Keyword: sulzberger
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An article in Business Day on Wednesday about investors in The New York Times Company who withheld their votes for directors misspelled the name of the family that has controlled the company since 1896. It is Ochs-Sulzberger, not Ochs-Sulzburger.
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Opinion: The Five Dumbest Things on Wall Street This Week 4. Penny Ante The New York Times Co. (NYT:NYSE - commentary - research - Cramer's Take) is feeling the pinch of aggrieved shareholders. Big investors took a shot across management's bow this week by withholding 28% of votes from the company's board slate. A 5.6% holder, Morgan Stanley Investment Management, wants to eliminate the Class B stock that gives the Sulzberger family control of the board despite its tiny financial stake. "MSIM believes that the dual-class voting at The New York Times Company, which is an exception to the general...
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Arthur Ochs “Pinch” Sulzberger, Jr., the scion of a family dynasty founded by his great grandfather, is well into the process of destroying the patrimony handed to him on a silver platter. Even worse, the whole world is starting to notice, something which will make other family members distinctly unhappy. And because the family controls the election of a majority of the board of directors of the New York Times Company, despite owning a tiny fraction of the actual equity (thanks to a two class system of shares), this unhappiness could affect Pinch’s tenure in office. No less an authority...
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Holder Hammers N.Y. Times By Sandy Brown TheStreet.com Staff Reporter 4/18/2006 1:42 PM EDT A big shareholder is taking aim at struggling publisher New York Times Co. (NYT:NYSE - commentary - research - Cramer's Take). Morgan Stanley Investment Management said Tuesday it withheld votes for the Times' director nominees because it believes the company's board and management have become unaccountable to shareholders. The firm, which says it owns more than 5% of the Times' Class A stock, called for the elimination of the dual-stock structure that leaves control of the board with minority shareholders led by the founding Sulzberger family....
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CHICAGO (MarketWatch) -- New York Times Co. on Wednesday said it expects first-quarter earnings to be in the range of 22 to 24 cents a share, including expenses of 2 to 4 cents a share related to job cuts the company announced last September. New York Times Co. (NYT) earned 76 cents a share a year earlier, bolstered by a gain totaling 46 cents a share from a sale of company headquarters and another property. New York Times said first-quarter earnings may also be impacted if it is determined that one of its joint venture equity investments has lost value....
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Motley Fool A Dubious Sign of the Times Tuesday March 7, 3:17 pm ET By Tim Beyers I've long wanted to own stock in New York Times (NYSE: NYT - News) for several reasons. I love the paper. I'm a big fan of About.com. And then there's sentimental angle: I'm a New York native. But there's one big reason why I'm not buying the stock. A check of the proxy statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Friday reveals that chairman Arthur Sulzberger Jr. and CEO Janet Robinson both received hefty bonuses despite meeting less than 60%...
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Arthur "Pinch" Sulzberger Jr. apparently was given quite a chilly reception in his annual state-of-the-Times address..... Newspaper Guild members have already had to give up their raises for the year to rescue their embattled healthcare coverage, and 500 employees are losing their jobs. Floyd Norris, a business columnist, was said.... to be particularly intense in grilling Sulzberger on why (Pinch) would not give back his hefty million-dollar bonus this year to save jobs. "He kept ducking [the question]," ......"It was lame, lame, lame."
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WASHINGTON (Dow Jones/AP) The New York Times Co. paid Chairman Arthur Sulzberger Jr. a salary and bonus of $1.6 million for 2005. The New York-based media company also said he received options on 150,000 shares and got a grant of restricted stock units valued at $817,500. Those figures compared with a salary and bonus of $1.9 million the previous year, with grants of 59,000 options and restricted stock valued at $433,840, the company said Friday in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Janet L. Robinson, who became the Times' president and chief executive at the end of 2004,...
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All The News That’s Fit For Pinch By Jason Maoz Yes, another piece on The New York Times – and those who don’t understand why the Times warrants constant scrutiny probably have no business reading a media column in the first place. Two years after the cartoonishly left-wing Howell Raines was removed from the executive editor’s office, the Times shows no signs of reverting to even a semblance of balance in its news coverage. In fact, the Times’s liberal bias has never been more pronounced, its editorial enthusiasms – particularly its obsessions with race and gender – blatant in virtually...
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Commentary: Focusing on transition to digital businesses By Jon Friedman, MarketWatch Last Update: 12:01 AM ET Jan. 25, 2006 (This is the first of a two-part series on Arthur Sulzberger Jr., publisher of the New York Times and chairman of its parent company. Part 2 will appear on Friday.) NEW YORK -- Arthur Sulzberger Jr. forced a smile when I asked him if he thought that the worst had passed at the New York Times. It seemed like a fair point, considering that the institution had practically been synonymous with chaos at times in recent years. In fact, I'd contend...
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The full grovelBy Thomas LifsonJan. 1,2006 Byron Calame, public editor of the New York Times, addresses his newspaper's role in publishing leaked classified information about the NSA's surveillance program. As the Department of Justice has launched an investigation of the probably criminal leaking and possibly criminal publication of the data, interest in the matter could not be higher. Shockingly enough, his superiors stonewall him when it comes to explaining why they waited a year to publish the revelations. Moreover, their story about the actual time interval of the delay has certain inconsistencies. Usually, when those under investigation for possible criminal...
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The top deputy to then-Attorney General John Ashcroft refused two years ago to approve important parts of the secret program that allows domestic eavesdropping without warrants, prompting two leading White House aides to try to win the needed approval from Mr. Ashcroft himself while he was hospitalized after a gall bladder operation, according to officials knowledgeable about the episode. With Mr. Ashcroft recuperating from gall bladder surgery in March 2004, his deputy, James B. Comey, who was then acting as attorney general, was unwilling to give his certification to crucial aspects of the classified program, as required under the procedures...
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WAR AND TREASON AND THE NEW YORK TIMES by Mia T, December 29, 2005 inch Sulzberger rushed to the C-SPAN confessional booth mere days after 9/11. He had to make certain no one would blame The New York Times for that. The Times' '96 endorsement of bill clinton1 was the problem. The endorsement, you may recall, was contingent on clinton getting a brain transplant--specifically of the character lobe.2 How could The Times square that shameful, irresponsible endorsement with this monstrous failure3? Sulzberger quickly explained that The Times was able to endorse clinton by separating clinton's "policies"...
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WASHINGTON, Dec. 23 - The National Security Agency has traced and analyzed large volumes of telephone and Internet communications flowing into and out of the United States as part of the eavesdropping program that President Bush approved after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks to hunt for evidence of terrorist activity, according to current and former government officials. The volume of information harvested from telecommunication data and voice networks, without court-approved warrants, is much larger than the White House has acknowledged, the officials said. It was collected by tapping directly into some of the American telecommunication system's main arteries, they said....
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Traitors of Record: The Record of the New York TimesBy Fedora “. . .the most untrustworthy paper in the United States. . .” --President Dwight Eisenhower, referring to the New York TimesIntroductionLast week Senator John Cornyn criticized the New York Times for endangering national security with a James Risen story on NSA surveillance timed to coincide with a vote on the Patriot Act and, incidentally, with the release of a book by Risen. A review of the record illustrates that endangering national security through irresponsible leaks is nothing new for the New York Times. Some particularly outrageous examples are worth...
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New York Times chairman Arthur Sulzberger Jr., who famously got punched in the eye by a bicycle messenger in 2002, gets another shiner in the new issue of The New Yorker. In a must-read profile for media soothsayers, writer Ken Auletta raises the question of whether Pinch Sulzberger can survive journalistic embarrassments and shrinking profits. Auletta quotes a "family friend" asking, "Is Arthur going to get fired?" Though Auletta notes that The Times remains arguably "the world's finest newspaper," and the only one that generates more than $1 billion a year in advertising, he contends: "Within the newsroom, there is...
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YOUR MONEY OR YOUR LIFE: The Newspaper Guild at the New York Times is worried about a $4M shortfall in its benefits fund. Photo: AP The New York Times faces a looming $4 million shortfall in the health and benefits plan that is administered by the Newspaper Guild and about 1,500 unionized members may have to give up a 3 percent pay hike. An e-mail from the Guild jolted unionized members, who were told that their benefits fund faces a "major financial shortfall that is projected to hit about $4 million this year." The Guild said members face two...
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Evidence of Sulzberger’s panic came almost immediately after the Presidential election. On Saturday, Nov. 13, 2004, a strange article was written by a columnist at the Globe, Alex Beam, in which Justice Judith Cowin was blamed for the Democratic loss. This is the first paragraph in its entirety: “I was intrigued to learn that, after all the crocodile tears were shed for John Kerry's wrenching electoral loss, the name on everyone's lips was not Margaret Marshall, but . . . Judith Cowin.” So who is Judith Cowin? And how could she help Pinch Sulzberger escape blame for the Democratic loss?
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New York Times chairman, columnist to visit NorthJuly 09, 2005 ¤Ñ WASHINGTON ¡ª Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, Jr., chairman of The New York Times Company and publisher of The New York Times, will begin a four-day visit to North Korea today accompanied by one of the paper's columnists, Nicholas D. Kristof. A diplomatic source in Washington said yesterday that Mr. Sulzberger and Mr. Kristof will stay in Pyongyang through July 12 and meet with high-level officials, including Foreign Minister Paek Nam-sun and Deputy Foreign Minister Kim Kye-gwan. The source said the visit of a prominent American media figure at a time...
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The number one New York Times bestselling author of Bias---Bernard Goldberg---delivers another bombshell -- this time aimed at ...100 People Who Are Screwing Up America No preaching. No pontificating. Just some uncommon sense about the things that have made this country great -- and the culprits who are screwing it up. Bernard Goldberg takes dead aim at the America Bashers (the cultural elites who look down their snobby noses at "ordinary" Americans) ... the Hollywood Blowhards (incredibly ditzy celebrities who think they're smart just because they're famous) ... the TV Schlockmeisters (including the one whose show has been compared to...
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Paris Hilton's parents; the Rev. Al Sharpton; the guy who gave us "Fear Factor;" and Rep. Jim McDermott. At first glance, they don't have a lot in common. But they are linked for eternity in a new book, "100 People Who Are Screwing Up America (and Al Franken Is # 37)." McDermott, as it happens, is No. 38. The Democratic congressman from Seattle apparently doesn't pose as big a threat to democracy as comedian-and-leftist radio talkster Franken. But McDermott presents more of a problem than, say, feminist Gloria Steinem, at No. 42, or Enron's disgraced chief executive, Kenneth Lay, who...
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In a major setback for proponents of the legal rights of journalists, the U.S. Supreme Court yesterday declined to hear the case of two reporters who have refused to cooperate with a grand-jury investigation.... Time magazine reporter Matthew Cooper and New York Times correspondent Judith Miller now face as much as 18 months in prison for civil contempt unless they comply with a lower-court order that they cooperate with a government investigation into the leak.... The Supreme Court's decision not to address the case has far-reaching implications for the rights of journalists in protecting unnamed sources from federal investigations. Reporters...
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ON this 60th anniver sary of the allied triumph over Na zism, do we need another book examining The New York Times' failure to report news of the Holocaust? After all, the refusal to seriously report the mass murder of Europe's Jews as it was unfolding was a failing of the entire American press. (The New York Post was one of the few Exceptions.) And the Times itself has publicly acknowledged that it grossly underplayed coverage of the Holocaust. But, as Laurel Leff documents in this important book, which makes extensive use of the Times' corporate archives, there are many...
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An elderly member of the family that controls The New York Times nearly lost $5,000 to a con woman — but wound up helping cops arrest a suspect.... Jean Sulzberger, 83, was walking along Lexington Avenue when she bumped into a woman who claimed to know her. "She said, 'Oh, years ago, you gave me money, and I'm so lucky to have run into you,' " Sulzberger recounted to The Post. "Then she started her story — 'I had breast cancer, and I got kicked out of my house. We have no place to go.' It was so awful." Also,...
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SAN FRANCISCO, April 19 - Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, chairman emeritus of The New York Times Company, was awarded the Katharine Graham Lifetime Achievement Award on Tuesday by the Newspaper Association of America at its annual meeting here. The award is named for the late publisher of The Washington Post, to whom it was awarded posthumously in 2002. In presenting the award, Gregg K. Jones, chairman of the association, said Mr. Sulzberger deserved recognition for two main reasons: publishing the Pentagon Papers in 1971 and reinvesting in The Times during the financial crises of the 1960's and 1970's. Mr. Sulzberger, 79,...
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The world is now observing the 60th anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz concentration camp. More Jewish people were slaughtered there than at any other point on earth. In the midst of the remembrance, it is well to recall the New York Times article by C.L. Sulzberger noting the liberation. Cyrus Sulzberger listed the different kinds of people slaughtered at the camp: men, women, children, Poles, Italians, etc. One thing old Cyrus neglected to mention in his article was the religion of the overwhelming majority of victims: They were Jews. This should not surprise us. After all, another Sulzberger,...
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During the 1940’s my father would read his Yiddish newspaper and often share with me the awful news from Europe. To paraphrase the Watergate questions: What did we know? And when did we know it? We knew enough, and we knew enough in timely fashion. Week after week, month after month, we read about the roundup of Jews, the wholesale deportations, the killings. In July 1941, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency disclosed that hundreds of Jews had been massacred in Minsk, Brest-Litovsk, Lvov, and other East European cities, as the Nazis cut a bloody path through the Soviet Union. By mid-March...
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Yesterday, Dan Okrent, "public editor " of the NYTimes—the Times is constitutionally unable to use the familiar Swedish import, "ombudsman"—asked: Is The Times systematically biased toward either candidate? and immediately answered, "No." You were expecting, maybe, he would be biting the hand that feeds him, nibbling Prince Sulzberger's knuckles? The question is goofy. Mr. Okrent doesn't tell his readers what evidence would be sufficient to prove that the Times is systematically biased. You can infer that systematically has the effect of spreading vanishing cream on all the Times's Kerry-oozing zits. Thus, even the Times daily book reviewer, Michiko Kakutani, can...
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Pinch Sulzberger, owner of the New York Times, last week blamed the readers of the Times for the Jayson Blair scandal which rocked his newspaper last year and brought it þu and him þu to their knees. Sulzberger made the charge against his readers while he was on a panel at the American Society of Newspaper Editors according to Editor and Publisher magazine, which reported the story this way: ¡°Sulzberger [said] the worst thing to come out of the Blair scandal was ¡ readers who knew about the incorrect reporting did not complain¡¡± But Pinch, the readers may not have...
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Arthur Sulzberger Jr., chairman of The New York Times Co. and publisher of The New York Times, will be the guest speaker at the annual Lakeland Area Chamber of Commerce meeting Jan. 29 at The Lakeland Center. The event is usually attended by about 1,000 people, and this year will recognize entrepreneurial spirit in Lakeland. Chamber President Kathleen Munson said Sulzberger was a perfect choice for the event. "We're going to recognize all the family-owned businesses in town, and The New York Times is a perfect example of that theme, being a family-owned business for years." The New York Times...
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'Gay' marriage justice tied to N.Y. TimesWed to Anthony Lewis, paper's affiliate pushed for her appointment Posted: November 19, 20031:00 a.m. Eastern © 2003 WorldNetDaily.com The Massachusetts chief justice who voted with the majority yesterday in a 4-3 ruling that could establish homosexual marriage in the state is married to a former prominent columnist for the New York Times. Margaret Marshall, a native of South Africa, is married to recently retired columnist Anthony Lewis. One of Marshall's chief nemeses, J. Edward Pawlick, attorney for Massachusetts Citizens for Marriage, sees the marriage as a politically beneficial alliance with the Sulzberger family, who consider...
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Statement of J. Edward Pawlick, Attorney for Massachusetts Citizens for Marriage - November 18, 2003 The Massachusetts Supreme Court has now joined the Legislature and Governor Jane Swift in violating Massachusetts law. They have all refused to follow the state Constitution and allow the voters to decide gay marriage at the ballot box even though 130,000 people signed a petition to do so and all the necessary requirements were followed. The Supreme Judicial Court told former Gov. Swift in an opinion on Dec. 20, 2002 that the Constitution had been violated by the Legislature and that she must act before...
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To the Editor: Regarding Arthur Sulzberger Jr.'s suggestion to the Pulitzer Prize Board that revoking Walter Duranty's 1932 prize recalled the "Stalinist practice to airbrush purged figures out of official records and histories" ("Times Should Lose Pulitzer From 30's, Consultant Says," news article, Oct. 29): Those targeted for "airbrushing" were already murdered, languishing in the gulag or forced into exile after having been falsely accused of espionage, treason, sabotage and other "crimes." The N.K.V.D., the predecessor of the K.G.B., then ordered libraries to expunge all mention and to relegate them to the status of non-persons, a fate that persisted for...
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During my recent book tour, I resisted the persistent, illiterate request that I name traitors. With a great deal of charity – and suspension of disbelief – I was willing to concede that many liberals were merely fatuous idiots. (In addition, I was loathe to name names for fear that liberals would start jumping out of windows.) But after the Times' despicable editorial on the two-year anniversary of the 9-11 terrorist attack, I am prepared – just this once – to name a traitor: Pinch Sulzberger, publisher of the New York Times. To be sure, if any liberal could legitimately...
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During my recent book tour, I resisted the persistent, illiterate request that I name traitors. With a great deal of charity – and suspension of disbelief – I was willing to concede that many liberals were merely fatuous idiots. (In addition, I was loathe to name names for fear that liberals would start jumping out of windows.) But after the Times' despicable editorial on the two-year anniversary of the 9-11 terrorist attack, I am prepared – just this once – to name a traitor: Pinch Sulzberger, publisher of the New York Times. To be sure, if any liberal could...
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During my recent book tour, I resisted the persistent, illiterate request that I name traitors. With a great deal of charity – and suspension of disbelief – I was willing to concede that many liberals were merely fatuous idiots. (In addition, I was loathe to name names for fear that liberals would start jumping out of windows.) But after the Times' despicable editorial on the two-year anniversary of the 9-11 terrorist attack, I am prepared – just this once – to name a traitor: Pinch Sulzberger, publisher of the New York Times. To be sure, if any liberal could legitimately...
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After the resignations of executive editor Howell Raines and managing editor Gerald Boyd, publisher Arthur Sulzberger, Jr. said the New York Times would continue the affirmative action program that helped produce the Jayson Blair scandal. The Washington Post reported that Sulzberger "emphasized that the Times would not back away from aggressive reporting or its commitment to diversity in hiring." Sulzberger was quoted as saying, "A newsroom that has a diversity of ethnicity and race and gender helps us to report the world not as [critics] would like to see it, but the world as it is. Diversity is not just...
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May 20, 2003, 9:00 a.m. All the News that's Fit to Print… …for the whole world to read. here is no doubt that the Jayson Blair outrage has created a crisis at the New York Times. And since the scandal caps a long series of complaints about the paper's leftward bias, the Blair affair's power to hurt the Times has become more than the sum of its parts. Yet those who believe that the New York Times is on the ropes are fooling themselves. Beneath the well-publicized controversies over the Times' ideological bias lie a couple of lesser known and...
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There is no doubt that the Jayson Blair outrage has created a crisis at the New York Times. And since the scandal caps a long series of complaints about the paper's leftward bias, the Blair affair's power to hurt the Times has become more than the sum of its parts. Yet those who believe that the New York Times is on the ropes are fooling themselves. Beneath the well-publicized controversies over the Times' ideological bias lie a couple of lesser known and intertwined stories: the tale of Times owner, Arthur Sulzberger Jr., and of the business strategy that he and...
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Mountains of newsprint, airtime, and Internet screenage have been expended on the recent embarrassments at The New York Times—the coming to light of massive fabrication and plagiarism by a young reporter, Jayson Blair, as well as professional slippages elsewhere on the prestigious paper's staff. Last week, with the newsroom in incipient revolt over the ethical lapses, the paper's two top news generals—executive editor Howell Raines and managing editor Gerald Boyd—were compelled to resign, after a regnum of only 21 months—the shortest rise and fall in the paper's century-plus history. It's a big story for journalists—since it reflects on all of...
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It's unlikely that the account in the NYTimes of the resignation of Howell Raines and Gerald Boyd will win a Pulitzer. It's overlong, tendentious, flat, delicate where it might have been bold, not sufficiently analytical, and it totally omits a number of important facts. The author of this account is Jacques Steinberg, the Times's media editor who had earlier demonstrated pluck, ingenuity, and a stoic public countenance in the teeth of absurdity: although he was barred as a member of the press from attending the staff meeting held three weeks ago to quell the Times's newsroom rebellion, he managed to...
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Newspaper Daze, Part 4 It's unlikely that the account in the NYTimes of the resignation of Howell Raines and Gerald Boyd will win a Pulitzer. It's overlong, tendentious, flat, delicate where it might have been bold, not sufficiently analytical, and it totally omits a number of important facts. The author of this account is Jacques Steinberg, the Times's media editor who had earlier demonstrated pluck, ingenuity, and a stoic public countenance in the teeth of absurdity: although he was barred as a member of the press from attending the staff meeting held three weeks ago to quell the Times's newsroom...
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<p>June 7, 2003 -- New York Times Publisher Arthur Sulzberger Jr. has also been damaged in the Jayson Blair scandal — and industry observers are increasingly wondering whether he'll survive, and for how long.</p>
<p>Before top editor Howell Raines quit, "Pinch" Sulzberger reportedly described Raines as being on probation; now it looks more like Sulzberger himself is on probation — both with his family and his roiling newsroom.</p>
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<p>How right John Podhoretz is ("The Crisis Isn't Over," Opinion, June 6), and what a disingenuous editorial the Times printed — as if the Jayson Blair scandal was the reason the editors "resigned." And as to Raines' remark regarding The Washington Times, calling it a "journalistic entity," well, how coincidental that such is the term that Yasser Arafat and the Arabs once used for Israel — "the Zionist entity." And we all know how the left worships the Palestinians as victims and denigrates the state of Israel.</p>
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If anyone ever needed to measure the dedication of The New York Times's employees to this newspaper, the level of anguish generated by the Jayson Blair incident is a pretty good standard. The discovery that one young reporter had faked or plagiarized a large number of articles drew extensive news coverage, but the publicity outside the paper paled next to the anger and soul-searching within. This week, Howell Raines, the executive editor, and Gerald Boyd, the managing editor, decided that the backwash from the Blair affair was keeping them from providing the effective leadership The Times needs. Yesterday, they resigned....
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The Krugman Truth Squad is going to talk about more than Paul Krugman today, even though his op-ed in this morning's New York Times offers more than the usual number of juicy opportunities for hilarious lie-busting. As you know, there's been a key development in the battle against liberal bias in the media — what I call "the conspiracy to keep you poor and stupid." The conspiracy was dealt a severe blow Thursday when Howell Raines resigned from the Times. (Raines, the paper's executive editor, was the man who hired Paul Krugman in the first place.) The proximate cause of...
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<p>June 6, 2003 -- The Gray Lady's two top newsmen collapsed under the pressure of the Jayson Blair scandal yesterday, resigning from their positions at the head of the nation's "paper of record."</p>
<p>The departure of New York Times executive editor Howell Raines and managing editor Gerald Boyd was announced in an emotional newsroom meeting at which publisher Arthur Sulzberger Jr. also said former Times editor Joseph Lelyveld will take over in the interim.</p>
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<p>The problem with The New York Times isn't that tyro reporter Jayson Blair made stuff up. Or that Pulitzer-prize-winning reporter Rick Bragg didn't properly credit other reporters for their work under his byline. Or even that Howell Raines, the executive editor who quit yesterday, wasn't nice to people and played favorites and lost the confidence of his newsroom.</p>
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<p>NEW YORK (AP) _ Here is the full text of New York Times Publisher Arthur Sulzberger's memo to the staff this morning.</p>
<p>As you can see from the attached press release, this morning I accepted the resignations of Howell Raines, our executive editor, and Gerald Boyd, our managing editor. Both Howell and Gerald have made enormous and lasting contributions to The Times over their long and distinguished careers. Given the events of the last month, however, Howell and Gerald concluded that it was best for The Times that they step down. With great sadness, I agreed with their decision. Joe Lelyveld will return to serve as interim executive editor until the selection of new executive and managing editors is made. Since most of you know Joe, you'll understand why we can all be confident that during this interim period the immediate responsibility for the quality of our journalism will be in very good hands.</p>
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Coulter: Bush Got into Harvard, Sulzberger was Rejected When Bush-hating Maureen Dowd sneered that President Bush only got into Yale because his father was a Yale graduate, giving him a leg up because he was a "legacy," she attracted the attention of "Slander" author and conservative columnist Ann Coulter - a very dangerous thing to happen to a liberal like Dowd, already in hot water for deliberately misquoting the president and altering the meaning of what he said. Noting that the increasingly shrewish Miss Dowd had also sneered at the White House explanation that Bush got into Harvard Business School...
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