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Abdus Salam (Editor) : ウィキペディア英語版
Abdus Salam (editor)

Abdus Salam (2 August 1910 - 13 February 1977) was one of the most well-known newspaper editors of Pakistan. He edited ''The Pakistan Observer'', which was later renamed ''The Bangladesh Observer'' after the liberation of Bangladesh. He was the editor of The Pakistan Observer from 1949 to 1972.
==Early life==
Abdus Salam was born on 2 August 1910 in the village South Dharmapur in the Chhagalnaiya Upazila (subdistrict) of Feni District in Bangladesh.
Salam had earned reputation as one of the best students of the country with top scholarships from Matriculation to MA of Calcutta University. He won the Tony Memorial Gold Medal for securing the first position in the BA in English Examination at Presidency College, Kolkata. After a brief period as a Professor of English at Feni College, he served in many government departments during the British period, including Income Tax, Civil Supplies and Audit. In Pakistan he became the Deputy Accountant General, but left government service because of its anti-Bengali policies, and joined The Pakistan Observer.

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