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Ziua (The Day in Romanian) was a major Romanian daily newspaper published in Bucharest. It was published in Romanian, with a fairly sizeable and often informative English section. Ziua was founded in 1994 by Sorin Roșca Stănescu , eventually becoming foreign-owned. It was the most conservative of the major Romanian dailies, often taking a ...
10th Engineer Brigade "Dunărea de Jos" HQ, in Brăila [35] 2nd Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) Group, in Bucharest [ 36 ] 5th Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) Group, in Brăila [ 36 ]
Constanța's public transport system is run by CT Bus (formerly Regia Autonomă de Transport în Comun Constanța - RATC), and consists of 19 year-round bus lines, and two seasonal lines, including a sightseeing double decker open top bus line. In the early 2000s, the city bought 130 new MAZ buses to replace the aging fleet of DAC buses.
23 August (Romanian: Douăzeci și Trei August) is a commune in Constanța County, Northern Dobruja, Romania.The commune includes three villages: 23 August (historical names: Tatlâgeac Mare, Turkish: Büyük-Tatlıcak; Domnița Elena) – named after the day of the 1944 royal coup d'état
In 2004 and later, the Romanian newspaper Ziua published a series of articles and interviews with Stanislav Belkovsky, an influential Russian political commentator, who proposed a plan of a unification of Romania and Moldova excluding Transnistria. Speculations followed whether his plan is backed by higher circles in the Kremlin, but they were ...
Important cargo quantities are carried by river, between Constanta and Central and Eastern European countries: Bulgaria, Serbia, Hungary, Austria, Slovakia and Germany. River traffic is very important for the Constanța Port, having a share of 23.3% of the total traffic in 2005, when 8,800 river vessels called to the port. [5]
The Port of Midia is located on the Black Sea coastline, approx 13.5 NM north of Constanța.. It is one of the satellite ports of Constanța and was designed and built to serve the adjacent industrial and petrochemical facilities.
Azi (Today in Romanian) is a Romanian daily newspaper published in Bucharest. [1] The paper was started in 1990. [1]Today was also the name of a literary magazine published monthly in Romania, from March 1932 to August 1938, under the direction of Zaharia Stancu.