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Pulitzer Prize

• November 24 -- Pulitzer
Punts on Duranty's Prize, Satisfying Sulzberger
The Pulitzer Prize board decided not to revoke Stalinist Times reporter Walter
Duranty's 1932 prize, leading relieved publisher Arthur Sulzberger Jr. to say:
"We respect and commend the Pulitzer board for its decision on this complex
and sensitive issue."
• November 13 -- Times
Publisher Criticized By Own Hired Historian
A letter to the editor from a historian hired by the Times to assess Pulitzer
Prize winner Walter Duranty's reporting takes issue with publisher Arthur
Sulzberger Jr. But why'd the paper wait two weeks to print it?
• October 23 -- Retaining
a Stalinist's Stained Pulitzer
Giving back Stalinist apologist and Times reporter Walter Duranty's 1932
Pulitzer Prize would in itself evoke Stalinist purging, says publisher Arthur
Sulzberger Jr., and the idea gives executive editor Bill Keller "the
creeps."
• June 10 --
Revoking A
Blood-Stained Pulitzer
Will notorious pro-Stalinist Times reporter Walter Duranty finally lose his
Pulitzer Prize? The New York Sun reports a new push to revoke Duranty’s 1932
Pulitzer for his Russia coverage.
• May 14 --
Howell Raines’ Theatre of the Absurd
Times staffers will pack a Manhattan movie house today for the latest
installment of the “Blair Watch Project”—top management will take questions from
seething Times news staff. Do journalists now see that the media’s diversity
quest is damaging reporters’ reputations?
• May 13 -- No
Friends to the Left for the Times?
Even left-wing outlets are taking on the Times—and making conservative
arguments to do so.
• March 10 -- Walter
Duranty, the Times' Useful Idiot
Russian dictator Josef Stalin may have been poisoned, the Times' Serge
Schmemann noted with satisfaction in the "Editorial Observer" section
of Monday's edition. But he went on to admonish that Stalin "was not always
the same demon in our eyes that he is today," pointing out the Times
itself ran a report on Stalin's death that made no mention of the purges or the
gulag. But the career of Walter Duranty, Times' man in Moscow during the
1930s, proves the paper's ignorance of Stalinist reality wasn't limited to one
obituary.
• April 9 -- Fore!
The Timeswatch “Masters Golf Tournament” Edition
• Hootie and
the Blowhards: The Times Assault on the Masters Continues
• Turning to
the sports page…
• No Spike
For Columnist Selena Roberts
• The Times
Bogeys The Pulitzer Prize
• A Times Watch Editorial Exclusive:
AUGUSTA NATIONAL GOLF CLUB REP ACCUSES NEW YORK TIMES
OF ABSURD DOUBLE-STANDARD
See Op-Ed |
See Press Release
• March 10 --
Walter Duranty, the
Times' Useful Idiot
Russian dictator Josef Stalin may have been poisoned, the Times' Serge Schmemann
noted with satisfaction in the "Editorial Observer" section of Monday's edition.
But he went on to admonish that Stalin "was not always the same demon in our
eyes that he is today," pointing out the Times itself ran a report on Stalin's
death that made no mention of the purges or the gulag. But the career of Walter
Duranty, Times' man in Moscow during the 1930s, proves the paper's ignorance of
Stalinist reality wasn't limited to one obituary.
E-mail
TimesWatch Director, Clay Waters, with TimesWatch feedback at
cwaters@mediaresearch.org
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