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Novi list (lit. ' New paper ' ) is the oldest Croatian daily newspaper published in Rijeka . It is read mostly in Primorje-Gorski Kotar County of Croatia , but it is distributed throughout the country.
Sportplus – published from December 2009 to March 2011 as a sports daily spun off from Novi list to compete with Sportske novosti; after 2011 merged back into Novi list; Vjesnik – published 1940–2012, major government-owned daily; Business.hr – published 2005–2014, business and financial daily, which competed against Poslovni dnevnik
This is a list of famous or notable citizens of Novi Sad (included in the list are natives as well as permanent and/or temporary residents). This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness.
A boycott was initiated in Serbia on January 31. Serbia's boycott was unique in that it occurred in the backdrop of student protests that had been ongoing in the country since November 2024, following the collapse of a train station's canopy in Novi Sad on November 1, 2024. The country has one of the highest prices in Europe, with domestic ...
This is a list of mayors of Novi Sad from 1 February 1748, when the city got royal free city status by Maria Theresa of Austria. The mayor of Novi Sad is the head of the City of Novi Sad (the second largest city in Serbia and the administrative center of the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina). The mayor acts on behalf of the City, and performs ...
suburbs of Novi Sad; 1 Žitni Trg Radojka Jokanić Rotkvarija: 2 Stari Grad Kristina Žarić Stari Grad: 3 Prva Vojvođanska Brigada Sandra Žepinić Stari Grad: 4 Sonja Marinković Lazar Pavlović Stari Grad: 5 Liman Dragoljub Perković Liman I, University campus: 6 Boško Buha Branislav Jovović Liman II: 7 Liman III Hana Ljiljak Liman III: 8 ...
The first honorary citizen of Novi Sad was Nikola Tesla by the decision of the Assembly of the city on 10 July 1936. He was awarded this title due to the 80th anniversary of his birth, his worldwide contributions in the fields of physics and engineering, and bringing glory to the Serbian people and the people of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
Another cleric, Dionysius Juričev, wrote in the Novi list that to kill children at least seven years of age was not a sin. [25] Phayer argues that "establishing the fact of genocide in Croatia prior to the Holocaust carries great historical weight for our study because Catholics were the perpetrators and not, as in Poland, the victims."