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The company was founded by Henry Jarvis Raymond and George Jones in New York City. The first edition of the newspaper The New York Times, published on September 18, 1851, stated: "We publish today the first issue of the New-York Daily Times, and we intend to issue it every morning (Sundays excepted) for an indefinite number of years to come."
The New York Times ' s distribution center in College Point, Queens. Since 1997, [280] The New York Times ' s primary distribution center is located in College Point, Queens. The facility is 300,000 sq ft (28,000 m 2) and employs 170 people as of 2017. The College Point distribution center prints 300,000 to 800,000 newspapers daily.
The Wall Street Journal (2,834,000 daily) The New York Times (571,500 daily; 1,087,500 Sunday) New York Daily News (200,000 daily; 260,000 Sunday)
In December, the Daily News reported that The New York Times had pulled two sports columns written by Harvey Araton and Dave Anderson for disagreeing with the paper's position on Augusta; Araton had questioned if misogyny in sports should be condemned at a broader level, while Anderson had disagreed with an editorial calling on Tiger Woods to ...
The New York Times was formerly [96] available on Apple's news aggregator service Apple News and was among several publications to partner with Apple, debuting with the service in November 2015. [97] A study by the Tow Center for Digital Journalism found that the Times was among the largest publications on Apple News. [ 98 ]
The New York Times, the Daily News, and the New York Post were the subject of a strike in 1978, allowing emerging newspapers to leverage halted coverage. The Times deliberately avoided coverage of the AIDS epidemic, running its first front page article in May 1983.
The Times: How the Newspaper of Record Survived Scandal, Scorn, and the Transformation of Journalism is a 2023 book by Adam Nagourney chronicling a history of The New York Times. Further reading [ edit ]
While the Times shifted its spacing to cover more of the war, the paper's editorials had a strong crusading spirit; though this belief was in opposition to what Ochs had established, Sulzberger and Merz felt as though the paper was firmly established as a newspaper for news and could properly split its editorials from its news. The New York ...