UHAA NCRC INTERN PROGRAM
2006
Kyle Kikuchi
Participation year: 2006
Sponsor: SOGI
Program: Smithsonian Institute, Asian
Pacific American Program
Kyle Kikuchi interned with Dr. Franklin Odo at the
Smithsonian Institute’s (SI) Asian Pacific American (APA) Program. He maintained gift records for the Vietnamese
Heritage Project and did research for a potential exhibit telling the story of
Indian Americans and their near monopoly on the motel industry. Kikuchi also
did a lot of out reach promoting the program at the annual SI Teacher's
Night. He says, “I also must have stamped and mailed tens of thousands of
invitations to the four public programs I helped coordinate and execute.
I also helped our strained office to move from the A&I building to the Capital
Gallery. I did all of this as well as all the minor secretarial work as
the APA program had only two paid staff
members. My favorite times working at the SI was my lunch breaks with Dr.
Odo and his staff. The conversations we had were amazing, I got more out
of one hour with Dr. Odo and one of his distinguished visitors than an entire junior
seminar at UH. To work with and be surrounded by brilliant people who
respect me is something that I will never forget. I had a wonderful time
and really want to go back. “
Professional Activities:
Following Kikuchi’s participation an as intern, he became a senior at
the University of Hawaii but had to take a leave of absence in the Spring of
2007 to be deployed to Thailand as a Staff Sergeant in the Hawaii Air National
Guard. Upon graduation, Kikuchi plans on going to law or graduate school

Sarah Myhre
Participation year: 2006
Sponsor: NCRC/Fong
Program: National History of American History
Sarah Keleka Myhre interned with the Department of Military History
and Diplomacy in the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History under Cedric Yeh. Her first major and on-going project began
with the de-installation and securing of the military exhibits in the path of
the museum’s upcoming construction. She
also edited and updated the database for the department’s September 11
collection, entering the locations, descriptions, and accession information of
the objects. Other projects included
securing the antique gun collection in the department’s gunroom and creating
acid free storage-boxes to re-house the military uniforms. For her final project she transcribed the
1852 diary of Mary Armistead Bradford, wife of George Armistead, the man who
commissioned the Star - Spangled Banner.
Her experiences in Washington D.C. and with the Smithsonian afforded her life lessons
that she will not soon forget.
Professional Activities:
While interning she worked on completing her final semester at UH
Mānoa where she graduated in Fall 2006 with a B.A. in English and a minor
in Religion. Currently she is working on
her MLISc in Library and Information Science at UH and after graduating plans
to attend law school.

Barron Oda
Participation year: 2006
Sponsor: NCRC/Fong
Program: National Museum of
American History
Barron Oda was an intern at the National Museum of American
History. Upon his arrival in Washington DC, he was able to see this museum
before they closed the doors for renovation.
He was assigned the job of cataloging a “Teaching Collection” of items
stored in a basement room. All items had
to researched, tracing the origins of some items that were previously tagged
with numbers, approximate date of manufacture and purpose, and photographs and
descriptions of each item. The finished
product, a searchable database, contained over 600 items listing its physical
location on the shelf, its affiliation to specific activities and its origin
(if known) as well as special notation for delicate or potentially sharp or heavy
items that should not be handled by visitors.
“My internship experience has been more positive than I could’ve ever
imaged, especially more so considering that I was fortunate to have come at a
historic time with the Museum had just closed to the public and was undergoing
a major overhaul,” stated Oda.
Professional Activities:
Oda graduated in December 2007 from UH with a Bachelor of Arts degree in
Philosophy and is now contemplating Law School. He is working for the current session
of the State Legislature for Sen. Nishihara as a committee clerk for the tourism
and government committees.

Elizabeth J. West
Participation year: 2006
Sponsor: NCRC/Fong
Program: World Sindhi Institute (WSI)
Elizabeth West interned at the World Sindhi Institute (WSI),
a non-profit organization that works for human rights issues in Pakistan. The purpose of the institute is to
apply political pressure to the governments of the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom in order to change the way Western
countries deal with Pakistan, especially in regards to foreign
aid. Elizabeth’s role at WSI was as an assistant to the executive
director, Munawar Laghari. In this position, her main duties were to write
press releases, control communications with Congress, work on event
logistics—such as protests and the annual conference, development of the 2006
advocacy campaign (“People Unite for Human Rights in Pakistan”), and to conduct research on the
exploitation of natural resources in Sindh. Also, she was given the chance to
attend the United Nations Committee on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights in
Geneva, Switzerland, which gave her first hand
experience in understanding how large intergovernmental organizations are
operated.
Professional Activities:
Since graduating from the University of Hawaii in December 2006, Elizabeth moved back to the Washington D.C. area and is now employed as a News
Assistant at Asahi Shimbun, Japan's leading newspaper, as a
correspondent for the 2008 Presidential elections. She hopes to attend graduate
school in the near future for International Relations or International
Development.
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