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Daylight saving time (DST) in Romania (locally known by "Ora de Vară") was originally introduced in 1932 (between 22 May and 2 October). Between 1933 and 1940, DST started on the first Sunday in April and ended on the first Sunday in October. DST was abandoned in 1941 and reintroduced in 1979. [3]
Comedy Est (now Prima History) PRO 2 (now Acasă) PRO X (now Pro Arena) PRO Gold (now Acasă Gold) Look Sport (now Prima Sport) Telekom Info (now Orange Info) Telekom Sport (now Orange Sport) Antena 3 (now Antena 3 CNN) 2023 Boomerang (now Cartoonito) Bucuresti TV (now KanalD2) Cinema Est (now Prima History) Discovery Science; DTX (TV channel) 2024
EBS Radio (Cluj-Napoca),() * Metronom FM (Râmnicu Vâlcea) Stil FM (Călăraşi and Oltenița); Orizont FM Medgidia (); Radio Voces Campi (Călăraşi and Olteniţa) Radio Bărăgan (Călăraşi)
Darcy Graham climbed from sixth to joint-second on Scotland’s all-time try-scorer list with four touchdowns in a resounding 84-0 victory over Romania which sets up a mouth-watering Rugby World ...
It operates FM and AM, and internet national and local radio channels. The local stations are branded under the Radio România Regional umbrella. Radio Romania International is the company's international radio station, broadcasting on three channels in Romanian , English, French, Aromanian , Spanish, German , Italian , Serbian , Russian ...
Radio Romania International (Romanian: Radio România Internațional, or RRI) is a Romanian radio station owned by the Romanian public radio broadcaster Societatea Română de Radiodifuziune (SRR, the national public radio in Romania) that broadcasts abroad. It was created in 1927 and was known as Radio Bucharest before 1989.
On 12 October 2011, at 6:00 am (CEST), it was split into two different feeds: this feed focused on Central and Eastern Europe, while Boomerang HQ centred on the Benelux, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Greece, Middle East & Africa, and Portugal. The European feed at the time consisted of four audio tracks, which were in English, Romanian, Hungarian and ...
On September 25, 1999, after rebranding three times, TVR1 became "(TV) Romania 1". In March 2000, TVR2 changed its identity, logo and presentation for the fourth time. On March 1, 2001, TVR2 switched to round-the-clock programming, "Romania 1" following suit 9 days later along with a new logo in the flag colors.