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Neue Osnabrücker Zeitung
German daily newspaper From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Neue Osnabrücker Zeitung (German pronunciation: [ˈnɔʏə ɔsnaˈbʁʏkɐ ˈtsaɪtʊŋ]; transl. "New Newspaper of Osnabrück"; also known as Neue OZ) is a regional daily newspaper published in Osnabrück, Germany.
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History and profile
Neue OZ was established in 1967[1] as a successor of Neue Tagespost.[2] The daily is headquartered in Osnabrück[3] and serves for the regions of Osnabrück and Emsland.[4] The paper has seven regional editions.[1]
Neue OZ is published in broadsheet format.[5] Its publisher is Neue Osnabrücker Zeitung GmbH,[6] which also publishes Rheiderland Zeitung.[7] Berthold Hamelmann is the editor-in-chief of Neue OZ.[8] The website of the daily was started in January 2000.[1] It also provides a Facebook-like website to its readers.[8]
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Circulation
The circulation of Neue OZ was 308,000 copies and had 820,000 readers in 2001.[5] Its circulation was 296,228 copies in the first quarter of 2006.[9] In 2008 the daily had 442,000 readers.[10] The paper had a circulation of 165,393 copies from Mondays to Fridays in the first quarter of 2009.[10] The website of Neue OZ had 22,525,000 monthly page views in 2011.[6] In December 2013, the circulation of the paper was 160,000 copies.[11] The same date its website had 3.83 million page views.[11]
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References
External links
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