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Antena 1 (Romanian pronunciation: [anˈtena ˈunu]) is a Romanian free-to-air television network owned by the Antena TV Group, part of the Intact Media Group.Its programming consists of television news programs, soap opera shows, football matches, entertainment programmes, movies and television series.
Its main news program is News Hour with CNN, broadcasting from Monday to Friday at 18:00 EET/EEST, while its other television programs that are notable for airing on Antena 3 CNN include Sinteza zilei, În gura presei, În fața națiunii, Decisiv, NewsRoom, Exces de putere, Descoperiți, Subiectiv and Gătit la costum, among others. [4]
PRO TV (Romanian pronunciation: [pro teˈve], often stylized as PRO•TV since 2017) is a Romanian free-to-air television network, launched on 1 December 1995 as the fourth private TV channel in the country (after TV SOTI, Antena 1, and the now-defunct, but online Tele7ABC).
Antena Stars is a Romanian television channel. It started broadcasting on 9 April 2007 and it is a part of the Intact group, owned by the family of the Romanian businessman and politician Dan Voiculescu. On 16 December 2013, at 19:02 EET, the television station changed its name from Antena 2 to Antena Stars. [1]
Le Mariage de mademoiselle Beulemans [a] is a three-act comedy play written in 1910 by the Belgian playwrights Frantz Fonson and Fernand Wicheler. [1] It is a bourgeois [2] situation comedy of manners and character, [3] and a satire [4] on the aspirations and issues of the lower middle class that emerged in Brussels in the early twentieth-century.
La Une (French pronunciation: [la yn]) is a Belgian national television channel, owned and operated by the French-language public-service broadcasting organization RTBF. La Une is the equivalent of Flemish station VRT 1 , of the Flemish broadcaster VRT .
Les tapisseries de l'Hôtel de Ville de Bruxelles (in French). Antwerp: De Sikkel. Culot, Maurice; Hennaut, Eric; Demanet, Marie; Mierop, Caroline (1992). Le bombardement de Bruxelles par Louis XIV et la reconstruction qui s'ensuivit, 1695–1700 (in French). Brussels: AAM éditions. ISBN 978-2-87143-079-7. De Vries, André (2003).
The cathedral's origins are obscure, but historians agree that, as early as the 9th century, a chapel dedicated to Saint Michael probably stood in its place, on what was the most important point of Brussels at the time; the crossroads of two major trade routes—a first one connecting the County of Flanders and Cologne, and another between Antwerp and Mons, then France.