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Bruce West (newspaperman) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Bruce West (newspaperman) Bruce West (5 January 1912 - 16 September 1990) was a Canadian newspaper journalist and author. He was a columnist from the 1930s until the 1970s. As well as writing a daily column for the Toronto-based national newspaper, ''The Globe and Mail'', he wrote several books, narrated for television and wrote fiction for ''Maclean's'' magazine. == Early life ==
West was born and raised in a log house in Huntsville, Ontario. As a young man he began writing for the local weekly paper. He sent a story by telegraph to all the Toronto papers describing a brawl in the local tavern that sent two brothers to jail where they proceeded to wreck the premises. ''The Globe'', which later merged with ''The Mail and Empire'' to become ''The Globe and Mail'', printed it. West had a number of further stories published in ''The Globe''〔("Stories in the ashes: covering disaster in Lac-Mégantic" ). ''Ryerson Review of Journalism''.〕 and frequently travelled by train to Toronto to pitch story ideas. West was hired onto the staff of The Globe in 1934 and he became one of its best known reporters.
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