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[2] Viața Liberă is owned by European Media Investment A.G.A., a German media company. The newspaper is published every day by "Trustul de presă Dunărea de Jos - Galați." According to the Romanian Audit Bureau of Circulations, the circulation of the newspaper dropped significantly in 2008, when an average of 10,000 copies a day were ...
An exhibition match took place on 7 May 1921, in which Triumf București defeated Internaționala Galați 2–1. In the same year, the team of HMS Ladybird defeated Internaționala Galați 6–2. Though there were too few teams for organised competitions, inter-city matches intensified with Brăila , Tulcea , and Reni .
5.3 5.0 6.2 7.4 7.1 5.5 4.2 4.7 4.0 4.7 5.6 64.6 Average relative humidity (%) 87 85 81 75 73 73 72 72 74 79 87 89 79 Mean monthly sunshine hours: 81 113 161 203 255 274 299 282 219 156 86 73 2,202 Source 1: NOAA [18] Source 2: Romanian National Statistic Institute (extremes 1901–2000), [19] Deutscher Wetterdienst (humidity 1973–1992) [20]
By law nr. 16/1996 (modified by law nr.138/2013, in order to update the existing law and comply with EU requirements), the Archives establishes norms for archival activity; implements measures from the law on archives; receives documents for the National Archival Deposit of Romania; inventories, selects and preserves the documents it holds; preserves documents on microfilm and other formats ...
The club was founded in 1970, took the place of Oțelul Galați in Divizia B [2] and has played for 5 seasons in the Liga I.. For a brief period, it was Galați's main team, but after the rise of Oțelul in the 1980s, it is seen only in the Liga II and the Liga III.
By 1911, sufficient funds for the statue had been gathered. The commission was granted to Frederic Storck.Iorga wrote of the work: “instead of showing a gentleman in a jacket or even a frock”, similar to photographs of the poet, the sculptor “has made to arise from a large block of marble, given meaning by the blows of his hammer, a serene, gentle figure—not dreamy, but the grandly ...
The material, consisting of 2 parts [19], tells about Țiți, Cristescu Dumitru Laurențiu, a 4-year-old boy, who disappeared on October 20, 1973, in Bucharest, near a factory. Libertatea also talks about the robot portrait of an adult [ 19 ] Ţiți, made by Florin Lăzău, the only Romanian policeman specialized in age progression.
The name România liberă was first used by a daily newspaper focusing on politics published between 15 May 1877, [1] (one day after Romania declared its independence from the Ottoman Empire) and 13 April 1888, and afterwards by daily with somewhat erratic publication between 1915 and 1920.