VOL 36 NO 21 | MAY 20 – MAY 26, 2017

Page 1

PRSRT STD U.S. Postage Paid Permit No. 746 Seattle, WA

VOL 36 NO 21

MAY 20 – MAY 26, 2017

Broken promises torment Filipino Veterans 75 years to right a tragic wrong

Photo by Arlene Dennistoun/NWAW

Blue Compass’ Christine Jung talks Seattle Hackathon and humanitarianism

FREE 35 YEARS YOUR VOICE

Christine Chung

By Tim Gruver NORTHWEST ASIAN WEEKLY We have only 24 hours each day to choose what news we read and that includes our country’s decision makers. Each morning, American officials across the country are handed a single briefing in see JUNG on 13

STARS ON ICE The two Chens headline the 2017 Stars on Ice tour » see 8

Joe Taton, Sr., 101, surrounded by daughters Elizabeth, Desirae, grandson Solomon, and one of Taton’s caregivers.

By Arlene Kiyomi Dennistoun NORTHWEST ASIAN WEEKLY Four-hundred-fifty people filled the Renton Pavilion on Saturday, May 13 for a fundraiser with a $25,000 goal to buy replicas of Congressional Gold

By LYNN THOMPSON SEATTLE TIMES

Publisher Ng reflects on what made the day so special » see 10

EDITORIAL Apparently it’s wrong to have an opinion, as the new Miss USA found out. » see 11

in 1941. The Renton event also commemorated Asian Pacific Islander Month, Memorial Day, the 75th Anniversary of the Bataan Death March, and the passage of S1555 see FILVET on 12

Quiet Washington teen finds confidence, award from governor

A MOTHER’S DAY TO REMEMBER

COMMUNITY » 2 CALENDAR » 6 SUDOKU » 6 ASTROLOGY » 13

Medals for the Filipino Veterans (FilVet) of World War II. These men remain unrecognized for their wartime military service 75 years ago. Their service included guerilla warfare and enduring the brutal Bataan Death March in the Philippines after the Japanese attacked

Moses Shiong and Gov. Jay Inslee

BELLEVUE, Wash. (AP) — Moses Shiong didn’t feel supported at home. His parents, Hmong refugees from Laos, didn’t seem to understand their American son. He said they were disappointed that he wasn’t a traditional first son, strong, showing no weakness. His mentors said the parents didn’t seem to notice him withdrawing, locking himself in his room to cry. By his sophomore year of high school he was skipping first-period English, too exhausted mentally and emotionally, he said, from arguments at home. When his father had a heart attack and could no longer work, Shiong blamed himself and doubled his hours at a Bellevue pizza restaurant to help his family financially. Shiong, 17, said he had suicidal thoughts, but knew he couldn’t

abandon his sister, who was five years younger. “I wanted her to have a better future. That was a huge motivation for me,” he said. Last month, Shiong stood beside Gov. Jay Inslee, honored as one of the 13 finalists for the state Boys & Girls Youth of the Year Award, given to the high-school senior who most embodies the club’s values of leadership, service, academic excellence and healthy lifestyles. Shiong credits the turnaround in his life to the staff at the Bellevue Boys & Girls Club, where he’d attended after-school programs since he was in kindergarten. At the club, he said, he found adults willing to listen and offer support. One, Masao Yamada, director of the club’s Keystone Leadership Program for high-school students, became a see SHIONG on 15

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