R. W. Apple Jr., who has been Washington bureau chief, will become chief correspondent of the newspaper.
To the Editor: R. W. Apple Jr.'s corned beef saga is the greatest thing since Proust's madeleine.
The book, to sell for $5.50, will have an introduction by R. W. Apple Jr., chief Washington correspondent of The New York Times.
He is also becoming associate editor of the paper, a title last held by R. W. Apple Jr., who died in October.
R. W. Apple Jr., the newspaper's Washington bureau chief, will become its chief correspondent.
However, I believe R. W. Apple Jr. was wrong in not being able to find good places outside New York.
Her stepfather, R. W. Apple Jr., is the chief correspondent of The New York Times.
R. W. Apple Jr. was pleased by how the cabernet francs complemented a dish of braised rabbit.
And, of course, there is the consummate travel writer, R. W. Apple Jr., who died in 2006.
R. W. Apple Jr., writing in the New York Times, called the situation a debacle.