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         Asian-american Civil Rights:     more books (100)
  1. Racial Politics in an Era of Transnational Citizenship: The 1996 Asian Donorgate Controversy in Perspective by Michael Chang, 2004-11
  2. Recent activities against citizens and residents of Asian descent (SuDoc CR 1.10:88) by U.S. National Archives and Records Administration, 1986
  3. Achieving the Impossible Dream: HOW JAPANESE AMERICANS OBTAINED REDRESS (Asian American Experience) by Mitchell T Maki, Harry H Kitano, et all 1999-06-25
  4. Family Tightrope by Nazli Kibria, 1995-03-06
  5. The Asian American Educational Experience: A Sourcebook for Teachers and Students by Don Nakanishi, 1995-01-05
  6. Fighting Tradition: A Marine's Journey to Justice (Intersections Asian and Pacific American Transcultural Studies) (Intersections Asian and Pacific American Transcultural Studies) by Bruce I. Yamashita, 2003-09
  7. Entry Denied: Exclusion and the Chinese Community in America, 1882-1943 (Asian American History and Culture)
  8. Race Pride and the American Identity by Joseph Tilden Rhea, 1997-11-15
  9. Covering: The Hidden Assault on Our Civil Rights by Kenji Yoshino, 2006-01-17
  10. Consuming Citizenship: Children of Asian Immigrant Entrepreneurs (Asian America) by Lisa Park, 2005-08-22
  11. Immigrant Acts: On Asian American Cultural Politics by Lisa Lowe, 1996-12
  12. Filipino American Lives Pb (Asian American History & Cultu) by Yen Espiritu, 1995-03-23
  13. Contours Of The Heart: South Asians Map North America (Asian American Writers Worksh) by Sunaina Maira, 1996-03-19
  14. Unruly Immigrants: Rights, Activism, and Transnational South Asian Politics in the United States by Monisha Das Gupta, Monisha Das Gupta, 2006-11

61. Asian American Bar Association
he noted the remarkable contributions Minami had made to civil rights in America. strategywhich led to the appointment of the first Asian American judge in
http://www.aaba-bay.com/aaba/showpage.asp?code=0803

62. Asian Americans To Form New Association For Civil Rights
Americans are forming a national civil rights organization that People, which guardsthe rights of blacks are being decided without Asian American participation
http://www-tech.mit.edu/V117/N33/association.33w.html
Asian Americans To Form New Association for Civil Rights
By Connie Kang
Los Angeles Times

For the first time in their 150-year history in the United States, Asian Americans are forming a national civil rights organization that they hope will provide them with a unified voice and the meaningful political participation that has eluded people of Asian heritage. The movement is designed to provide the United States' fastest growing group with political clout like that of well-established associations such as the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which guards the rights of blacks, and the Anti-Defamation League, which is vigilant in defense of American Jews. Formation of the National Asian Pacific American Network Council has been spurred by the campaign fund-raising controversy which has occupied center stage in national politics and the front pages of major newspapers since last fall. "This crisis has given us huge momentum," Francey Lim Youngberg, executive director of the Washington-D.C.-based Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus Institute, told community leaders in Los Angeles last week. "This is the year to do it." In the past year, the relentless news coverage and political battling over the fund-raising scandal focused attention not only on central figures such as John Huang but also on the Asian community's longstanding frustration with its inability to secure political access and power.

63. The Lantern Online
For more than 20 years, Zia has been a feminist activist on social justice issuesand active in the Asian American civil rights movement, said Nancy Yan
http://www.thelantern.com/news/2002/05/09/Campus/Minorities.Struggles.Continue-2
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Campus Sports Arts ... Campus
Minorities' struggles continue
By Miriam Dick Published: Thursday, May 9, 2002 An Asian American feminist and civil rights advocate will address how the Sept. 11 attacks have increased xenophobia in the United States at 5:30 p.m. today in Hitchcock Hall.
Helen Zia, the keynote speaker for May's Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, will discuss how discrimination against Asian Americans has been sharpened since the terrorist attacks, said Tamara Welch, coordinator for the Office of Asian American Student Services.
Every year, the group recognizes an Asian American who inspires, educates and brings to light issues in the United States that affect Asian Americans, Welch said.
Zia, a second-generation Chinese American, is an award-winning journalist, contributing editor for Ms. magazine, a graduate of Princeton's first coeducational class, the author of "Asian American Dreams: The Emergence of an American People" and co-author with Wen Ho Lee of the recently published book "My Country Versus me," about the Los Alamos scientist who was accused of being a spy for China, Welch said.
For more than 20 years, Zia has been a feminist activist on social justice issues and active in the Asian American civil rights movement, said Nancy Yan, chairwoman for News and Speakers for APAHM.

64. Welcome To NAPALC.org
Washington, DC Four leading Asian American civil rights organizations calledfor an independent investigation by the General Accounting Office (GAO) to
http://www.napalc.org/programs/antiviolence/pr/WHL_5-18-00.htm
Anti-Asian Violence:
Current Issues

Action Alerts

Press Releases

Resources
...
Profiling

Navigation Areas: Home About Us News Room Events Pubs/Resources Links Contact Us Get Involved Search Program Areas: Affirmative Action Anti-Asian Violence Census Community Partners Immigration Language Rights Naturalization Voting Rights Welfare Reform
NATIONAL ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN LEGAL CONSORTIUM PRESS RELEASE Immediate Release Contact: Albert Chung
May 18, 2000 Asian Pacific American Civil Rights Groups Call for Independent Investigation Into Incidences of Racial Profiling in Nation's Nuclear Facilities
New Justice Department Report Criticizes Bungled FBI Investigation of Wen Ho Lee Washington, DC - Four leading Asian American civil rights organizations called for an independent investigation by the General Accounting Office (GAO) to examine accusations that racial profiling has been a factor in the effort to discover possible espionage at nuclear research facilities. The National Asian Pacific American Legal Consortium and its affiliates, the Asian Law Caucus in San Francisco, the Asian American Legal Defense Fund in New York and the Asian Pacific American Legal Center in Los Angeles, demanded Congress call for an independent investigation by the GAO into the Department of Energy's (DOE) and the FBI's investigations of Asian American scientists, especially in light of the case against Dr. Wen Ho Lee.

65. Brutal Racist Murder Led To Asian Coalition
who got away with murder. It s about the outrage over his killingthat sparked a grassroots Asian American civil rights movement.
http://www.napalc.org/news/napalc/Brutal racist murder led to Asian coalition.ht
Click Here to Return to The NAPALC Website
http://www.sfgate.com/
Return to regular view Brutal racist murder led to Asian coalition
Annie Nakao
Tuesday, June 18, 2002
©2002 San Francisco Chronicle
URL: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2002/06/18/DD244605.DTL LILY CHIN NEVER did find justice for her son. She passed away 10 days ago at age 82, just before the 20th anniversary of his murder. Vincent Chin, a 27-year-old Chinese American, died on June 23, 1982, at the hands of two disgruntled Detroit autoworkers who mistook him for Japanese. One held him down. The other bashed his skull with a Louisville Slugger baseball bat, not once but four times. They were never punished, despite two federal civil rights trials. A subsequent civil suit won a $1 million judgment against Ronald Ebens, who wielded the bat, but he made good his boast that Chin's mother would never see the money. At the time, I was working for the old Herald-Examiner in Los Angeles and even on the diverse West Coast, I could see tensions ratcheting up over Japan's seemingly invincible prosperity and America's economic decline in the early 1980s. I remember feeling revulsion and fear at the killing. Had I crossed their paths in Detroit, maybe Ebens and his stepson, Michael Nitz, would have hunted me down instead of Chin. Wrong place. Wrong time. Wrong looks.

66. HIST 449 - Labor And The Civil Rights Movement
Asian American encyclopedia Suzzallo Reference, Undergraduate Reference E184.O6 Encyclopediaof civil rights in America Suzzallo Reference, Undergraduate
http://www.lib.washington.edu/subject/History/bi/hist449/
Labor and the Civil Rights Movement
Background Sources Secondary Sources: Books Secondary Sources: Journal Articles
Finding Published Primary Sources
... Selected Web Resources
Background Sources
Encyclopedias and dictionaries provide background information and can be used to identify key people, events and dates which can then be used as search terms for finding additional information. More importantly, because encyclopedias often cover the major issues surrounding the subect, they can help you narrow your research from a broad “who, what, where, when” topic to a “how or why” question. In addition many encyclopedia articles include short bibliographies that will lead you to the major works on the topic.
  • The ABC-CLIO companion to the American labor movement
    Suzzallo Reference, Undergraduate Reference
  • American immigrant cultures : builders of a nation
    Suzzallo Reference
  • Asian American encyclopedia
    Suzzallo Reference, Undergraduate Reference
  • Dictionary of American Immigration History
    Suzzallo Reference, Undergraduate Reference
  • Encyclopedia of African-American Culture and History
    Suzzallo Reference
  • Encyclopedia of Civil Rights in America
    Suzzallo Reference, Undergraduate Reference

67. Press Releases By Congresswoman Pelosi
If confirmed, Lee would be the first Asian American to head the JusticeDepartment s civil rights Division. Bill Lann Lee s confirmation
http://www.house.gov/pelosi/prlee.htm
Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi
In Support of Bill Lann Lee
October 30, 1997
Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi Speaks Out In Support of Bill Lann Lee,
President Clinton's Nominee to be Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) today joined with leaders of the Congressional Asian-Pacific Caucus, Congressional Black Caucus and the Congressional Hispanic Caucus to support the nomination of Bill Lann Lee to be Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights. "The Republican leadership is trying to silence a champion of civil rights because of his opposition to Proposition 209 in California, the anti-affirmative action law. Lee has worked tirelessly to ensure that discrimination in every form is eliminated from our legal and social landscape. His opposition to Prop. 209 is the action of a man with a long and distinguished career as a civil rights attorney," Pelosi said. If confirmed, Lee would be the first Asian American to head the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division. "Bill Lann Lee's confirmation would broaden civil rights enforcement. It would be an acknowledgment of our nation's Asian American community," Pelosi said. "The GOP is playing politics with civil rights," Pelosi said. "It is time to end the games and confirm the right nominee for our time." Lee is presently the western regional counsel of the NAACP's Legal Defense Fund.

68. AsianWeek
At a briefing held before the US Commisssion on civil rights last week, more thana dozen individuals and representatives from Asian American advocacy groups
http://www.asianweek.com/121197/newsmaker.html

Front Page
In This Week's Issue Subscribe Special ... About AsianWeek
December 11-17, 1997
Having Our Say
File Photo Then and Now : More than a year ago advocates first voiced concerns about the effects of the campaign-finance controversy on Asian Americans. Last week, community representatives formally submitted their complaints in a briefing with the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Pictured at the Oct. 22, 1996, news conference in Washington, D.C., are: Hoyt Zia, an attorney with the Department of Commerce; Francey Lim Youngberg, executive director of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus Institute; Jocelyn Hong co-chair of the National Conference of Korean American Leaders; and Daphne Kwok, executive director of the Organization of Chinese Americans. Advocates brief Civil Rights Commission on effects of campaign-finance investigation BY STACY LAVILLA A year after investigations into the alleged campaign-finance abuses, a coalition of Asian Americans got their first chance to express what they view as the damaging aftermath of the investigations. At a briefing held before the U.S. Commisssion on Civil Rights last week, more than a dozen individuals and representatives from Asian American advocacy groups said that their community was discriminated against, used as scapegoats, and stereotyped by members of Congress, the Democratic National Committee (DNC), and the Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee, as well as numerous public officials and the media.

69. Asianweek
ago, the Organization of Chinese Americans (OCA) has made considerable strides inbeing one of the more visible and active Asian American civil rights groups.
http://www.asianweek.com/070596/OCA.html

Front Page
In This Week's Issue Subscribe Special ... About AsianWeek
July 5-11, 1996
Still Pioneers
A report from this year's OCA convention by Bill Wong From its humble beginnings 23 years ago, the Organization of Chinese Americans (OCA) has made considerable strides in being one of the more visible and active Asian American civil rights groups. Other such groups have been around a lot longer, like the Chinese American Citizens Alliance (CACA) and the Japanese American Citizens League, but at the moment OCA has become better known in the national political community. San Francisco-based Chinese for Affirmative Action (CAA) is only a little older than OCA and also has a relatively high national political visibility. None has a monopoly on Asian American political and cultural interests, and no one should expect any one organization to have such an encompassing reach. Nonetheless, because OCAâs leaders view this as an important political year and because of Californiaâs crucial role in the national political scene, the Washington, D.C.-based OCA held its 18th annual convention in San Francisco last weekend, hosted by five OCA chapters: San Francisco, the East Bay, Sacramento, San Mateo County, and Silicon Valley. Some 400 people registered for the convention and hundreds more drifted in and out of various sessions. About 500 attended the Friday night dinner saluting pioneers, and almost 800 squeezed into Saturday nightâs dinner honoring community service luminaries. (Full disclosure requires me to reveal that I was among the "pioneer" honorees on Friday night, but more on that later.)

70. Congressman Mike Honda - The Importance Of Protecting Civil Rights And Civil Lib
The Importance of Protecting civil rights and civil Liberties Asian AmericanSpeakers Series. Congressman Mike Honda (DCA). Washington, DC, May 12, 2004.
http://www.asiasociety.org/speeches/honda04.html
The Importance of Protecting Civil Rights and Civil Liberties
Asian American Speakers Series Congressman Mike Honda
(D-CA) Washington, DC, May 12, 2004 Special thanks to Federal Express for sponsoring this wonderful luncheon. Across our nation in this month of May, Asian Pacific American Heritage Month is celebrated with community festivals and educational activities. This year's theme "Freedom for All—A Nation We Call Our Own," is especially timely as our civil liberties and civil rights are under assault. This event hosted by the Asia Society recognizes both the importance of APA Heritage Month and reminds us of the many challenges facing Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders today. Our nation has come a long way since the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II through the Civil Rights movement. However, since the attacks of 9/11, President Bush and some Members of Congress have used it as an opportunity to promote legislation that has had a detrimental impact upon civil our liberties and civil rights. Unfortunately, much of this legislation disproportionately affects Asian Americans.

71. Calendar Event
Please join us to welcome the distinguished Asian American civil rights Leader ofour time, Yuri Kochiyama Monday, March 24th 700 PM Rose Hills Theatre The
http://acs.apanet.org/calendar/item.tcl?scope=public&calendar_id=29

72. University Of Michigan MLK Symposium
html. Asian American Community civil rights Advocacy OrganizationsURL http//janet.org/~ebihara/aacyber_community.html advocacy.
http://www.mlksymposium.umich.edu/links/
Civil Rights Websites American Civil Liberties Union
URL http://www.aclu.org American Civil Rights Institute
URL http://www.acri.org American Civil Rights Review
URL http://webusers.anet-stl.com/~civil/ Birmingham Civil Rights Institute
URL http://www.bcri.bham.al.us Civil Liberties, Civil Rights, Equal Opportunity and Discrimination
URL http://fedlaw.gsa.gov/legal6.htm Civil Rights Documentation Project
URL http://www.usm.edu/~mcrohb/ Civilrights.org
URL http://www.civilrights.org Cornell Law School: Legal Information Institute: Civil Rights
URL http://www.law.cornell.edu/topics/civil_rights.html Harvard University: The Civil Rights Project
URL http://www.law.harvard.edu/civilrights/ Historic Places of the Civil Rights Movement: National Register...Travel Intinerary
URL http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/travel/civilrights/ URL http://www.usdoj.gov/kidspage/crt/crtmenu.htm National Civil Rights Museum URL http://www.civilrightsmuseum.org/ Powerful Days: The Civil Rights Photography of Charles Moore URL http://www.civilrightsphotos.com Student Press Law Center URL http://splc.org

73. Civil Rights Forum, Volume 14, Number 3, Summer-Fall 2000
As previously reported in the civil rights Forum, Bill Lee, the first AsianAmericanto head the federal government’s premier civil rights post, was born in
http://www.usdoj.gov/crt/cor/Pubs/forum/00fall.htm
Civil Rights Forum
Summer - Fall 2000
Volume 14, Number 3
In This Issue... to Table of Contents A nation of immigrants moves to address the language needs of individuals with limited English proficiency While only recently the subject of front-page news, the Title VI roots of the obligation to address the needs of persons with limited English proficiency reach back more than twenty-five years to Lau v. Nichol s, 414 U.S. 563 (1974). In the waning days of the first summer of the century, President Clinton took steps to draw attention to, and build upon, this page from civil rights history. On August 11, 2000, the President issued Executive Order 13166, "Improving Access to Services for Persons with Limited English Proficiency." At the same time, the Department of Justice (DOJ) issued a Policy Guidance Document, "Enforcement of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 – National Origin Discrimination Against Persons with Limited English Proficiency" (LEP Guidance). The purpose of the Executive Order and the LEP Guidance is to eliminate to the maximum extent possible limited English proficiency as an artificial barrier to full and meaningful participation by beneficiaries in all federally assisted and federally conducted programs and activities. Prior to the President’s action, LEP obligations under Title VI were limited to recipients of Federal financial assistance.

74. Teaching Asian American Studies (Chan/Hune, 1995)
Washington, DC US Commission on civil rights, 1986. Anthologies of the Associationfor Asian American Studies. (1988) Frontiers of AsianAmerican Studies.
http://lama.kcc.hawaii.edu/asdp/biblio/amstudie/asambib.html
About
Index Search Other Links ... Comments/Submissions
TEACHING ASIAN AMERICAN STUDIES
Selected Bibliography
This bibliography is only a small selection from the nearly 10,000 artides and books produced over the last 20 years in Asian American Studies. It is only meant to provide the users with the beginning points in their seardh for lecture and teaching materials on Asians in America. This was compiled by ICenyon S. Chan (Asian American Studies, California State University, Northridge) and Shirley Hune (Urban Planning, UCLA), 1995.
HISTORY
Chan, Sudheng Asian Americans: An Interpretive History . Boston: Twayne, 1991.
Chan, Sudheng Asian Californians
Chan, Sudheng (Ed.) Hmong Means Free Philadelphia : Temple University Press, 1994.
Cheng, L. and Bonacidh, E. Labor Immigration Under Capitalism: Asian Workers in the United States Before World War II . Berkeley: U.C. Berkeley Press, 1984.
Daniels, Roger Asian America: Chinese and Japanese in the United States Since 1850 . Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1988.
Fawcett, James T. and Carino, B. V., (Eds)

75. Book #2649
He supplies a fresh interpretation of US civil rights from an Asian Americanperspective, providing readers with a facinating mix of constitutional law
http://www.asianamericanbooks.com/books/2649.htm
RACE, RIGHTS, AND THE ASIAN AMERICAN EXPERIENCE
By Angelo N. Ancheta - 1998, 209 pages, paperback. From the back cover -
"This book is the future....Angelo Ancheta is one of the first writers to offer us a new and necessary understanding of our increasing diversity. His work is an excellent introduction to the role of Asian Americans in the social, polictical, and legal debates of the day."
-FRANK H. WU, Howard University School of Law "Angelo Ancheta's long-time work on behalf of the least advantaged Asian Americans informs the analysis in this important book. He brings significant new information to the discussion of race and law, adding practice to theory, and humanity to practice."
-MARI J. MATSUDA, author of Where Is Your Body and We Won't Go Back "This is a very important book on the position of Asian Americans in civil rights and consitutional law. This is a facinating area of law and contemporary politics, particularly because Asian Americans are, as Ancheta notes, treated as either black or white depending on the context."
-DANA Y. TAGAGI, author of

76. Asian American Law Student Association At Washburn University School Of Law
ASIAN AMERICAN LAW STUDENT ASSOCIATION. NAPALC is a nonprofit, non-partisan organizationwhose mission is to advance the legal and civil rights of the
http://community.washburnlaw.edu/aalsa/
A SIAN A MERICAN L AW S TUDENT A SSOCIATION
WASHBURN UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW, TOPEKA, KANSAS
HOME CONSTITUTION OFFICERS OUTLINES PICTURES ... LINKS
AALSA MISSION
THE MISSION OF AALSA IS TO ENHANCE THE LEGAL EDUCATION, COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION, EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES, AND ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT OF ASIAN LAW STUDENTS AND OTHER MINORITIES BY HOSTING SPEAKERS, COORDINATING COMMUNITY PROJECTS, PROMOTING SOCIAL ACITVITIES, AND PROVIDING SUTDY AIDS TO OUR MEMBERS AND OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
  • Here are the potluck pictures Please be advised that the amended Constitution of the AALSA was ratified on February 11, 2004. Job Announcement WASHINGTON, DC - NATIONAL ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN LEGAL CONSORTIUM ("NAPALC") is seeking a Staff Attorney to work closely with the Legal Director, NAPALC staff attorneys, and affiliate staff attorneys to facilitate and implement NAPALC's Anti-Asian Violence and Race Relations program. NAPALC is a non-profit, non-partisan organization whose mission is to advance the legal and civil rights of the country's Asian Pacific Americans through litigation, advocacy, public education and public policy. The Consortium, located in Washington, D.C., is affiliated with the Asian Law Caucus in San Francisco and the Asian Pacific American Legal Center in Los Angeles. Qualifications include: the ability to plan, organize, and direct a comprehensive program; knowledge or skill in hate crimes, race relations, legislative process, law enforcement, prosecutorial, and/or civil rights, particularly as they pertain to Asian Pacific Americans; demonstrated strong writing and speaking skills; a J.D. degree from accredited law school and member in good standing of a state bar association; at least two (2) years of legal experience working in the Asian Pacific American community or with public policy matters; and a demonstrated interest in civil rights and/or race relations and public policy. Prosecutorial experience is welcomed.

77. Iowa Civil Rights Commission Corporate Survey Summary
as the level of unemployment or the awareness of civil rights law. employed less than50 individuals who were African American, Asian American, Native American
http://www.state.ia.us/government/crc/corporatesurveysummary98.html
Introduction In 1998 the Iowa Civil Rights Commission created the Results Measures group with the goal of measuring the effectiveness of the Iowa Civil Rights Commission's programs in meeting the Commission's mission of eliminating discrimination in Iowa. The results measures group has focused its recent efforts on measuring the level of discrimination Iowa. The group looked at the factors which may affect the level of discrimination, such as the level of unemployment or the awareness of civil rights law. The group also looke d at the data available for study. In some areas data was currently being collected, such as unemployment data, in others it was necessary to create new data sources. Survey in General Of the 78 companies responding 23 were manufacturing, 6 retail, 13 service, 1 agriculture and 34 indicated "other". The companies were fairly evenly divided between public and private ownership with 37 having private ownership and 41 public. Almost all (76) of the companies had been in business for over 10 years. When asked about the racial and ethnic composition of their workforce: 35.9% indicted they employed less than 50 individuals who were African American, Asian American, Native American, or Latino; 19.2% employed 50-100 individuals who were African American, Asian American, Native American, or Latino; 3.8% employed 101 to 150 individuals who were African American, Asian American, Native American, or Latino; 5.1% employed 151 to 200 individuals who were African American, Asian American, Native American, or Latino; and 29.5% employed 201 or more individuals who were African American, Asian American, Native American, or Latino.

78. Iowa Civil Rights Commission 1995 HMDA Waterloo Cedar Falls Asian American Appli
Waterloo Cedar Falls Asian American Applications 1995. Institution. Applications.Originated. Denied. Withdrawn. Closed Incomplete. Approved Not Accepted. Purchased.
http://www.state.ia.us/government/crc/waterloocedarfallsasaapp95.html
Waterloo Cedar Falls Asian American Applications 1995
Institution Applications Originated Denied Withdrawn Closed Incomplete Approved Not Accepted Purchased Homeland Savings Bank, Fsb Norwest Bank Iowa, N.a. Mercantile Bank Of No. Iowa Green Tree Financial John Deere Community Cu Homeland Bank, N.a. Norwest Mortgage, Inc. First Security State Bank Legacy Mortgage Company, Inc. Phh U.s. Mortgage Corporation Firstar Bank Milwaukee Iowa Bankers Mortgage Corp Allied Group Mortgage Company Firstar Bank Iowa, Na Washington Square Mortgage Co. Amerus Mortgage Inc. Commercial Credit Corpo Gmac Mortgage Corporation Bank Of America,fsb Cedar Falls Comm.credit Union Amerus Bank Knutson Mortgage Corporation Farmers State Bank Chase Manhattan Mortgage Corp Ford Consumer Finance Co.,inc. Cuna Mortgage Corporation Prudential Home Mortgage Co Countrywide Funding Corporatio Norwest Funding Bank United Of Texas Fsb United Companies Lending Corp. Aetna Finance Company Iowa Community Credit Union Fbs Mortgage Corporation Principal Residential Mtg, Inc Residential Funding Corp.

79. Resources - Civil Rights - California Dept. Of Justice - Office Of The Attorney
in Los Angeles, Asian Law Caucus in San Francisco and the Asian American Legal Defense NCLRconducts policy analysis and advocacy activities in civil rights.
http://caag.state.ca.us/civilrights/sections/reports/resources.htm
Other Organizations
State and Local Civil Rights Directory
This directory of civil rights agencies in 22 California cities and counties is compiled by the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights.
Asian Law Caucus Based in San Francisco, ALC is the nation's oldest Asian Pacific American civil rights legal organization providing legal services, community education, and advocacy assistance to low-income people, with a focus on Asian and Pacific Islander immigrants and refugees. The ALC's multilingual staff offers services in the areas of civil rights, housing, employment, immigration and naturalization, and the rights of the elderly. Address: 720 Market Street, Suite 500. Phone: (415) 391-1655; Fax: (415) 391-0366.
American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee
The ADC web page notes that the non-partisan civil rights group is the largest Arab-American grassroots organization in the U.S. ADC was founded in 1980 by former Sen. James Abourezk with chapters nationwide.
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (ATF) enforces federal laws and regulations relating to alcohol, tobacco, firearms, explosives and arson by working directly and cooperatively with others.
Bureau of Justice Assistance
The Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA) provides assistance to state and local governments in combating violent crime and drug abuse via funding, evaluation, training, technical assistance and information support.

80. Untitled Document
JV/6874/R5 Author Ancheta, Angelo N., 1960 Title Race, rights, and the Asian Americanexperience / Angelo N Asian Americans civil rights United States.
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~hist32/Books/POLITICS - LAW.htm
Politics - Civil Rights/Laws

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