Times Company ‘Does Not Foresee’ Closing Globe
By making steep pay and benefit cuts to the Boston Newspaper Guild, the company achieved the savings it needed to keep the paper alive.
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By making steep pay and benefit cuts to the Boston Newspaper Guild, the company achieved the savings it needed to keep the paper alive.
Employee wages will be reduced by 23 percent in order to keep the paper from shutting down.
The editorial director for Brant Publications has left.
Judging from his 'Times' column, he hasn't talked to an actual sports fan in years.
And it's funny! Now quit while you're ahead, Sanchez.
"A criminal's life has nothing but ups and downs, whereas a white-collar criminal has never seen the dark side, so when he enters that realm, he is lost."
We learned this disturbing fact from Suze Orman.
File this under "Things That Make Us Feel Good About Ourselves."
The public radio station will lay off four people and eliminate eleven unfilled positions. Senior staff will take a pay cut, as well.
And even better, it looks like the collusion wasn't illegal!
A meeting today among representatives of fifteen major papers could mean a lot of things.
Okay, not quite. But he thinks his new project "will help, maybe a lot."
“Hugging appears to be a grass-roots phenomenon,” the ‘Times’ observes.
He'll hold the post, soon to be vacated by outgoing editor Peter Kaplan, either temporarily or permanently.
Sometimes, wall-to-wall coverage makes us feel boxed in.
But it was kind of an important thing.