VOL 37 NO 9 | FEBRUARY 24 – MARCH 2, 2018

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

VOL 37 NO 9 FEBRUARY 24 – MARCH 2, 2018

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36 YEARS YOUR VOICE

The ID skyline is changing By Ruth Bayang NORTHWEST ASIAN WEEKLY

At least a quarter of a billion dollars is being invested in the ID

The International District (ID) is the new hot spot for real estate development. Today, there are nearly a dozen real estate projects in the ID, in various stages of development — bringing in the next several years, new commercial space, and market rate and affordable housing. For the first time in a decade, condominiums, starting at under $400,000, will be available to purchase. The look and feel of retail spaces will also change. Here’s a look at some of the planned and ongoing developments.

SpringHill Suites

The mixed-use project is a 16-story development with seven levels of hotel at the lower levels, eight levels of apartments above the hotel, and one level of condominiums on the top level. There will be retail space on the ground level, and four levels of underground parking. Developer: Hotel Concepts, a local hotel developer which owns and operates more see ID on 12

China urges US to get tough on man who stole thumb from terracotta warrior

PICTORIAL 20th Asia Pacific New Year Celebration » see 9

Photo by Janice Nesamani

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Cavalryman statue

SPORTS The Layup Drill » see 8

Statue without thumb

Nathan Chen dazzles after poor short program By DAVE SKRETTA AP SPORTS WRITER

LETTER TO EDITOR Bellevue teen is thrilled to see Asian Americans at the Olympics» see 11

GANGNEUNG, South Korea (AP) — Nathan Chen finally admitted the pressure of being the face of American figure skating got to him, winding him up so tight for his short program that it ended in what he described as a “disaster.” see CHEN on 5

Nathan Chen | AP Photo

Chinese authorities are calling for a heavy punishment for a Delaware man charged with stealing a thumb from an ancient terracotta warrior statue on display at a museum in Pennsylvania. Federal authorities 24-year-old Michael Rohana was attending an Ugly Sweater Party at the Franklin Institute on Dec. 21, when he entered the “Terracotta Warriors of

the First Emperor” exhibit. Authorities say Rohana took selfies while posing next to a statue known as “The Cavalryman,” and then snapped off the statue’s left thumb, put it in his pocket and left. Museum staff noticed the missing thumb on Jan. 8, and the FBI traced it to Rohana five days later. Chinese authorities are demanding compensation for the damage see TERRACOTTA on 14

Heroic actions of Asian American student and teacher during school shooting PARKLAND, Fla. — A math teacher at a Florida high school where 17 people were killed in a mass shooting last week, is being hailed a hero. Instead of sending her students into the hallway when she heard the second fire drill go off at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, Shanthi Viswanathan told her students to get on the floor and covered the windows, keeping them out of the reach and sight of the gunman, the Sun-Sentinel reported.

Shanthi Viswanathan

Peter Wang

“She was quick on her feet. She used her knowledge. She saved a lot of kids,” Dawn Jarboe, the mother of one of Viswanathan’s see VISWANATHAN on 15

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