Category: News

  • Columnist Robert Novak retires after ‘dire’ prognosis

    Conservative columnist Robert Novak announced his immediate retirement Monday after being told his prognosis for a malignant brain tumor was “dire.”

    Novak, 77, said he plans to focus all his energies on his treatment and recovery, according to a story in the Chicago Sun-Times, his home paper. “The details are being worked out with the doctors this week, but the tentative plan is for radiation and chemotherapy,” he told the paper.

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    One of the nation’s most influential and widely read syndicated columnists, Novak revealed several days ago that he had a brain tumor and was undergoing testing at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.

    That diagnosis came less than a week after he struck an elderly pedestrian with his Corvette in downtown Washington and drove away. At the time, he said he was not aware he hit anyone, and received a $50 citation for the accident. The pedestrian was treated for a dislocated shoulder.

    Novak is perhaps best known for outing Valerie Plame as a covert operative of the Central Intelligence Agency in a July, 2003 column, several months after Plame’s husband, Joseph Wilson, had written an op-ed piece questioning the factual justification for the invasion of Iraq.

    The outing created a political furor about the source of Novak’s information, and an investigation that resulted in the conviction of I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, then chief of staff to Vice President Cheney, on charges of perjury and obstruction of justice. President Bush subsequently commuted Libby’s sentence.

    Novak himself avoided any legal entanglement, although Judith Miller, then of the New York Times, was sent to jail for refusing to reveal her sources to a grand jury, even though she had never written about Plame. Novak’s source was eventually revealed to be Richard Armitage, former deputy secretary of state. Novak later acknowledged that he got confirmation of that information from then-White House Political Director Karl Rove.

    Novak launched his career as a political columnist in 1963 as a sidekick to Rowland Evans, and continued writing it even after his partner retired in 1993. Novak was also a longtime co-host of CNN’s Crossfire, and appeared frequently on MSNBC’s Meet the Press and on Fox News, where his scowling presence became almost a caricature of a right-wing pundit.

    Last year, he published a memoir of his life called The Prince of Darkness, using a nickname bestowed by another journalist for his unrelentingly negative view of the world and which he seemed proud to claim.

    In his memoir, he described how he began life as a political centrist and once turned down a job writing editorials for the Wall Street Journal because he didn’t think he was conservative enough.

    Born into a secular Jewish family in Joliet, Ill., Novak converted to Catholicism in the 1990s. His baptism was attended by a bevy of Washington insiders, including journalists Al Hunt and his wife, Judy Woodruff, the late Rep. Henry Hyde and the late Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan. Novak himself liked to quote Moynihan’s quip: “Well, we’ve now made Bob a Catholic. The question is, can we make him a Christian?”

    Novak has been diagnosed with cancer at least three times. He underwent surgery in 2003 to remove a cancerous growth on his kidney and was under medical observation for a possible recurrence.

    He and his wife, Geraldine, who worked for the late Lyndon Baines Johnson, have two children: Alex Novak is the marketing director of Regnery, the conservative publishing house; his daughter, Zelda Caldwell, is a Republican activist who has worked for Dan Quayle and Jack Kemp, among others.

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  • Nabokov’s son to publish final manuscript

    His dying father, Vladimir Nabokov, had commanded him to destroy his still-unfinished, final novel.

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    Instead, an agonized Dmitri Nabokov placed the novel – in the form of 50 index cards – in a Swiss bank vault. Now, more than 30 years later, the writer’s only child told Der Spiegel magazine that he had decided to publish The Original of Laura.

    Speaking from his winter home in Palm Beach, Fla. this week, the 73-year-old Dmitri Nabokov justified his decision, saying, “I’m a loyal son and thought long and seriously about it. Then my father appeared before me and said, with an ironic grin, ‘You’re stuck in a right old mess – just go ahead and publish!’”

    He told the magazine that he had finally made up his mind to do so.

    Over the years, Dmitri Nabokov has described wrestling with the decision about what to do with The Original of Laura, which he has called “the most concentrated distillation of [my father’s] creativity.” As Nabokov’s literary executor, he said he felt a duty to share it with the world; as his son, he felt a duty to honor his father’s last wishes.

    Dmitri Nabokov, who divides his time between Palm Beach, Fla. and Montreux, Switzerland, is a staunch advocate of his father’s literary legacy, and has translated many of his novels, plays, poems, lectures and letter.

    In celebration of Vladimir Nabokov’s centennial in 1999, he appeared as his father in Terry Quinn’s Dear Bunny, Dear Volodya, a dramatic reading based on the personal letters between Nabokov and literary and social critic Edmund Wilson. Performances took place in New York, Paris, Mainz, and Ithaca.

    Yet he is a multi-faceted personality with many other accomplishments. A profile that appeared in the Harvard Crimson in 2005 described a complex character.

    Those who know him describe him as tall and imposing, with a face like his father’s, and one editor calls him “his father’s very best translator.”

    But Dmitri has accrued a set of accolades and interests all his own.
    “His love of fast boats and fast cars and helicopter skiing made him like a James Bond figure,” says Deanne Urmy, editor of Nabokov’s Butterflies, a collection of Vladimir’s writings which includes translations by Nabokov.

    He is best known as an opera star. After graduating from Harvard with a concentration in history and literature, Dmitri Nabokov served briefly in the U.S. military as an instructor in Russian before deciding to pursue his dreams as a performer.

    He made his operatic debut in 1961 in the same Milan performance of La Boheme as the now legendary Luciano Pavarotti. Among the highlights from his operatic career: performances at the Gran Teatre del Liceu in Barcelona with soprano Montserrat Caballé and acclaimed Catalan tenor Jaume Aragall, better known as Giacomo Aragall.

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    • Philanthropist Alberto Vilar convicted in fraud case

      November 19, 2008 at 3:52pm

      A trial that has riveted the world of philanthropy ended today with the conviction of Alberto W. Vilar, a man who pledged, and sometimes gave, millions of dollars to the arts.

    • Bard’s Botstein joins Streisand to perform for Israel’s 60th

      Once again, Bard President Leon Botstein is stepping into the breach.

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      Botstein, who directs the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra, will perform next month as part of the 60th anniversary celebration of the state of Israel at a time when several other noted Israeli artists, including pianist and conductor Daniel Barenboim, are staying away.

      The commemoration has aroused the ire of some Israelis, who question the government’s plans for celebration amid so much political and economic turmoil. But Botstein, a political progressive and secular Jew, is going his own way, appearing in the week-long program along with American singer Barbra Streisand.

      He told the Forward several years ago that he had little patience for artists who canceled performances in Israel because of the goverment’s policies towards the Palestinians.

      “I’ve been a lifelong believer in Israel, and I have also been severely critical of many of its policies, which simply puts me in league with thousands and millions of other Israelis,” he said then. “The point of working in Israel is to support its potential and future as a secular democracy. The only countries that deserve to be boycotted are countries that have authoritarian regimes where there is no freedom, no opportunity for artistic expression.”

      Botstein has always defied easy categorization. He rails against the failures of higher education, even as he heads the small, selective Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, N.Y., and is the product of America’s most elite universities – Harvard and the University of Chicago.

      He promotes an agenda of social change through programs like the Bard Prison Initiative, the largest degree-granting program in the American jail system, while working tirelessly to spread the classical music canon as director of both the Jerusalem Symphony and the American Symphony Orchestra. A frequent critic of pop culture, he makes appearances on both “60 Minutes” and “The Colbert Report” to tout pet projects.

      “People have so little tolerance for dissent,” he told the New York Times when criticized or accepting money to establish both an Alger Hiss endowed chair and a Henry R. Luce chair for Bard faculty.

      “What happened to free thought?” he said. “Individual ideas? What happened to Thoreau? What happened to this tradition in America? ‘You’re either for ‘em or agin ‘em.’ What are we discussing, subtle issues with a meat cleaver?”

      Botstein was born in Switzerland where his physician-parents had sought refuge from Lotz, Poland. The parents, who subsequently moved the family to New York, encouraged their children to become doctors, and Botstein’s sister Eva, is a pediatric cardiologist, while his older brother, David is a biologist who heads the Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics at Princeton University.

      Predictably, the young Leon did his own thing. After graduating from New York City’s High School of Music and Art in New York at 16, he was pursuing a Ph.D. in history from Harvard and living with Jill Lundquist, when her father, a college trustee, asked him what he might do to help Franconia College. His answer earned him the job of president of Franconia.

      Botstein came to Bard in 1975, making him one of the longest-serving presidents of an American college.

      His second wife, Barbara Haskell, a curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, told the Times that his devotion to music has shaped her husband’s ideas about education.

      “The notes on a sheet of music are given, just the way knowledge is given,” she said. “It is the way one interprets those notes, what one does with knowledge one has acquired, that makes the life of the mind.”

      Botstein’s life is in many ways an improvisation between his crusader’s zeal and classical tastes. When a group of Bard students ran short of money while in New Orleans on a college program to help rebuild the city last winter, Botstein wrote a personal check to keep the program running.

      Last fall, when one of his pet projects, Bard High School Early College, an alternative secondary school that lets high school students begin college studies, earned poor grades from the New York City Board of Education, Botstein balked. “Let’s say we’re a vegetarian restaurant and you’re telling me our meat is not good. I’m telling you we don’t serve meat,” he said. Botstein prevailed in getting another review.

      Last summer, when the publicly funded Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra faced drastic cuts by the Israeli government, Botstein managed to eke out another year’s funding, contending the savings were too small to matter to the government – but would kill the orchestra.

      “Here comes the… Israel Broadcasting Authority [acting] like an overweight person who decides to lose weight by having a haircut,” he said.

      On May 7, despite the embattled positions of both the country and the orchestra, Botstein will mount the podium in Jerusalem’s Henry Crown Hall to conduct Dvorak’s Symphony No. 9 in E minor, op. 95 from The New World.

    • Did ‘Yoo Doctrine’ spawn torture?

      The disclosure this week of a March, 2003 memo from Justice Department lawyer John C. Yoo, asserting that laws banning torture were trumped by the president’s authority as commander-in-chief in a time of war, appears to offer a direct line to subsequent abuses at Abu Ghraib prison.

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      The 81-page document, declassified as a result of a lawsuit by the American Civil Liberties Union and first reported by the Washington Post, argues that federal laws prohibiting assault, maiming and other crimes during military interrogations of al-Qaeda captives would not give rise to criminal liability. It also appears to defend the use of mind-altering drugs that do not produce “an extreme effect” calculated to “cause a profound disruption of the senses or personality.”

      Part One of the memo is here, and Part Two is here.

      The memo was intended to deal with “unlawful combatants,” a label that would not apply to the largely Iraqi population captured during the Iraq war. But as our friends over at TPM Muckraker point out:

      The natural suspicion remains that Yoo’s expansive parsing might have migrated over to Iraq. After all, Major General Geoffrey Miller, then the commanding officer at Guantanamo Bay, did travel to Iraq in August of 2003 to advise officials there on interrogating Iraqi detainees. Miller had been briefed on the Pentagon’s guidelines for interrogation, which owed much to Yoo’s green light.

      Yoo denies that, noting that several military investigations have found that the abuses at Abu Ghraib were not authorized by military policy.

      The ACLU also points out that the March, 2003 document refers to other still-secret Justice documents, including one from 2001 that found that the “Fourth Amendment had no application to domestic military operations.”

      The October 2001 memo was almost certainly meant to provide a legal basis for the National Security Agency’s warrantless wiretapping program, which President Bush launched the same month the memo was issued.

      The existence of the March, 2003 document, which was addressed to William Haynes II, then the top lawyer at the Pentagon, has long been known, but its contents had not been disclosed before. Although the Justice Department told the Defense Department to stop relying on it nine months after it was written, the Post’s Dan Eggen and Josh White assert that Yoo’s reasoning provided the legal foundation for the military’s use of harsh interrogation tactics at a crucial time, as captives were pouring into military jails in Afghanistan and as the U.S. was preparing to invade Iraq.

      Yoo’s opinions in the months after the 911 attacks have come to be known collectively as the “Yoo Doctrine.” Critics accused him of enabling torture and claiming unlimited powers for the president, charges which Yoo has denied.

      In his 2007 book, “The Terror Presidency,” Jack Goldsmith, who took over the Office of Legal Counsel after Yoo departed, writes that the two memos “stood out” for “the unusual lack of care and sobriety in their legal analysis.”

      Yoo was born in South Korea, grew up in Philadelphia, and earned degrees from Harvard and Yale Law School. After graduation, he clerked for Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, and became a favored legal philosopher in conservative circles. He is now on the faculty of the school of law at the University of California, Berkeley.

      UPDATE:
      In his first interview since the release of the 2003 memo, Yoo denied to Esquire today that his memo applied to soldiers in Iraq or Afghanistan, or that it authorized the kinds of abuses revealed at Abu Ghraib.

      “The memo released yesterday does not apply to Iraq. It applied to interrogations of al Qaeda detained at Guantanamo Bay. I don’t [necessarily] agree that the methods did migrate to Iraq, because I don’t know for a fact that they did. The analysis of the memo released yesterday was not to apply to Iraq, and we made clear in other settings that the Geneva Conventions fully applied to the war in Iraq. There was no intention or desire that the memo released yesterday apply to Iraq.”

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    • Murdoch’s Daughter Throws Obama Bash

      Rupert Murdoch’s distaste for New York Sen. Hillary Clinton has often spilled out onto the pages of the New York Post, and into broadcasts on Fox News, both of which he owns.

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      But it would be a mistake to see daughter Elisabeth’s decision to host a London fundraiser for Barack Obama later this month as Daddy’s doing.

      Sure, she may want to run her father’s billion-dollar empire some day. But it is likely that Obama’s story has particular resonance for Elisabeth Murdoch, whose first husband, Elkin Kwesi Pianim, is Ghanian, and with whom she has two children.

      Since leaving her father’s employ to form her own television production company, Elisabeth Murdoch has established a reputation as a shrewd and strong-willed businesswoman in her own right, winning the sobriquet, Britain’s “Most Powerful Blond” from Tatler Magazine. Her company, Shine Ltd., has made a name for itself by adapting American hits like Project Runway for British audiences. Last month, the company clinched a deal to buy Los Angeles-based Reveille, another independent television production company behind the hit shows The Office and Ugly Betty.

      A citizen of both the U.S. and Britain, Murdoch grew up primarily in New York City, where she attended the exclusive Brearley School and then Vassar College, and she continues to maintain close ties to the U.S.

      She and her current husband, public relations guru Matthew Freud, the great-grandson of Sigmund Freud, are part of the international glitterati scene in London, which includes a number of wealthy American expatriates, some of whom signed on as co-sponsors of the Notting Hill fundraiser.

      That list includes actress Gwyneth Paltrow, David Blood, who runs an investment fund with former Vice President Al Gore, Warner Brothers UK chief Josh Berger and Swedish heiress Cristina M. Stenbeck, a vice president of Investment AB Kinnevike.

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    • Congressional showdown with televangelists

      The aptly-named Creflo Dollar Jr. flies a Lear jet between his million-dollar mansion Atlanta and church services in New York City, where he also keeps a $2.5 million apartment.

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      Tampa televangelist Paula White , who has homes in San Antonio, Malibu and New York, bought a Bentley convertible for fellow televangelist Bishop T.D. Jakes for his 50th birthday.

      David and Joyce Meyer spent $23,000 on a marble topped toilet, $30,000 for a conference table and $11,219 for a French clock for the Fenton, Mo. headquarters of their not-for-profit an tax-exempt mission headquarters.

      Such are the earthly rewards of preaching the so-called prosperity gospel, a controversial iteration of Christianity which holds that God rewards the faithful with material, as well as spiritual wealth.

      But now the shepherds themselves are facing a reckoning. Dollar, White and the Meyers are among a half dozen TV evangelists being probed by Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, ranking Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, for possible misuse of donor funds and their tax-exempt status as religious organizations. The other targets are faith healer Benny Hinn of Grapevine, Texas; prosperity preacher Kenneth Copeland of Newark, Texas and Bishop Eddie Long of Lithonia, Ga.

      Yesterday was a showdown of sorts – the deadline in the four-month inquiry to voluntarily submit information to Congress. Four of the six ministries indicated they would cooperate, even if they did not hand over the requested material; Dollar and Copeland, however, were defiant in their refusals.

      Through an attorney, Dollar, a former board member of Oral Roberts University, called the inquiry an “unprecedented inquiry into the religious activities of a church.”

      Copeland, also a former Oral Roberts board member, said through a representative that only the IRS had jurisdiction to question his ministry about finances.

      A leader of the prosperity gospel movement, Copeland is close to former GOP presidential contender Mike Huckabee who appeared on his national television show last fall “for six days of frank discussion on the Biblical perspective of character.”

      When Huckabee’s campaign struggled for cash, Copeland invited him to attend a national ministers meeting at his west Texas headquarters in January. The candidate, a Southern Baptist minister, raised $111,000 in contributions and another million dollars in pledges there, according to the Tulsa World. Copeland denied the appearance was a political endorsement, saying that Huckabee’s campaign simply rented a room, and Kenneth Copeland Ministries did not make a contribution.

      Grassley sent a particularly extensive questionnaire to Copeland, requesting credit card records and information on offshore banking accounts; receipts for planes, and information about whether the ministry used its mineral rights to capitalize a for-profit company. ( The Ft. Worth Star Telegram reports that FAA records show Copeland owns three planes and his ministry has several more).

      But it looks as if the Iowa Republican may have to issue subpoenas if he is going to succeed at forcing the church to render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s.

      A spokeswoman for Grassley said yesterday that the inquiry is a “step-by-step process,” and no decisions have been made about congressional hearings or subpoenas. Grassley has defended the probe, saying he is investigating whether tax-exempt organizations are accountable to their donors, not their religious practice.

      “The allegations involve governing boards that aren’t independent and allow generous salaries and housing allowances and amenities such as private jets and Rolls Royces,” he said when he announced the probe last November. “. . . I have an obligation to donors and the taxpayers to find out more.”

      Kenneth Behr, president of the Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability, an accreditation agency for Christian ministries, called the inquiry “a very big deal,” in an interview with the Tampa Tribune. He said he is not aware of a high-ranking lawmaker ever undertaking such an extensive investigation. “I think he’s picking a fight,” Behr said. “He is not just asking them to come in and talk, he is asking them for everything.”

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      2 Comments

      • #1.   John Laird 04.01.2008

        Jesus,hear my plea ,take these hypocrites vulgar gains and place them in chains. I don’t know if you have that power or your father “God” but surely “Senator Grassley” and the “Senate Finance Committee” do.
        The only people who received prosperity are those “Bible Pimps” by using Jesus and the big Kahuna “God” as their cohorts to steal from these poor blind sheep. They got these bible thumping fools in a suffocating religious illusion so much so, that if these heathens are sent up the river the government better have the army protect them from themselves because they are so mind controlleded the KOOL AID might come flying off the shelf.

      • #2.   Linda Rayborn 04.01.2008

        This article tells us much more about Mike Huckabee, our best hope for the future of the country than it does these tv evangelists. If Mike Huckabee wanted riches and fame, he could certainly have it. He is the most articulate, best motivator, most charismatic figure out there now for conservatives. He could certainly land a big time tv spot and live comfortably much like Gore, basking in the limelight. But Huckabee is running on principles and the sincere desire to make a better country for the future generations. He wants to make a difference and his religious foundation is important only in that it grounds him, making him consistent, strong, calm and collected. Conventional wisdom would have said that Huckabee should have dropped out, like Romney when he realized the odds were not in his favor. But Huckabee was running for the people who supported him and the principles he believed in more than the favor of the GOP elite. THAT is the kind of president we need and deserve!!! As Huckabee often says, “he would rather lose an election than lose the principles that got him into politics in the first place”. May we only hope and PRAY we have another chance to put this man in the White House!!

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