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・ Úgaine Mór
・ Úherce
・ Úherce (Louny District)
・ Úherce (Plzeň-North District)
・ Úherčice
・ Úhlava
・ Úhlejov
・ Úholičky
・ Úhonice
・ Úhorná
・ Úhořilka
・ Úhošť
・ Úhřetice
・ Úhřetická Lhota
・ Új Előre
Új Kelet
・ Új Magyar Szó
・ Új név a régi ház falán
・ Új Szó
・ Újbarok
・ Újbuda
・ Újbuda FC
・ Újbuda–központ (Budapest Metro)
・ Újcsanálos
・ Újdombrád
・ Újezd
・ Újezd (Beroun District)
・ Újezd (Domažlice District)
・ Újezd (Olomouc District)
・ Újezd (Zlín District)


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Új Kelet : ウィキペディア英語版
Új Kelet

''Új Kelet'' (Hungarian translation: "New East") is a Zionist Jewish newspaper in the Hungarian language which first appeared in Kolozsvár (Cluj) in Transylvania, Romania, and was later revived in Tel Aviv, Israel.
On the initiative of Chajjim Weiszburg, a leader of the Zionist movement, ''Uj Kelet'' was launched as a weekly on December 19, 1918. It become a daily in 1920. The first editor was Béla Székely, who was succeeded in 1919 by Ernõ Márton.
From 1927 until the end of its Transylvanian period, the editor was Ferenc Jámbor. After the Hungarian annexation of Cluj in 1940, the Horthy regime banned the paper because of its strong Zionist line. Márton emigrated to Palestine (Eretz Israel) after World War II, and in 1948, with David Schon the paper reappeared under his editorship in Tel Aviv.
Among the known writers in the newspaper, in the period of his concert in Israel, there were Alexander Sauber, Rudolf Kastner, Yossef Lapid, Ephraim Kishon, Otto Rappaport, Elemer Diamant, David Drori.
Uj Kelet



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「Új Kelet」の詳細全文を読む



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