Herbert Mitgang, 93, Intrepid Journalist

Mr. Mitgang, a longtime reporter and editor for The New York Times, told of mountains of F.B.I. and C.I.A. records squirreled away on America’s most well-known writers.

    



Three Journalists at The Times Are Departing

Hugo Lindgren, editor of The New York Times Magazine, told the news to his staff at a noon meeting. No successor has been named.

    



Times Co. Posts a Loss, Hurt by Sale of The Globe

The company said the results were positive because the company is now free to concentrate on its profitable core product, The New York Times and its affiliated publications.

    



Longtime Times Editor Named Politico Executive

Richard L. Berke, Politico’s new executive editor, said that he admired how it “started from scratch and became a journalistic powerhouse” and that he hoped to help it reach to “even greater heights.”

    



Pogue, Times Technology Columnist, Is Leaving for Yahoo

After writing about personal technology for The Times for 13 years, David Pogue will start a consumer technology Web site at Yahoo.

    



A Leaner Times Aims for Global Growth

After shedding outside holdings, The New York Times Company this week will introduce The International New York Times and, later, new subscription, video and consumer initiatives.

    



D. J. R. Bruckner, Columnist and Critic, Dies at 79

Mr. Bruckner, who was a longtime editor for The New York Times Book Review, landed on Nixon’s enemies list over his syndicated columns for The Los Angeles Times.

    



National Briefing | Washington: Prosecutors Press Subpoena for Times Reporter in Leak Case

The Justice Department on Monday asked a full federal appeals court not to hear arguments from lawyers for a New York Times reporter, who has been subpoenaed to testify in a leak case against a former C.I.A. officer.

    

Officer Is Indicted on Charges of Lying About Photographer’s Arrest

The officer, Michael Ackermann, claimed that Robert Stolarik’s camera flash interfered with a girl’s arrest last year, but evidence later emerged that no flash had been used.

    

Stringer Gets Endorsements of Three City Newspapers

The New York Times, The Daily News and The New York Post backed Scott M. Stringer for city comptroller instead of Eliot Spitzer.

    



Times Chairman Sells a Portion of His Stock

A Securities and Exchange Commission filing stated that Arthur O. Sulzberger Jr. had sold some of his publicly traded stock, but that he retained significant holdings.

    



Common Sense: After Post Sale, Spotlight Shines More Intensely on The Times

The New York Times, one of the last of the family-owned newspapers, is optimistic about staying competitive in an increasingly digital world. Should it be?

    

The Times Isn’t for Sale, Its Publisher Declares

The recent sales of The Boston Globe and The Washington Post make The New York Times the nation’s last major newspaper run by a family.

    

National Briefing | Washington: Times Reporter Seeks Subpoena’s Withdrawal

A lawyer for James Risen, a reporter for The New York Times, has asked Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. to withdraw a subpoena requiring him to testify about a confidential source.

    

Jean-Claude Suares, 71, a Daring Times Op-Ed Artist

Mr. Suares, the first Op-Ed page art director at The New York Times, began a visual era for editorial illustrations that influenced many other publications.

    

Boston Globe Is Another Metro Paper Gone Local

The sale continues a recent trend in the struggling newspaper industry: newspapers being returned to local owners, often at bargain-basement prices.

    

2 Editors Promoted at New York Times

Matt Purdy, the investigations editor, was named an assistant managing editor, and Marc Lacey, a deputy foreign editor, became an associate managing editor.

    

The Public Editor: Making Sense of a Sensational Case

The Times has made up for a slow start on the Trayvon Martin story.

    

New York Times Names a New National Editor

Alison Mitchell, the weekend editor of The Times, was named national editor to replace Sam Sifton, who will work on online projects.

    

Layhmond Robinson Jr., Who Paved Way for Black Journalists, Dies at 88

Mr. Robinson, one of the first black reporters at The New York Times in the 1950s and a local television news correspondent, inspired the next generation of black journalists.