| |
| | The New Yorker: PRINTABLES |
 | | Sulzberger was wryly introduced by a friend—“I found his infectious enthusiasm to be irritating when I was dangling over a cliff,” she said—and then Sulzberger, a youthful-looking man of fifty-four, bounded to the microphone. |
 | | Sulzberger’s hair has begun to turn gray and to recede, and yet, like Tom Hanks in the movie “Big,” he seems to be only impersonating an older man. He is often known as Young Arthur, and, behind his back, people still call him Pinch, in contrast to his father, Punch. |
 | | Sulzberger said that he was “deeply disappointed” in the Time decision; Miller, still refusing to testify—with Sulzberger’s continuing support—was ordered to report to the Alexandria Detention Center, in northern Virginia, until she testified, or until the term of the grand jury expired, in late October. |
| www.newyorker.com /printables/fact/051219fa_fact (8081 words) |
|