NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--June 5, 2003--The New York Times
announced today that Joseph Lelyveld, former executive editor of The
Times, has been named interim executive editor, assuming the
responsibilities held by Howell Raines, who has resigned as executive
editor. Gerald M. Boyd has also resigned as managing editor. No one
will be named interim managing editor.
"Howell and Gerald have tendered their resignations, and I have
accepted them with sadness based on what we believe is best for The
Times," said Arthur Sulzberger Jr., publisher of The New York Times
and chairman of The New York Times Company. "They have made enormous
contributions during their tenure, including an extraordinary seven
Pulitzer Prizes in 2002 and another this year. I appreciate all of
their efforts in continuing the legacy of our great newspaper.
"I am grateful to Joe Lelyveld, an editor of superb talents and
outstanding accomplishments, for his willingness to provide strong
journalistic leadership as we select new executive and managing
editors. While the past few weeks have been difficult, we remain
steadfast in our commitment to our employees, our readers and our
advertisers to produce the best newspaper we can by adhering to the
highest standards of integrity and journalism. For nearly 152 years,
The Times has devoted itself to this mission. With the efforts of our
outstanding staff, we believe we can raise our level of excellence
even higher."
Mr. Lelyveld, 66, retired in 2001, after having served as
executive editor for seven years. During his tenure, The Times won 12
Pulitzer Prizes, introduced color to its pages, added new sections and
greatly expanded its national circulation.
Mr. Lelyveld's assignments as a correspondent included Congo,
India and Pakistan, Hong Kong, London and Washington. He was twice the
correspondent in South Africa, in 1965 and again from 1980 to 1983. He
was also a staff writer and columnist for The New York Times Magazine.
He returned to New York as a foreign editor in 1987 and became
managing editor, the second highest executive in the newsroom, in 1990
before being named executive editor in 1994.
Mr. Lelyveld has been active as a freelance writer since his
departure from The Times, writing for The New York Review of Books,
The New Yorker and The New York Times Magazine.
His book, "Move Your Shadow," which described decades of racial
turmoil in South Africa and reflected his two assignments there, won
the Pulitzer Prize for nonfiction in 1986. He also won numerous awards
for his reporting, including two George Polk Memorial Awards, and
received a Guggenheim Fellowship.
Mr. Lelyveld graduated from the Bronx High School of Science in
1954. In 1958 he graduated from Harvard University with a bachelor's
degree in history and English literature and later earned a master's
degree in American history there. He graduated from the Columbia
University Graduate School of Journalism in 1960 and then had a
Fulbright scholarship in Burma.
Mr. Raines, 60, became executive editor of The New York Times in
2001, after having served as editorial page editor of The Times since
1993. Previously he had been Washington bureau chief since 1988 and
bureau chief in London since 1987.
From 1985 until 1987, Mr. Raines served as deputy Washington
editor. Before that he was the chief national political correspondent
in 1984, a White House correspondent from 1981 until 1984, and Atlanta
bureau chief from 1979 until 1981. He joined The Times in 1978 as a
national correspondent in Atlanta.
Before joining The Times, Mr. Raines had been political editor at
The St. Petersburg (Fla.) Times from 1976 until 1978. Earlier he was
political editor of The Atlanta Constitution, which he joined in 1971
after a year as a reporter on The Birmingham (Ala.) News. His
journalistic career began in 1964 with The Birmingham Post-Herald, and
he also worked for The Tuscaloosa (Ala.) News and WBRC-TV in
Birmingham.
Mr. Raines won the Pulitzer Prize in feature writing in 1992 for
"Grady's Gift," a personal reflection that appeared in The New York
Times Magazine.
Mr. Raines received a bachelor's degree from Birmingham-Southern
College in 1964. He went on to earn a master's degree in English from
the University of Alabama.
Mr. Boyd, 52, was named managing editor of The New York Times in
2001, after having served as deputy managing editor for news since
1997. Before that, Mr. Boyd had been assistant managing editor from
1993 until 1997.
Mr. Boyd also served as the co-senior editor of The Times's "How
Race is Lived in America" series, which was published in 2000 and was
awarded a Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting in the following year.
Mr. Boyd joined The Times in 1983. He soon became a member of its
national political team and reported on Vice President Bush during the
1984 presidential campaign. Mr. Boyd became a senior editor in January
1991, when he was appointed special assistant to the managing editor,
which led to brief stints as a top editor in the paper's Washington
bureau and in its national and metropolitan departments.
Mr. Boyd received a bachelor's degree in journalism from the
University of Missouri in 1973. He began his journalism career as a
copy boy at The St. Louis Post-Dispatch, where he eventually became a
White House correspondent. In 1980 Mr. Boyd attended Harvard
University as a Nieman Fellow.
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CONTACT:
The New York Times Company, New York
Catherine Mathis
212-556-1981
E-mail: mathis@nytimes.com
This press release can be downloaded from www.nytco.com