タイトルおよび責任表示のエリア
タイトル
They tell me : CBC National : Wartime savings, September 3-28, 1945.
一般資料の指定
併記されるタイトル
他のタイトル情報
責任のタイトル表示
タイトル記述
記述レベル
ファイル
リポジトリ
レファレンスコード
版次エリア
版次の表示
責任表示の編集
資料詳細の分類のエリア
縮尺の表示(地図)
図法の表示(地図)
座標の表示(地図)
責任表示(建築)
発行政府と額面の表示(切手コレクション)- 必須項目
作成日のエリア
日付
物理的記述エリア
物理的記述
出版社のシリーズエリア
出版社のシリーズのタイトル
出版社のシリーズの併記されるタイトル
出版社のシリーズの他のタイトル情報
出版社のシリーズの責任表示
出版社のシリーズの番号
出版社のシリーズの注記
アーカイブズ記述エリア
作成者名
履歴
Claire Wallace was a Canadian radio broadcaster and journalist, and one of the first women to broadcast nationally over the CBC. Born in Orangeville, Ont., she attended Branksome Hall and initially worked for The Toronto Star writing a column titled "Over the Teacups" which parlayed into, as radio show on station CFRB Toronto in 1935, called "Teatime topics." She joined CBC in 1936 and by 1942 she was hosting the thrice weekly show "They Tell Me." She married James C. Stutt in the same year. In 1946 she won the Beaver Award from Broadcaster Magazine as Canada's top woman commentator. Beginning in the 1940's she also became an advocate for women's rights, and could lay to claim to many "first woman to..." titles. In 1952 Claire returned to broadcasting on CFRB where should would continue for many years while writing books such as "Mind Your Manners", an etiquette guide, which was published in 1953. For several years, beginning in 1955, she ran the Claire Wallace Travel Bureau in Toronto taking tourists to such locations as China and Russia. Claire was also a member of many organizations including the Canadian Women's Press Club and the Heliconian Club for artists and worked actively to raise money for several charities. Claire died in 1968 in Toronto.