Word: lelyveld
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Everyone at the New York Times knew that Joe Lelyveld would be the next executive editor, although most people didn't expect announcement of his elevation as soon as last week. What almost nobody knew, and everybody speculated about, was who would replace him as managing editor and heir apparent. The answer, revealed to several hundred assembled staff members last week, surprised practically everyone in the news business...
...definitely not the heir apparent: Eugene Roberts, who at 61 is four years Lelyveld's senior and who left the Times in 1972 to transform the soggy Philadelphia Inquirer into one of the nation's foremost dailies. Lelyveld calls the low-key, deceptively shrewd Roberts "one of the great strategic thinkers in journalism," a judgment shared by most people in the industry. Several have tried to lure Roberts back into editing since he retired in 1990, after spurring his Inquirer staff to win 17 Pulitzer Prizes in 18 years on topics ranging from the intricacies of the federal budget...
...call from Lelyveld last month was different. The two are old friends who have never once, Roberts says, disagreed about journalistic philosophy. The paper has problems in local coverage and marketing to the suburbs, two of Roberts' specialties. And the Times is the Times -- the premier daily, the shared frame of reference for political, commercial, cultural and media elites. Its analysis becomes, almost by definition, the prevailing wisdom...
...hubbub over Roberts almost overshadowed the main event, the confirmation that the top post will pass in July from Max Frankel, 64, to Lelyveld, 57. The transition will mark a change in style -- Frankel is courtly and professorial, Lelyveld shy yet blunt -- but not necessarily in substance. Both men are Ivy Leaguers and Pulitzer prizewinners (Frankel for covering Richard Nixon's trip to China, Lelyveld for a book about South Africa) who have spent their adult life at the Times. Both reflect a newsroom esprit de corps that approaches religious fervor. Both are political liberals who preach the importance...
...lunches of cold cuts and pasta (pleasantly tacky, a reporter said) at a nearby Marriott. When Sulzberger described his theories of management, a reporter piped up that terror was still the prevalent emotion on 43rd Street. Sulzberger went on in his usual cheerful way, while "Max and Joe ((Lelyveld, the managing editor)) looked like they wanted to die," the reporter recalls...