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Lawsuit Settled Over Beach Boys Name
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Reynolds, ex-NRCC chair, won’t run again
Rep. Thomas M. Reynolds, R-NY, his political fortunes damaged by an accounting scandal at the National Republican Congressional Committee, has decided not to seek re-election.
The five-term congressman announced today that he will not run again in his western New York district.
Hint: Click in map to explore connectionsStory continues below interactive map
MAP HINTS: Click expands a name. Control+Click centers map on a name. Solid lines are current relations. Dotted lines are former relations. For advanced tools choose Tools > Options from the menu at top. More help. Not seeing the maps? Please go here to check for the latest version of Java.He is the 29th House Republican to step aside. His absence from the ticket is expected to give Democrats a shot at what has been until recent years a safe Republican seat.
Reynolds, 57, was chairman of the NRCC, a group that raises funds for congressional candidates, from 2003 to 2007. One of his first acts upon assuming leadership was to appoint Christopher J. Ward as treasurer.
Ward is now under FBI investigation for possibly diverting as much as $1 million from the NRCC and other groups that he worked with.
At least three people had been seeking the Democratic nomination to run against Reynolds in the 26th congressional district. Each of them has made the missing money a campaign issue.
“Does Tom Reynolds ever accept responsibility for his poor leadership, or does he just pass the buck?” recently asked a spokesman for Jonathan Powers, an Iraq War veteran who has been campaigning for the nomination for months.
Reynolds has denied any knowledge of Ward’s activities, which allegedly included the submission of faked audits.
“At no point in time were any red flags raised about those audits,” Reynolds said in a statement released last month.
In announcing his decision today, Reynolds said he did believe he could have been re-elected were he to run again. He also said a Republican would win in the fall. “Make no mistake, this is a Republican district and it will be represented by a Republican,” he said.
Alice J. Kryzan, a lawyer who lives in Amherst, a Buffalo suburb, is also seeking the Democratic nomination.
Jack Davis, a millionaire who came close to defeating Reynolds in the 2006 election, has been preparing to oppose Reynolds for what would have been the third time.
Davis, who lives in Clarence, Erie County, said recently that he was willing to spend $3 million of his own funds in the election.
The Buffalo News reported today that the top Republican contenders to replace Reynolds are New York state Sen. George D. Maziarz of Newfane, Niagara County, and state Assemblyman James E. Hayes of Amherst.
New York’s 26th district includes all or parts of seven counties in western New York.
It mixes parts of suburban Buffalo and suburban Rochester with numerous rural communities and had been tailor-made for Republicans.
But Reynolds was pressed by Davis last time around and had to spend $5.2 million, an unusually high sum for the district, in a winning effort.
Related Stories on Muckety- The case of the NRCC and the missing money – March 11, 2008
- Joe Lieberman blazes his own path – March 10, 2008
- Out of the park and into politics – October 13, 2007
- Mark Warner running for Senate – September 13, 2007
- Lobbyist Black defends McCain on lobbyist issue – February 24, 2008
- The politics of Warren Buffett – July 14, 2007
- J.C. Watts mentioned as possible VP – February 20, 2008
- VECO corruption trial begins – October 23, 2007
- The meteoric rise of Blackwater – October 3, 2007
- Ickes helps the Clintons through a new crisis – February 11, 2008
This post is tagged with: , Christopher J. Ward, Congress, National Republican Congressional Committee, NRCC, Politics, Thomas M. Reynolds
Read related stories: Politics
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Will the Tribune Company sell Newsday?
Tribune Company owner Sam Zell may be entertaining bids for Newsday, the company’s Long Island paper, amid mounting financial pressures.
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MAP HINTS: Click expands a name. Control+Click centers map on a name. Solid lines are current relations. Dotted lines are former relations. For advanced tools choose Tools > Options from the menu at top. More help. Not seeing the maps? Please go here to check for the latest version of Java.Citing an unnamed newspaper industry insider, Crain’s New York Business reported today that News Corp. owner Rupert Murdoch “is believed to have set his sights on Newsday.” Murdoch was reportedly interested in a joint operating agreement between Newsday and his New York Post last year. But the idea went nowhere when Sam Zell took Tribune private in a deal worth $8.2 billion.
Others expressing interest in buying the tabloid are said to include Mortimer B. Zuckerman, the real-estate developer and publisher who owns the New York Daily News, and James Dolan, whose family controls Cablevision, the cable television operator, the New York Times reported.
Talk of the possible sale of Newsday surfaced today as Tribune reported a fourth-quarter loss of $79 million. The company acknowledged it may have to sell assets as it struggles past a highly-leveraged December deal that took the company private.
The dismal results come three months after chairman and CEO Zell, a real estate mogul with no experience in the newspaper business, led a buyout of the struggling company, which owns the Los Angeles Times, the Chicago Tribune and the Baltimore Sun, among other newspapers, local television stations and the Chicago Cubs baseball team.
At the time, Zell said he planned to sell the Cubs and related assets, but wanted to keep most of the rest of the company intact. He also said that additional downsizing was not the answer to historic changes in the newspaper industry. But in the three months since, he has cut jobs, citing falling advertising revenue and a tanking economy.
Tribune said today it has “begun a strategic review of certain Tribune assets to determine whether capital can be more effectively redeployed into our core operations or toward reducing our outstanding leverage.”
Related Stories on Muckety- Zell takes over Tribune – December 21, 2007
- Newspaper lobbyists may lose a moneymaker – October 20, 2007
- Murdoch’s media machine – June 25, 2007
- Forget news, is McClatchy a real estate play? – January 5, 2008
- Bruce Sherman and Hearst-Argyle – August 27, 2007
- Mays family awaits Clear Channel buyout – February 12, 2008
- Candidates and baseball owners cover political bases – October 10, 2007
- Patriots’ Kraft wants English club – October 30, 2007
- Surprise! Gore supports Murdoch – July 18, 2007
- Murdoch gets taste of his own medicine – September 8, 2007
This post is tagged with: Baltimore Sun, Business, Chicago Cubs, Chicago Tribune, K. Rupert Murdoch, Los Angeles Times, Media, News Corp., Newsday, Newspapers, Sam Zell, Tribune Company
Read related stories: Business · Media · Newspapers
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Dc Court Disbars Scooter Libby
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Muckety This Kim Basinger to Brian Wilson
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Lauder gives $131 million to the Whitney
Cosmetics magnate Leonard A. Lauder has made the biggest gift the Whitney Museum has ever received.
Lauder, chairman of the museum board and of Estee Lauder Companies, is contributing $131 million to the Whitney, with most of the gift going to the art museum endowment.
Hint: Click in map to explore connectionsStory continues below interactive map
MAP HINTS: Click expands a name. Control+Click centers map on a name. Solid lines are current relations. Dotted lines are former relations. For advanced tools choose Tools > Options from the menu at top. More help. Not seeing the maps? Please go here to check for the latest version of Java.The Lauders rank as a first family of the New York art world. Leonard Lauder’s brother, Ronald S. Lauder, is chairman emeritus of the Museum of Modern Art and a co-founder of the Neue Galerie.
By jingling the coins in his pocket, Leonard Lauder may prompt other Whitney trustees to increase their support. Among the board’s many wealthy members:
· Wall Street financier Thomas H. Lee, who is also a trustee of the Museum of Modern Art. His wife, Ann Tenenbaum, is a trustee of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and a member of the New York City Art Commission. The couple were also major benefactors of the Dia:Beacon, on the Hudson north of New York City.
· Wilbur Ross, who is in the midst of a $1.1 billion deal to buy H&R Block’s Option One mortgage servicing business
· Chicago developer Neil G. Bluhm, who is also a trustee of the Art Institute of Chicago
· Billionaire Steven Roth, chairman of Vornado Realty
· Eric Mindich, chief of the Eton Park hedge fund
· Norton Utilities creator Peter Norton, who also sits on the board of the Museum of Modern Art and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
Related Stories on Muckety- Princeton, donors’ family battle over $880 million – October 28, 2007
- James Simons gives millions to Stony Brook – February 29, 2008
- The Rockefeller dynasty – May 9, 2007
- The charity work of Bear Stearns’ Alan Schwartz – January 9, 2008
- For Patricia Cornwell, philanthropy has its price – February 22, 2008
- Lev Leviev’s empire built on diamonds and real estate – February 4, 2008
- Andre Agassi Foundation names Miller CEO – January 16, 2008
- Blackstone’s Peterson starts doling out a fortune – February 15, 2008
- Billionaire Chuck Feeney gives it all away – March 9, 2008
- Ford Foundation chooses a new president – August 14, 2007
This post is tagged with: Ann Tenenbaum, Arts, Eric Mindich, Estee Lauder Companies, Leonard A. Lauder, Museum of Modern Art, Neil G. Bluhm, Neue Galerie, Peter Norton, Philanthropy, Ronald S. Lauder, Steven Roth, Thomas H. Lee, Whitney Museum, Wilbur Ross
Read related stories: Arts · Philanthropy
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Obama pastor part of rabble-rousing tradition
As Sen. Barack Obama’s pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr. is cast as Public Enemy No. 1 by some commentators for his rants against the white establishment, it’s worth remembering that his congregation belongs to a liberal mainline Protestant denomination in America with a long history of offending people.
The United Church of Christ, a blend of four historic Protestant traditions, traces its origins to the first church to take a stand against slavery in 1700, the first to ordain a woman in 1853, the first to publish an inclusive-language hymnal in 1995 and first to support same-sex marriage in 2005, according to a church website. Its 2004 television ads promoting its open door to blacks and gays was rejected by television networks CBS and NBC, which deemed them too controversial. (Story continues below interactive map.)
Hint: Click in map to explore connectionsStory continues below interactive map
MAP HINTS: Click expands a name. Control+Click centers map on a name. Solid lines are current relations. Dotted lines are former relations. For advanced tools choose Tools > Options from the menu at top. More help. Not seeing the maps? Please go here to check for the latest version of Java.But even within that tradition, Wright is considered radical. The rebellious son and grandson of Baptist ministers, he was part of a group of black intellectuals such as James Cone, author of Black Theology and Black Power, who believed that blacks shouldn’t have to choose between Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. They preached an Afro-centric Christianity that combined Christian principles with a strong social action agenda.
When Wright arrived on the rough-and-tumble south side of Chicago in 1972, Trinity United Church of Christ was clearly losing in the competition for young, black men’s hearts to the Nation of Islam and black liberation groups despite its recently-adopted slogan, “unashamedly black and unapologetically Christian.” Over the next three decades, Wright transformed it into a megachurch with almost 8,000 members with dozens of community services, including day care, a credit union and a drug-and-alcohol program. When he retired last month, the church was the denomination’s largest.
Wright’s screeds against America and white powerbrokers, his post-911 sermon that America had brought the attacks on itself and his praise of Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan are now well known thanks to the constant loop of snippets playing on cable television.
Less well known is how he also informally advised Chicago’s only black mayor Harold Washington, considered a political role model for Obama, and also, the combative relationships he often had with more doctrinally conservative black ministers in Chicago, described in Obama: From Promise to Power, by Chicago Tribune reporter David Mendell.Mendell said that Obama first noticed the church in 1985 because of the “Free Africa” sign that Wright had posted out front to protest apartheid, and quotes Wright describing their open-ended talks about faith, politics, race and social change.
“Trying to hold a conversation with a guy like Barack, and him trying to hold a conversation with some ministers, it’s like you are dating someone and she wants to talk to you about Rosie and what she saw on Oprah, and that’s it,” Wright said. “… He felt comfortable asking me questions that were postmodern, post-Enlightenment, and that college-educated and graduate school-trained people wrestle with when it comes to the faith … I was not threatened by those questions.”
Obama credits Wright for his embracing Christianity, and says he took the title of his book, Audacity of Hope from a sermon Wright preached.
What he doesn’t say is that he used Wright as a sounding board for questions about politics as well as faith. Mendell describes how, in 2002, a dejected Obama went to see Wright after returning from Washington where he attended the annual Congressional Black Caucus conference trying to garner support for his bid for the U.S. Senate.
“He had gone down there to get support and find out who would support him, and found out it was just a meat market,” the pastor told Mendell. “He had people say, ‘If you want to count on me, come to my room. I don’t care if you’re married. …He was, like, in shock … He comes back shattered. I thought to myself, ‘Does he have a rude awakening coming his way.’”
Mendell notes that Trinity United is considered by some Chicago blacks to be “the church of elites,” attracting celebrities like the rapper Common, TV talk mogul Oprah Winfrey, as well as academics from the nearby University of Chicago. On Sundays, BMWs and Audis create traffic jams on 95th Street.
But the church was undergoing its own generational shift. Wright retired last month, and the top post was assumed by Otis Moss III, a Yale-educated former track star whose style is much more like that of the church’s most famous member, than of its former fire-and-brimstone pastor.
Moss, too, is the son of a Baptist minister – Otis Moss Jr., who preached at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta and who was a friend of Martin Luther King Jr. But while he, too, is said to connect strongly to young people, his cool, intellectual approach is less likely to catapult him to notoriety on cable television. In 2005, the magazine The African American Pulpit named him one of the “Twenty to Watch” ministers under forty.
Here’s a video of Wright:
Related Stories on Muckety- Echoes of Camelot as a Kennedy endorses Obama – January 26, 2008
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- Oprah and Maya disagree on 2008 choices – July 14, 2007
- Power off the campaign, not off the record – March 8, 2008
- will.i.am, Jesse Dylan and friends make Obama video – February 9, 2008
- Smoot rakes in millions for Obama campaign – February 21, 2008
- Nugen quietly courts Obama superdelegates – March 18, 2008
- Henry Louis Gates heads new Washington Post site – January 29, 2008
- Bill Richardson endorses Obama – March 21, 2008
This post is tagged with: Barack Obama, Harold Washington, James Cone, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King Jr., Otis Moss II, Otis Moss Jr., Politics, Religion, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr., Trinity United Church of Christ, United Church of Christ
Read related stories: Politics · Religion
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Ashley Dupre Video is Lucky Find for Girls Gone Wild
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Cornelius Vanderbilt to Douglas Fairbanks
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