Generation Connie
By Connie Wang
Photographs by Connie Aramaki
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IT WAS ON MY FIRST DAY OF COLLEGE at the University of California, Berkeley, when I started to realize there were more of us out there.
Suddenly, I was among a student body that was almost 50 percent Asian. While I was standing in line to order a sandwich at the campus cafe, I heard a voice from across the room: Connie Wang!
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UNLIKE MOST PEOPLE, I was able to pick my own name.
I already had one, of course Xiaokang, my Chinese name, given to me by my maternal grandfather, which referred to the Communist Partys commitment to achieving a moderately prosperous society. But in 1990, my parents decided to raise me in the United States, and we all had a chance to choose a new identity. They asked for my 3-year-olds opinion: What would I like to be called in this new place? I answered, the story goes, with Connie, after that pretty ayi, or auntie, we watched on TV.
That ayi was Constance Yu-Hwa Chung, or, as the world knows her, Connie Chung. Ms. Chung had rejoined CBS News a year earlier; she would eventually become the first Asian and second woman to be an anchor of a major weekday news program, appearing nightly alongside Dan Rather to deliver the worlds biggest news events to Americans at home, my family included.
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Full article
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This is a great article. I've always liked Connie Chung, too, and she looks great.