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・ Larry Pressler
・ Larry Price
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・ Larry Probst
・ Larry Pugh
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・ Larry Questad
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・ Larry Quinn
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・ Larry R. Benfield
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Larry R. Heather
・ Larry R. Hicks
・ Larry R. Johnson
・ Larry R. Lawrence
・ Larry R. Marshall
・ Larry R. Smith
・ Larry R. Thompson
・ Larry R. Williams
・ Larry Rafferty
・ Larry Ragland
・ Larry Raines
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Larry R. Heather : ウィキペディア英語版
Larry R. Heather

Larry R. Heather (born in Vulcan, Alberta) is an aspiring politician and activist in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. He was in the past a perennial candidate for the Christian Heritage Party of Canada, and has also campaigned in provincial and municipal elections.
==Life and career==
He holds a Bachelor of Religious Education degree from Briercrest Bible College in Saskatchewan, a Bachelor of Arts degree in Religion from Rocky Mountain College, and a Graduate Certificate of Christian Studies from Regent College in Vancouver. A shipper/receiver and audio editor by profession, he is a member and performer in the Canadian Badlands Passion Play Society and a member of the Creation Science Association of Alberta. Heather previously hosted the radio program "Gospel Road" on AM1140 in High River. He has lived in the electoral district Calgary Southwest since 1963. He is a director with the (William Aberhart Historical Foundation ) started by former Alberta Social Credit Speaker of the House, Arthur J. Dixon.
Heather is best known as an anti-abortion activist. He was briefly detained in 1985 for throwing ketchup on abortion activist Henry Morgentaler, upon the latter's arrival in Calgary on a fundraising tour.〔''Globe and Mail'', 16 January 1985〕 He later protested against funding for the Calgary Birth Control Association in 1988, on the grounds that the organization provided abortion counselling.〔''Calgary Herald'', 21 December 1988〕 A few months after the Supreme Court of Canada struck down the nation's abortion law, he was quoted as saying, "a woman's womb is the most dangerous place to live in Canada".〔''Calgary Herald'', 29 January 1989〕 During a debate over a Calgary abortion clinic in 1991, he described Morgentaler as "a mass murderer who has murdered thousands of unborn babies".〔''Calgary Herald'', 10 October 1991〕
He has also been active in other socially conservative causes. During the 1989 municipal campaign, he described a local gay bar as a "major public health threat"〔''Calgary Herald'', 14 December 1989〕 and claimed that condoms in washroom coin machines would result in a "flood of promiscuity".〔''Calgary Herald'', 6 October 1989〕 In 2005, he criticized Conservative Party leader Stephen Harper for supporting civil union rights for homosexual couples.〔''Calgary Herald'', 28 January 2005〕
Heather is a member of Cedars of Lebanon Reforestation (CoL), a group which believes that the growth of cedars in Lebanon and Israel will signal the return of the Christian Messiah.〔http://www.clhrf.com/balfour/bruce.haaretz.htm〕 He spoke in defense of fellow CoL member Bruce Balfour in 2003, upon the latter's arrest by Lebanese authorities on charges of spying for Israel.〔''Canada AM'', 2 September 2003〕 The charges were not proven, and Balfour was released.
As of 2007, he was the 2nd vice-president of communication of the Alberta Social Credit Party. Heather is a Conservative Baptist, and for many years was president of Christians Concerned For Life in Calgary.〔()〕〔()〕 He has also written and performed gospel songs and is a playwright with three produced two-act dramas, including a Messianic Hanukkah Musical Tree of Light.〔()〕
One of his campaign documents in 2006 featured the headline, "Purge Supreme Court Activist Rulings!", accompanied by the image of a judge smashing his gavel on a husband-and-wife centerpiece. This was a reference to the recent legalization of same-sex marriage in Canada. His campaign website also featured images of aborted fetuses, which are juxtaposed with and likened to images of massacred children in Rwanda.〔()〕
In October 2007, he entered the campaign for the leadership of the Social Credit Party of Alberta. He lost to Len Skowronski in a vote in Red Deer on November 3, 2007. He ran for public school trustee in Calgary in 2010 and documented that election on his post-election website.〔(2010 post-election website )〕 Protesting a change in membership standards in the Christian Heritage Party, he ran in his home riding of Calgary Southwest as an independent in 2011.
He was a candidate for Mayor for the 2013 Calgary municipal elections and came in fifth out of nine candidates.〔http://www.calgaryherald.com/news/Longshots+line+take+Nenshi/8850308/story.html〕 He is a City Hall attender and frequent presenter from the public at both the committee level and Council public hearings.
In the 2015 Alberta provincial election he was a Social Credit candidate in Calgary Elbow against Education Minister incumbent Gordon Dirks.〔http://resultsnew.elections.ab.ca/orResultsPGE.cfm〕
In the 2015 Federal Election he ran in the electoral district of Calgary Heritage as an Independent Candidate, his sixth time on the ballot with Stephen Harper. 〔Calgary Herald, 20 October, 2015,pB11〕

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