Items
Class
Image
In item set
056 - Dorothy Chung Siu
Media presence
Has media
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Stretched out beside the swimming pool on the Wigwam Guest Ranch, near the flying field at Phoenix, the girls and their partners soak up the Arizona sunshine. p.30 Magazine photo clipping of Chinese American young adults in swim suits laying on a field. -
"These aren't Japanese tank troops. They're Chinese. They are fighting with their own arms in their own soil for their own freedom--and doing very well at it"- p.12. Paul Guillumette China Film. Clipping showing an image of Chinese troops during World War II. -
No Oriental Dance. This had straight American jitterbugging, as demonstrated by Mary Wong and cadet Paul Fu. Cadets like American dancing music. p.33 Magazine photo clipping of man and woman dancing. -
Dorothy Siu's father, Mr. Chung Wong Mr. Chung Wong sitting in the back of a wagon with his produce. -
A track and field star of championship caliber--he competed as a pole vauklter in the 1936 Olympic games. Paul Fu (on top) demonstrates a handstand. p. 31 Magazine clipping of young adults, two of which are in the middle of demonstrating a handstand as others observe. -
Chester Bue Gan Photograph of the Chester Gan dressed as a sailor -
The Chung sisters Group photograph of the Chung sisters, Florence Chung Lon, Mildred C. Handel, Anna Chung Yip, Margaret J. Chung, and Dorothy Chung Siu. Dorothy is seated at right and Mildred Chung has a paratrooper's or submariner's badge on her left pocket. -
[Duplicate] Dorothy Chung Siu's mother, Minnie Chan Chung Portrait of Dorothy Chung Siu's mother, Minnie Chan Chung. She was the first Chinese court interpreter. -
"These motorcycle troops belong to the same Chinese forces as the tanks on the opposite page. They operate in Hunan, one of the richest provinces of Free China"- p. 13 Clipping showing image of Chinese forces in China during World War II. -
At dinner in the cadet mess hall, Margaret Kwong fed her last spoonful of dessert to Shih Mei-Tung. Theirs was one of the romances the party inspired. p. 33 Magazine photo clipping of woman feeding a man at an event. -
China Relief Week - Governor Olson and Wing Luk (left), Dorothy Siu (middle), and Iris Wong (right) Governor Cubert Olson sits at a desk with a proclamation ready to sign. Iris Wong points to the signature line as Wing Luk and Dorothy Siu stand and watch. -
Jake Siu in a rickshaw Two men, possibly in Bruce Wong's. Jake Siu, Dorothy Siu's husband who is half Norwegian, sits in the rickshaw. -
Dr. Margaret Chung Portrait of Dorothy Chung Siu's sister, Dr. Margaret Chung. She was the first Chinese-American woman to become a physician. -
Click Magazine, p.2, November 1944, vol. 7, No. 11 ($.10, $.12 in Canada). Shown on cover is a nurse and Patricia Hong at 17 months of age. Image clipping from Click Magazine picturing nurse and baby Patricia Hong. Image used for war fund. -
Dr. Margaret Chung Portrait of Dorothy Chung Siu's sister, Dr. Margaret Chung. She was the first Chinese-American woman to become a physician. -
Two men to each girl insured competition, but lucky Chew Lai-Chung had King Chuon to himself--for a bit. She came from China five months ago. p. 31 A magazine photo clipping of a man and woman in swimwear reclining on lawn. -
Crowded round a mirror, four of the girls Look Magazine took to Luke Field for an all-Chinese party, get in a last-minute checkup before the cadet dance. "Look Plays Host to the Chinese Air Force," Earl Theisen for Look, p.29 Image clipping from Look Magazine showing group of women getting ready for a dance. -
Dr. Margaret Chung on set with Gregory Peck Gregory Peck and Margaret Chung sitting and talking on set of the Twentieth Century-Fox film "The Keys of the Kingdom." -
Dorothy Siu's father, Mr. Chung Wong Mr. Chung Wong sitting in the back of a wagon with his produce. -
Dorothy Siu in RKO picture "Behind the Rising Sun" Set photograph from the RKO production "Behind the Rising Sun" with many Chinese extras, including Dorothy Siu. -
Dorothy Siu's father, Mr. Chung Wong Mr. Chung Wong sitting in the back of a wagon with his produce. -
Favorite amusement during intermissions at the dance which brought the day to a close was this dart game - with a caricatured "Jap" for a target. The boys were notably better marksmen than the girls- but no more determined. p. 32 Magazine photo clipping of men and women participating in throwing darts on a caricatured image of a Japanese man. -
King Chuon, halfway out of the pool was pulled noisily in again as this picture was made. It was the first time the cadets had gone swimming in Arizona. p. 30 Magazine photo clipping showing five young adults out swimming. -
Look Magazine, June 16, 1942, vol. 6. No. 12, p.11. Raymond Clapper. "Do You Know Why We are Fighting in Asia?" "Chinese Oldster & grandson, well dressed well fed, well educated. Made in America this picture suggests living standards victory will bring to all Asia" (paper is "The Chinese Journal") Image clipping from Look Magazine, picturing older man with grandson reading The Chinese Journal. -
Dorothy Chung Siu's mother, Minnie Chan Chung Portrait of Dorothy Chung Siu's mother, Minnie Chan Chung. She was the first Chinese court interpreter. -
Dorothy Siu public relations shot. Photograph of Dorothy Siu wearing a robe and holding a fan.













