Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. Sep 29, 2012 · September 29, 2012 8:23am. Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, The New York Times publisher who moved the newspaper from a regional to a national power and created the consumer-facing sections that would ...

  2. Sep 30, 2012 · Former New York Times publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, who led the company for 34 years in a period of growth that made it a multibillion-dollar media enterprise, died on Saturday at the age of ...

  3. Arthur Hays Sulzberger (September 12, 1891 – December 11, 1968) was publisher of The New York Times from 1935 to 1961. During that time, daily circulation rose from 465,000 to 713,000 and Sunday circulation from 745,000 to 1.4 million; the staff more than doubled, reaching 5,200; advertising linage grew from 19 million to 62 million column inches per year; and gross income increased almost ...

  4. L ast week the New York Times formally established the two-year-old fact that Arthur Hays Sulzberger is publisher of the greatest newspaper in the land. Unobtrusively Mr. Sulzberger had been ...

  5. Sep 29, 2012 · When he died in 1935, authority passed to Iphigene Ochs’s husband, Arthur Hays Sulzberger. Iphigene and Arthur had three daughters: Marian, Ruth and Judith, called Judy. Then came a son, Arthur ...

  6. Oct 6, 2012 · The nickname Punch was bestowed on Mr. Sulzberger by his father, Arthur Hays Sulzberger, who saw the boy as a counterpoint to one of his older sisters, Judith, called Judy.

    • 14 min
  7. People also ask

  8. Adolph Ochs eventually relinquished the paper to the man to whom he had reluctantly given his daughter, Iphigene—Arthur Hays Sulzberger. Sulzberger, who also had German-Jewish ancestors, took effective control in 1933 when Ochs was ailing and became the paper’s formal head in 1935 upon Ochs’s death.

  1. People also search for