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NRC Handelsblad was first published on 1 October 1970 after a merger of the Amsterdam newspaper Algemeen Handelsblad (founded 1828 by J.W. van den Biesen) and the Rotterdam Nieuwe Rotterdamsche Courant (founded 1844 by Henricus Nijgh). [4] The paper's motto is Lux et Libertas – Light (referring to the Age of Enlightenment) and Freedom.
Nieuwsblad van de stad en het district Roermond: 1856‑01‑05 De Gelderlander: Nijmegen: 111,311 Gelderland: DPG: De Batavier, Staat- en Letterkundig Weekblad: 1843‑08‑24 [8] De Stentor: Zwolle: 96,008 Gelderland (north), Overijssel (west) DPG: Overijsselsch Weekblad: 1790‑06‑05 Noordhollands Dagblad: Alkmaar: 95,767 North Holland ...
Heldring started to write columns in Nieuwe Rotterdamsche Courant (NRC) in 1953. From 1960 onwards, his column was called Dezer dagen (Our Days). In 1968, he became the editor-in-chief of the NRC, which merged with Algemeen Handelsblad in 1970 to form NRC Handelsblad. He stayed on as editor-in-chief until 1972.
The Council of Ministers of the Kingdom of the Netherlands proposed, by use of an Algemene maatregel van rijksbestuur , to task Governor George-Wout with responsibility for holding the elections. Minister of Interior and Kingdom Relations Ronald Plasterk stated that the "interim cabinet severely damaged the integrity of the electoral process ...
NRC Next (Dutch pronunciation: [ˌɛnɛrseːˈnɛkst]; stylized as nrc•next) was a Dutch daily newspaper published in the Netherlands by Mediahuis. The first edition was released on 14 March 2006. It was stopped in March 2021. NRC Next was a morning edition tabloid, and its primary target group are young higher educated people.
Current affairs show Nova / Den Haag Vandaag called it the "funniest election manifesto so far". [7] Hubert Smeets of NRC Handelsblad wrote a generally negative review of the book, in which he compared Fortuyn to a burglar and rejected his ideas as duplicitous. [35] "Things could get crowded with shopping carts and cardboard boxes in the ...
After a ceasefire deal paused 15 months of war in Gaza, hundreds of thousands of Palestinians returned to the rubble of their homes.
Marjon van Royen (born 24 October 1957 in The Hague) is a Dutch journalist and foreign correspondent for the NOS Journaal, the Dutch language public radio and television news channel. She started her career as a freelance journalist in Italy in the 1980s.