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www.aaezine.org
www.ic.sunysb.edu/
clubs/educasia
www.aasquared.org
JOIN US -
email
aaezine@yahoo.com
aasquared@gmail.com
aaezine@aa2sbu.org
The FIRST
Asian Am E-Zine
at SBU is HERE!
That was written in 2002. It was the first not only at SBU
but is still the only weekly Asian Am college 'newspaper' in America
The Gift of a Lifetime:
Charles B. Wang Center Celebrating Asian and Asian American Cultures

AA E-Zine Special
on the Wang Center
SBU ic sites do not expand to
the extent needed by the Zine
and do not allow things like
streaming video, so the Zine
moved most operations off-
campus. When this ic site ran
out of space, Wang Center
photos were removed, leaving
gaps. There is a Wang Center
project, in the process of being
redone for what seems like
forever and someday... in the
meantime it is still the most
descriptive site on any SBU
website of the Wang Center
www.aa2sbu.org/aaezine/Wang
EducAsians SBU
Asian American
Student Guidebook
Although out of date and many organizations use Facebook and
Zanga for their websites now rather than the university club page, it still
gives a good scope of what is available at SBU
Building Community:
SBU 101
Written years ago,
nothing has changed.
It is still as needed now.
Stony Brook Stories

ART & Architecture
Shi Ming Hu
Memorial Scholarship Drive
was set up at Prof. Hu's
passing. The
Director of
China Studies was on
sabbatical in China at
the
time.
Upon his return, the
current info on the
scholarships
was moved
to
China Studies
Off Campus Mail:
P O Box 4093
Stony Brook, NY 11790
On Campus Mail:
Union Room 071
Zip+3200
631 632 1395
Messages Only
631 831 6062
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AA E-Zine: The Zine is
a weekly online news and events zine about the SBU / Long Island / metro New
York Asian American community. It is produced by students and alumni.
Students get academic credit through the Media Minor. Excerpts from the AA
E-Zine are also printed in The SB Press and there are specials on SBU
TV. Check it out at
www.aaezine.org and sign up to get an email telling you when each
new issue is released.
[AA]² @ SBU:
Student and alumni goals
of
[AA]² include promoting diversity and
leadership training, enabling students to gain employment opportunities and
alumni to promote internship opportunities, providing academic and non-academic
enrichment opportunities, encouraging and rewarding student activists,
sponsoring events, encouraging and promoting alumni support of SBU, and fostering unity among the various Asian
and Asian American student groups.
[AA]²
SBU Alumni: The alumni network sponsors
events and
members attend university events to give students
networking opportunities with each other and with alumni. They also give talks on leadership
and life after the Brook. Monthly events are held just for alumni too -
happy hour networking in NYC, sports, music, and family outings - and the
annual Homecoming at Wolfstock.
History: EducAsians began in April
2000 when controversy over the screening of The Color of Fear, the
award winning provocative documentary on race, led to brainstorming
on not only how to resolve the issues that controversy had raised, but how
to continue the discussions the film itself had raised.
EducAsians broad goal was education outside of the classroom - teaching
Americans about Asians and Asian Americans, teaching Asians about Americans
and Asians in the Americas, and most importantly, doing it all within a
framework of teaching racial harmony and a love of diversity. Within a year
it included
[AA]² @ SBU, which
was then known as the Asian American Alumni Association, when EducAsians
students graduated.
In 2001, when Asian American students decided to run for political offices
of Polity, now known as USG, The Statesman, which had been carrying
an EducAsians column, refused to include what was written about the
election. They later wrote an 'Asian Invasian' article. As a result, the AA
E-Zine was started to give Asian American students their own voice and the
first issue appeared in February 2002.
As alumni married non-alumni, in 2003 [AA]2 gave up its alumni only
designation and incorporated as a 501(c)3 non-profit: Asians, Americans, and
Asian Americans. Still AA Squared but with an enlarged focus. An [AA]2 Board
member produced the first annual Asian American events at The New School
University.
[AA]2 won a grant from the LIFWG for workshops
and conferences on Asian American young women. A Wang Center calendar
journal was created. Internships were created. And lots more. Join us!
Our
Philosophy:
If you are interested in becoming involved in [AA]2
or AA E-Zine, please email
us. We only ask that you agree with our philosophical position on
interracial relationships. Our rational is that only those who believe in
such relationships can also believe that their race is not superior and that
all races are equal, even if current society does not reflect that.
Statistically the divorce rate for same race couples is higher than for
mixed couples. Authors Mark and Gail Mathabane believe that "most mixed
race marriages endure, and have a great deal to teach society about race
relations, because the ingredients that make such unions work - trust,
cooperation, mutual respect, communication, open-mindedness and a
willingness to learn and change - are requisite to racial harmony."
Helen Zia, journalist and author, ended Asian American Dreams
(2000) with the following:
"I see the evolution in my own family. My parents started out in
America with little more than their dreams and convictions... Aunt Betty's
son Pete... who is half Danish and half Chinese, likes to exclaim, "We're
just like the United Nations."
I've heard many other Asian American families say the same thing. My
extended family, besides being Chinese American, includes Japanese Okinawan
American, Japanese American, Malaysian Chinese, Italian American,
Scottish-German-Italian American, Filipino American, African American,
Puerto Rican, and Jewish American.
In the younger generation there are scholars, athletes, and everything
in between. One of my second cousins is seven feet two inches tall... And
astonishing to me, some of my nieces and nephews refuse to eat Chinese food.
I have to tell cousin Pete that, actually, we're just like the United
States." |
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PLEASE USE MSIE 5+
Unfortunately, when we first
began with little knowledge of
web design, we chose a MS
product for its ease of use at
the time. MS being MS, it has
so much proprietary code that
although there are now better
browsers, MS does not let this
show up correctly on them.
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The views expressed on
this website are those of students and alumni and do not represent
official views of Stony Brook University. The
University supports the First Amendment of the United States Constitution
and allows campus organizations to freely express their views.
© 2000-2006, EducAsians / SBU AA E-Zine
/ [AA]2 AA E-Zine. Permission granted to copy and distribute all of this
website for personal use or other non-profit purposes. All other rights
reserved.
Last updated June 2006 by
aaezine@yahoo.com |