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VOL 41 NO 21 MAY 21 – MAY 27, 2022
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EDI rebounding from existential threat By Mahlon Meyer NORTHWEST ASIAN WEEKLY When Ted Yamamura asked Vanna Novak if she wanted to start a nonprofit to train Japanese American professionals, she prayed she would have the strength to refuse. “Please, please, let me have the strength to say no,” she remembered. “That’s what I was thinking. What I heard me say was, ‘Sure.’ What I didn’t realize was that one word would change the course of my life forever.” Novak’s words, written in the form of a letter to Yamamura, after he died in 2013, reflected the feelings of generations of alumni who have gone through the intense, life-changing program—as many describe it—called Executive Development Institute (EDI). Tom Gin
Asians cautiously optimistic as travel plans take off
see EDI on 11
Authorities: Hate against Taiwanese led to church attack
Sheena Kaup with her family at Mumbai Airport ready to board their flight to Seattle
By Janice Nesamani NORTHWEST ASIAN WEEKLY In March 2020, a work opportunity for Sheena Kaup would have meant she and her family would move half a world away from Pune, India to Seattle. It was a prospect that not only excited her and her husband, but their then 4-yearold son, too. Like millions of people across the
world, Kaup’s travel plans had to remain grounded due to the COVID-19 pandemic and new waves caused by variants. Traveling from India to the United States for work or to attend an emergency meant getting government approvals and going through the hoops of tests and certificates. “We felt it wasn’t safe for us to travel see KAUP on 16
AP Photo/Jae C. Hong
Shouan Pan resigning in August
Billy Chang, a 67-year-old Taiwanese pastor who survived the May 15 shooting at Geneva Presbyterian Church, gets emotional while speaking at a prayer vigil on May 16.
By Amy Taxin, Ken Ritter and Deepa Bharath ASSOCIATED PRESS Orange County Sheriff’s Dept.
LAGUNA WOODS, Calif. (AP) — A gunman motivated by political hatred against Taiwan chained shut the doors of a California church and hid firebombs inside before shooting at a gathering of mostDavid Chou, 68 ly elderly Taiwanese parishioners, killing a man who tackled him and possibly saved dozens of lives,
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authorities said. David Chou, 68, of Las Vegas—a U.S. citizen who authorities say grew up in Taiwan—drove to Orange County on May 14. The next day, he attended a lunch held by Irvine Taiwanese Presbyterian Church, which worships at Geneva Presbyterian Church in the community of Laguna Woods. Though he knew no one there, he spent about an hour mingling with about 40 attendees and then executed his plot, authorities said at a news conference. Authorities said Chou chained the doors and put super glue in the keyholes. He had two 9 mm handguns—legally purchased see CHURCH ATTACK on 14
Seattle Colleges (SC) Chancellor Shouan Pan announced on May 12 that he will leave his post on Aug. 1—two years before his contract is up in 2024. The college system’s board of trustees voted to terminate the contract early in agreement with Pan, who shared in March that he’d begun seeking jobs elsewhere. He was a see PAN on 5
Shouan Pan
THE INSIDE STORY
ON THE SHELF A life of crime is not for everyone
PICTORIAL Seattle Boba Fest
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A&E Korean Music Association’s 42nd Annual Concert
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