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         Chinese Asian Americans:     more books (100)
  1. American Born Chinese by Gene Luen Yang, 2007-10-30
  2. I. M. Pei (Asian-American Biographies) by Mary Englar, I. M. Pei, 2005-09-05
  3. Asian America: Chinese and Japanese in the United States Since 1850 by Roger Daniels, 1990-09
  4. Smuggled Chinese: Clandestine Immigration to the United States (Asian American History and Culture) by Ko-Lin Chin, Douglas S. Massey, 2000-01-15
  5. East Asian Art and American Culture by Warren I. Cohen, 1992-04-15
  6. Becoming Chinese American, A History of Communities and Institutions by Madeline Hsu, 2004-07-15
  7. Chinese Immigrants, African Americans, and Racial Anxiety in the United States, 1848-82 (Asian American Experience) by Najia Aarim, 2006-02-20
  8. Chinese American Voices: From the Gold Rush to the Present
  9. Chinese American Masculinities: From Fu Manchu to Bruce Lee (Asian Americans) by Jachinson Chan, 2001-07-16
  10. Eat Everything Before You Die: A Chinaman In The Counterculture (Scott and Laurie Oki Series in Asian American Studies) by Jeffery Paul Chan, 2004-10-31
  11. The Chinese American Family Album (The American Family Albums) by Dorothy Hoobler, Thomas Hoobler, 1998-05-28
  12. To Save China, to Save Ourselves: The Chinese Hand Laundry Alliance of New York (Asian American History and Culture) by Renqiu Yu, 1995-09
  13. Strangers in the City: The Atlanta Chinese, Their Community and Stories of Their Lives (Asian Americans) by Jianli Zhao, 2001-12-07
  14. Global Spaces of Chinese Culture:Diasporic Chinese Communities in the United States and Germany (Asian Americans: Reconceptualizing Culture, History, Politics) by Sylvia Van Ziegert, 2006-07-25

41. ICC - Asian Americans & Cancer
(1) According to US Census Data, the asian American population consists of thesepercentages of ethnicities 23.8% chinese, 20.4% Filipino, 12.3% Japanese, 11.8
http://iccnetwork.org/cancerfacts/cfs3.htm
iccnetwork.org/cancerfacts News Cancer Facts Biennial Symposium Resources ... Search this site
Who We Are "Asian American" refers to persons whose familial roots originate from many countries, ethnic groups and cultures of the Asian continent, including (but not limited to): Asian Indian, Bangladeshi, Bhutanese, Burmese, Cambodian, Chinese, Filipino, Hmong, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, Laotian, Malayan, Mien, Nepalese, Pakistani, Sikh, Sri Lankan, Thai and Vietnamese. According to US Census Data, the Asian American population consists of these percentages of ethnicities: 23.8% Chinese, 20.4% Filipino, 12.3% Japanese, 11.8% Asian Indian, 11.6% Korean and 8.9% Vietnamese. Seventy percent of US Asians are immigrants who entered the US during one of three distinct immigration waves: before 1975, between 1975-1979, and 1980 or later. Most Asian Americans who have arrived since 1965 still live in ten large metropolitan areas. In 1996, an estimated four in ten Asian Americans lived in California. These US Asian-born individuals emigrated from countries with the overall lowest breast cancer rates in the world.

42. American West - Asian Americans - Academic Info
The Golden Mountain asian americans in the West Under Texts you will find examplesof primary texts, such as the chinese Exclusion Act and literary works, or
http://www.academicinfo.net/westnewasians.html
Academic Info
The American West
Asian Americans
Home Search Index Contact ... American West Asian Americans American Studies Asian Americans American West Advertisers University of Phoenix Online - Earn your degree 100% online.
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... Auto Insurance Cheap You can sponsor this page Email us for details The Chinese in California, 1850-1925 "...illustrates nineteenth and early twentieth century Chinese immigration to California from 1850 to 1925 through about 8,000 images and pages of primary source materials. Included are photographs, original art, cartoons and other illustrations; letters, excerpts from diaries, business records, and legal documents; as well as pamphlets, broadsides, speeches, sheet music, and other printed matter." - American Memory, Library of Congress

43. Asian American Village @ IMDiversity.com Main Home Page
restricts White House Initiative on asian americans and Pacific What’s in a(n asian)Name? withdraw line, apologize, Newcomer Ignites chinese Newspaper War in
http://www.imdiversity.com/villages/asian/village_asian_american.asp
home search jobs my account employer profiles ... for employers Key Sponsors
Asian American Village Categories
Careers, Workplace, Employment

Family, Lifestyles, Traditions

Opinion and Letters

World Affairs
...
Special

Quick Job Search
My Job Tools Login
Username:
Password: Forgot your login or password?
Top Feature
Big Business Selling Out to Asians When Mickey D's trademarks the phrase "I am Asian," we know we've hit the consumer big-time. But NikkeiView's Gil Asakawa is ambivalent about our new desirability as a target niche. Other Features Paul Igasaki on protecting American values in the wake of the WTC and Pentagon attacks of 2001 National AAPI Leaders Denounce Gutting of Historic Executive Order Say new order drastically reframes, restricts White House Initiative on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders What’s in a(n Asian) Name? First generation immigrants changed ethnic names to gain access, but what about the continuing trend among younger generations?

44. AP Daily News Headlines From Asian American Village @ IMDiversity.com
South asians, Muslims, and Arab americans since the asian Business Thrives in NorthwestFlorida By WENDY greets customers in English, Vietnamese and chinese.
http://www.imdiversity.com/Villages/Asian/Daily_News.asp
home search jobs my account employer profiles ... for employers Key Sponsors
Asian American Village Categories
Careers, Workplace, Employment

Family, Lifestyles, Traditions

Opinion and Letters

World Affairs
...
Special

Quick Job Search
My Job Tools Login
Username:
Password: Forgot your login or password? Asian-American Village News Relatives of Montagnard Exile Forced to Confess 'Wrongdoings' in Vietnam Report: Activists Taken Away Ahead of Tiananmen Anniversary Tanonaka Challenges Abercrombie for 1st District Seat Lacking Summertime Workers, Resort Businesses Import from Abroad Variety Is Spice of Life but May Be Detriment of Diets Secret Asian Man 6/1: Secret Asian Man in: "Golden Arches" Specials New IMDiversity Pharmaceutical Careers Channel Jobs Special: Summer 2004 Internships, Coops, and Opportunities for Recent Grads What's New with the IMDiversity site renovation
Asian-American Village Daily News
Relatives of U.S.-Based Montagnard Exile Forced to Confess 'Wrongdoings' in Vietnam

45. Multicultural Resources: Asia Americans/East Asian Studies
chinese American and chinese history and culture through community outreach activities Address http//www.chcp.org; CET Resources asian American History Web
http://www.union.edu/PUBLIC/LIBRARY/guide/mcasia.html
MULTICULTURAL RESOURCES:
Asian Americans/East Asian Studies
This Guide: Asian American/East Asian Studies: Reference Books The Catalog Statistics Indexes ... Electronic Journals Multicultural Guide: General Resources Reference Books The Catalog Indexes Statistics ... Multicultural Web Sites Action Menu: Search Minerva Catalog Place Book Orders Search E-Journals Search Other Libraries ... Search Electronic Resources Home Pages: Union College Multicultural Resource Center Schaffer Library
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Asian American/East Asian Studies Reference Sources
The Asian American Almanac . By Susan Gall and Irene Natividad. 1st Ed. Detroit, MI: Gale Research, 1995. CALL NUMBER: Ref E184.O6 A824 1995 The Asian American encyclopedia . Editor, Franklin Ng; managing editor, John D. Wilson. New York: Marshall Cavendish, c1995.
CALL NUMBER: Ref E 184.O6 A827 1995 v.1-6 Columbia Chronologies of Asian History and Culture. Editor, Bowman, John S. New York: Columbia University Press, c2000. CALL NUMBER: Ref DS 33 .C63 2000 Encyclopedia of Asian history . Prepared under the auspices of the Asia Society ; Ainslie T. Embree, editor in chief. New York: Scribner; London: Collier Macmillan, c1988.

46. Education World ® Lesson Planning: Asian Americans: Where Do They Come From?
top ten original nationalities of America s asian and Pacific following two resourcesUS asian Population 2000 Answers chinese, Filipino, asian Indian, Korean
http://www.education-world.com/a_lesson/04/lp340-02.shtml
EdWorld Internet Topics
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Web Hosting Alberghi Finanza ... Copy DVD Register To Win a $100 GiftCard Visit Target.com Vacanze Accessori Computer Career Education ... Social Science Lesson Planning Article LESSON PLANNING ARTICLE Back to Asian and Pacific-Island Heritage Lesson Plan Asian Americans: Where Do They Come From? Subjects
  • Social Studies Geography
Grade Brief Description Learn about some of the places from which Asian Americans come. Objectives Students will
  • identify 15 places (14 countries plus Hawaii) from which large populations of Asian Americans originate.
  • create a graph to help themselves visualize the places from which large populations of Asian Americans originate.
  • identify the locations on a world map of 15 Asian and Pacific Island locations.
  • create a chart to compare places from which large populations of Asian American originate.
Keywords Asian American, Asia, Pacific Island, population, census, world map, graphic organizer, chart, graph

47. Djchuang.com: Asian American
ethnic asian ministries (chinese, Japanese, Korean, Taiwanese, Vietnamese, etc.).L 2 Foundation developing leadership legacy for asian americans now with
http://www.djchuang.com/asian/
a place called home asian Asian American
articles

48. OCAGC
Welcome to the Organization of chinese American of Greater Cleveland s website, withinhere are also welcome to post news of the interest for asian americans.
http://www.ocagc.org/
A non-profit, non-partisan advocacy organization of concerned Chinese Americans.
OCAGC is part of the national OCA, dedicated to securing the rights of Chinese American and
Asian American citizens and permanent residents through legislative and policy initiatives at all levels of the government. Welcome to the Organization of Chinese American of Greater Cleveland's website, within here you will find news and events happening in our city or with our national headquarter. We would like to encourage all to constantly checking out the CoolBoard section for latest news or event posting, you are also welcome to post news of the interest for Asian Americans. Thank you for electing me to serve you in our community. Johnny Wu
2004 - 2005 OCAGC President Personal
latest event/news
Events OCAGC participated in 2004 More news and photos! Please join us: A/PAF Asian Heritage Day June 19th
Cleveland State Univeristy's University Center
1pm to 3pm: Health Care Issues and Job workshops
free health checkups
3pm: free lunch
4pm to 6:30pm: Cultural Performances
click here for the Adobe Acrobat Reader Flyer
Speakers Bureau Committee OCAGC has set up a new committee to help promote and educate Asian American culture and heritage. Committee members are all volunteering their time and effort, and will come to your organization to speak about the Asian Americans in Cleveland. If you would to have one of our committee members to speak at your group, please contact

49. Asian American Student Association At UMass Amherst
Tickets can be purchased at chinese grocery stores in New Haven area or This eventcosponsored by AAPA (asian americans for Political Action), YKCC (Yuri
http://www-unix.oit.umass.edu/~aasa/

50. ED369577 1994-06-00 Asian-American Children: What Teachers Should Know. ERIC Dig
The four major groups of asianamericans are East asian, such as chinese, Japanese,and Korean; Pacific Islander; Southeast asian, such as Thai and Vietnamese
http://www.ericfacility.net/databases/ERIC_Digests/ed369577.html
ERIC Identifier:
Publication Date:
Author:
Feng, Jianhua
Source: ERIC Clearinghouse on Elementary and Early Childhood Education Urbana IL.
Asian-American Children: What Teachers Should Know. ERIC Digest.
THIS DIGEST WAS CREATED BY ERIC, THE EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES INFORMATION CENTER. FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT ERIC, CONTACT ACCESS ERIC 1-800-LET-ERIC Asian-Americans constitute a significant minority in the U.S. and are one of the fastest growing ethnic groups in this country, yet little is known about their particular educational needs, especially at the early childhood and elementary levels. This digest provides information to help teachers gain a better understanding of Asian-American children, particularly those from East and Southeast Asian cultures, and identify culturally appropriate educational practices to use with those children.
ASIAN-AMERICAN CHILDREN: WHO ARE THEY?
The term Asian-American covers a variety of national, cultural, and religious heritages. Indeed, Asian-Americans represent more than 29 distinct subgroups who differ in language, religion, and customs. The four major groups of Asian-Americans are East Asian, such as Chinese, Japanese, and Korean; Pacific Islander; Southeast Asian, such as Thai and Vietnamese; and South Asian, such as Indian and Pakistani (Pang, 1990). Although there are similarities among the various subgroups, they have different origins, ecological adaptations, and histories.

51. Published Works
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS REGARDING AMERICAN ATTITUDES TOWARD chinese americansAND asian americans SURVEY April 2001 Who is the Committee of 100?
http://www.committee100.org/Published/surveyfaqs.html
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS REGARDING "AMERICAN ATTITUDES TOWARD CHINESE AMERICANS AND ASIAN AMERICANS" SURVEY
April 2001
Who is the Committee of 100?
The Committee of 100 is a non-partisan, national organization, founded in 1989 by a group of Chinese Americans who are leaders in their fields. They recognized the need for an organization that brings an Asian American perspective to U.S. relations with the most populous region in the world and to address the concerns of Americans of Chinese/Asian heritage. The organization has a two-fold mission: encouraging the full participation of Chinese Americans in U.S. society, and improving relations between the U.S. and Greater China. Why was this study done?
Over the years, there have been a number of incidents that we felt have reflected and/or exacerbated an anti-Asian sentiment in America. These include the killing of Vincent Chin in Detroit, a Chinese American that was murdered by auto workers who thought he was Japanese, over concerns regarding loss of jobs, the rise of hate crimes, the Wen Ho Lee issue, and campaign finance scandals. We conducted this study to determine and benchmark what Americans' attitudes really are towards Chinese Americans and Asian Americans. This study was conducted in a two-prong approach, using both qualitative and quantitative studies, for thoroughness and analytical rigor. It is a landmark study, never before conducted, and offers us a sound foundation for further analysis and comparisons in the future.

52. Asian American Studies -- Duke University Libraries
chinese in place, Pakistani americans. chinese students place, South Asianamericans. Emigration and immigration lawcountry/place, Triads (Gangs).
http://www.lib.duke.edu/reference/asia-am.htm
duke libraries catalog databases ask a librarian ... contact us
The Asian American Experience:
A Guide to Selected to Resources in
Perkins Library, Duke University . . . and Beyond!
CONTENTS
Background Reference Sources: Dictionaries, Encyclopedias and Atlases
Bibliographies

Directories

Asian American Organizations at Duke University
...
Additional Duke and Other Web Sites

This guide is intended to supplement to the guides "Japan: An Annotated Guide to Selected Sources in the Duke University Libraries . . . and Beyond!" and "Twentieth Century China: A Guide to Selected Sources in the Duke University Libraries," and is intended to be an overview of how to identify reference, primary and secondary source materials; it is not a complete review of resources. For additional information see a librarian at the Reference Desk.
BACKGROUND REFERENCE SOURCES:
DICTIONARIES, ENCYCLOPEDIAS AND ATLASES
Avakian, Monique. Atlas of Asian-American History . New York: Checkmark Books, 2002. (Ref. 973.0495 A945 A881 2002) Asian American Encyclopedia . Ed. by Franklin Ng. New York: Michael Cavendish, 1995. (Ref. 973.0495003 A832 1995)

53. Asian American Bar Association
asian American groups including the Organization for chinese americans (OCA) andasian American Journalists Association (AAJA) have protested a onepage
http://www.aaba-bay.com/
About Us Newsletter Calendar Membership ... Contact Us
Welcome to AABA
The Asian American Bar Association of the Greater Bay Area (AABA) was founded in 1976 to provide Asian American attorneys in the San Francisco Bay Area with a vehicle for the unified expression of opinions and positions on matters of concern to all Asian American attorneys.  AABA also encourages and promotes the professional growth of its members, serves the Asian American and minority community, and fosters the exchange of ideas and information among its members and the legal community at large.
AABA strives not only to meet the professional needs of our members, but to use our resources and expertise to serve the public interest through legal clinics and other programs.  To learn more about AABA, click on About Us and Mission/History .  For information on current AABA events, see our Newsletter and Calendar pages.  See Photos from our events.  Read about our committees and become a member
Featured Local News
NAAAP-SF Establishes Judge Lillian Sing Scholarship; To Hold Fundraiser on June 5, 2004
The National Association of Asian American Professionals of San Francisco (NAAAP SF) in conjunction with Plan C Group is hosting its premier fashion show

54. Mental Health: Culture, Race, Ethnicity
the rates for Filipino (3.5), chinese (8.3), and Japanese (9.1) americans are substantiallylower adolescents in Hawaii, and older asian American women have
http://www.surgeongeneral.gov/library/mentalhealth/cre/fact2.asp

News Release
Fact Sheets Culturally Specific Mental Health Resources Related Annotated Bibliography ... Other Surgeon General's Reports
Asian Americans/Pacific Islanders
Approximately 4% of the U.S. population – over 11 million people – identify themselves as Asian Americans or Pacific Islanders (AA/PIs). The AA/PI population is expected to double in the next 25 years. About 54% of AA/PIs live in western States, especially California and Hawaii. 18% live in the Northeast, 17% in the South, and 11% in the Midwest. The AA/PI category is extremely diverse, with about 43 different ethnic subgroups. While the majority of AA/PIs were born outside of the U.S., a large proportion of Chinese and Japanese Americans are 4th and 5th generation Americans. Since the mid-1960s, the AA/PI population has grown rapidly with high rates of immigration from China, India, the Philippines, Korea, Vietnam, and Southeast Asia. Most Pacific Islanders are not immigrants, but are descendants of the original inhabitants of land taken over by the United States – Hawaii, Tonga, Guam, American Samoa, the Northern Mariana Islands, the Marshall Islands, the Caroline Islands, and Palau. AA/PIs speak over 100 languages and dialects, and about 35% live in households where there is limited English proficiency in those over age 13. Some subgroups have more limited English proficiency than others: 61% of Hmong-, 56% of Cambodian-, 52% of Laotian-, 44% of Vietnamese-, 41% of Korean-, and 40% of Chinese-American households are linguistically isolated.

55. Asian American Voices For Affirmative Action By Paul Rockwell - In Motion Magazi
persons of chinese, Japanese, Korean, Cambodian, Laotian, Vietnamese, Filipino, asianIndian, Pakistani, Thai and other asian ancestry. asian americans are a
http://www.inmotionmagazine.com/rockasn.html
Asian American Voices for Affirmative Action by Paul Rockwell
Oakland, California
In a flip remark last June, University of California (UC) Regents Ward Connerly said: "I would be quite comfortable with only white and Asian students at UC, I have no problem with that."
It was Henry Der, Chair of Chinese for Affirmative Action who took Connerly and Pete Wilson to task. In his eloquent address to the UC Regents, August 20th, Der said: "If Asian American students were to attend certain UC campuses that are exclusively Asian and white, such segregated education would not prepare Asian American students to assume leadership positions in a multiracial California society. As a parent, I do not want any of my three children to experience or choose a segregated college education."
Pete Wilson's attempt to foment hostility between Asian American and African American communities has already backfired. Asian American support for affirmative action is growing. Throughout California's communities of color there is an awakened sense that an injury to one is an injury to all.
Filipinos for Affirmative Action, the Asian Law Caucus, the Asian Pacific American Labor Alliance; Kimi Lee, Executive Director of tbe University of California Student Association; and Eddie Wong, Western Region Rainbow Coalition Director, are playing an active role in defending affirmative action for America.

56. Asian American Studies M132B: Chinese Immigrant Literature And Film
A History of the chinese Diaspora (Boston Little, Brown, 1990). Ronald Takaki,Strangers From a Different Shore A History of asian americans (NY Penguin
http://www.owlnet.rice.edu/~swlewis/syllabi/AsianM132B.html
Chinese Immigrant Literature and Film:
Asian American Studies M132B
Comparative Literature M171
Chinese M153 Winter 1998
Shu-mei Shih
Time: Tuesdays and Thursdays 2-3:15pm
Location: Bunche Hall 3211, UCLA
Office: Royce Hall 241B
Office Hours: Tuesdays and Thursdays 3:30-4:30pm and by appointment
Jump To the Following Parts of This Page:
Course Objectives and Requirements
Required Texts Schedule of Readings/Discussion (Go To A Specific Week): Useful Links Course Description and Class Requirements:
This course offers an examination of Chinese immigrant literature and filmthe literature written in English and Chinese (in English translation) and films (in English or Chinese with English subtitles) about Chinese immigrant experience. We will begin with Angel Island poems and Gold Mountain poems of early Chinese immigrants to reflections on issues of history, culture, gender, and race in diaspora in the increasingly globalized era of the 1990s. Larger issues to be discussed will include the following: What are the changing meanings of such tropes as "China," "Chinese-ness," "Chinese culture," "America," and "Chinese America" for the Chinese in diaspora? How are these categories imagined differently by different individuals and how are they reconfigured through time? What are the processes by which the immigrant Chinese reconstitute or imagine his/her identity and community in diaspora? Course Requirements: This course emphasizes discussion and writing. You need to participate in classroom discussions.

57. Asian American Council, Dayton, OH
asian American Youth Against Tobacco (AAYAT) Seeks Mentor. By DACA (Dayton Associationof chinese americans) and VAGD (Vietnamese Association of the Greater
http://iis.stat.wright.edu/AAC-Dayton/
Always Under Construction!
Asian American Youth Against Tobacco
(AAYAT) Seeks Mentor
Mentor Position
Pay Rate: $10/hour
2-3 hours/week
Dayton AAYAT is seeking an individual to work under the supervision of the Dayton Regional Coordinator, attend all meetings with AAYAT youth, assist in the planning of all AAYAT youth meetings and events, provide administrative support and attend the Youth Summit in March. The qualified applicant must enjoy working with high school youth, effectively work with community organizations, have somewhat flexible hours and be available late Sunday afternoon for meetings. Preferred fields: health education, public health, social work, psychology, nursing or related field. To request an application, contact: Cheryl Owens, MPH
Project Director
OR Betty Lacey, MS in Ed
Dayton Regional Coordinator
(bettylacey@att.net
Information About:
(1) The Lunar-Calendar New Year Celebrations in the Greater Dayton Area
(2) South Asia Film and Lecture Series, Winter 2004, at The University of Dayton
(Read down for the series.)

58. PBS - "Ancestors In The Americas"
West, Ding makes bold connections between the parallel experiences of various groupsof asian americans, and also between the experiences of chinese and Indian
http://www.pbs.org/ancestorsintheamericas/timeline.html
ANCESTORS IN THE AMERICAS producer Loni Ding offers a trail blazing global perspective of U.S. history, viewing Asian American and American history as one and the same. Exploring the centuries-old relationships between East and West, Ding makes bold connections between the parallel experiences of various groups of Asian Americans, and also between the experiences of Chinese and Indian indentured workers and those of African slaves. "...Europe with ‘ASIA on the MIND’..." The East/West Manila-Acapulco Trade Chinese in Mexico European colonizations in Asia ... site credits

59. AsianWeek: Asian American Roundtable
Of course, I know asian americans are not genetically predisposed to spying The onlything this new wave of chinese espionage experts proves is that you don’t
http://www.asianweek.com/061099/opinion_roundtable.html
Thursday, June 10, 1999 * Volume 20, No. 41
Our latest cover ALSO IN OPINION:
APA Roundtable The Right Side Emil Amok Lead Editorial
I Am Not a Spy Are You?
By Helen Zia
There is something I must tell the world, especially Congress, the pundits and all those self-declared China experts. I need to say it out loud, in print and for the record: Helen Zia Nightline Washington Post The Art of War Some journalists rely less on history, more on stereotype. The Santa Fe New Mexican Helen Zia is a journalist and activist based in the Bay Area. Her book, Asian American Dreams: The Emergence of An American People CNN and other sites CNN CNNSI CNNfn TIME Daily TIME Digital TIME Asia FORTUNE Fortune Investor Small Business Street Life MONEY Markets Stock quotes Entertainment Weekly Ask Dr. Weil Dr. Ruth Online ParentTime LIFE ASIANWEEK SI For Kids TIME For Kids Travel Search Yahoo Search Altavista Custom Programs: Cars and Culture Cyber Awards Shopping: Giftfinder store Time Inc. Newsstand Computer Products Total E Music Barnes and Noble Office Depot.com

60. Asian American Community
Filipino Civil Rights Advocates; Japanese American Citizens League; National AsianPacific American Legal Consortium; Organization of chinese americans. Contents.
http://www.janet.org/~ebihara/aacyber_community.html
Asian American Community Links
CONTENTS

Links to other Asian Pacific American organizations may also be be listed in the Culture or Concerns categories of the Asian American Cybernauts Page . Also feel free to submit a new link , if your organization is not listed here.
Arts Organizations
[Contents]
Civil Rights Advocacy Organizations
[Contents]
Cultural and Community Organizations
[Contents]
Educational Organizations
[Contents]
Media Organizations

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