Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Evenimentul Zilei - Ediția de Transilvania; Gazeta de Cluj; Gazeta de Hunedoara; Gazeta de Oradea; Hermannstädter Zeitung (weekly in German language) Informația Cluj; Informația de Vest; Monitorul de Braşov; Monitorul de Cluj; Monitorul de Făgăraș; Monitorul de Sibiu; ProSport - Ediția de Transilvania; Realitatea Bihoreană
Observator Observator is the channel's daily newscast (that airs at the Observator 12 from Monday to Friday) it is one of the most watched newscasts in Romania. It has fifth daily editions, starting at 6.00 AM, 12.00 PM on weekdays or 1 PM on weekend, 5.00 PM, 7.00 PM, and 11.00 PM/11.30 PM.
Expresul de Ungheni (Romanian) Fizica găurilor, teleportare si levitare (Russian) Flux (Romanian) Gazeta de Vest (Romanian) Glia Drochiană (Romanian) Jurnal de Chişinău [2] (Romanian) Kommersant PLUS (Russian) Komsomolskaya Pravda v Moldove (Moldovan edition of Russian tabloid Komsomolskaya Pravda) [2] Limba Română (Romanian) Literatura ...
BBC World Service is available on 88 FM in the capital, and is relayed in Timișoara (93.9), Sibiu (88.4) and Constanta (96.9). Private FM stations dominate the market in Romania, with more than 700 licenses from the National Broadcasting Council by 2009.
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.
Observatorul de Nord, a newspaper from Soroca, founded in 1998 [19] [20] Vocea Basarabiei, 67,69 and 103.1; Natives Samuel Bronfman (1889–1971), a Jewish-Canadian ...
HONG KONG/SEOUL/SHANGHAI (Reuters) -The U.S. Postal Service said it would temporarily suspend parcels from China and Hong Kong, after President Donald Trump ended a trade provision this week used ...
The following villages belong to the commune: Mircea Vodă (historical name: Celebichioi or Celibichioi, Turkish: Çelebiköy) - named after Mircea I of Wallachia Gherghina (historical name: Defcea, Turkish: Devce)