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NY Times appoints new public editor

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AP News, May 3rd, 2007

Pulitzer Prize-winning newsman Clark Hoyt has been named public editor of The New York Times, the newspaper announced Thursday.

Hoyt, 64, is a veteran journalist who spent much of his career at Knight Ridder newspapers, including his Pulitzer-winning coverage of Democratic vice presidential candidate Thomas F. Eagleton during the 1972 election. He was Washington editor for the chain until its sale last year, and since June had been working as a newsroom consultant to its new owners, The McClatchy Co.

Hoyt will be in the post for a fixed two-year term, and takes over the role of writing about the Times for the newspaper from Byron Calame, whose two-year stint is ending.

As the Times' public editor, Hoyt will work independently of the paper's regular editors in a job that is part media critic, part ombudsman. The paper said Hoyt will write a column critiquing the Times' journalistic practices and answer questions from readers.

"We expect him to hold us accountable to our own standards," the paper's executive editor, Bill Keller, said in a news release.

During his tenure, Calame called for a review of Times reporter Judith Miller's journalistic practices, defended the paper's reporting on the CIA's "forced rendition" program and chided the Times for failing to adequately explain to readers why it waited a year to report that the National Security Agency engaged in domestic eavesdropping without court-approved warrants.

In a staff memo, Keller thanked Calame for taking on "the most thankless job in journalism," saying he had performed a "great service" for the paper.

During his career, Hoyt worked for The Ledger of Lakeland, Fla., the Detroit Free Press, The Miami Herald and The Wichita Eagle-Beacon.

He shared a Pulitzer with Robert S. Boyd in 1973 for his reporting on the mental health history of Eagleton, who was George McGovern's running mate. The investigation, conducted while Hoyt was Washington correspondent for The Miami Herald, forced Eagleton from the ticket.

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Staff. NY Times appoints new public editor. Copyright 2007  AP News.

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