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The paper was established in 1932 as the afternoon edition of Helsingin Sanomat. [3] [4] [5] In 1949 it became a separate newspaper and was named Ilta-Sanomat.[5]Its sister paper is Helsingin Sanomat and both papers are part of Sanoma. [3]
Iltalehti was established in 1980 [3] as the afternoon edition of the newspaper Uusi Suomi. [citation needed] The Helsinki-based Alma Media is the owner of Iltalehti. [3] [4] Its sister newspapers are Aamulehti and Kauppalehti. [5] Iltalehti is published in tabloid format [6] six times per week. [7] [8] Petri Hakala served as the editor-in ...
Presidential elections were held in Finland in January and February 2012. The first round took place on 22 January 2012 with advance voting between 11 and 17 January. Since no candidate received a majority of the vote, a second round was held on 5 February, with advance voting between 25 and 31 January.
Alma Consumer publishes the national news media Iltalehti, regional newspapers Aamulehti, Satakunnan Kansa, and the local and town papers published in the Pirkanmaa region as well as in western and central Finland. The offering of the business segment also includes several digital consumer services related to lifestyle, travel, cooking and dating.
Presidential palace on the Independence Day 2011. The Independence Day Reception (Finnish: Itsenäisyyspäivän vastaanotto; Swedish: Självständighetsdagens festmottagning) is an annual event organised by the President of Finland at the Presidential Palace in Helsinki on 6 December, Finland's Independence Day.
Yle Uutiset. 21 July 2011. Humanism evenings, Erkki Toivanen: Healthy roots of a real prerequisite for internationalization (in Finnish) Erkki Toivanen's obituary in Helsingin Sanomat (in Finnish) (subscription required)
The Philadelphia Eagles weren't in top form, but the NFC's No. 2 seed had enough to handle the Green Bay Packers for a wild-card playoff win.
The Peasant March, a show of force in Helsinki by the Lapua Movement on 7 July 1930. In Finland, the far right (Finnish: Äärioikeisto) was strongest in 1920–1940 when the Academic Karelia Society, Lapua Movement, Patriotic People's Movement (IKL) and Vientirauha operated in the country and had hundreds of thousands of members. [1]