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CHANNEL: Asian

News that includes Asian topics.

  • Que Chi Nguyen, 16, finds herself in a balancing act as a "quiet, obedient Vietnamese girl" and a "loud, headstrong American."

  • Bilingual Chinese- and Vietnamese-transliterated voting ballots in Boston may disappear if Secretary of State William Galvin has his way.  Galvin knows he can "count on a growing anti-immigrant political climate...to misrepresent the facts and poke fun at Chinese names," says the director of a Chinese organization, in a commentary for the Bay State Banner.

  • The Beijing Olympics were supposed to be China's coming-out party to the world.  Instead, it might have backfired despite the country's great lengths to be prepared and considerate hosts.  "It's the control that's made an impression on China's foreign guests, not the country's hospitality," writes Jun Wang for New America Media.


  • JudyAnn Bigby, MD
    , secretary of the Executive Office of Health and Human Services (EOHHS) for Massachusetts, wants healthcare institutions held accountable for their quality of care to patients of color.

    She spoke to NEWz about this and other issues, following the Nov. 28 release of the state report, "Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities by EOHHS Regions in Massachusetts."

  • Adil Najam, professor of international relations at Boston University, and M. Saud Anwar, founder and past president of the Pakistani American Association of Connecticut, spoke about the future of Benazir Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party and her two terms as prime minister with relatively unremarkable accomplishments.

  • New Hampshire's only Hindu temple is in the midst of bitter legal and financial battle with its lender, which intends to finally evict its creditor.

  • Leader Bank, the only Indian-owned bank in New England, opens a fourth branch this month, in Belmont, Mass., reports India New England.

  • The Asian American Commission of Mass. unveiled a plan for a first-time-ever statewide needs assessment. The plan calls for town meetings; focus groups to explore healthcare, economic development, education and other sectors; and a statewide survey, says New England Korean Alliance Press.

  • Navjeet Bal, an attorney, has become the first minority to be appointed to head the Mass. Department of Revenue. Bal was born in Kenya to Punjabi parents. She immigrated to the U.S. 30 years ago, reports India New England.

  • Boston, Jan. 24, 2008 – Gov. Patrick appointed 10 community leaders to the new Commonwealth Service Corps Board, which will oversee his statewide volunteer efforts.

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