PRSRT STD U.S. Postage Paid Permit No. 746 Seattle, WA
VOL 33 NO 13
MARCH 22 – MARCH 28, 2014
FREE
32 YEARS YOUR VOICE
DIVERSITY High school students vie for scholarships » P. 5
One woman’s journey from Vietnam to US She wanted her son to know. So at various points throughout her day, Julie Loan Ky Alexander, familiar to a generation of Monroe residents as the soft-spoken woman with the Vietnamese accent behind the counter at the Monroe Post Office, started writing her memories down. Over several years, she related the memories of school years during which she passed bodies of townspeople in the street, of the grim post-war years and the struggle not to starve, the lucky break that gave her a college education, and another that brought her to the United States, from where she supported nearly an entire
community, to the 2009 voyage that finally fulfilled her father’s last wish. Originally, she only intended her memoir as a way to explain to her son and perhaps a few other relatives why she had come to America. But her husband, an enterprising inventor and businessman, saw a greater potential in her work, and he encouraged her to find a publisher. It didn’t take long. The second publisher to view it snapped it up, and in February, her book, “A Rose on the Steel Ground,” was released. Photo by Polly Keary
By Polly Keary The Monroe Monitor
After the war
During the Vietnam war, above ground, the rural district {see ALEXANDER cont’d on page 15}
Julie Alexander, well-known to most Monroe residents from her 17-year post at the Monroe Post Office, and her husband, Rick, celebrate the recent release of her book, “A Rose on the Steel Ground,” which details the surprising and often harrowing journey that brought her to America, and finally to Monroe.
Nomura explores her roots Solemsaas finalist through choreography, dance in NSCC prez search By Alia Marsha Northwest Asian Weekly
{see NOMURA cont’d on page 13}
Photo by Sue Misao/NWAW
For its second season, the Seattle dance group Relay Dance Collective travels back to their roots as inspiration for “Beginnings,” featuring repertory works by 30 dancers and choreographers. Dancer and co-founder of the group Gabrielle Kazuko Nomura uses this opportunity to tell the story of her origins as a Japanese American through her piece “Farewell shikata ga nai.” Both of Nomura’s great-grandparents were sent to internment camps. Her grandfather was even born in one. Nomura said that she has always known about this part of her family history, but it was not always easy to accept it. Choreographing the dance piece is one way of coming to terms with what happened to her family and the Japanese American community during the Japanese American incarceration in World War II. Nomura grew up listening to her grandfather’s stories about the camps. These stories have inspired her so much that a recording of her grandfather’s Dharma messages will be played as part of the piece. Having these personal elements are also, however, what makes it challenging to put together Gabrielle Nomura, left, and Sierra Keith rehearse for “Beginnings.”
It would be an “honor” and a “homecoming” for Rachel Solemsaas to be selected as the president of North Seattle Community College. That’s what Solemsaas said when she was named as one of four finalists for the position. Solemsaas received her master’s degree in public administration from the University of Washington and her doctorate in education from Washington State University. She is currently vice president for finance and administrative services at Truckee Meadows Community College in Reno, Nev. Before that, she served in administrative services at Bellevue College, as vice president of finance and operations at Edmonds Community College, and as chief financial officer at King County Department of Community and Human Services. Thirty candidates applied for the North Seattle position, and seven made it to the semi-finalist
Rachel Solemsaas
list. Of the 30 applicants, five were women and nine were persons of color, according to NSCC. The other three finalists are Warren J. Brown, Ed.D., executive vice president for instruction and {see SOLEMSAAS cont’d on page 13}
The Inside Story EDUCATION H-1B visas for students » P. 4
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WORLD Hong Kong dock strike works » P. 8
MUSIC Wanting Q at the Triple Door » P. 9
COMMENTARY China & Gary Locke » P. 11
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