<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (GMJigga)</div><div class='quotemain'>Denver's geographical position in the
United States has also played a role in Denver's notable Asian population. While not as famous as the communtities of
San Francisco's "Chinatown",
Los Angeles' "Little Tokyo", or
Seattle's "International District", Denver's considerable population of
Japanese Americans is considered a vital part of the city. In the northeast part of Denver,
Sakura Square was founded in
1944 by formerly-interned
Japanese people migrating from the
West Coast states of
Washington,
Oregon, and
California. Nicknamed "Tiny" or "Little Tokyo" by Denverites, the community plays host to several public markets and restaurants indicative of Japanese culture (unlike
Seattle, or San Francisco which each have one notable market). The city-wide celebrations of
Chinese New Year have attracted many tourists annually, and generate a boom in Sakuru Square's economy.</div></p>
1) Yi is chinese.</p>
2) While I do not think this ideal is right... </p>
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8...1139759,00.html</p>
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE </div><div class='quotemain'>Chinese kids can be forgiven for thinking Japan is a nation of "devils," a slur used without embarrassment in polite Chinese society. They were raised to feel that way, and not just through cartoons. Starting in elementary school children learn reading, writing and the "Education in National Humiliation." This last curriculum teaches that Japanese "bandits" brutalized China throughout the 1930s and would do so today given half a chance. Although European colonial powers receive their share of censure, the main goal is keeping memories of Japanese conquest fresh. Thousands of students each day, for instance, take class trips to the Anti-Japanese War Museum in Beijing to view grainy photos of war atrocities—women raped and disemboweled, corpses of children stacked like cordwood. As one 15-year-old girl in a blue and yellow school uniform, Ji Jilan, emerged from a recent visit to the gallery, she told a TIME correspondent: "After seeing this, I hate Japanese more than ever."</div></p>
-Petey</p>