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The journal was established on 16 June 1831. During World War II, the journal was published separately but under the same title by both the Belgian government in exile and the occupying authority. In order to distinguish between the two, the government-in-exile version is retrospectively entitled Belgian Official Journal (Exile Government). [1]
La Meuse was launched in 1856. [1] [2] The paper has its headquarters in Liège [3] and is owned by the Rossel group which also owns Le Soir and La Lanterne, among others.[4] [5] La Meuse is published by Rossel et Cie S.A. [6] in tabloid format. [4]
The Laval University Sports and Physical Education Complex, Pavillon de l'éducation physique et des sports de l'Université Laval PEPS is a sports complex located in Quebec City, Quebec, on the Université Laval campus.
Official Journal may refer to the public journal of several nations and other political organizations: Belgian Official Journal; Journal Officiel de la République Française; Official Journal of the European Patent Office; Official Journal of the European Union
Since 1998, the journal has been available online via the EUR-Lex service. [citation needed] On 1 July 2013, published issues of the Official Journal began to have legal value only in electronic form, per Article 5 of Regulation (EU) No 216/2013. [3] [4] From this date, the printed version has lost its legal value. [5]
Advertising poster with King Leopold II by designer E. Flasschoen. La Dernière Heure was established on 19 April 1906. [1] [2] The paper has its headquarters in Brussels and has a liberal stance without any political affiliation. [1]
In 1997 the then loss-making Le Peuple was taken over by the Rossel media group (along with two other socialist dailies, Le Journal de Charleroi and La Wallonie). In the following year these three dailies were merged into Le Matin, but Rossel withdrew from the cooperation. [18] Publication ended in March 1998 following financial problems. [2]
Metro was a free newspaper in Belgium, distributed on working days and aiming in particular at 18 to 44 year-old urban, active, mobile students and commuters. [1] Separate Dutch and French-language versions, each with its own content, were according to the area's language(s) available in railway stations, subway stations, universities, etc. from dedicated stands that had the colour of the ...