PRSRT STD U.S. Postage Paid Permit No. 746 Seattle, WA
VOL 40 NO 27 JULY 3 – JULY 9, 2021
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Resilient Seattle restaurants ready to serve again By Janice Nesamani NORTHWEST ASIAN WEEKLY
SPD arrests suspect 6 weeks after assault on elderly Japanese American
Photo from Maneki restaurant’s Instagram
Wednesday, June 30 could not have come sooner for Washington state! Not only did it bring us respite from the scorching 100-degree temperature days we almost melted through, but it also gets us a step closer to normal life after Covid-19. Gov. Jay Inslee announced in May that our state could lift most Covid-related business restrictions on June 30. This means your favorite restaurant is now able to open at full capacity, you will not have to stay six feet away from other diners, and, if you’re vaccinated, you can say goodbye to face masks. see RESTAURANTS on 12 Japanese comfort food from Maneki restaurant
Captured on video: Man in helmet attacking Gordon Shoji, 78
Suni Lee, first Hmong American to make the US Olympic gymnastics team
By Mahlon Meyer NORTHWEST ASIAN WEEKLY
Sunisa “Suni” Lee has made history—she will be the first Hmong American to represent the United States at the Olympics. Lee assured her spot on the women’s gymnastics team by placing second at the Olympic trials on June 27. She scored a total of 115.832 points, second only to Simone Bile’s score of 118.098 . “Unreal. I am so extremely honored and blessed to get the opportunity to represent Team USA at the 2021 Olympics in Tokyo. This is a dream come true, see LEE on 4
Sunisa Lee’s Instagram post
see ASSAULT on 11
THE INSIDE STORY
NAMES IN THE NEWS CID Community Watch helps seniors during heatwave 2
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Looming in the doorway, a big, helmeted man rushes into the apartment. The owner, a thin, wiry 78-year-old Japanese American man, backpedals until he can try to reason with him. But the intruder gets right up in his face. The larger, hulking man is like a tank. He swarms over the smaller man. In his rage, he head butts him, hard, with his helmet. When the older man tries to stand up again, the intruder swings a heavy blow right into the side of his head. “Can’t you see enough out of your tight eyes,” the intruder yells. Gordon Shoji, the older man who was attacked in his apartment, has been frustrated that it seemed to take the Seattle Police Department (SPD) six weeks to arrest the suspected assailant, Effendi Dean. On June 28, SPD arrested Dean, who is being held on $150,000 bail. Not until Shoji shared a video he had secretly taken of the May 14 assault with an ex-police officer, who Shoji thinks may have sent it to the SPD, did there appear to be any action on the case. According to Shoji, it was only then that they sought Dean at the pot shop where he works. “They told me he’d gone to Las Vegas,” said Shoji in an interview, the day before the arrest. SPD Det. Patrick Michaud responded to numerous questions rapidly.
PUBLISHER’S BLOG Cool foods, cool acts for heat relief 6
AT THE MOVIES “F9”: Number nine is not the charm 7
SPORTS Japanese soccer player Yokoyama comes out as transgender 8
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