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Magazine Głos (''The Voice'' in the Polish language; (:ˈɡwɔs)) is a name used today and throughout history by a number of different Polish language journals: ;At present * ''Głos (1991)'', a socio-political weekly magazine headed by Antoni Macierewicz * ''Głos – Tygodnik Nowohucki'', a weekly magazine founded in 1957, published in Kraków ;Throughout history * ''Głos (1886–1905)'', a social, literary and political weekly review published in Warsaw under Partitions * ''Głos Demokraty'', a weekly launched in Przemyśl during Vistula–Oder Offensive (1944–45) * ''Głos Drohobycko-Borysławsko-Samborski'', from Drohobycz in interwar Poland (1927–34) * ''Głos Gródecki'', from Gródek in partitioned Poland (1890) * ''Głos Jarosławski'', bi-weekly published in Jarosław in the interwar Poland (1893–95, 1927–32) * ''Głos Jasielski'', from Jasło, a Catholic bi-weekly before World War I * ''Głos Katolicko-Polski'', bi-weekly in partitioned Poland (1901) * ''Głos Lwowa'', a literary and socio-economic magazine from Lwów in interwar Poland (1926) * ''Głos Polski'', an art, literary and cultural magazine in interwar Poland (1927–28) * ''Głos Pracy'', a trade magazine for crafts and industry published in interwar Poland (1928) * ''Głos Przemyski'', a Saturday socio-economic weekly/bi-weekly from Przemyśl in partitioned Poland * ''Głos Rzeszowski'', a Saturday weekly published by Edward Arvay in early 20th-century Poland (1897–1920) * ''Głos Wolny'', a nonpartisan bi-weekly published by Jan Obaliński in Rzeszów in interwar Poland * ''Głos (1977–1981)'', an underground newspaper published in communist Poland ==References== * WiMBP (2013), (Wirtualna Kolekcja Czasopism Regionalnych ) (Collection of Regional Periodicals ). Dział Komputeryzacji Procesów Bibliotecznych WiMBP, Rzeszów. Retrieved September 19, 2013. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Głos」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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