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The Los Angeles Times stated there were multiple people on the roof of the grocery with "shotguns and automatic weapons". [2] [4] Ebony magazine noted the use of "rifles and handguns." [9] Because South Korea had at the time a thirty-month mandatory military service for males, it was noted that many Korean immigrants had experience with ...
Adjustment Problems Among Korean Elderly Immigrants in New York and Los Angeles and Effects of Resources on Psychological Distress and Status in the Family (dissertation). ProQuest, 2008. ISBN 0549566058, 9780549566052. UMI Number 3307607. Kim, Katherine Yungmee. Los Angeles's Koreatown. Arcadia Publishing, 2011. ISBN 0738575526, 9780738575520.
Part of Asian Americans in Los Angeles, 1850-1980 MPS 91: Fire Station No. 14: Fire Station No. 14: March 17, 2009 : 3401 S. Central Ave.
1980: Korean Cultural Center of Los Angeles was founded on April 11, 1980. 1992: The area around was burned in the Rodney King riots, while the center was protected by armed guards. 2001: Reopening of remodeled KCCLA Library on May 24, 2001.
Los Angeles skyline in 2024, with Downtown Los Angeles in the background and Westwood in the foreground McArthur Park view of the DTLA skyline. Bunker Hill in Downtown Los Angeles. The Wilshire Grand Center is the tallest building in Los Angeles, California, measuring 1,100 feet (335.3 m) in height.
The lobby of the Eaves on South Gramercy Place in Koreatown is shown. The building converted into homeless housing has 58 bedrooms. (Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)
A reader asked why L.A.'s recognizable skyline — with skyscrapers such as the Wilshire Grand Center and U.S. Bank tower — developed roughly 15 miles from the Pacific. We have answers.
The sun sets behind the L.A. skyline as seen from Azusa. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times) It seems only yesterday that California’s population was nearly 40 million.