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---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Tue, 12 Aug 2003 03:00:00 -0700
From: Media Research Center <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: MRC Alert: Network Vet: 'Dukakis Was No Liberal and Neither Was
    Mondale'

              ***Media Research Center CyberAlert***
     6am EDT, Tuesday August 12, 2003 (Vol. Eight; No. 153)
  The 1,559th CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996

> CBS & ABC Describe as "Controversial" Bush's EPA and New Nominee
> Network Vet: "Dukakis Was No Liberal and Neither Was Mondale"
> "Conservative" Rohrabacher Endorsing Schwarzenegger Worries Time
> GMA Frets About Bush's Vacation, "Shouldn't He Be Hard at Work?"
> Job Opening at MRC: Assistant Archivist for Media Conversion

    #### Distributed to more than 14,000 subscribers by the Media
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since 1987. The MRC is the leader in documenting, exposing and
neutralizing liberal media bias. Visit the MRC on the Web:
http://www.mediaresearch.org. CyberAlerts from this year are at:
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For 2002: http://www.mediaresearch.org/archive/cyber/archive02.asp
    Subscribe/unsubscribe information, as well as a link to the
MRC donations page, are at the end of this message.
    When posted, this CyberAlert will be readable at:
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1) When reporters describe a policy or person as "controversial"
you know they must be referring to a policy or person which upsets
liberals. CBS's Dan Rather employed the term once and ABC's
Charles Gibson used the term three times on Monday night in
reporting on President Bush's decision to nominate Utah Governor
Mike Leavitt to succeed former New Jersey Governor Christie
Whitman as EPA Administrator.

2) Former NBC and CNN political reporter Ken Bode, on the Chris
Matthews Show over the weekend, seriously maintained that neither
Walter Mondale nor Michael Dukakis were liberals. Bode generously
conceded that George McGovern "was a liberal," but then insisted:
"Dukakis was no liberal and neither was Mondale. Both of them had
several people to the left in those primaries. It was what the
Republicans did to them once they got the nomination that made
them seem to be liberals in both cases."

3) In their Arnold Schwarzenegger cover stories this week, Time
and Newsweek each painted the movie star candidate as a political
mystery, but described his social stands as either "liberal" in
quote marks or "libertarian." Newsweek also suggested his
potential marital infidelity was not a mark of an inferior moral
record, at least when compared to Ronald Reagan. Time's Richard
Lacayo found Schwarzenegger liberal on several issues but brooded
about the import of Congressman Dana Rohrabacher, "one of the most
conservative members of the California congressional delegation,"
endorsing the actor. Lacayo worried: "Is that just further
evidence of Arnold's gift for befriending people of all kinds, or
does Rohrabacher know something the rest of us don't?"

4) A few hours before President Bush traveled to Arizona and to
Denver, where he announced his pick to run the EPA, Good Morning
America co-host Charles Gibson, on his first day back from
vacation, demanded at the top of Monday's ABC broadcast:
"President Bush enjoys another month-long vacation. Shouldn't he
be hard at work in the White House?" But maybe ABC's reporters
need a vacation since they messed up basic facts. Diane Sawyer
proclaimed: "President Bush has now spent a full 30 straight days
away from Washington." And Kate Snow suggested Bush has only been
in office for a year.

5) Job opening at the MRC for the position of Assistant Archivist
for Media Conversion.


    > 1) When reporters describe a policy or person as
"controversial" you know they must be referring to a policy or
person which upsets liberals. CBS's Dan Rather employed the term
once and ABC's Charles Gibson used the term three times on Monday
night in reporting on President Bush's decision to nominate Utah
Governor Mike Leavitt to succeed former New Jersey Governor
Christie Whitman as EPA Administrator.

    Rather, on the August 11 CBS Evening News, claimed the entire
agency had become "controversial" under Bush: "President Bush
today nominated Utah Governor Mike Leavitt to head his
controversial Environmental Protection Agency. Leavitt has already
been criticized by environmentalists for his land-use policies. If
confirmed, Leavitt will succeed Christie Whitman who resigned in
May."

    Over on ABC's World News Tonight, anchor Charles Gibson
asserted: "President Bush has announced his new nominee to head
the Environmental Protection Agency and it may be controversial.
The President's choice is Utah Governor Mike Leavitt."

    After a soundbite from President Bush, Gibson turned to Kate
Snow with Bush in Denver to explain why Bush picked Leavitt.
Gibson wanted to know: "He is picked to succeed former New Jersey
Governor Christie Whitman. Hers was a controversial stewardship at
the EPA. Will this be any less controversial?"

    Snow reported mixed reaction from environmentalists with the
Sierra Club "disappointed" but the Wilderness Society willing to
work with him.



    > 2) Wonder how reporters, as cited in recent CyberAlerts, can
describe Howard Dean as a "fiscal conservative," a "centrist" and
even claim "there's a lot in his record that looks...not only
moderate, but even conservative"? Well, they probably see the
world through the same very liberal prism as former NBC and CNN
political reporter Ken Bode who, on the Chris Matthews Show over
the weekend, seriously maintained that neither Walter Mondale nor
Michael Dukakis were liberals.

    I'm not kidding.

    Bode generously conceded that George McGovern "was a liberal,"
but then insisted: "Dukakis was no liberal and neither was
Mondale. Both of them had several people to the left in those
primaries. It was what the Republicans did to them once they got
the nomination that made them seem to be liberals in both cases."

    By that reasoning, Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Bob Dole
and George W. Bush cannot be considered conservative since they
had people to their right in their primaries. But you'll never
hear Bode or any other journalist suggest any such thing though,
compared to Alan Keyes, George W. Bush is not conservative.

    Bode is very experienced political reporting veteran whose way
of seeing the world probably matches much of the Washington press
corps. Before joining NBC News in the 1980s, Bode worked for the
1976 presidential campaign of the liberal Morris Udall, though
he'd probably claim Udall was a just a misunderstood moderate. By
the early 1990s he'd jumped to CNN and then he put in a stint as
moderator of PBS's Washington Week in Review. Until fairly
recently, he served as Dean of the Medill School of Journalism at
Northwestern University. He is now a Distinguished Professor of
Journalism at DePauw University in Indiana.

    MRC analyst Geoffrey Dickens took down Bode's ideological
assessment as expressed on the August 10 Chris Matthews Show, a
weekend program carried by NBC-owned stations and otherwise
syndicated in cities without an NBC O&O.

    Matthews set up Bode in a discussion of the Dean campaign:
"Let me go to Ken. You say, Ken, you know the McGovern campaign,
an upstart from out West, but a man of the left. Certainly Jimmy
Carter, a man of the, a bit of the right or center. He beat the
pack and then Gary Hart, another outsider. What's this guy look
like? He's an outsider, is he gonna win?"
    Bode argued: "Well the, the rap, the rap on Dean is that he's
like Dukakis and Mondale and McGovern. Well McGovern was a liberal
but we had an issue and that was the war. Dukakis was no liberal
and neither was Mondale. Both of them had several people to the
left in those primaries. It was what the Republicans did to them
once they got the nomination that made them seem to be liberals in
both cases. Now Dean, when you examine his record, is gonna come
off to be a far more moderate person than he is, appears now
because right now his issue is the war, it's Bush, it's
manipulation of intelligence and, and he's very strong and that's
moving him."

    DePauw's announcement, about Bode joining their faculty,
includes a photo of him:
http://www.depauw.edu/news/story.asp?id=377146000347222

    The MRC's 1996 booklet, "Team Clinton: The Starting Line-Up of
the Pro-Clinton Press Corps," featured a page on Bode. See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/specialreports/1996/clinton/bode.asp

    Bode's personal liberalness regularly came through in his
coverage. In a February 13, 1992 story for CNN this is what Bode
recalled about the 1988 presidential race:
    "David Duke's exploitation of white working-class fears about
blacks echoes a theme from the 1988 election. Then the issue was
crime. This is the Maryland State Penitentiary. Inside resides the
most politically notorious convict in America...William Horton,
Jr., the focal point of a national campaign designed to exploit
white fear of black crime." .

    Back in 1988, during NBC's prime time coverage of the
Republican Convention, this was what most concerned Bode about
then-Vice President Bush's pick of Dan Quayle for a running mate:
    "But last night, the first decision that he made...He put a
Senator on the ticket who doesn't have a great civil rights
record, who voted against the civil rights bill and voted to
sustain a veto on the civil rights bill."



    > 3) In their Arnold Schwarzenegger cover stories this week,
Time and Newsweek each painted the movie star candidate as a
political mystery, but described his social stands as either
"liberal" in quote marks or "libertarian." Newsweek also suggested
his potential marital infidelity was not a mark of an inferior
moral record, at least when compared to Ronald Reagan: "It won't
change the fact that he's stayed married to his first wife –– a
record of marital success the last Hollywood actor to be elected
governor of California could not have claimed to match."

    Time's Richard Lacayo found Schwarzenegger liberal on several
issues but brooded about the import of Congressman Dana
Rohrabacher, "one of the most conservative members of the
California congressional delegation," endorsing the actor. Lacayo
worried: "Is that just further evidence of Arnold's gift for
befriending people of all kinds, or does Rohrabacher know
something the rest of us don't?"

    The MRC's Tim Graham submitted this item for CyberAlert:

    In their lead article in the August 18 edition, Newsweek
writers Jonathan Alter and Karen Breslau touted Arnold's
moderation: "Beyond his peculiar charm, Schwarzenegger's biggest
asset is that he's not 'Conan the Barbarian' politically but a
moderate Republican whose views are in sync with those of most
Californians. He's pro abortion rights, pro gay adoption, pro
environment (despite the Hummer) and a confessed 'liberal' on
other social issues."

    For that article in full:
Alter and Breslau: http://www.msnbc.com/news/950553.asp

    In a more personal profile by Breslau, Jerry Adler, and
Jennifer Ordonez, Newsweek raised the infidelity issue, but
suggested his moral record was better than Ronald Reagan's: "A
magazine story in 2001 -- denounced by Schwarzenegger as a tissue
of lies -- depicted him as a serial groper of attractive women who
cross his path, and he does possess, as one friend delicately puts
it, "a ribald sense of humor 20 years out of date." If there are
any more serious transgressions out there, presumably they will
emerge in the next two months, but it won't change the fact that
he's stayed married to his first wife -- a record of marital
success the last Hollywood actor to be elected governor of
California could not have claimed to match."

    For the Breslau, Adler and Ordonez piece in its entirety:
http://www.msnbc.com/news/950552.asp

    In Time's lead story, reporters Karen Tumulty and Terry
McCarthy suggested Schwarzenegger was a political mystery, which
would hurt the Gray Davis game plan: "Davis was sharpening his
knives again for conservative Republican Congressman Darrell Issa,
who had spent $2.96 million to get the recall (and himself) on the
ballot. But soon after Schwarzenegger got in the race, Issa bowed
out, leaving Davis with an opponent who not only has star power
but also will be far more difficult to paint as a tool of the
right wing. In fact, it could be difficult to attach any labels at
all to Schwarzenegger. What do you call an advocate of fiscal
discipline who sponsored a successful 2002 ballot measure that
requires spending more than $400 million on after-school
programs?"

    Davis was never described as a liberal or a "tool of the left
wing."

    For the August 18 Time cover story:
http://www.time.com/time/covers/1101030818/story.html

    In the second, more personal profile, Time's Richard Lacayo
tried to explain Schwarzenegger's social liberalism: "Friends
describe him as a moderate Republican, fiscally conservative but
libertarian on most social issues. They also say he's a true
conservative, a man who keeps a bust of Ronald Reagan in his
office. What that means exactly is still something of a mystery.
Whatever kind of Republican Schwarzenegger may be, it's probably
not the kind to give much comfort to a cultural conservative like
Pat Robertson. The actor has said he's pro-choice, though how he
feels about things like parental notification and partial-birth
abortion is unknown. He's loud and clear about his support for gay
rights, including adoption rights. He once told Cosmopolitan
magazine, 'I have no sexual standards in my head that say this is
good or this is bad. Homosexual –– that only means to me that he
enjoys sex with a man and I enjoy sex with a woman. It's all
legitimate to me.'"

    Lacayo reported Arnold also favors gun control and describes
himself as an environmentalist, despite his affinity for Hummer
SUVs. But some supporters gave Lacayo heartburn: "One of the first
members of Congress to endorse Schwarzenegger's candidacy was Dana
Rohrabacher, a longtime friend who is one of the most conservative
members of the California congressional delegation. Is that just
further evidence of Arnold's gift for befriending people of all
kinds, or does Rohrabacher know something the rest of us don't?"
But he concluded: "Friends say the Kennedy-Shriver clan has
softened the edges of Schwarzenegger's politics from the time he
came into their orbit in the late 1970s. 'Arnold was quite right
wing when I first met him in 1972,' says [movie producer George]
Butler. 'Maria has moderated that quite a lot.'"

    For Lacayo's piece:
http://www.time.com/time/covers/1101030818/narnold.html

    Earlier CyberAlert items on coverage of the California recall:

    -- Katie Couric certainly has chutzpah. On Thursday's Today,
beating Democratic operatives to the punch, Couric reminded
viewers of Arnold Schwarzenegger's "baggage," from "smoking
marijuana" to being "the son of a Nazi Party member" to
"allegations" that he's "sexually harassed women and committed
infidelity." But on Monday morning, she dared to scold Republican
gubernatorial candidate Bill Simon as she cited a newspaper report
about how a Simon strategist promised to spotlight "the actor's
raunchy past and liberal social views." Couric then demanded:
"How dirty will you get?" See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030811.asp#1

    -- Matt Lauer on Friday morning tried to undermine the recall
effort by worrying about whether there's "collusion in the
Republican Party that goes all the way to the White House?" As if
something would be wrong with that. Over on ABC's Good Morning
America, Diane Sawyer reminded Arnold Schwarzenegger about how he
blames California Governor Gray Davis for the state's $38 billion
deficit and then demanded: "Do you blame President Bush for the
more than $450 billion deficit in the United States as a whole?"
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030811.asp#2

    -- "A lot of California Democrats were salivating at the
thought that Mr. Panetta himself might jump into the Governor's
race," Ted Koppel gushed on Thursday's Nightline about his only
guest. Describing Leon Panetta as a "good, strong, sensible
politician," Koppel pleaded with him: "Not to press the issue too
much, but since it's gonna happen anyway, why not have a, you
know, a good, strong, sensible politician like yourself to say,
well, let's make the best of a bad deal and here I am and I'll try
and help make it work?" See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030811.asp#3

    -- Come to America, meet and marry a U.S. journalist and
become more liberal. A profile of Arnold Schwarzenegger in
Friday's Washington Post related how a film producer claimed
Schwarzenegger's "politics were to the right of Genghis Khan," but
"his thinking has definitely evolved over the years" since he
married NBC News reporter Maria Shriver, to the point where "I
would call him a kind of Shriver Republican. His views on many
issues have been tempered by Maria and her family." Appearing on
FNC's Fox and Friends, Schwarzenegger admitted that his father-in-
law, liberal Democrat Sargent Shriver, "has influenced me a lot."
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030811.asp#4

    -- NBC found a similarity between Arnold Schwarzenegger and
Ronald Reagan, but not an admirable one in the view of reporter
George Lewis. On Friday's NBC Nightly News, Lewis suggested that
on that morning's Today Schwarzenegger had just pretended to not
hear a question about releasing his tax returns, an event which
"evoked memories of another movie star turned politician
pretending not to hear questions." See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030811.asp#4

    -- Sounding eerily like Hillary Clinton's claim of a "vast
right-wing conspiracy," ABC anchor Elizabeth Vargas blamed "a
determined group of well-financed conservatives ready to exploit"
the "weaknesses" of a recall law and unpopular Governor for the
circus of California's gubernatorial race featuring "former child
actor Gary Coleman" and "Hustler magazine publisher Larry Flynt,"
though modern conservatives had nothing to do with the century-old
law which made it so easy to get on the ballot. See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030808.asp#1

    -- Former presidential adviser and current U.S. News Editor-
at-Large David Gergen argued on CNBC Thursday night that Leon
Panetta would make a good candidate in California, crediting him
with balancing the federal budget: "He did run the budget office,
after all, for Bill Clinton, turned a deficit into a surplus,
and...that's exactly what California needs right now." Gergen also
gave credence to a Democratic attack line against Arnold
Schwarzenegger over his inexperience, but then he touted a more
liberal candidate who has zilch government experience: "There are
some good people in this race -- Arianna Huffington is a terrific
columnist and a good voice." See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030808.asp#2

    -- Good morning, America, here's the Democratic spin of the
day. On today's Good Morning America, instead of conveying the
reaction of both Republicans and Democrats to Arnold
Schwarzenegger entering the gubernatorial contest, George
Stephanopoulos devoted nearly all of his analysis to how Democrats
will undermine Schwarzenegger. Stephanopoulos reported that those
he talked to "point to a couple of hopeful signs in this
election." First, that since Schwarzenegger announced "on the same
day that Gary Coleman of Diff'rent Strokes got into the race as
well, just points up the whole freak show nature" of the race. And
second, Democrats "did some focus groups over the last few weeks
and they found out when they presented the idea of Arnold to
voters, they laughed." And he cited a supposed Schwarzenegger
gaffe that Democrats had attacked. See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030807_extra.asp#1

    -- Journalists normally fret about negative campaigning and
condemn attacks that dig out personal baggage in a candidate's
background. Just as long as the candidate doesn't threaten a
Democrat, apparently, since on this morning's Today Katie Couric
didn't hesitate to beat Democratic operatives to the punch and
remind viewers that Schwarzenegger's father was a Nazi. She began
a question: "Let me ask you about his, his baggage, if you will.
He's admitted smoking marijuana, using steroids during his body-
building career. He's the son of a Nazi Party member..." See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030807_extra.asp#2

    -- From the MRC's TimesWatch.org: The Times story on
California's recall vote noted Senator Dianne Feinstein is out,
while action-hero Arnold and "populist" Arianna are in, and
offered its readers snob appeal: "Instead of talking about issues
like nuclear proliferation and appropriations, as Ms. Feinstein
did, Mr. Schwarzenegger made light of his decision to run..." And
is Arianna Huffington really a populist independent or just
another left-winger? See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030807_extra.asp#3

    -- A Republican Hollywood liberals can accept. On Thursday's
Good Morning America, actress Jamie Lee Curtis declared of Arnold
Schwarzenegger the morning after he announced he's running in the
recall election for Governor of California: "I think he will make
a fantastic Governor." She soon revealed her rationale: "I
actually believe he's really, at his heart, even though he
pretends to be a Republican, I think he's a social Democrat at
heart." See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030807.asp#5



    > 4) A few hours before President Bush traveled to Arizona and
to Denver, where he announced his pick to run the EPA, Good
Morning America co-host Charles Gibson, on his first day back from
vacation, demanded at the top of Monday's ABC broadcast:
"President Bush enjoys another month-long vacation. Shouldn't he
be hard at work in the White House?"

    For the past two summers, NBC's Katie Couric on Today has been
the biggest complainer about Bush's vacations, but this year GMA
beat her to it just days after ABC's Ted Koppel returned last week
following more than a month off.

    Yet maybe ABC's reporters need a vacation since they messed up
basic facts in their presentation, MRC analyst Jessica Anderson
noticed. Diane Sawyer proclaimed: "President Bush has now spent a
full 30 straight days away from Washington." I assume she meant to
say that he WILL spend 30 straight days away from Washington.

    And in trying to show how Bush gets a better deal than others
after the same time in a new job, reporter Kate Snow lost a year
of the Bush presidency: "After one year on the job, regular
Americans average a measly eight days of vacation. The President's
four-week vacation comes closer to what Australians and Europeans
are used to."

    In fact, President Bush has been in office for more than two-
and-a-half years.

    Now the full rundown of the story in the 7am half hour of the
August 11 GMA, starting with Gibson's up top tease: "President
Bush enjoys another month-long vacation. Shouldn't he be hard at
work in the White House?" Then, immediately after the camera went
to Gibson at the anchor desk, he added: "I don't see anything
wrong with vacations -- I just took one. Good morning, America,
I'm Charles Gibson."

    Diane Sawyer set up the subsequent piece which was based on
the premise that President Bush's vacation is too long, but Kate
Snow did include comments knocking down that notion:
    "White House watchers have been keeping a tally, and they
calculate that President Bush has now spent a full 30 straight
days away from Washington. His aides are calling it a working
vacation, but needless to say, the late-night comedians have him
in their cross-hairs, and ABC's Kate Snow joins us live and early
this morning from Crawford. Good morning, Kate."
    Snow checked in: "Good morning, Diane. This morning Mr. Bush
will head out of here to Arizona to visit an area that was ravaged
by wildfire near Tucson earlier this summer. This is the first
field trip, the first day trip out of his base here in Crawford,
Texas, this go around. They call this the Western White House; he
is spending the entire month of August here.
    "One month outside the Beltway Bubble, a place so hot the
jokes come easy."
    David Letterman on the Late Show: "Nice time to be down there
-- it's about 140. You folks get 35 days off a year? [Audience
answers 'no'] No, you don't get 35 days off a year, and you know
why you don't get 35 days off a year? Because at your job they
need you."
    Snow: "The White House would call that a low blow. For one
thing it's 30 days and they insist it's a working vacation: lunch
with Secretary Powell; updates on the troops in Iraq; and, oh
yeah, don't forget all those fundraisers."
    Scott McClellan, White House Press Secretary: "I don't think
the President of the United States ever gets a break."
    Snow: "But tell that to Democratic Senator Robert Byrd."
    Senator Byrd: "The question needs to be asked, who's minding
the White House?"
    Snow: "Richard Nixon was the last President to take such long
breaks. Some say four weeks is too long."
    Anonymous man on the street, who thinks a lot of himself:
"I've heard people say to me, well, you know, they really have a
tough job, they deserve it. Well, it's no harder than my job."
    Snow claimed: "After one year on the job, regular Americans
average a measly eight days of vacation. The President's four-week
vacation comes closer to what Australians and Europeans are used
to. Mr. Bush will spend a fair amount of his time doing what he
considers relaxing [clip of him chopping up a tree with a
chainsaw]."
    President Bush: "It turns out the fish like cooler weather
than hot weather. Probably the press corps feels the same way."
    Snow: "True, the press corps would rather be in Kennebunkport,
Maine, or Martha's Vineyard or Hyannisport, but maybe the
President's Crawford tradition isn't so bad."
    Professor Mark Rozell, Catholic University of America: "It
sends a sense of calm to the rest of the country that the
President feels that things are okay in the country right now,
that it's not a crisis atmosphere. Things are under control enough
that the President can actually get away and take a real vacation
like the rest of the country."
    Snow finally got to the reality of Bush's "vacation" that
isn't always one: "You could argue this still isn't a real
vacation. President Bush today alone will put in 13 hours on the
road and, Diane, he doesn't hold the record for the longest
presidential vacation or for the least touristy spot to get away
to. That record held by Calvin Coolidge, who spent an entire
summer once in North Dakota. Diane."
    Sawyer: "And he didn't have to worry about David Letterman,
old Coolidge didn't. Thanks, Kate."

    GMA's concern about Bush's vacation reminded me of how NBC's
Katie Couric fretted about it in 2001 and 2002. An excerpt from an
item in the July 26, 2002 CyberAlert:

Katie Couric's obsession with President Bush's vacation schedule.
Last year, before 9/11, she focused on his "excessive" time off
and how he's "getting political heat from those who feel he's
spending too much time away from the White House." On Thursday
morning this week, she asked if by taking a vacation in August,
while the nation "is still at war," he is "risking a lot of
criticism."

Couric wrapped up a July 24 Today show interview with Tim Russert,
MRC analyst Geoffrey Dickens noticed, by inquiring:
"And real quickly Tim I know that he's gonna be taking a month off
in August. Given the fact that the country is still at war, the
economic situation is, is pretty dicey right now is he risking a
lot of criticism doing this?"

Russert: "They're very sensitive to that criticism. They're gonna
have enormous amount of travel out of Crawford, Texas and also
hold an economic summit at the ranch in Crawford, Texas."

But Bush's vacation schedule bothered Couric before the war. The
August 8, 2001 Today dedicated a whole interview with Newsweek's
Howard Fineman to the subject. Couric set up the segment:
"President Bush is on Day Four of his month long working vacation
at his ranch in Crawford, Texas. But along with the 100 degree
weather he's also getting political heat from those who feel he's
spending too much time away from the White House."

Couric soon proposed: "Howard, I know by the time President Bush
returns to the White House he'll have spent 54 days at his ranch.
This is since his inauguration. Four days in Kennebunkport, 38
full or partial days at Camp David. According to the Washington
Post that's 42 percent of his presidency. Either at vacation spots
or en route. Does that sound excessive compared to other
Presidents in the past or not?"

For more about the interview, see the August 9, 2001 CyberAlert,
which noted that at the time Tom Brokaw was beginning the seventh
week of his vacation:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2001/cyb20010809.asp#1

    END of CyberAlert Excerpt



    > 5) Job opening at the MRC for the position of Assistant
Archivist for Media Conversion. The job notice:

The Media Research Center (MRC), a non-profit foundation in Old
Town, Alexandria, Virginia, and the nation's leading conservative
media watchdog, has an opening for an Assistant Archivist. As a
part of the MRC's News Analysis Division, the Assistant Archivist
will help facilitate the conversion of the foundation's extensive
video archive to DVDs. This involves reviewing the tape library,
database entry, and burning, reviewing, and labeling the DVDs.

The media archive is the basis for all the Media Research Center's
research and publications. Therefore, candidates must have an
exacting eye for detail, be organized, able to maintain meticulous
logs, and keep dependable hours. Familiarity with the news media a
plus. This project is cutting-edge, so experience with computers
is a must and an interest in technology is preferred.

Candidates must work at the MRC's Alexandria, Virginia, offices
eight blocks from the King Street Metro stop on the Yellow and
Blue lines. This is an entry-level position. Approved flex hours
are possible with a weekend day included. Salary: Low to mid $20s.

To apply, fax resume to the attention of Kristina Sewell, the
MRC's Research Associate: (703) 683-9736. Or, e-mail your resume
to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

    END Reprint of Job Description


    If you missed a lot of the 1990s, the position offers a good
way to catch up.

-- Brent Baker


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