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San Francisco Call [6] San Francisco Chronicle; San Francisco Evening Bulletin; San Francisco Examiner; San Francisco Herald; San Francisco Independent; San Francisco Progress (1918–1988) [7] [8] SF Weekly; Shinsekai asahi shinbun (New World Sun, 1932–1941) [1] Shin sekai (New World, 1912–1932) [1] Sinhan Minbo; South San Francisco ...
The news of the successful operation is reported by European media, with the Bay Area counterattack proving to be a major turning point in America's guerrilla war against the GKR occupation. With San Francisco taken, many West Coast cities are returned to U.S. hands, and the military launches a counter-offensive to take back the occupied states.
Its third headquarters [3] on Vermont Avenue. (1985) The newspaper was founded on June 9, 1969 as an extension of the South Korea-based Hankook Ilbo.Around this time, South Korean immigration to the United States was increasing in the wake of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, and the Jang family saw an opportunity in establishing a newspaper there for the growing Korean community.
San Francisco Bay Guardian; San Francisco Call (1856–1913) [17] San Francisco Evening Bulletin (1929–1959) [18] San Francisco Frontiers (1994–2002) [19] The San Francisco News (1903–1959) [20] San Mateo County Times; San Mateo Daily News; Sanger Herald; La Sociedad (San Francisco, Spanish, 1869–1895) [21] Upland News; Viet Mercury ...
New Korean Federation of Occupied America: A totalitarian puppet state formed as a result of an invasion by the Greater Korean Republic in the video game Homefront. Stretches from the West Coast to an irradiated Mississippi River, as well as Alaska and Hawaii, and borders the actual United States east of the Mississippi
Greater Korean Republic: A fictional empire in Homefront which initially started off as a unified Korean Republic under Kim Jong-un, who managed to reunify the Koreas peacefully. It was established in 2015, after conquering Japan, the Philippines, and all of Southeast Asia and Western America.
AsianWeek was one of the newspapers owned and operated by the Fang family of San Francisco, with others including the San Francisco Independent and the San Francisco Examiner. [7] It was founded by John Fang in 1979 and helmed by long-time AsianWeek President James Fang from 1993-2009. AsianWeek headquarters were located in San Francisco's ...
Sinhan Minbo (Korean: 신한민보; Hanja: 新韓民報) or The New Korea was a Korean language newspaper published in the United States. It was founded on February 10, 1909 by the Korean National Association (KNA) and published weekly from San Francisco.