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  • What is Lunar New Year and how is it different from Chinese New Year?

    What is Lunar New Year and how is it different from Chinese New Year?


    The Lunar New Year, also known as the Spring Festival, is based on cycles of the moon and falls on a different day every year. In 2024, the Year of the Dragon begins on Feb. 10. It marks the start of a new lunar calendar and it is a celebration of the arrival of spring. It is known to Asian communities around the world by different names, the most commonly used being Chinese New Year or Chinese “Chunjie,” largely by the Chinese diaspora around the world. Other names include Vietnamese Tet, Korean Solnal and Tibetan Losar.

    Lunar New Year celebrations in Chinese culture typically go for 15 days, culminating in a lantern festival on the final day.

    VIDEO: Unveiling the secrets of Chinatown’s Eastern Bakery in SF

    Eastern Bakery has been around 98 years in San Francisco Chinatown. It’s the go to place for mooncakes and coffee crunch cake.

    Lunar New Year in California

    The Year of the Dragon for 2024 will be the second Lunar New Year celebrated in California as an official state holiday. California is the first state in the U.S. to recognize the holiday in an official capacity, an act by the state to show its solidarity with the Asian American community through the wave of anti-Asian hate and violence that grew after the COVID-19 pandemic.

    In 2022, California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill declaring Lunar New Year as a state holiday. In his signing message, he wrote that this act, “… acknowledges the diversity and cultural significance Asian Americans bring to California and provides an opportunity for all Californians to participate in the significance of the Lunar New Year.”

    How Lunar New Year is celebrated

    Spring cleaning is a common practice of those celebrating the season. Gearing up to usher in good luck and welcome good fortune for the year is seen as an important practice before the new year arrives.

    Staying up late to ring in the new year, much like it is done in American culture is also common. However, fireworks and firecrackers, along with lion and dragon dances, are all thought to be additional elements to ward off evil spirits and frighten bad luck away.

    Gifting red packets filled with crisp dollar bills to children and the elderly is another important hallmark of the season. The red packets symbolize good luck, the dollar bills have to make up a round, even number and the act of giving and receiving one signals an exchange of a blessing.

    “Lucky food”

    Dottie Li, cross-cultural expert and Voice and Voice Coach of Rosetta Stone’s Mandarin products, explains, “There are some items that are must-haves such as fish, tofu, bok choy and of course, noodle soup – a traditional meal of choice. The noodles are believed to bring good luck, the fish rhymes with having leftovers, the bok choy and tofu symbolize peace and protection.”

    Depending on the region and country, other food are staples such as sweet glutinous rice cakes (nian gao), sticky rice balls (tang yuan) and tik ko ladoo, a crispy ball of sesame seeds and toffee.

    VIDEO: Lion Dance troupe shares traditional customs and culture

    Traditional lion dancing entertains and educates with music and movement.

    Greetings

    Family visits and meet ups with friends, much like the American Thanksgiving, are central to the Lunar New Year.

    Chinese people greet one another with auspicious sayings and phrases to wish each other health, wealth, and good fortune when they meet during this period.

    Traditional greetings include:

    • Gong Xi Fa Cai: may great wealth and affluence be with you.
    • Chu Ru Ping An: travel safe in and out of your house.
    • Bu Bu Gao Sheng: may you be promoted every step of the way. May you continually grow and elevate.

    May you have a prosperous and healthy Lunar New Year!

    Copyright © 2024 WTVD-TV. All Rights Reserved.



    WTVD

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  • UNC Pembroke students got blank alert after shots fired near campus

    UNC Pembroke students got blank alert after shots fired near campus


    Administrators at the University of North Carolina at Pembroke are trying to figure out why its student alert system sent out a blank message when shots were fired Wednesday afternoon at a nearby apartment complex.

    A former student reportedly died off-campus after the alert came out around 4:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Courtyard Apartments at 519 University Road in Pembroke.

    WRAL News spoke with some students who said they didn’t get the alert for nearly 40 minutes after the shooting happened.

    A car had its windshield and fender shot up outside of Building 3 at the Courtyard Apartments. When the shots started, students said they scrambled to safety.

    Resident Christopher Tamplen said his reaction to the Brave Alert was “tun if you can, hide if you can’t run, fight if you must.

    “Me and my roommate just ended up going and sitting in his bathroom with kitchen knives, just in case,” Tamplen said.

    Investigators said a former student was shot in the parking lot, but was later found dead at an off-campus location.

    Student Rachel Carapella described the Brave Alert she received.

    “It was blank,” Carapella said. “One of the emails came out blank.

    “No one really knew what was going on, so we were just all confused.”

    University of North Carolina at Pembroke Vice Chancellor for Finance and Administration Gabriel Eszterhas (left) and UNC-P Chancellor Robin Cummings (right) held a news conference Thursday. They discussed a Wednesday shooting at an apartment complex near campus.

    At a Thursday news conference, UNC-P Chancellor Robin Cummings and the university’s head of security acknowledged there was a problem with the message that was sent out through the school’s Brave Alert system.

    “So, there was a delay in the report, and the first message that went out was blank, but subsequently, we issued a message that was notifying the campus of the shooting and to be alert,” Cummings said.

    Authorities are investigating the death of the student.

    The university’s administration said it is checking to see what went wrong with the alert system.



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  • NC congressional hopeful talks crisis at the border, who’s to blame

    NC congressional hopeful talks crisis at the border, who’s to blame


    RALEIGH, N.C. (WNCN) — In-person early voting in North Carolina will start on Feb. 15.

    On the primary ballot are 14 Republican candidates for the state’s 13th congressional district. The 13th includes part of Wake County as well as Johnston, Lee, Harnett, Franklin, Person, Caswell and Granville counties.

    Dr. Josh McConkey, who is an emergency room physician and a colonel in the U.S. Air Force Reserve, is one the candidates vying for that seat.

    NC District 13 congressional candidate Dr. Josh McConkey.

    He sat down with CBS 17’s Russ Bowen to talk about one of the top issues he believes Americans are facing.



    Russ Bowen

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  • Updated Coronavirus Information

    Updated Coronavirus Information







    Friday – February 09, 2024



    Updated Coronavirus Information

     








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