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From: "The New York Times"
To:"jeevacationggmail.com <jeevacation@Smat .com>
Subject: For Times subscribers only: here's your March newsletter
Date: Tue, 07 Mar 2017 13:39:36 +0000
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Off the Press - March 2O17
HOME PAGE OPINION POLITICS RECOMMENDED FOR YOU MOST POPULAR
Dear Subscriber,
We've been covering major conflict and disaster zones since the Civil War.
From the World Wars to earthquakes, pestilence and 21st-century battlefields in
the Middle East, readers have turned to The Times for trustworthy firsthand
accounts, analysis and commentary. In this issue of Off the Press, we share
some of what goes into our reporting from the front lines around the world.
In Harm's Way:
The Risks and Precautions We Take to
Cover the News
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Covering the Ebola crisis, video journalist Ben Solomon gets a chlorine spray outside a hospital in
Monrovia. Liberia. Photo: Daniel Berehulak for The New York Times
Peril is just part of the job description. Covering the most important news
worldwide often puts us close to the front lines of major conflicts and disasters.
A good day at the office may mean not getting abducted, injured or killed. Each
of the stories below is a case in point.
"ISIS Sent Four Car Bombs. The Last One Hit Me."
"4 Times Journalists Held Captive in Libya Faced Days of Brutality."
You can also click here to see work by limes photographer Tyler Hicks, who
earned a Pulitzer Prize in 2014 for courageously documenting a deadly terrorist
attack at a Nairobi shopping mall.
It takes fortitude and strategy to protect journalists and get accurate information
in trying circumstances. Below, limes veteran Jodi Rudoren tells us more.
TAKE A LOOK
CATCH UP WITH EDITORIAL DIRECTOR OF NYT GLOBAL
Jodi Rudoren
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.lodi Rudoren
The world's her stage. Recently appointed editorial director of
NYT Global, and just before that a deputy editor of international
news, Jodi knows about bringing home the big stories from all
over the map. She also brings to her job a diversity of experiences,
having served as a National and Metro correspondent and editor.
Perhaps no correspondent ever inspired as much reader email as
Jodi did while serving as Jerusalem bureau chief; one of her critics
fiercely accused her of "neutrality."
We recently spoke to her, and here's what she told us.
WHAT ARE SOME OF THE BIGGEST CHALLENGES FOR THE
TIMES TODAY IN COVERING A WORLD IN TURMOIL?
Access. We have been unable to safely travel to most of Syria during
the long and chaotic civil war there. In China, we struggle to get
journalist visas to bring in new correspondents. We recently had a
reporter turned back at the Istanbul airport because he had been
blacklisted. Hamas has made it difficult for our reporters to work in
Gaza.
And, of course, danger: our photographer Bryan Denton was recently
hit by an ISIS car bomb in Iraq, our team in Mogadishu was
frighteningly close to a deadly explosion in January, travel in Yemen
is severely restricted. The list goes on and on.
WHAT ARE SOME OF YOUR MOST MEMORABLE
EXPERIENCES IN INTERNATIONAL NEWS - OR IN YOUR
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OTHER WORK AT THE TIMES?
I covered two wars in Gaza: I don't think I'll ever forget the night I
woke up to an FA-i8 dropping its load a block from my hotel in 2012,
or writing about an Italian journalist and Palestinian fixer who were
killed in 2014 doing a feature on the Hamas team that handled
unexploded ordnance (a story I might have been doing that day
myself). But those scary things are not the most powerful
experiences.
Much more impactful, in terms of human understanding and growth,
was the afternoon I spent with Nidaa Badwan, an artist in Gaza who
locked herself in her room for a year because she could not cope with
the situation. I'll never forget the young Israeli hipster who had
tattooed her grandfather's Auschwitz number on her forearm. Or the
strength of Rachel Fraenkel, whose son was among the three yeshiva
boys kidnapped in the occupied West Bank, as she awaited word
whether he was alive (he was not).
WHAT DOES YOUR NEW JOB AS EDITORIAL DIRECTOR, NYT
GLOBAL ENTAIL?
Well, I'm writing this on an airplane to Newark at the end of a is-day
trip through Stockholm, Amsterdam, Brussels, Hong Kong and
Beijing — so it seems to entail a lot of travel!
The idea of NIT Global is to grow our audience around the world and
to make The Times a truly international news organization. That
means expanded coverage in Australia and Canada, where the decline
of the local media has left readers clamoring for quality journalism. It
means building our brand across Europe to showcase our coverage of
Europe as well as our indispensable service journalism on health and
food, our innovative visual-first projects, our podcasts. It means
evolving our Spanish and Chinese websites. It means helping build
out lines of coverage on climate change, gender, technology and
urbanization that resonate in every corner of the world. And it means
working across the newsroom to ensure that the report is not
presumptively American, that we don't send the message to readers
abroad that this is not for them.
That's what I know right now, but Global is new and entrepreneurial
and looking for opportunities to seize. We'd love to hear readers'
ideas about how to get their friends and neighbors engaged with
Times journalism. Send your suggestions to globalOnytimes.com.
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Did you know?
We have our own Department of Corrections. Not exactly jail time
for erring journalists, but, just as we call out erroneous statements
made by political leaders, we also regularly note factual errors that
we inadvertently make ourselves. We may be good, but we're not
yet perfect. You can find our daily Corrections in the Main News
section of our newspaper and under "News" in the list of
categories on the home page of nytimes.com.
VISIT CORRECTIONS
Want to foster the next generation of
Times readers?
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upport the mission of The New York
Imes by making a contribution that
provides Times digital subscriptions to
tudents and schools across the United
tates.
he Times matches every subscription
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granted through contributions to the program, providing a subscription to one
additional student. It also provides unlimited access to The Times's Learning
Network and its rich archive of lesson plans for the school that each sponsored
student attends. We are deeply grateful to all of you who already support
our journalistic endeavor with your subscription. If you'd like to spread the word
or become a sponsor click here.
LEARN MORE
Check Out the Most-Shared Articles
These are the recent stories shared most by NYTimes.com readers.
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Heart of Darkness
Heart of Darkness
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In this Times Insider article, Azam Ahmed,The Times's Mexico bureau chief,
recounts his journey to the remote town of Rendel, Haiti, to report on the
cholera epidemic devastating the community.
READ NOW
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ℹ️ Document Details
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