[1] After failing to become bureau chief, Greenfield briefly resigned from the Times and joined Westinghouse Broadcasting as a vice president.
[4] In 1991, Greenfield stepped down as assistant managing editor, though he remained a consulting member of the editorial board.
[7] Greenfield was a founder of The Independent Journalism Foundation (IJF) and served in a volunteer capacity as its President from its founding in 1991.
[8] IJF is a nonprofit organization that operates centers and related training programs for the media in Eastern Europe and Southeast Asia.
[7] Beginning in the 1950s, she was an art and antiques dealer in London, Washington D.C., and finally New York, where until 1998 she owned and ran Marco Polo, a store located on Madison Avenue between E. 84th and E. 85th Streets in Manhattan.
[7] The couple lived in the Upper East Side of Manhattan, and Greenfield and his wife also developed brownstone houses.