‘A steady rock’: former longtime CP journalist Sufrin remembered as calm, caring
The billowing cigar smoke made it easy to spot Mel Sufrin in the newsroom.
It curled around him as he coached young journalists, championed a labour union for reporters, or regaled staffers with tales drawn from his front-row seat to history. His anecdotes were set everywhere from the press box of a small Toronto baseball field to the floor of the United Nations.
Over the course of a 69-year journalism career, including nearly 45 with The Canadian Press, Sufrin established himself as an avid storyteller and stickler for grammar, but above all is remembered by family and former colleagues as a sweet and thoughtful “gentleman.”
Sufrin died Sept. 19 in a Toronto retirement home at age 96, daughter Jodi Sufrin said in a phone interview from her Boston home.