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The New York Times

The New York Times is a newspaper published in New York City by Arthur O. Sulzberger Jr., and distributed in the United States and many other nations worldwide. It is owned by The New York Times Company, which also publishes some 40 other newspapers, including the International Herald Tribune and the Boston Globe. The newspaper is nicknamed the "Gray Lady" and is often referred to as the newspaper of record in the United States.

History

The New York Times was founded on September 18, 1851 by Henry Jarvis Raymond and George Jones. Raymond was also a founding director of the Associated Press in 1856. Adolph Ochs acquired the Times in 1896, and under his guidance the newspaper achieved an international scope, circulation, and reputation. In 1897 he coined the paper's slogan "All The News That's Fit To Print," widely interpreted as a jab at competing papers in New York City (the New York World and the New York Journal American) that were known for yellow journalism. After relocating the paper's headquarters to a new tower on 42nd Street, the area was named Times Square in 1904. Nine years later, the Times opened an annex at 229 43rd Street, their current headquarters, later selling Times Tower in 1961.

The Times was originally intended to publish every morning except on Sundays; however, during the Civil War the Times started publishing Sunday issues along with other major dailies. It won its first Pulitzer Prize for news reports and articles about World War I in 1918. In 1919 it made its first trans-atlantic delivery to London.

The crossword began to appear in 1942 as a feature, and the paper bought the classical station WQXR in the same year. The fashion section started in 1946. The Times also started an international edition in 1946, but stopped publishing it in 1967 and joined with the owners of the New York Herald Tribune and The Washington Post to publish the International Herald Tribune in Paris. The Op-Ed section started appearing in 1970. More recently, in 1996 The New York Times went online, giving access to readers all over the world on the Web at www.nytimes.com. A new headquarters for the newspaper, a skyscraper designed by Renzo Piano, is currently under construction at 41st Street and 8th Avenue in Manhattan.

In 1964, the paper was the defendant in New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, which established the actual malice legal test for libel.

Times today

The New York Times' main offices at 229 West 43rd Street in New York City.

Today The New York Times is probably the most prominent American daily newspaper, sometimes being referred to as America's "newspaper of record". It has traditionally printed full transcripts of major speeches and debates. The newspaper is currently owned by The New York Times Company, in which descendants of Ochs, principally the Sulzberger family, maintain a dominant role.

The Times has won 90 Pulitzer Prizes – the most prestigious award for journalism in the US, presented each year by Columbia University – including a record 7 in 2002. In 1971 it broke the Pentagon Papers story, publishing leaked documents revealing that the U.S. government had been painting an unrealistically rosy picture of the progress of the Vietnam War. This led to New York Times Co. v. United States (1971), which declared the government's prior restraint of the classified documents was unconstitutional. In 1972, the Times exposed the Tuskegee experiment, in which African Americans suffering from syphilis were surreptitiously denied treatment over a period of decades. More recently, in 2004 the Times won a Pulitzer award for a series written by David Barstow and Lowell Bergman on employers and workplace safety issues.

The Times has been going through a downsizing, for several years, laying off workers and cutting expenses [1], in common with a general trend among print newsmedia. At the end of 2005 it had over 350 full time reporters and about 40 photographers, in addition to hundreds of free-lance contributors who work for the paper more occasionally.

The Times is based in New York City. It has 16 news bureaus in the New York region, 11 national news bureaus and 26 foreign news bureaus.[2] For the year ending Dec. 26, 2004, the reported circulation data for The New York Times were: 1,124,700 Weekday[3] and 1,669,700 Sunday[4].

The newspaper continues to own classical WQXR (96.3 FM) and WQEW (1560 AM). The classical format was simulcast on both frequencies until the early 1990s, when the big-band and standards format of WNEW-AM (now WBBR) moved from 1130 AM to 1560. The AM station changed its call letters from WQXR to WQEW. By the beginning of the 21st century, The Times had begun leasing WQEW to ABC Radio for its Radio Disney format, which continues on 1560 AM to this day.

The New York Times is printed at the following sites:

Ann Arbor, Michigan; Austin, Texas; Atlanta, Georgia; Billerica, Massachusetts; Canton, Ohio; Chicago, Illinois; College Point, New York; Concord, California; Dayton, Ohio (Sunday only); Denver, Colorado; Fort Lauderdale, Florida; Gastonia, North Carolina; Edison, New Jersey; Lakeland, Florida; Phoenix, Arizona; Minneapolis, Minnesota; Springfield, Virginia; Kent, Washington and Torrance, California. [5]

Major sections

The newspaper is organized in three sections:

1. News 
2. Opinion 
3. Features 

Style

Stylistically, the newspaper is quite conservative (see also: The New York Times Manual of Style and Usage). When referring to people, it uses titles, rather than unadorned last names (except among the sports pages, in which last names stand alone). Its headlines tend to be verbose, and, for major stories, come with subheadings giving further details, although it is moving away from this style. It stayed with an 8-column format years after other papers had switched to 6, and it was one of the last newspapers to adopt color photography. In the absence of a major headline, the day's most important story generally appears in the top-righthand column.

Web presence

The Times has had a strong presence on the web since 1995, and has been ranked one of the top web sites. It has a general policy of keeping articles freely available for a week and charges subscription for older articles. The website had 555 million pageviews in March 2005.[6] In September 2005, the paper decided to experiment with charging subscription for daily columns in a program known as TimesSelect. This is unusual, in that it included previously free editorial columns. This led to attempts to work around it, such as Never Pay Retail [7] and the posting of TimesSelect material by bloggers. [8] Most for-pay NYT editorials are available online shortly after their publication through blog searches. As of late January 2006 online reproduction of Select content is extremely difficult to find. This seems to be a result of vigorous action by the Times' legal wing.

Famous mistakes

In 1920, a New York Times editorial ridiculed Robert Goddard and his claim that a rocket would work in space:

In 1969, days before Apollo 11's landing on the moon, the newspaper published a tongue-in-cheek correction:

On November 15, 1992, the Times published a list of slang terms (known as "grunge speak") that were supposedly used in the Seattle grunge scene. This was later proven to be a hoax created by Megan Jasper, a sales representative for Sub Pop Records.

On several occasions the Times has erroneously published premature obituaries, including:

  • William Baer (a New York University professor) in 1942, as a result of a hoax by his students
  • Alan Abel in 1980, who had faked his own death as an elaborate hoax
  • Katharine Sergava (ballet dancer) in 2003, based on an earlier incorrect obituary in the Daily Telegraph.

Allegations of bias

The Times, like many major news organizations, has often been accused of giving too little or too much play to various events for reasons not related to objective journalism.

One of the most serious of these charges is that before and during World War II, the New York Times downplayed evidence that the Third Reich had targeted Jews for genocide, at least in part because the publisher feared the taint of taking on any 'Jewish cause'.

Liberal bias?

Some conservatives believe that the Times' hard news and soft news reportage have a consistent and pronounced liberal slant, particularly on social issues. A 2005 study by Tim Gloseclose and Jeffrey Milyo of media coverage over the past ten years ranked the New York Times as the third most liberal of twenty major media outlets ranked by Americans for Democratic Action's guidelines for lawmakers' votes on selected issues of importance to liberals.

Riccardo Puglisi from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has written a paper about the editorial choices of the New York Times from 1946 to 1994, entitled, "Being the New York Times: The Political Behaviour of a Newspaper" (December 6, 2004). [9]. He finds that the Times displays Democratic partisanship, with some watchdog aspects. For example, during presidential campaigns, the paper systematically gives more coverage to Democratic topics, but only so when the incumbent president is a Republican.

Among other things, the intermix of political commentary with art criticism in the Arts section of the paper is pointed to as evidence of bias. For example, A. O. Scott's film reviews sometimes contain barbs directed at social conservatives, and Frank Rich's Arts columns regularly attacked conservatives.

The op-ed section, the Times's regular columnists — who operate largely independently of the rest of the paper, and are subject to relatively little editorial oversight — have varying political orientations. However, some critics believe the mix is more liberal than conservative.

The 2005 roster of regular columnists ranges in political position from Maureen Dowd, Paul Krugman, and Bob Herbert on the left, to Nicholas Kristof and Thomas Friedman on the center-left, and David Brooks, formerly of The Weekly Standard magazine, and John Tierney on the moderate right. However, attempts to place these columnists' positions on a one-dimensional American political spectrum do not completely characterize their actions or views. For example, Dowd strongly criticized President Clinton; Krugman (a professional economist) spoke as an economic centrist before he began criticizing the George W. Bush administration; and libertarian-conservative former columnist William Safire criticized the Patriot Act.

The editorial page of the Times has not endorsed a Republican Party candidate for president since Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1956.

Conservative bias?

Some liberals view the New York Times as a conservative establishment newspaper due to its failure to use its formidable journalistic resources to critique and expose structural economic inequality, the comparative ideological similarity of the major U.S. political parties on many issues, the often-harmful activities of multinational corporations, etc. Such critics note the significance of the many important stories that the Times does not print, which can be found in alternative media. A frequent critic of the Times in this vein has been leftist Noam Chomsky.

Distinctions between news, comment, ads

On November 25, 2002, the Times ran a front-page story with the headline, "CBS Staying Silent in Debate on Women Joining Augusta" — part of a string of stories focusing on the Augusta National Golf Club, the host of the Masters Tournament, effectively demanding a boycott. Critics complained that this was an editorial usurping news space. Mickey Kaus wrote that the executive editor, Howell Raines, was "on the verge of a breakthrough reconceptualization of 'news' here, in which 'news' comes to mean the failure of any powerful individual or institution to do what Howell Raines wants them to do."

The Times has also been criticized for allowing Exxon-Mobil Corporation to run a regular paid "advertorial" commentary piece on its editorial page, although the practice is common in other U.S. newspapers. Some studies have shown that the Times selection of op-ed pieces and letters to the editor seem to "bracket" their editorial position, making the editorials appear to be moderate — although again this practice is hardly unique to the Times.

Times self-examination of bias

In summer 2004, the Times' public editor (ombudsman), Daniel Okrent, wrote a piece on the Times' alleged liberal bias. He concluded that the Times did have a liberal bias in coverage of certain social issues, gay marriage being the example he used. He claimed that this bias reflected the paper's cosmopolitanism, which arose naturally from its roots as a hometown paper of New York City.

Okrent did not comment at length on the issue of bias in coverage of "hard news", such as fiscal policy, foreign policy, or civil liberties. However, he noted that the paper's coverage of the Iraq war was, among other things, insufficiently critical of the George W. Bush administration (see below). (In May 2005 Okrent was succeeded by Byron Calame.)

Recent controversies

The day after the Israel Day Parade in 2002, the Times featured a picture of the event on the front page. The photo, however, focused on the comparatively minuscule number of Palestinian protestors at the parade and made the event appear to be confrontational. In response, thousands of Jews canceled their Times subscriptions.[10]

In 2003, the Times admitted to journalism fraud committed over a span of several years by one of its reporters, Jayson Blair, and the general professionalism of the paper was questioned, though Blair immediately resigned following the incident. Questions of affirmative action in journalism were also raised, since Blair was African American. The paper's top two editors – Howell Raines, the executive editor, and Gerald Boyd, managing editor – resigned their posts following the incident.

Since the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq, the Times has persistently referred to "insurgents" rather than "terrorists" being responsible for the bombing and other acts of violence. This has been aggressively criticized, such as by frequent Times contributor Christopher Hitchens, as carrying a connotation of justification; Times columnist Thomas Friedman refers to them as "terrorists" or "Islamo-fascists".

In April, 2004 the Times reversed its policy of not using the term Armenian Genocide. Despite publishing dozens of articles about the Armenian Genocide as it progressed, the Times for a period shied away from using the term in its articles as part of its editorial policy. The Turkish Government still actively denies a genocide occurred. Incidentally, Times columnist and former reporter Nicolas Kristof, a Pulitzer prize winner, has mentioned being of Armenian descent and has criticized the ongoing denial of the Armenian Genocide by the Turkish government, in his Times column.

On May 26, 2004, the Times published another significant admission of journalistic failings, admitting that its flawed reporting during the buildup to the Iraq campaign of the War on Terror helped promote the misleading belief that Iraq possessed large stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction. [11] While this "From the Editors" piece didn't mention names, a large part of the incriminated articles had been written by Times reporter Judith Miller.

A second self-criticism by Okrent went further. "The failure was not individual, but institutional," he wrote. "War requires an extra standard of care, not a lesser one. But in the Times's WMD coverage, readers encountered some rather breathless stories built on unsubstantiated 'revelations' that, in many instances, were the anonymity-cloaked assertions of people with vested interests. Times reporters broke many stories before and after the war - but when the stories themselves later broke apart, in many instances Times readers never found out. ... Other stories pushed Pentagon assertions so aggressively you could almost sense epaulets sprouting on the shoulders of editors. ... The aggressive journalism that I long for, and that the paper owes both its readers and its own self-respect, would reveal not just the tactics of those who promoted the WMD stories, but how the Times itself was used to further their cunning campaign." [12]

In August 2005, the Times was accused of attempting to unseal the adoption records of United States Supreme Court nominee Justice John Roberts's children, an unprecendented investigation by a newspaper. Journalist Brit Hume, of Fox News reported that the Times has been asking lawyers that specialize in adoption cases for advice on how to get into the sealed court records. The report went on, "Sources familiar with the matter tell Fox News that at least one lawyer turned the Times down flat, saying that any effort to pry into adoption case records, which are always sealed, would be reprehensible." The Times replied, "Our reporters made initial inquiries about the adoptions." However they also claimed, "They did so with great care, understanding the sensitivity of the issue." The Times was condemned by the National Council for Adoption, “NCFA denounces, in the strongest possible terms, the shocking decision of The New York Times to investigate the adoption records of Justice John Roberts’ two young children. The adoption community is outraged that, for obviously political reasons, the Times has targeted the very private circumstances, motivations, and processes by which the Roberts became parents." [13]

Following Hurricane Katrina in 2005, The Times has referred to those displaced by the hurricane as "refugees", while most news media refer to them as "evacuees". The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees defines "refugees" as those who have crossed a national border to escape unbearable conditions at home, while those who have been driven from home within their own nation are referred to as "internally displaced persons" (or "IDP's"). The American Heritage Dictionary, however, defines refugee as "one who flees in search of refuge."

In October 2005, Times reporter Judith Miller was released from prison after an 85-day stay, when she agreed to testify to Patrick Fitzgerald's grand jury. She said she finally relented only after receiving a personal waiver, both on the phone and in writing, of her earlier confidential source agreement with Lewis "Scooter" Libby, although Libby's lawyer claimed the offer of a waiver had been standing for a year. After Miller's appearance before the grand jury, she was released from her contempt of court finding, after which the New York Times became free to write their own account of the affair. This account [14] was published on October 16, along with a personal account by Miller [15]. However, these accounts were widely criticized as revealing even more flaws and failings of both Miller and the Times than they answered, including uncooperativeness and dissembling by Miller to the Times and a lack of reasonable oversight of Miller’s work by the Times, as summarized for example in the Washington Post [16]. This included several predictions and calls for Miller to be fired, including some by self-styled media watchdogs Alex Jones, director of the Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard University (and a former New York Times reporter); Jay Rosen, journalism professor at New York University; and Editor and Publisher columnist Greg Mitchell. Mitchell said Miller was guilty of “crimes against journalism” and “did far more damage to her newspaper than did Jayson Blair, and that’s not even counting her WMD reporting, which hurt and embarrassed the paper in other ways.” [17] Miller resigned from the paper on 9 November 2005.

On December 16, 2005, a New York Times article revealed that the Bush administration had ordered the NSA to intercept certain telephone conversations between al-Qaeda-connected persons in the U.S. and those in other countries without first obtaining court warrants for each instance of surveillance. It later came to light that reporters and editors at the Times had known about this intelligence-gathering program for approximately a year, but had "sat on the story". The Justice Department has launched an investigation to determine the sources of the classified information regarding the program that the Times published.


Management and Employees

Publishers

  • Adolph Ochs (1896-1935)
  • Arthur Hays Sulzberger (1935-1961)
  • Orvil Dryfoos (1961-1963)
  • Punch Sulzberger (1963-1992)
  • Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr. (1992- )

Executive editors

  • Turner Catledge (1964-1968)
  • James Reston (1968-1969)
  • position vacant (1969-1976)
  • Abe Rosenthal (1977-1986)
  • Max Frankel (1986-1994)
  • Joseph Lelyveld (1994-2001)
  • Howell Raines (2001-2003)
  • Bill Keller (2003- )

Current columnists

  • David Brooks
  • Maureen Dowd
  • Thomas L. Friedman
  • Bob Herbert
  • Nicholas D. Kristof
  • Paul Krugman
  • Gretchen Morgenson
  • Frank Rich
  • John Tierney
  • William Safire (retired as an Op-Ed columnist as of late January 2005, but continues as Language columnist)

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. It also has the legend Por la razón o la fuerza (By right or might or By reason or by force).
. The Justice Department has launched an investigation to determine the sources of the classified information regarding the program that the Times published. The coat of arms depicts the two national animals: the condor (Vultur gryphus, a very large bird that lives in the mountains) and the huemul (Hippocamelus bisulcus, an endangered white tail deer). It later came to light that reporters and editors at the Times had known about this intelligence-gathering program for approximately a year, but had "sat on the story". The national flower is the copihue (Lapageria rosea, Chilean bellflower), which grows in the woods of southern Chile. and those in other countries without first obtaining court warrants for each instance of surveillance. Master artists from Chile include: Carlos Catasse, Roberto Matta, Camilo Mori, Carlos Sotomayor.

On December 16, 2005, a New York Times article revealed that the Bush administration had ordered the NSA to intercept certain telephone conversations between al-Qaeda-connected persons in the U.S. His three highly individualistic homes, located in Isla Negra, Santiago and Valparaiso are popular tourist destinations. Mitchell said Miller was guilty of “crimes against journalism” and “did far more damage to her newspaper than did Jayson Blair, and that’s not even counting her WMD reporting, which hurt and embarrassed the paper in other ways.” [17] Miller resigned from the paper on 9 November 2005. Chile's most famous poet, however, is Pablo Neruda, who also won the Nobel Prize and is world-renowned for his extensive library of works on romance, nature, and politics. This included several predictions and calls for Miller to be fired, including some by self-styled media watchdogs Alex Jones, director of the Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard University (and a former New York Times reporter); Jay Rosen, journalism professor at New York University; and Editor and Publisher columnist Greg Mitchell. Gabriela Mistral, was the first Chilean to win a Nobel Prize for literature. However, these accounts were widely criticized as revealing even more flaws and failings of both Miller and the Times than they answered, including uncooperativeness and dissembling by Miller to the Times and a lack of reasonable oversight of Miller’s work by the Times, as summarized for example in the Washington Post [16]. Chileans call their country País de Poetas which means land of poets.

This account [14] was published on October 16, along with a personal account by Miller [15]. In the mid-1960s native musical forms were revitalized by the Parra family with the Nueva Canción Chilena, which was associated with political activists and reformers. After Miller's appearance before the grand jury, she was released from her contempt of court finding, after which the New York Times became free to write their own account of the affair. Arising from music imported by the Spanish colonists, it is distinguished from the cueca by an intermediate melodic section and a more prominent melody. She said she finally relented only after receiving a personal waiver, both on the phone and in writing, of her earlier confidential source agreement with Lewis "Scooter" Libby, although Libby's lawyer claimed the offer of a waiver had been standing for a year. Another form of traditional Chilean song, though not a dance, is the tonada. In October 2005, Times reporter Judith Miller was released from prison after an 85-day stay, when she agreed to testify to Patrick Fitzgerald's grand jury. The national dance is the cueca.

The American Heritage Dictionary, however, defines refugee as "one who flees in search of refuge.". Other European influences, primarily English and French, began in the 19th century and have continued until today, as in other Western societies. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees defines "refugees" as those who have crossed a national border to escape unbearable conditions at home, while those who have been driven from home within their own nation are referred to as "internally displaced persons" (or "IDP's"). Afterwards, their culture was dominated by the Spanish during the Colonial and early Republican period. Following Hurricane Katrina in 2005, The Times has referred to those displaced by the hurricane as "refugees", while most news media refer to them as "evacuees". Northern Chile was an important center of culture in the medieval and early modern Inca empire. The adoption community is outraged that, for obviously political reasons, the Times has targeted the very private circumstances, motivations, and processes by which the Roberts became parents." [13]. About 85% of Chile's population lives in urban areas, with 40% of the country's population living in Greater Santiago (6.5 million people).

The report went on, "Sources familiar with the matter tell Fox News that at least one lawyer turned the Times down flat, saying that any effort to pry into adoption case records, which are always sealed, would be reprehensible." The Times replied, "Our reporters made initial inquiries about the adoptions." However they also claimed, "They did so with great care, understanding the sensitivity of the issue." The Times was condemned by the National Council for Adoption, “NCFA denounces, in the strongest possible terms, the shocking decision of The New York Times to investigate the adoption records of Justice John Roberts’ two young children. Most retained their traditions, cultures and national affiliations by maintaining close-knit communities - although many also mixed into the majority - while at the same time co-existed peacefully with the host population. Journalist Brit Hume, of Fox News reported that the Times has been asking lawyers that specialize in adoption cases for advice on how to get into the sealed court records. Although the combined number of immigrants never comprised a large segment of the population, they nevertheless contributed greatly to Chilean society and the development of the nation. In August 2005, the Times was accused of attempting to unseal the adoption records of United States Supreme Court nominee Justice John Roberts's children, an unprecendented investigation by a newspaper. In the last decade there has been an influx of Koreans who settled in small sections of Santiago. The aggressive journalism that I long for, and that the paper owes both its readers and its own self-respect, would reveal not just the tactics of those who promoted the WMD stories, but how the Times itself was used to further their cunning campaign." [12]. There are also people from Middle Eastern and North African backgrounds, including the second largest Palestinian colony outside of the Middle East.

.. Other historically significant immigrant groups include people of Italian ancestry (Valparaíso Region), Croatian (Antofagasta and Punta Arenas), French, and Polish backgrounds. Other stories pushed Pentagon assertions so aggressively you could almost sense epaulets sprouting on the shoulders of editors. A government-sponsored immigration from Germany began in 1848, and in time, changed the cultural makeup of the southern provinces of Valdivia, Llanquihue, and Osorno, which still show a strong German influence. .. They include an influential number of descendants of Irish immigrants which arrived in Chile during the Spanish colonial period and descendants of English immigrants, arrived during and after independence (mainly merchants and sailors). Times reporters broke many stories before and after the war - but when the stories themselves later broke apart, in many instances Times readers never found out. Chileans descended from non-Spanish European immigrants are numerous.

But in the Times's WMD coverage, readers encountered some rather breathless stories built on unsubstantiated 'revelations' that, in many instances, were the anonymity-cloaked assertions of people with vested interests. However, Argentina's eventual economic collapse in 2001 caused such an escalation in their migratory influx into Chile, that by 2005 Argentinians comprised the largest immigrant group, outnumbering Peruvians. "War requires an extra standard of care, not a lesser one. Peruvians have historically constituted the largest immigrant group of the country. "The failure was not individual, but institutional," he wrote. Throughout much of Chile's modern history there has been a slow but steady work related trans-Andean migration to Chile - primarily from Peru and Bolivia - due mostly to the economic situation of its neighbours. A second self-criticism by Okrent went further. There are also around 5,000 polynesian people who are indigenous to the Chilean territory of Easter Island (Rapanui) in the Pacific.

[11] While this "From the Editors" piece didn't mention names, a large part of the incriminated articles had been written by Times reporter Judith Miller. Aymara and Quechua-speaking populations live along the northern border with Peru and Bolivia. On May 26, 2004, the Times published another significant admission of journalistic failings, admitting that its flawed reporting during the buildup to the Iraq campaign of the War on Terror helped promote the misleading belief that Iraq possessed large stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction. Of that 700,000, around 80% are Mapuche that reside mainly in the south-central area of the country. Incidentally, Times columnist and former reporter Nicolas Kristof, a Pulitzer prize winner, has mentioned being of Armenian descent and has criticized the ongoing denial of the Armenian Genocide by the Turkish government, in his Times column. People that self-identify solely as members of any of the country's many indigenous groups number around 700,000 individuals, or 5% of the country's total population. The Turkish Government still actively denies a genocide occurred. Those of unmixed European ancestry are estimated in ten percent of the population.

Despite publishing dozens of articles about the Armenian Genocide as it progressed, the Times for a period shied away from using the term in its articles as part of its editorial policy. People of relatively unmixed Spanish ancestry are not uncommon. In April, 2004 the Times reversed its policy of not using the term Armenian Genocide. The combination of an economy based on temperate-zone agriculture, Amerindian resistance to Spanish occupation, and a continuous influx of Spaniards from the mid-sixteenth century to the end of the colonial period defined the main body of Chile's mestizo majority population to one where the average Spanish input is greater than in neighbouring Andean mestizo populations. This has been aggressively criticized, such as by frequent Times contributor Christopher Hitchens, as carrying a connotation of justification; Times columnist Thomas Friedman refers to them as "terrorists" or "Islamo-fascists". Many of these ended up settling in Chile. invasion of Iraq, the Times has persistently referred to "insurgents" rather than "terrorists" being responsible for the bombing and other acts of violence. Spaniards arrived from all regions of Spain, including Andalucia, Extremadura, and the Basque country.

Since the 2003 U.S. During the colonial period, Spain found it necessary to maintain a continual influx of soldiers to protect its distant American colonies. The paper's top two editors – Howell Raines, the executive editor, and Gerald Boyd, managing editor – resigned their posts following the incident. Around 95% of Chileans descend from early Spanish colonists, with the overwhelming part also possessing Native American ancestry in varying degrees - thus deeming the population majority as mestizo. Questions of affirmative action in journalism were also raised, since Blair was African American. Unlike some of its South American neighbours, Chile is a relatively homogenous country. In 2003, the Times admitted to journalism fraud committed over a span of several years by one of its reporters, Jayson Blair, and the general professionalism of the paper was questioned, though Blair immediately resigned following the incident. Chile has a population of 16,136,137 people (June 2005, Estimated).

In response, thousands of Jews canceled their Times subscriptions.[10]. The two countries maintain consular relations. The photo, however, focused on the comparatively minuscule number of Palestinian protestors at the parade and made the event appear to be confrontational. Chile and Bolivia severed diplomatic ties in 1978 over Bolivia's desire to reacquire territory it lost to Chile in 1879-83 War of the Pacific. The day after the Israel Day Parade in 2002, the Times featured a picture of the event on the front page. It settled its territorial disputes with Argentina during the 1990s. (In May 2005 Okrent was succeeded by Byron Calame.). The Chilean Government has diplomatic relations with most countries.

Bush administration (see below). An associate member of Mercosur and a full member of APEC, Chile and has been an important actor on international economic issues and hemispheric free trade. However, he noted that the paper's coverage of the Iraq war was, among other things, insufficiently critical of the George W. Chile hosted the Community of Democracies ministerial in April 2005. Okrent did not comment at length on the issue of bias in coverage of "hard news", such as fiscal policy, foreign policy, or civil liberties. Chile hosted the Defense Ministerial of the Americas in 2002 and the APEC summit and related meetings in 2004. He claimed that this bias reflected the paper's cosmopolitanism, which arose naturally from its roots as a hometown paper of New York City. Chile is an active member of the UN family of agencies and participates in UN peacekeeping activities.

He concluded that the Times did have a liberal bias in coverage of certain social issues, gay marriage being the example he used. Chile completed a 2-year non-permanent position on the UN Security Council in January 2005. In summer 2004, the Times' public editor (ombudsman), Daniel Okrent, wrote a piece on the Times' alleged liberal bias. Since its return to democracy in 1990, Chile has been an active participant in the international political arena. Some studies have shown that the Times selection of op-ed pieces and letters to the editor seem to "bracket" their editorial position, making the editorials appear to be moderate — although again this practice is hardly unique to the Times. Although not a de-facto mandate in it's mission, the Policia de Investigaciones keeps an eye on the Carabineros in order to weed out corruption, Carabineros reciprocates the duty and both institutions have exposed corrupt officials within their counterpart. newspapers. In addition to investigating crimes, the Policia de Investigaciones also complements the functions Carabineros in times of civil unrest, and is in charge of all immigration procedures.

The Times has also been criticized for allowing Exxon-Mobil Corporation to run a regular paid "advertorial" commentary piece on its editorial page, although the practice is common in other U.S. Mr Arturo Herrera heads the Policia de Investigaciones. Mickey Kaus wrote that the executive editor, Howell Raines, was "on the verge of a breakthrough reconceptualization of 'news' here, in which 'news' comes to mean the failure of any powerful individual or institution to do what Howell Raines wants them to do.". It is a special arm of the Public Ministry whose main task is to investigate crimes and apprehend the suspects once firm evidence has been established. Critics complained that this was an editorial usurping news space. In addition to the Carabineros, who are part of the military, Chile also has the Policia de Investigaciones, a police force composed of civilians which is similar in purpose to the FBI. On November 25, 2002, the Times ran a front-page story with the headline, "CBS Staying Silent in Debate on Women Joining Augusta" — part of a string of stories focusing on the Augusta National Golf Club, the host of the Masters Tournament, effectively demanding a boycott. Alberto Cienfuegos is the head of the national police force of 30,000 men and women who are responsible for law enforcement, traffic management, narcotics suppression, border control and counter-terrorism throughout Chile.

A frequent critic of the Times in this vein has been leftist Noam Chomsky. Gen. Such critics note the significance of the many important stories that the Times does not print, which can be found in alternative media. With the return of democratic government, the Carabineros were placed under the operational control of the Interior Ministry but remained under the nominal control of the Defense Ministry. political parties on many issues, the often-harmful activities of multinational corporations, etc. After the military coup in September 1973, the Chilean national police (Carabineros) were incorporated into the Defense Ministry. Some liberals view the New York Times as a conservative establishment newspaper due to its failure to use its formidable journalistic resources to critique and expose structural economic inequality, the comparative ideological similarity of the major U.S. F-16 aircraft in 2006, and a contract for 18 used F-16 more has been signed with Holland.

Eisenhower in 1956. The FACH will begin taking delivery of 10 U.S. The editorial page of the Times has not endorsed a Republican Party candidate for president since Dwight D. The Air Force also operates an airbase on King George Island, Antarctica. Bush administration; and libertarian-conservative former columnist William Safire criticized the Patriot Act. Air assets are distributed among five air brigades headquartered in Iquique, Antofagasta, Santiago, Puerto Montt, and Punta Arenas. For example, Dowd strongly criticized President Clinton; Krugman (a professional economist) spoke as an economic centrist before he began criticizing the George W. Osvaldo Sarabia heads a force of 12,500.

However, attempts to place these columnists' positions on a one-dimensional American political spectrum do not completely characterize their actions or views. Gen. The 2005 roster of regular columnists ranges in political position from Maureen Dowd, Paul Krugman, and Bob Herbert on the left, to Nicholas Kristof and Thomas Friedman on the center-left, and David Brooks, formerly of The Weekly Standard magazine, and John Tierney on the moderate right. Pendant of delivery one new Scorpene class SSK and up to 4 ex-dutch Fokker F-27 MPA. However, some critics believe the mix is more liberal than conservative. Currently, the Navy will replace almost all the surface ships with 4 ex-dutch ships(2 Karel Doorman multi-role and 2 Jacob Van Heemskerck air defence frigates) and 3 ex-british ships (Type 23 ASW frigates). The op-ed section, the Times's regular columnists — who operate largely independently of the rest of the paper, and are subject to relatively little editorial oversight — have varying political orientations. The Navy also operates three submarines based in Talcahuano.

Scott's film reviews sometimes contain barbs directed at social conservatives, and Frank Rich's Arts columns regularly attacked conservatives. The Navy operates its own aircraft for transport and patrol; there are no Navy fighter or bomber aircraft. O. Those ships are based in Valparaíso. For example, A. Of the fleet of 29 surface vessels, only six are operational major combatants (destroyers and frigates) due to be replaced with 8 2nd hand frigates in the 2006-2008 period. Among other things, the intermix of political commentary with art criticism in the Arts section of the paper is pointed to as evidence of bias. Rodolfo Codina Díaz directs the 25,000-person Navy, including 5,000 Marines.

For example, during presidential campaigns, the paper systematically gives more coverage to Democratic topics, but only so when the incumbent president is a Republican. Adm. He finds that the Times displays Democratic partisanship, with some watchdog aspects. It also operates Leopard I and AMX-30 main battle tanks. [9]. The Chilean Army is 45,000 strong and is organized with an Army headquarters in Santiago, seven divisions throughout its territory, an Air Brigade in Rancagua, and a Special Forces Command in Colina. Riccardo Puglisi from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has written a paper about the editorial choices of the New York Times from 1946 to 1994, entitled, "Being the New York Times: The Political Behaviour of a Newspaper" (December 6, 2004). Juan Emilio Cheyre.

A 2005 study by Tim Gloseclose and Jeffrey Milyo of media coverage over the past ten years ranked the New York Times as the third most liberal of twenty major media outlets ranked by Americans for Democratic Action's guidelines for lawmakers' votes on selected issues of importance to liberals. Gen. Some conservatives believe that the Times' hard news and soft news reportage have a consistent and pronounced liberal slant, particularly on social issues. The commander in chief of the Chilean Army is Maj. One of the most serious of these charges is that before and during World War II, the New York Times downplayed evidence that the Third Reich had targeted Jews for genocide, at least in part because the publisher feared the taint of taking on any 'Jewish cause'. However, reforms made in 2005 to the Constitution now give the President the right to remove the Commanders in Chief of the Armed Forces. The Times, like many major news organizations, has often been accused of giving too little or too much play to various events for reasons not related to objective journalism. Under the 1980 Constitution, the services enjoyed considerable autonomy, and the President could not remove service commanders on his own authority.

On several occasions the Times has erroneously published premature obituaries, including:. Chile's Armed Forces are subject to civilian control exercised by the President through the Minister of Defense. This was later proven to be a hoax created by Megan Jasper, a sales representative for Sub Pop Records. The combined public and private foreign debt was roughly over 50% of GDP at the end of 2004—low by Latin American standards. On November 15, 1992, the Times published a list of slang terms (known as "grunge speak") that were supposedly used in the Seattle grunge scene. The government is paying off its foreign debt. In 1969, days before Apollo 11's landing on the moon, the newspaper published a tongue-in-cheek correction:. Nearly all of the funds raised go to finance investment.

In 1920, a New York Times editorial ridiculed Robert Goddard and his claim that a rocket would work in space:. markets through American Depository Receipts (ADR's). This seems to be a result of vigorous action by the Times' legal wing. There are three main ways Chilean firms raise funds abroad: bank loans, bond issue, and the selling of stock on U.S. As of late January 2006 online reproduction of Select content is extremely difficult to find. Chile maintains one of the best credit ratings (Standard & Poor's A+) of countries in Latin America. [8] Most for-pay NYT editorials are available online shortly after their publication through blog searches. Chile's private pension system, with assets worth roughly $54 billion in late 2004, has provided an important source of investment capital for the capital market.

This led to attempts to work around it, such as Never Pay Retail [7] and the posting of TimesSelect material by bloggers. The introduction of these new products has been accompanied by increased use of traditional instruments such as loans and credit cards. This is unusual, in that it included previously free editorial columns. Chileans have enjoyed the recent introduction of new financial tools such as home equity loans, currency futures and options, factoring, leasing, and debit cards. The website had 555 million pageviews in March 2005.[6] In September 2005, the paper decided to experiment with charging subscription for daily columns in a program known as TimesSelect. The Chilean government implemented a further liberalization of capital markets in 2001. It has a general policy of keeping articles freely available for a week and charges subscription for older articles. Chile's financial sector has grown faster than other areas of the economy over the last few years; a banking reform law approved in 1997 broadened the scope of permissible foreign activity for Chilean banks.

The Times has had a strong presence on the web since 1995, and has been ranked one of the top web sites. Currently it is negotiating with African nations. In the absence of a major headline, the day's most important story generally appears in the top-righthand column. Chile also has signed trade agreements with China, as well as a four-party agreement with Singapore, New Zealand and Brunei (P4). It stayed with an 8-column format years after other papers had switched to 6, and it was one of the last newspapers to adopt color photography. Chile is a strong proponent of pressing ahead on negotiations for a Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). Its headlines tend to be verbose, and, for major stories, come with subheadings giving further details, although it is moving away from this style. The U.S.-Chile FTA entered into force January 1, 2004 following approval by the U.S and Chilean congresses.

When referring to people, it uses titles, rather than unadorned last names (except among the sports pages, in which last names stand alone). The agreement will lead to completely duty free bilateral trade within 12 years. Stylistically, the newspaper is quite conservative (see also: The New York Times Manual of Style and Usage). After two years of negotiations, the United States and Chile signed an agreement in June 2003. The newspaper is organized in three sections:. Continuing its export-oriented development strategy, Chile completed landmark free trade agreements in 2002 with the European Union and South Korea. [5]. Chile, a member of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) organization, is seeking to boost commercial ties to Asian markets.

Ann Arbor, Michigan; Austin, Texas; Atlanta, Georgia; Billerica, Massachusetts; Canton, Ohio; Chicago, Illinois; College Point, New York; Concord, California; Dayton, Ohio (Sunday only); Denver, Colorado; Fort Lauderdale, Florida; Gastonia, North Carolina; Edison, New Jersey; Lakeland, Florida; Phoenix, Arizona; Minneapolis, Minnesota; Springfield, Virginia; Kent, Washington and Torrance, California. An association agreement with Mercosur--Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay--went into effect in October 1996. The New York Times is printed at the following sites:. Chile also concluded preferential trade agreements with Venezuela, Colombia, and Ecuador. By the beginning of the 21st century, The Times had begun leasing WQEW to ABC Radio for its Radio Disney format, which continues on 1560 AM to this day. During the 1990s, Chile signed FTAs with Canada, Mexico, and Central America. The AM station changed its call letters from WQXR to WQEW. Successive Chilean governments have actively pursued liberalizing trade agreements.

The classical format was simulcast on both frequencies until the early 1990s, when the big-band and standards format of WNEW-AM (now WBBR) moved from 1130 AM to 1560. Chile will have to phase out the price bands within 12 years under the terms of the U.S.-Chile FTA. The newspaper continues to own classical WQXR (96.3 FM) and WQEW (1560 AM). The price bands were ruled inconsistent with Chile's WTO obligations in 2002 and the government has introduced legislation to modify them. 26, 2004, the reported circulation data for The New York Times were: 1,124,700 Weekday[3] and 1,669,700 Sunday[4]. Higher effective tariffs are charged only on imports of wheat, wheat flour, and sugar as a result of a system of import price bands. It has 16 news bureaus in the New York region, 11 national news bureaus and 26 foreign news bureaus.[2] For the year ending Dec. Chile unilaterally lowered its across-the-board import tariff for all countries with which it does not have a trade agreement to 6% in 2003.

The Times is based in New York City. As a bloc, the European Union (EU) in 2004 supplied 16.3% of Chile's imports, while Argentina contributed 16%. At the end of 2005 it had over 350 full time reporters and about 40 photographers, in addition to hundreds of free-lance contributors who work for the paper more occasionally. The United States represented 14.6% of Chilean imports in 2004. The Times has been going through a downsizing, for several years, laying off workers and cutting expenses [1], in common with a general trend among print newsmedia. Capital goods made up about 66% of total imports. More recently, in 2004 the Times won a Pulitzer award for a series written by David Barstow and Lowell Bergman on employers and workplace safety issues. Chilean imports increased 30% in 2004, to $23 billion, reflecting a positive change in consumer demand and economic recovery.

In 1972, the Times exposed the Tuskegee experiment, in which African Americans suffering from syphilis were surreptitiously denied treatment over a period of decades. Asia has been the fastest-growing export market in recent years. United States (1971), which declared the government's prior restraint of the classified documents was unconstitutional. The U.S., the largest national market, takes in 17.3% of Chile's exports. v. Chile's export markets are fairly balanced among Europe (25.1%), Asia (33.1%), Latin America (15.7%), and North America (19%). This led to New York Times Co. Total exports in 2004 were $32 billion, a 52.1% increase from $20.4 billion in 2003.

government had been painting an unrealistically rosy picture of the progress of the Vietnam War. The trade balance for 2004 showed a historic surplus $9 billion, considerably higher than 2003. In 1971 it broke the Pentagon Papers story, publishing leaked documents revealing that the U.S. The most important non-mineral exports are forestry and wood products, fresh fruit and processed food, fishmeal and seafood, and wine. The Times has won 90 Pulitzer Prizes – the most prestigious award for journalism in the US, presented each year by Columbia University – including a record 7 in 2002. In 1975, non-mineral exports made up just over 30% of total exports, whereas now they account for about 60%. The newspaper is currently owned by The New York Times Company, in which descendants of Ochs, principally the Sulzberger family, maintain a dominant role. Nontraditional exports have grown faster than those of copper and other minerals.

It has traditionally printed full transcripts of major speeches and debates. Chile has traditionally been dependent upon copper exports; the state-owned firm Codelco is the world's largest copper-producing company. Today The New York Times is probably the most prominent American daily newspaper, sometimes being referred to as America's "newspaper of record". In 2004, exports accounted for about 34% of GDP. Sullivan, which established the actual malice legal test for libel. Chile's economy is highly dependent on international trade. v. The U.S.-Chile Free Trade Agreement offers a number of other investor protections.

In 1964, the paper was the defendant in New York Times Co. Registration is simple and transparent, and foreign investors are guaranteed access to the official foreign exchange market to repatriate their profits and capital. A new headquarters for the newspaper, a skyscraper designed by Renzo Piano, is currently under construction at 41st Street and 8th Avenue in Manhattan. Chile's welcoming attitude toward foreign direct investment is codified in the country's Foreign Investment Law, which gives foreign investors the same treatment as Chileans. More recently, in 1996 The New York Times went online, giving access to readers all over the world on the Web at www.nytimes.com. The government also has encouraged the use of Chile as an "investment platform" for multinational corporations planning to invest in the region. The Op-Ed section started appearing in 1970. The Chilean Government committed, in early 2002, to undertake a series of microeconomic reforms designed to create new incentives for private investment.

The Times also started an international edition in 1946, but stopped publishing it in 1967 and joined with the owners of the New York Herald Tribune and The Washington Post to publish the International Herald Tribune in Paris. Both foreign and domestic investment in Chile had declined during the country’s period of slower economic growth from 1999-2003, but appear to be recovering strongly. The fashion section started in 1946. Total foreign direct investment rose to $7.1 billion in 2004, up from $2.5 billion in 2003. The crossword began to appear in 1942 as a feature, and the paper bought the classical station WQXR in the same year. Under the compulsory private pension system, most formal sector employees pay 10% of their salaries into privately managed funds. In 1919 it made its first trans-atlantic delivery to London. Most wage settlements and spending decisions are indexed, reducing inflation's volatility.

It won its first Pulitzer Prize for news reports and articles about World War I in 1918. Chile registered inflation of 2.4% in 2004 and is expected to see a 3% increase in 2005 and 2006, due gas-price factor. The Times was originally intended to publish every morning except on Sundays; however, during the Civil War the Times started publishing Sunday issues along with other major dailies. Inflation has not exceeded 5% since 1998. Nine years later, the Times opened an annex at 229 43rd Street, their current headquarters, later selling Times Tower in 1961. Chile's independent Central Bank pursues a policy of maintaining inflation between 2% and 4%. After relocating the paper's headquarters to a new tower on 42nd Street, the area was named Times Square in 1904. The share of Chileans with incomes below the poverty line--defined as twice the cost of satisfying a person's minimal nutritional needs--fell from 46% of the population in 1987 to 18.8% in 2003.

In 1897 he coined the paper's slogan "All The News That's Fit To Print," widely interpreted as a jab at competing papers in New York City (the New York World and the New York Journal American) that were known for yellow journalism. Wages have risen faster than inflation as a result of higher productivity, boosting national living standards. Adolph Ochs acquired the Times in 1896, and under his guidance the newspaper achieved an international scope, circulation, and reputation. Unemployment remained at 8.8% at the end of 2004 in spite of strong economic growth. Raymond was also a founding director of the Associated Press in 1856. Unemployment has hovered in the 8%-10% range in recent years, well above the 5%-6% average for the 1990s. The New York Times was founded on September 18, 1851 by Henry Jarvis Raymond and George Jones. The privatized national pension system has encouraged domestic investment and contributed to an estimated total domestic savings rate of approximately 21% of GDP in 2003.

. High domestic savings and investment rates also helped propel Chile's economy to average growth rates of 8% during the 1990s. The newspaper is nicknamed the "Gray Lady" and is often referred to as the newspaper of record in the United States. Chile has signed Free Trade agreements (FTAs) with several important economies, including an FTA with the United States, which was signed in 2003 and implemented in January 2004. It is owned by The New York Times Company, which also publishes some 40 other newspapers, including the International Herald Tribune and the Boston Globe. Chile is strongly committed to free trade and has welcomed large amounts of foreign investment. Sulzberger Jr., and distributed in the United States and many other nations worldwide. The government's role in the economy is mostly limited to regulation, although the state continues to operate copper giant Codelco and a few other enterprises.

The New York Times is a newspaper published in New York City by Arthur O. The 1973-90 military government sold many state-owned companies, and the three democratic governments since 1990 have continued privatization at a slower pace. William Safire (retired as an Op-Ed columnist as of late January 2005, but continues as Language columnist). Chile has pursued generally sound economic policies for nearly three decades. John Tierney. The high degree of governability, the absence of corruption for Latin Standards, the high level of consumer and business confidence on the Chilean stability and the broad network of free trade agreements with most of the First World are the great bases for the Chile's the macroeconomic situation. Frank Rich. The Chile's real GDP per capita has risen in two years from $4,568 in 2003 to $7,300 US dollars in 2005 -the highest in Latin America- although a sharp income inequality persists -among the world's top-10 countries- extreme poverty rates less than 18%.

Gretchen Morgenson. The Chilean economy finished 2004 and 2005 with growth of 6.1% and a similar economic growth ( 6.3%)is forecasted for 2006. Paul Krugman. The economy remained sluggish until 2003, when it began to show clear signs of recovery, achieving 3.3% real GDP growth. Kristof. After a decade of impressive growth rates, Chile experienced a moderate downturn in 1999 brought on by the global economic slowdown. Nicholas D. Also controlled but uninhabited are the small islands of Sala y Gomez, San Ambrosio and San Felix, these islands are notable because they extend Chile's claim to territorial waters out from its coast into the Pacific.

Bob Herbert. Chile controls Easter and Sala-y-Gómez Islands, the easternmost islands of Polynesia, which it incorporated to its territory in 1888, and Robinson Crusoe Island, more than 600 km from the mainland, in the Juan Fernández archipelago. Friedman. Chile is the longest (N-S) country in the world (over 4,200km), and also claims a large section of Antarctica as part of its territory. Thomas L. The Andes Mountains are located on the eastern border. Maureen Dowd. The southern coast is a labyrinth of fjords, inlets, canals, twisting peninsulas, and islands.

David Brooks. Southern Chile is rich in forests and grazing lands and features a string of volcanoes and lakes. Bill Keller (2003- ). This area also is the historical center from which Chile expanded in the late 19th century, when it integrated the northern and southern regions. Howell Raines (2001-2003). The relatively small Central Valley, which includes Santiago, dominates the country in terms of population and agricultural resources. Joseph Lelyveld (1994-2001). The northern Atacama desert contains great mineral wealth, primarily copper and nitrates.

Max Frankel (1986-1994). Chile stretches over 4,630 km (2,880 miles) north to south, but only 430 km (265 mi) at its widest point east to west. Abe Rosenthal (1977-1986). A long and narrow coastal Southern Cone country on the west side of the Andes Mountains. position vacant (1969-1976). There is speculation that the numeral system will be dropped in favor of their formal names. James Reston (1968-1969). Being designated by numerals 14 and 15, both break the geographical numerical order from north to south.

Turner Catledge (1964-1968). In 2005, the Chilean congress passed a reform to create two new regions, one in the north, around the city of Arica, and one in the South centered around Valdivia (aka Region of the Rivers). (1992- ). The only exception is the region where Santiago is situated, which is designated RM, that stands for Región Metropolitana, Metropolitan Region. Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr. In general, the Roman numeral is used, rather than the name. Punch Sulzberger (1963-1992). Each region has traditionally been designated by a name and a Roman numeral, assigned from North to South.

Orvil Dryfoos (1961-1963). This has being a main problem due to the big size of capital city (over 5.5 millions people) that retains most of those taxes. Arthur Hays Sulzberger (1935-1961). However all tax incomes from regions goes to central government in Santiago where the final destination of the money not necesseraly returns to the regions. Adolph Ochs (1896-1935). Finally each province is divided into various Comunas each with its own mayor, elected by their inhabitants. Katharine Sergava (ballet dancer) in 2003, based on an earlier incorrect obituary in the Daily Telegraph. Every region is further divided into provinces with a Gobernador Provincial, also appointed by Santiago.

Alan Abel in 1980, who had faked his own death as an elaborate hoax. Chile was divided into 13 regions in 1975, each of which is headed by an intendente appointed by the President. William Baer (a New York University professor) in 1942, as a result of a hoax by his students. The reform replaced inquisitorial proceedings with an adversarial system more similar to that of the United States. Chile completed in mid-2005 a multi-year overhaul of its criminal justice system. Chile's judiciary is independent and includes a network of courts of appeals, a system of military courts, a constitutional tribunal, and the Supreme Court of Chile.

Michelle Bachelet, a Socialist moderate, was elected President on January 15, 2006, beating her closest rival Sebastián Piñera. (See Chilean presidential election, 2005.). In 2005, both leading parties, the Christian Democrats and the UDI lost representation in favor of their allies Socialist Party (which became the biggest party in the Concertación block) and National Renewal in the right-wing alliance. The Communist Party again failed to gain any seats in the 2001 elections.

In the 2001 congressional elections, the conservative Independent Democratic Union surpassed the Christian Democrats for the first time to become the largest party in the lower house. Only if the leading coalition ticket out-polls the second-place coalition by a margin of more than 2-to-1 does the winning coalition gain both seats. Typically, the two largest coalitions split the seats in a district. Each coalition can run two candidates for the two Senate and two lower chamber seats apportioned to each chamber's electoral districts.

Chile's congressional elections are governed by a unique binomial system that rewards coalition slates. The Congress is located in the port city of Valparaíso, about 140 kilometers (84 mi.) west of the capital, Santiago. Currently 4 Deputies have their voting rights suspended on legal grounds. The current lower house—the Chamber of Deputies—contains 60 members of the governing center-left coalition and 56 from the center-right opposition.

(Chile's Constitution provided that former presidents who have served at least 6 years shall be entitled to a lifetime senate seat.) The last congressional elections were held in December 2001. Nine institutional senators were appointed in 1999, and two "senators for life," former President Pinochet (who resigned in 2002) and Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle. The current Senate is evenly split 24-24 between pro-government and opposition Senators. Senators serve for 8 years with staggered terms.

Deputies are elected every 4 years. Chile's bicameral Congress has a 48-seat Senate—38 elected, 9 appointed, 1 for life—and a 120-member Chamber of Deputies. The President is currently elected by the people to a 4-year term, the term was reduced from 6 years in 2005 which was in turn reduced from 8 years in the original 1980 constitution. In 2005, after 3 democratic elections for presidential periods, over 50 reforms were approved, which eliminated the remaining undemocratic areas of the text, such as the existence of non-elected Senators (institutional senators, or senators for life) and the inability of the President to remove the Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces.

However the following years, the new Constitution was amended to ease provisions for future amendments to the Constitution. New elections were held in 1989 as was programmed, initiating a normal Democratic process. Pinochet's was defeated in the 1988 plebiscite, but he kept the Army force commanding. If the plesbicite was not approved, free elections will be called the next year (1989) with new candidates for president as well a Congress.

Also the 1980 voting programmed another plebiscite for 1988 for approving a new 8 years period with Pinochet plus a Congress (replacing the Junta). The new constitution established an 8 years government lead by President Augusto Pinochet without a Congress, supported by an Army/Navy/Air/Police Forces Junta instead, that was confirmed along with the approval of the new constitution. It entered into force in March 1981, replacing the old one from 1925. Chile's Constitution was approved in a tightly controlled national plebiscite in September 1980, under the military government of Augusto Pinochet.

(see below). Ms Bachelet will be sworn in for a 4-year term (one of the Constitution's reforms since old format was a 6 years period). The other candidates were previous Alliance for Chile right-wing candidate Joaquin Lavin and Tomas Hirsch, the far left candidate. She won the 2006 runoff election against central-right-wing candidate Sebastián Piñera after none of the 4 main candidates obtained the necesary 50% of the votes in the first round of voting.

She is the first and so far the only woman president in the country's history. Ms Bachelet continues the center-left Coalition of Parties for Democracy government in their fourth term. Chile's current president-elect is the former health and later defense minister Michelle Bachelet, daughter of Alberto Bachelet, an air force general who was captured and tortured in the military coup of 1973 and died shortly after. The last period of president Frei due to the economy disaster led to a lower popularity for the Concertacion block.

He was sworn in March 11, 2000, for a 6-year term. Ricardo Lagos Escobar of the Socialist Party led the Concertación coalition to a narrow victory, with 51.31% of the votes. A presidential election was held on December 12, 1999, but none of the six candidates obtained a majority, which led to an unprecedented runoff election on January 16, 2000 between Ricardo Lagos and Joaquín Lavín of the rightist Alliance for Chile. During his government Chile's economy had their best years, although bad managing during last year plus the fact of the Asian crisis in 1998 got the country involved in a very bad situation affecting mainly to the middle class and to the small-Mid-Sized Companies.

President Frei's administration was inaugurated in March 1994. In December 1993, Christian Democrat Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle, the son of previous president Eduardo Frei Montalva, led the Concertación coalition to victory with an absolute majority of votes. President Aylwin served from 1990 to 1994, that was considered a transition period. Christian Democrat Patricio Aylwin, the candidate of a coalition of 16 political parties called the Concertación, received an absolute majority of votes.

Chileans elected a new president and the majority of members of a two-chamber congress on December 14, 1989. In a plebiscite on October 5, 1988, General Pinochet was denied a second 8-year term as president. During its nearly 17 years in power, Chile moved away from economic statism toward a largely free market economy that saw an increase in domestic and foreign private investment, although the copper industry and other important mineral resources were not returned to foreign ownership. The right-wing military government pursued decidedly laissez-faire economic policies.

In the late 1980s, the regime gradually permitted greater freedom of assembly, speech, and association, to include trade union and limited political activity. A new Constitution was approved by a highly irregular and undemocratic plebiscite characterized by the absence of registration lists, on September 11, 1980, and General Pinochet became President of the Republic for an 8-year term. Some 30,000 were forced to flee the country. At least a thousand people were executed during the first six months of Pinochet in office, and at least two thousand more were killed during the next sixteen years, as reported by the Valech Report.

On October 1973, at least 70 persons were murdered by the Caravan of Death. The first years of the regime were marked by serious human rights violations. A military government, led by General Augusto Pinochet Ugarte, took over control of the country. As the armed forces bombarded the presidential palace (Palacio de La Moneda), Allende reportedly committed suicide.

A military coup overthrew Allende on September 11, 1973. The crippled economy was further battered by prolonged and sometimes simultaneous strikes by physicians, teachers, students, truck owners, copper workers, and the small business class. By early 1973, inflation was out of control. Political polarization increased, and large mobilizations of both pro- and anti-government groups became frequent, often leading to clashes.

By 1972, the economic progress of Allende's first year had been reversed and the economy was in crisis. Simultaneously, the CIA funded opposition media, politicians, and organizations, helping to accelerate a campaign of domestic destabilization. The Nixon administration brought international financial pressure to bear in order to restrict economic credit to Chile. and other foreign-owned companies led to increased tensions with the United States.

The nationalization of U.S. The Indian Peoples Development Corporation and the Mapuche Vocational Institute were founded to address the needs of Chile's indigenous population. Other reforms undertaken during the early Allende period included redistribution of millions of hectares of land to landless agricultural workers as part of the agrarian reform program, giving the armed forces an overdue pay increase, and providing free milk to children. Industrial output increased sharply and unemployment fell during the Allende administration's first year.

Many enterprises within the copper, coal, iron, nitrate, and steel industries were expropriated, nationalized, or subjected to state intervention. Much of the banking sector was nationalized. Joint public-private public works projects helped reduce unemployment. Allende adopted measures including price freezes, wage increases, and tax reforms, which had the effect of increasing consumer spending and redistributing income downward.

Production fell and unemployment rose. An economic depression that began in 1967 peaked in 1970, exacerbated by capital flight, plummeting private investment, and withdrawal of bank deposits by those opposed to Allende's socialist program. The Popular Unity platform also called for nationalization of foreign (U.S.) ownership of Chile's major copper mines. Allende's program included advancement of workers' interests; a thoroughgoing implementation of agrarian reform; the reorganization of the national economy into socialized, mixed, and private sectors; a foreign policy of "international solidarity" and national independence; and a new institutional order (the "people's state" or "poder popular"), including the institution of a unicameral congress.

Frei refused to form an alliance with Alessandri to oppose Allende, on the grounds that the Christian Democrats were a workers party and could not make common cause with the oligarchs. Despite pressure from the government of the United States, the Chilean Congress, keeping with tradition, conducted a runoff vote between the leading candidates, Allende and former president Jorge Alessandri and chose Allende by a vote of 153 to 35. In 1970, Senator Salvador Allende Gossens, a Marxist physician and member of Chile's Socialist Party, who headed the "Popular Unity" (UP or "Unidad Popular") coalition of the Socialist, Communist, Radical, and Social-Democratic Parties, along with dissident Christian Democrats, the Popular Unitary Action Movement (MAPU), and the Independent Popular Action, won a plurality of votes in a three-way contest. At the end of his term, Frei had accomplished many noteworthy objectives, but he had not fully achieved his party's ambitious goals.

By 1967, however, Frei encountered increasing opposition from leftists, who charged that his reforms were inadequate, and from conservatives, who found them excessive. Under the slogan "Revolution in Liberty," the Frei administration embarked on far-reaching social and economic programs, particularly in education, housing, and agrarian reform, including rural unionization of agricultural workers. The 1964 presidential election of Christian Democrat Eduardo Frei Montalva by an absolute majority initiated a period of major reform. Jorge Alessandri succeeded Ibáñez in 1958, bringing Chilean conservatism back into power democratically for another term.

In 1952, voters returned Ibáñez, now reincarnated as a sort of Chilean Perón, to office for another 6 years. During the period of Radical Party dominance (1932-52), the state increased its role in the economy. It became the key force in coalition governments for the next 20 years. When constitutional rule was restored in 1932, a strong middle-class party, the Radicals, emerged.

By relinquishing power to a democratically elected successor, Ibáñez del Campo retained the respect of a large enough segment of the population to remain a viable politician for more than thirty years, in spite of the vague and shifting nature of his ideology. The longest lasting of the ten governments between those years was that of General Carlos Ibáñez, who briefly held power in 1925 and then again between 1927 and 1931 in what was a de facto dictatorship, although not really comparable in harshness or corruption to the type of military dictatorship that has often bedeviled the rest of Latin America, and certainly not comparable to the violent and repressive regime of Augusto Pinochet decades later. A military coup led by General Luis Altamirano in 1924 set off a period of great political instability that lasted until 1932. In the 1920s, Marxist groups with strong popular support arose.

Alessandri Palma's reformist tendencies were partly tempered later by an admiration for some elements of Mussolini's Italian Corporate State. By the 1920s, the emerging middle and working classes were powerful enough to elect a reformist president, Arturo Alessandri Palma, whose program was frustrated by a conservative congress. Hence the Chilean economy partially degenerated into a system protecting the interests of a ruling oligarchy. However, the Civil War had also been a contest between those who favored the development of local industries and powerful Chilean banking interests, particularly the House of Edwards who had strong ties to foreign investors.

The Chilean Civil War in 1891 brought about a redistribution of power between the President and Congress, and Chile established a parliamentary style democracy. As a result of the War of the Pacific with Peru and Bolivia (1879-83), Chile expanded its territory northward by almost one-third, eliminating Bolivia's access to the Pacific, and acquired valuable nitrate deposits, the exploitation of which led to an era of national affluence. In 1881, the government signed a treaty with Argentina confirming Chilean sovereignty over the Strait of Magellan. Toward the end of the 19th century, the government in Santiago consolidated its position in the south by ruthlessly suppressing the Mapuche Indians, finally completing the conquest begun more than three centuries earlier.

The system of presidential absolutism eventually predominated, but wealthy landowners continued to control Chile. The political revolt brought little social change, however, and 19th century Chilean society preserved the essence of the stratified colonial social structure, which was greatly influenced by family politics and the Roman Catholic Church. On February 12, 1818, Chile was proclaimed an independent republic under O'Higgins' leadership. Intermittent warfare continued until 1817, when an army led by Bernardo O'Higgins, Chile's most renowned patriot, and José de San Martín, hero of Argentine independence, crossed the Andes into Chile and defeated the royalists.

Spanish attempts to reimpose arbitrary rule during what was called the Reconquista led to a prolonged struggle. A movement for total independence soon won a wide following. The junta proclaimed Chile an autonomous republic within the Spanish monarchy. A national junta in the name of Ferdinand—heir to the deposed king—was formed on September 18, 1810.

The drive for independence from Spain was precipitated by usurpation of the Spanish throne by Napoleon's brother Joseph, in 1808. The abolition of slavery in 1683 defused tensions on the frontier between the colony and the Mapuche land to the south, and permitted increased trade between colonists and Mapuches. Each time the Mapuche and other native groups revolted, the southern border of the colony was driven northward. Subsequent major insurrections took place in 1598 and in 1655.

A massive Mapuche insurrection that began in 1553 resulted in Valdivia's death and the destruction of many of the colony's principal settlements. Conquest of the land that is today called Chile took place only gradually, and the Europeans suffered repeated setbacks at the hands of the local population. Although the Spanish did not find the extensive gold and silver they sought, they recognized the agricultural potential of Chile's central valley, and Chile became part of the Viceroyalty of Peru. The first permanent European settlement, Santiago, was founded in 1541 by Pedro de Valdivia, one of Francisco Pizarro's lieutenants.

These cultures supported themselves principally through slash-and-burn agriculture and hunting. The Spanish encountered hundreds of thousands of Indians from various cultures in the area that modern Chile now occupies. The next Europeans to reach Chile were Diego de Almagro and his band of Spanish conquistadors, who came from Peru in 1535 seeking gold but were turned back by the local population. In 1520, while attempting to circumnavigate the earth, the Portuguese Ferdinand Magellan, discovered the southern passage now named after him, the Straits of Magellan.

The Incas briefly extended their empire into what is now northern Chile, but the area's remoteness and the fierce opposition of the native population prevented extensive settlement. About 10,000 years ago, migrating Native Americans settled in fertile valleys and along the coast of what is now Chile. The Spanish conquistadors heard about this name from the Incas and the few survivors of Diego de Almagro's first Spanish expedition south from Peru in 1535-1536 called themselves the "men of Chilli.". Another theory points to the similarity of the valley of the Aconcagua with that of the Casma Valley Casma in Peru, where there was a town and valley named Chili. Other theories say Chile may derive its name from the indigenous Mapuche word chilli, which may mean "where the land ends" or "the deepest point of the Earth," or from the Aymara tchili meaning "snow"; another meaning attributed to chilli is the onomatopoeic cheele-cheele—the Mapuche imitation of a bird call.

There are various theories about the origin of the word Chile. According to one theory the Incas of Peru, who had failed to conquer the Araucanians, called the valley of the Aconcagua "Chili" by corruption of the name of a tribal chief ("cacique") called Tili, who ruled the area at the time of the Incan conquest. . It borders with Argentina to the east, Bolivia to the northeast and Peru to the north. The Republic of Chile (Spanish: , IPA [re'puβlika de tʄile]) is a country in South America occupying a long coastal strip between the Andes mountains and the Pacific Ocean.

The (CIA) World Factbook: Chile. Library of Congress country profile. Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs, United States Department of State, April 2005. Reporters without borders: Worldwide press freedom index 2005, ranked 50 out of 167 countries (fifth in Latin America after El Salvador, Costa Rica, Bolivia and Uruguay).

Yale University/Columbia University: 2005 Environmental Sustainability Index, ranked 42 out of 146 countries (ninth in Latin America after Uruguay, Argentina, Brazil, Peru, Paraguay, Costa Rica, Bolivia, Colombia and Panama). World Economic Forum: Global Information Technology Report 2004-2005 - Networked Readiness Index, ranked 35 out of 104 countries (first in Latin America). Kearney/Foreign Policy Magazine: Globalization Index 2005, ranked 34 out of 62 countries (second in Latin America after Panama). A.T.

Transparency International: Corruption Perceptions Index 2005, ranked 21 out of 159 countries (tied with Japan) (first in Latin America). Save the Children: State of the World's Mothers 2005, ranked 17 out of 110 countries (tied with Argentina) (third in Latin America after Costa Rica and Cuba). Brown University: Fifth Annual Global E-Government Study (2005), ranked 13 out of 198 countries (first in Latin America). Freedom House: Freedom in the World 2005, average score: 1 (Free) (Costa Rica and Uruguay are the only two other Latin American countries with the highest score).

World Bank: Where is the Wealth of Nations? (2005) - Total wealth per capita, ranked 32 out of 118 countries (fourth in Latin America after Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil). World Economic Forum: Global Competitiveness Report 2005-2006 - Growth Competitiveness Index, ranked 23 out of 117 countries (first in Latin America). Fraser Institute: Economic Freedom of the World: 2005 Annual Report, ranked 20 out of 127 countries (tied with Belgium, Costa Rica and Hungary) (first in Latin America). IMD International: World Competitiveness Yearbook 2005, ranked 19 out of 60 economies (countries and regions) (first in Latin America).

Heritage Foundation/The Wall Street Journal: 2006 Index of Economic Freedom, ranked 14 (free) out of 157 countries (first in Latin America). UNDP: Human Development Index 2005, ranked 37 out of 177 countries (second in Latin America after Argentina). The Economist: The World in 2005 - Worldwide quality-of-life index, 2005, ranked 31 out of 111 countries (first in Latin America). Chilean wine.

Chilean Spanish. Chilean pharmaceutical policy. intervention in Chile. U.S.

Transportation in Chile. List of Chilean television channels. List of Chileans. List of Chilean companies.

Holidays in Chile. Foreign relations of Chile. Elections in Chile. Communications in Chile.

Chile Antarctic Geopolitics.