About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 27. Chapters: Juan Carlos Blumberg, Adolfo Pedernera, Eduardo Salvio, Ricardo Montaner, Roberto Acuna, Marcelo Barticciotto, Jose Eulogio Garate, Leonardo Fernandez, Humberto Maschio, Raimundo Orsi, Leandro Caruso, Hector Yazalde, Jorge Asis, Gustavo Adrian Lopez, Graciela Fernandez Meijide, Azucena Villaflor, Norberto Raffo, Ignacio Carlos Gonzalez, Juan Carlos Munoz, Edelmiro Julian Farrell, Angel Clemente Rojas, Manuel Seoane, Carlos Squeo, Patricio Margetic, Dario Siviski, Miguel Angel Santoro, Roberto Perfumo, Mario das Neves, Alberto Ohaco, Felix Loustau, Carmelo Giuliano, Adriana Varela, Roberto Mouzo, Raul Bernao, Juan Hector Guidi, Carlos Casteglione, Walter Coyette, Sergio Zanetti, Santiago Lovell, Adrian Hernan Gonzalez, Roberto Ferreiro, Pedro Ochoa, Omar Zarif, Eduardo Commisso, Hugo Perez, Juan Jose Castro, Leonardo Ricatti, Marcelo Ojeda, Cristian Grabinski, Pablo Alejandro Izaguirre, Angel Bossio, Zoilo Canavery, Carlos Arano, Francisco Garraffa, Hernan Fredes, Natalio Pescia, Salvador Debenedetti, Pablo Echarri, Fabian Bordagaray, Abel Ernesto Herrera, Juan Sanchez Sotelo, Marcos Ramirez, Ivan Marcone, Eladia Blazquez, Hector Varela. Excerpt: Juan Carlos Blumberg (born in 1945) is an Argentine textile entrepreneur and victims' rights advocate who rose to prominence following the 2004 murder of his son, Axel Blumberg. Blumberg was born in Avellaneda, Buenos Aires. He enrolled at the National Technological University and pursued a degree in textile engineering, though he reportedly left in 1966 to pursue an interest in traditional Lithuanian dancing. Blumberg publicly referred to himself as an "engineer" graduated in Reutlingen University (Germany), although a journalistic investigation revealed on 15 June 2007 that this claim is false. Blumberg lost his son Axel Blumberg, an engineering student, after a kidnapping...