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・ Głogówek
・ Głogówiec
・ Głogówko
・ Głogówko Królewskie
・ Głogówko, Greater Poland Voivodeship
・ Głogówko, Lower Silesian Voivodeship
・ Głojsce
・ Głomno
・ Głomsk
・ Głos
・ Głos (1886–1905)
・ Głos (1991)
・ Głos Ludu
・ Głos wolny wolność ubezpieczający
・ Głos znad Pregoły
Głos – Tygodnik Nowohucki
・ Głoska, Lower Silesian Voivodeship
・ Głosków, Garwolin County
・ Głosków, Piaseczno County
・ Głosków-Letnisko
・ Głotowo
・ Głowa, Łódź Voivodeship
・ Głowacki
・ Głowaczewo, Kołobrzeg County
・ Głowaczewo, Wałcz County
・ Głowaczowa
・ Głowaczów
・ Głowaczów, Lower Silesian Voivodeship
・ Głowaczów, Masovian Voivodeship
・ Głowbity


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Głos – Tygodnik Nowohucki : ウィキペディア英語版
Głos – Tygodnik Nowohucki

The ''Głos – Tygodnik Nowohucki'' is a weekly magazine published in Kraków, Poland, focused on regional news concerning the largest and most populous city district of Nowa Huta. It features weekly editorials about politics, economy, culture, history of the city and the arts. ''Głos'' (The Voice) is published in color by Graf-Press media group in a tabloid format and sold each Wednesday with the local distribution of 18,000 copies. It can be purchased in kiosks and other commercial outlets for 1.5 zloty. Its main source of revenue is advertising. The editor-in-chief of ''Głos'' is Jan Franczyk.〔(Głos – Tygodnik Nowohucki at encyklopedia.interia.pl )〕〔(''Głos – Tygodnik Nowohucki'' online )〕
==History==
Between 1957 and 1991 the ''Głos'' magazine – established in 1957 – was owned by the Lenin Steelworks since renamed to Tadeusz Sendzimir Steel Mill and bought by Mittal Steel. In 1991 the Głos weekly was privatized, and its name changed from ''Głos Nowej Huty'' to ''Głos – Tygodnik Nowohucki''.〔(Głos Nowej Huty - kronika.com.pl )〕〔(Głos Nowej Huty - www.wir.e12.pl )〕 Currently the magazine is no longer subsidized, although the steelworks and the district authorities often purchase up to several pages in order to present their own information and advertise new employment opportunities for thousands of prospective factory workers. Following the collapse of communism the weekly ''Głos'' begun publishing articles on religion for the first time. It produced a series of stories on the local Mogiła Abbey, a Gothic monastery of the Cistercians erected in the 13th century in Nowa Huta (formerly, village of Mogiła),〔Jerzy Aleksander Karnasiewicz, ''Nowa Huta. Okruchy życia i meandry historii'' ((英語:Nowa Huta. Crumbs of Life and the Meanders of History)), photo anthology; Wydawnictwo Towarzystwo Slowaków w Polsce, Kraków, 2003; ISBN 83-89186-67-5〕 which appeared in the years 1998, 1999 and 2000.〔(Łukasz Stanek, Delft University, Nowa Huta as a case study. )〕
Since 2006 the Głos includes a supplement published for the youth, and co-edited by students from the local high-schools under the direction of Agnieszka Żuchowicz and Tomasz Korczynski. The initiative is part of a program called Equal, connecting 16 secondary schools within the city district, and run by Partnerstwo Inicjatyw Nowohuckich society.〔 , reprint from ( Życie Krakowa )〕

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