User talk:NADER BAGAGO

The New York Times (sometimes abbreviated NYT and The Times) is an American daily newspaper, founded and continuously published in New York City since September 18, 1851, by The New York Times Company. The New York Times has won 119 Pulitzer Prizes, more than any other newspaper.[5][6][7]

The paper's print version in 2013 had the second-largest circulation, behind The Wall Street Journal, and the largest circulation among the metropolitan newspapers in the US. The New York Times is ranked 18th in the world by circulation. Following industry trends, its weekday circulation had fallen in 2009 to fewer than one million daily.[8]

Nicknamed "The Gray Lady",[9] The New York Times has long been regarded within the industry as a national "newspaper of record".[10] It has been owned by the Ochs-Sulzberger family since 1896; Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, Jr., the publisher of the Times and the chairman of the New York Times Company, is the fourth generation of the family to helm the paper.[11] The New York Times international version, formerly the International Herald Tribune, is now called the New York Times International Edition.[12]

The paper's motto, "All the News That's Fit to Print", appears in the upper left-hand corner of the front page. Since the mid-1970s, The New York Times has greatly expanded its layout and organization, adding special weekly sections on various topics supplementing the regular news, editorials, sports, and features. Since 2008,[13] The New York Times has been organized into the following sections: News, Editorials/Opinions-Columns/Op-Ed, New York (metropolitan), Business, Sports of The Times, Arts, Science, Styles, Home, Travel, and other features.[14]

On Sunday, The New York Times is supplemented by the Sunday Review (formerly the Week in Review),[15] The New York Times Book Review,[16] The New York Times Magazine[17] and T: The New York Times Style Magazine (T is published 13 times a year).[18] The New York Times stayed with the broadsheet full page set-up (as some others have changed into a tabloid lay-out) and an eight-column format for several years, after most papers switched to six,[19] and was one of the last newspapers to adopt color photography, especially on the front page.[20]