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  • Rev. Jeremiah Wright has more to say

    Rev. Jeremiah Wright, the fire-and-brimstone race-baiter and former “spiritual advisor” to President Barack Obama, struck a blow for anti-Semitism and against conventional grammar when he said he hasn’t spoken to Obama since he was elected because “them Jews ain’t going to let him talk to me.”

    Wright made the remarks in an interview with the Daily Press of Newport News, Va., after speaking Tuesday night at the 95th annual Hampton University Ministers’ Conference.

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    “I told my baby daughter that he’ll talk to me in five years when he’s a lame duck, or in eight years when he’s out of office,” added the former pastor of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago.

    “The Jewish vote, the AIPAC vote that’s controlling him, that will not let him send representation to the Darfur Review Conference, that’s talking this craziness on Israel because they’re Zionists, they will not let him talk to somebody who calls a spade what it is. Ethnic cleansing is going on in Gaza – the ethnic cleansing (by) the Zionists is a sin and a crime against humanity.”

    As reported by The Huffington Post, Wright tried Thursday to skin back his anti-Semitic bombast on the Sirius Radio program “Make It Plain with Mark Thompson,” saying, “Let me just say, like Hillary, I misspoke. Let me just say Zionists,” which he differentiated from “responsible Jewish persons.”

    The White House hasn’t commented on Wright’s remarks.

    This man of God’s original comments were made the same day white supremacist James von Brunn, 88, allegedly shot a security guard at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. The guard, Stephen T. Johns, was killed.

    Yesterday von Brunn – who was critically wounded when other security guards returned fire – was charged with murder and killing in the course of possessing a firearm in a federal facility. The FBI is investigating whether the shooting was a hate crime or domestic terrorism, which could lead to additional charges.

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    • Manhattan DA Morgenthau helped boost Sotomayor’s career

      June 12, 2009 at 9:33am

      Upon gradation from Yale Law School in 1979, Sonia Sotomayor, President Obama’s pick to fill a vacancy on the Supreme Court, made a surprising career choice.

    • Big Ed Whitacre Will Take Reins at Gm

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    • Cathleen Black Bucks Publishing Trends

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    • J. Ezra Merkin to give up control over hedge funds

      Financier and philanthropist J. Ezra Merkin assented Tuesday to step down as manager of his hedge funds and to place them into receivership.

      The step was demanded by New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, who brought civil charges against Merkin last month, accusing him of fraudulent concealment and misrepresentation for steering his clients’ money to Bernard Madoff without their knowledge or permission.

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      Merkin, the former chairman of GMAC and the scion of a prominent Jewish family, funneled $2.4 billion into Bernard Madoff Investment Securities, including millions from prominent institutions like Yeshiva University.

      Some of his investors, including New York University, New York Law School and Mort Zuckerman’s charitable trust, have brought suit against him, as has the trustee liquidating Madoff’s firm.

      The agreement, announced Tuesday in New York State Supreme Court, means that Merkin will no longer control his three hedge funds, Ascot, Gabriel and Ariel, from which he reportedly collected more than $470 million in fees over the last decade.

      “Mr. Merkin is working closely with the New York Attorney General,” his attorney, Andrew Levander, said in a statement, adding that Merkin had agreed in principle to appoint Guidepost Partners as receivers for the funds while he remains available to consult regarding the wind-down.

      Justice Richard Lowe gave Cuomo and Merkin until May 28 to finalize the agreement.

      Despite his legal and financial woes, the Jewish Week reported that Merkin is the frontrunner expected to be elected chairman Wednesday of the tony Fifth Avenue Synagogue, which his father helped found.

      Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel, who lost most of the funds of his humanitarian foundation, as well as his personal savings, after investing with Madoff, will become one of two honorary chairmen.

      Despite consternation in some quarters, the Jewish Week said that Merkin has not been publicly opposed, perhaps because he has been one of the synagogue’s primary benefactors.

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      • Spitzer’s mood darkens during state testimony

        May 21, 2009 at 9:48am

        Two sides of former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer’s personality are revealed in recently released transcripts of two interviews he gave on the same subject under oath last year.

      • Success at NBC hasn’t been as easy as Silverman had hoped

        Two years ago, Ben Silverman took on the job of restoring NBC’s entertainment lineup to its former glory.

        So far, Silverman, 38, hasn’t met that goal, according to The New York Times.

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        “NBC has for several years been all but desperate for a new breakout show — or two or three,” wrote Bill Carter in the Times. “Mr. Silverman’s first full cycle of programs has not yet produced anything fitting that description.”

        For sure, Silverman’s performance has been pulled down by external factors. First there was the writer’s strike that disrupted the 2007-2008 season. Then, there has been the recession.

        But Silverman’s so-so showing is nonetheless surprising, given his background and his proven talent for creating hits.

        In a sense, Silverman was born to be television executive in charge of programming, as his mother, Mary D. Silverman, has had a similar role at Court TV, USA Network and other venues.

        He’s also no stranger to the creative arts, as his father, Stanley Silverman, is a composer who has created musical scores for movies and the theater, most notably working with playwright Arthur Miller.

        After graduating from Tufts University, Ben Silverman also worked for Brandon Tartikoff, who had revived NBC in the 1980s, bringing it the hit shows, “Hill Street Blues,” “Cheers” “The Cosby Show” and “L.A. Law.”

        Later, Silverman joined the William Morris Agency, soon working out of London. While there, he helped bring “Survivor” and “Who Wants to be a Millionaire” to the U.S. television audience.

        Silverman left William Morris in 2002 when he founded Reveille, a production company.

        While at Reveille, Silverman brought “The Office,” “Ugly Betty,” “The Biggest Loser” and other hits to television here. (Shine Limited, a British company owned by Elisabeth Murdoch, daughter of Rupert Murdoch, bought Reveille last year for $125 million.)

        Given this track record, it’s no surprise that NBC made Silverman the co-chairman of NBC Universal Entertainment and NBC Universal Television Group in 2007.

        Silverman focuses on the programming side of the business, while lawyer Marc Graboff, the other co-chairman, handles the business side.

        Despite his lack of experience as a network executive, Silverman was confident when he began work at NBC.

        “The industry hasn’t seen an executive like me in a long time,” he told Esquire magazine.

        He then went on to label his counterparts at ABC and FOX as “D-girls,” a term defined by Esquire as “industry slang for cute young development execs with little power.”

        Adding insult to insult, Silverman also called Steve McPherson, ABC’s entertainment president, a “moron.”

        Not surprisingly, Silverman’s remarks caught the attention of his boss.

        “Ben made some mistakes in his first year,” Jeff Zucker, the CEO of NBC Universal told the Times. “The first year was a learning experience. He had to learn how to work inside a corporation.”

        Zucker did say that Silverman is still the right person for the job.

        “Ben has a skill set that is incredibly appropriate for these times,” he said. “If we weren’t supportive of Ben, he wouldn’t be here.”

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        • Muck tracker – Ezra Merkin resigns as synagogue officer

          May 22, 2009 at 8:18am

          J. Ezra Merkin, the financier who was a major feeder to Bernard L. Madoff’s Ponzi scheme, stepped down Wednesday night as an officer of the Fifth Avenue Synagogue, the New York Times reports. He declined a nomination to be chairman.

        • ‘Hillaryland’ is reborn at the State Department

          Hillary Rodham Clinton may have reinvented herself as secretary of state, but she hasn’t exactly started with a blank slate.

          The former New York senator has taken along some of her most loyal staffers from “Hillaryland,” the nickname given to the tightknit group that coalesced around her in the White House, and which advised and supported her as she charted her own political career.

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          For starters, there’s Melanne Verveer, who was chief of staff to First Lady Clinton, and who is now the nominee for a new State Department post – ambassador at large for global women’s Issues. It’s a natural stepping stone for Verveer, now the CEO and co-founder of an international nonprofit called Vital Voices Global Partnership, which grooms women for leadership roles around the world.

          Hillary Rodham Clinton
          Hillary Rodham Clinton

          There’s attorney Cheryl Mills, counsel to Clinton’s ill-fated 2008 presidential campaign, who has been reincarnated as her new chief of staff.

          Mills is best known for defending former President Bill Clinton during his 1999 impeachment trial, when she was deputy White House counsel. After that, she took a breather from politics, working as an executive at Oprah Winfrey’s Oxygen Media and at New York University.

          There’s the glamorous Huma M. Abedin, who started with First Lady Clinton as a college intern in 1996, and who moved up to become her “body” person, adviser and close friend, and who has now inherited the title of senior adviser to the secretary.

          Abedin, who was the subject of a 2007 Vogue profile, is famous for her style, and shares an unusually close, almost sisterly relationship with Clinton.

          While critics have questioned Abedin’s foreign policy experience, her supporters note that she is a fluent Arabic speaker who grew up in Saudi Arabia, and who has been a trusted Clinton adviser on the Middle East.

          “Abedin has the energy of a woman in her 20s, the confidence of a woman in her 30s, the experience of a woman in her 40s, and the grace of a woman in her 50s,” Clinton wrote in an email to Vogue. “She is timeless, her combination of poise, kindness, and intelligence are matchless.”

          Abedin is dating Rep. Anthony Weiner (D-NY), who is a possible 2009 New York City mayoral contender.

          Other longtime Clinton loyalists joining her in the State Department include:

          • Judith A. McHale, a longtime Clinton friend and donor, and former president of Discovery Communications, who has been nominated as undersecretary for public diplomacy. After two decades building Discovery, McHale, the daughter of a foreign service officer, helped found the GEF/Africa Growth Fund, a private equity fund that makes investments in consumer goods and services in Africa.
          • James Steinberg, President Bill Clinton’s deputy national security adviser, who has been nominated as deputy secretary. Steinberg, whose articles criticizing the Bush Doctrine of pre-emption became a rallying cry for Democrats, brings experience as a former White House and congressional military policy adviser.
          • Lissa Muscatine, a speechwriter, erstwhile book collaborator and “walking catalogue of everything the candidate has ever said about anything,” who was tapped as chief speechwriter at State.
          • Andrew Shapiro, who advised Sen. Clinton on defense and foreign policy issues, who was nominated assistant secretary for political-military affairs.
          • Philippe Reines, her Senate press secretary, who is reprising that role at State.

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          1 Comments

          • #1.   Stacy 05.18.2009

            Of course she will bring people she knows and trusts with her and what the article doesn’t mention is all the new people at State she has on her team.

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          • Madoff trustee sues Fairfield Greenwich to recover funds

            May 19, 2009 at 3:26pm

            The court-appointed trustee of Bernard Madoff’s defunct firm is going after the millionaire middlemen who acted as witting or unwitting accomplices to Madoff’s $65 billion Ponzi scheme.

          • Jon Huntsman Jr. nominated as U.S. ambassador to China

            President Obama seems to have pulled off a slick three-fer today in announcing his nomination of Republican Utah Gov. Jon M. Huntsman Jr. as U.S. ambassador to China.

            First, Huntsman, 49, has solid diplomatic credentials, having served as President George H.W. Bush’s ambassador to Singapore and U.S. trade ambassador for President George W. Bush. He learned to speak fluent Mandarin earlier in life as a Mormon missionary to China, and adopted his daughter from China.

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            Second, it was a high-profile display of Obama’s pledge of bipartisanship, albeit a choice that reflects many Democratic values in a moderate Republican who almost routinely rocks the ribs of the GOP’s never-say-die ultra-conservatives.

            Jon M. Huntsman Jr.
            Jon Huntsman Jr.

            Third, and most significant politically, if Huntsman is confirmed it will effectively remove him from contention in an Obama re-election bid in 2012, at the same time pulling the only moderate out of a field of potential GOP candidates who play insistently to the party’s supposed base.

            One significant example of Huntsman succeeding as a moderate among conservatives was the easing of Utah’s restrictive liquor laws to promote tourism, a move resisted by the state’s large Mormon population.

            He also has endorsed civil marriage for gays – although he supported a successful amendment to his state’s constitution banning them in 2004 – and is a strong voice for environmentalism – especially in joint efforts with the Chinese.

            If his appointment is accepted, Huntsman will replace Clark Randt as ambassador.

            He is the son of Jon M. Huntsman Sr., founder and chairman of Huntsman Corp., a global chemical manufacturer and marketer.

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            2 Comments

            • #1.   Max 05.16.2009

              Governor Huntsman learned Mandarin as a Mormon missionary to TAIWAN, not China.

            • #2.   TonyP4 05.17.2009

              Never use our yardstick on human right on a developing country like China.

              American contributes more pollution per capita than China esp. some pollution is caused by manufacturing for global consumers.

              We can build carriers powered by two nuclear generators and China cannot build helicopters. What a joke!

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