Category Archives: Documenting Asian America
“Breaking Ground” Powell Library Exhibit: 40 Years of UCLA Asian American Studies
When I was a high school student in the mid-1960s, I used to trek up to the West Wing of UCLA’s Powell Library on Sunday nights. This was the place to see and be seen in the social scene of … Continue reading
“Breaking Ground” Exhibit—continued
Pacific Ties Newsmagazine: UCLA student newspaper produced by Asian and Pacific American students. Collage of past frontcovers. Opening night: Staff, students, faculty, and friends. Student and Community Panels: collage of past Pacific Ties frontcovers on the nearest panel. EthnoCommunications had … Continue reading
Unburying/Part 2: Ching Ming
A bag of tortilla strips, two cans of Bud Light beer, red-and-white striped peppermint candies, and a bag of American grown Blue Ribbon long grain rice were the food offerings to the 1888 ancestral monuments. While appearing somewhat humorous, and jarring … Continue reading
Unburying Chinese American History in East L.A.
In 2005, a section of the cemetery was excavated during the construction of the light rail line. Over 186 gravesites were disturbed, the skeletal remains of more than 130 individuals were removed, and grave markers of deceased Chinese persons were found lining a roadway of the Crematorium. Continue reading