| BACKGROUND
The Committee of 100 will be holding its 14th
Annual Conference on April 7-9, 2005 in
the Washington, D.C. area at the Ritz-Carlton - Pentagon City.
This two and a half-day conference, with expected attendance
of over 700 persons, will provide a forum to discuss key issues
related to U.S.-China relations and Asian Pacific American progress.
This year's conference theme is "Scaling Great Heights, Inspiring
New Visions."
Our gala banquet will take place on Thursday evening, April
7, 2005. Our four honorees will be Anna Chennault (international
cooperation), Connie Chung (broadcast journalism), Maya
Lin (architecture), and General Electric (exemplary
work in Asian Pacific American diversity issues and U.S.-Greater China business
relations).
As for the program itself, we will have some exciting panels on
current issues ranging from the latest in U.S.-China economic integration
matters to the impact of Chinese adoptees on U.S. culture to the
unveiling of the Committee's latest survey results on "American
Attitudes Toward Greater China" to analysis of Asian Pacific
Americans' progress in the political arena.
We sincerely hope you will be able to join us for our 14th Annual Conference
and engage in dialogue with us around issues of common concern.
The Committee of 100 (C-100) is a national, non-partisan organization composed
of American citizens of Chinese descent that brings a unique Chinese American
perspective to issues concerning Asian Americans and U.S. relations with Greater
China. It was founded in 1990 by a group of concerned and prominent Chinese
Americans after the famed architect, I.M. Pei, was inundated with calls from
reporters seeking his reaction, as an influential Chinese American, to the
Tiananmen Square incident in June 1989. C-100 is not aligned with any political
party in the United States, nor with any of the Asian polarities: Taiwan, People's
Republic of China (PRC), Hong Kong, or Southeast Asia.
All of our members have achieved prominence in the United States in a broad
range of professions. With their diverse backgrounds, members collectively
pool their strengths and experience to address important issues concerning
both the Chinese-American and Asian Pacific American communities, as well as
issues affecting U.S.-China relations.
The Committee's two-fold mission is to promote the full participation of Chinese
Americans in all fields of American life and to encourage constructive relations
between the peoples of the United States and Greater China. |