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June 22, 2007
At The American Thinker, Thomas Lifson makes the case that "the slow motion business collapse of the New York Times Company may be picking up its pace." JOHN adds: Those of us who are connoisseurs of the NYT Corrections section gain insight, I think, into the paper's declining fortunes. From this morning's corrections: The Keeping Score column on Sunday, about new baseball research into hitting and fielding trends that can help assess the impact of pitchers, referred incorrectly to the status of the journeyman Glendon Rusch. He is recovering from a blood-clot scare last season, and is not pitching now; he is not out of the game because he “appears to have run out of employers to disappoint” with his statistically below-average pitching. The Times might want to notify its insurance carrier of that one. Some would say that it is the Times that has "run out of readers to disappoint" with its news coverage. |