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Miše Stupara 3 78000 Banja Luka, BiH: Daily Ringier Axel Springer d.o.o. www.blic.rs: 2233-176X: EuroBlic is a daily middle-market tabloid newspaper in Republika Srpska. Founded in 2000, EuroBlic is currently owned by Ringier Axel Springer Media AG, a joint venture between Ringier media corporation from Switzerland and Axel Springer AG from ...
The NASA Images archive was created through a Space Act Agreement between the Internet Archive and NASA to bring public access to NASA's image, video, and audio collections in a single, searchable resource. The Internet Archive NASA Images team worked closely with all of the NASA centers to keep adding to the ever-growing collection. [130]
Danas (pronounced, Serbo-Croatian for "today") is a United Group-owned daily newspaper of record published in Belgrade, Serbia. [2] It is a left-oriented media, promoting social-democracy and European Union integration.
On May 7, 2012, Dnevne Novine became the first and, as of October 2012, only free newspaper in Montenegro. [5] Željko Ivanović and Mladen Milutinović, owners of Vijesti and Dan, tried to sabotage the move by threatening to withdraw their papers from the main media distributors in the country (Tabacco, S Media and Štampa). [6]
On the 2nd and 3 October 1999, the paper ceased publication due to an official injunction, citing three unregistered workers at the ABC grafika printing company. The ban was widely seen as retribution for the paper's decision to print and distribute a bulletin by the Alliance for Change opposition coalition.
The Glas Srpske (lit. ' The Voice of Srpska ' [1]) is a Republika Srpska daily newspaper published in Banja Luka.Together with Bosniak-oriented Dnevni avaz from Sarajevo and Croat-oriented Dnevni list from Mostar, Glas Srpske is Serb-oriented and one of three main ethnic newspapers in Bosnia and Herzegovina addressing various issues primarily from the mainstream or elite perspective among ...
The bombing provoked outrage in both Muslim and Serbian media. [3] Srpski Glas joined Nezavisne novine in printing a mostly blank front page three days after the bombing, carrying only the words "We Want to Know" to call for further investigation into the attack. Bosnian television interrupted programming to display the same message. [3]
No one expected the release of a new issue the next morning. However, at 6 o'clock in the morning, a news story was published on the front page with a photo of the fire and the message: Oslobođenje ide dalje (The Oslobođenje goes further). Three months later, the Oslobođenje building was set on fire for the second time. After this attack ...