enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Slavko Ćuruvija - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavko_Ćuruvija

    While some of them quickly reconvened to form Naša borba, Ćuruvija took another career route, hooking up with Momčilo Đorgović to found Nedeljni telegraf, a weekly tabloid newspaper. In 1996, the duo founded Dnevni telegraf, Serbia's first privately owned daily in more than 50 years.

  3. Dnevni telegraf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dnevni_telegraf

    Dnevni telegraf was a Serbian daily middle-market tabloid published in Belgrade between 1996 and November 1998, and then also in Podgorica until March 1999. It was the first privately owned daily in Serbia after more than 50 years of across-the-board public ownership under communism .

  4. Nedeljnik - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nedeljnik

    The publishers of Nedeljnik consider its primary audience to be urban and educated people. There is a large interest for the interviews with the world leaders and influencers, which have been, for years, ignored in Serbia.

  5. List of newspapers in Serbia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_newspapers_in_Serbia

    Srpski telegraf Belgrade Tabloid [1] ~36,000 copies sold sensationalist, populist? 2016 www.republika.rs: Sportski žurnal: Belgrade Broadsheet ~10,000 copies sold

  6. Marko Lopušina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marko_Lopušina

    He was the Belgrade reporter of the newspaper Nedeljni telegraf until 2008. He has been a contributor to many newspapers, including Politika, Ilustrovana Politika, Revija 92, TV Novosti, Dnevnik, Jedinstvo, TV Politika, Arena, Start, Penthouse from Belgrade, Novi Sad, Pristina and Zagreb.

  7. Vladan Dinić - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vladan_Dinić

    He was the editor-in-chief of "Novosti plus" before becoming one of the editors of the first independent weekly in Serbia - "Nedeljni Telegraf". In May 1995 Vladan Dinić started his own weekly "Svedok" [4] which gained high popularity reporting on the Balkan criminal underground and on the links between crime and politics.

  8. Velimir Ilić - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Velimir_Ilić

    While denying allegations from a Nedeljni Telegraf piece by Dragan Novaković, headlined "Cypriot Partners of Velimir Ilić, Part of the Biggest Tobacco Mafia in Europe", Ilić made thinly veiled threats of violence against the Nedeljni Telegraf reporter, saying: "If I had really wanted to beat him up, he wouldn't have a single tooth left in ...

  9. Željko Rodić - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Željko_Rodić

    Born at the island of Vis, [2] he started his career in Sarajevo, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1966 when he joined the youth team of FK Željezničar Sarajevo. [3] Playing as the attacker, he would become senior in 1970.