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・ Die Wahrheit übers Lügen
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・ Die Watching
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・ Die Weißen Blätter
・ Die Welt
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Die Weltwoche
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・ Die Wicherts von nebenan
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・ Die with your boots on
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・ Die Woch
・ Die Woche
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Die Weltwoche : ウィキペディア英語版
Die Weltwoche

''Die Weltwoche'' (meaning "The World Week" in English) is a Swiss weekly magazine based in Zürich. Founded in 1933, it has been privately owned by Roger Köppel since 2006.
The magazine's regular columnists of note include the former president of the Social Democratic Party of Switzerland, Peter Bodenmann, as well as Christoph Mörgeli MP, a leading figure of the right wing of the nationalist Swiss People's Party, and cultural and social commentator Alexander, Count von Schönburg-Glauchau.
The magazine's editorial stance under Köppel is considered to range between economic liberalism and neo-conservatism - regularly along the lines of the Swiss People's Party as critics allege.〔"In der Heimat wie im Ausland sorgt freilich vor allem die publizistische Unterstützung der 'Weltwoche' für die rechtsliberale Schweizer Volkspartei (SVP) unter ihrem Chef Christoph Blocher regelmäßig für Aufregung." / "At home as well as abroad the Weltwoche often creates controversy, above all else, for its support of the right-wing, economically-liberal Swiss People's Party under the leadership of Christoph Blocher." Der Standard, 5 March 2008 ()〕〔("'Weltwoche' stürzte unter Köppel ab" ) ''NZZ am Sonntag'', 21 July 2006〕
==History==
Founded 1933〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://guides.nyu.edu/content.php?pid=74313&sid=704214 )〕 as a weekly newspaper in the mold of French weeklies, it started off somewhat sympathetic to the Nazi government of Germany, but soon joined the other Swiss media in vigorously opposing it.
During the 1980s, the newspaper was led by Rudolf Bächtold and Jürg Ramspeck and owned by Jean Frey Verlag. ''Weltwoche'' remained a fixture of the intellectual environment in Switzerland, publishing articles, columns and interviews on a wide range of topics, including politics, the economy, culture and science, generally from a center-left perspective. In 1987, Jean Frey Verlag was bought up by notorious entrepreneur and fraudster Werner Rey. After the collapse of Rey's holdings in 1991, the publisher was sold to Curti Medien Holding AG, which in 1996 passed to ''Basler Zeitung''. The last editor in chief before the takeover by Köppel was Fredy Gsteiger (1997 to 2001), under whom the newspaper pursued a general political position of center-left liberalism.
Köppel became editor-in-chief in 2001, launching a complete redesign, replacing the broadsheet by a magazine format. Jean Frey AG was now bought by Tito Tettamenti. Köppel replaced most of the editors and re-positioned the magazine as neoliberal and right-wing conservative. In 2003, the new ''Weltwoche'' began to openly support Christoph Blocher and his Swiss People's Party. This resulted in a decline in sales, and Köppel was replaced by Simon Heusser, in 2005 followed by Jürg Wildberger.
In 2006, the ''Weltwoche'' was detached from Jean Frey AG, now published under its own label ''Weltwoche Verlag AG''.
The magazine was bought by Köppel, who now also returned as editor-in-chief, resulting in a renewed exodus of much of the editors. Since 2006, the paper has been run by Köppel directly and has acquired a thoroughly right-wing conservative focus.

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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