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Vietnamese doctor forcibly removed from United flight By Staff NORTHWEST ASIAN WEEKLY Dr. David Dao is recovering at a Chicago hospital after he was forcibly removed from a United Airlines flight headed to Louisville, Ky. on April 9. The incident was caught on videos taken by other passengers — provoking an outcry on social media. In a statement, United said, “Flight 3411 from Chicago to Louisville was overbooked. After our team looked for volunteers, one customer refused to leave the aircraft voluntarily and law enforcement was asked to come to the gate. We apologize for the overbook situation.” The airline was asking already seated passengers to voluntarily give up their seats for $800 — in order to make room for four employees who needed to get to Kentucky. When the appeal failed, United staff said they randomly selected four passengers by computer. One couple and another passenger left the plane peacefully, but Dao, who’s Vietnamese-Chinese — Screenshot from video of Dr. David Dao dragged through the aisle
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Julie Locke, mother of former Washington governor, dies at 90 By Staff NORTHWEST ASIAN WEEKLY Julie Locke died in Seattle on April 6. She was 90. According to her son, the former governor of Washington, Gary Locke, “Mom passed away … peacefully and without any pain and in the comfort of her home.” Locke said his mother suffered a massive stroke on March 20. Born on Jan. 11, 1927 in Hong Kong, Julie married James Locke in Hong Kong in 1947 and moved to the United States shortly after. She was sworn in as a U.S. citizen in 1954. “What many don’t know is that she had a thirst for learning,” Locke told the Northwest Asian Weekly. “She went back to community college when she was 50 years old to take courses in tailoring — even though she was already an amazingly gifted
Photo provided by the Locke family
VOL 36 NO 16
Julie Locke
seamstress, having made suits for my Dad and re-upholstered our living room sofas—and a course in idioms of American expressions!! And she was always reading newspapers and magazines and looking up unfamiliar words in her Chinese-American dictionary and practicing writing out the words on recycled scraps see LOCKE on 5 SEE RELATED BLOG ON 10
1st-generation immigrant from Malaysia gets accepted by 8 Ivy League schools
Terracotta Warriors exhibit open in Seattle
By Staff NORTHWEST ASIAN WEEKLY A 17-year-old Malaysian immigrant in Orange County, Calif. has stunned everyone with her extraordinary achievement of getting acceptance letters from eight Ivy League universities. Cassandra Hsiao’s application essay played a big role in her acceptance into the universities, where she wrote about learning English while growing up in a house of immigrants. She has received acceptance
Photo by Janice Nesamani/NWAW
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Cassandra Hsiao
The terracotta horse who has flown all across the world with a cavalry man.
By Janice Nesamani NORTHWEST ASIAN WEEKLY For over 2,000 years, they lay underground — silently guarding China’s First Emperor Qin Shi
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Huang. In 1974, they were accidentally disturbed from their eternal watch by farmers digging a well in Xi’an in the Shaanxi province of China, revealing a see TERRACOTTA WARRIORS on 15
IRON CHEF
PAUL TRAN
GENE MOY
Will this Seattle chef reign supreme? » see 7
Getting ready for Rain City Grand Slam » see 8
We captured his 100th birthday party. » see 9
COMMUNITY » 2
CALENDAR » 6
ASTROLOGY » 13
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