Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Agenția de Presă RADOR is the largest press monitoring center in Romania, established in 1990.RADOR editors monitor news published in Romanian and in other 15 foreign languages: from audiovisual media – 57 radio and TV stations, from the written media – 150 newspapers and news agencies on all continents.
The website was founded in October 1999 by a group of financial journalists under the name RevistaPresei.ro and contained articles from outside sources put together as a press review. It was rebranded as HotNews.ro in 2005.
Revista Media; Sibiu Independent; SevenTimes.Ro, in English language; Szabadság, in Hungarian language; Transilvania expres; Transilvania jurnal; Transindex; Tribuna Sibiu; Unirea, one of the oldest newspapers in Transylvania; Vitrina de Cluj; Ziarul Clujeanului; Ziarul Crișana; Ziarul de Mureș; Ziarul Financiar - Ediția de Transilvania ...
State-run Radio Romania operates four national networks and regional and local stations. 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.
Piata Presei Libere no.1, Building C1, Ground floor, Office 10, 11, 14 A, 14 B, Sector 1, Bucharest ... Romania-related news and weather. External links. Official ...
Informaţia, Revista presei în ianuarie 2005 [permanent dead link ], 14 January 2005; Cartianu, Grigore et al. Evenimentul Zilei, Domnule Nastase, am aflat noi cine a dat bani presei!, 3 February 2005; Biroul Roman de Audit al Tirajelor (The Romanian Circulation Audit Office).official industry dataset
The House of the Free Press (Romanian: Casa Presei Libere), known under Communist rule as Casa Scînteii, 'House of The Spark (newspaper)', is a building in northern Bucharest, Romania, the tallest in the city between 1956 and 2007. [1]
With the inauguration of Nicolae Ceaușescu as Party Secretary, and later President of Romania, Murgescu had more opportunities to expand on his economic theories. Serving only as ICE department head from 1965, [67] he continued to edit Revista Economică to 1968, then Revista Română de Relații Internaționale (from 1968 to 1970).