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Topic: Arthur Ochs Sulzberger


  
  Iphigene's Ashes - CJR, September/October 1999
Husband Arthur, who would go on to make a great success out of his reign, was a wondrously complex and artistic man, a dashing, moody sophisticate possessed of a "withering wit," who composed poems to his children (most of them barbed) as well as his mistresses (loving).
Sulzberger relatives were always welcome to try their hand at the paper – that is, if they were male (only now, under the reign of Arthur Jr., an ardent advocate of diversity, can it be assumed that female descendants are also welcome).
Arthur Jr., who had the most rigorous apprenticeship of all, once quipped that the role of heir apparent was like "a womb with a view." The tension over the subject of nepotism between the outsiders and the family was often palpable.
archives.cjr.org /year/99/5/thetrust.asp   (2591 words)

  
 Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Summary
Arthur Ochs Sulzberger (born 1926), long-time publisher of the New York Times, was involved in the transformation of the newspaper from a New York City enterprise into one of broad national influence.
Arthur Ochs Sulzberger was born February 5, 1926, in...
Sulzberger served as an enlisted soldier in the U.S. Marine Corps dur...
www.bookrags.com /Arthur_Ochs_Sulzberger   (159 words)

  
 Born to be king, Bill Hagerty - British Journalism Review Vol. 15, No. 3, 2004
Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr, chairman and publisher of The New York Times, is one of a rare breed who not only has had his collar felt, and more than once at that, but can talk freely about the circumstances.
Sulzberger’s parents divorced when he was four years old, and until he was in his mid-teens he lived with his mother and stepfather, largely separated from Arthur “Punch” Sulzberger’s upward path through the company, bought in 1896 by Punch’s grandfather, Adolph Ochs.
Sulzberger might have been forgiven for departing to find a rock to climb at this point, but he quickly responded when subsequently I suggested to him that the Iraq war repentance (in which he was not personally involved) was unnecessarily voluminous.
www.bjr.org.uk /data/2004/no3_hagerty.htm   (2591 words)

  
 The Punch Sulzberger Executive News Media Leadership Program
Arthur Ochs Sulzberger became chairman emeritus of The New York Times Company in October 1997, after having served as chairman and chief executive officer since November 1973.
Sulzberger spent his entire professional career with The Times, beginning in 1951 except for one year (1953 to 1954) when he was a reporter for The Milwaukee Journal.
Sulzberger was a director of the Newspaper Advertising Bureau and was chairman from 1974 to 1976.
www.jrn.columbia.edu /events/exec_lead/sulzberger_family.asp   (1133 words)

  
 .:: Welcome To The Jewish Ledger ::.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
At the bottom is Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, who was publisher from 1963 to 1992 and who is famous as the father of the modern Times.
Sandwiched between them is Arthur Hays Sulzberger, father of Arthur Ochs Sulzberger and grandfather of the current publisher, Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr.
Arthur Hays Sulzberger refused to intervene with American officials to get a visa for a cousin, Fritz Sulzberger, advising him in 1938 to stay in Germany.
www.jewishledger.com /articles/2006/05/04/book_reviews/book79.txt   (571 words)

  
 Ken Auletta :: Articles - Opening Up the Times
Arthur Sulzberger's father, Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, Sr., known as Punch, who is now the chairman and chief executive officer of the company, and Punch Sulzberger's sisters--Marian S. Heiskell, Ruth S. Holmberg, and Judith P. Sulzberger--have a total of thirteen children among them, four of whom have prominent management jobs at the New York Times Company.
At present, Arthur Sulzberger, Jr., prefers to concentrate not on the question of profit or the question of succession at the company but on changing the atmosphere at the paper, and on altering how the Times itself is managed.
Sulzberger says that the earlier editorial "was unfair to a man I did not know" because it "singled him out" as the personification of all the evils of influence peddling in Washington.
www.kenauletta.com /openingupthetimes.html   (8609 words)

  
 Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr. - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sulzberger is the son of the previous Times publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger and grandson of another Times publisher, Arthur Hays Sulzberger.
Sulzberger has a son, Arthur Gregg Sulzberger III, and a daughter, Annie Sulzberger, who both attended Brown University in Providence, RI.
In January 1993 Sulzberger announced a ten-percent cut in the paper's workforce, bolstering the already extant nickname "Pinch" (which played on his father's nickname "Punch"), used with derisive intent.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Arthur_Ochs_Sulzberger_Jr.   (454 words)

  
 Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Biography | Dictionary of Literary Biography
The leadership task passed to the fourth generation of the family on 16 January 1992, when Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, Jr., took his father's place on the fourteenth floor of the Times Building on West Forty-third Street in New York City.
Prior to his appointment, Sulzberger, Jr., served for almost four years as deputy publisher, with responsibility for the news and business departments of the newspaper.
Arthur Ochs Sulzberger from Dictionary of Literary Biography.
www.bookrags.com /biography/arthur-ochs-sulzberger-dlb   (201 words)

  
 Sample text for Library of Congress control number 2005281891
Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, known both inside and outside the paper simply as “Punch,” was making one of his increasingly rare trips to the newsroom.
Arthur Hays Sulzberger led the paper from 1935 until 1961, when Orvil Dryfoos, the husband of Arthur and Iphigene Sulzberger’s oldest daughter, Marian, was named publisher.
Arthur Sulzberger had undergone an apprenticeship that went far beyond that of any of the previous publishers at the paper–he had served as a reporter and editor, worked in the paper’s ad department, done nights in the production department, and helped his father as the assistant and deputy publisher.
www.loc.gov /catdir/enhancements/fy0627/2005281891-s.html   (4627 words)

  
 New York Times Company: Our Company: Executives: Arthur Sulzberger, Jr.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
Sulzberger was named chairman of The New York Times Company on October 16, 1997.
Sulzberger was deputy publisher from 1988 to 1992, overseeing the news and business departments.
Sulzberger was a reporter with The Raleigh (N.C.) Times, from 1974 to 1976, and a correspondent in London for The Associated Press from 1976 to 1978.
www.nytco.com /company-executives-asulzberger.html   (386 words)

  
 Sulzberger, Arthur Hays. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05
Sulzberger broadened the Times’s use of background reporting, pictures, and feature articles, and expanded its sections.
In 1987, Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, Jr., 1951–;, b.
In 1997 the elder Sulzberger retired as chairman and chief executive, and his son assumed corporate leadership.
www.bartleby.com /65/su/Sulzberg.html   (281 words)

  
 Arthur Ochs Sulzberger - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sulzberger served as an enlisted man in the U.S. Marine Corps during World War II, from 1944 to 1946, in the Pacific theatre.
In the 1960s Sulzberger built a large news-gathering staff at The Times, and was publisher when the newspaper won a Pulitzer Prize in 1972 for publishing The Pentagon Papers.
He is the son of Arthur Hays Sulzberger, a previous publisher of The New York Times.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Arthur_Ochs_Sulzberger   (411 words)

  
 The Metropolitan Museum of Art - Special Exhibitions   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
Sulzberger has also been chairman (currently co-chairman) of the Department of Arms and Armor's Visiting Committee, and he spearheaded the fundraising campaign for the refurbishment of the Arms and Armor Galleries in the Museum's Pierpont Morgan Wing in 1988–91.
In addition to the objects currently on view in the Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Gallery, several recent acquisitions are being displayed in the Arms and Armor Galleries, where they are shown in contextual settings.
The installation was organized by Stuart W. Pyhrr, Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Curator in Charge; Donald J. LaRocca, curator; and Morihiro Ogawa, senior research associate, all of the Museum's Department of Arms and Armor.
www.metmuseum.org /special/Arms_and_Armor/notable_acquisitions_more.htm   (920 words)

  
 n i l e M e d i a . c o m
The volume of distribution alone accords Sulzberger and his bully pulpit journalists a forum to slice and dice policies and policy makers according to their very private agendas.
Sulzberger and his crew are no different from the Irish-Americans who support the Real IRA or Peruvian-Americans who support the Shining Path or Afghani Americans who support the Taliban.
Sulzberger's tactic of falsifying history by repeating manufactured and partial news in edition after edition will no longer carry the day.
www.nilemedia.com /Columnists/Ahmed/2001/July/Sulzberger.html   (1489 words)

  
 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)

  
 Reference.com/Encyclopedia/Arthur Hays Sulzberger
Arthur Hays Sulzberger (1891 - 1968) was the publisher of The New York Times from 1935 to 1961.
Sulzberger graduated from Columbia College in 1913, and married Iphigene Bertha Ochs in 1917.
Under Sulzberger the Times began to publish editions in Paris and Los Angeles with remote-control typesetting machines.
www.reference.com /browse/wiki/Arthur_Hays_Sulzberger   (326 words)

  
 Columbia Magazine
Sulzberger was a clear proponent of the notion that, as he put it in a memo to top editors, “all Jews are not brothers.” “Judaism is neither a race nor a nation,” he said.
Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, known as Punch, had succeeded his father as publisher in 1963.
For Sulzberger to concede otherwise, Leff argues, would have meant acknowledging that his identity as an American was not as secure as he resolutely asserted.
www.columbia.edu /cu/alumni/Magazine/Spring2006/review_goldman.html   (741 words)

  
 Columbia News ::: Kraft Center Honors Robert Kraft, Arthur Sulzberger, Herman Wouk for Contributions to Jewish Student ...
New England Patriots' owner Robert K. Kraft, New York Times' chairman emeritus Arthur Ochs Sulzberger and author Herman Wouk will be honored by the Kraft Center for Jewish Student Life at the Center's Inaugural Dinner Thurs., May 17, beginning at 6 p.m.
Sulzberger (CC'51) has served on the Board of Columbia's Jewish Campus Life Fund for decades, following in the tradition of his father, Arthur Hays Sulzberger, who founded the original Jewish Advisory Board in 1929, and his mother, Iphigene Sulzberger, a patron for many years.
Sulzberger is chairman emeritus, former chief executive officer and former publisher of The New York Times and a Trustee Emeritus of Columbia.
www.columbia.edu /cu/news/01/05/kraft_center.html   (326 words)

  
 [No title]
Sulzberger was born in September 1951 in Mount Kisco, New York.
Sulzberger's parents divorced when he was five, and much of his childhood was spent living with wealthy relatives.
Sulzberger, they discovered, is a huge fan of psychological motivation techniques, "Total Quality Management," and a more "democratic" workplace (but chilled by a "climate of fear" created by Sulzberger appointees such as Raines).
www.discoverthenetwork.org /individualProfile.asp?indid=1821   (2420 words)

  
 New York Times Company: Our Company: Board Members: Arthur Sulzberger, Jr.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
Sulzberger, who became publisher of The New York Times in 1992, continues to run the Company’s flagship enterprise on a day-to-day basis.
Sulzberger played a central role in the development of the Times Square Business Improvement District, officially launched in January 1992, serving as the first chairman of that civic organization.
Sulzberger earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in political science from Tufts University in 1974.
www.nytco.com /company-directors-asulzbergerjr.html   (413 words)

  
 TIME.com: Mutiny at The Times -- Jun. 16, 2003 -- Page 1   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr., publisher of the New York Times, had two visions for the most prestigious newspaper in America when he took over in 1992.
Sulzberger, who often tells interviewers about the importance of making mistakes in life, stood by his editor when the crisis broke, saying he would not accept Raines' resignation.
But Sulzberger also took an aggressive role in trying to gauge newsroom discontent, including holding a meeting of hundreds of employees in a Times Square movie theater — which made it clear that Raines and Boyd needed to act very fast to fix morale.
www.time.com /time/magazine/article/0,9171,1101030616-457369,00.html   (1071 words)

  
 Arthur Hays Sulzberger - HighBeam Encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
In 1963, his son, Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, 1926-, b.
In 1987, Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, Jr., 1951-, b.
Find newspaper and magazine articles plus images and maps related to "Sulzberger, Arthur Hays" at HighBeam.
www.encyclopedia.com /doc/1E1-sulzberg.html   (439 words)

  
 Adolph Ochs
Adolph Simon Ochs (March 12, 1858 - April 8, 1935) was an American Jewish reporter of Bavarian background, who purchased The New York Times in 1896, and rescued it from near oblivion, increasing its readership from 9,000 at the time of his purchase to 780,000 by the 1920s.
His daughter, Iphigene Bertha Ochs, married Arthur Hays Sulzberger, who became publisher of the Times after his father-in-law.
Her son Arthur Ochs "Punch" Sulzberger also became publisher of the Times.
www.teachersparadise.com /ency/en/wikipedia/a/ad/adolph_ochs.html   (142 words)

  
 Keyword   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
Prosecuting Sulzberger and the Times is both a moral and a survival imperative: If we don't prosecute them, if we declare Sulzberger and the Times untouchable by virtue of their press status, it follows that anyone intent on doing this country harm can simply call himself 'the press'...
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.
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.
www.freerepublic.com /focus/keyword?k=sulzberger   (5585 words)

  
 Highbeam Encyclopedia - Search Results for Sulzberger,
Sulzberger, Arthur Hays 1891-1968, American newspaper publisher, b.
Sulzberger broadened the Times's use of background reporting, pictures, and feature articles, and
MEMO PAD: SULZBERGER, KELLER, MILLER TALK...AND JUSTICE FOR SMALL...PEACH ON EARTH.
www.encyclopedia.com /SearchResults.aspx?Q=Sulzberger,   (243 words)

  
 CJR - It's the Content, Stupid, by Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, Jr.
CJR - It's the Content, Stupid, by Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, Jr.
The dean of the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism serves also as the publisher of the Columbia Journalism Review.
Sulzberger's observations about the future of print journalism seemed particularly pertinent.
archives.cjr.org /year/94/6/pubnote.asp   (785 words)

  
 CJR Daily: Nuw Yerk Tumes Names Sulzburger as Chairmun
In what could only be an act of protest against the junior Sulzberger's leadership, public investors controlling more than a quarter of the shares decided to just throw their hands up in the air by refusing to vote for the four out of thirteen directors of the company's board they have the right to choose.
Sulzberger received cash and stock compensation of more than $2.4 million, plus options valued at $765,000, in 2005.
It places the Sulzberger's woes in context by referring to a few other high profile shareholder revolts in the past year and the problems inherent in family-owned companies with dual-class systems (like, by the way, the Washington Post Co.).
www.cjrdaily.org /the_audit/nuw_yerk_tumes_names_sulzburge.php   (1106 words)

  
 JS Online: Social Activist Sulzberger Dies
She was the great-aunt of Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr., the current publisher of The New York Times.
She was married to David Hays Sulzberger, the brother of Arthur Hays Sulzberger, publisher of the Times from 1935 to 1961.
Louise Sulzberger, who was a member of the New York State Commission on Aging, was the daughter of Hugo Blumenthal, a banker and philanthropist.
www.jsonline.com /news/nat/ap/jun01/ap-obit-sulzberger061001.asp   (181 words)

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