i won't read the other, ted graham and tim o'bryan's stories are equally troubling. i want to good on to "the new york times." which is really by far my favorite chapter. and is the most -- chapter that is truly sort of -- studs turkle, from one story to the other. i interviewed 17 out of 30 reporters there and so you get the whole going from rick, the bureau chief, on to rich, who covered the national security council, steve roberts, and marty schulte who were alternating congress and white house, bernie, the foreign diplomatic correspondent, and they weave in and out. i'll do a long one of marty. primarily because it tells what it was like there without exception if you started in the new york times at that time. marty said, got a bachelor of law degree and then i went into the service for two years and came out and took a v.a. course called, how to get a job. the burden of which was something to do -- go for had gone you're interested. and i wrote 110 makes and i was offered copy boy jobs, mailroom jobs. took the one at the new york times. when you got that job, a