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Our Family is Healthy Because Our Home is Free from Cigarette. Southeast Asian Health Project, 1988.

Our Family is Healthy Because Our Home is Free from Cigarette. Southeast Asian Health Project, 1988. The UC Irvine Libraries, Special Collections and Archives.


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Phylypo Tum of the Cambodian Humanitarian Organization for Peace on Earth, known as C-HOPE, hosts th

Phylypo Tum of the Cambodian Humanitarian Organization for Peace on Earth, known as C-HOPE, hosts the spelling contest at the Khmer Language Gala. 

The Khmer Culture Preservation Gala provides Cambodian children an opportunity to display their knowledge of language and culture, and to compete for cash prizes. The gala is hosted and sponsored by community and business leaders as a way to promote the development and retention of the Khmer language and culture in Long Beach. At these events, young Cambodians are introduced to key culture bearers and elders in the community, and meet young Cambodian professionals who can serve as role models. 


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Title: “SEA Legacies: Commemorating 40 Years of Southeast Asian Diasporas”

The goals of the symposium are to commemorate the formation of Southeast Asian diasporic communities in the US over the past 40 years and to educate students and the community about Southeast Asian American heritages, experiences, and histories.

Events in no particular order:

A.    Keynote: Dr. Viet Nguyen, Departments of English and American Studies and Ethnicity, USC

B.     Panel: Vietnamese American Authors: Telling Diasporic Stories from Vietnam to the US

C.     Panel: Southeast Asian Experiences

D.    Panel: The Fall of Saigon: Political Background and Military Context

E.     Roundtable: Alumni Experiences: Intergenerational Dialogue

F.      Panel: CBOs & JOBs: Get to Know Local Community Organizations and Resources

G.    Roundtable: Let’s Get Engaged! Students Share Opportunities for Campus and Community Involvement and Service.)

H.    Panel: Preserving and Sharing Our Stories: The Role of Southeast Asian Oral History Projects and Archives

I.       Digital Photo Exhibit: Vietnamese Americans: A Self-Portrait of a People

J.       Exhibit: Letters from Vietnam

K.    Film Series: Visual Stories of Diaspora: An Exploration of Southeast Asian History and Life through Films

L.     Panel: Beyond the Fall of Saigon: Communism as Discourse in National, Community, and Identity Formations in the US and Vietnam

M.   Panel: Global Perspectives on the Vietnam War

N.    Panel: National Resource Center for Asian Languages and Vietnamese Literacy Development for Dual Language Immersion

O.    Closing Performances: Southeast Asian American Expression and Performance

The SEA Legacies Symposium is generously sponsored by the College of Humanities and Social Sciences and by Dr. Craig K. Ihara.

The SEA Legacies Symposium is organized by faculty, students, and staff of Asian American Studies, Modern Languages and Literatures, History, American Studies, Political Science, Psychology, Sociology, Communications, Education, the HSS Office of Development, the CSUF Office of State and Community Relations, the Vietnamese Students Association, the Cambodian Students Association, and the Asian Pacific American Resource Center, and in collaboration with community partners.

Please contact Dr. Eliza Noh at [email protected] for more information.

Please don’t forget to share the eventbrite RSVP link with the campus and external community. All attendees, including speakers and yourselves, should register by Feb. 20th so that we can take a headcount for food:

https://eventbrite.com/event/152941782

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Monday:

Started the week off with Jillian coming over. Stacey made some delicious cuban pork for dinner!!

Then we went to Yogurtland for dessert!

Thursday:

Jason and I went out for dinner and drinks! Always a good time with my bro!

Friday:
I needed to get my emissions test and it’s so convenient now cause I live right by one. I literally left my house for 20 minutes… LOL 

And when I got home Stacey had Jerk Wings ready for lunch! It was AMAZING!

And when I got home from work, Stacey made Thai Turkey Meatballs for dinner! Also DELICIOUS!!!

And for dessert, the Dessert Queen wanted to make raspberry scones!

Saturday:
We needed to go to Whole Foods for some last minute grocery shopping and we noticed that Chick Fil-A was empty, so we got it for lunch! DELICIOUS!

For dinner, we had our friends over food, drinks, and games! It was fun times with our friends! 

Lots of food!

My favorite at the party!

It was the first time that Anna and Monica came over to our spot! Haven’t seen them in a minute!

Then it was time for games… it got intense lol 

Sunday:
Stacey and I went to to Phnom Penh for lunch!



Hope everyone had a great weekend! Have a great week, everyone!

Day 2: 91°F, went out to the furthest sites about an hour away to ground truth. The first video was

Day 2: 91°F, went out to the furthest sites about an hour away to ground truth. The first video was taken walking through the wooded area of a mound site, and shortly after it was taken I unknowingly dropped my phone while being swarmed by ants. I didnt realise I had lost it until about 10 minutes later and THANKFULLY we’re good archaeologists and were able to find it in the woods. 2nd photo is of a small shrine we found on a temple mound site pictured in the 3rd photo as well.
#archaeology #archaeologist #archaeologygrad #archaeologymasters #archaeologystudent #cambodia #cambodian #cambodianarchaeology #khmer #temple #asia #southeastasia #masters #fieldarchaeology #lidar #fieldwalking #gradblr
https://www.instagram.com/p/BvitjEAFWlV/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=uh4ehfwbp3cz


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Are you sick of being mocked for how Asian you look? Are you tired of the slanted eye jokes and comments about your “exotic” features?

Well, have no fear, we have a tutorial to help you look more “western” and normal!

Step 1: Let’s Fix Those Eyes!

Invest in getting eyelid surgery to fix your monolids. If you can not afford surgery, you can still buy eyelid tape or glue!

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(It is only fair that we warn you of the possibility of accidentally ripping your eyelid while using eyelid tape. Please use with caution.)

Step 2: Hide that Round Face!

Many Asians have distinctive round faces that make them stick out from a western crowd of sharp and oval faces. Our best advice is to use your hair to hide and shape your face!

Here are our recommended hair styles:

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Step 3: Step Away From Traditional Hair Styles

An absolute feature of every asian is straight black hair. Make people question your ethnicity even more by curling or dying your hair.

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Step 4: Muscle Up!

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One of the common stereotypes of Asians are how weak and submissive they are. If you bulk up, everyone around you will see you as strong and powerful— nothing at all like an Asian at all!

Step 5: Get a Tan or get Pale!

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East Asians are often noted for their pale skin while South East Asians are often noted for their tan skin. Let’s mix it up! If you are an East Asian, consider getting tanner! If you are South East Asian, then it’s time to get paler— your dark skin signifies your poor field working class, so you’ll want to get paler anyways.

arjuna-vallabha:Parvati, khmer sculpture from Cambodia

arjuna-vallabha:

Parvati, khmer sculpture from Cambodia


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Gaahhh I can’t wait to bring this Krasue to life! So much fun! #keldeltattoo #artfuldodger #ar

Gaahhh I can’t wait to bring this Krasue to life! So much fun! #keldeltattoo #artfuldodger #artfuldodgertattoo #seattle #seattletattoo #seattletattooartist #ladytattooer #capitolhill #wa #tattoo #tattooed #photooftheday #love #illustration #illustrativetattoo #instadaily #party #art #followme #art #artist #creative #whip #drawing #sketch #krasue #floatinghead #blackwork #ladyhead #vampire #cambodian #horror (at Artful Dodger Tattoo & Comics)


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We’re super excited to share our new shirts with you, created in partnership with Asian Prisoner Sup

We’re super excited to share our new shirts with you, created in partnership with Asian Prisoner Support Committee!

We need your support to reunite four Cambodian deportees with their families and community. If we’re able to stop people from getting deported, we can also bring them back home!

We’re raising $3,000 to pay for Kay Kay, China, Tone and Chantha’s legal defense. 100% of shirt proceeds go to APSC, who are working to reunite them! 

Kay Kay, China, Tone, and Chantha came to the US as refugee children fleeing from the US-backed genocide in Cambodia, the Khmer Rouge. Now, ICE has ripped apart their families because their status as formerly-incarcerated refugees made them targets for deportation.

Kay Kay, China, Tone and Chantha’s families were resettled by the US government in heavily-policed and under-resourced neighborhoods in California. As youths in the 1990s, they committed crimes during an era of “tough on crime” laws that drove mass incarceration to new heights.

Kay Kay, China, Tone and Chantha rebuilt their lives after being released. Now they are struggling to survive after being deported to Cambodia, a country they do not know. 80% of all deportation orders for Southeast Asian Americans are based on old criminal records that have already been served.

These Cambodian refugees escaped one of the worst genocides of the 20th century to seek safety in the US, only to be deported and separated from their families.

Get a shirt to help reunite Kay Kay, China, Tone and Chantha’s families!

Our shirt design is by Raychelle Duazo, a queer femme Filipina-American illustrator and tattoo artist from the Pacific Northwest. See more of Raychelle’s work @bombchelle. 


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