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The New York Times



The New York Times is a newspaper published in New York City by Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr. and distributed internationally. It is owned by The New York Times Company, which publishes 47 other newspapers, including the International Herald Tribune and the Boston Globe. The New York Times is nicknamed the "Old Gray Lady" and is regarded as a newspaper of record in the United States, though recent controversies have led some to criticize its quality. The name is abbreviated the Times (not to be confused with the The Times, which is published in the United Kingdom).

History

The front page on June 6, 1944 announces the beginning of the Battle of Normandy

The New York Times was founded on September 18, 1851 by Henry Jarvis Raymond and George Jones. Raymond was also a founding director of the Associated Press in 1856. Adolph Ochs acquired the Times in 1896, and under his guidance the newspaper achieved an international scope, circulation, and reputation. In 1897 he coined the paper's slogan "All The News That's Fit To Print," widely interpreted as a jab at competing papers in New York City (the New York World and the New York Journal American) that were known for yellow journalism. After the paper's headquarters were relocated to a new tower on 42nd Street, the area, formerly known as Longacre Square, was renamed Times Square in 1904. Nine years later, the Times opened an annex at 229 43rd Street, their current headquarters, later selling Times Tower in 1961. New headquarters for the "Times" is currently under construction.

The Times was originally intended to publish every morning except on Sundays; however, during the Civil War the Times started publishing Sunday issues along with other major dailies. It won its first Pulitzer Prize for news reports and articles about World War I in 1918. In 1919 it made its first trans-Atlantic delivery to London.

The crossword began to appear in 1942 as a feature, and the paper bought the classical station WQXR in the same year. The fashion section started in 1946. The Times also started an international edition in 1946, but stopped publishing it in 1967 and joined with the owners of the New York Herald Tribune and The Washington Post to publish the International Herald Tribune in Paris. The Op-Ed section started appearing in 1970. More recently, in 1996, The New York Times went online, giving access to readers all over the world on the Web at www.nytimes.com. A new headquarters for the newspaper, a skyscraper designed by Renzo Piano, is currently under construction at 41st Street and 8th Avenue in Manhattan.

In 1964, the paper was the defendant in New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, which established the actual malice legal test for libel.

Times today

The_new_york_times_building_in_new_york_city.jpg

The New York Times' main offices at 229 West 43rd Street in New York City.

The New York Times is one of the most prominent American daily newspapers, although it trails USA Today and the Wall Street Journal in circulation. It has traditionally printed full transcripts of major speeches and debates. The newspaper is currently owned by The New York Times Company, in which descendants of Ochs, principally the Sulzberger family, maintain a dominant role.

The Times has won 94 Pulitzer Prizes , as of 2006—the most prestigious award for journalism in the US, presented each year by Columbia University—including a record 7 in 2002. In 1971 it broke the Pentagon Papers story, publishing leaked documents revealing that the U.S. government had been painting an unrealistically rosy picture of the progress of the Vietnam War. This led to New York Times Co. v. United States (1971), which declared the government's prior restraint of the classified documents was unconstitutional. More recently, in 2004 the Times won a Pulitzer award for a series written by David Barstow and Lowell Bergman on employers and workplace safety issues.

The Times has been going through a downsizing for several years, offering buyouts to workers and cutting expenses , in common with a general trend among print newsmedia. At the end of 2005 it had over 350 full time reporters and about 40 photographers, in addition to hundreds of free-lance contributors who work for the paper more occasionally. Net income dropped 69 percent for the thirteen weeks ending March 26, 2006. It is also becoming increasingly embroiled in controversies relating to its accuracy and perceived political leanings (see below).

The Times is based in New York City. It has 16 news bureaus in the New York region, 11 national news bureaus and 26 foreign news bureaus. In 2005, the paper reported a circulation of roughly 1,131,000 copies on weekdays and 1,681,000 copies on Sundays.WQXR (96.3 FM) and WQEW (1560 AM). The classical format was simulcast on both frequencies until the early 1990s, when the big-band and standards format of WNEW-AM (now WBBR) moved from 1130 AM to 1560. The AM station changed its call letters from WQXR to WQEW. By the beginning of the 21st century, The Times had begun leasing WQEW to ABC Radio for its Radio Disney format, which continues on 1560 AM to this day.

Major sections

The newspaper is organized in three sections:

;1. News : Includes International, National, Washington, Business, Technology, Science, Health, Sports, New York Region, Education, Weather, Obituaries, and Corrections.2. Opinion : Includes Editorials, Op-Eds and Letters to the Editor.;3. Features : Includes Arts, Books, Movies, Theater, Travel, NYC Guide, Dining & Wine, Home & Garden, Fashion & Style, Crossword/Games, Cartoons, The New York Times Magazine, and Week in Review

Style

When referring to people, it uses titles, rather than unadorned last names (except among the sports pages, in which last names stand alone). Its headlines tend to be verbose, and, for major stories, come with subheadings giving further details, although it is moving away from this style. It stayed with an 8-column format years after other papers had switched to 6, and it was one of the last newspapers to adopt color photography, with the first color photograph on the front page appearing on October 16, 1997. In the absence of a major headline, the day's most important story generally appears in the top-righthand column.

The typefaces used for the headlines include Cheltenham. The text is set in Imperial.

Web presence

The Times has had a strong presence on the web since 1995, and has been ranked one of the top web sites. It is accessible via www.nytimes.com and www.nyt.com. It has a general policy of keeping articles freely available for a week and charges subscription for older articles. Accessing some articles requires registration, though this restriction can be bypassed by using a link generator or in some cases through Times RSS feeds.[1] The website had 555 million pageviews in March 2005.

For the month of March 2006, NYTimes.com had a strong traffic, with 11.6 million unique visitors and continues to rank as the number one newspaper site. NYT Company consolidation (which includes About.com) is the 12th most-visited parent company, with 37.7 million unique visitors.

In September 2005, the paper decided to begin subscription based service for daily columns in a program known as TimesSelect. This was unusual in that it included previously free editorial columns, and so it consequently led to attempts to work around it such as Never Pay Retail and the posting of TimesSelect material by bloggers. One of the reasons for this new service was to move from a large dependency on ad revenue.

Times columnists such as Nicholas Kristof and Thomas Friedman have made their criticisms of TimesSelect clear, with Friedman going so far as to say "I hate it. It pains me enormously because it's cut me off from a lot, a lot of people, especially because I have a lot of people who reading me overseas, like in India and whatnot, and so I hate it ... I feel totally cut off from my audience." in a video interview conducted at the 2006 Webby Awards. Most for-pay NYT editorials are available online shortly after their publication through blog searches. As of late January 2006 online reproduction of Select content is extremely difficult to find on commercial websites.

Famous mistakes

In 1920, a New York Times editorial ridiculed Robert Goddard and his claim that a rocket would work in space::That Professor Goddard, with his "chair" in Clark College and the countenancing of the Smithsonian Institution, does not know the relation of action to reaction, and of the need to have something better than a vacuum against which to react – to say that would be absurd. Of course he only seems to lack the knowledge ladled out daily in high schools.

In 1969, days before Apollo 11's landing on the moon, the newspaper published a tongue-in-cheek correction::Further investigation and experimentation have confirmed the findings of Isaac Newton in the 17th century, and it is now definitely established that a rocket can function in a vacuum as well as in an atmosphere. The Times regrets the error.

On November 15, 1992, the Times published a list of slang terms (known as "grunge speak") that were supposedly used in the Seattle grunge scene. This was later proven to be a hoax created by Megan Jasper, a sales representative for Sub Pop Records.

On September 30, 2000, the Times published a picture as part of a front page story of an Israeli soldier wielding a club standing above a bloody man. The caption described "an Israeli policeman and a Palestinian on the Temple Mount." Upon cursory examination, a gas station is evident in the background, so the picture is clearly not of the Temple Mount. Also, upon closer examination, the soldier is gesturing to people outside of the picture rather than, as implied, beating the other subject. Further, the bloody subject is noticeably dressed in the style of a yeshiva student rather than in the style of an Arab. Reluctantly, against a flood of outrage, the Times published a minor correction note a few days later, explaining that the bloody subject was an American student, but leaving intact the implication that he was beaten by the policeman. A week later the Times published a further correction explaining that the subject was actually an American student beaten by local Arabs because he was a Jew, and that the policeman was protecting him from the mob. Their mistake as to the location of the picture was never corrected. This event led to the establishment of the NGO Honest Reporting.

On several occasions the Times has erroneously published premature obituaries, including:
*William Baer (a New York University professor) in 1942, as a result of a hoax by his students
*Alan Abel in 1980, who had faked his own death as an elaborate hoax
*Katharine Sergava (ballet dancer) in 2003, based on an earlier incorrect obituary in The Daily Telegraph.

Allegations of bias

The Times, like many major news organizations, has often been accused of giving too little or too much play to various events for reasons not related to objective journalism.

One of these allegations is that before and during World War II, the New York Times downplayed accusations that the Third Reich had targeted Jews for expulsion and genocide, at least in part because the publisher, who was Jewish, feared the taint of taking on any 'Jewish cause'.

Another serious charge is the accusation that the Times, through its coverage of the Soviet Union by correspondent Walter Duranty helped to cover up the Ukrainian genocide perpetrated by Joseph Stalin in the 1930s.[2][3]

Corporate influence bias

In the book Manufacturing Consent, noted left-wing intellectuals Edward Herman and Noam Chomsky analyze a variety of major U.S. media outlets, with an emphasis on the Times, and conclude that a bias does exist. This bias, they claim, is neither liberal nor conservative in nature, but rather aligned towards the interests of corporate conglomerates, such as those who now own most of these media. Chomsky has explained that this bias functions in all sorts of ways:

"...by selection of topics, by distribution of concerns, by emphasis and framing of issues, by filtering of information, by bounding of debate within certain limits. They determine, they select, they shape, they control, they restrict --02.htm|title=Excerpts from Manufacturing Consent: Noam Chomsky interviewed by various interviewers|accessdate=2006-07-19}}
Chomsky also touches on the specific importance that this bias has in the New York Times:
"...history is what appears in The New York Times archives; the place where people will go to find out what happened is The New York Times. Therefore it's extremely important if history is going to be shaped in an appropriate way, that certain things appear, certain things not appear, certain questions be asked, other questions be ignored, and that issues be framed in a particular fashion."

Accusations of liberal bias

Many readers believe that the Times' hard news and soft news reportage have a consistent and pronounced liberal slant, particularly on social issues. A 2005 study by Tim Groseclose and Jeffrey Milyo of media coverage over the past ten years surprisingly ranked the New York Times as only the third most liberal of twenty major media outlets ranked by Americans for Democratic Action's guidelines for lawmakers' votes on selected issues of importance to liberals.

Riccardo Puglisi from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology wrote a paper about the editorial choices of the New York Times from 1946 to 1997. He finds that the Times displays Democratic partisanship, with some watchdog aspects. For example, during presidential campaigns, the paper systematically gives more coverage to Democratic topics, but only when the incumbent president is a Republican.

The intermix of political commentary with art criticism in the Arts section of the paper is pointed to as evidence of bias. For example, A. O. Scott's film reviews sometimes contain barbs directed at social conservatives, and Frank Rich's Arts columns regularly attacks conservatives.

The 2005 roster of regular columnists ranges in political position from Maureen Dowd, Frank Rich, Paul Krugman, and Bob Herbert on the left, to Nicholas Kristof and Thomas Friedman on the center-left, to David Brooks and John Tierney on the center-right. These labels must be placed alongside the subjects that the columnists most frequently choose to write about. For example, Friedman writes a great deal about free trade and globalization while Kristof writes almost exclusively about human rights, and thus comes across as more liberal.

The editorial page of the Times has not endorsed a Republican Party candidate for president for half a century (Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1956 was their last). But the paper does not follow a rigid party line, endorsing the Republicans in statewide or local races, such as current New York Governor George Pataki and New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

Daniel Okrent, the Times former Public Editor stated that his was a liberal newspaper in a July 25, 2004 article. Additionally in a post-Jayson Blair report to Bill Keller, a committee of Times employees noted:

Nothing we recommend should be seen as endorsing a retreat from tough-minded reporting of abuses of power by public or private institutions. In part because the Times's editorial page is clearly liberal, the news pages do need to make more effort not to seem monolithic.

Distinctions between news, comment, ads

On November 25, 2002, the Times ran a front-page story with the headline, "CBS Staying Silent in Debate on Women Joining Augusta" — part of a string of stories focusing on the Augusta National Golf Club, the host of the Masters Tournament, effectively demanding a boycott. Critics complained that this was an editorial usurping news space. Mickey Kaus wrote that the executive editor, Howell Raines, was "on the verge of a breakthrough reconceptualization of 'news' here, in which 'news' comes to mean the failure of any powerful individual or institution to do what Howell Raines wants them to do."

At the time Raines said he intended to "flood the zone" with coverage of the Augusta controversy. Some commenters believed this was a concerted effort not to report the news, but to lobby the Augusta National club to change its policies. This effort failed.

The Times has also been criticized for allowing Exxon-Mobil Corporation to run a regular paid "advertorial" commentary piece on its editorial page, although the practice is common in other U.S. newspapers. Some studies have shown that the Times selection of op-ed pieces and letters to the editor seem to "bracket" their editorial position, making the editorials appear to be moderate — although again this practice is hardly unique to the Times.

Times self-examination of bias

In summer 2004, the Times' then public editor (ombudsman), Daniel Okrent, wrote a piece on the Times' alleged liberal bias. He concluded that the Times did have a liberal bias in coverage of certain social issues, gay marriage being the example he used. He claimed that this bias reflected the paper's cosmopolitanism, which arose naturally from its roots as a hometown paper of New York City.

Okrent did not comment at length on the issue of bias in coverage of "hard news", such as fiscal policy, foreign policy, or civil liberties. However, he noted that the paper's coverage of the Iraq war was, among other things, insufficiently critical of the George W. Bush administration (see below). (In May 2005 Okrent was succeeded by Byron Calame.) Calame has not been very visible in moderating criticism of the New York Times alleged bias.

Recent controversies

In 2003, the Times admitted to journalistic fraud committed over a span of several years by one of its reporters, Jayson Blair, and the general professionalism of the paper was questioned, though Blair immediately resigned following the incident. Questions of affirmative action in journalism were also raised, since Blair was black. The paper's top two editors – Howell Raines, the executive editor, and Gerald Boyd, managing editor – resigned their posts following the incident.

In April, 2004 the Times reversed its policy of not using the term Armenian Genocide. Despite publishing dozens of articles about the Armenian Genocide as it progressed, the Times for a period shied away from using the term in its articles as part of its editorial policy. The Turkish Government still denies genocide occurred. Incidentally, Times columnist and former reporter Nicholas D. Kristof, a Pulitzer Prize winner, has mentioned being of Armenian descent and has criticized the ongoing denial of the Armenian Genocide by the Turkish government, in his Times column.

On May 26, 2004, the Times published another significant admission of journalistic failings, admitting that its flawed reporting during the buildup to the Iraq campaign of the War on Terror helped promote the misleading belief that Iraq possessed large stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction. While this "From the Editors" piece didn't mention names, a large part of the incriminated articles had been written by Times reporter Judith Miller, who already stated in Feb 26, 1998 to claim that "all of Iraq is one large storage facility" for weapons of mass destruction. One of Miller's prime sources was Ahmed Chalabi, who is currently the interim oil minister of US-occupied Iraq.

A second self-criticism by Okrent went further. "The failure was not individual, but institutional," he wrote. "War requires an extra standard of care, not a lesser one. But in the Times's WMD coverage, readers encountered some rather breathless stories built on unsubstantiated 'revelations' that, in many instances, were the anonymity-cloaked assertions of people with vested interests. Times reporters broke many stories before and after the war - but when the stories themselves later broke apart, in many instances Times readers never found out. ... Other stories pushed Pentagon assertions so aggressively you could almost sense epaulets sprouting on the shoulders of editors. ... The aggressive journalism that I long for, and that the paper owes both its readers and its own self-respect, would reveal not just the tactics of those who promoted the WMD stories, but how the Times itself was used to further their cunning campaign."

In August 2005, the Times was accused of attempting to unseal the adoption records of United States Supreme Court nominee Justice John Roberts's children, an unprecedented investigation by a newspaper. Journalist Brit Hume, of Fox News reported that the Times has been asking lawyers that specialize in adoption cases for advice on how to get into the sealed court records. The report went on, "Sources familiar with the matter tell Fox News that at least one lawyer turned the Times down flat, saying that any effort to pry into adoption case records, which are always sealed, would be reprehensible." The Times replied: "Our reporters made initial inquiries about the adoptions, as they did about many other aspects of his background. They did so with great care, understanding the sensitivity of the issue. We did not order up an investigation of the adoptions. We have not pursued the issue after the initial inquiries, which detected nothing irregular about the adoptions. More specifically, our reporter called a number of lawyers who handle adoptions to learn about adoption issues in general and to inquire whether adoption papers are publicly available. He was told that the rule varies from case to case and jurisdiction to jurisdiction. At some point, he was informed that the Roberts adoption papers were sealed. He did not try to get them unsealed, nor did he try to obtain copies in any other way. He did not hire anyone to help him. Our editors have made it clear that they will not stand for any gratuitous reporting about the Roberts children. Many of our staff are adoptive parents-including our executive editor-and we are particularly sensitive to the subject." The Times was condemned by the National Council for Adoption, "NCFA denounces, in the strongest possible terms, the shocking decision of The New York Times to investigate the adoption records of Justice John Roberts' two young children. The adoption community is outraged that, for obviously political reasons, the Times has targeted the very private circumstances, motivations, and processes by which the Roberts became parents."

In October 2005, Times reporter Judith Miller was released from prison after an 85-day stay, when she agreed to testify to Patrick Fitzgerald's grand jury. She said she finally relented only after receiving a personal waiver, both on the phone and in writing, of her earlier confidential source agreement with Lewis "Scooter" Libby, although Libby's lawyer claimed the offer of a waiver had been standing for a year. After her second appearance before the grand jury, Miller was released from her contempt of court finding, after which the New York Times became free to write their own account of the affair. This account was published on October 16, along with a personal account by Miller. However, these accounts were widely criticized as revealing even more flaws and failings of both Miller and the Times than they answered, including uncooperativeness and dissembling by Miller to the Times and a lack of reasonable oversight of Miller's work by the Times, as summarized for example in the Washington Post. This included several predictions and calls for Miller to be fired, including some by self-styled media watchdogs Alex Jones, director of the Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard University (and a former New York Times reporter); Jay Rosen, journalism professor at New York University; and Editor and Publisher columnist Greg Mitchell. Mitchell said Miller was guilty of "crimes against journalism" and "did far more damage to her newspaper than did Jayson Blair, and that's not even counting her WMD reporting, which hurt and embarrassed the paper in other ways." Miller resigned from the paper on 9 November 2005.

On December 16, 2005, a New York Times article revealed that the Bush administration had ordered the NSA to intercept certain telephone conversations between suspected al-Qaeda-connected persons in the U.S. and those in other countries without first obtaining court warrants for each instance of surveillance. The article noted that reporters and editors at the Times had known about this intelligence-gathering program for approximately a year, but after meeting with White House officials, who requested that the article not be published, the newspaper chose to delay publication to conduct additional reporting. The Justice Department has launched an investigation to determine the sources of the classified information regarding the program that the Times published. The men who reported the stories, James Risen and Eric Lichtblau, won the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting in 2006.

In an article in June 2006, the Times revealed a Treasury Department program, intended to detect terrorist financiers, that involved searches of international money transfer records stored in the SWIFT database in Belgium. The Administration had strongly urged the Times to not publish the article, citing severe national security concerns including the certain disruption of terrorist tracking which was sure to result. In the wake of this incident, Republican Congressman Peter T. King has called for an investigation into whether or not the NYT violated the Espionage Act. Ann Coulter called for the editors to be executed. On June 28, 2006, the House of Representatives approved a measure condemning the New York Times and other papers for publishing this information. The Times responded with many articles and editorials on the one hand supporting its disclosures as being vital for public knowledge (which trumps national security) while on the other hand bizarrely blaming the disclosures on the Wall Street Journal.

In an earlier similar case, in late 2001 Times reporters (including Judith Miller) learned that federal agents would soon raid the Holyland Relief Foundation and the Global Relief Foundation freeze their assets. The two foundations were noted conduits for funding various Arab terrorist organizations operating in Israel. Despite the obvious sensitivity of this information, the Times first tipped off the foundations that they were soon to be raided and impounded, then published articles with this information. Naturally, when the federal agents arrived the next day, much important information had already been obscured. A grand jury was convened to consider an indictment against the leakers. When the grand jury called upon the Times to reveal its sources, the Times refused to do so. After many letters were exchanged debating the issue, the Times received a declaratory judgment prohibiting the grand jury from subpoenaing the Times phone records. That decision was recently reversed, allowing the government to obtain the records.

Management and employees

Publishers

*Adolph Ochs (1896-1935)
*Arthur Hays Sulzberger (1935-1961)
*Orvil Dryfoos (1961-1963)
*Punch Sulzberger (1963-1992)
*Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr. (1992- )

Executive editors

*Turner Catledge (1964-1968)
*James Reston (1968-1969)
*position vacant (1969-1976)
*Abe Rosenthal (1977-1986)
*Max Frankel (1986-1994)
*Joseph Lelyveld (1994-2001)
*Howell Raines (2001-2003)
*Bill Keller (2003- )

Current columnists

*David Brooks
*Maureen Dowd
*Thomas L. Friedman
*Bob Herbert
*Nicholas D. Kristof
*Paul Krugman
*Gretchen Morgenson
*Frank Rich
*John Tierney
*William Safire (retired as an Op-Ed columnist as of late January 2005, but continues as Language columnist)

See also

* CIA leak grand jury investigation
* New York Times Best Seller list
* Media of New York City
* Current History
* Bulldog edition
* Norimitsu Onishi
* John Bertram Oakes

Further reading

* Berry; Nicholas O. Foreign Policy and the Press: An Analysis of the New York Times' Coverage of U.S. Foreign Policy (Greenwood. 1990)
* Davis; Elmer. History of the New York Times, 1851-1921 (1921)
* Hess, John. My Times: A Memoir of Dissent, Seven Stories Press (2003), cloth, ISBN 1583226044; trade paperback, Seven Stories Press (2003), ISBN 1583226222
* Jones, Alex S. and Susan E. Tifft. The Trust: The Private and Powerful Family Behind The New York Times. Back Bay Books (2000), ISBN 0316836311.
* Mnookin, Seth. Hard News: The Scandals at The New York Times and Their Meaning for American Media, Random House (2004), cloth, ISBN 1400062446.
* Talese, Gay. The Kingdom and the Power, World Publishing Company, New York, Cleveland (1969), ISBN 0844662844.
*''The New York Times Manual of Style and Usage, revised edition. Allan M. Siegal and William G. Connolly. New York: Times Books, 1999. ISBN 0812963881. Self-indexed.

References

External links

The New York Times on the Web
*WQXR, the Times' radio station
*Official history of the Times
*"The Times and Iraq," New York Times, May 26, 2004.
*Daniel Okrent, "Weapons of Mass Destruction? Or Mass Distraction?" New York Times, May 30, 2004.
*Daniel Okrent, "THE PUBLIC EDITOR; Is The New York Times a Liberal Newspaper?" New York Times, July 25, 2004
*"Times Watch", documents alleged liberal bias in the Times, run by the Media Research Center
*Plamegate timeline, AIPAC / Franklin Pentagon mole indictment, Niger yellowcake connections? at NewsFollowUp.com.



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