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February revenue from continuing operations fell 3.6% from the same month last year, while advertising revenue from continuing operations dropped 6%. The company said February ad revenue fell 7.5% at the New York Times Media Group, dropped 4% at the New England Media Group, and fell 8.1% at the Regional Media Group. Internet ad revenue for the three media groups rose 14.3% in February. [emphasis added]
[The Times] was investing in a new headquarters, which [Elmasry] saw [like American Thinker] as a vanity project. His concerns escalated in 2005 when the company announced the $410 million acquisition of About.com, a huge database of advice and information. According to a person familiar with his thinking, Mr. Elmasry worried that About.com, lacking an established brand, could easily be surpassed by a rival product from Google Inc. or Yahoo Inc. [....]Mr. Elmasry wrote to the chairman directly. After its benign opening, his letter outlined six specific areas of concern, including the Times's declining circulation in the New York region and what Mr. Elmasry called the company's weak and unfocused Internet strategy; capital misallocation and overly liberal option grants.Mr. Sulzberger responded about two weeks later, rebutting Mr. Elmasry's arguments point by point without addressing the investor's request for a meeting. [....]In a second letter dated Nov. 1, 2005, Mr. Elmasry told Mr. Sulzberger he was "baffled" by his inability to get a meeting. "In over 20 years of investing we have not yet encountered a chairman of a public company who has declined to meet with us as long-standing and substantial institutional shareholders, particularly after such a lengthy period of poor business and stock market performance," the letter said. [....]Three months later, in February 2006, Mr. Elmasry got the response he wanted. After he sent a third letter -- this time to Class A directors, copying top executives -- the board decided the chairman should sit down with the money manager, according to a letter written to Mr. Elmasry by the Times's corporate governance officer. In mid-March, Mr. Elmasry and an associate met Mr. Sulzberger, Ms. Robinson and the communications chief, Ms. Mathis, in the chairman's office.