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Part of the Los Angeles Wave newspaper family. Los Angeles: L.A. Watts Times: 1976? [88] Weekly [88] OCLC 29744254; Los Angeles / Inglewood: The Los Angeles Community Circle News / Los Angeles Community Circle Clipper: 1989 [89] Bimonthly newspaper [89] OCLC 26828513; Los Angeles: Los Angeles Illustrated Reflector: 1934? [90]? [90] Weekly [90 ...
The paper was founded in 2006 by two Los Angeles-based Burmese-Americans, Thakhin Kai Bwor and George Kyaw. . The paper's mission purportedly is to "promote networking amongst Burmese Americans towards a more civic-minded community". The first issue was published in July 2006.
In 1899, Ng Poon Chew (March 14, 1866 - March 13, 1931), a well-known and respected Chinese Presbyterian minister, started Hua Mei Sun Po (華美新報), also known as The Chinese American Newspaper, a Chinese-language weekly newspaper in Los Angeles. [5] He moved the paper to San Francisco in 1900 and renamed it Chung Sai Yat Po. [5]
According to Rocky Chin, "If there is an 'Asian-American Movement' publication, it is Gidra, the most widely circulated Asian American newspaper-magazine in the country." [7] Wimp Hiroto of the Los Angeles-based Japanese American community newspaper Crossroads praised Gidra 's mission.
The Chinese man accused of shooting up a Taiwanese church in California, killing one and wounding five, called himself a “destroying angel” in a manifesto mailed to a Chinese-language newspaper.
International Daily News (traditional Chinese: 國際日報; simplified Chinese: 国际日报; pinyin: Guójì rìbào), also known as Guoji Ribao, [3] is a major Chinese-language newspaper in North America and Indonesia. It is a pro-mainland newspaper, [4] sold in several major Chinatowns.
This is a list of African American newspapers and media outlets, which is sortable by publication name, city, state, founding date, and extant vs. defunct status. For more detail on a given newspaper, see the linked entries below. See also by state, below on this page, for entries on African American newspapers in each state.
Before launching the Standard, Lewis worked at Our Weekly (2006-2008, 2013–2016) and the Los Angeles Sentinel Newspaper (2008-2013), which are also African-American owned newspapers. He worked as a writer, photographer, sports editor, and web and social media manager at both publications.