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New Zealand Woman's Weekly (1932 to 2020, since 2020) 1940s. New Zealand Gardener (since 1944) 1970s. Art New Zealand (since 1977) Art News Aotearoa, originally Art News New Zealand (since 1979) 1980s. Cuisine (since 1986) Fashion Quarterly (1980 to 2020, since 2020) Metro (since 1981) New Zealand Geographic (since 1989) North & South (since ...
On 18 April 2005, Seek was floated on the Australian Securities Exchange with a market capitalisation of $587 million. [4] In May 2022, it moved its head office to a newly-constructed building in Cremorne, Victoria. [5] In June 2024, SEEK sold its holdings in the Latin American job-boards OCC (Mexico) and Catho (Brazil). [6]
Student newspapers published in New Zealand (8 P) Pages in category "Newspapers published in New Zealand" The following 50 pages are in this category, out of 50 total.
The New Zealand Advertiser and Bay of Islands Gazette was New Zealand's second newspaper; [1] the New Zealand Gazette and Wellington Spectator had first been published in Wellington on 18 April 1840. [2] The Advertiser was a forerunner to the government's New Zealand Gazette as it was used by the colonial administration to publish official ...
New Zealand Media and Entertainment (abbreviated NZME) is a New Zealand newspaper, radio and digital media business. It was launched in 2014 as the formal merger of the New Zealand division of APN News & Media, APN New Zealand; The Radio Network, is formerly part of the Australian Radio Network; and GrabOne, one of New Zealand's biggest ecommerce websites.
Stuff Limited (previously Fairfax New Zealand) is a privately held news media company operating in New Zealand. It operates Stuff, the country's largest news website, and owns nine daily newspapers, including New Zealand's second and third-highest circulation daily newspapers, The Post and The Press, and the highest circulation weekly, Sunday Star-Times. [1]
The New Zealand Gazette Extraordinary, 6 November 1918. The New Zealand Gazette (Māori: Te Kāhiti o Aotearoa), commonly referred to as Gazette, is the official newspaper of record the New Zealand Government (government gazette), serving as the medium by which decisions of Government are promulgated. Published since 1840, it is the longest ...
The Whangarei Comet and Northern Advertiser was founded in 1875 as a weekly paper by George Alderton and, despite a small population which led to a prediction the paper "would go up like a comet, and come down like a stick", [3] the paper flourished and within two years had expanded to 12 pages and become the Northern Advocate and General Advertiser, with a small section printed in Māori. [3]