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Pages in category "Magazines published in Zurich" The following 29 pages are in this category, out of 29 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9.
Canton of Zurich Weekly Became a magazine in 2002 [100] Wir Brückenbauer: 1942 2004 Zurich Canton of Zurich Weekly Became a magazine and was renamed Migros Magazin in 2004. [101] Heute: 2006 2008 Zurich Canton of Zurich Daily .ch: 2007 2009 Zurich Canton of Zurich Daily News: 2007 2009 Daily Burgdorfer Tagblatt 1911 2012 Burgdorf Canton of Bern
The magazine's creators and journalists state that critical reader feedback and community is a defining characteristic of their project. [ 3 ] The magazine has tended to focus on political and international topics, but has also published an exposé on construction fraud in a small Swiss town, [ 3 ] [ 4 ] [ 6 ] a report on a controversial Swiss ...
Its main competitor is the weekly Die Weltwoche magazine. Schweizer Bibliothek. In 2005 and 2006, the magazine published the "Schweizer Bibliothek" – a compilation of twenty books, written by twenty of the 20th century's most important Swiss writers. Volume 1: Friedrich Glauser, Matto regiert (1936) Volume 2: Markus Werner, Bis bald (1992)
These titles were reported to be technical, economic, professional, trade-union, agricultural, sports and religious magazines. [1] Bollinger also stated that the Swiss political and news magazines were not aggressive like those in other European languages. [1] The following is an incomplete list of current and defunct magazines published in ...
Chloë Sevigny turns 50 today but her style is just as influential and cool in 2024 as ever. An ode to the perennial It girl's style, in honor of her birthday. Chloë Sevigny turns 50 today but ...
Paris Hilton and Nicole Richie are reflecting on their iconic aughts style. Ahead of the long-awaited return of their reality show The Simple Life , the duo spoke with Glamour about their ...
The magazine was founded in 1926 by Max Ras as Der Schweizerische Beobachter and first distributed in 1927 as a free newspaper to all households in the German-speaking part of Switzerland. From the beginning, it was a political, but non-partisan struggle sheet, that took a position in favor of economically weakly positioned people.