|
George Charles Stewart Bain, , DLitt, ( ) was a Canadian journalist, and the first to be named a national affairs correspondent at any Canadian newspaper. Bain was described by Allan Fotheringham as being "the wittiest columnist ever to grace Ottawa," and Doug Fisher said that Bain was “the closest to the perfect columnist” and the columnist he tried to emulate. ==Career== Born in Toronto, Ontario, he started with the ''Toronto Telegram'' at the age of sixteen, eventually becoming a general reporter and City Hall reporter. During World War II, he served with the Royal Canadian Air Force as a bomber pilot. After the war, in 1945, he joined ''The Globe and Mail'' as a general reporter for City Hall and Provincial Affairs in October 1945. He became a National Affairs reporter and columnist in 1952, and then served as a foreign correspondent in London (19571960) and Washington (19601964) before returning to the Ottawa bureau. From 1964 to 1969, he also appeared on ''Doug Fisher and ...'' and ''Question Period'' on CJOH-TV. Bain did not shy away from controversy in his writing. He was an early opponent of the ''War Measures Act'' when it was invoked by Pierre Trudeau as a response to the October crisis, and he later took Trudeau to task for swearing in the House of Commons and not being truthful about it afterward in what came to be known as the fuddle duddle incident. Trudeau, however, was the first to ask, "Where's Bain?" when Bain left the ''Globe'' for the ''Star'' in 1973. In his column (which appeared five times a week in the ''Globe''), he occasionally offered comic relief for his readers under the title of ''Letter from Lilac'', ostensibly written by Clem Watkins, Jr. of Lilac, Saskatchewan (where the local branches of the Royal Canadian Legion and the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament had a joint membership arrangement).〔''Letters from Lilac'', p. 128〕 He was characterized as "a rural Pepys reporting on the state of the nation." In one such letter, which was an allegory for the 1960s controversy over the unification of the Canadian Forces, Clem reported on the Lilac town council's move to unify its police, fire and ambulance services: In 1973, he joined the ''Toronto Star'', initially as an editorial page editor, and then as European correspondent (19741977), and Ottawa columnist (19771981). In 1981, he returned to ''The Globe and Mail'' to write a weekly column (and, from 1985, a monthly column for its ''Report on Business Magazine'') which lasted until 1987, when he left after a protracted and bitter exchange with Editor-in-Chief Norman Webster. The ''Globe'' refused to print his final column, but it subsequently appeared in the ''Toronto Sun''. He continued to write his "Media Watch" column for ''Maclean's'', wine pieces for ''Toronto Life'' and ''enRoute'', and weekly political commentary for ''The Chronicle Herald'' and ''The Mail-Star'' in Halifax, Nova Scotia. In 1979, he became director of the School of Journalism at University of King's College. He retired in 1985, settling in Mahone Bay. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「George Bain (journalist)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|