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Foxing on book ledge Small watermark on bottom corner of first 30 pages- no mold Joseph C. Goulden L. Stuart, 1988 - Editors - 486 pages Examines Rosenthal's rise to power and the enormous use of his position. It addresses the question of whether to be an effective executive, one must be both Caesar and Caligula. Rosenthal had characteristics of both Roman emperors. The Times and many persons benefitted from his many talents. Others suffered, for the editor whose byline was A.M. Rosenthal was not always the most pleasant of men, personally or professionally.
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For some two decades, Abe Rosenthal was arguably the most powerful person in printed journalism in the world. As executive editor of the New York Times, he exerted tremendous influence and control ove...
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