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・ S. R. Prabhakaran
・ S. R. Ramanan
・ S. R. Ramaswamy
・ S. R. Ramchandra Rao
・ S. R. Rana
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・ S. Rajam
・ S. Rajammal
・ S. Rajandram
・ S. Rajaraman
S. Rajaratnam
・ S. Rajaratnam (Ceylonese lawyer)
・ S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies
・ S. Rajasekaran
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・ S. Rajendra Babu
・ S. Rajendran
・ S. Rajendran (AIADMK politician)
・ S. Rajendran (CPI politician)
・ S. Rajeswara Rao
・ S. Ramachandra
・ S. Ramachandra Iyer
・ S. Ramachandran
・ S. Ramachandran Pillai
・ S. Ramadoss


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S. Rajaratnam : ウィキペディア英語版
S. Rajaratnam

Sinnathamby Rajaratnam, (25 February 1915 – 22 February 2006), was a Deputy Prime Minister of Singapore from 1980–85, a long-serving Minister and member of the Cabinet from 1959–88 and a short story writer. He was one of the pioneer leaders of independent Singapore as it achieved self-government in 1959 and later independence in 1965. He devoted much of his adult life to public service, and helped shape the mentality of Singaporeans on contemporary issues. One of the schools of Nanyang Technological University, is named the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in honour of him, as is the S. Rajaratnam block of his ''alma mater'', Raffles Institution.
==Early life==
The second child of Sabapathy Pillai Sinnathamby and his wife N. Annamah, both of Tamil descent, Rajaratnam was born in Vaddukoddai,(tholpuram) Jaffna, Sri Lanka. His father had wanted him to be born there for auspicious reasons after the premature death of his older brother. He was then brought back to Malaya and raised in Seremban and Selangor.
Rajaratnam studied in, St Paul's boys' school, Victoria Institution in Kuala Lumpur, and later in Raffles Institution in Singapore. In 1937, he went to King's College London to pursue a law degree. However, due to World War II, he was unable to receive funding from his family to continue his studies; instead, he turned to journalism to earn a living. He met his wife Piroska Feher, a Hungarian teacher while in London. In London, Rajaratnam also wrote a series of short stories which ''The Spectators J.B. Trend reviewed positively. Rajaratnam also gained the attention of George Orwell who then worked in the Indian Section of the BBC’s Eastern Service based in London and recruited Rajaratnam to contribute scripts for the network. Rajaratnam's short stories and radio plays were later published by Epigram Books in (''The Short Stories & Radio Plays of S. Rajaratnam'' ) (2011).〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.epigrambooks.sg/the-short-stories-radio-plays-of-s-rajaratnam/ )
He returned to Singapore in 1948 when he joined the ''Malayan Tribune'' and stopped writing short stories. In 1954, he joined ''The Straits Times'' as a journalist. He was bold in writing about the way Singapore was governed by the British.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.viweb.freehosting.net/SRajaratnam.htm )〕 This incurred the displeasure of the colonial government. His column, "I write as I please", attracted so much attention that he was called for questioning by the government.

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