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Večernji list was started in Zagreb in 1959. [3] [4] Its predecessor Večernji vjesnik ('Evening Courier') appeared for the first time on 3 June 1957 in Zagreb on 24 pages [5] but quickly merged with Narodni list ('National Paper') to form what is today known as Večernji list. Večernji list is considered a conservative leaning newspaper. [2]
www.dnevni-list.ba: 1512 - 8792: Dnevni list is daily newspaper (English: Daily Courier) is a popular daily newspaper in Bosnia and Herzegovina. [4] Its headquarters is in Mostar. [2] The paper is especially popular among the nation of the Croats and Bosniaks. The paper was founded in 2001 and it has a pro-Croats stance. [4] Večernji list BiH
Sportplus – published from December 2009 to March 2011 as a sports daily spun off from Novi list to compete with Sportske novosti; after 2011 merged back into Novi list; Vjesnik – published 1940–2012, major government-owned daily; Business.hr – published 2005–2014, business and financial daily, which competed against Poslovni dnevnik
It was a modern tabloid with short news, human interest stories, big photos, well-written headlines, and many sports, city and regional reports. For a long period of time Večernje novosti had the largest circulation in Yugoslavia. Only Večernji list from Zagreb occasionally beat them. [5]
Milan Ivkošić (born 23 July 1947) is a Croatian journalist writing for Večernji list. [1]He was born in a Catholic family in the village of Zmijavci near Imotski.Ivkošić started his journalist career in the 1970s as a journalist of the youth newspaper Tlo. [2]
Večernji list; Vjesnik; Z. Zadarski list; Zajedničar This page was last edited on 1 May 2020, at 06:29 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
He is best known for his regular comic "Felix" in the Croatian daily Večernji list, [1] but has had his comic strips published in nearly every Croatian newspaper. [2]
Jutarnji list (lit. ' The Morning Paper ') is a Croatian daily newspaper, founded and continuously published in Zagreb since 6 April 1998, by EPH (Europapress holding, owned by Ninoslav Pavić) which eventually changed name in Hanza Media, when bought by Marijan Hanžeković. [3] The newspaper is published in the berliner format and online.