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         Vietnamese Asian Americans:     more books (101)
  1. Vietnam Generation: Southeast Asian-American Communities by Kali Tal, 1990
  2. Le Ly Hayslip (Asian-American Biographies) by Mary Englar, 2005-09-15
  3. As Is: A Collection of Visual and Literary Works by Vietnamese American Artists
  4. Vietnamese in America by Lori Coleman, 2004-09
  5. Vietnamese Immigration (Changing Face of North America) by Joseph Ferry, 2004-01
  6. The Vietnamese (Coming to America) by Michelle E. Houle, 2005-09-09
  7. Songs of the Caged, Songs of the Free: Music and the Vietnamese Refugee Experience by Adelaida Reyes, 1999-06-24
  8. For Better or For Worse: Vietnamese International Marriages in the New Global Economy by Hung C. Thai, 2008-02-20
  9. Vietnamese (Immigrants in America) by Tricia Springstubb, 2002-02-19
  10. American Heroes of Asian Wars by Dodd Mead, 1968-06
  11. Hearts of Sorrow: Vietnamese-American Lives by James Freeman, 1991-04-01
  12. Where the Ashes Are: The Odyssey of a Vietnamese Family by Qui Duc Nguyen, 2009-12-01
  13. Cultural Vision and the Vietnamese-American Spirit by Brandon hoang Nguyen, 2008-05-09

41. SFSU Bulletin - AA S Discipline Course Listing
asian American Experience (1992) AA S 171 Speak vietnamese I - (2002) AA S 172Speak vietnamese II - (2003) AA S 200 History of asian americans - (2003) AA S
http://www.sfsu.edu/~bulletin/courses/aas.htm
Asian American Studies
Discipline Course Listing
Year following course title indicates most recent year taught. AA S 101 Introduction to Asian American Studies
AA S 110
Critical Thinking and the Asian American Experience - (1992)
AA S 171
Speak Vietnamese I - (2002)

42. SFSU Asian American Studies Undergraduate Program
AAS 370, vietnamese in America, 3. 3. Thematic or CrossGroup Courses (3 Units;select one), AAS 205, asian americans and American Ideals and Institutions, 3.
http://www.sfsu.edu/~puboff/programs/undergrad/asian_am.htm
Asian American Studies
College of Ethnic Studies Undergraduate Programs
The Asian American Studies Department, the largest of four departments in the College of Ethnic Studies at San Francisco State University, was established in fall 1969 as a result of the Third World Student Strike. The Department currently consists of five Asian American ethnic units: Chinese American, Filipino American, Japanese American, Korean American, and Vietnamese American. It is a full service academic unit that offers a comprehensive program of study on the Asian American experience with a commitment to serving the University, its students, and the Asian American communities. At present, the Department offers fifty sections of classes taught by a faculty of twenty-plus to approximately two thousand students each semester. Students may take Asian American Studies courses for a baccalaureate major or minor, and to partially fulfill Liberal Studies major, general education, and University statutory graduation requirements. A master's degree program is pending final approval from the California State University Chancellor's Office. In 1994, the Asian Pacific American Education Advisory Committee of the Chancellor's Office recognized and acknowledged the Asian American Studies Department at San Francisco State University as an "exemplary" program.

43. Asian Americans: Whats New: Mammogram Brochure Available In 3 Asian Languages
Yet asian and Pacific Islander women over age 40 get mammograms less often free copiesof the brochure in English, Chinese, Tagalog, and vietnamese, call NCI's
http://www.omhrc.gov/omh/Asian Americans/2pgaapi/whatsnew21.htm
Mammogram Brochure Available in 3 Asian Languages
Did you know that breast cancer is on the rise for women of Asian and Pacific Islander descent living in the United States? Yet Asian and Pacific Islander women over age 40 get mammograms less often than other groups of women in the U.S. The National Cancer Institute (NCI) recommends that women in their 40s and older get a mammogram every 1 to 2 years. NCI, in cooperation with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), produced a new brochure about the importance of mammograms called "Do it For Yourself, Do it For Your Family." You can download pdf versions of the brochure here: To order free copies of the brochure in English, Chinese, Tagalog, and Vietnamese, call NCI's Cancer Information Service at 1-800-4-CANCER (1-800-422-6237), or visit http://breasthealth.cancer.gov

44. Asian Americans: Whats New Index:Snapshot Of Departmental Programs Affecting Asi
to the Hmong, and (2) A PatientCentered Quality Measure for asian-americans, to conduct separate focus groups involving Chinese and vietnamese patients in
http://www.omhrc.gov/omh/Asian Americans/2pgAAPI/whatsnew1.htm
    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
    Snapshot of Departmental Programs Affecting
    Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders
    MANDATE: The Department of Health and Human Services is the United States government's principal agency for protecting the health of all Americans and providing essential human services, especially for those who are least able to help themselves. Overview of HHS HHS is the largest grant-making agency in the Federal government, providing some 60,000 grants per year. The HHS budget for FY 2000 is $395 billion, and the total number of HHS employees is 61,654. The Department's Medicare program is the nation's largest health insurer, handling more than 900 million claims per year. HHS works closely with state, local, and tribal governments, and many HHS-funded services are provided at the local level by state, county or tribal agencies, or through private sector grantees. The Department's programs are administered by 11 HHS operating divisions, with leadership provided by the Office of the Secretary (OS). In addition to the services they deliver, the HHS programs provide for equitable treatment of beneficiaries nation wide, and they enable the collection of national health and other data. Public Health Service Operating Divisions:
    • National Institutes of Health (NIH)
    • Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
    • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
    • Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR)
    • Indian Health Service (IHS)
    • Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA)

45. Health Care Quality: Researchers Are Developing And Testing An Instrument To Exa
to develop a culturally sensitive questionnaire for use in evaluating the qualityof health care provided to asian americans of Chinese and vietnamese descent.
http://www.ahcpr.gov/research/dec00/1200RA17.htm
Researchers are developing and testing an instrument to examine quality of care for Chinese and Vietnamese Americans
Over the past three decades, immigration to the United States of Asian Americans has risen by more than 400 percent. In fact, Asian Americans are one of the fastest growing minority groups in the country. Cultural beliefs, as well as linguistic and other barriers, make providing quality care for Asian Americans a unique challenge. A study supported by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (HS01316) is now under way to develop a culturally sensitive questionnaire for use in evaluating the quality of health care provided to Asian Americans of Chinese and Vietnamese descent. These patients include many new immigrants who have a low income and limited English proficiency. Deeply held cultural beliefs can present barriers to quality health care, especially if providers lack sensitivity to these concerns. Also, the health beliefs of Asian Americans are unfamiliar to many American clinicians. For example, many Asian Americans believe that health reflects the balance of yin and yang, hot and cold elements, within the body. When experiencing an upper respiratory infection, they may follow the traditional custom of rubbing the body with oil and a coin to release the "cold" element, which may result in bruises along the spine and sternum. Western health care providers often mistake these bruises for indications of abuse or signs of hematologic diseases. To care for these patients effectively, providers must be able to communicate with them about such practices.

46. Asian Americans
com (Search for Aug 1995 article on asianIndian americans). Total asian 7.0 m (million)Chinese 1.6 m Filipino 1.4 m Indian 815 k Korean 799 k vietnamese 614 k
http://www.infinityfoundation.com/ECITasianamericansframe.htm
Asian Americans
by M. Lal Goel, PhD,
University of West Florida
lgoel@uwf.edu

The history of mankind is a saga of migrations. Several centuries after the dawn of civilization, humans numbered only a few million. Today the population is nearly 6 billion. Homo sapiens now occupy almost all of the terrestrial globe except for the polar reaches. Humans migrate for a variety of reasons; e.g., environmental deterioration, political and religious persecution, economic hardship and a sense of adventure. A few examples will suffice to provide elaboration for these causes of migration. Environmental deterioration has been a major factor in the movement of people. The area now occupied by the sands of the Sahara was once lush, green, productive, and occupied by a substantial population. Desiccation occurred, water courses shriveled, trees died, the topsoil blew away, and the people left. The earliest settlers in America the Indians migrated from the Orient because of severe climatic changes. When glaciers advanced, the sea level fell, and the shallow waters of the Bering Strait became a land corridor which allowed Asians to walk to North America. Columbus 'rediscovered' America in 1492. Just as environmental austerity or opportunity may facilitate migration so will man's inhumanity to man. The Pilgrims who landed in Plymouth, MA in 1620 came to America to avoid religious persecution in England and to worship according to their belief. In our time, political persecution has replaced religious persecution as a spur to migration. Most 20th Century migrations have been caused by tyrannical regimes. The extreme right and the extreme left are equally intolerant to human rights.

47. Beginning Library Research On Asian American Studies
americans (STK Bender E184.O6 T35 1989) A narrative history of richly diversestories of Japanese, Chinese, Koreans, Filipinos, asian Indians, vietnamese,
http://www-sul.stanford.edu/depts/ssrg/adams/shortcu/asam.html

Beginning Library Research on ASIAN AMERICAN STUDIES
Stanford University Libraries contain many titles on the historical and contemporary experience of Asian Americans, making it an excellent place for students conducting research in this area. Because of the interdisciplinary nature of Asian American, relevant titles are often dispersed throughout the general collection depending upon subject matter. Use Socrates , Stanford's online catalog to to locate books and other materials. Use the library's print or electronic indexes to locate journal and newspaper articles and published papers. Socrates can tell you what library materials Stanford owns and where they are located, allowing you to search by author, title, call number, organization, or subject. When searching Socrates , it helps to know the Library of Congress Subject Headings. One method of identifying the subject headings is to check the Library of Congress Subject Headings bound volumes. Another (online) method is to locate material you know is on your topic by doing an author (A) and/or title (T) search. Then look at the full display to see what

48. Asian-Americans And Student Organizations:Attitudes And Participation
Offices dealing with minority students may want to consider vietnamese Americansseparately from other asian groups in order to meet their needs.
http://www.inform.umd.edu/EdRes/Topic/Diversity/General/Reading/Sedlacek/attitud
Asian-Americans and Student Organizations:Attitudes and Participation
Yuh-Yin Wang, William E. Sedlacek, and Franklin D. Westbrook Research Report #7-91 This study was sponsored and conducted by the Counseling Center and the Office of Minority Student Education at the University of Maryland, College Park. Computer time for this project was provided by the Computer Science Center of the University of Maryland, College Park. COUNSELING CENTER UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND COLLEGE PARK, MARYLAND Asian-Americans and Student Organizations: Attitudes and Participation Yuh-Yin Wang, William E. Sedlacek, and Franklin D. Westbrook Research Report #7-91 Summary Items Mean SD
solving ability. 19. The University is supportive of minority students. 3.35 .86 20. I prefer not to mix socially with White students. 1.59 .74 21.I feel left out of things while attending the 1.95 .97 University because of race. 22.I don't like the idea of joining groups. 2.20 .94 23.It is more important to join a majority student 2.39 .84 organization than a minority student organization. 24.I often take advantage of the services provided by 2.12 .97 the Office of Minority Student Education. 25.I don't know whether there is a Career Development 2.22 1.33 Center on campus. 26.I feel more secure when I am with students of 2.65 1.15
General Diversity Resources Diversity Reference Resources Issue Specific Resources

49. Parsing Asian America 3/4 | Asian American Demographics | Goldsea
vietnamese immigration. By 2010 vietnamese americans will surpassall asian groups except Chinese in population. The downside of
http://goldsea.com/AAD/Parsing/parsing3.html
ASIAN AMERICAN DEMOGRAPHICS
AA FORUMS
COMMENT ON AN ARTICLE CONTACT US
No part of the contents of this site may be reproduced without prior written permission.
GOLDSEA
ASIAN AMERICAN DEMOGRAPHICS Parsing Asian America
PART 3 OF 4 VIETNAMESE AMERICANS
Vietnamese immigration was little more than a trickle of warbrides and orphans until 1970 when it began building rapidly through the fall of Saigon in 1975. After that it swelled with tens of thousands admitted under refugee provisions enacted hastily to help save a half million South Vietnamese fleeing in tiny fishing boats. At its peak in the midto-late-70s, an average of 120,000 entered each year. By 1997 the number had dropped slightly below 40,000.
Of the five major Asian American groups, Vietnamese have the highest F.O.B. ratio, 33% having immigrated during the past 10 years. As a consequence, 23% of Vietnamese households live below the poverty level, the highest rate among Asian groups. But 88% of families that had immigrated during the 1970s and 80s have graduated into the middle class and higher. Thanks to intense focus on education and achievement, a rapdily growing proportion of established Vietnamese Americans are now moving into professional, managerial and entrepreneurial positions, especially in the hi-tech sector. For the past five years Vietnamese have formed the backbone of Silicon Valley's engineering and skilled technical labor force.
For at least the next decade or two the recent normalization of U.S. relations with Vietnam and the poverty and lack of prospects in that nation will contribute to continued high levels of Vietnamese immigration. By 2010 Vietnamese Americans will surpass all Asian groups except Chinese in population. The downside of that rapid growth is that Vietnamese Americans will continue to have the largest share living below the poverty line.

50. Is Seattle A Haven For Asian Americans? | Asian American Issues | GoldSea
largest vietnamese (44,000), 9th largest Corean (38,000), and the 11th largest Chinese(58,000) and Filipino (53,000) communities. The area's asian americans
http://goldsea.com/Air/Issues/Seattle/seattle.html
" TARGET="_blank"> " BORDER=0> GOLDSEA ASIAMS.NET ASIAN AMERICAN ISSUES Is Seattle a Haven for Asian Americans?
(Updated Wednesday, Apr 09, 2003, 09:14:12 AM) he Seattle-Bellevue-Everett area is only 11th largest in the size of its Asian American population (285,000, or about 11.4% of the area's 2.5 million), but it claims one of the oldest and richest slices of Asian American history. Its Chinatown was home to America's first Asian-owned manufacturing business, the Wa Chong Co. The company produced, among other things, a very fine grade of opium, some of which was probably exported to China with the U.S. government's blessings.
Best city for AA?
Since its birth in 1910 Seattle's atmospheric International District was settled by generations of Chinese, Japanese, Filipino and Vietnamese immigrants. In the late 70s the aging District began enjoying a rebirth into its modern incarnation thanks to Asian American activism in seeking to preserve it as a historical and cultural site. More recently an influx of trendy young AA professionals, entrepreneurs and artists has helped transform it into a vibrant part of downtown Seattle's cultural and night life. The District hosts the Northwest Asian American Theater Company and the Wing Luke Asian American Museum, named after a Chinese American elected to the Seattle City Council in 1965.
On the far end of the Seattle area's cultural spectrum is lush, ultra-modern Bellevue, one of the nation's most affluent communities. Asians make up 20.3% of the students of the Bellevue School District, thrice the 7.3% concentration in the general population of Washington state. This points up the fact that Seattle hosts one of the nation's best established Asian populations. Unlike some urban areas dominated by one or two Asian nationalities, Seattle's AA population is highly diversified, comprising the nations 7th largest Japanese (31,000), the 8th largest Vietnamese (44,000), 9th largest Corean (38,000), and the 11th largest Chinese (58,000) and Filipino (53,000) communities.

51. Asian Americans
920/S617ex. Sinnott, Susan. EXTRAORDINARY asianPACIFIC americans. Childrens,1993. Hoyt-Goldsmith, Diane. HOANG ANH A vietnamese-AMERICAN BOY.
http://www.uiowa.edu/~crl/bibliographies/asianamer.htm
The Eye of the Dragon:
The Culture, History, and Tradition of Eastern/Southeastern Asian Americans September 1999
Compiled by D. Popham and B. Mueller
Print Version
Curriculum Laboratory
University of Iowa
Easy/Picture Books
E/B191p Balgassi, Haemi. PEACEBOUND TRAINS. Ill. Chris K. Soentpiet. Clarion, 1996 E/B829s Breckler, Rosemary. SWEET DRIED APPLES: A VIETNAMESE WARTIME CHILDHOOD. Ill. Deborah Kogan Ray. Houghton, 1996 E/B942ss Bunting, Eve. SO FAR FROM THE SEA. Ill. Chris Soentpiet. Clarion, 1998 E/C545b Choi, Sook Nyul. THE BEST OLDER SISTER. Ill. Cornelius Van Wright and Ying-Hwa Hu. E/C545h Choi, Sook Nyul. HALMONI AND THE PICNIC. Ill. Karen M. Dugan. Houghton, 1993 E/C545y Choi, Sook Nyul. YUNMI AND HALMONI'S TRIP. Ill. Karen Dugan. Houghton, 1997 E/G233my Garland, Sherry. MY FATHER'S BOAT. Ill. Ted Rand. Scholastic, 1998 E/H198b Hamanaka, Sheila. BEBOP-A-DO-WALK! Simon, 1995

52. Bridges With Asia Asian Americans In The United States
has to a large extent been due to the remittances that vietnamese americans havesent capital flow in Asia, while Young contends that asian americans must use
http://www.ciaonet.org/conf/ass01/ass01_h.html

53. Southeast Asian American Advocacy Initiative
Regular updates on current legislation that will affect Southeast asian americans;;Free educational materials by well respected vietnamese, Laotian, and
http://www.searac.org/advoinit.html
Southeast Asian American
Advocacy Initiative
Southeast Asian American National Leadership-Advocacy Training, June 2003, Washington, DC Information and application forms. Public Interest Parole: New Guidelines for Adjustment of Status Additional information. Issue Area: Welfare and Benefits Restoration Section dealing with welfare- and benefit-related issues. Issue Area: Education Section dealing with education-related issues. Issue Area: Deportation Section dealing with Deportation-related issues. Family Unity Listserv Member Page Restricted section with documents for members of the Family Unity Listserv. Contact TC Duong for additional information. Statement of Concern for the Safety and Well-Being of Montagnards in Cambodia and Vietnam, June 6, 2001 The complete document. As members of the Southeast Asian American community, we know better than to accept the "model minority" image of Asian Americans. We see all around our communities the constant struggles that our families and friends face with difficulties in language, education, and employment. SEARAC wants to work with other organizations to ensure that issues that concern Southeast Asians are not buried underneath the gloss of the "model minority image." For example, we need to draw attention to the fact that 43% of Cambodians and 65% of Hmong in this country live in poverty; Vietnamese American women are five times more likely than European American women to suffer from cervical cancer; and over 60% of Hmong Americans live in "linguistically isolated" households.

54. ASIAN AMERICAN MAILING LISTS
Approximately 80% of vietnamese americans are foreign born and have theleast likelihood of all asian americans to speak English at home.
http://www.allied-media.com/MAILING LISTS/asian-mailing-lists.htm

55. Asian American Studies Resources
americans; Chinese American; Hmong American; Filipino American; Japanese American.Korean American; Pakistani American; South asian American; Thai American; vietnamese
http://www.princeton.edu/~asianamr/
Asian American Studies Resources
Flower Cloth of the Hmong,
Denver, CO: Denver Museum of Natural History, 1985.
Resources at Princeton
Associations and Organizations Asian Americans APA Electronic Publications ... Departments, Institutes, Programs, and Centers Resources at Princeton
  • Princeton University Homepage Carl A. Fields Center for Equality and Cultural Understanding - Ethnic Studies: Asian American Studies Library Homepage Library Catalogs ... Thai American Student Organization
  • Asian Americans
  • Cambodian Americans Chinese American Hmong American Filipino American ... Vietnamese American

  • Archival Collections and Museums
  • California Ethnic Multicultural Archives (CEMA) houses the following: Asian American Theater Company

  • Archives, Robert Billigmeier Collection (Japanese evacuation and relocation study-Tule Lake Relocation Center), the
    Chinese American Voters Education Committee, Inc. Archives, the Iris Chang Papers (Chinese American writer),
    Chinese American Political Association Archives, Michio Ito Collection (Japanese American dancer and choreographer),
    Genny Lim Papers (Chinese American playwright, poet, performance artist), Ester Soriano-Hewitt Papers (Filipina

    56. Asian American Books Bibliography: Short Stories
    experience, fostering cultural awareness, and to educate asian americans about their Indonesian,Japanese, Khmer, Korean, Lao, Samoan, Thai, and vietnamese.
    http://www.cynthialeitichsmith.com/AsianAmbiog.htm
    Page Updated March 3, 2003
    Cyn's Home
    CLSCLR Home
    Book of Month
    Links of Month ... Writing Bibliographies
    General Books Recs
    Picture
    Chapter
    Middle Grade ...
    Indian Shoes

    by Cynthia Leitich Smith
    Check out the Teacher Guide
    and Readers Theater
    Rain Is Not My Indian Name

    by Cynthia Leitich Smith Tour Hannesburg, Kansas; the fictional town in RAIN Check out the Teacher Guide Jingle Dancer by Cynthia Leitich Smith illustrated by Cornelius Van Wright and Ying-Hwa Hu Check out the Teacher Guide Haemi Balgassi (Korean American, featured author Uma Krishnaswami (Indian American, featured author Gus Lee (Chinese American) An Na (Korean American, featured author) Linda Sue Park (Korean American, featured author Allen Say (Japanese American) Chris Soentpiet (Korean American) Amy Tan (Chinese American) Janet S. Wong (Asian American) Laurence Yep (Chinese American)
    Asian American Bibliography: YA short story anthologies
    anthologies related links
    Introduction Asian American Overview ... For Grown-Ups This bibliography features children's and young adult books with Asian and Asian American characters (mostly anthologies) that were published in the United States. For books featuring Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Korean, and Vietnamese American characters, please see the pages linked above. If you have any suggestions for additions, please let us know This bibliography was compiled by Children's Book Author Greg Leitich Smith, who is a Japanese-German American.

    57. Health Library: All Topics: A: Asian American Health - Healthfinder®
    asian), vietnamese and more. details Educational InstitutionFollow the ResourceURL for More Information. Diabetes in asian and Pacific Islander americans
    http://www.healthfinder.gov/Scripts/SearchContext.asp?topic=71

    58. News From The UCSF Comprehensive Cancer Center, April 3, 2001
    care? An overview of tobacco control interventions for vietnamese;Hepatitis B and liver cancer among asian americans; Lung cancer
    http://cc.ucsf.edu/news/040301.html
    Source: Twink Stern, UCSF News Services
    April 3, 2001
    UCSF Vietnamese Community Health Promotion Project Co-Sponsors Academy to Prevent Cancer in Asian Americans
    The UCSF Vietnamese Community Health Promotion Project has announced the first annual Asian American Cancer Control Academy scheduled on April 25 and 26, 2001 at the Oakland Asian Cultural Center. Those invited to attend the conference include community physicians, nurses, health educators and other health professionals in private practice, community clinics, and managed health care systems as well as volunteers, staff from cancer control voluntary agencies, researchers, and public health students at all levels. Program topics include:
    • Do traditional Vietnamese and Chinese health beliefs act as barriers to cancer screening and health care?
    • An overview of tobacco control interventions for Vietnamese
    • Hepatitis B and liver cancer among Asian Americans
    • Lung cancer among Chinese
    • Successful cancer control strategies in the Chinese community
    • A panel discussion on Asian American cancer survivors and support
    • Tailoring health education materials for Vietnamese
    • Developing community/university partnerships
    • A clinician's tool kit for providers of health care to the Vietnamese and Chinese populations
    Other objectives of the two-day academy are to further develop insights into the cultural background and historical context that may affect Vietnamese-American and Chinese-American communities and their readiness for cancer control activities.

    59. Asian Americans
    americans (1.4 million), Japanese americans (865,000), Korean americans (800,000),asian Indian americans (785,000), and vietnamese americans (595,000) make up
    http://www.freethechildren.org/cultures/html/map/asia/asia-american.html
    Asian Americans People from Asia have been migrating to the United States for nearly 200 years now. The first Asian immigrants came from China, and they were brought over by American companies seeking cheap laborers. Early Asian immigrants, mostly Chinese and Japanese, were met with resentment and racism by whites in the U.S. In addition to violent attacks, early Asian immigrants were subjected to a long list of anti-Asian legislation. One of the effects of this legislation was to make it nearly impossible for any new immigrants from Asia to come to the United States for nearly a century until the mid-1960s. As a result, the vast majority of the Asian-Pacific American population has come to the United States during the past four decades.
    As with the other groups of racial categorization, the race “Asian” is problematic. It is based largely on geography, rather than on the race of the people. For instance, people from Bangladesh, Pakistan, and India do not racially look like people from China, Japan, and Vietnam but are categorized in the same race because of their geography.
    To learn more about specific cultures, click below:

    60. Asian American Film Festival: Links
    Professionals Society; vietnameseAmerican Public Affairs Committee (VPAC). Southasian, South asian American Project IMPACT for South asian-americans; South
    http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~asamfilm/links.html
    Vietnamese, Vietnamese American South Asian, South Asian American Korean, Korean American Taiwanese, Taiwanese American Chinese, Chinese American Japanese, Japanese American MultiEthnic American Filipino American General Asian, Asian American Links

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