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Mesquite News; Plano Star Courier; The Rowlette Lakeshore Times; Southlake Times; Texas Catholic; Texas Jewish Post; The Dallas Examiner; Tre Weekly News Magazine - headquartered in Garland, serving the Vietnamese immigrants in DFW metroplex; White Rock Lake Weekly - serving all of East Dallas, distributed for free; White Rock Lake Weekly
As of 1991 there was a Vietnamese community magazine called Xay Dung. [44] Tre Magazine is a Vietnamese language weekly publication, serving the large Vietnamese immigrant community in the U.S. Since its first launch in Houston in 2011, Tre has gained favorable responses from readers and recognition within the community.
At 8:50 PM, a white truck with two occupants pulled up to a Texaco-owned convenience store in Garland. [2] Acosta exited the passenger side of the vehicle, and walked behind the truck, positioning himself on one of the exterior walls of the store. Acosta walked up to the front door, and stopped before ducking under a window. [3]
Several African-American-owned newspapers are published in Houston. Allan Turner of the Houston Chronicle said that the papers "are both journalistic throwbacks — papers whose content directly reflects their owners' views — and cutting-edge, hyper-local publications targeting the concerns of the city's roughly half-million African-Americans."
The Garland's website launch comes a few weeks after the theater, which sold to new owners late last year and has been closed, announced it would be reopening March 1. "WEBSITE IS LIVE!!!"
The Curtis Culwell Center attack was a failed terrorist attack on an exhibit featuring cartoon images of Muhammad at the Curtis Culwell Center in Garland, Texas, US on May 3, 2015, which ended in a shootout with police guarding the event, and the deaths of the two perpetrators. [4]
U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland on Thursday called former President Donald Trump’s claims that the FBI was authorized to shoot him during its 2022 search of his Florida club “false ...
In January 1980, the Vietnamese-language magazine office of Van Nghe Tien Phong located in Arlington County, Virginia, was set fire by an explosion but publisher Nguyen Thanh Hoang lived. [3] In 1990, when the last of five journalists was killed, the victim also worked for Van Nghe Tien Phong and the publication reported that victim Triet Le ...