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Launched by Ringier AG (owners of another Serbian daily Blic) on October 15, 2007, Alo! attempts to establish itself on the saturated Serbian daily tabloid market through aggressive campaign that announces it as 'Najveće dnevne novine u Srbiji' ("The biggest daily in Serbia") – referring to its format size.
Serbian postal codes consist of five digits. The first two digits roughly correspond to the corresponding district; district seat cities usually have 000 as the last three digits, while smaller towns and villages have non-round last three digits.
A 60.9% stake (70% of the public stake) in the magazine was to be auctioned off on September 29, 2007 with starting price set at RSD13.2 million (~ €170,000). [9] However, the auction as the method of privatization for the magazine was scrapped by the Serbian Privatization Agency due to employee demands and a new tender was set for sometime ...
Majority of the staff followed him. They then hooked up with another businessman Radisav Rodić (owner of the printing company ABC Produkt that printed daily issues of Blic and its offshoots) and under his financial backing started a new paper called Glas javnosti (the first five issues were called Novi Blic). Rodić thus entered the world of ...
RTS Svet (Serbian Cyrillic: РТС Свет, or RTS World (Serbian: РТС Свет / RTS Svet); Satellite program of RTS (Сателитски програм РТС-а / Satelitski program RTS-a)), formerly RTS Sat, is a Serbian satellite television channel. [1]
Radio Television of Vojvodina [a] (RTV) is the regional public broadcaster in the Serbian province of Vojvodina, headquartered in Novi Sad.Alongside statewide Radio Television of Serbia, RTV serves as the second major public broadcaster in the country.
Danas (pronounced, Serbo-Croatian for "today") is a United Group-owned daily newspaper of record published in Belgrade, Serbia. [2] It is a left-oriented media, promoting social-democracy and European Union integration. It is a vocal media supporter of Serbian NGO activities towards human rights and minorities protection. [2]
The magazine now contained a complete episode of a comic separated into 2-3 parts. [ 1 ] Starting from 1971, Politikin Zabavnik was also printed in the Latin alphabet and Slovenian , [ 9 ] and at its peak it reached a number of 330,000 copies per issue (1975). [ 10 ]