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・ Bernard Klatt
・ Bernard Kleiman
・ Bernard Knight
・ Bernard Knitter
・ Bernard Knowles
・ Bernard Knox
・ Bernard Koenen
・ Bernard Kohn
・ Bernard Kolélas
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・ Bernard Kops
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・ Bernard Kouchner
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Bernard Krisher
・ Bernard Kroger
・ Bernard Krone Holding
・ Bernard Kryszkiewicz
・ Bernard Kręczyński
・ Bernard L. Austin
・ Bernard L. Diamond
・ Bernard L. Kowalski
・ Bernard L. Oser
・ Bernard L. Oser Award
・ Bernard L. Schwartz
・ Bernard L. Schwartz Communication Institute
・ Bernard L. Shaw
・ Bernard L. Strehler
・ Bernard Labourdette


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Bernard Krisher : ウィキペディア英語版
Bernard Krisher

Bernard Krisher (
* August 9, 1931) was born in Frankfurt and left Germany in 1937 at the age of six via Paris and Lisbon eventually settling in New York in January 1941 with his parents. At age 12, Krisher published his own magazine and edited his high school and Queens College newspapers. Later he worked for the New York Herald Tribune and the New York World-Telegram & Sun. After graduating from Queens College Krisher was drafted into the Army during the Korean War but due to his German language skills was stationed in Heidelberg at the US Army's press and information division. In 1958 he visited Japan for the first time. From 1959 to 1960 Krisher spent a year doing Japanese area and language studies at Columbia University as a Ford Foundation Advanced International Reporting Fellow. He joined ''Newsweek'' 's Tokyo bureau first as a stringer and eventually became bureau chief until 1980.
In 1975 he was the first and only journalist ever do a to a one-on-one interview with the Japanese Emperor Hirohito (Tenno Showa).〔http://www.apnewsarchive.com/1989/In-Only-Exclusive-Interview-Emperor-Spoke-of-Concern-for-the-Japanese-People/id-222cfb3f51a427a2ebf043f7742e5e09〕 He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
After retiring from Newsweek, Krisher joined Fortune Magazine as its Tokyo correspondent and at the same time joined Shinchosha, a large Japanese publishing company as its chief editorial advisor. There he founded the groundbreaking〔Secrets, Sex, and Spectacle: The Rules of Scandal in Japan and the United States By Mark D. West〕 and wildly successful weekly ''(FOCUS )'' magazine in 1981. Focus magazine has reached peak editions of up to 20 million in its heyday.〔:ja:FOCUS
Bernard Krisher is the Far East representative of MIT's Media Lab.〔http://sap.mit.edu/resources/portfolio/cambodia/〕 As such he collaborated with Nicholas Negroponte who was also one of the first to sponsor a school in Cambodia in Krisher's signature school building project.〔Learning to Change the World: The Social Impact of One Laptop Per Child By Charles Kane, Walter Bender, Jody Cornish, Neal Donahue. Macmillan, New York, 2012, ISBN 978-0-230-33731-2〕
== Philanthropy ==
In 1993, Krisher founded and became chairman of American Assistance for Cambodia, a non-profit organization aimed at giving hope to the Cambodian people following the extermination of 2 million Cambodians during the Khmer Rouge regime. Krisher launched the charity Sihanouk Hospital Center of HOPE which treats the poor for free. By 2013 he has built over 550 schools, many of them with matching funds from the World Bank and Asian Development Bank. He also founded and publishes "The Cambodia Daily", a newspaper dedicated to setting up a sound foundation for a free press and training journalists. In 2008, Krisher also founded the (''The Burma Daily'' ) which aims to replicate the ideals and success of ''The Cambodia Daily''.

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