Get your Copy Today
Click Here

Freedom Will Conquer Racism
Click Here

No. 2 In a Series About Pinch Sulzberger Apologizing to Graduating College Students for His Failed Life
No Member of the Sulzberger Clan Can Correct the Decay and Rot at the New York Times, the Sulzbergers Are All Complicit
When the Sulzbergers Are Removed by the Shareholders, this Country Can Become United and Strong Once Again
            When the father of Pinch Sulzberger appointed him Chairman of the New York Times Company, the father was not enthusiastic because he had many concerns about this strange young man.
            These doubts were shared by Pinch’s 12 cousins who insisted that one of them be appointed Vice Chairman with an office right next to Pinch in case he faltered. The cousin was Michael Golden who was raised in Chattanooga, Tennessee, where his mother ran the original paper of the modern founder of the Times, Adolph Ochs, who was her grandfather.
            Because Golden was raised much differently than his cousins who enjoyed all the luxury of New York City, the founder of MassNews, Atty. J. Edward Pawlick, sent him a personal FedEx letter on April 15, 2004 urging him to remove Pinch while there was still time for the family to save the Times.
            Pawlick was well known to all the denizens of the corporate offices in New York because he had caused them untold headaches when Pinch picked Boston as the place to begin his “reform” of America, in that his Boston Globe newspaper totally dominated all of Massachusetts.
            But Pawlick had totally dominated the lawyers and courts of the state since 1972 when he founded Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly which immediately became the “bible” of every practicing lawyer in the state.

 FedEx Letter Was Honest and Frank
            Pawlick began his letter by telling Golden: “I have good feelings about you for some reason,” and then went on to say that Golden must remove Pinch if he was to save the company. It was no secret that the Sulzbergers were managing the company illegally. Although they had been forced to sell stock to the public because of financial problems, they still managed the company as though they owned it all.
            When Pinch was named Chairman, the Chairman of IBM, Louis Gerstner, resigned from the Board of the Times rather than face a possible suit from shareholders of the Times.
Full text of letter to Michael Golden


Free Satellite TV! 

Copyright 2006©All Rights Reserved
Massachusetts News®, Inc.
PO Box 688
Marlborough, MA 01752

781-237-2772