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The paper was first published in Bala in October 1860, as a four-page supplement, The Merioneth Herald, in The Oswestry Advertiser.Having subsequently become a distinct paper printed in Oswestry, England, in 1864 it became the Merionethshire Standard and Mid-Wales Herald [3] and, in 1869, was renamed The Cambrian News and Merionethshire Standard.
The media in Wales provide services in both English and Welsh, and play a role in modern Welsh culture. BBC Cymru Wales began broadcasting in 1923 have helped to promote a form of standardised spoken Welsh, [1] and one historian has argued that the concept of Wales as a single national entity owes much to modern broadcasting. [2]
Công_hoà_xa_hoi_chu_nghia_Viêt_Nam.oga (Ogg Vorbis sound file, length 6.5 s, 393 kbps, file size: 314 KB) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Below is a list of websites published in Vietnam in alphabetical order. 24h.com.vn [38] Báo Mới [39] Báo Điện tử Chính phủ nước Cộng hòa Xã hội chủ nghĩa Việt Nam [40] Việt Báo [41] VietNamNet [42] Việt Nam News [43] VnExpress [44]
The Cambrian Archaeological Association was to sponsor the publication of Westwood's Lapidarium Walliæ: the early Inscribed and Sculptured Stones of Wales in 1876–1879. [17] A final key figure was Rev Cardale Babington, who came from Ludlow in Shropshire. Professor of Botany at Cambridge, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1851 ...
In this term, the National Assembly adopted the name "the Socialist Republic of Vietnam" (Cộng hoà xã hội chủ nghĩa Việt Nam) for the re-unified country, merged corresponding organizations between the Government of North Vietnam and South Vietnam, and renamed Saigon as Ho Chi Minh City. It also approved the new Constitution in 1980.
The new king of Denmark has changed the country’s royal coat of arms to more prominently feature Greenland in an apparent rebuke of President-elect Donald Trump’s plan to take over the ...
Logo. The Chiêu Hồi program ([ciə̯w˧ hoj˧˩] (also spelled "chu hoi" or "chu-hoi" in English) loosely translated as "Open Arms" [1]) was an initiative by the United States and South Vietnam to encourage defection by the People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN) and Viet Cong (VC) and their supporters to the side of South Vietnam during the Vietnam War.