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Film critic Philip K. Scheuer in his review of Saigon for the Los Angeles Times, called the film "long on atmosphere and short on logic." [16] In a similar vein, Bosley Crowther simply dismissed the film as "sorry" and "a fine lot of super-silly moonshine, more to be laughed at than esteemed." [17]
The Hi-Tek incident, [a] referred to in Vietnamese-language media as the Trần Trường incident (Vietnamese: Vụ Trần Trường or Sự kiện Trần Trường), was a series of protests in 1999 by Vietnamese Americans in Little Saigon, Orange County, California, in response to Trần Văn Trường's display of the flag of communist Vietnam and a picture of Ho Chi Minh in the window of ...
About 45 miles (72 km) south of Los Angeles, Westminster was once a predominantly White middle-class suburban city of Orange County with ample farmland, but the city later experienced a decline by the 1970s. Since 1978, the nucleus of Little Saigon has long been Bolsa Avenue, where early pioneers Danh Quach and Frank Jao established businesses.
About 45 miles (72 km) south of Los Angeles, Westminster was once a predominantly white middle-class suburban city of Orange County with ample farmland, but the city later experienced a decline by the 1970s. Since 1978, the nucleus of Little Saigon has long been Bolsa Avenue, where early pioneers Danh Quach and Frank Jao established businesses.
The Little Saigon News; Los Angeles Blade; Los Angeles Express (newspaper) Los Angeles Free Press; Los Angeles Herald; Los Angeles Reader; Los Angeles Staff; Los Angeles Standard Newspaper; Los Angeles Times suburban sections; Los Angeles Tribune (1886–1890) Los Angeles Tribune (1911–1918) Los Angeles Tribune (1941–1960) Los Angeles ...
Los Angeles County's sizable Asian immigrant communities are bracing for disruption and heartache as rumors swirl of mass deportations to be carried out under sweeping new orders issued by the ...
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times) L.A. County agreed to bestow new powers on its beleaguered probation chief, giving him temporary authority to redirect some of the county's workforce as the ...
He then joined United Press International in San Francisco and Denver; from 1968 to 1970, he worked as a battlefront correspondent in Saigon. He joined the Los Angeles Times in 1970 and was based in Los Angeles, New York, and Washington, D.C., as well as being bureau chief in Sydney, Nairobi, Cairo and Hanoi.