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Raymond Heard : ウィキペディア英語版 | Raymond Heard
Raymond Heard is a Canadian-South African journalist, editor, media executive and political strategist. He was responsible for making Nelson Mandela the first living honorary Canadian in 2001. Heard is President of Toronto-based Heard-Cosgrove Communications, whose clients include some of Canada's largest companies. He is a contributor to Canada's ''National Post'' and the Huffington Post and appears on the CTV News Channel, CBC News Network, Global News and formerly appeared on the defunct Sun News Network as a political pundit. In Washington, his two scoops were that Nixon would visit China, and Lyndon Johnson would abdicate. ==Early life and education== A white South African by birth, Heard, whose parents, George and Vida Heard, were prominent liberal journalists, was a political reporter for the ''Rand Daily Mail'' from 1955 until 1960. On the ''Mail'', he disclosed that liberal members of the opposition United Party would break away to launch the Progressive Party. In 1960, Heard graduated with a BA Hons. in political science at the University of the Witwatersrand (Johannesburg) and then spent a year at Harvard on a Frank Knox Fellowship, where his teachers included Henry Kissinger and John Kenneth Galbraith. While there, he wrote an article on the political situation in his homeland for the ''Harvard Crimson'' in which he described apartheid as "a combination of hatred, fear, and ignorance."〔("South African Describes Verwoerd's Republic" ), ''Harvard Crimson'', October 28, 1960〕
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