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  • ✇Antiques and Vintage - flickr
  • M.J. Brusse, author of the novel Boefje Truus, Bob & Jan too!
    Truus, Bob & Jan too! posted a photo: Vintage Dutch postcard. Photo Coret, The Hague. From a booklet of postcards on the stage play Boefje/ Little Rascal, adapted for the stage by Jaap van der Poll after the novel (1903) by M.J. Brusse. The little rascal Jan Govers was played by Annie van Ees, his parents M. and Mrs. Govers, by Piet Bron and Mrs. Schwab-Welman. The play premiered in 1923, by 1935 Van Ees had played the part 500 times. In 1939 a film adaptation followed, directed by Dou
     

M.J. Brusse, author of the novel Boefje

Truus, Bob & Jan too! posted a photo:

M.J. Brusse, author of the novel Boefje

Vintage Dutch postcard. Photo Coret, The Hague. From a booklet of postcards on the stage play Boefje/ Little Rascal, adapted for the stage by Jaap van der Poll after the novel (1903) by M.J. Brusse. The little rascal Jan Govers was played by Annie van Ees, his parents M. and Mrs. Govers, by Piet Bron and Mrs. Schwab-Welman. The play premiered in 1923, by 1935 Van Ees had played the part 500 times.

In 1939 a film adaptation followed, directed by Douglas Sirk/ Detlef Sierck, shortly before he moved to Hollywood (he never saw the finished film). In the film, Van Ees again played the part of the rascal Jan Govers, while Bron played the father once more. Shooting took place at the The Hague based film studio complex Filmstad.

Marie Joseph (Rie) Brusse (Amsterdam, June 26, 1873 – Alkmaar, January 5, 1941) was a Dutch journalist and writer. His well-known book *Boefje* was adapted into a film in 1939. According to one of his sons, M.J. Brusse was known as the “prince of journalists.”

Brusse was an innovator in Dutch journalism. He was one of the first to describe situations and events from his own observational perspective. He was also one of the first to present the interviews and conversations he conducted in dialogue form. For his series of articles on Rotterdam sailors’ lodgings, he went undercover (1898). For decades, he wrote daily reports and serialized stories for the (then) Nieuwe Rotterdamsche Courant under the title “Onder de Menschen.” He wrote extensively about social injustices in the major cities and in rural areas. Many of his pieces were published in book form. A bestseller was his book *Het rosse leven en sterven van de Zandstraat* about Rotterdam’s red-light and sailors’ district around Zandstraat.

During the First World War, he reported extensively on the work of Dutch doctors and nurses in the Balkans, both in newspapers and in books. In 1915, he published *The Horrors of War in Serbia* about Dr. Arius van Tienhoven’s ambulance unit in Valjevo, and two years later, *A Dutch Hospital in a Bombed City* about Dr. Henri van Dijk’s work at the front in Monastir. In 2017, 100 years after its first publication, the First World War Study Center Foundation reissued that latter work.

In 1903, he published a serialized story titled Boefje in the Nieuwe Rotterdamsche Courant, also issued that year as novel. The play Boefje, adapted from Brusse's lovel and written by Jaap van der Poll, enjoyed great popularity and was performed hundreds of times with actress Annie van Ees in the title role, from 1923 onward. In 1939, Douglas Sirk directed a Dutch film adaptation starring the then 45-year-old Van Ees.

Brusse spent the last years of his life with his family in Groet (North Holland). He died in 1941 in a hospital in Alkmaar and is buried at the General Cemetery in Schoorl.

(Source: Dutch Wikipedia)

  • ✇Malay Mail - All
  • Trump approval drops to 35pc as Republican support weakens over living costs, Iran conflict
    WASHINGTON, May 20 — Donald Trump’s presidential approval rating fell to nearly its lowest level since he returned to the White House, hit by a drop in support among Republicans, according to a new Reuters/Ipsos poll.The four-day poll, which closed on Monday, showed 35 per cent of the country approved of Trump’s job performance, down a percentage point from a Reuters/Ipsos poll earlier this month and just above the low-point of his presidency - 34 per cent - seen
     

Trump approval drops to 35pc as Republican support weakens over living costs, Iran conflict

20 May 2026 at 02:59

Malay Mail

WASHINGTON, May 20 — Donald Trump’s presidential approval rating fell to nearly its lowest level since he returned to the White House, hit by a drop in support among Republicans, according to a new Reuters/Ipsos poll.

The four-day poll, which closed on Monday, showed 35 per cent of the country approved of Trump’s job performance, down a percentage point from a Reuters/Ipsos poll earlier this month and just above the low-point of his presidency - 34 per cent - seen last month. Trump started his current term in January 2025 with a 47 per cent approval rating.

The president’s popularity has taken a hit this year as Americans suffer from surging gasoline prices since Trump ordered strikes on Iran in February alongside Israel. The war shut down a large chunk of the global oil trade, sending prices at the pump for Americans about 50 per cent higher and raising concern among Trump’s Republican allies, who will be defending their congressional majorities in the November midterm elections.

Discontent is spreading within Trump’s party, with 21 per cent of Republicans saying they now disapprove of the president’s performance, compared to 5 per cent just after he took office in January 2025. Some 79 per cent of Republicans in the poll said Trump was doing a good job, down from 82 per cent earlier in the month and 91 per cent at the start of his term.

Republicans have soured in particular on Trump’s handling of the cost of living for Americans, an issue he promised to address during his campaign in 2024, after a bout of high inflation bedeviled his predecessor in office, Democrat Joe Biden. Only 47 per cent of Republicans give Trump a thumbs up on the cost of living, compared to 46 per cent who say he’s doing a bad job. Among Americans overall, just one in five approve of Trump’s stewardship over the cost of living.

The poll, which was conducted online, gathered responses from 1,271 adults nationwide and had a margin of error of 3 percentage points for Americans overall and 5 points for Republicans.

Republican political strategists said the downward turn in Trump’s popularity could be a sign of flagging enthusiasm among Republican voters ahead of the November elections, when control of both chambers of the US Congress will be up for grabs.

“The bigger concern I would have is that Republicans don’t seem to be as motivated to turn out in midterm elections as Democrats do right now,” said Jeanette Hoffman, a Republican consultant. Hoffman said it remained unclear how much impact Trump’s declining numbers might have, with four out of five Republicans still backing him. “80 per cent is still a pretty big number,” she said.

Trump’s support within his party has held more firmly for his immigration policy, another issue central to his 2024 presidential election campaign and which has animated core supporters, a group he refers to as the Make America Great Again movement, or MAGA. Some 82 per cent of Republicans approve of Trump’s handling of immigration, little changed from last year.

Trump also came to office on promises to avoid what he called “forever wars” like the US military interventions in Iraq and Afghanistan, which occupied US troops for most of the last quarter century.

He has argued that the conflict with Iran has been a success, touting strikes that killed the country’s leader and many senior politicians. A fragile ceasefire has been in place since April, but Iran has largely refused to allow oil tankers to pass through the Strait of Hormuz, which before the war saw a fifth of the global oil trade.

Just 62 per cent of Republicans approve of how Trump is handling the situation in Iran, while 28 per cent disapprove, according to the latest Reuters/Ipsos poll. Democrats overwhelmingly disapprove, as do two-thirds of independents.

Overall, just one in four respondents in the poll - and about half of Republicans - said the US military action in Iran has been worth it. — Reuters

 

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