Biographies
Rao S
Anumolu,
son of Mr.
Anumolu
Seshagiri
Rao, hails
from
Vijayawada,
Andhra
Pradesh.
Rao came to
Chicago for
higher
studies in
1969. He
obtained a
Masters
degree in
Industrial
Engineering
and also an
MBA degree.
In addition,
Mr. Anumolu
attended
several
Advanced
Management
Courses at
Defense
Systems
Management
College,
Harvard
University
and Wharton
School of
Business
Management.
Mr. Anumolu has
the unique
distinction and
the rare
privilege of
being the only
Indian to have
been cited by
the US Congress
for the
contributions
made by him and
ASR
International
Corporation
towards homeland
security in
USA. The
cost-effective
technology and
systems deployed
by ASR to
protect the
nation’s
airports,
waterways,
railroads and
highways were
specifically
mentioned in the
US Congress
citation.
Expressing her
'deep
appreciation for
and recognition
of his tireless
efforts in
support of our
nation's
defense,' New
York
Congresswoman
Carolyn McCarthy
told the US
Congress that as
President and
CEO of ASR
International
Corporation,
Anumolu has
assisted the
Department of
Defense - in its
fight to protect
our homeland
since the attack
on our country -
on September 11.
Congresswoman
Carolyn
McCarthy, also
hosted a special
reception in Mr.
Anumolu’s honor
at the Rayburn
House Office
Building which
was attended by
diplomats,
leading US CEOs,
Congressman
Frank Pallone,
founder of the
Congressional
India Caucus and
several top
Defense
officials and
leading members
of the Indian
community.
For the past
thirty five (35)
years, Mr.
Anumolu held
senior
management
positions
directing
commercial and
government
programs that
include major
aerospace design
and development
projects. Mr.
Anumolu launched
major technology
initiatives and
has managed
several
high-technology
programs which
were completed
on time and
within budget to
the total
satisfaction of
the customers –
a rare feat in
the technology
world.
Armed with this
outstanding
technical
experience and
background, Mr.
Anumolu founded
ASR
International
Corporation in
1986 in Long
Island, NY. ASR
is a world
renowned high
technology
company
providing
Engineering,
Information
Technology,
Quality
Assurance,
Supply Chain
Management
Support Services
to global
Fortune 1000
companies, Prime
Defense
contractors and
government
agencies.
ASR
International
has emerged a
trail blazer in
developing
processes and
technologies to
provide
cost-effective,
high quality
services. ASR’s
methodology
enables its
customers to
reduce wastage
by streamlining
management
practices and
reengineering
business
processes to
reap the cost
benefits of
outsourcing.
Using its patent
pending business
process
methodology, ASR
provides high
quality but
cost-effective
services in all
the 50 states of
USA and in 40
countries around
the world.
Mr. Anumolu is
the recipient of
several awards
and honors which
recognize his
business acumen,
professional
achievements,
contributions to
the community
and his support
of philanthropic
activities in
USA and India.
He is a role
model and a
source of
inspiration for
the Indian
community.
He has been
honored by
several
organizations
and professional
societies such
as: Business
Excellence Award
by US Small
Business
Administration
(under President
Clinton), US
President’s
council on small
business,
Indo-American
Friendship
Council WTF
(World Telugu
Federation),
World Business
Forum, ASQ
(American
Society of
Quality),
Nassau and
Suffolk
legislatures
etc.
Mr. Anumolu is
often
interviewed by
the media to
elicit his views
on business
related issues
and is quoted
extensively in
the local,
national and
international
media as an
authority on
high technology
and management
areas. He has
made several
guest
appearances on
CNN, News 12 and
has been
featured in
Newsday, LI
Business News
etc. He
serves on the
advisory board
of leading
academic
institutions in
NY – Adelphi and
SUNY- Stony
Brook.
He is blessed
with two sons
Praveen Anumolu
who is a
graduate of
Cornell
University with
Masters in
Engineering and
Naveen Anumolu
graduated in
Engineering from
Stony Brook
University. His
wife Rajeswari’s
total support in
all his
endeavors is the
primary reason
for Mr.
Anumolu’s
success.
Selma Botman
is Executive
Vice Chancellor
and University
Provost at The
City University
of New York. She
previously
served as
Special
Assistant to the
Chancellor at
the University
of Massachusetts
Lowell, where
she had a
wide-ranging
portfolio. In
addition to
teaching courses
on the Middle
East and on
international
development, she
crafted a model
of civic
engagement for
the campus that
involved
faculty, staff
and students in
meaningful
outreach to the
community. This
involved linking
curricular
development,
outreach
activities and
administrative
structures and
restructuring
the schools,
departments and
majors to be
multidisciplinary
and to include
service-learning
opportunities
for students.
In her previous
post as Vice
President for
Academic Affairs
at the
University of
Massachusetts,
she was the
chief academic
officer of the
five-campus
University
System. She
worked closely
with faculty and
administrators
on academic and
strategic
initiatives,
encouraged
inter-campus
collaboration,
evaluated and
approved new
campus-based
academic
programs and
degrees and
reviewed all
tenure cases.
Dr. Botman also
worked closely
with the
University's
Board of
Trustees,
providing policy
recommendations,
and assistance.
Responsible for
creating an
Intercampus
Graduate School
of Marine
Sciences and
Technology, a
national model,
Dr. Botman was
also involved in
linking the
University with
the state's K-12
system. She
initiated
partnerships
with the
Massachusetts
Department of
Education and
brought the
University's
message to
students,
teachers and
guidance
counselors while
visiting over 60
high schools
across the state
during a
five-year
period.
Dr. Botman
played an active
role in efforts
to increase
student
diversity at the
University of
Massachusetts,
and worked with
the Raytheon
Corporation on a
project to
increase the
number of women
and minorities
in the
engineering
field. She
brought together
K-12 teachers,
university
faculty and
retired
engineers to
develop new
curricular
modules central
to engineering
education, which
have been
introduced into
specific
secondary
schools. She has
also taught
seminars in
Modern Middle
Eastern Politics
in the
Department of
Political
Science at the
University of
Massachusetts'
Boston campus.
Her most recent
book is entitled
Engendering
Citizenship in
Egypt.
Prior to joining
the University
of Massachusetts
she spent nine
years on the
faculty of the
College of the
Holy Cross in
Worcester,
Massachusetts.
Dr. Botman
earned her
bachelor's
degree, cum
laude, from
Brandeis
University;
holds a B.Phil
in Middle
Eastern Studies
from Oxford
University; and
a master's in
Middle Eastern
Studies and
doctorate in
History and
Middle Eastern
Studies from
Harvard
University.
Kuo York
Chynn, M. D.
was born in
Shanghai, China
in l923 and
graduated from
the National
Tung-Chi
University
Medical School
in Shanghai in
l949. Dr. Chynn
pursued his
postgraduate
training in
United States: a
rotating
internship in
Wilmington,
North Carolina,
surgical
residency in New
Haven,
Connecticut and
radiology
residency in St.
Louis,
Missouri. In
1954 he became a
diplomate in the
Specialty of
Radiology.
After private
practice for two
years in
Montana, Dr.
Chynn was
appointed
Assistant
Professor in
Radiology at
Cornell
University
Medical College,
and subsequently
Clinical
Professor in
Radiology at
Columbia
University
College of
Physicians &
Surgeons. He
was awarded the
Special
Fellowship in
Neuroradiology
by NIH
l959-1960, and
pursued his
studies in
London, and
Stockholm. He
was former Chief
of Neuroradiology
at the New York
Hospital-Cornell
Medical Center
where he
established the
subspeciality of
Neuroradiology
at that
department, and headed the Neuroradiology
Division at the
St. Luke's
Hospital Center
from l967-1994.
Dr. Chynn has
published and
presented more
than 30 papers
nationally and
internationally,
and is the
author of two
textbooks, one
on Cranial
Computerized
Tomography and
the other on
Myelography.
His invention,
"Painless Chynn
Myelography
Needle" was
patented by
Becton,
Dickinson and
Co.
Since
retirement, Dr.
Chynn enjoys oil
painting, piano
practice, church
choir practice
and karaoke,
exploring the
Internet,
visiting the
Galapagos
Islands and
Ayers Rock with
his family.
Matthew
Goldstein
was appointed
Chancellor of
The City
University of
New York (CUNY),
effective
September 1,
1999. He is the
first CUNY
graduate to lead
the nation's
most prominent
urban public
university (City
College, Class
of 1963).
Dr. Goldstein
has served in
senior academic
and
administrative
positions for
more than 30
years, including
as President of
Baruch College,
President of the
Research
Foundation, and
Acting Vice
Chancellor for
Academic Affairs
of CUNY. Prior
to being named
Chancellor, he
was President of
Adelphi
University.
Dr. Goldstein
earned his
doctorate from
the University
of Connecticut
in mathematical
statistics, and
a bachelor's
degree in
statistics and
mathematics from
The City College
of The City
University of
New York.
He has held
faculty
positions in
mathematics and
statistics at
Baruch College,
the CUNY
Graduate School
and University
Center,
Polytechnic
University of
New York, Cooper
Union, Eastern
Connecticut
State
University, and
the University
of Connecticut.
He is the
co-author of
three books:
Discrete
Discriminant
Analysis,
published by
John Wiley &
Sons in 1978;
Intermediate
Statistical
Methods and
Applications,
published by
Prentice Hall in
1983; and
Multivariate
Analysis,
published by
John Wiley &
Sons in 1984. In
addition, he has
written many
articles for
leading
scholarly
publications in
mathematics and
statistics.
Currently, Dr.
Goldstein is a
member of the
Board of
Trustees of the
JP Morgan Funds,
the Albert
Einstein School
of Medicine and
of the
Bronx-Lebanon
Hospital Center.
He is a Director
of the Lincoln
Center Institute
for the Arts in
Education, ex
officio, the
United Way of
New York City,
and a member of
the Business
Advisory Council
for Columbia
Management and
of NASULGC's
Commission of
The Science and
Mathematics
Teacher
Imperative.
Dr. Goldstein is
a Fellow of the
New York Academy
of Sciences and
a 2006 Fellow of
the American
Academy of Arts
& Sciences.
Among his honors
are the 2007
Carnegie
Corporation of
New York's
Academic
Leadership
Award, the 2005
John H. Finley
Award, the 2005
Medal of Honor
"Austrian Cross
of Honor for
Science and Art,
First Class,"
the 2004 New
York Foundation
for Architecture
President's
Award, the 2003
Max Rowe
Educational
Leadership Award
of the American
Friends of The
Open University
of Israel, the
2002 Ellis
Island Medal of
Honor, the 2000
Townsend Harris
Medal, and the
Jewish National
Fund Tree of
Life Award. He
is a member of
Beta Gamma Sigma
(Hon.) and the
Golden Key Honor
Society (Hon.).
George Hu
is the Assistant
to the Governor
of New York
State for Asian
Community
Affairs. Mr. Hu
came to New York
State in 1979 as
a student from
China. In 1982,
he graduated
from the Hunter
College with a
Bachelors degree
in Political
Science. In
1992, he
graduated from
Hunter College
with a Masters
degree in Urban
Affairs.
In 1989, Mr. Hu
joined the
public service,
and worked at
the NYC
Department of
Finance as a
Policy Analyst.
Later, he was
appointed as the
Director of the
Central In Rem
Office (Real
Estate Tax
Foreclosure).
Since 1991, he
has become the
certified New
York City
translator for
Chinese language
by the Mayor’s
office.
In 2000,
representing the
Finance
Department, Mr.
Hu participated
in the
establishment of
the city-wide
311 citizen
service center.
From 2004 to
2007, he was in
charge of
several
city-wide multi
agency projects.
Charlton
M. Lewis
obtained his BA
from Yale
University, and
MA and Ph.D
degrees in
Chinese history
from the
University of
California,
Berkeley. As a
graduate student
he studied and
conducted
research for
three years in
Taiwan and
Japan.
From 1965 to
2000 Dr. Lewis
taught Chinese
and Japanese
history at
Brooklyn College
(CUNY), and was
chairman of the
History
Department there
for three
years. After
his retirement
in 2000, Dr.
Lewis taught
Chinese history
for five
additional years
at the New
School
University in
Manhattan. He
has traveled
widely in China,
and for a
semester in1995
was a research
scholar at the
Yuelu Academy at
Hunan University
in Changsha.
Dr. Lewis is the
author of
Prologue to the
Chinese
Revolution
(Harvard East
Asian Center,
1976), a study
of Hunan
province in the
late Qing
period, and a
number of
articles. He is
co-author with
Professor Scott
Morton of
China, Its
History and
Culture (4th
ed., McGraw
Hill), and is
currently
writing a book
on China's water
crisis.
Blossom
Kan is
an attorney
employed in
Manhattan and a
member of the
Asian American
Bar Association
of New York and
the Asian
American Legal
Defense and
Education Fund.
She graduated
from Yale
University where
she majored in
English.
W. Scott
Morton,
B.A., B.D.,
Ph.D., is the
author of
“China, Its
Culture and
History,” and a
Professor
Emeritus of
Chinese and
Japanese History
from Seton Hall
University. Born
in 1908 in
Edinburgh,
Scotland, Dr.
Morton received
his Bachelor of
Arts degree in
Greek and Latin
Classics from
Cambridge
University.
After receiving
a Bachelor of
Divinity degree
at Edinburgh
University, he
went to
Manchuria,
China, as a
missionary of
the Church of
Scotland. Five
years and a
furlough later,
he spent two
years in Japan,
studying the
language.
Upon returning
to Manchuria to
continue his
work, Dr. Morton
was asked to
evacuate by the
British Consul
to evacuate the
area. Dr. Morton
arrived in Los
Angeles one
month prior to
the attack on
Pearl Harbor.
During World War
II, he served as
a chaplain in
the British
Royal Air Force,
and thereafter
did church work
in Britain and
the United
States.
After the war,
it was no longer
possible to take
up missionary
work again upon
the
establishment of
the People’s
Republic of
China. Dr.
Morton however
continued his
strong
commitment and
interests in
China and its
studies.
Deciding to
continue his
studies, Dr.
Morton received
his Ph.D. in
Comparative
Philosophies at
Edinburgh
University in
1964.
After a period
in Britain, he
came to the
United States
and began his
second career as
a professor of
Chinese and
Japanese
History. His
lectures and
readings are
still used today
in the
classroom.
James
Muyskens was
appointed Queens
College’s ninth
president in
July 2002.
During his
tenure, Dr.
Muyskens has
successfully
launched a
review and
updating of the
college’s
undergraduate
General
Education
curriculum. He
also added a
number of new
programs,
including
business
administration,
neuroscience,
graphic design,
and
bioinformatics.
Over the years
at Queens
College, Dr.
Muyskens has
guided the
recruitment of
hundreds of new
faculty,
overseen the
completion of
the renovation
of Powdermaker
Hall (the
college’s
primary
classroom
facility), and
broke ground on
a $30 million
addition to
Remsen Hall,
which will house
new chemistry
laboratories.
Recently Dr.
Muyskens
spearheaded the
college’s most
ambitious
capital
fundraising
campaign, which
exceeded its
goal of $100
million.
In 2007 Queens
College received
a glowing
reaccreditation
report from the
Middle States
Association of
Colleges and
Schools . Dr.
Muyskens is
currently
overseeing the
college’s
ambitious new
strategic
planning
initiative,
which will
establish goals
for the college
to achieve
during the next
twenty years.
Dr. Muyskens’
extensive
administrative
experience
includes serving
as Senior Vice
Chancellor for
Academic Affairs
for the
34-campus
University
System of
Georgia. He also
spent seven
years as Dean of
the College of
Arts and
Sciences at the
University of
Kansas.
His appointment
to Queens
College marked
Dr. Muyskens’
return to the
City University
of New York. He
began his career
at Hunter
College as an
assistant
professor of
philosophy and
moved through
the ranks to
full professor.
He also served
Hunter as chair
of its
Department of
Philosophy and
as Associate
Provost and
Acting Provost.
A graduate of
Central College
in Iowa, James
Muyskens earned
a Master of
Divinity degree
from Princeton
Theological Se
minary and a
Ph.D. in
philosophy from
the University
of Michigan. His
publications
include two
books, The
Sufficiency of
Hope and Moral
Problems in
Nursing: A
Philosophical
Investigation,
as well as
numerous
articles
concerning the
philosophy of
religion and
ethics.
Dr. Muyskens
serves as a
member of the
Commission on
International
Initiatives for
the American
Council of
Education (ACE).
He is also a
member of the
Council of State
Representatives
for the American
Association of
State Colleges
and Universities
(AASCU).
Ellen Young
was elected in
2006 to
represent the
22nd Assembly
District, which
includes parts
of Flushing
lying east of
the Van Wyck
Expressway, from
the Long Island
Expressway to
several blocks
north of
Northern
Boulevard,
Winning over 77
Percent of the
vote, Young made
legislative
history by
becoming the
first
Asian-American
woman elected to
a state office.
An immigrant
from Taiwan who
came to the U.S.
with limited
resources, Ellen
has become a
successful
businesswoman
and advocate for
the Asian
community. She
co-founded the
Chinese-American
Women’s
Association and
was named as the
first female
Asian Auxiliary
Police Officer
in Queens.
A single mother,
Ellen has
dedicated her
public service
career to
helping families
achieve the
American Dream.
Over the past
two decades, she
has organized a
Main Street
blood drive,
held a
fundraiser for
Hurricane
Katrina victims
and has served
as:
- President of
the Chinese
American Voters
Association
- President of
the Friends of
Queens Library,
Elmhurst Branch
- Vice Chair of
the Flushing
Asian Lunar New
Year Celebration
Committee
- Vice President
of the New York
Conservative
Democratic Club
- Board Member
on the Queens
District
Attorney’s Asian
Advisory Council
- Board Member
on the Queens
Borough
President’s
Advisory
Committee
- Board Member
on the NYPD’s
Asian Advisory
Council
- District
Leader, 22nd
Assembly
District
- District
Administrator,
Councilman John
Liu
In the Assembly,
Ellen is
committed to
improving the
quality of life
and education
for her
constituents by
working to
secure more
after-school
programs,
decreasing
classroom sizes,
hiring better
teachers,
improving access
to health care
and providing
more affordable
housing.
Michelle
Yu,
a graduate of
Manhattan
College, is an
on-air sports
reporter for NY1
News and a
member of the
Asian American
Journalism
Association. She
also served as a
sports writer
for College
Sports
Television and a
reporter at
Sports
Illustrated for
Kids Magazine.