IMG_7661

Women’s Pipeline for Change Meet at Fairmont Copley for Inaugural Conference

Women and politics took center stage on Wednesday, May 30 at the Fairmont Copley Hotel when the new coalition, Women’s Pipeline for Change, met at its first statewide conference.

Photo by Jianghe Niu

Massachusetts Asian American Commission Dinner and Award Ceremony

The Massachusetts Asian American Commission held their sixth joint dinner at Boston University’s Metcalf Hall on May 16. Over three hundred people from all works of life dressed up to attend the event.

Photo credit: Eric Haynes / Governor’s Office

Governor Deval Patrick Celebrates Asian American Heritage Month

On Thursday, May 10, Governor Deval Patrick proclaimed the month of May to be Asian Pacific Heritage Month during a celebration at the State House. Governor Patrick was joined by members of the Governor’s Asian American Commission, elected officials and members of the Asian Pacific American community.

RC at AD

An Interview with Rhitu Chatterjee

Rhitu Chatterjee currently works as a science reporter for the daily public radio program of international news called The World. The show is co-produced by the BBC World Service, Public Radio International and WGBH radio in Boston. The World is broadcast on nearly 300 public radio stations in the U.S. and Canada.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

An Interview with Brian H. Wong

Brian H. Wong is the News Editor at ESPN. For Sampan’s Asian American Heritage Month special, Mr. Wong was kind enough to accept an interview. Here is what he said:

Mildred_Portrait

An Interview with Mildred Wong

What was it like growing up as an Asina-American in the United States?
Fortunately, I can say that as an Asian American growing up in Boston, I have never been teased with degrading names or insults. No blond-haired, blue-eyed boy in my first grade class ever pulled his eyes at the corners, slanted them, and ridiculed me. At Boston Latin School, at least 45 percent of the students were Asian American, which made us much more a majority than a “minority.” Extreme racial slurs and blatant prejudice are as foreign to me as soy sauce on ice cream. As a contemporary Chinese-American, I have never been hassled, unless bad pickup lines count. “Hey baby, ni hao ma?” is not an effective pickup line.