From:

http://www.mediaresearch.org/

Media Research Center CyberAlert
Tuesday July 18, 2000 (Vol. Five; No. 118)

NBC Knew of Slur Charge; ABC Pushed to "Integrate" Court; Jacoby
Denounced; Ted's SUV

1) Monday night ABC didn't touch the allegation of an anti-Semitic
ethnic slur 26 years ago by Hillary Clinton. CBS and NBC ran full
stories. NBC avoided the specific words, CBS let viewers read them
on screen. NBC revealed it knew last year about the charge.

2) ABC refused to label Ralph Nader as a liberal. Looking as
Bush's VP options, CBS's Bill Whitaker applied incongruous
labeling: "Ridge, for example, could bring a big state but the
pro-choice Catholic could turn off the big anti-abortion bloc."

3) ABC picked up Bill Clinton's cause: "The chances of integrating
the Fourth Circuit this year appear slim," ABC's Josh Gerstein
concluded a story. Carole Simpson rued: "It is...one of the most
conservative courts in the country, and all the judges are white."

4) Boston Globe ombudsman Jack Thomas maintained Jeff Jacoby "was
lucky he wasn't fired" and suggested he "learn something about
life," become liberal. Thomas complained about how the "radical
right" wants to "rescue Jacoby as the New England conduit for
their ideology." But a Phoenix paper will welcome Jacoby back.

5) MRC Chairman L. Brent Bozell will be the substitute host
Tuesday night on Michael Reagan's national radio talk show.

6) Ted Turner, the environmentalist who tears down fences at
ranches he buys so bison and prairie dogs are free as they were
before the arrival of white settlers, drives around his property
in a gas-guzzling SUV, USA Today revealed.


Correction: A bit of a jumbled table of contents listing in the
July 17 CyberAlert. "Bill Moyers has his foundation funded the
book," should have read "had his foundation fund..."


    > 1) CBS and NBC on Monday night picked up on the charge in a
new book that Hillary Clinton uttered an ethnic slur during an
angry 1974 outburst, though only CBS gave viewers a clue about
what it was, but they had to read it on-screen. NBC didn't go
further than referring to an "anti-Semitic slur," and Andrea
Mitchell revealed that last year the same source told her network
about the same slur, but NBC decided to not report it.

    ABC's World News Tonight didn't touch the subject Monday
night, but Monday morning all three morning shows raised the
issue, including ABC's Good Morning America on which George
Stephanopoulos, MRC analyst Jessica Anderson noticed, expressed
doubt about the charge. CNN started reporting the alleged slur and
Hillary's denial on Sunday.

    On the July 17 CBS Evening News Diana Olick opened with
Hillary's denial: "I can only state unequivocally it did not
happen."

    Olick explained how the charge was made in a new book, State
of a Union: Inside the Complex Marriage of Bill and Hillary
Clinton, by former National Enquirer reporter Jerry Oppenheimer.
He recounted how Paul Fray, 1974 manager of Bill Clinton's failed
House run in Arkansas, claimed Hillary made the slur in an
argument about who was to blame for the loss. Olick explained:
"Fray claims after the vote Mrs. Clinton verbally attacked him,
using this unspeakable ethnic slur."

    On screen, under an old black and white photo of Fray next to
Bill Clinton, viewers saw: "F------ Jew bastard."

    After a soundbite of Fray saying the comment was "indicative"
of Hillary's attitude and that she would deny ever saying it,
Olick relayed the Clinton retort: "The Clinton campaign quickly
offered proof, a 1997 letter from Fray to Mrs. Clinton apologizing
for his behavior in the �74 campaign. �I ask for your
forgiveness,' he wrote, �because I did say things against you and
called you names. I would say things without thinking, without
factual foundation.'"

    Olick soon added: "Mrs. Clinton's Senate opponent, Congressman
Rick Lazio, quickly made it a campaign issue."

    Lazio: "I don't think New Yorkers know who to believe and
therein lies a good deal of the problem."

    Olick concluded: "One thing they can be sure of is this will
continue to be a nasty personal fight. Today Mrs. Clinton herself
predicted it will get worse. After all, she said, it's only July."

    Over on the NBC Nightly News, Andrea Mitchell began: "Touring
Ellis Island today, the symbol of America's diversity, Hillary
Clinton angrily denies that she used an anti-Semitic slur more
than a quarter of a century ago against a former campaign aide."

    After explaining the release of the book and the identity of
Paul Fray, and running a confirming soundbite from his wife Mary
Lee, Mitchell revealed that NBC heard the allegation in 1999 but
decided to not report it:

    "Fray and his wife made the same charge last year to
Dateline."

    Voice of off-camera NBC News producer: "Mary Lee told us that
there were ethnic slurs that she threw at you."

    Fray: "Sure."

    Mitchell: "But Dateline never aired the interview. Too many
questions about Fray's credibility. And now the Clinton campaign
releases what it says is proof of a contentious relationship
between the two, a three year old letter from Fray apologizing to
Mrs. Clinton, subject unclear."

    Mitchell read the same portion of the handwritten note as had
Olick before concluding with Clinton biographer David Maraniss
saying he talked many times to the Frays and they had never told
him anything about such a slur.

    While the Clinton operatives again managed to quickly locate a
letter which helped them, they have more trouble with billing
records and correspondence that might not be so helpful. As FNC's
Steve Centanni noted in the beginning of a Special Report with
Brit Hume piece Monday night on how Judge Royce Lamberth "scolded"
White House lawyers for continued foot dragging in turning over e-
mail, a subject ignored by the other networks, "Two women who blew
the whistle on the White House e-mail troubles once again told
tales of threats and retaliation at the hands of administration
officials."


    > 2) Labeling policies. Monday night ABC refused to apply any
ideological label to Ralph Nader, but CBS repeatedly used the term
"pro-choice" in looking at Bush's potential VP choices.

    From Los Angeles ABC's Judy Muller checked in with a profile
of Green Party presidential candidate Ralph Nader. She never
called him left-wing or even liberal, describing him instead in
her World News Tonight piece as "the consumer advocate who rode
onto the national scene warning about the dangers of the
Corvair..."

    Later, she delivered this innocuous overview of his issues:
"Nader says it's important to talk about issues he believes are
ignored by the two major parties: jobs going overseas, campaign
finance reform, the environment."

    The July 17 CBS Evening News led with a CBS News/New York
Times poll which put Bush ahead of Gore by 43 to 41 percent. "Well
the race to decide the next President of the United States is
about as close as it could be," observed anchor Bob Schieffer. But
with Buchanan and Nader added in at 4 percent each, the Bush gap
over Gore grows to 42 to 37 percent.

    Schieffer added: "The poll also finds naming a Vice President
who favors abortion rights could hurt Bush more than it helps."

    Bill Whitaker examined Bush's VP options. According to
Whitaker, Powell, Danforth and McCain all said no and the "hottest
names" are now Frank Keating, Chuck Hagel, John Kasich and Tom
Ridge. Whitaker then displayed some incongruous abortion position
labeling, tagging one side "pro-choice" and the other "anti-
abortion" instead of by their preferred "pro-life." He asserted:

    "Each has his strengths and weaknesses. Ridge, for example,
could bring a big state but the pro-choice Catholic could turn off
the big anti-abortion bloc. Still, Bush said today, Ridge and the
other pro-choice Northeast Governors remain in the running even
though the CBS poll shows a pro-choice VP would hurt Bush badly
with the party faithful [on screen 35% less likely to support
�pro-choice VP']."


    > 3) "The chances of integrating the Fourth Circuit this year
appear slim," ABC's Josh Gerstein concluded a July 16 World News
Tonight/Sunday story which matched the Clinton agenda to paint in
racial terms the GOP Senate resistance to a Clinton nomination of
a particular black judge. Anchor Carole Simpson introduced the
story: "It is one of the most influential and one of the most
conservative courts in the country, and all the judges are white."

    Gerstein's piece gave time to both sides, but the overall
story agenda certainly advanced the Clinton cause of discrediting
opposition: "The judges of the Fourth Circuit Federal Court of
Appeals: 11 men, two women, all white. It's a picture some find
disturbing, particularly because more African-Americans live in
the Fourth Circuit than in any other federal court jurisdiction.
President Clinton has tried three times to install a black judge
on the court. The latest nominee, to get bogged down in the
Senate, is James Wynn, a moderate state court judge from North
Carolina."

    Judge Wynn: "Quite honestly, it does not look like I'm going
to get a hearing at least anytime in the near future."

    Gerstein recalled: "For a year, North Carolina Senator Jesse
Helms has blocked Wynn's confirmation by preventing a hearing on
his nomination. Senate rules allow Senators to put a hold on
nominees from their home states. Helms has stonewalled the
nominations of every North Carolina resident Mr. Clinton has
proposed for the appeals court."

    Clinton at the NAACP convention: "Over seven years now, he has
stopped my attempts to integrate the Fourth Circuit Court of
Appeals. This is outrageous."

    Gerstein: "Senator Helms declined to be interviewed, but his
staff denies any racial bias. They say the senator simply agrees
with the court's chief judge, Harvey Wilkinson, that the panel's
workload doesn't require any more judges. Some in Congress see a
more sinister motivation."

    Rep. James Clyburn, Congressional Black Caucus Chairman:
"There is an effort on the part of the chief judge of this circuit
and Senator Helms to keep this court not just conservative but all
white."

    Gerstein: "One Republican says the President is the one
injecting race into the debate."

    Sen. Jeff Sessions: "This is a political season. He's
appearing before political groups, and I think he's trying to play
the race card, and that is bad."

    Gerstein: "Helms has also blocked the nomination of a white
judge, which suggests the dispute may not be about race but about
payback. Eight years ago, Terrence Boyle, a lawyer who has close
ties to Helms, was nominated for a seat on the same court.
Democrats wouldn't let Boyle have a hearing, and since then, Helms
has blocked four nominations.

    Gerstein concluded: "With the clock running out on his term,
President Clinton is now trying an end run around Senator Helms by
nominating an African-American lawyer from Virginia to the appeals
court. Virginia's Republican Senator John Warner is supporting the
new nominee, but with the election nearing, the chances of
integrating the Fourth Circuit this year appear slim."

    Maybe it would help if Clinton nominated a conservative black
judge.

    In Monday's National Review Washington Bulletin e-mail report,
John J. Miller and Ramesh Ponnuru put the burden instead on
Clinton for so politicizing the matter. Here's an excerpt:

....On June 30, Clinton nominated Richard Gregory to the circuit.
It took Clinton all of two weeks to start complaining that the
Senate was holding up the nomination-which he did at the NAACP
convention. Gregory is black, as were three other nominees whom
Clinton described as "poised to make history if the Senate would
just stop standing in their way." Clinton singled out Sen. Jesse
Helms for blocking Gregory.

There is no pressing need for more judges on the Fourth Circuit
Court of Appeals. The judgeship to which Gregory was nominated was
created in 1990, but it's never been filled. (Note also that
Clinton can wait for seven years to nominate anyone, but a Senate
that takes no action for two weeks is dragging its feet.) The
circuit's chief judge, J. Harvie Wilkinson III, wrote last
December that he opposed "unnecessary judgeship growth." The
circuit, he pointed out, disposes of cases quicker than most
circuits.

The only reason Democrats have for treating this as an urgent
matter is political. Chuck Robb, Democratic Senator from Virginia,
is fighting a tough race against former Republican Governor George
Allen. Robb also has bad blood with Doug Wilder, a former
Democratic Governor. The confirmation of Gregory, a law partner of
Wilder, would do a little bit to help Robb....

    END Excerpt


    > 4) Go West young man. Sunday and Monday brought reaction
from two ombudsmen to Jeff Jacoby's situation. Unfortunately for
the now-suspended conservative Boston Globe columnist, he was
condemned by Jack Thomas, the Globe's ombudsman, who accused him
of plagiarism, maintained "he was lucky he wasn't fired" and
basically suggested he become a liberal, recommending he go off
and be a reporter for a few months so "he might learn something
about life." Thomas complained about a supposed effort by the
"radical right in America to rescue Jacoby as the New England
conduit for their ideology."

    But the Arizona Republic's Richard de Uriate, "reader
advocate" at the Phoenix daily which carried Jacoby's syndicated
column, recounted what Jacoby did and then concluded: "Republic
Editorial Page Editor Keven Willey said she considers Jacoby a
�fresh conservative voice' and would be willing to use him
again. That is, whenever and wherever he writes another column."
To read the entire July 16 piece, go to:

http://www.azcentral.com/news/cols/0716deur.shtml


    "Fresh conservative" voices aren't so welcome at the Boston
Globe. It's been two weeks since Jacoby's last column ran and the
Globe has yet to find a conservative replacement. Editorial Page
Editor Renee Loth assured Thomas: "I guarantee readers that
through Jeff's suspension and during the presidential campaign,
there will continue to be variety on the op-ed page, including a
conservative voice." Note the promise of "a" conservative voice.
This from the woman in charge of a page which features by my
count, not even counting syndicated liberals like Mary McGrory, at
least four regular Globe-based liberal columnists.

    Now to the hostile July 17 column by Globe ombudsman Jack
Thomas, headlined: "Was Jacoby's punishment excessive? No, it
wasn't." An excerpt:

In the matter of the suspension of Jeff Jacoby and the rancor it
has aroused among a number of readers, especially those partial to
conservative ideology, a few reflections:

1. The Problem.

Globe management is reluctant to use the word "plagiarism" to
describe Jacoby's July 3 column, "56 great risk-takers," but if
one accepts the definition in Webster's that plagiarism is the
unauthorized use of language and thoughts of another writer and
the representation of them as one's own, and then if one compares
Jacoby's column line by line with renditions by Paul Harvey, Rush
Limbaugh Sr., and an anonymous version available on the Internet,
one cannot avoid the conclusion that, whether by malice or by
chance, Jacoby is guilty of plagiarism.

2. Public Response.

Locally, it's been loud and clear -- many readers believe the
punishment excessive, capricious, and meant to purge the op-ed
page of its only conservative voice.

Nationally, most of the mail is the result of an ambitious
campaign by the legitimate conservative movement and also by the
radical right in America to rescue Jacoby as the New England
conduit for their ideology.

The effort is (a) impressive in the ability of conservatives to
mobilize as a single voice of uncompromising support in what
otherwise would be merely a local issue; (b) chilling in the
extent to which members of the radical right strut to the same
conclusion without, in many cases, having read the relevant
material; and (c) amusing, too, in the colorful way they express
fury. Globe editors are -- take your pick -- fascists or Marxist
lefties. One reader described the Globe as mullet-wrapper. Another
wrote, "May a thousand fleas infest your home."

3. Globe Reaction.

This has been a public relations disaster. By releasing few
details beyond a formal statement, the Globe left readers
uncertain about Jacoby's transgression, suspicious of the
punishment, and frustrated at the confusion....

Editors were reluctant to provide painful details about a
personnel matter, a noble ideal, but when a popular columnist is
punished harshly and publicly, readers have a right to information
that enables them to make their own judgments....

4. The Sequence....

5. What happens now?

They say the suspension will stand. Until Jacoby returns, however,
the Globe needs to appoint a columnist with conservative
credentials.

"I haven't zeroed in on a replacement," says Loth, "but I
guarantee readers that through Jeff's suspension and during the
presidential campaign, there will continue to be variety on the
op-ed page, including a conservative voice. I'm sorry this
happened. But it was the right thing to do."

6. Was the punishment excessive?

Some Globe reporters and editors think so. "It seems to us," says
a petition in the newsroom, "that a four-month suspension without
pay is a punishment far out of proportion to Mr. Jacoby's error."

I disagree. Jacoby is lucky he wasn't fired.

As Publisher Richard H. Gilman said Friday in response to the
petition, "We have been reluctant to discuss the details out of
courtesy to Jeff. However, I cannot be so constrained now that
others have created a wrong impression in the public discourse.
The column in question is not just history but a direct parallel
to a very particular version of history that Jeff found both in a
short book...by Paul Harvey and in a widely circulated e-mail....

Two years after the Globe's reputation was severely damaged by the
discovery that Mike Barnicle and Patricia Smith had fabricated
parts of their columns and that Barnicle had been accused of
plagiarism, too, how is it possible that another lazy columnist
repeats the blunder?

One parallel is that none of the three columnists had experience
as a reporter in a newsroom, and none of them had had the
opportunity, therefore, to learn the craft of reporting and the
culture of newspapering, including fundamental ethics.

For example, as the Jacoby nightmare unfolded last week,
colleagues were further shocked to discover that before the column
was published, Jacoby e-mailed it to 100 people, including a
reporter at a rival newspaper. If Jacoby had worked one day in a
city room, he would have understood why such behavior is
repugnant.

When Jacoby's suspension ends in November, the Globe should
welcome him back and then assign him for another four months to
the city desk as a reporter.

He could chase fires. He could cover meetings of the sewer board.
He could spend time in Boston's poor neighborhoods, write about
homeless shelters, interview alcoholics, unwed mothers, gay
teenagers, cops, clowns, politicians, and assorted scalawags.

It would make him a better columnist because he'd learn something
about the newspaper business. And he might learn something about
life.

    END Excerpt

    To read the entire Thomas column, go to
http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/199/oped/Was_Jacoby_s_punishment
_excessive_No_it_wasn_t+.shtml

    To amuse Thomas with the "colorful way" the radical right
expresses its "fury," you can e-mail him: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

    So that you are fully informed, you can check out all the info
you need on this subject. Jim Romenesko's MediaNews has created a
Jacoby index page of links to comments and reactions:
http://www.poynter.org/medianews/jacoby.htm

    And, you can peruse past CyberAlert items about Jacoby's
original column, reaction to it from conservatives and liberals as
well as how the Boston Phoenix's Dan Kennedy detailed the Globe's
double-standard on how it treated Jacoby:

http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/cyberalert/2000/cyb20000711.html#5
http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/cyberalert/2000/cyb20000712.html#4
http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/cyberalert/2000/cyb20000713.html#5

    One more reaction before ending this item. "Globe overreacts
in Jacoby flap," announced the headline over a July 13 Boston
Herald column by Wayne Woodlief who was a colleague of Jacoby's
until Jacoby left the Herald in 1994. A short excerpt:

....The Boston Globe's decision to suspend columnist Jeff Jacoby
for four months looks suspiciously like an ideological
assassination rather than a righteous defense of journalistic
ethics.

Can it be just a coincidence that Jacoby's four-month suspension
runs up to Nov. 7, election day? I'd hate to think it was a tiny
left-wing conspiracy to bench him for the whole presidential
campaign. But the outcome, whatever the intent, is great news for
Al Gore. The knocks on the veep from Morrissey Boulevard will be
precious few with Jacoby gone.

The Globe's famed compassionate liberalism also went AWOL when it
came to disciplining its lone conservative on the editorial page.
No matter that Jacoby's wife Laura has only a part-time job and
they have a three-year-old son to support. He got no second
chance, as former columnists Patricia Smith and Mike Barnicle did
after editors concluded they sometimes made up the people they
wrote about....

    END Excerpt

    To read all of Woodlief's analysis, go to:
http://www.bostonherald.com/news/columnists/wayn07132000.htm


    > 5) MRC Chairman L. Brent Bozell to host Micheal Reagan's
radio talk show. Tuesday night, July 18, MRC Chairman L. Brent
Bozell will serve as guest host of the Michael Reagan Talk Show on
radio stations across the country. Guests will include Jeff
Jacoby, the conservative Boston Globe columnist suspended by the
liberal paper, and Robert Knight, fresh from being insulted as "a
f***ing idiot" by Bryant Gumbel.

    The Reagan radio talk show airs live from 3 to 7pm PT, 6 to
10pm ET, but airs on a delayed basis in some markets. Check the
station list for a local outlet and broadcast time:

http://www.webforums.com/forums/t-read/msa21.261.html

    Some popular stations in major markets include (all times
local):

Albuquerque: KKOB (770 AM) from 9pm to 11pm
Baltimore: WCBM (680 AM) from 9pm to 1am
Houston: KPRC (950 AM) from 7 to 10pm
Kansas City: KCMO (810 AM) from 9pm to 12am
Las Vegas: KDWN (720 AM) from 3 to 6pm
Los Angeles: KIEV (870 AM) 4 to 7pm
Milwaukee: WISN (1130 AM) from 12 to 3am
Norfolk: WNIS (850 AM) from 8pm to 12am
Oklahoma City: KTOK (1000 AM) from 9pm to 12am
Portland: KEWS (620 AM) from 2 to 5pm
San Antonio: KTSA (550 AM) from 8pm to 12am
San Diego: KOGO (600 AM) from 7 to 10pm
Salt Lake City: KALL (910 AM) from 6 to 9pm
Seattle: KVI (570 AM) from 11pm to 2am
Washington, DC: WMAL (630 AM) from 3 to 5am

    Or, you can listen live on July 18 from 6 to 10pm ET via
RealPlayer or Windows Media Player. You can listen later from the
same address, but to play audio from the archive you must use
Windows Media Player: http://www.reaganradio.com/


    > 6) Another "environmentalist" who owns an SUV. Not just an
SUV, but the biggest and most gas-guzzling of them all, a
Chevrolet Suburban. In a July 17 USA Today story about Ted
Turner's 1.7 million acres of land the CNN founder owns in five
Western states, making him the largest individual land owner in
the U.S., reporter Patrick Driscoll explained Turner's
environmental protection mission:

    "The ranches aren't just open-air bison factories, either.
They are a vast canvas on which Turner, an outspoken
environmentalist, is painting a radical version of land management
in the West.

    "They are places where rare and endangered species of
wildlife, native grasses and even the lowly rattlesnake, coyote
and prairie dog merit equal protection. It is largely unfenced
landscape with bison and without cattle, as it was before the
arrival of white settlers."

    But not before the invention of the SUV.

    Driscoll soon related this anecdote from his time with
Georgia-native Turner at a 113,000 acre ranch in Montana:

    "�I consider myself a serious rancher,' Turner says as he
steers his Chevy Suburban (with a �Save the Humans' bumper sticker
on the back) across the rolling, emerald pastures of the Flying D.
�But we're not trying to squeeze the last nickel out of
everything. We're trying to leave an adequate portion for
wildlife. Bison give us an opportunity to save more land from
development.'"

    Wouldn't want any suburban sprawl embodied by a bunch of SUV-
driving transplants from the East. -- Brent Baker


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   The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
       Shalom, A Salaam Aleikum, and to all, A Good Day.
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