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Feyer worked at the Associated Press for four years, then became an editor at the New York Times in 1980, working primarily on the foreign desk, and letters editor in 1999. [2] [3] [4] Two other editors assist him in choosing 10 to 15 to publish from the approximately 1,000 received every day. [4] [5] [6]
Kahn joined the Times in January 1998, after four years as China correspondent for The Wall Street Journal. Before the Journal, he was a reporter at The Dallas Morning News, where he was part of a team of reporters awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1994 for international reporting for their stories on violence against women around the world. [1]
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This week's letter to the editor asks what we, as a community, and you, as an individual, can do to be accountable for children's behavior. Manitowoc letter-writer says parents should also be ...
The public editor position was established in 2003 in response to the Jayson Blair scandal. In late May 2017, The New York Times announced that it was eliminating the post. Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr. announced: "The public editor position, created in the aftermath of a grave journalistic scandal, played a crucial part in rebuilding our readers ...
Letters to the Editor (LTEs) have been a feature of American newspapers since the 18th century. [citation needed] Many of the earliest news reports and commentaries published by early-American newspapers were delivered in the form of letters, and by the mid-18th century, LTEs were a dominant carrier of political and social discourse.
He is the son of A. M. Rosenthal, a longtime New York Times senior executive and executive editor. While at The New York Times, he managed the paper's opinion pages, their editorial board, and the Letters and Op-Ed departments. As the paper maintained separation between editorial and journalistic operations, Rosenthal reported directly to paper ...
The New York Times began using live blogs as chats for the 2012 Republican Party presidential debates, later using Slack for the 2016 Republican debates, [4] and covered the November 2015 Paris attacks with a live blog. [5] Live blogs begin with a primary post affixed before the live updates to overview the event. [6]