Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Het Laatste Nieuws (HLN; Dutch pronunciation: [ət ˌlaːtstə ˈnius]; in English The Latest News) is a Dutch-language newspaper based in Antwerp, Belgium. It was founded by Julius Hoste Sr. on 7 June 1888. It is now part of DPG Media, [2] and is the most popular newspaper in Flanders and Belgium.
Anneleen De Vos, Gentenaars maken van Euro een kunstwerk, Het Nieuwsblad (ill.), 09.04; Euro's worden kunstwerken, Het Volk, 29.03; Karel Verhoeven, Bij welke kunstenaar gaan we vandaag op bezoek, De Standaard,18.07; Katleen van de Sype, Met kunst van Hans de lucht in . Hof van Eden komt in nieuwe luchthaventerminal, Het Volk (ill.), 28.08
In 1987 the Van Thillo family, already the publishers of magazines Joepie (1973) and Dag Allemaal (1984), obtained 66 percent of shares in the Flemish publishing company Hoste NV, publisher of newspaper Het Laatste Nieuws and magazine Blik. In 1990 the rest of the shares were acquired and the company's name was changed to De Persgroep.
VRT NWS Journaal (formerly Het Journaal) is the main news program of the VRT, broadcast daily on the channels VRT 1 and VRT Canvas.. The first edition of Het Journaal was broadcast on 31 October 1953, the day that Flemish television began.
The Barneveldse Krant is a local daily newspaper in the Netherlands. It is printed, published, and distributed by Royal BDU in Barneveld . The newspaper is printed 6 times per week, with a focus on advertisements on Thursday and special weekend pages on Saturday.
Het Nieuws van den Dag voor Nederlandsch-Indië was a Dutch-language newspaper published on the island of Java in the Dutch East Indies (modern-day Indonesia). Originally called De Indische Courant (one of a number of papers with that name), it was published in Batavia from 1895 [ 1 ] or 1896 to 1900 [ 2 ] until it was renamed. [ 3 ]
The first issue of the Nieuwsblad van het Noorden appeared on 2 June 1888. Until 1997 its offices were in a 1903 Jugendstil building in the Gedempte Zuiderdiep designed by Gerrit Nijhuis . During the German occupation in World War II, the Nieuwsblad van het Noorden, like many other Dutch newspapers, published anti-Semitic and pro-German articles.
Editorial office of the Dagblad van het Noorden in Emmen in 2007. The Dagblad van het Noorden is a merger of the Nieuwsblad van het Noorden (founded in 1888), the Groninger Dagblad (founded by merger in 1992) [1] and the Drentse Courant (founded by merger in 1991). Its first edition was published on 2 April 2002.