Childhood, education, and military service Fike was born March 31, 1920, in
Delmar, Maryland, to Claudius Edwin Fike and Rosa Lake Pegram. He grew up in
Ahoskie, North Carolina. He earned a bachelor's degree in economics from
Duke University in 1941 and graduated as an
ensign from the Naval Officer Candidate School at
Northwestern University in 1942. During
World War II, Fike was a
navigator aboard the
ammunition ship USS Mount Baker and the
amphibious ship USS Rushmore during the latter's participation in the
Battle of Leyte Gulf. Fike returned to newspapers in 1953 as
associate editor and Sunday editor of the
Rocky Mount Evening Telegram in
North Carolina. He resigned from the
Telegram on April 1, 1957 after he bought the Byerly newspaper chain in Montana, including the
Lewiston Daily News, the
Glendive Daily Ranger, and the
Argus-Farmer. From 1957 to 1968, Fike was editor and publisher of Fike Newspapers in Montana and California, followed by two years as associate editor of the
Richmond News-Leader in Virginia. The U.S.
Internal Revenue Service seized the newspaper, which was the oldest in
Southern California, and a sister publication,
Harbor Mail, in April 1963 for failure to pay taxes withheld from employees' salaries. The building was shuttered and the 23 workers told to go home. Fike was publisher of the
Woodland Hills Reporter in 1967. In 1967, coverage of a school-attendance-boundary dispute in
Sunland-Tujunga, where Fike owned and edited the
Record-Ledger, "according to many, sharpened the controversy," which had racial overtones. Jerry Cohen of the
Los Angeles Times reported that Fike: "willfully aggravated dissension with "inflammatory editorials" and "slanted news." One minister said he considers the newspaper "a divisive force" in all community affairs involving so-called liberal and conservative issues." . . . But Fike denies intent to present the news less than objectively and insists his... editorials merely reflect sincere personal belief in conservative principles." The
Times printed a response from Fike which stated, in part: "The suspicion grows and grows that the Los Angeles Board of Education by a one-vote margin knowingly sacrificed the
Shadow Hills neighborhood upon the altar of
forced integration as demanded by agitators and by the U.S. government as its price for federal aid." Fike moved to
San Diego, California, in 1970 as director of news and editorial analysis for
Copley Newspapers, and in 1977 he was named editor of the editorial pages of the
San Diego Union. ==Political opinions==