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This is a list of speakers for the
Vietnamese American Youth Leadership Conference.
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Linda Akutagawa -
Vice President Resource & Business Development, Leadership Education for Asian Pacifics, Inc. |
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Elena
Arons -
American Legacy Foundation |
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Robert L. Bisi
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Director of Communications & Outreach,
Youth Service America |
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Larry Berman -
Professor & Director, University of California Washington Center |
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Christine Chen
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Executive Director, Organization of Chinese Americans |
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Dr. Ngoc Quang Chu -
President, Vietnamese Professionals Society |
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Christina Diaz-Malone -
Director, National
Initiatives,
Freddie Mac |
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Thanh N. Dinh
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Captain, U.S. Air Force |
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Uyen Dinh
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Counsel, House Committee on the Armed Services |
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Ba-Huy
Duong -
Technical Director, AnviCom,
Inc. |
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Mark Keam -
Counsel, Senate Committee on
the Judiciary |
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Janelle Hu -
Executive Director,
APIAVote |
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Daphne Kwok -
Executive Director, APAICS |
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David Lamb -
Reporter / Author |
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Ngoan Le -
Senior Program Director, Chicago Community Trust |
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Phuong Ly -
Reporter, The Washington Post |
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Sherri Ly -
Reporter, WTTG/FOX
5 News |
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Carl Nguyen -
Agent, State Farm
Insurance |
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Dr. Charles Cuong Nguyen -
Dean, School of Engineering, Catholic University of America |
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Hung Quoc Nguyen -
President, National Congress of Vietnamese Americans |
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Mai Nguyen -
AAPI/NAAN Program Manager, Federal Aviation Administration |
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Mina Nguyen -
Director of Government Affairs, RNC |
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Bob Sakaniwa -
Senior Counsel, Representative Mike Honda |
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Shari
Sitron -
Director, Youth Activism Program,
American Legacy Foundation |
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Bryan Spoon -
Outreach Liaison, Representative Jim
Moran |
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Bouapha Toommaly -
Field Programs Manager, Rural
Coalition |
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Doua Thor -
Deputy Director, Southeast Asian Resource Action Center |
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Linda Akutagawa is the
Vice President for Resource and Business Development at Leadership Education for
Asian Pacifics, Inc. (LEAP). She is responsible for LEAP’s overall fundraising
and business development. She also manages and maintains relationships with
LEAP’s diverse constituents ranging from Board members, program alumni,
community organizations, corporations, student organizations, universities and
employee network groups. Previously, Ms. Akutagawa was the Director of External
Relations developing and implementing LEAP’s marketing & sales strategy for it’s
programs and services.
Envisioned as a vehicle to
develop future leaders, Leadership Education for Asian Pacifics, Inc. (LEAP) is
a national, nonprofit organization founded in 1982 to achieve full participation
and equality for Asian Pacific Americans (APAs). Unmatched in vision and scope,
LEAP offers leadership training, publishes original public policy research, and
conducts community education to advance a comprehensive strategy of APA
empowerment.
LEAP has grown steadily
from its roots as a volunteer organization offering community training, into a
national organization with a current clientele of nearly 500 nonprofit,
community and student organizations; federal, state and local government
agencies; colleges and universities; and Fortune 1000 companies.
For the past twenty years,
LEAP has been intent on "growing leaders." LEAP programs encourage individuals
to assume leadership positions at work and in the community, to be informed and
vocal about policy issues relevant to APAs, and ultimately, to become role
models for future leaders.
Linda speaks and presents
nationally on topics such as leadership, Asian Pacific American issues, employee
network groups, diversity and networking and relationship building to a range of
audiences such as corporations, student groups and community and professional
organizations. Previous to joining LEAP, Linda was the Marketing Manager for
Japan and Orient Tours, a tour operator specializing in Asia and the Pacific. In
her 11th year at LEAP, Linda received her B.S. in International Business with a
minor in Economics from California State University at Los Angeles.
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Larry Berman is Director
of the University of California Washington Center and Professor of Political
Science at the University of California, Davis.
Berman’s research and
publications have focused on the presidency, foreign policy and Vietnam. He has
written three books on the war, most recently No Peace, No Honor: Nixon,
Kissinger and Betrayal in Vietnam has been featured on C-Span’s Book
TV, the History Channel’s Secrets of War, and reviewed prominently in
the New York Times, Washington Post, Boston Globe,
Sacramento Bee, and Washington Times. The Vietnamese language
edition, Khong Hoa Binh, Chang Danh Du: Nixon, Kissinger, Va Su Phan
Boi O Viet Nam, was published by Viet Tide of Westminster, California.
Berman has appeared on a number of broadcasts, including Bill Moyers PBS series,
“The Public Mind;” David McCullough’s American Experience series, “Vietnam: A
Television History;” and C-SPAN’s Book TV.
Berman has received
fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, the American Council of Learned
Societies, the National Science Foundation, and research grants from several
presidential libraries. He is a co-recipient of the Richard E. Neustadt Award,
given annually for the best book published during the year in the field of the
American Presidency. He received the Bernath Lecture Prize, given annually by
the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations to a scholar whose work
has most contributed to our understanding of foreign relations. Berman has been
a Fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington,
D.C. and scholar in residence at the Rockefeller Foundation’s Center in Bellagio,
Italy.
Berman’s current project,
A Decade of Reconciliation: Vietnam-U.S. Relations Today and Tomorrow
addresses U.S.- Vietnam bilateral relations. He is addressing such issues as how
will the relationship evolve, what factors will be most critical for
cooperation, what issues are likely to present obstacles, what factors effect
the relationship of globalization and interdependency. Berman hopes to identify
the shared common interests of two countries in humanitarian, economic and
political areas and then discuss how convergent interests can provide a solid
foundation for bilateral cooperation. Berman has visited Vietnam several times
in conjunction with this project and previous research.
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Robert L. Bisi
Director of Communications & Outreach Youth Service America |
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Robert L. Bisi is the
Director of Communications and Outreach for Youth Service America (YSA). He is
responsible for connecting the youth service, service-learning, and youth civic
engagement field with tools, resources, and opportunities that increase their
effectiveness, scale, and sustainability. He is also responsible for developing
and directing YSA’s communications strategy. More specifically, he directs the
Working Group on National & Community Service; edit’s YSA’s weekly National
Service Briefing (35,000+ subscribers) and YSA Quaterly; directs YSA's
membership and partnership development; serves as YSA's representative on the
advisory boards of the Youth Vote Coalition (www.youthvote.org);
Mobilizing America’s Youth (www.m-a-y.org);
and the Gloria Barron Prize (www.barronprize.org);
and directs YSA's Youth Voice Initiative.
Over the past several
years, Robert created opportunities for young people to participate in the
community, media, and government. For six years, Robert served as the
Washington, DC Bureau Director of a national youth run news organization called
Children's Express (CE). As the director, he worked with 150 young reporters and
editors (aged 8-18) to produce stories for print, radio, and online media
outlets including among others: Reuters Syndicate, Newhouse Syndicate, and
National Public Radio. He managed the DC Bureau’s coverage of national media
events such as the 1996 and 2000 national political conventions, the 1996 and
2000 presidential inaugurations, and the 1997 Presidents' Summit on Service and
Volunteerism. In addition, he was responsible for the general operations,
planning, and fundraising of the DC Bureau.
Before Children's Express,
Robert was a field representative for California Assemblywoman Barbara Lee
(D-Oakland). Among many duties, he was responsible for providing constituent
services related to worker's compensation, senior citizens, youth, and
unemployment. In order to increase the civic engagement of citizens, he created
and managed advisory councils that served as the eyes and ears for Assemblywomen
Lee. He is most proud of the youth council, which was made up of young people
between the ages of 13 and 18. They provided the member with perspective on
pending legislation and issues within the Assembly District affecting youth.
In his spare time, Robert
enjoys bike riding, traveling, reading, volunteering, and listening to live
Reggae and Latin Jazz. On the volunteering front, he is a seasoned tutor at
Community Club in downtown Washington, DC.
Robert has a Bachelors Degree in Political Science with a minor in Urban Studies
from San Francisco State University.
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Named as one of Newsweek's
"2001 Women of the New Century," Christine Chen currently serves as the
Executive Director for the Organization of Chinese Americans (OCA), a national
Asian Pacific American civil rights organization based in Washington, D.C.
representing over 80 chapters and affiliates. She coordinates programs and
monitors issues pertaining to the Asian Pacific American community, such as hate
crimes, racial profiling, election reform, immigration reform, and affirmative
action. Ms. Chen currently sits on the executive board for the Leadership
Conference on Civil Rights, National Council of Asian Pacific Americans and for
YouthVote, and the advisory boards for the Midwest Asian American Students Union
(MAASU), and the East Coast Asian American Students Union (ECASU).
Previously, she served as Director of Programs for OCA for six years. She
coordinated the first national Asian Pacific American voter registration and
education campaign in 1996 and then served as the National Director for the
APIAVote 2000 campaign. The campaign initially registered over 75,000 new voters
in 1996 and translated and created voter registration posters in Chinese, Korean
and Vietnamese. Ms. Chen also developed a leadership training program, "APIAU:
Leadership 101", which trains over 600 Asian Pacific American college students
every year.
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Dr. Chu is the President
of the Vietnamese Professionals Society and an Executive Member of Vietcare. Vietcare was started in 1998 by a small group of Vietnamese
Americans who were former refugees. When they were in the refugee camps,
each one of them made individual promises to return and provide the same
assistance that they had received as refugees. Vietcare began its mission
at the last "home" for Vietnamese refugees (the Vietvillage in the Philippines)
by taking care of the remaining Vietnamese and proceeded to aid the Filipinos
who lived in the surrounding communities. Vietcare aims to help other Vietnamese
to learn how to form other volunteer groups so that they too, as Vietnamese
refugees, can give back, contribute and continue the spirits that got them to
where they presently find themselves.
In 2003, Dr. Chu was
nominated and accepted into the American College of Dentists. His induction will
be in October 2003. The fellowship in the American College of Dentist is
given to those who provide leadership in the field of dentistry and demonstrate
commitment to community services. Additionally, he received a
Gubernatorial Citation from Governor Parrish Glenndening of Maryland.
DENTAL LICENSE
Maryland (Northeast Regional Board)
EDUCATION
Certificate of Prosthodontics: Baltimore College of Dental Surgery, University
of Maryland, 1990.
Doctor of Dental Surgery: Baltimore College of Dental Surgery, University of
Maryland, 1988.
Bachelor of Arts: University of Maryland, Baltimore County, 1984.
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Christina Diaz-Malone is
Freddie Mac’s Director of National Initiatives responsible for working with a
diverse group of organizations that promote, encourage and support homeownership
for immigrants, low-to moderate-income, minority and under-served communities
throughout the United States.
Prior to her current
position she was in Freddie Mac’s Community Development Lending area where she
was responsible for developing public-private partnership with state and local
governments, community-based organizations, philanthropic organizations, lending
institutions and other entities to increase single family housing opportunities
for under-served households and communities.
Ms. Diaz-Malone has more
than 20 years of mortgage banking and community development experience. Before
joining Freddie Mac she worked in Fannie Mae’s National Housing Impact Division
following a career in sales with PMI Mortgage Insurance Company. She has been an
active member of the Latino community beginning with her involvement in the
formation of the first Latino nonprofit social services and employment
organization in Atlanta, Georgia.
Throughout her career, Ms
Diaz-Malone has served as member and volunteer of various nonprofit and
professional organizations as the Atlanta Mortgage Bankers Association,
Association of Mortgage Brokers, Association of Professional Mortgage Women, and
Foreign Born Information and Referral Services.
Ms. Diaz Malone is a
graduate of LadyCliff College, New York and a native of the Dominican Republic.
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Captain Thanh (“Tino”)
Dinh is an active duty officer in the US Air Force. He was born in Boston, but
grew up in Houston, Texas. Capt. Dinh received his bachelor’s degree in Asian
Studies and a commission as a second lieutenant at the US Air Force Academy in
Colorado Springs, CO in 1999. Following a year of ROTC scholarship recruiting,
Capt. Dinh received specialized training. Subsequently, he was stationed in
Uijeongbu, South Korea, Honolulu, HI, and currently Washington DC. He has
traveled to numerous countries in Asia and Europe and mostly recently served a
six month deployment in Baghdad, Iraq, training Iraqi military staff. He is
married to the former Miss Ji Hyun (“Anna”) Choi of Seoul, South Korea.
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Uyen Dinh was born in
Saigon, Vietnam and immigrated with her family to the United States in 1975. She
graduated from James Madison University in 1993 and from the Catholic University
of America’s Columbus School of Law in 1996. Uyen is a member of the Virginia
State Bar.
At JMU, Uyen was a
founding sister of the Theta Iota Chapter of Alpha Phi International Fraternity.
In addition, she served as the Public Affairs Officer for the Asian American
Association and the program director for the Asian-American Student Conference
in 1993. At the Columbus School of Law, Uyen served as the External Affairs
Officer for the Asian Pacific American Law Students Association. She also
participated in Moot Court and served as Moot Court Judge from 1993-1996.
Uyen is the founder and
director of Empress Productions, a Vietnamese performing arts organization.
Empress Productions comprises of young volunteers from the Northern Virginia
area who perform traditional Vietnamese cultural dances and play traditional
Vietnamese instruments. Empress Productions also produce Vietnamese cultural and
fashion shows complete with historical narration and costumes. Empress
Production’s goal is to share the Vietnamese culture and heritage with the
general public. Since 1991, members of Empress Productions perform annually at
the National Independence Day Parade, the Vietnamese American Youth Leadership
Conference, Fairfax Fair, and other heritage and culture events in the
Washington, DC area.
In addition, Uyen served
as executive producer and host of Our Generasian, a local cable talk show
focusing on Asian-American issues in the mid 1990's. The weekly show hosted
local community and business leaders, scholars, and students as guests to
discuss diverse subject matters affecting the Asian-American community. Uyen
also served as the executive director and guest speaker for the Vietnamese
American Youth Leadership Conference in 2001 and 2003.
From 1997-2001, Uyen
served as Legislative Counsel for Congressman Tom Davis (R-VA), specializing in
national security and defense, international affairs, trade, education,
telecommunications, banking and financial services, labor, immigration, civil
rights, and First Amendment rights issues. And from 2001-2003, she served as
Counsel for House Committee on Government Reform, Subcommittee on Technology and
Procurement Policy. Her portfolio focused on information technology (IT),
national security and homeland defense, including nuclear, chemical, biological,
radiological (NBCR) terrorism.
Presently, Uyen is Counsel
for the House Armed Services Committee and is responsible for the Department of
Defense’s $30 billion IT programs and policies. Her portfolio includes both
business and national security systems, such as command, control,
communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (C4ISR)
programs, as well as network centric warfare, information assurance, and
enterprise architecture issues. Uyen also drafts legislation, prepares hearings,
devise budget allocations, write speeches, and handle all Member IT requests and
issues for the annual National Defense Authorization process.
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Mr. Duong graduated from
the University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada with honors, in 1992. He has been
leading technology development projects and teams since joining AnviCom in 1995.
His fifteen years of work experience have been in support of a broad spectrum of
business sectors: banking/finance, telecommunications, the U.S. Federal
Government, and the Department of Defense. As Technical Director at AnviCom,
Inc., an Asian-owned firm specializing in Internet services and network
convergence, he is currently the Chief Engineer supporting a major U.S. Army
system handling ocean cargo worldwide. As a member of the company’s technology
Advisory Group, Mr. Duong is frequently called upon to help develop technical
solutions for a wide range of customer business requirements.
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Janelle Hu is the National
Director of the Asian & Pacific Islander American Vote Campaign, a coalition of
national and grassroots non-partisan nonprofit organizations that encourages
civic participation and promotes a better understanding of public policy and the
electoral process among the Asian and Pacific Islander American community that
has registered 110,000 new APIA voters and made over 5 million voter contacts by
mail, phone, and precinct walking since 1996. A native Californian, Janelle
moved to Washington, DC for graduate school, where she became involved in Asian
Pacific American community activism. She serves as a board member for the
Conference on Asian Pacific American Leadership, an all-volunteer nonprofit
organization that aims to draw more Asian Pacific Americans into public service
and elected office. She holds a bachelor’s degree in Sociology from UCLA and
graduated from Georgetown University's accelerated joint-degree program in law
and public policy.
As an Asian American,
Janelle feels a great duty to charge forward with other, like-minded individuals
who desire to empower the APIA community. By dispelling the myths and rumors
surrounding the political process and subsequently increasing voter
participation, she hopes to assist APIAs in the pursuit of bolstering support
for more APIA public servants, our communities, and ultimately, our families.
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Mark L. Keam is Chief
Counsel to the Assistant Senate Democratic Leader (Whip) Richard J. Durbin and
is also the Democratic Staff Director of the United States Senate Committee on
the Judiciary’s Subcommittee on Corrections and Rehabilitation, which has
jurisdiction over the government’s prisons, parole, probation and other
detention-related policies.
In these roles, Mr. Keam
serves as the top legal advisor to the senior Senator of Illinois on various
legislative, policy, and political matters that come before the high profile
Senate panel. He also supervises a team of attorneys and professionals who work
on committee hearings and legislation that address a wide variety of issues,
including amendments to the Constitution, civil liberties and civil rights,
criminal justice, federal courts, homeland security, immigration, privacy, and
terrorism. Mr. Keam and his staff also advise Senator Durbin in the confirmation
process for the President’s nominees to various Department of Justice and other
executive branch positions, and to serve lifetime judicial appointments on the
federal bench.
Mr. Keam’s areas of
expertise include First Amendment constitutional matters as well as business
issues, such as antitrust, bankruptcy, civil justice reform, corporate and
securities fraud, intellectual property, Internet, technology, and
telecommunications. He also works with Senator Durbin, Senator Obama, House
Speaker Hastert, and the White House in a bipartisan process they have
established to select nominees for federal judicial vacancies in the state of
Illinois.
Before coming to Capitol
Hill in 2001, Mr. Keam served in the Clinton Administration as Assistant Chief
Counsel in the Office of Advocacy of the U.S. Small Business Administration
(SBA), where he worked to protect the regulatory interests of small,
minority-owned, and woman-owned businesses. Prior to that appointment, Mr. Keam
was an enforcement attorney with the Wireless Telecommunications Bureau of the
U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC), where he worked on implementing
the landmark Telecommunications Act of 1996. Before that, Mr. Keam held a number
of positions in private, public, and political organizations.
Mr. Keam studied political
science at the University of California at Irvine. While in college, he interned
in Washington, DC, at the Democratic National Committee, and was a staff of the
Democratic National Convention. Mr. Keam received his law degree from the
University of California, Hastings College of the Law, in San Francisco, where
he was elected a first year section representative to student government. He
served as a senior editor of the Hastings Law Journal, was on moot court,
and clerked at the U.S. Attorney’s and City Attorneys’ offices..
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In April 2001, Daphne Kwok became the Executive Director of
the Asian Pacific American Institute for Congressional Studies. Ms. Kwok brings
exceptional leadership and organizational skills, political and community
contacts, and knowledge of front-burner issues to APAICS.
For 11 years, she was the Executive Director of the Organization of Chinese
Americans (OCA), a non-profit, civil rights organization with more than 10,000
members. She coordinated programs and services for 45 chapters and 37 college
affiliates and monitored issues pertaining to the Asian American community, such
as hate crimes, campaign finance reform, immigration reform, Census 2000,
English-only, and affirmative action.
During the Wen Ho Lee investigation, Ms. Kwok testified before the Congressional
Asian Pacific Caucus on the impact of federal counter-intelligence and security
investigations on Asian Pacific Americans at the Department of Energy. She was
subsequently appointed to the Secretary of Energy's Advisory Council.
Empowerment of all APAs has long been one of Ms. Kwok's core values.
From November 1997 until April 2001, Ms. Kwok was the first elected Chair of the
National Council of Asian Pacific Americans, a network of national APA
organizations.
She coordinated a national voter registration campaign involving 19 Asian
Pacific American organizations in 1996. This unprecedented campaign registered
more than 70,000 voters.
A 1984 graduate of Wesleyan University, Ms. Kwok became the first Asian American
member of its Board of Trustees. She has a B.A. in East Asian Studies and Music.
She received a Masters in Public Administration from New York's Baruch City
College.
Ms. Kwok currently serves on the board of a wide range of APA groups including
the Southeast Asia Resource Action Center,
National Coalition of Asian Pacific
American Community Development, and the Asian Pacific American Caucus of the
American Political Science Association. She is a Founding Board Member of the
Asian & Pacific Islander
American Scholarship Fund. Her views have been featured on national
radio and TV programs as well as in major newspapers and magazines.
Honors include The Women at the Top of the Game Award in 2001, being named one
of A Magazine's One Hundred Most Influential Asian Americans of the Past Decade,
World Journal's Top 100 North American Chinese, a member of the 1999 American
Swiss Foundation's Young Leaders Conference in Vevey, Switzerland, one of 10
delegates selected for the 1997 National Women's Leadership Group to travel to
Israel hosted by the American Jewish Committee, and the Presidential Classroom's
25th Anniversary Outstanding Alumni Award.
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David Lamb's travels as a
foreign correspondent for The Los Angeles Times have taken him to more
than 120 countries and to all seven continents. He has covered the Vietnam War,
the Iranian revolution, the overthrow of Idi Amin in Uganda, the Israeli
invasion of Lebanon, the African famine and the Rwanda massacres, the Persian
Gulf War, the popular uprising in Indonesia in 1998, the anarchy in East Timor
in 1999, the war on terror in Afghanistan and many of the other major stories of
the past two decades. His reporting has been nominated eight times for a
Pulitzer Prize.
A native of Boston and a
1962 graduate of the University of Maine, Mr. Lamb began his career with The
Okinawa Morning Star, then moved on to newspapers in Las Vegas, Oakland
(California) and to United Press International in San Francisco, Denver and Ho
Chi Minh City (Saigon), before joining The Times in 1970. With The Times he has
been based in Los Angeles, New York, Washington, Sydney (Australia), Nairobi
(Kenya), Cairo and Hanoi.
He returned to the United
States in 1985 after nearly eight years in Africa--the last three and a half of
which were spent in Egypt covering North Africa and the Middle East. Before his
Egypt assignment, Mr. Lamb covered sub-Sahara Africa from a base in Nairobi,
Kenya. His reporting and research for three books has taken him to 50 of
Africa's 51 countries, to all 21 Arab countries and to the 10 countries of
Southeast Asia. From August, 1997, to May , 2001, Mr. Lamb was The Times’
Southeast Asia bureau chief, based in Hanoi.
Mr. Lamb is the author of
The Africans, The Arabs: Journeys Beyond the Mirage, Stolen
Season, A Sense of Place: Listening to Americans, Over The Hills:
A Midlife Escape Across America By Bicycle, and Vietnam, Now: A Reporter
Returns, published in May, 2002 by Public Affairs. His articles have
appeared in numerous publications, including National Geographic,
Readers Digest, and Sports Illustrated. Mr. Lamb has been a Nieman
Fellow and an Alicia Patterson Fellow, a writer-in-residence at the University
of Southern California's School of Journalism and a Pew Fellow.
Interviews:
Adopt
Vietnam,
Asia Source.
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Ngoan Le is presently the Senior Program
Officer for Basic Human Needs at the Chicago Community Trust. Prior to this
position, Ngoan served as the Special Assistant to Mayor Daley on Homelessness.
In this position she coordinated the City Inter-Agency Task Force on
Homelessness and co-chaired the Chicago Continuum of Care, a consortium of over
200 public and private homeless stakeholders.
Ngoan has spent many years working in the field of human services. She was the
Managing Deputy Commissioner/Chief Program Officer of the Chicago Department of
Human Services. Prior to the reorganization in 2003, the Chicago Department of
Human Services provided the social service safety net for Chicago residents
through Children Services, Youth Development Program, Homeless and Domestic
Violence Services, Crisis Intervention and Economic Development.
Before coming to city government, Ngoan spent over ten years working for the
State of Illinois. She served as the Assistant to the Secretary of the Illinois
Department of Human Services, the Deputy Administrator for the Division of
Planning and Community Services of the Illinois Department of Public Aid and
Special Assistant to the Governor for Asian American Affairs.
A refugee from Vietnam who came to the U.S. in 1975, Ngoan served as the
executive director of the Vietnamese Association of Illinois, a refugee
community based organization, for nine years. She built this all volunteer
organization into a nationally-known community based comprehensive social
service agency providing assistance to newly arrived refugees from Southeast
Asia.
Ngoan has served on the Board of Directors of numerous local and national
organizations seeking to improve the quality of life for immigrants and low
income individuals. Ngoan was appointed by President Clinton in May of 2000 as
one of the fifteen community leaders to serve on the President’s Advisory
Commission for Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. She was the only
Vietnamese included in President Clinton’s official delegation to visit Vietnam
in November 2000.
Ngoan Le received many recognition and awards for her work including the “1991
Recognition for Outstanding Contributions to the U.S.” given by the U.S.
Ambassador for Refugee Affairs Jewel Lafontant-Mankarious and the “1989 -
Crain’s Chicago Business, 40 Under 40 most dynamic civic and business
leaders in Chicago”.
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Phuong Ly got her start in
journalism as editor of her high school newspaper in North Carolina. She is a
graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, with degrees in
journalism and American history. She worked for two years at the Charlotte
Observer before joining the Washington Post in July 1999. Currently, she reports
for the paper's Maryland desk, covering criminal justice and immigration issues.
She also sits on the national board of the Asian American Journalists
Association, a 1,700-member group that works to ensure fair and accurate news
coverage of Asian Americans and increase the number of Asians in the media
business.
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Sherri Ly joined WTTG/FOX
5 as a reporter in September 2002. You will see her reporting on Channel 5 at
10pm weeknights. Since coming to Washington she has covered a wide range of
stories, most notably the sniper shootings in October. She is one of a number of
reporters who contributed to the station’s sniper coverage, earning Channel 5 a
National Edward R. Murrow Award for its reporting.
Prior to coming to
Washington, DC, Sherri worked as a reporter and anchor in the Los Angeles area
and San Francisco. She traveled across the state, reporting from wildfires in
the Sequoia National Forest to snowstorms in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. When
not on the road, she also spent much of her time covering political issues. Her
five part investigation into California’s mandatory drug treatment law brought
attention to substance abuse and sparked debate about the legal system. In
Orange County, CA Sherri also covered demonstrations in Little Saigon, when
thousands protested the communist Vietnam flag and a picture of Ho Chi Minh at a
video store.
Sherri’s mother is
Vietnamese. She was born in Okinawa, Japan and grew up in Florida. In her spare
time she enjoys sports, traveling and spending time with her husband and family.
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Carlton Nguyen was born in
Saigon, Vietnam. He and his family immigrated to the U.S. in 1981. After several
moves, they settled in Memphis, Tennessee. Carlton grew up in Memphis and earned
his Bachelor of Science degree at the University of Memphis.
While in college, Carlton
interned at Merrill Lynch, NBC Bank, and The Southwestern company-selling books
door-to-door. During this period, he attended over 200 hours of motivational
seminars listening to speakers from Bob Richards to Rudy.
Carlton began his career
with the State Farm office in Nashville, Tennessee immediately after college
with the goal of becoming an agent. While in Tennessee, he volunteered with the
Junior Achievement and PERT (Partners Encouraging Reading and Tutoring). He also
served as Sergeant-At-Arms for Toastmasters International and was a member of
the Emerging Markets Council for State Farm in Tennessee and Kentucky. He is a
member of the Knights of Columbus.
In 2001, Carlton was
offered the opportunity to manage his own agency in Falls Church, Virginia. As a
business owner, he runs an insurance and financial services agency. His agency
offers auto, life, health, fire, and commercial insurance. Accomplishments with
State Farm include: Top 46 Trainee Agent in the nation, Ambassadors for Life, VA
Vice-President of Agency Club, and member of National Association of Insurance
and Financial Advisors. Carlton loves his job and enjoys meeting new clients
everyday.
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Dr. Charles Cuong
Nguyen is a researcher, educator, administrator and presidential appointee. He
is currently Dean of School of Engineering and Professor of Electrical
Engineering and Computer Science at the Catholic University of America (CUA).
Elected Dean in 2001, he has been the first Vietnamese American Dean of a
college at a major university in the U.S. He has also been the first Asian
American dean at Catholic University. He was Chairman of the Department of
Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at CUA from September 1997-June
2001. He earned the Diplom Ingenieur in Electrical Engineering at Konstanz
University, West Germany where he was also named "Best Graduate of the Class of
1978," in 1978. Later he received his Master of Science in 1980 and Doctor of
Science in 1982 both with honor at the George Washington University. Professor
Nguyen has published over 100 technical and scientific papers in the area of
control and robotics, co-edited three books and guest-edited 10 special issues
in major journals. He also presented numerous research papers, organized and
chaired numerous technical sessions at many international conferences. He was
the chairman of the Robotics Committee of the Fifth International Symposium on
Robotics and Manufacturing (ISRAM'94) and was the program vice-chair of the IEEE
Conference on Robotics and Automation, 1997 (ICRA'97). Dr. Nguyen is a member
of ISMM, Sigma Xi, and a member and Chief Faculty Advisor of Tau Beta Pi
Engineering Honor Society. He is a Senior Member of the IEEE, a senior member of
Society of Manufacturing Engineering (SME), and a senior member of Robotics
International of SME. He is a member of the advisory board of Vietnamese
Association for Computing, Engineering Technologies and Science (VACETS) since
2001. He is a member of the Board of Directors, Asian Division of the U.S.
Library of Congress and member of the Board of Directors, Library and Education
Assistance for Vietnam (LEAF-VN). He is a member of the Virginia Republican
Fife and Drum Club.
He was the
recipient of the "Research Initiation Award" from Engineering Foundation in 1986
and was awarded NASA/ASEE Fellowship Awards in 1985 and 1986. He was the
recipient of the "Academic Vice President Research Excellence Award," in
February 1989 from the Catholic University of America. He was a recipient of
the Distinguished Alumni Scholar Award from the George Washington University in
2002. He was awarded a Senior Research Associateship from the National
Research Council/National Academy of Science to conduct robotic research at the
Goddard Space Flight Center (NASA) during his sabbatical leave of the academic
year 1990-1991. Among many other awards, recently he received the Lifetime
Achievement Award from World Automation Congress (WAC) for contribution to
robotics and intelligent automation in June 2004 and the Community Service
Award from Asia Entertainment for Achievements in Education in August 2004.
In May 2004 he was appointed by President Bush to serve on the Board of
Directors of the Vietnam Education Foundation and went to Vietnam to represent
the United States in working with high-ranking Vietnamese officials in the area
of educational exchange.
His life and
achievements are listed in 40 biographical registers and Who's Who such as Men
of Achievements, Who's Who in the East, Who's Who in the World, Who's Who of
Emerging Leaders in America, Who's Who in American Education, Who's Who in
Engineering, Who's Who among Asian Americans, etc.
He is the Founder
and founding Editor of International Journal of Intelligent Automation and Soft
Computing (AutoSoft). He currently serves as the chair of the Editorial
Advisory Board of AutoSoft. He is an Associate Editor of International Journal
of Computers and Electrical Engineering and served on the Editorial Board of
Journal of Intelligent and Fuzzy Systems. He also served on the Editorial Board
of Journal of Engineering Design and Automation and was Guest Editor of Journal
of Robotic Systems, International Journal of Computers and Electrical
Engineering and International Journal of Intelligent and Robotic Systems.
His research
interests lie in the areas of time-varying control systems, control of large
space structures, decentralized control, control of robot manipulators, closed-kinematic
chain manipulators, robot vision, intelligent control and neural networks. His
research has been continuously funded by government agencies such as NASA, US
Air Forces, JPL, and Engineering Foundation. He has been the principal
investigator of 15 research projects.
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Hung Nguyen is a community
organizer and activist. He holds a B.A. in Liberal Arts and working on his M.A.
thesis "Jungian Psychology and the Masculine Spirituality." He is the President
of the National Congress of Vietnamese Americans, a nonpartisan nonprofit
organization that promotes culture, education and civic involvement. He serves
on the Board of Directors of the Conference on
Asian Pacific American Leadership (CAPAL) as the Chair of the Washington
Leadership Program, the Board of Directors of the Coalition of Asian Pacific
Americans of Virginia, the Executive Committee of the
NAACP - San José Chapter and the
Advisory Committee of the Vietnamese American Professionals Alliance (VAPA).
Previously, Hung Nguyen served as Director of Public Relations for the
Vietnamese Nationalist Community of Austin, recipient of the National Society of
Fund Raiser Executives’ 1999 Philanthropic Organization of the Year Award and
the Executive Committee of the California State Conference of the NAACP.
Hung Nguyen has worked on
issues affecting the community, including capacity building, economic
self-sufficiency, redistricting, human rights, and voter education and
empowerment. In addition to being quoted in the Los Angeles Times, Washington
Post, San José Mercury News, Associated Press, Fairfax Times and many other
community newspapers, he has appeared on television and radio programs to inform
and educate the public on hot issues affecting the communities of interest. He
is focused in educating the public and working on projects in which the
community can increase its effectiveness, capacity/infrastructure and
empowerment capabilities. Hung Nguyen currently lives and works in the
Washington, D.C. metropolitan area.
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Mai Nguyen is currently
working as the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) program manager for Asian
Americans and Pacific Islanders, Native American/Alaska Native, and People with
Disabilities. She joined the FAA in 1991 after spending six years with the U.S.
Department of Agriculture and the Peace Corps.
Mrs. Nguyen returned to the Federal Service after spending a decade in the
private sector working as management consultant for Space America, DC
Associates, Academy of Educational Development, and other International
Corporations. She was also a director of personnel for Marriott, Ramada, and the
Holiday Crowne Plaza in the Washington Metropolitan.
Mrs. Nguyen received a BA in political science and languages from Wayne State
College and did her graduate studies at Ohio University.
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Mina Nguyen
Director of Government Affairs, Republican National Committee (RNC) |
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Mina T. Nguyen recently
joined the Republican National Committee as Director of Government Affairs where
she is responsible for coordinating efforts with the U.S. Congress and managing
activities with business and trade organizations. She previously served as the
National Business Coalition Director and the Northeast Regional Coalitions
Director for the Bush-Cheney 2004 campaign. In this role, she was responsible
for developing and executing the campaign’s winning business coalition strategy
which included building grassroots support among business leaders and
communicating the President’s economic policies to small businesses.
From 2001-2003, Nguyen
served as Director of Public Liaison and Special Assistant to the Secretary at
the U.S. Department of Labor. Serving in the Senior Executive Service of the
Bush Administration, Nguyen was responsible for advancing the Department’s 21st
Century Workforce agenda by working with federal agencies, business
organizations, and community groups. From 1998-2001, she was a Management
Consultant in Accenture’s Strategy practice, working with Fortune 100 companies
in the hi-tech and communication industries.
Nguyen received her B.S.
in Business Administration from U.C. Berkeley, Walter A. Haas School of Business.
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Shari Sitron has managed
the Youth Activism Program at the American Legacy Foundation in Washington, D.C.
since January 2002. Prior to joining Legacy, Shari was a Program Associate for
Maternal and Child Health and Primary Care for the National Association of
County and City Health Officials (NACCHO), also in D.C and a health care
evaluator for the U.S. General Accounting Office. She is originally from Detroit
and received her B.A. and Master of Public Health Degrees from the University of
Michigan.
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Originally from Falls
Church, Virginia Bryan works to build and maintain community relationships
throughout the 8th Congressional District for Congressman Moran.
Before working for the Congressman, Bryan was a political consultant at Field
Works where he organized a successful statewide campaign for Virginia tax
fairness, lobbied to extend metro rail in Northern Virginia and worked on other
campaigns locally and nationally.
Bryan is currently the City / County Caucus Chair for the Virginia Young
Democrats. It is his responsibility to give the tools necessary to build
organizations throughout the state that can effectively lobby, campaign and
build leadership skills.
When he is not working for the Congressman or the Democratic Party, Bryan is a
High School track coach and volunteer ESL teacher.
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Bouapha Toommaly was born
in Laos, her family came to the US in 1979 as political refugees. Raised in the
San Francisco Bay Area in California, she developed a passion and commitment for
social change work. At the age of 19, she began her career as an organizer with
the Asian Pacific Environmental Network, working on environmental justice issues
in Richmond, CA. She helped to develop the program and foundation for the
Laotian Organizing Project. Recognizing the Environmental Justice movement
needed to be rejuvenated with a new direction and a new vision, she took on the
position as the youth coordinator for the Second National People of Color
Environmental Leadership Summit. There she was able to work with young EJ
organizers from all over the country to develop a national youth strategy for
the movement.
With a deeper understanding of the issues and struggles and the framework of
environmental justice, Bouapha came to the Rural Coalition in Washington, DC to
work on issues of economic justice, land struggle, agriculture and free trade.
At the Rural Coalition she worked with farm workers to establish safer working
condition and small and limited resourced farmers for protection and equity. In
2004 she took a leave of absence from the Rural Coalition to work with National
Voice as the Asian Pacific Islander American Organizing Director. She worked to
mobilize the APIA community to participate in this nations democratic process
with the vision to build a permanent infrastructure for longer-term civic
engagement with in the APIA community. In October of 2004 she was asked to come
to the Kerry-Edwards presidential campaign as the Minnesota State APIA State
Field Director. Her short experience with electoral politics re-affirmed her
vision of building community based power as a strategy to building resilient
communities.
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Doua is Hmong American.
She and her family immigrated from Laos to Detroit, Michigan in 1979. They were
apart of hundreds of thousands of Hmong families who were refugees after
supporting and fighting on the side of the United States in the Secret Wars of
Laos. She holds a graduate degree from the University of Michigan’s School of
Social Work with a concentration on Social Policy and Evaluation. While in
graduate school, Doua worked with the Youth Initiatives Project, a program led
by young people working on antiviolence and antigun campaigns. In April of 2002
Doua was awarded the New Voices Fellowship and is now working with Hmong
National Development (HND) as the Policy Advocate. HND is the only national
Hmong organization based in Washington, DC whose missions is to develop the
capacity to ensure the full participation of the Hmong in this country.
In the past Doua has been
involved with the local Detroit community. She served as a board member for
Hmong Women United of Michigan, the only Hmong women’s organization in Michigan.
She was also one of the co-founders of Hmong of Tomorrow-a youth group in the
Detroit Metropolitan area. She graduated with her undergraduate degree from
Wayne State University while working with an organization called Neighborhood
Service Organization, where she served as a bridge between the Hmong community
and many social service institutions in the Detroit area.
Currently she serves as a
board member for the National Asian Pacific American Women’s Forum and was the
first graduate scholar of the Council on Asian Pacific American Leadership.
Overall, Doua is dedicated and committed to the community. She plans to utilize
her social work degree to advocate and work towards social justice at the same
time increasing awareness about the Southeast Asian community in America.
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