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Jawa Pos was the first newspaper in Indonesia to apply the international width standard in 1998, to have a daily section for youth (2000), and to use computer to plate technology (2006). [ 3 ] With 842,000 average daily circulation (2017), data by Nielsen Consumer & Media View (CMV) , Jawa Pos is the most popular newspaper in Indonesia.
Cenderawasih Pos (The Cenderawasih Post) is a daily newspaper published in Jayapura, Indonesia. The paper is the major paper of Jayapura and Papua province . It is owned by Jawa Pos Group and become a part of Jawa Pos News Network (JPNN).
Jawa Pos Group: Women's Local newspapers. All newspapers listed below are in Indonesian. Newspaper chain. Note: Some members of these chain are shown below this sub ...
Kahiyang Ayu (born 20 April 1992) is Joko Widodo's second child and only daughter. She graduated from Sebelas Maret University on 17 December 2013. [3] In 2019, she obtained a master's degree from the IPB University, together with her husband, Bobby Nasution is a former mayor of Medan and governor of North Sumatra, they got married in 2017.
In 1991, Suara Pembaruan reported a circulation of roughly 340,000, ranking as the fourth largest selling daily behind Kompas, Pos Kota, and Jawa Pos. The following year it ranked second in advertising revenue, trailing behind Kompas. [2] Suara Pembaruan formerly holds shares in The Jakarta Post, which was co-founded by its progenitor Sinar ...
Indopos newspaper was first published 25 February 2003. It was published by PT Indopos Intermedia Press, a subsidiary of Jawa Pos Group. Indopos at the time was considered as "the Jakarta version of Jawa Pos", as Jawa Pos is also owned a number of local newspapers across the country.
East Java (Indonesian: Jawa Timur, Javanese: ꦙꦮꦶꦮꦺꦠꦤ꧀, romanized: Jawa Wétan, Madurese: Jhâbâ Tèmor) is a province of Indonesia located in the easternmost third of Java island.
Ganjar Pranowo was born Ganjar Sungkowo on 28 October 1968, as the fifth of the six children of a family in a village on the slopes of Mount Lawu, Karanganyar, to S. Pamudji Pramudi Wiryo (1930–2017), a police officer, and Sri Suparni (1940–2015), a homemaker. [2]