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    Aug 19, 2009 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  1. Robert Novak dies at 78; syndicated columnist and TV commentator

    Robert Novak, the longtime syndicated columnist and television commentator who was at the center of a furor late in his career as the first journalist to disclose the identity of CIA operative Valerie Plame, died Tuesday. He was 78.
    Robert Novak, the longtime syndicated columnist and television commentator who was at the center of a furor late in his career as the first journalist to disclose the identity of CIA operative Valerie Plame, died Tuesday. He was 78. Novak died at home in...

    Tags: NBC (tv network), Entertainment, Television Industry, Satellite and Cable Service, Journalism

  2. Aug 18, 2009 |Story| KTLA-LTV
  3. Political Columnist Robert Novak Dies At 78

    WASHINGTON -- Political columnist Robert Novak, a diehard
conservative, pugilistic debater and proud owner of the "Prince of
Darkness" monikor, has died after a battle with brain cancer.
    Associated Press
    WASHINGTON -- Political columnist Robert Novak, a diehard conservative, pugilistic debater and proud owner of the "Prince of Darkness" monikor, has died after a battle with brain cancer. His wife of 47 years, Geraldine Novak, told The Associated Press...

    Tags: Entertainment, Cancer, Surgery, Mitch McConnell, Journalism

  4. Aug 18, 2009 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  5. Columnist, TV Commentator Robert Novak Dies

    Robert Novak, the longtime syndicated columnist and television commentator who was at the center of a furor late in his career as the first journalist to disclose the identity of CIA operative Valerie Plame, died today. He was 78.
    Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
    Robert Novak, the longtime syndicated columnist and television commentator who was at the center of a furor late in his career as the first journalist to disclose the identity of CIA operative Valerie Plame, died today. He was 78. Novak died at his...

    Tags: NBC (tv network), Entertainment, Television Industry, Los Angeles Times, Satellite and Cable Service

  6. Feb 25, 2010 | Los Angeles Times
  7. Cheney v. Bush: At first meeting since they left office, hot coffee is on the menu. How bitter were the beans?

    Top of the Ticket
    The bipartisan summit at Blair House today is garnering a lot of media and public attention. Billed as either the last hope for healthcare reform or as marvelous political theater (complete with high-level negotiations over the shape of the table......
  8. Mar 12, 2010 | Los Angeles Times
  9. Blago does Donald Trump. Maybe Patrick Kennedy's right. Is there no shame left in America?

    Top of the Ticket
    Let's be clear. Rod Blagojevich is an impeached former governor, facing charges of trying to sell Barack Obama's old Senate seat. The indictment against him -- prepared by prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald, famous for going after former Cheney chief of staff....
  10. Feb 11, 2007 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  11. Cheney reaction

    <article_body>

If you've wondered whether cynical, disrespectful, hyper-critical cartoonists ever give President Bush a break, the answer is yes &#133; and we use the breather to go after the <I>vice</I> president! In between snickering at Super Bowl ads, cracks about astronaut diapers and yet another tiresome season of global-warming/winter-weather snow jobs, cartoonists sniped at Deadeye Dick Cheney's perfect storm of political troubles. Paul Berge stuck it to him on gay parenting. R.J. Matson piped up on the &quot;Scooter" Libby trial. Rob Rogers cast him as an uncharacteristically upbeat actor of evil. And Rex Babin locked him in a rubber war room. Nice touch &#8212; a not-so-straight shooter in a straitjacket.</article_body>
    Joel Pett is the Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist of the Lexington Herald-Leader. His work also appears in USA Today.
    If you've wondered whether cynical, disrespectful, hyper-critical cartoonists ever give President Bush a break, the answer is yes … and we use the breather to go after the vice president! In between snickering at Super Bowl ads, cracks about astronaut...

    Tags: George W. Bush, Entertainment, Pulitzer Prize Awards, Cartoons, Dick Cheney

  12. Feb 3, 2007 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  13. Stay of executions

    ANDREW COHEN is CBS News' chief legal analyst.
    LURKING LARGELY beneath the radar the last few weeks, while media coverage has focused on the perjury and obstruction-of-justice trial of I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby and the Bush administration's flip-flop on domestic surveillance, were a series of important...

    Tags: Political Development, Maryland, Executive Branch, Martin O'Malley, Prisons

  14. Aug 17, 2007 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  15. Just for the record

    I have this idea for a hugely successful business, but apparently it will so completely destroy my credibility that my print journalism career would end. And I can't quit a growth field like this. My plan was to start a consulting agency to train...

    Tags: Celebrities, Entertainment, Adam Sandler, Tom Cruise, Alec Baldwin

  16. Mar 5, 2007 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  17. The Scooter Libby trial: What was the original sin?

    The Intelligence Identities Protection Act was believed to be the prime mover behind prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald's long investigation of White House leaks to the press, yet it ended up netting not a single indictment. Is the act too narrow? Too broad?...

    Tags: Movies, Celebrities, Entertainment, Alec Baldwin, Crimes

  18. Jun 14, 2008 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  19. Tim Russert, 58; keen-minded NBC journalist brought blue-collar touch to political coverage

    New York
    Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
    New York Tim Russert, the longest-serving moderator of NBC's "Meet the Press" and the lion of the Washington press corps, died of a sudden heart attack Friday. He was 58. Russert had returned early from a family trip to Italy and was working at NBC's...

    Tags: NBC (tv network), Executive Branch, Entertainment, Television Industry, Los Angeles Times

  20. Jul 4, 2007 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  21. Lucky Libby

    PRESIDENT BUSH'S carefully calibrated decision to commute the prison sentence of I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby without granting a pardon may prove politically wise. But it epitomizes the moral obtuseness that has so handicapped his administration. Bush is...

    Tags: Paris Hilton, Prisons, Democratic Party, Judges, Dick Cheney

  22. Jul 4, 2007 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  23. The American way

    THERE'S PLENTY to bemoan about America on this Fourth of July: We're a nation at war, and it's not going well. The climate is warming, and we carry more than our share of the blame. Guantanamo is open, and "Scooter" Libby is not a guest there. The...

    Tags: George W. Bush, Elections, Government, Executive Branch, Politics

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