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Raymond Nels Nelson : ウィキペディア英語版
Raymond Nels Nelson
Raymond Nels Nelson (September 2, 1921 - June 1, 1981) was bureau chief of ''The Providence Journal and Evening Bulletin'', and later a member of the staff of Senator Claiborne Pell. He was found murdered in his Washington, D.C. apartment on June 1, 1981 (Washington Post, June 2, 1981). The murder is still unsolved.〔D.C. Metropolitan Police Department, (Unsolved Murder Handbill, Raymond Nels Nelson ), May 30, 2007〕
==Life==

Born into a large working class Swedish family in which he boasted over 50 first cousins, Nelson didn’t speak English until the age of 6. His twin brother, Ralph Hilmer, died of spinal meningitis in 1930. Nelson began his career at The Providence Journal as a typist after his honorable discharge from the Navy. After rising to bureau chief he was tapped to join the staff of Claiborne Pell, a former officer with the Foreign Service and intelligence agent groomed for political office of Rhode Island.
Nelson managed Pell's first Senate campaign in 1960. Pell, considered a long-shot, became the first unendorsed aspirant to win a statewide primary in Rhode Island. When Pell was elected, Nelson went to Washington DC as his Administrative Assistant (AA). Commenting on the folly of staking his career on an unknown candidate, Nelson said: “There is absolutely nothing like being right when everybody thinks you’re wrong,” and called the campaign “the most fun I ever had.” (Providence Journal-Bulletin, June 2, 1981). In a 1971 interview in the Sunday Journal, Nelson prided himself on Pell’s Senate office’s open door policy and college intern program, at the time the largest and most active on the Hill. The article declared Nelson as “…a nice guy and a tough guy, and he knows when to be which.” (Providence Journal-Bulletin, June 2, 1981).
Nelson’s influence on the early drafting of Federally funded college aid, later known as ‘The Pell Grants’, is detailed in G. Wayne Miller’s biography on Pell, ''An Uncommon Man'': “I don’t believe he ever considered going to college,” his son, David C. Nelson, recalled. “He had both admiration and disdain for higher education, believing he was as smart as any college graduate. This may have been a class thing, because he identified himself as a ‘peasant’, and my grandfather referred to the ‘upper crust’ as ‘a bunch of crumbs held together by a little dough’. They almost lost their home several times during the Depression and were very traumatized during that period.”
“Recognizing the complexities of the new world that his children would inherit convinced Nelson of the value of a college degree, and he brought that perspective to his boss in their discussions. Like Pell, Nelson saw a model in the G.I. Bill.” (Page 156, ''An Uncommon Man'')
In 1974 Nelson abruptly left Pell’s office and joined the staff of the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration. Pell appointed another important member of his staff, Paul Goulding, as his new AA. (Providence Journal-Bulletin, April 10, 1974).
Nelson was seemingly a happily married family man with three children and a home in Bethesda, Maryland. In the early 1970s, Nelson changed his conservative style of attire and began dressing in the popular 'Carnaby Street' style of the era. In 1976, he openly declared himself a gay man and left his suburban home to live in the city. He remained good friends with his wife, whom he never divorced, and maintained contact with his children.

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