New York Times

The 1851 founded American Daily, the New York Times is the largest metropolitan newspaper in the US. Its circulation on weekdays as well as weekends hovers above the one million mark. The newspaper sports an unappealing color and font, but is very popular for its news coverage. More information about the New York Times is presented in the articles below.
Articles

Health Care on Less Than You Think
The New York Times Guide to Getting Affordable Coverage...

Lean, Long & Strong
The 6-Week Strength-Training, Fat-Burning Program for Women. Sick of wasting time on the treadmill? Want real results? In this follow-up to her "New York Times" bestseller BodyChange, personal trainer Wini Linguvic presents a revolutionary fat-burning, strength-training program designed specifically for women.

David Letterman Blasts New York Times
A recent New York Times magazine article has attempted to determine the influence that Late Night hosts like David Letterman have on voters'opinions.

Rightwing Us Media Respond to Call for Withdrawal
Conservative US papers today condemned what they described as "appeasement" the day after the New York Times finally came out to call for the withdrawal of US troops.

Right Turns on New York Times
Conservative US papers yesterday condemned what they described as "appeasement" the day after the New York Times finally came out and called for the withdrawal of US troops.

Baby Boom Crossword Clues Compiled By Ex-us President (7)
A crossword posted on the New York Times website is generating interest well beyond the ranks of puzzle buffs. The reason: the compiler is Bill Clinton.

Cheerleading
Is cheerleading dangerous? According to the New York Times, acrobatic manoeuvres such as throwing women (known as "flyers") 20 feet in the air or forming human pyramids have made "knee braces and ice-bags accoutrements as common as mascara" among the US's four million cheerleaders. By Stuart Jeffries

UK Readers Blocked From Ny Times Terror Article
The New York Times has blocked British readers from accessing an article published in the US about the alleged London bomb plot for fear of breaching the UK's contempt of court laws. By Julia Day.

Chinese Court Jails New York Times Researcher
A Chinese court sentenced a New York Times researcher to three years in prison for fraud today, but dismissed more serious charges of leaking national secrets.

New York Times Hires Man With Nose for a Story
The New York Times has announced the appointment of its first perfume critic, in what the paper describes as a breakthrough for olfactory journalism and a wake-up call for a secretive, hype-driven industry.

Court Fails to Deliver Verdict on Chinese Researcher
A Chinese court verdict in the case of a New York Times researcher accused of leaking state secrets has failed to materialise. By Julia Day and agencies.

Diary
Further to our recent item on the underpants of eminent New York Times columnist Thomas L Friedman, we hear a certain Daily Telegraph and Country Life contributor wears tailor-made Y-fronts of hand-woven tweed, because it 'breathes'. Apparently. By Jon Henley

Republican Urges Prosecution of 'treasonous' New York Times
A prominent Republican congressman has called on the Bush administration to seek criminal charges against the New York Times for publishing details of a secret programme to monitor the financial transactions of thousands of Americans.

The Real State of the Union: How Well Are the Clintons Getting On?
New York Times article makes former first family's marriage front-page news.

Selective Service: A Shot Off the Bow
A recent guest editorial in the New York Times proposed a renewal of military conscription as a means of persuading the Iranians to disarm. The idea is as ludicrous as it is disingenuous. Military conscription is a crime against humanity.

Mismanagement at The New York Times
Major shareholders at the New York Times Company withheld their votes for four members of the board of directors. Has the company been mismanaged? And is the stock now a bargain?

New York Times Wins Pulitzer for Wiretap Story
A New York Times investigation exposing how George Bush ordered domestic wiretapping without court oversight shared a Pulitzer prize for national reporting yesterday.

U-turn on Abu Ghraib Torture Image
New York Times forced to apologise after victim is wrongly identified as ex-Baghdad mayor.

China Delays Trial of New York Times Man
The trial of a Chinese researcher charged with revealing state secrets while working for the New York Times is due to take place before the end of March. By Julia Day.

New York Times Journalist to Go on Trial in China
The Chinese authorities are preparing to put a New York Times research assistant on trial for leaking state secrets, his legal team said yesterday.

Miller Granted a Last Word As She Leaves 'the Convent'
· New York Times reporter leaves paper in turmoil · Pay-off and letter to editor seals drawn-out departure.

Judith Miller Departs New York Times
Judith Miller, the New York Times journalist who went to jail to protect a source, has left the paper after weeks of controversy. By Stephen Brook.

'Plamegate' Reporter Leaves New York Times
Judith Miller, the New York Times reporter criticised by her editor for her role in a Bush administration intelligence leak scandal, left the newspaper yesterday after a negotiated settlement.

Support for Miller Exposes Rift at New York Times
· Publisher backs journalist despite calls for her to go · Severance may include chance to reply to critics

Colleagues Call for Removal of New York Times Journalist in Cia Leak Case
The New York Times continued to implode under the weight of internal criticism yesterday as the public clamour for one its most prominent reporters, Judith Miller, to be removed from her job gained pace.

Editor Opens Rift Over Cia 'leak'
New York Times reporter who went to jail attacked over sources.

Journalist Reveals Tortuous Path to the Grand Jury - and Jail
· New York Times publishes Judith Miller's testimony · Reporters criticise 'divisive newsroom figure'

At Home With Rupert and Wendi
Rupert Murdoch and his wife Wendi Deng have invited the New York Times into their SoHo apartment in a bid to attract potential buyers. By Claire Cozens.

Jailed Reporter Freed After Agreeing to Give Evidence
The New York Times reporter jailed for refusing to testify about the leak of a covert CIA officer's identity has been released after agreeing to give evidence. By Claire Cozens.

Film Directors and Writers Call for Release of Jailed Journalist
More than two dozen prominent European film directors, writers and journalists have published an open letter calling for the release of Judith Miller, a New York Times reporter who is today spending her 50th day in jail for refusing to identify confidential sources.

Fear of Prosecution Prompts Us Paper to Pull Stories
The editor of a leading US newspaper has admitted pulling two major investigative pieces on the advice of lawyers after a New York Times reporter was sent to jail for refusing to divulge the identity of a source. By Claire Cozens.

Off the Record and Straight to Jail
The jailing yesterday of New York Times reporter Judith Miller has turned the spotlight on the casual relationship between journalists and their 'anonymous sources', writes Albert Scardino.

New York Times Journalist Jailed
Refusal to name source in row over CIA revelations sees journalist jailed for four months - or until she decides to cooperate.

JUDITH MILLER: The Anti-Hero
Today Judith Miller of the New York Times was ordered to jail for refusing to give up her source in the Valerie Plame case. Overnight, she becomes both hero and martyr to the profession. But there is more to this case than what at first appears.

US Abuse of Afghan Prisoners 'widespread'
US soldiers carried out widespread abuse of detainees at the US-run Bagram prison camp in Afghanistan, according to a confidential US army report revealed today in the New York Times.

US Mass Media entrap the US into disastrous Middle Eastern policies
Refutation and criticism of a New York Times article that adopted French Colonial policies and tactics to falsify historical realities related to the Aramaeans, a historical people that consists in the backbone of the local populations in the Arabic-speaking countries of the Middle East. Traditional French practice in this regard was to diffuse a false national name ('Assyrians') to confuse the Aramaeans and to divert them from National Awakening.

The Vietnam Turnout Was Good As Well
Sami Ramadani: No amount of spin can conceal Iraqis' hostility to US occupation. On September 4 1967 the New York Times published an upbeat story on presidential elections held by the South Vietnamese puppet regime at the height of the Vietnam war.

Profits Warning at New York Times
The United States east coast's leading newspaper group, the New York Times, yesterday warned on profits after weaker than expected advertising sales so far this month. The news increased fears that the autumn is shaping up to be weaker than US publishers had hoped and sent shares in the...

White House Leak Inquiry Summons Journalists
A journalist from the New York Times has been drawn into an official inquiry set up to establish the source of an illegal leak from the White House, raising fears that the investigation is becoming an attack on the right of reporters to protect their sources. Judith Miller has received a...

New York Times Says It Was Duped By Pentagon 'cunning'
The New York Times donned sackcloth and ashes again yesterday when its ombudsman said the newspaper had been duped by "the cunning campaign" of those that wanted the world to believe that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction. Some stories, Daniel Okrent said, "pushed Pentagon...

New York Times Admits Failures in Run-up to War
The New York Times yesterday admitted that its coverage in the run-up to the Iraq war was "not as rigorous as it should have been".

The Man Who Took the New York Times for a Ride
When Jayson Blair was found out plagiarising a news story, it led to soul searching and resignations on one of the world's most famous newspapers. What has become of him since? He tells all to Gary Younge.

New Editor for Troubled New York Times
The troubled New York Times named its new editor yesterday as it was forced to publish yet another lengthy correction in an attempt to settle nerves and restore confidence at one of the nation's most respected newspapers. Bill Keller, a columnist and magazine writer, will succeed Howell...

Reporter's Plagiarism Claims Scalp of New York Times Editor
Two most senior journalists pay price for humiliation heaped on paper by scandal.

New York Times editor quits
Howell Raines has quit as editor of the New York Times in the wake of the Jayson Blair plagiarism scandal. The paper's managing editor Gerald Boyd has also resigned.

New York Times in shock as reporter's lies are uncovered
A New York Times reporter has fabricated and plagiarised dozens of stories that have appeared in the paper, according to a report published on its own front page yesterday.

New York Times profits leap 45%
The New York Times Company has delivered a shot in the arm to the world's print media business, posting a 45% leap in profit in the final quarter of last year, buoyed by a advertising surge.

O'Sullivan makes up for lost time as she looks to New York
Sonia O'Sullivan is taking the opposite approach to Paula Radcliffe when it comes to preparing for the marathon. While the Bedford runner has been in isolation in the French Pyrenees resort of Font Romeau for weeks now without racing, O'Sullivan has decided to stay at home in London and compete almost every weekend.