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477:(KNA), in some instances the paper faced backlash from Koreans who disagreed with the content of the editorials. One of the paper's presidents, Akutagawa, was a devout Buddhist, and had around 300 articles about the religion published in the paper. The writer for the KNA claimed that the articles about Buddhism sometimes targeted people who didn't align with their perception of Buddhist religious values. The articles also advocated for the further assimilation of Koreans into the Empire of Japan.
331:) became president until his resignation in February 1932, and replacement by Tadashi's son Hiroshi. On January 27, 1931, a fire destroyed their building. They moved into a temporary building and continued publishing two-page issues at a time. Meanwhile, they reorganized the company and hired a new editor in chief.
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It was first published with four pages, and increased this to eight in 1917. It began publishing both in the morning and evenings on
January 15, 1923, with four pages in each issue. Notably, it adopted this twice-daily printing system before other private Korean newspapers of the time, and possibly
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The paper devoted much of its space to information about business and economics. This was particularly salient, as Busan was a significant port and trading city. Data about fishing, agriculture, shipping were published. It published analyses on technology and the impact of policy on business.
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reduced the number of pages it published from six to four in 1933. On May 27, 1941, after experiencing two fires and by an order of the
Japanese colonial governor for there to only be one paper per
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The paper also published
Japanese literature. The writer for the KNA claimed that while popular literature was also covered, the majority of stories were about heroism, for example the exploits of
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influenced their later adoption of it. In 1929, they increased this to six pages in the morning and four in the evening. In
November 1934, this increased to twelve pages total per day.
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in capital. On
November 26, 1915, a fire broke out in a company building, which necessitated the rebuilding of its printing and office facilities. It acquired a
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In 1919, the company was made into a public stock company. It had capital of 250,000 yen, and in April 1920 completed a new office building at what is now
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was also merged into the paper in this year. Afterwards, they reduced the number of pages to four in the evenings and two in the mornings.
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took significant market share in Korea. Still, the paper was consistently in the top 20 newspapers in both Korea and Japan until its end.
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From 1941 until its end, it had a monopoly on publishing in Busan. However, as a result of the industry consolidation in the 1940s, the
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The paper performed significantly well, and for years was considered to be second in Korea only to the government-backed
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in July 1916. By
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began to outperform its rival. While it published more and more pages over time, the
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It was one of the most prominent
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In its early years, the newspaper underperformed its longtime rival
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747:"Fuzan Nippō — Browse by title — Hoji Shinbun Digital Collection"
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Digital copies are available, scanned and searchable, on the
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Its editorials were nationalistic, and faithful to
Japanese
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391:was absorbed into the
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44:Founder(s)
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500:See also
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67:Language
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636:김, 덕영.
584:김, 보영.
482:samurai
442:Content
335:Success
249:History
104:Country
86:1945-09
84: (
59:1905-02
57: (
52:Founded
691:"부산일보"
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395:. The
387:, the
202:조선시사신보
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328:香椎源太郎
323:]
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161:Busan
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651:2024
360:and
256:葛生修吉
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178:조선일보
172:朝鮮日報
134:부산일보
124:釜山日報
94:City
354:The
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