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John Lake (journalist) : ウィキペディア英語版 | John Lake (journalist)
John Eric Lake (born February 18, 1930 in Albany, New York) was the sports editor of ''Newsweek'' until his mysterious disappearance in December 1967. ==Career at Newsweek== Lake had succeeded Dick Schaap in this role in February, 1964. He ascended to the position of sports editor of ''Newsweek'' having just turned 34 years old. Lake had previously worked with Red Smith on the ''New York Herald Tribune''. In his last year at the magazine he authored three cover stories (nine in four years) on such varied topics as "The Black Athlete", the Indy 500 and the World Series, a testament to his talent considering the hard-news topics competing for covers in the turbulent 1960s. Lake was admired by journalists and athletes alike for his style and professionalism and was considered among the upper pantheon of writers at ''Newsweek''. The author and screenwriter Peter Benchley, who edited the Radio/TV section at the time, admitted to being intimidated by him. Auto racing legend Mario Andretti called him the most prepared journalist from the national media that ever interviewed him. And boxing raconteur Bert Sugar recalls that it was John Lake that moved press conferences from showmanship to seriousness with a single question.
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