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(For new reader and those who request 好友请求, please read my 公告栏 first).
The New York Times newspaper is considered as the most authoritative daily newspaper in the US and
arguably the most in the world. It is read and quoted by millions of people everyday and available in most
libraries, US embassies, and consulates abroad. However, on Sundays it publishes an edition which
contains many special sections not present in its weekday editions. Many people all over the US including
myself subscribe to it (Footnote: my Sunday NY Times is delivered to my door at 6:30am every Sunday
without fail. On weekdays I used the Times Select service which delivers an e-mail summary of topics of
interest to me in the paper on that day. I can then use the URLs included in the e-mail to read articles of
interest on line). Reading the NY Times on Sunday morning is a pleasurable ritual for me for over 40 years.
I know it is also true for countless others. The motto of NYT is "all the news that's fit to print". My
version for the Sunday Times is "all the knowledge that are useful and pleasurable to read". Let me give an
account of what a typical Sunday edition (May 6, 2007) contains :
1. The entire paper weighs over four pounds not counting the advertisement inserts only of
interest to local New York city residents and not delivered outside the city.
2. Front page – the featured article is "How counterfeit and poisoned medicine from China kills
hundred of innocent people in the world". This is literally a detective story about how a cheap
glycerin substitute was sold as the real stuff from China and made its way via Spain into
medicine which caused deaths for hundreds of people all over the world and how it was
discovered. This is a painful article for oversea Chinese to read since we all share a sense of
collective guilt. We must also bear the blunt of any anger and backlash generated as a result.
3. The "News of the Week in Review" section – This section is essentially a weekly news
magazine typically consisting about 16 pages. The three front page stories this Sunday are:
a. Conflict between "modern" and "tradition" in oil rich Saudi Arabia
b. .The public kissing incident caused by the American movie actor Richard Gere in India due
to different customs in the two countries
c. How to survive in the U.S. political capital, Washington, D.C. using the examples of the
World Bank President, Paul Wolfowitz, and the Attorney General, Alberto Gonzales.
Inside the section there is day-by-day summary of the major news stories of the week and more
detailed account of the French election, the fallout of the Israeli-Lebanese war, and a list and
account of the most endangered animals of the earth. Finally, the opinion-editorial pages carries
the regular columns of some of the most celebrated columnists of the newspaper media.
4. The Sunday Magazine – This is usually the second section I will read. It is actually
published in glossy magazine format. This week it has 104 pages and devoted entirely to the
subject of the new human "middle age". It has articles on longevity, spiritual wisdom, sex,
physical labor vs. leisure labor, fashion (separate section of 98 pages), and the American baby
boomer generation. But my favorite is always the column entitled "the Ethicist" by Randy
Cohen who wisely answers all kinds of ethical dilemma posed by readers with humor and sage
advice.
5. The other sections (featured stories and total pages) Business section (Rupert Murdoch's
proposal to buy the Wall Street Journal, How to combine making money and doing charitable
work at the same time, 20 pages), The Arts and Leisure Section (Black-Americans in Ballet,
New movies this summer, 58 pages) the Style,and Society section (matchmakers for
celebrities, homosexual art, 24 pages), the Real Estate section (the best places to live, 18 pages),
the Sports section (the Kentucky Derby, and the Yankee star baseball pitcher Chien-ming Wang,
12 pages), and the Travel section (36 hours in Istanbul, 18 pages)
You can surmise how long would it take to read all of these interesting, sometimes useful, and often
important stories. I usually spend about two hours on Sunday morning reading and skimming 20-30%
of all the stories. I then keep the paper for a week with the hope I'll go back to read other stories later.
But frankly I seldom have the time or occasion to do so. But I know people to keep back copies of the
Sunday times for years in their basement. However, with the Internet database, this is more a habit
rather than necessity.
The chief virtue of NYT is not only its indepth factual reporting but also the analysis of the signigicance of the events reported.
In any case, sitting down in a comfortable chair with a cup of newly brewed "dragon well" tea and reading
the Sunday Times on a beautiful Spring day is one of the pleasures of being alive and connected to the
world.
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