jancancook
Posts : 1136 Join date : 2011-01-02
| Subject: Nevertheless, Scheveningen always had a strong identity of its own Wed Mar 30, 2011 3:17 pm | |
| Nevertheless, Scheveningen always had a strong identity of its own. For instance, it had its own soccer club, playing in the highest Dutch division ("Scheveningen Holland Sport" was its name). In the course of the second half of the former century this club was forced to merge with ADO Den Haag. Veronica ship "The Norderney", Scheveningen, April 7, 1973 From April 21, 1960 [4] the pirate radio station Radio Veronica [5] broadcast its programmes from an anchorage in the North Sea about four miles off the Scheveningen coast. It was joined by Radio Noordzee Internationaal (RNI) in 1970 [6] and the relaunched Radio Caroline in late 1972 [7]. When the Netherlands ratified The Treaty of Strasbourg on September 1, 1974 [8], Veronica applied for legal status and became the VOO, Caroline moved anchorage to the English coast, and RNI closed down completely [9]. Memorable episodes during this period included the stranding of Radio Veronica's ship the Norderney which lost its anchor in a storm and ran aground on Scheveningen beach on April 2, 1973 and a firebomb attack on RNI's ship the Mebo Two on 15 May 1971. sms text messaging onlinegiochi gratis | |
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