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Random
recollections by Rosaleen Dickson
In 1989
there was no Hill Times. Then, suddenly, Jim Creskey and Ross Dickson decided
there should be such a paper in Ottawa and voila there it was. My part in the proces wasn't all that significant,
but it meant a great deal to me.
Anyone who
has ever "done time" on a newspaper will know it does not just happen.
Getting it open and accepted was hard, and tiresome, and world-shaking, and not
only was every day a surprise for the first folks involved, but also it
startled the people on the Hill. Suddenly they were being bombarded by these
young journalists who had decided to make Parliament their bailiwick.
Our first
Hill Times office was a ground floor apartment in an old building on Gilmore
Street. The staff was new to Ottawa but not new to journalism. Ross and
Jim had both experienced the weekly newspaper world, Ross in Shawville and Jim
in Buckingham, so they well knew what was involved, but doing it with MPs and
Senators, and Ambassadors, and the population of government was a different
matter.
The first
most brilliant move they made was to find Kate Malloy and Pamela Frampton to do
news and production duties respectively, and help the Hill Times to evolve from
a great idea into a great newspaper. There were others, of course, but my first
recollections are of those two beautiful, energetic, brilliant young women
walking the long way to Parliament to get the story and turn it into good
reading for a growing audience. From the start the Hill Times became a priority
in the Press Gallery and Government offices all around Ottawa, and very soon, all around the world. Everyone who really needed the facts read it, so when I was asked to add a few little features, I found it a
tad challenging. My major newspaper experience had been in rural Quebec – a far
cry from the sophistication of the Capital.
For my first
column, I chose PARLIAMENT COOKS, featuring the things various Members do in
their kitchens. At first I thought it would be an unlikely topic but was
surprised to find how many of the Members actually did cook and loved to tell us
about it. One fellow made his own bread and insisted I go to his house to watch
the whole process.
Others cooked everything from soup
to cake and they always had a sample for me to take home.
Then we
decided to do a column on the books that Members were reading and writing,
which turned into a huge chore. As Books Editor, I was inundated by new
editions from the publishers, who then sent along their authors to be
interviewed. That was when I discovered the National Press Club whose lounge
across from Parliament was a great place to meet the authors and their agents.
I had been using my own living room but the wonderful Press Club dining room and
friendly bar were much more convenient.
When
Mordecai Richler came though, he did nOt want to eat or drink, but asked if we
could just take a walk along Sparks Street; an experience to remember with one
of the greatest story tellers in Canada. My plan was to interview him, but he spent
an hour ambling through town interviewing me. By then, the Hill Times had moved
into its new offices, so I suggested a visit, but this author wanted only
to walk and talk, and exprience Ottawa.
Back at the
office, some of my less interesting chores were calling advertisers to remind
them to pay their bills, sending out invoices, and calling Hill workers to set
up interviews as I was also writing about the barbers, the security staff, and
other people who keep things going on the Hill, and a series about the best
chefs all over town.
Today there
is not enough room for all the news generated on Parliament Hill, and as for
the diplomatic community, well, Ross and Jim had to start a whole new
newspaper, EMBASSY, to cover that intrinsic part of Ottawa. But before the
advent of this new paper, I wrote a column in The Hill Times; that
covered the comings and goings of diplomats in all the embassies, and also in
the entourage of the Governor General. Getting to know the ambassadors and cosuls was fun,
and very soon they were calling me to tell me who was going to arrive or leave.
We also took
special note of the Senators, and one young man who would call me regularly
about changes there was Jim Watson, who went on to become the Mayor of Ottawa
and then a Member of the Ontario Legislature.
By the time
EMBASSY came on the scene, I had become a Director of the National Press
Club, engaging speakers for their Newsmaker Breakfasts and Press
Luncheons, so I got myself a digital camera to provide photos for EMBASSY
with my stories of these events.
The Hill
Times and EMBASSY family changes constantly, with a roster of
incredibly brilliant writers working as a team, and Kate Malloy still holds the
fort as editor. It is a family, and it works.
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