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・ Buenos Aires Cricket & Rugby Club
・ Buenos Aires Cricket Club Ground
・ Buenos Aires Customs
・ Buenos Aires District
・ Buenos Aires District, Buenos Aires
・ Buenos Aires District, Morropón
・ Buenos Aires District, Picota
・ Buenos Aires English High School
・ Buenos Aires Esperanto Association
・ Buenos Aires Football Club
・ Buenos Aires Football Club (1886)
・ Buenos Aires Grand Prix
・ Buenos Aires Grand Prix (motor racing)
・ Buenos Aires Great Southern Railway
・ Buenos Aires Hardcore
Buenos Aires Herald
・ Buenos Aires Hockey Association
・ Buenos Aires House of Culture
・ Buenos Aires International Airport
・ Buenos Aires International Book Fair
・ Buenos Aires International Christian Academy
・ Buenos Aires International Festival of Independent Cinema
・ Buenos Aires Japanese Gardens
・ Buenos Aires Jazz Festival
・ Buenos Aires Lake
・ Buenos Aires Lake (Bolivia)
・ Buenos Aires Lawn Tennis Club
・ Buenos Aires leaf-eared mouse
・ Buenos Aires Marathon
・ Buenos Aires me mata


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Buenos Aires Herald : ウィキペディア英語版
Buenos Aires Herald

The ''Buenos Aires Herald'' is an English language daily newspaper from Buenos Aires, Argentina. Their slogan is ''A World of Information in a few words''.
==History==
Under the original name of ''The Buenos Ayres Herald'', it was founded on 15 September 1876 by Scottish immigrant William Cathcart. At first it consisted of a single sheet with advertising on the front and mostly shipping coverage on the back. When Cathcart sold the paper a year later, it changed from a weekly to a daily format, focusing on more typical newspaper content, but always with a large shipping section. It fast became the main source of local information for the English-speaking population of Buenos Aires.
In 1925 the Rugeroni brothers, Junius Julius y Claude Ronald bought the paper.〔(buenosairesherald.com )〕
The Evening Post Publishing Company from Charleston, South Carolina, USA, purchased a controlling interest in Junius Rugeroni's holdings in 1968. In 1998, the Evening Post Publishing Company became the sole owner of the newspaper.〔(buenosairesherald.com )〕 Starting on 15 December 2007, the Argentine businessman Sergio Szpolski, bought the newspaper and added it to his multimedia holdings. Almost a year later, Szpolski sold it to Amfin, which publishes the financial newspaper ''Ámbito Financiero''.
During the military dictatorship in Argentina (1976-1983) ''The Buenos Aires Herald'', under the direction of the British journalist Robert Cox, was the only local media that told the story of the forced disappearances of people from the opposition to the regime. Due to this, Cox was detained for a while and his family received threats, and an attempt to kidnap his wife was made. This forced him to leave the country with his family in 1979.

Columnist Eric Ehrmann wrote for the paper during the transition from dictatorship to democracy (1985-1990) under the editorships of Dan Newland, James Nielsen and others. His articles discussed the proliferation risks associated with the controversial Condor (Tammuz) medium range guided missile system being built by Argentina and Iraqi Baath Party strongman Saddam Hussein along with European companies, and controversial dual-use issues that caused Argentina to ratify the Nuclear Non-proliferation treaty. Ehrmann was simultaneously writing columns about Southern Cone politics for the American "Christian Science Monitor," and "National Review."

The newspaper's opposition against the military regime between 1976 and 1983 led to constant threats. Staff writer Andrew Graham-Yooll was forced into exile.〔(ARGENTINA Press, Media, TV, Radio, Newspapers ) Press Reference〕 At the time Yooll was simultaneously writing for the British ''Daily Telegraph''. Yool returned to ''The Buenos Aires Herald'' as editor-in-chief in 1994.
In January of 2014, Damián Pachter, a journalist for the Herald's online version, broke the news of prosecutor Alberto Nisman's death to the country on Twitter. Nisman died in mysterious circumstances the day before he was set to give details at Congress regarding his legal charges against President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner for allegedly covering up the investigation into the 1994 AMIA Jewish community centre bombings Pachter's source remains unknown, and the journalist fled Argentina for Israel subsequently, saying he feared for his life.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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