comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - Esther kim - Page 21 : comparemela.com

Five cadets selected by Army for Nurse Summer Training Program

Five cadets selected by Army for Nurse Summer Training Program UNG cadets, from left to right, Brandon Ware, Anna Chirillo, Esther Kim, Megan Collins and Haydn Griffin will participate in the Nurse Summer Training Program. Five University of North Georgia (UNG) cadets have been selected for the Army s competitive Nurse Summer Training Program (NSTP). The internship will provide Bachelor of Science in Nursing students Anna Chirillo, Megan Collins, Haydn Griffin, Esther Kim, and Brandon Ware with a four-week experience unlike their other clinical rotations. Each will be stationed at a different location in the United States between their junior and senior years.

Vincent Chin slaying will be topic of virtual event Wednesday

Hate crimes against Asian Americans have soared during the COVID-19 pandemic. Such attacks have a long, tragic history in America, with one of the most infamous incidents happening in Detroit nearly 40 years ago. The 1982 killing of Vincent Chin will be the subject of a virtual event on Wednesday presented by Cinema Detroit, Over the Moon Detroit and the Freep Film Festival. The evening will begin with an online screening of “Who Killed Vincent Chin?,” the 1989 Oscar-nominated documentary directed by Christine Choy and Renee Tajima-Pean. Chin, 27, a Chinese-American automotive engineer, was out celebrating at his bachelor party when he was assaulted by two white autoworkers. He went into a coma and died four days later.

The Good, the Bad, the Beautiful: Moving Back Home During the Pandemic

The Good, the Bad, the Beautiful: Moving Back Home During the Pandemic For many immigrants and next-gens in their 20s and 30s, moving back in with family has led to reconciliation and healing despite generational and cultural divides. Fiza Pirani Mar 3, 2021 3:20PM ET For some, moving home to live with family amid the pandemic has been restorative Leaving home when you grow up within a multigenerational household and collectivist culture like mine often feels like a revolutionary act, one that comes with its share of grievances and guilt doubly so if you’re a woman. When I first left my South Asian parents’ home in the Georgia suburbs for my own studio in Atlanta years ago, my father nearly broke down. I’d lived at the college dorms during undergrad, but the thought of my not sharing the same roof for any other reason but school to willingly live independently on my own was unfathomable. 

© 2024 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.