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The Globe and Mail is a Canadian newspaper printed in five cities in western and central Canada.With a weekly readership of approximately 2 million in 2015, it is Canada's most widely read newspaper on weekdays and Saturdays, although it falls slightly behind the Toronto Star in overall weekly circulation because the Star publishes a Sunday edition, whereas the Globe does not.
Robyn Doolittle (born 13 September 1984) is a Canadian investigative reporter for The Globe and Mail. At the Toronto Star, she became well-known for covering Toronto mayor Rob Ford's political and personal life, which led to her authoring the biography Crazy Town: The Rob Ford Story (2014).
Clement George McCullagh (March 16, 1905 – August 5, 1952) was an influential Canadian newspaper owner between 1936 and 1952. He created The Globe and Mail by merging the Liberal-allied Globe and Conservative-allied Mail and Empire newspapers in 1936.
John Doyle. Doyle in 2005. Born. 1957 (age 66–67) Nenagh, Ireland. Occupation (s) Television critic, author. John Doyle (born 1957) is a Canadian writer who is a television critic at The Globe and Mail .
Robert Fife (born 1954) is a Canadian political journalist and author who was the Ottawa bureau chief for CTV News from February 2005. Since January 2016, Fife has served as Ottawa bureau chief for The Globe and Mail .
Pages in category "The Globe and Mail columnists" The following 51 pages are in this category, out of 51 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
Hugh Fraser Winsor, CM (born 18 April 1938 at Saint John, New Brunswick) is a Canadian journalist, noted for his work with The Globe and Mail and CBC Television's The Journal. He received the Charles Lynch Award for journalism in 1998 and has been a Member of the Order of Canada since 2005.
The Globe and Mail Greenspon began working at The Globe and Mail in 1986 as a reporter for the paper's Report on Business section. He soon found himself back in London as the Globe's first European business correspondent.
Richard J. Needham (May 17, 1912, in Gibraltar–July 1996 in Toronto) was a Canadian humour columnist for The Globe and Mail. He previously worked at the Calgary Herald. Many of his columns were collected in a variety of books, including The Garden of Needham and Needham's Inferno, which won the Stephen Leacock Memorial Medal for Humour in 1967.
The Globe and Mail Centre is a 17-storey building, on King Street East, in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, that houses the offices of The Globe and Mail newspaper, and other tenants. [1] The building is adjacent to the former offices of rival newspaper the Toronto Sun, towering over it.