When people ask me how I feel about the Chinese government, I will be honest - I don't agree with many of the policies of the Chinese government.... I know that corruption is still a huge problem, and that there's an absence of the rule of law.... I am still proud to be Chinese - there's such a rich cultural heritage that comes with being Chinese - but I don't think the current regime in China reflects what it means to be Chinese. Maybe some people would think that makes me less Chinese, and perhaps they're correct, because I did grow up in America. And because of this background, I feel strongly about democracy and human rights, and I guess that outweighs any nationalist pride I have"


Asian American Leaders in Business & Industry
Results from CWR Survey

For a detailed listing with photos and additional information,
CLICK HERE.

Asian American Leaders in Business & Industry

Phyllis Campbell

CEO, JP Morgan Chase Northwest.

John Chen

Chairman, CEO, and President, Sybase, Inc.

David Chu

Taiwanese founder of Nautica men's designer clothing.

John Chuang

CEO and co-founder Aquent global professional services firm.

Raj Gupta

Chairman and CEO, Rohm & Haas Company.

Keiko Harvey

Senior Vice President, Verizon Communications.

Andrea Jung

Chairman and CEO, Avon Products.

Eugenia Kim

New York accessories designer.

James J. Kim

CEO and Chairman, Amkor Technology, Inc.

Jeong Kim, Ph.D.

President Bell Labs at Alcatel-Lucent.

William Mow

Founder of Bugle Boy Industries.

Indra Nooyi

Chairman and CEO, PepsiCo.

Vera Wang

American fashion designer.

Jerry Yang

Billionaire co-founder and former CEO, Yanoo!

Scott Oki

Founder and Chairman, Oki Golf.

Cyrus Tang

Billionaire CEO and President, Tang Industries.

Janie Tsao

Co-founder Linksys.

Victor Tsao

Co-founder Linksys.

An Wang

Co-founder Wang Laboratories.

 

 
Fact Versus Fiction
Fact:  What was the Chinese Coaching Book?

The coaching book was used by Chinese immigrants arriving through Angel Island in San Francisco Bay. The detention center there, 1910-1940, functioned to keep immigrants from entering the country. Some Chinese had discovered a way to circumvent racist laws to exclude them by claiming descent from Chinese who were citizens. Some of these Chinese falsely claimed citizenship by asserting their papers had been burned in the 1906 fire in San Francisco. Immigration authorities devised detailed questions to "catch" Chinese entering. In response, the Chinese devised these "coaching" books for the immigrants to memorize so they would not be tripped up by the agents.- Dr. Franklin Odo, Director Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Project

Fiction:  All Asian Americans are either wealthy and affluent, of members of the American middle class; there are no poor Asian Americans.

Fact:  "There are many pockets of poverty in Asian American communities across the country."  - Dr. Franklin Odo, Director Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Project

More Facts:  "What the headlines left out, were the stories of a rapidly growing Asian American underclass.  Social problems festered as ethnic enclaves became the destination points of countless migrants arriving to work in sweatshops and small family businesses, with the hope that the next generation might carve out a piece of the American pie.  The spotlight stayed on the high achievers.  The perception of Asian Americans became one in which statistics revealing high household incomes and great numbers in elite universities overshadowed the other half of the reality." - Dr. Evelyn Hu-DeHart, Director of the Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity, Brown University

Fiction: 
All Asians are alike; similar culture, history, and interests.

Fact:  "The ethnic variation and economic disparities within 'Asian America' make matters all the more complicated.  The broad subcategory of 'South Asian,' for example, masks sharp distinctions among Hindus, Ismailis and other Muslims, Sikhs, Jains, Parsis and others.  Many who are classified as South Asians lived for generations in various African or Caribbean countries before settling in the United States." - Dr. Evelyn Hu-DeHart, Director of the Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity, Brown University

More Facts:  "Southeast Asian refugees---Vietnamese, Laotian, Cambodian, Hmong---also constitute a significant proportion of the new arrivals.  They are at best 'reluctant immigrants,' traumatized by war and devastation at home and unequipped with the kind of human  capital (such as urban background, formal education and English knowledge, entrepreneurial and industrial work experience) that would enable them to make an easy transition to American society and culture."  Dr. Evelyn Hu-DeHart, Director of the Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity, Brown University


Major Political Issues for Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders
Results from CWR Survey
 
 

Major Political Issues for Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders

Education disparities; especially with Southeast Asians.

Financial assistance; especially with Southeast Asians.

Hate Crimes; racial hatred and violence such as the attacks on Asian American Indians after 9-11.

Healthcare access.

Higher education access.

Civil rights.

Immigrant rights.

Economic rights.

Lack of formal national attention to achievement of Asian Americans and Asian American history.

 

Issues of Concern to Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders on the Asian Continent and Pacific Islands
Results from CWR Survey
 

Issues of Concern to Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders on the Asian Continent and Pacific Islands

Because of xenophobia and the backlash against Asian Americans, the actions of China and North Korea are of particular interest.

Refugee and immigration issues.

Economic empowerment.

Educational opportunities.

Censorship of Internet reparations from powerful governments for past wrongs.

Ethnic/cultural pride and empowerment.

Ethnic strife among and between different Asian groups.

War related toxic waste, landmines, post traumatic stress disorder, and continued genetic defects from the atomic bomb (Vietnam, Cambodia, Japan, etc.)

Disappearance of culture/language.

Tibet; Mongolia.

Environmental issues (China and pollution especially).

Separation from loved ones (Korea, Tibet for example).

 

Social Issues of Concern to Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders
Results from CWR Survey
 

Major Social Issues for Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders

Job promotion/discrimination.

Need for more formal recognition of the impact of various aspects of Asian culture on the U.S. culture (martial arts, Zen, meditation, philosophy, art, music, etc.)

Xenophobia; people can't distinguish between Asian Americans and Americans.

Ethnic conflicts among and between Asian American groups.

Youth gang violence.

Immigration issues, especially as it relates to mental illness, need for services, language barriers, etc.

Multicultural identity (mixed race).

Defamation.

Media portrayal

Anti-Asian hate crimes near invisibility in public school curriculum at all levels.

Cultural pride/empowerment, especially among youth.

Lack of integration in neighborhoods (U. S. is racially and economically segregated among all groups).

Need for more cultural institutions such as the Rubin Museum, the Asian American Museum, etc.

The view that Asian Americans are completely homogenous.

Countering stereotypes

Stereotype:  All Asians are good at math, science, and music.

Stereotype:  Asians are taking over the world.

 

Legal Information
The CWR logo, the It's A Reader's World logo, and the names, Leader's, Mentors, and Role Models; Career Zone; and Security Focus are all either trademarks or copyrights owned by Donell Edwards Media, and may not be copied, reproduced, or used in any manner without prior written consent.
Disclaimer
The opinions expressed within The College World Reporter by writers not associated with Donell Edwards Media, are those of the writers, and are not necessarily shared by the publisher.  The items contained herein are provided for general information purposes only. Readers should not rely solely on this information, but should do their own research. This ezine may contain links to websites that are created and maintained by other organizations. Donell Edwards Media does not necessarily endorse the views expressed on these websites, nor does it guarantee the accuracy or completeness of any information presented there.