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The View From Here . . . (Garden City...

August 29, 2008
posted by admin

The sudden passing of Tim Russert last Friday is a major blow to American journalism and American political life. Few politicians particularly enjoyed being interviewed by Mr. Russert, but that was the point. Among partisans of both parties, he was regarded as tough but fair, qualities that seem rare among Washington media figures in this very polarized age.


Extraordinary life brings honorary...

August 28, 2008
posted by admin

84-year-old Henryk Gurman, survivor of a Russian forced labor camp, gets a rare, honorary teaching license.


Meet Michael Dowd- author of - "Thank...

August 27, 2008
posted by admin

Video thumbnail. Click to play
Click To Play       *QUICKTIME         *Phone     *Audio MP3

Early in the first week of May, 2008, the little town of Cold Spring, Minnesota, had a very interesting visitor.  The man's name was Michael Dowd, and he came to share his story about the book he has written called, "Thank God For Evolution".  Dowd was a guest speaker at Peace Lutheran Church and shared his story about traveling around the country with his wife Connie Barlow, spreading their message of Evolutionary Theology.  An audience of about 75 persons listened to Dowd's two hour presentation.

The following is the PROLOGUE from his book.

“Satan obviously has a foothold in this school!” I told my room-
mate twenty-five years ago at Evangel University. Moments
earlier, I had stormed out of freshman biology class after the
teacher held up the textbook we were going to use, and I recognized it as
one that taught evolution. How else could I explain why a Bible-believ-
ing, Assemblies of God institution would teach evolution?

A little background…


I grew up Roman Catholic. As a teenager—like so many of my peers dur-
ing the 1970s—I struggled with alcohol, drugs, and sexuality. In 1979,
while in Berlin, Germany, and serving in the U.S. Army, I was “born
again.” Six months later I experienced what Pentecostals call “baptism
in the Holy Spirit,” evidenced by speaking in tongues. For the next three
years, the people I fellowshipped with, the books I read, the television
programs I watched, and the music I listened to all reflected a funda-
mentalist perspective strongly opposed to evolution.

I was taught that evolution was of the devil. It was antithetical to
the Word of God and would seduce people away from godly thinking
and living. I believed Darwinism was the root of most social problems,
and I was deeply concerned for my friends and family—especially those
caught in the snares of a secular humanistic worldview. I even distrib-
uted anti-evolution tracts and was eager to debate anyone who thought
the world was more than six thousand years old. So how was I to make
sense of the fact, as I soon discovered at Evangel, that virtually all evan-
gelical colleges and universities teach evolution?

The shift occurred in three steps. First, I came to know and trust sev-
eral students and teachers before learning that they held evolutionary
worldviews. Having already conversed, prayed, sung, and worshipped
with each, I couldn’t write any of them off as demonically possessed. The
second influence was the biblical studies and philosophy courses I took
at Evangel. Both the content and the professors reinforced the idea that
“all truth is God’s truth.” The final element in my transformation was a
budding friendship with a Roman Catholic hospital chaplain and former
Trappist monk, Tobias Meeker. Before I discovered that Toby considered
himself a “Buddhist-Christian,” and that he embraced a process theology
understanding of evolution, I had already assessed that he was the most
Christ-like man I had ever met.

The past two and a half decades have been an amazing journey. After
completing my undergraduate work at Evangel (double majoring in bibli-
cal studies and philosophy), I went on to earn a Master of Divinity degree
at Eastern Baptist Theological Seminary. Although I learned to accept
evolution at Evangel, I did so only with my mind—not my heart. That
final shift happened suddenly, in February 1988. I was in Boston for the
first session of a course titled “The New Catholic Mysticism,” taught by
cultural therapist Albert LaChance. Albert began by telling the scientific
story of the Universe in a way that I had never heard it told before—as a
sacred epic. Less than an hour into the evening, I began to weep. I knew
I would spend the rest of my life sharing this perspective as great news.

My evangelizing began shortly thereafter as an avocation wedged into the
rest of my life. Even so, virtually everything I’ve preached and written
since that epiphany has been in service of a God-glorifying understand-
ing of evolution, such that others, too, might experience our common cre-
ation story as gospel and be inspired to serve God accordingly.

By no longer opposing evolution, but wholeheartedly embracing it as
the “Great Story” of 14 billion years of divine grace and creativity, I now
have a more intimate relationship with God and a more joyful walk with
Christ than ever before. Throughout this book, I will be sharing how
and why this is the case, and I will do so in ways that non-Christians
and non-religious people can also celebrate.


The Marriage of Science and Religion

Over the course of ten years, I pastored three United Church of Christ con-
gregations—one in New England and two in the Midwest—before shifting
careers into interfaith sustainability work and community organizing. In
the spring of 2000, I attended a Pentecostal/Charismatic worship service
near my childhood home of Poughkeepsie, New York. I’ve always loved
the energy and enthusiasm of “Spirit-filled” worship. At a moment when
the congregation was swept up in ecstatic praise, the woman who had
invited me turned and grasped my hands. “I have a word from God for
you,” she declared. “Great!” I replied. She continued, “Thus sayeth the
Lord, ‘My son, I have called thee home to reveal thy true mission. Step
out boldly with thy beloved and fear not. For I will bless thy steps and thy
ministry more abundantly than thou canst imagine.’”

  Several thoughts raced through my mind. The first: “Praise God! I’m
ready!” Then, “I wonder why God likes Elizabethan English so much?” Fi-
nally, “Whoa boy, did you hear that? God said, ‘with your beloved.’ You’d
better get moving, dude. You don’t even have a girlfriend!”

  Several months later my friend’s prophetic words were made flesh. I
met science writer Connie Barlow at a lecture given by cosmologist Bri-
an Swimme at Auburn Theological Seminary in New York City. Connie
was the author of four books, and two of them had “evolution” in their
titles (Evolution Extended: Biological Debates on the Meaning of Life and
The Ghosts of Evolution). She, too, was a long-time “epic of evolution”
enthusiast. What is more, her passion for sharing a sacred understand-
ing of cosmic history was no less than mine. Seven months later I asked
Connie to marry me. Three weeks after that, we were wed at the Earth-
Spirit Rising Conference on Ecology, Spirituality, and the Great Work,
which was held in Louisville, Kentucky in June 2001. Surely this was
a marriage of science and religion. Connie was a self-described atheist,
and her professional life was steeped in the sciences. My life was devot-
ed to religion. Our union embraces both.

Three months later, the World Trade Center was attacked. We were
living north of New York City, and Connie had a scheduled meeting in
Tower No. 1 the very next day. The collapse of the towers forced us to
reevaluate our priorities. A month later, we were watching the final in-
stallment of the PBS television special, Evolution: A Journey into Where
We’re From and Where We’re Going. That episode was titled “What About
God?” It examined the struggle that conservative Christian college stu-
dents face in trying to embrace both evolution and a pre-evolutionary
interpretation of their faith. As the program ended, Connie turned to me
and said, “You need to be out there speaking to those students. You need
to show how an evolutionary understanding can enrich one’s faith!”

Connie and I were still newlyweds. I had no idea she was prepared
to follow through—personally—on her declaration. A few weeks later,
after a frustrating day at work, I told her (not really serious, just sort of
whining), “You know, I wish we could just travel non-stop, teaching and
preaching the Great Story wherever we go.” Her response was astound-
ing. Looking me in the eyes, she said with utter conviction, “I’d love to
do that!”

Itinerant Evolutionary Evangelism

Since April 2002, Connie and I have been full-time “evolutionary evan-
gelists.” We live permanently on the road, offering a spiritually nour-
ishing view of evolution throughout North America. In the tradition of
traveling preachers, we gave up our worldly possessions, left our home,
and now carry everything we need in our van. We go wherever we are
invited. Our goal is to inspire people of all ages and theological orienta-
tions to embrace the history of everyone and everything in personally
and socially transforming ways.

We offer a view of our collective evolutionary journey that fires the
imagination, touches the heart, and leaves people wanting more. We
keep our distance from the polarized science versus religion conflict
that festers in our society, particularly with respect to public school edu-
cation. In the few hours or days that we engage with any given group,
we present only the most compelling and alluring features of what many
call “the epic of evolution” or “the Great Story.” As with other leaders
in this movement, we believe that the 14-billion-year story of cosmic,
Earth, life, and cultural history can enrich any and all of humanity’s
cherished creation stories and religious paths.

In our first five years on the road, we have delivered Sunday ser-
mons, evening programs, and multi-day workshops in more than five
hundred churches, convents, monasteries, and spiritual centers across
the continent, including liberal and conservative Roman Catholic, Prot-
estant, Evangelical, Unitarian Universalist, Unity, Religious Science,
Quaker, Mennonite, and Buddhist groups. We have also presented audi-
ence-appropriate versions of this message in nearly a hundred secular
settings, including colleges, high schools, grade schools, nature centers,
and public libraries.

When we launched our ministry, we chose to display on our van
both a Jesus fish and a Darwin fish—kissing. Many passersby flash a
smile when they see it, although disapproving responses are not uncom-
mon. A retired biology professor in Lawrence, Kansas, took one look at
the decals and laughed, “Oh great! Now you piss everyone off!”

Picture_10_2

What Connie and I do on the road is serious, but it is best served by our
maintaining a light-hearted approach. Our fishy pairing of what many
regard as oppositional was thus a playful reminder to ourselves of who
we wish to be along our shared journey.

Life on the road is far from a hardship. Connie and I have no home
base in the usual sense, but North America as a whole feels like home
to us. We are blessed to experience the stunning beauty of this vast con-
tinent. More, we rarely stay in public lodgings. Instead, we are invited
into people’s homes for a few days or perhaps a week at a time—and
this, too, nurtures our souls.

Connie and I love being part of what is now a fast-growing move-
ment that unites people across the theological and philosophical spec-
trum. Throughout this book, you will find a wealth of quotations from
others who, like us, hold a sacred view of evolution. I will also share
personal stories gleaned from our experiences on the road. These stories
include evolutionary epiphanies—when people suddenly see the mean-
ing of their lives in a larger context.

A dozen years before Connie and I met, cosmologist Brian Swimme
issued a proclamation that we are now privileged to live: “We are in the
midst of a revelatory experience of the Universe that must be compared
in its magnitude with those of the great religious revelations. And we
need only wander about telling this Great Story to ignite a transforma-
tion of humanity.”

Amen!

(PROLOGUE Reprinted Here With Permission Of The Author)

Visit The WEBSITE:Thank God For Evolution

SEE OTHER MICHAEL DOWD VIDEO EXAMPLES:
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Richard Price

August 26, 2008
posted by admin

Lush Life (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
This high-voltage interview with Richard Price (he spiels, riffs, and shoots off sparks) gives a rare insight into the way he orchestrates the complex of simultaneous perception in his writing. He proceeds with a strong sense of dread—ready for an attack from any and every direction.


BRITAIN'S GOT TALENT WINNER GEORGE...

August 25, 2008
posted by admin

George_sampson

George Sampson was announced as the winner of Britain's Got Talent. The fourteen year-old beat 50,000 hopefuls to win the top prize. Simon Cowell called George the "dance version of Rocky" for his determination during the competition. George competed on the show last year but was eliminated in an early round. Click here to learn more about George's victory.   We told you this kid could dance. Congrats George! The Sun is reporting that George is about to be come a Hollywood phenomenon and star in a "Billy Elliot" type movie based on his life story.  We loved Billy Elliot and think the movie will be a big hit.  Watch George Sampson's winning performance again if you missed it.

Britain's Got Talent Finals 2008 - George Sampson Wins!

Producers have approached the 14-year-old’s agent about a Billy Elliot-style tale of a boy dancer beating the odds. An insider said: They reckon George’s story could be a perfect follow-up to Billy. There are a lot of similarities.

Breakdancer George, from Warrington, Cheshire, won the TV show despite a rare spine condition that once left him blind. He had to endure �poof� taunts from classmates over his dancing. And he busked in the streets of Manchester to pay for dance lessons.

In the 2000 film, hero Billy had to beat the prejudice of his family who wanted him to take up boxing instead of ballet.

Meanwhile, Britain’s Got Talent chiefs are crediting George with helping to pull in a record 20,000 entries for next year’s show.

An insider said: He’s shown you don’t need to be a singer to win. source


Bone marrow drive: June 28, from 10...

August 24, 2008
posted by admin

Giovanni Guglielmo of Belmont, was born July 24, 2006. He was subsequently diagnosed with NEMO, a rare immunodeficiency, requiring a life saving bone marrow transplant. The chances for finding a match were one in 20,000. ...


Parents’ fears for baby with rare...

August 23, 2008
posted by admin

THE parents of a 13-month-old boy born with a rare genetic disorder which may see him die before reaching adulthood have spoken of their ordeal.


Kenneth Anger at the Palais du Tokyo

August 22, 2008
posted by admin

Dear Shaded Viewers,

The_beastThe_man_we_want_to_hang
The Man We Want to Hang by Kenneth Anger

Aleister_crowleyTheartofalistercrowley3
THe Man We Want to Hang -The Art of Aleister Crowley

Ac_posterKenneth_anger_autographs
Kenneth Anger signing an autograph. His energy and amazing good looks had me wondering if this 81 year old icon had made some kind of pact with the Devil that would keep him forever vibrant and young.

The reason for Kenneth Anger's rare appearance in Paris's Palais de Tokyo is a film retrospective at the Pompidou Center and to attend the opening of Aleister Crowley's La Chambre des Cauchemars. Those of you familiar with the work of Kenneth Anger know that Aleister Crowley inspired Kenneth's Anger's artistic life. Tonight he screened one film, The Man We Want to Hang, a visual record of the Aleister Crowley gallery show at October in London. The film was made in 2002 music by Anatol Liadov.

The second film was Invocation of My Demon Brother and was inspired by Crowley's idea of magic, where Kenneth Anger turned some of Crowley's ideas into cinema. The music is by Mick Jagger.


The_stickAlistercrowleysart1
Aleister Crowley's La Chambre des Cauchemars


Kenneth Anger - The man we want to hang. Pt. 1
PART 1:
Works by the late Occultist, Aleister Crowley. Directed by Kenneth Anger. Music By Anatol Liadov. 2002.


Kenneth Anger - The man we want to hang. Pt 2.


The invocation of My Demon Brother is a collage of different ideas based on Crowley's paintings that were destroyed by the Nazi's. Kenneth spoke about the Swastika as an ancient symbol chosen by Hitler and twisted by Crowley. THe Swastika was a holy symbol even thought it was taken through hell. The Swastika before negative Nazi connotations stood as a symbol of immutable good luck used by Hindu's, Buddhists, and Jains for thousands of years. Kenneth Anger pointed out that the Nazi Regime only lasted 12 years. "A flic of Shiva's eyelash." "I play around a little with my collection of old Nazi flags but it has come to the end of the line for me because I just finished a 36 minute film on the end of Hitler youth, Ich will, which will be shown at the Centre Pompidou tomorrow night as an avant-premiere.

Kenneth Anger's revealed that his family comes from Germany in the region of Berlin and Prussia, although he's part of the American side. There are still about 30 Anger cousins living in and around Berlin. Anger in German means the field or meadow where the knights held their evening macho ritual of jousting. Anger said he likes the double meaning of his name, on the one hand it means peaceful meadow and on the other a furious man.

Invocation_of_my_demon_brother1Kenneth_anger_talking
Invocation of my Demon Brother and Kenneth introducing his films.

Invocation of my demon brother, buy the recently issued DVD's and get a preview here:

Tattoo of Lucifer's Seal

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IjEfawOelaw&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TlTuvYmACeI&feature=related

At the end of the presentation Kenneth Anger thanked Aleister Crowley for guiding him all through his artist life.

Scott_treleaven_paul_p_and_dennis_cTgfans
Scott Treleaven, Paul P and Dennis Cooper, One member of the Throbbing Gristle

Vincent_and_my_voiceScotttreleaven_and_genesis
Vincent Gagliostro with my voice and Scott Treleaven and Gensis P-Orridge, Throbbing Gristle

Throbbing Gristle
la Villette Sonique June 6th, Genesis P-Orridge (bass, violin, vocals)

Later,

Diane


Ill. town finds life does go on after...

August 21, 2008
posted by admin

After floods devastated Valmeyer, Ill., a FEMA project to helped the flood-prone town relocate to higher ground. The townspeople now live in new homes in a new town that has the old name but looks more like a suburban subdivision with manicured lawns and cul-de-sacs.


Doctors give orphan a shot at a...

August 20, 2008
posted by admin

Several doctors in Southwest Florida teamed up to give a 15-year old boy a new outlook on life. A rare disease made him an outcast in his home country of Haiti. NBC2 found out why people in the brave boy's hometown will never look at him the same way again.


ePerks v Vlad: Strategies to Avoid a...

August 19, 2008
posted by admin

War does not determine who is right– only who is left. ~Bertrand Russell

The firestorm that has erupted in the real estate net over the ePerks lawsuit against a blogger is spilling over to other blogs, including marketing and foreign blogs. If it hits the major tech blogs, the case could go viral (global). What effect that would have on the company and its brands is anyone’s guess. But many might guess: Not good, if most folks don’t side with you.

I want to share a true story about the potential reach and effect of blogging as citizen journalism.

I had read an article in The New York Times about the demolition of the Bell Labs facility in Holmdel, NJ. I wrote a post why the lab should be saved as a part of tech history. The response was non-existent. It was not until Engadget picked up the story that things began to happen. The news of Bell Labs planned extinction traveled around the world resulting in a worldwide reaction in support of Bell Labs. To make a long story short– the company decided not only to keep the building but to make it the centerpiece of the redevelopment project. They also decided to create a library of Bell Labs artifacts. The reason the redevelopment company CEO gave for the change of heart (I spoke to him)– the response from the Engadget blog post. (the company has since backed out of the contract). I was amazed.

Blogging, as citizen journalism, can rival other media in global reach and have a profound influence and effect. It cannot be overlooked and must be considered when deciding whether to sue.

Alternatives to a Lawsuit: The Court of Google

As an attorney, I believe there is a time and place for a lawsuit. Each case must be examined to see if that is the best way to go, the best for the client’s interest. For one thing, a lawsuit is expensive and unpredictable (judges & juries are human and can be swayed as much by a nice suit as a treatise). For another, you might win and still not collect a dime. And there are other risks, especially if you have an online business.

When deciding whether to sue where there will be repercussions to your online brand, you ought to ask: Will most folks (that matter) side with us in the court of online public opinion? If the answer you sense is “No”– you should not sue, in my opinion. Google ranked bad press, via search engine traffic to negative posts, can be devastating, even if you win in the real life world of lawyers and judges. For one thing, lawyers and judges may not be your target market— but the folks that stood against you online might be. For another, some of these online folks know how to SEO their content and can rule Google’s first 10 pages for a long time, while your lawyerly defense may be on page 30 (where few will ever see it). The Court of Google is the online equivalent of the court of public opinion. If you depend on online business, that is the court where you must win.

How I Would Have Advised ePerks: Tested Solutions

Let me begin by saying I am not suggesting that ePerks present attorney did not advise similarly. Perhaps he did, perhaps he didn’t– I have no way of knowing — and it is privileged information between attorney and client. And the client makes the final call.

The Gibbonsesque Solution: Bend it Like David

Whirling Dervish

If I were ePerks counsel, I would have suggested doing battle directly on the blog posts, mano y mano, so as to keep the fighting localized and spinnable. Zillow has employed David G in this way to do blog battle against dissenters, spread goodzill and spin the issues like a whirling dervish. In this way, online opinion becomes fragmented, with many buying the company line. Without a spin master, the local battle can spill over into several battles and ultimately into war, as others join the fight against a perceived common enemy. Eventually, the web fronts become too many to defend, even for a chap like Gibbons. Before you know it, you have a virtual world war on your hands.

And what’s next? Well, mainstream media news loves covering wars (and lawsuits) of all kinds– with the stories running over and over. Now the shitake really hits the fan— mainstream media news is a tsunami compared to the Mavericks-like blogger waves you have to surf. Does a client want this? Is it in their best interest? Will the brand survive the flood?

The Glenn Kelman Sorry Solution: It’s Hard to Kick a Kneeling Man

Another alternative, and the one I would have strongly recommended, would have been a private & public apology “for the misunderstanding/mistake /overreaction” with a “what can we do to make it right” offer. This Sorry Solution has been honed to a science by Redfin’s Glenn Kelman. His masterly mea culpas have deflected more deadly bullets than Kevlar. If anyone can bend over like a man it’s Glenn. Making peace by verbal surrender has several positive effects. It shows you have a heart and can admit when you are wrong. It might also result in the blogger posting that he has forgiven you. Soon everyone joins in the forgiveness and gets back to work. What’s great about the sorry solution, as Glenn has proven, it’s reusable.

In closing, I think it’s rarely too late to say you’re sorry and end the story, and get back to selling more stuff. Make money, not war.

Just this bloke’s opinion.


Rare 'Titanic' Life Vest Goes to...

August 18, 2008
posted by admin

New York-The first Titanic life vest to go on sale in North America will be on public display beginning on Saturday at the Christie's auction house in Manhattan.One of only six known ...


Gordon Odametey - Power to the Soul

August 17, 2008
posted by admin

Credits to AmbroseBierce (Ripper & Uploader)

Gordon Odametey
Power to the Soul
Gamton Records CD GAM 003, 2000

Alt text

TRACK LISTINGS

01. Power To The Soul 4'15
02. Assase 3'54
03. Warrior - Kpalogo Live Solo 3'35
04. Okemi Ekpe 3'52
05. Noko Ye Dzen - Djembe Live Solo 5'07
06. Flying Gods 5'01
07. My Hometown 7'48
08. The Queen Is Born 4'00
09. Jungle Walk 8'53
10. Aseriso 7'26
11. Nana 2'44
12. Ogidi Gidi 4'28
13. Wala Aba 5'01

Also from Gamton but a different order of thing entirely, Gordon Odametey's album just exploded out of my speakers like several simultaneous earthquakes, frightening the dog and me out of our skin. I have to say that the title track - violent, visceral and explosive - is one of the most thrilling demonstrations of percussion I've heard. And so it proceeds - it's rare for a drumming album to approach the spiritual, and anyone who's ever tried to assemble a band knows the difficulty of finding a drummer who also understands music. But this prodigious Ghanaian ( based in Berlin for 15 Years ) provides a glowing lesson of what can be achieved by holdness, intuition and good hands. At times, the effects are thunderous, other times more conversational. But always I think the riffs and rhythms derive directly from spoken phrase and sentence, the mind leading the hand. Rattling beads, a backdrop of human voices, barking dogs, and didgeridoo - this is a beautifully recorded aural canvas that just might do your head in. - Rick Sanders
With his second album "Power To The Soul" Gordon Odametey summarizes his experience as a drummer and presents an artistically well balanced result of 20 years of drumming. The 'classical' use of traditional patterns of rhythm is accentuated, however, the musician' s preference for free drumming is easily to be recognized. Gordon Odametey has been living in Germany for 15 years.
He comes from a Ghanian family of musicians and healers and combines experiences made in the diaspora with those of the origins of drumming. In addition to the aesthaetic effect of sounds "Power To The Soul" deals with the power inherent in music: the freeing of emotions and being aware of them. Gordon Odametey works with the music's effects on the soul and feelings of his audience. His music translates and causes emotions: "You feel that you are being cured ...
in a way that you cannot describe and you feel happiness ... , an overwhelming joy of life."
320 kbps mp3, including full booklet scans

Download Part One
Download Part Two


Titanic life jacket up for sale...

August 16, 2008
posted by admin

A life preserver from the Titanic is expected to fetch up to $80,000 when it goes up for auction at Christie's this month. Artifacts from the Titanic are rare because debris not lost at sea was mostly destroyed. Fred Katayama reports from New York.


Rare meteorite given to museum...

August 15, 2008
posted by admin

A rare meteorite which could disclose secrets about the origins of the solar system has been handed to the Natural History Museum.


Remarks by John McCain at the NFIB...

August 14, 2008
posted by admin


ARLINGTON, VA -- U.S. Senator John McCain delivered the following remarks as prepared for delivery at the NFIB & eBay 2008 National Small Business Summit in Washington, D.C.,
Thank you very much. I appreciate the hospitality of the National Federation of Independent Business. And I am honored to be in the company of so many men and women who represent the best of American enterprise.

I have never run a small, struggling enterprise -- unless you count my presidential campaign last year. But I do know that more than anything else, small businesses are what make the American economy run. You're the ones who take the risks, often with little start-up money and nothing to fall back on. You are the ones who do most of the innovating in this country, and most of the hiring, too. For women, for immigrants and for people of every background, small businesses are the path to success and to the American dream.

In this very tough time for our economy and for workers and families across our country, job creation among small businesses is crucial. The African-American and the Hispanic-American small business communities are one of the fastest growing segments of our economy. That is a credit to the entrepreneurs of America, and America's prosperity depends on your success.

Job creation is just one reason why the government should never take the hard work, sacrifices, and earnings of small businesses for granted. As president, my goal will to get our economy running at full strength again. And that starts by supporting small businesses across America.

Now that we know who I will be facing in the general election, the real debate over economic policy can begin. And as you may have heard, Senator Obama and I might well be meeting soon in a series of town hall discussions. Just the two of us, in direct conversation with voters. No need to turn it into a big media-run production with process questions from reporters, a spin room, and all the rest of it. To keep things friendly, I also suggested that my opponent and I travel to these town hall meetings together in the same plane.

Our disagreements in these town hall meetings will be civil and friendly, but they will also be clear for all to see. On tax policy, health-care reform, trade, government spending, and a long list of other issues, we offer very different choices to the American people. And those choices will have very different consequences for American workers and small business owners.

No matter which of us wins in November, there will be change in Washington. The question is what kind of change? Will we enact the single largest tax increase since the Second World War as my opponent proposes, or will we keep taxes low for families and employers? This election offers Americans a very distinct choice about what kind of change we will have. This is especially true for the small business community.

Let me speak to you about the change I will seek.

As president, I intend to act quickly and decisively to promote growth and opportunity. I intend to keep the current low income and investment tax rates. And I will pursue tax reform that supports the wage-earners and job creators who make this economy run, and help them to succeed in a global economy. Serious reform is needed to help American companies compete in international markets. I have proposed a reduction in the corporate tax rate from the second highest in the world to one on par with our trading partners; to keep businesses and jobs in this country.

One of the most crucial economic issues in this campaign is the ability of American workers to benefit from exports to other nations, and how government policy can help them to do so. And here, too, I welcome the debate with the Democratic nominee.

I want to break down foreign trade barriers, so that America's small businesses can compete abroad. When new trading partners can sell in our market, and American companies can sell in theirs, the gains are great and lasting. The strength of the American economy offers a better life to every society we trade with, and the good comes back to us in many ways -- in better jobs, higher wages, and lower prices. Free trade can also give once troubled and impoverished nations a stake in the world economy, and in their relations with America.

At the same time, we have to help displaced workers at every turn on a tough road, so that they are not just spectators on the opportunities of others. And I have made that commitment with reforms to expand and improve federal aid to American workers in need. We need to help millions of workers who have lost a job that won't come back find a new one that won't go away.

Unfortunately, Senator Obama has a habit of talking down the value of our exports and trade agreements. He even proposed a unilateral re-negotiation of NAFTA -- our agreement with Canada and Mexico that accounts for 33 percent of American exports. But we have a sharp disagreement here that I look forward to debating. If I am elected president, this country will honor its international agreements, including NAFTA, and we will expect the same of others. And in a time of uncertainty for American workers, we will not undo the gains of years in trade agreements now awaiting final approval.

And as we expand markets for Americans products, we must do more tax reform here at home. I will propose and sign into law a reform to permit the first-year expensing of new equipment and technology. We're also going to keep the low rate on capital gains, so that businesses like yours can expand and create jobs instead of just sending more of your earnings to the government. And so parents can spend and save more for their own children, I will propose to double the size of the child tax exemption. I will also propose as well a middle-class tax cut -- a phase-out of the Alternative Minimum Tax to save more than 25 million middle-class families as much as 2,000 dollars in a single year.

Another of my disagreements with Senator Obama concerns the estate tax, which he proposes to increase to a top rate of 55 percent. The estate tax is one of the most unfair tax laws on the books, and the first step to reform is to keep it predictable and keep it low. After a lifetime building up a business, and paying taxes on every dollar that business earns, that asset should not be subjected to a confiscatory tax.

It is not enough, however, to make little fixes here and there in the tax code -- especially if you're a small business owner filing under the individual tax. What we need is a simpler, a flatter, and a fair tax code. As president, I will propose an alternative tax system. When this reform is enacted, all who wish to file under the current system could still do so. And everyone else could choose a vastly less complicated system with two tax rates and a generous standard deduction.

Americans do not resent paying their fair share of taxes. What they do resent, and especially if they're trying to run a business, is being subjected to thousands of pages of needless and often irrational rules and demands from the IRS. We know from experience that no serious reform of the current tax code will come out of Congress, so now it is time to turn the decision over to the people. We are going to create a new and simpler tax system -- and give the American people a choice.

Senator Obama's plans would add to the difficulties of small business in other ways, too. Currently, there are the 21.6 million sole proprietorships filing under the individual income tax. When Senator Obama talks about raising income tax rates on those making over 250,000 dollars -- that includes these businesses as well. He also proposes increases in dividend and capital gains taxes. Under Senator Obama's tax plan, Americans of every background would see their taxes rise -- seniors, parents, small business owners, and just about everyone who has even a modest investment in the market. He proposes to eliminate the Social Security earnings cap, and thereby to increase the tax on employers. He proposes to eliminate the secret ballot for union votes, and to raise the minimum wage and then index it, which is a sure way to add to your costs and to slow the creation of new jobs. You work hard in small businesses to grow and to create new jobs and opportunities for others -- and the federal government shouldn't make your work any harder.

As for health care policy, I believe that the best way to help small businesses and employers afford health care is not to increase government control of health care but to bring the rising cost of care under control and give people the option of having personal, portable health insurance.

As it is, the traditional tax-subsidy that supports private insurance is concentrated on a subset of American workers and a portion of our businesses. My health care reform will end that unfair bias in the law, while helping to make health insurance more affordable for every American. We're going to offer every individual and family in America a large tax credit to buy their health care, so that their health insurance is theirs to keep even when they move or change jobs. My plan would allow those who want to stick with employer provided health insurance to do so. But I want to give individuals greater choice, rather than give small business no choice at all.

For too long, government has been the voice of big business, not small business. And to make matters worse, even when very large businesses violate their trust, they seem to be held to a different standard -- getting away with conduct that would leave any small business owner broke. We need rules that assure fairness and punish wrongdoing in the market, and hold every business person in America to the same fair standards.

In times of hardship and distress, we should be more vigilant than ever in holding corporate abuses to account, as in the case of the housing market. Americans are right to be offended when the extravagant salaries and severance deals of CEO's -- in some cases, the very same CEO's who helped to bring on these market troubles -- bear no relation to the success of the company or the wishes of shareholders. Something is seriously wrong when the American people are left to bear the consequences of reckless corporate conduct, while the offenders themselves are packed off with another forty - or fifty million for the road.

If I am elected president, I intend to see that wrongdoing of this kind is called to account by federal prosecutors. And under my reforms, all aspects of a CEO's pay, including any severance arrangements, must be approved by shareholders.

In so many ways, we need to make a clean break from the worst excesses of both political parties. And for Republicans, it starts with reclaiming our good name as the party of spending restraint. Somewhere along the way, too many Republicans in Congress became indistinguishable from the big-spending Democrats they used to oppose. The only power of government that could stop them was the power of veto, and it was rarely used. If that authority is entrusted to me, I will use the veto as needed. I will veto every bill with earmarks. I will seek a constitutionally valid line-item veto to end pork-barrel spending once and for all. And I will lead broad reforms that remove the many corporate tax loopholes that are costly, unfair to smaller business competitors, and inconsistent with a free-market economy.

The recent 300 billion-dollar farm bill was a case in point. Family farmers are America's original small business owners, and many are struggling to survive. But nowadays, small farmers have been forgotten, and instead the Congress sends a steady supply of subsidies to agribusiness. It would be hard to find any single bill that better sums up why so many Americans in both parties are so disappointed in the conduct of their government, and at times so disgusted by it. Even as American families struggle to buy food, because of rising prices, Congress refuses to place real limits on farm subsidies or end tariffs on imports that drive grocery bills higher.

When both parties carry on like this, there is only one proper response -- a presidential veto. That is exactly what I will do as president, with any bill that serves only special interests and corporate welfare. On my watch there will be no more subsidies for special pleaders, no more corporate welfare, no more throwing around billions of dollars of the people's money on pet projects, while the people themselves are struggling to afford their homes, groceries, and gas. We are going to get our priorities straight in Washington -- a clean break from years of squandered wealth and wasted chances.

To control spending, I will also order a thorough review of the budgets of every federal program, department, and agency, and I will post the results of these reviews on the Internet for every American to see. While that review is underway, we will institute a one-year pause in discretionary spending increases with the necessary exemption of military spending and veterans benefits. "Discretionary spending" is a term people throw around a lot in Washington, while actual discretion is seldom exercised. Instead, every program comes with a built-in assumption that it should go on forever, and its budget increase forever. My administration will change that way of thinking. We will ensure that federal spending serves the common interests, that failed programs are not rewarded but reinvented or ended, and that discretionary spending is going where it belongs -- to essential priorities like job training, the security of o ur citizens, and the care of our veterans.

These are among the many serious issues at stake in this election. All of these challenges, and more, will face the next president, and I will not leave them for some unluckier generation of leaders to deal with. For too long government has been more interested in protecting its budget and its interests rather than the interests of small businesses and the family budgets that depend on your growth. And partisanship in Washington is less focused on your future than it is on the next election.

My goal, however, is not to denigrate government but to make it better, not to deride it but to restore its good name. Government should be on your side, not in your way. It will be hard work, but it is a cause worthy of our best efforts. And if we do it well, in the right spirit, it will be because we have again put our country's interests before the interests of parties, bureaucracies and self-interest. And then we will finally reclaim the confidence of the people we serve. Thank you.

John McCain 2008 - John McCain for President


In Memoriam: Tim Russert (Day 2)

August 13, 2008
posted by admin

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Constantly updating below...

>The Newseum, which Russert helped make a reality, pays tribute...

>Doctors confirm that the cause of death was a heart attack.

>How the papers covered it...(all front page)

Washington Post:

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New York Times:

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Washington Examiner:

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NY Post:

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Washington Times:

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Newsday:

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New York Daily News:

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>The Buffalo News remembers a "favorite son."

>David Broder looks at the "many gifts of Tim Russert." Todd Gitlin talks of a "loss in the family." Tom Shales on a "smile that lit up journalism." Dan Balz: "On Tim Russert."

>MSNBC.com's online discussion boards feature emotional notes of support to Tim's son, Luke.

>Woodward on "Today": There was always a bit of Columbo in him.

>MSNBC shows an old tape of "Meet" EP Betsy Fischer: He's just a guy you want to have a beer and watch football. ... And yet he's brilliant at the same time.

>Brian Stelter on Russert's turnaround of "Meet." Sewell Chan on Russert and NY Politics.

>From a tipster:

    Tim Russert: a class act, a huge sports fan, a journalist whose habits are worth emulating by anyone who conducts interviews for a living -- that would be all of us. RIP.

>Last night's Nightly News opened with the theme song to "Meet the Press."

>Via Playbook:

    Jay Leno recalled last night than he made so many jokes about the "Florida, Florida, Florida” dry-erase board that "one Christmas, he came on, and he presented me with this, which hangs in my office" -- a board saying, "Jay! Jay! Jay!"

>Brokaw: Do me a favor and say a prayer for 'ol Timmy.

>President Bush, in Paris: "America lost a really fine citizen yesterday when Tim Russert passed away. ... I foudn him to be a hard working thorough, decent man."

>Politico: "Prepping for Russert." "Memorable Tim Russert moments."

>The Today show focuses on Russert this morning. A special Saturday edition of "Morning Joe" does the same on MSNBC.

>Obama on "Today": We prepared a lot more for Meet the Press.

>Washington City Paper: "If a recreational trail is ever built in Klingle Valley, it might be appropriate to name it in the memory of Tim Russert."

>Politicker has a cartoon:

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So does Roll Call:

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>David Gregory to Mika and Scarborough: "Tim so enjoyed the show that you two have created."

>Slate's John Dickerson tells FishbowlDC: "He was a great interviewer and he knew the right questions to ask. The thing that always struck me though was that at the top of his game I saw him do two things people at the top of their game don't often do: he was generous and kind to people of no stature or note and he went out of his way to credit the work of journalists who had reported something first or who had come up with an idea first."

>NBC's Ron Allen tells FishbowlDC: " First and foremost my wife Adaora and I want to express our deepest heartfelt sympathy to Tim's family. It's especially tragic and unbelievable when anyone so young is taken from us without warning and so much too soon. Tim seemed to be in stride and in the prime of his life...at a time in our national life that was calling out for him. I last saw him in Washington about a week ago....to experience the honor of appearing on his program.....and as always he was so engaged, excited, and present while kicking around everything politics. Over the years, Tim was always supportive and thoughtful... the kind of guy you could always have a down to earth conversation with...no nonesense....just being real. He showed us all how to be prepared and to know what we're talking about, how to be tough and always fair. He showed us all how the best at what we do spend their lives seeking the truth."

>ABC's Terry Moran tells FishbowlDC: "What Tim Russert did was put passion into political journalism at a time it was sorely needed. He loved the game, he loved the tactics and strategy--but he also loved the substance of our politics, the real debates over the real choices we face in coming to grips with our real problems. His enthusiasm for what matters in politics, which stemmed from his palpable love for our country, was a rare quality. And it remains an inspiration."

>Some coverage plans, from the release:


    SATURDAY, JUNE 14:

    8 AM -- 12 PM ET: Morning Joe -- LIVE Remembering Tim Russert

    12 PM ET: Dateline -- "Remembering Tim Russert"

    1-6 PM ET -- MSNBC LIVE -- Special Coverage -- Remembering Tim Russert

    6 PM ET: Dateline -- Remembering Tim Russert

>You'll notice that Russert has been removed from MSNBC's regular promos.

>

>My Examiner colleague Jeff Dufour writes an obit...

>Statement from Bob Wright, former chairman and CEO of NBC Universal:

    I met Tim when I first came to NBC 22 years ago. He was a fireball of news energy. He loved life, his wife Maureen and his son Luke. There was no news assignment that he wasn't part of. Our Washington Bureau was forever changed by his presence and management. Meet The Press was reborn with Tim and continues today as his signature program. Tim was a big part of the launch of MSNBC, the Today Show's political coverage, Nightly News, and all of NBC's political coverage. He was generous, thoughtful, inspired and a tireless journalist who will never be forgotten!

>Tom Brokaw:

    Tim was a man of many passions -- his family most of all, his faith, his country, political journalism, baseball and the Buffalo Bills.

    As a working class Irish-American with a Jesuit education his range was wide and deep -- from the sensibilities of blue-collar voters to the politics of the Vatican, from the power plays on Capitol Hill to the power plays on network television.

    Almost all of our conversations – and they went on every day – ended with some version of, "Can you believe how lucky we are to be doing this?"

>Brian Williams:

    Tim Russert is gone. He was a giant in our company, in our lives, and in the combined fields of journalism and politics. He was my friend for many years, and my on-air partner during the most exciting political year in generations. The members of Tim's NBC News family are thinking only of the members of Tim's own family in the wake of this staggering, overpowering and sudden loss.

>Terry McAuliffe on Larry King Live:

    I couldn't believe it today. I had been on Tim's show many, many times. And I was never on a panel. I was always the one he was asking the tough questions of. But, you know, he was always fair. He was a tough interview. When I went on his show, I knew I had to be prepared. I felt like I was cramming for exams again.

    At the end of the interview, you never felt that he took any cheap shots. He let you answer the questions. And Tim and I talked an awful lot. We talked about sports. He loved politics, both from upstate New York.

    I'm devastated by the news. No one will ever be able to replace Tim Russert. When I was chairman of the party, I would go on right before every election and Tim would say, all right, Terry, I'm going to take some bets with you. So I would always have to bet money. And he would always take the toughest races. And as chairman of the party, I could never say we were going to lose. Every year, I had to spend thousands of dollars giving to the Boys and Girls Club of Washington that Tim always supported.

    But I'm going miss him. We did a lot of battles together. But, more importantly, we were great friends. And I think I speak for a lot of people who sat in the hot seat for many years, you know what, you'd never give a day back. He was spectacular. KING: Wolf, we know how much you work. Do you take heed with what Ted Koppel said?

>Kimmy Kaplan, a former "Meet" intern, tells FishbowlDC:

    I'm not a politician. I'm not a network news anchor. I'm only a fresh faced recent graduate and an aspiring journalist who had the opportunity to intern at Meet the Press and for Tim Russert this past fall. So many internships are about the skills you obtain, but that internship was more about the intangible things I learned. Sitting in that studio and watching Tim in action each Sunday was memorizing, not only because of the careful, insightful and fair questions he asked the world's greatest leaders and newsmakers, but because he was one of the hardest working news people in the business. So many people on air today are simply talent reciting the news that their production teams have worked so hard to report, but Tim was not only a member of his team, he was the captain. He worked side by side with his producers and researchers, while leading and inspiring everyone he came into contact with. He will be greatly missed by all of those people and by the audience with whom he connected on a weekly basis. I know that I will keep him and the way he did his job in the back of my mind everyday as I continue to work towards my goals and I hope that his presence will have had the same effect on all he came to contact with, whether it was through a personal relationship or through their television screens.

>Dick Cheney on "Today":

    It's a great tragedy. I was stunned yesterday to learn of Tim's passing. ... It' a tremendous loss. ... He was never into gotcha journalism, he'd ask you tough questions, remind you of quotes you had made in previous settings...so you never got away with anything. ... It wasn't just politics, it was substance. ... we certainly want to extend our prayers to Tim's family. He was a remarkable individual. We are all better for having known him.

>Obama on NBC: He was a great example of a good guy.

>Recollections: Howard Fineman, Joe Klein, NYDaily News, Bill Kristol

>Chris Matthews remembers:

>"Tribute to a Buffalo boy who made it":

>Big Russ & Me:

>The Life of Tim Russert:

>Charlie Rose remembers:

>John Edwards remembers:

>Colin Powell remembers:

>Chuck Todd remembers:

>Al Hunt:

>Ethel Kennedy:

>A giant in journalism:

>Florida! Florida! Florida!

>All the Tim Russert news you could ever want...

>Tim's books are #1 and #2 on Amazon.com:

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>You can email memories to RussertCondolences@nbcuni.com

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media


In Memoriam: Tim Russert

August 12, 2008
posted by admin

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Constantly updating below...

Awful, awful news today: FishbowlDC has confirmed that NBC's Tim Russert has passed away following a heart attack.

Our thoughts remain with his family and, as one Russert friend told FishbowlDC, 'for all the people he's helped and loved.'

As we continue to cover this, feel free to send your memories of Russert in our tips box or by dropping us an email.

>UPDATE: From TVNewser..."Around 1pmET this afternoon, Russert was conducting a political Q&A on MSNBC.com. We're told Russert collapsed while in the tracking booth at the Washington bureau. Russert was 58 years old."

>Tom Brokaw on NBC: "He elevated everybody in this bureau." "We cannot believe that he's gone." We cannot believe that we've lost his voice."

>Brokaw says that Maureen Orth (Tim's wife) and his son, Luke, are back from Italy, where the Russerts had been vacationing.

>It looks like Tim Russert's Wikipedia page may have actually been the first to break the tragic news.

>Brian Williams on MSNBC: "He believed in transparency, he believed in showing how we do this. ... The viewers should know what we're up to."

>Brokaw: "We didn't always see eye to eye, but we worked it out."

>The last guests on "Meet": NBC's Ron Allen, Lee Cowan, David Gregory, Andrea Mitchell, Kelly O'Donnell and Chuck Todd.

>Williams: The Newseum may be come to symbolize Russert, since it was partly his idea.

>Brokaw: "He was a very tough interrogator but he would keep his very strong opinions to himself."

>Brokaw: "His big regret is that he never got Bruce Springsteen on the program."

>David Gregory: "The world is going to react to this, namely the world of politics."

>Dana Perino: "The president and Mrs. Bush are deeply saddened to hear about the death of Tim Russert."

>Gregory: "My initial thoughts are about his love for his family. ... If you wanted to talk about your kids -- yours or his -- he'd stop and talk."

>Andrea Mitchell: "This relationship with his son is the central part of his life. ... When people were in trouble ... the first person you would go to ... the bureau chief was such a father figure.

>TVNewser has some coverage of other networks' coverage.

>From NBC's Jeff Zucker:

    We are heartbroken at the sudden passing of Tim Russert. We have lost a beloved member of our NBC Universal family and the news world has lost one of its finest. The enormity of this loss cannot be overstated. More than a journalist, Tim was a remarkable family man. Our thoughts and prayers are with his wife, Maureen, their son, Luke, and Tim's entire extended family.

>Mitchell: "Our hearts are broken."

>Williams: "He won the lottery in life."

>Rep. David Obey:

    Tim Russert's death is not just a body blow for NBC News, it is a body blow for the nation and for anyone who cherishes newsmen and women who have remained devoted to reporting hard news in an era increasingly consumed by trivia. He was a great newsman and a great human being.

>Statement from the president:



    Laura and I are deeply saddened by the sudden passing of Tim Russert. Those of us who knew and worked with Tim, his many friends, and the millions of Americans who loyally followed his career on the air will all miss him.

    As the longest-serving host of the longest-running program in the history of television, he was an institution in both news and politics for more than two decades. Tim was a tough and hardworking newsman. He was always well-informed and thorough in his interviews. And he was as gregarious off the set as he was prepared on it.

    Most important, Tim was a proud son and father, and Laura and I offer our deepest sympathies to his wife Maureen, his son Luke, and the entire Russert family. We will keep them in our prayers.

>Dana Perino tells FishbowlDC:

    I have admired and watched tim for many years -- and learned a lot from him as well. I am so sad for my colleagues at NBC. I know he was a wonderful person who everyone looked up to. I will have his family and friends firmly in my thoughts and prayers.

>Chris Cillizza reflects:

    I had the pleasure of appearing on Tim's show on CNBC and MSNBC a handful of times and the honor of sharing the "Meet the Press" table with him as well. I did not know him well, but I looked up to and admired the hell out of him, so getting the chance to talk politics with him was a rare treat for a young journalist like myself.

    What I came away with each time after an appearance with Tim was that he was someone, like me, who loved the political game, who took pleasure in the day-to-day trench warfare of the campaign, who worked his sources to make sure he got the most up to date information to his viewers and who loved hearing from new voices offering fresh perspective on the political process.

>Andrea Mitchell chokes up on air, talking about how Russert calls her "Mitch," a nickname that only her dad uses. "It is impossible to believe that he is not with us."

>Sen. John McCain:


    U.S. Senator John McCain today issued the following statement on the sudden and tragic passing of Tim Russert:

    I am very saddened by Tim Russert's sudden death. Cindy and I extend our thoughts and prayers to the Russert family as they cope with this shocking loss and remember the life and legacy of a loving father, husband and the preeminent political journalist of his generation. He was truly a great American who loved his family, his friends, his Buffalo Bills, and everything about politics and America. He was just a terrific guy. I was proud to call him a friend, and in the coming days, we will pay tribute to a life whose contributions to us all will long endure.

>From ABC's David Westin:

    Tim Russert was a great newsman who helped set the standard for political reporting and public affairs programming. His fine work made all of us better and benefited the Nation as a result. Tim was also a great friend to so many of us. But above all, Tim was a man devoted to his family. Our thoughts and prayers are with them and everyone at NBC News at this devastating time

>From NBC News' Steve Capus:

    This is a loss for the entire nation. Everyone at NBC News is in shock and absolutely devastated. He was our respected colleague, mentor, and dear friend. Words can not express our heartbreak. Our thoughts and prayers are with Maureen, Luke, Big Russ and all of Tim's family.

>Olbermann: I don't know that I've ever met anybody who enjoyed what he did more than Tim.

>Mitchell: "There is no turnover at the Meet the Press. No one leaves that show."

>Olbermann: "It seems like such an extraordinary thing to be talking about Tim Russert dying..."

>Fineman: "It's almost impossible to wrap your brain around the fact that he's been taken from us."

>Doris Kearns Goodwin tells the Observer:

    "I feel so bad," she said. "He was such a good friend."

    "Somebody just called from the television studio and said have you heard the horrible news about Tim and I thought he must have been in a plane crash. That he had a heart attack and just died. It's incomprehensible."

    "He's a giant and he's the best," she said. "I loved him."

Fineman:

    "I'm in complete, shock," said NBC News Analyst Howard Fineman.

    He said when he heard the news he thought about a dinner he had shared with Mr. Russert a few months ago in Florida on the campaign trail. They were in the thick of the campaign, and heatedly talking about politics. But every so often, Mr. Russert would excuse himself to talk on the phone with his ailing father back in Buffalo. After he got off the phone, Mr. Russert explained.

    "He said, I've got this thing set up back in Buffalo where I have a group of people who six or seven times every day stop by to see him. The key to it is that my dad doesn't know that I've done all this. He thinks all these people are just dropping in on him. Tim was allowing his father to stay in his home, in the home where he had lived for forty or fifty years, where Tim had grown up.

    "The fact that his dad now has to see his beloved son die at a relatively young age like this…," Mr. Fineman paused. "It's just shocking."

>Columbia Journalism Review looks back...

>John Harwood on MSNBC: He never forgot people on the ground. ... The constant references to the Buffalo Bills, that wasn't a put on. That was real about Tim. ... The contribution that he made to our business was pretty profound. ... If you could pass the Tim Russert test, you could do something in this business.

>Judy Woodruff tells FishbowlDC: "I'm devastated; have no words to express what a loss this is. Tim was not only the household name, TV celebrity and hard-charging political reporter -- he had a heart of pure gold -- was always there when a friend was in need. When I think of Tim I think of his big heart, how much he loved his wife Maureen, their son Luke, his family and close friends."

>Rep. John Boehner:

    Tim Russert was so much more than the longest-serving moderator in history of NBC's Meet the Press. He was a loyal and loving son. He was a devoted husband and father. He was one of the smartest, toughest television news journalists of all time. And he was an astute student of American politics.

    I can say from experience that joining Tim on Meet the Press was one of the greatest tests any public official could face. Regardless of party affiliation, he demanded that you be straight with him – and with the American people who were watching. Tim's 'white board' analysis of the Electoral College has become a fixture on election nights, and frankly, it is difficult to imagine what that night will be like without him this year.

    Tim's place in my life extended far beyond politics, however. Reading about his relationship with his father in his book 'Big Russ and Me' not only led me to think back to experiences with my dad, but also led me to reflect on the special times I've shared with my own daughters as well. And on an even more personal note, I will always be grateful that Tim served as the master of ceremonies for the very first Boehner-Kennedy Dinner, the annual dinner I have hosted with Sen. Ted Kennedy to raise money for low-income students to attend Catholic grade schools in our nation’s capital.

    It goes without saying that Tim will be missed. And it goes without saying that Washington, DC and our nation's political landscape will never be the same without him. My thoughts and prayers are with Tim's family, his friends, and the entire NBC News family.

>Al Gore: "The world has lost a great journalist, interviewer and author."

>Brokaw:

>Kurtz: "Tim Russert, the Democratic operative turned NBC commentator who revolutionized Sunday morning television and infused journalism with his passion for politics, died this afternoon."

>Obama: "I considered him not only a journalist but a friend. There wasn't a better interviewer on television, a more thoughtful analysts about politics. ... I am grief-stricken with loss and my thoughts and prayers go out to his family.

>Joel Achenbach on Russert:

    The gap between Tim and everyone else was such that it's hard to even think of who would be number two on that list.

    He was also a fun guy to run into at a party or out on the campaign trail -- friendly, generous, down-to-Earth. He was never the type to look over your shoulder to see if someone more important was coming along.

    After every big political debate, the smart viewer would click on NBC to see what Russert would say. Because what he said mattered more than what anyone else said -- even if you disagreed with it. And we'll all have, forever, the memory of Russert and his little white board on election night 2000 as he documented the unfolding narrative of a race too close to call.

    A huge loss.

>Lloyd Grove's 1989 profile of Russert.

    Get me a russert," Gary Hart was reputed to have ordered his staff as he prepared for his first presidential campaign in 1984. It was a quote that, once printed in The New Yorker, became inseparable from the legend of Timothy John Russert -- not only strategist and adviser nonpareil, but a noun in the political lexicon. Also a verb, The New Yorker suggested. "To russert," an infinitive, meant not just beating a political foe, but vaporizing him.

    As chief of staff to Sen. Moynihan (D-N.Y.), Russert russerted then-Rep. Bruce Caputo, Moynihan's strongest Republican opponent in 1982, by planting stories with reporters that Caputo had been boasting about Vietnam experiences that didn't exist. Caputo, who promptly dropped out of the race, hasn't been heard from since.

    "It was one of the most important moments in my life," Russert says, recalling how he and a colleague hunkered down in the New York Public Library, painstakingly examining newspaper clippings to document the contradictions in Caputo's public statements. "It was investigative reporting at its best."

>Poynter Institute looks back.

>Olbermann says his last email from Tim Russert ended with, "Go get 'em."

>Sen. John Kerry:

    Today's awful news about Tim Russert's sudden passing is a swift kick for everyone who knew, respected, and loved Tim and had the honor of sharing his company. It's hard to describe the shock. Tim was the best political newsman of his generation, and he was a trailblazer in the unique way he brought his personal love of politics, honed by Moynihan and Cuomo, right into our living rooms every Sunday. Tim was at once brilliant and insightful while always approachable, always accessible, and always your next door neighbor and your friend who was there to referee the debates of the big issues of our time. He relished that role and he excelled at it, as any one would who believed in the tenets of Jesuit education. He loved to hold the big guys accountable and in the original, intelligent, studied way he did it he emerged as the biggest guy of all. It is impossible to overstate how much Tim was inseparable from American politics. When I decided to announce for President, the only place to do it was on Meet the Press. It is impossible to imagine political life without him as our guide every Sunday. But it is even more difficult to find the words to express our sympathy for Maureen, Luke, his father Big Russ, and Tim's family at NBC. Tim, Maureen, and their family will remain in our thoughts and prayers a long long time.

>Mitchell: "This man has done more to raise the profile of needy charities. ... This is a life lived large. ... When you think of what has happened to us here at nbc news...David Bloom... Now Tim..."

>Chuck Todd appears at 5:05 pm...clearly having been crying and choked up. "I don't know anybody who's made people appreciate their fathers. If there has to be a weekend where we have to mourn the loss of Tim it's Father's Day. ... He was everybody's father figure here at the bureau."

>Howard Fineman tells FishbowlDC:

    Loved his family. Loved his church. Loved his country and his work. He defeated cynicism with hard work and genuineness.

>Todd: "I can't tell you how many people say 'I want to be Tim Russert one day.'" "When Luke calls, everything drops. There was never a doubt what the priority was. And it instilled the priority in you and everyone else here."

>Roy Blunt:

    It's hard to quantify the influence that Tim Russert has had over political discourse in this country today. And it's even harder to express the toll that his death will have on journalism for years to come. His commitment to the unbiased truth transformed Meet the Press into the premiere political news program of our day.

    But Tim Russert was more than his career. He was a man defined by his commitment to family and friends making him the giant that he truly was.

    As we mourn his passing and salute his enduring impact, I join my many colleagues in Congress in sending his entire family -- his loving wife and son and his extended family at NBC -- our thoughts and prayers.

>Michael Isikoff tells FishbowlDC:

    It really is quite a shock. I was on MTP a few times and he was without a doubt the most informed moderator and interviewer on TV. But one thing many people migth not instantly remember: I covered the CIA leak case quite closely and it was, at the end of the day, Russert who made all the difference in the world. Once Russert took the stand to dispute what Scooter LIbby had said in the grand jury. Cheney's chief of staff was cooked. The defense lawyers made a stab at trying to impugn Russert's crediblity, but it was hopeless. They were trying to raise questions about a guy who was, like Walter Cronkite before him, the most trusted man on television.

>Newt Gingrich:

    Anyone who knew Tim Russert personally and the millions who knew him from his years at NBC News knew that he loved life and lived every moment of it. Even though he had reached the professional pinnacle of the political news world, you always knew and he always knew that he was just a kid from Buffalo and he never forgot it.

    Tim was genuinely charming but as anyone who came to the set of Meet the Press unprepared can tell you, he was direct, tough and gave no quarter. His experience working with Gov. Mario Cuomo and Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan gave him an insight few in the journalism world can match.

    It is particularly poignant to lose such a dedicated father and a son who so honored his father in his book "Big Russ and me" just before Father's Day.

    Tim's life serves as a model and a reminder for everyone to cherish the ones you love.

    I considered him my friend and I will miss him. Callista and I are praying for him and those who loved him.

>City of Buffalo orders at flag staff.

>ABC reacts:

    George Stephanopoulos Statement
    Tim loved everything about politics and journalism -- because he believed in it. Every day he brought Washington home to his viewers and made all of us better. My thoughts and prayers are with his family -- especially Maureen, Luke and his father Russ.

    Charlie Gibson Statement
    Tim projected vitality -- always excited about the stories he covered and intrigued by the people he interviewed. That's what made him so good, and his passing so hard to absorb. His competitors -- just like his co-workers -- held Tim in the highest of regard.

    Cokie Roberts Statement
    Tim Russert Was a great competitor and a good friend. I am obviously shocked and dismayed by this news and extend my thoughts and prayers to his son Luke -- he was so proud of you -- to his wife Maureen and to the rest of his family; especially his beloved father. Tim and I worked together on Catholic causes, and I will greatly miss him.

    Diane Sawyer Statement
    No one could see Tim in a room and not smile.

    He brought so much joy and curiosity and sheer vitality to all our lives.
    As a journalist, he would set out like a great explorer. You couldn't wait to see what he discovered every day in the new world.

    He was a defining American newsman. Love of country, love of family poured through him--onto the screen, into the work, into stories at dinner, into the little chuckle that reminded us ---aren't we lucky to be here in this big life.

>Nancy Pelosi:

    Today, broadcast journalism lost one of its giants, who will be remembered along with names like Edward R. Murrow, Walter Cronkite, and David Brinkley. The City of Buffalo has also lost its favorite son, who loved his city and its hometown team, the Bills. The smile that came across Tim's face whenever he spoke of the place of his birth and his favorite football team was one of true joy and I will never forget it.

    Tim Russert embodied the very best in broadcast journalism and has been a fixture in millions of living rooms every Sunday morning on 'Meet the Press,' an institution that he shaped into one of the most influential news and opinion programs of our time. A stellar journalist, Tim also touched our hearts with his loving portrait of his father in the best-selling book, 'Big Russ and Me.'

    To everyone at NBC News, who today lost not only a colleague, but a true friend, I offer my deepest condolences. Most of all, my thoughts are with Tim's wife, Maureen, and his son, Luke. I hope it is some comfort that so many throughout the world have the Russert family in their thoughts and prayers at this difficult time.

>Want to know how much the world cares about Tim? Check out the Google Trends top ten:

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>Fineman: "If I ever thought of being Catholic, Tim would be the best poster child for that faith. ... Tim never pursued false gods. He pursued the real one."

>Abe Pollin:

    Irene and I, on behalf of the entire organization, would like to express our profound shock and sadness at the news of the devastating loss of Tim Russert. Tim was a true friend and loyal supporter of our teams and charitable causes throughout the years. He'll be remembered as a great human being, a loving father and family man. We will miss his excitement, enthusiasm and presence on the sidelines of Wizards games. We loved him very much.

>Buchanan: "He was a Catholic kid who had done his homework. ... He had a tremendous love for what he was doing, an infectious sense of humor."

>From CNN:

    Please note that Larry King will be covering the Tim Russert news to night for the hour on CNN Larry King Live, 9 p.m. ET. Our previously-scheduled interview with Steve Carell will be rescheduled for another date (TBD) in light of this breaking news.

>From Bob Schieffer:

    Tim was the best of our profession. He asked the best questions and then he listened for the answer. We became very close friends over the years. He delighted in scooping me and I felt the same way when I scooped him. When you slipped one past ol' Russert, you felt as though you had hit a home run off the best pitcher in the league. I just loved Tim and I will miss him more than I can say, and my heart goes out to his son, Luke, and his wife, Maureen.

>From Dan Rather:

    Tim's passing is a loss not only to his family and many friends, it is a loss to good journalism and to our country.

    Tim, first and foremost, was devout in his faith and deeply devoted to his family. He loved his country with a passion and became a classic example of the ideal American journalist.

    Tim had become an important part of our political process. He will be especially missed in this historic presidential election year.

    Tim Russert was a beacon of quality journalism. At a time when quality journalism is in increasingly short supply, Tim Russert was a leader for what is best in American journalism. He was tough but air, pulled no punches, played no favorites.

    As an interviewer, he had few, if any, peers.

>FishbowlDC has learned that CBS is trying to get Bob Schieffer and Katie Couric on tonight's Evening News. Both were off today and are not in New York.

>Barbara Walters calls into NBC: This is a man the country came to know so well, the grief this country is going to face is similar to what we felt when Peter Jennings died, such an untimely death. ... We will grieve, we know what he meant to journalism, but also to this country.

>Eugene Robinson: It is a loss to Washington and politics in this country. Russert established a unique arena where contestants from all points would come and fight it out and be grilled and present their point of view and make news. ... I still cannot believe that he's not with us.

>Roger Ailes (via TVNewser):

    Tim was one of the funniest guys that I knew. It's hard to find a picture of Tim, when he's not smiling. He was very, very good at what he did. He was an example for all journalists today and tomorrow.

>Olbermann: There may be another host of "Meet the Press," but not another moderator.

>Peggy Noonan: This is a blow to America. He had a kind of presence as someone you trusted to be fair.

>Statements from NBC:

    JEFF ZUCKER, CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, NBC UNIVERSAL:
    We are heartbroken at the sudden passing of Tim Russert. We have lost a beloved member of our NBC Universal family and the news world has lost one of its finest. The enormity of this loss cannot be overstated. More than a journalist, Tim was a remarkable family man. Our thoughts and prayers are with his wife, Maureen, their son, Luke, and Tim's entire extended family.

    STEVE CAPUS, PRESIDENT, NBC NEWS:
    This is a loss for the entire nation. Everyone at NBC News is in shock and absolutely devastated. He was our respected colleague, mentor, and dear friend. Words can not express our heartbreak. Our thoughts and prayers are with Maureen, Luke, Big Russ and all of Tim's family.

    JEFF IMMELT, CHAIRMAN AND CEO, GENERAL ELECTRIC:
    Everyone at GE and at NBC Universal is devastated by the loss of our colleague and friend Tim Russert. Tim was a giant in journalism and a face and a voice that America trusted. He earned that trust through hard work, love of his profession and, above all, through his enduring honesty and integrity. And most importantly, Tim was a wonderful human being who valued family and friends over all. We will miss him greatly. My sincerest sympathies go out to Tim's family and to the many people whose lives he touched.


    Following is a transcript of the initial NBC News and MSNBC coverage of Russert's passing:

    TOM BROKAW, NBC NEWS: I'm Tom Brokaw, NBC News. And it's my sad duty to report this afternoon that my friend and college, Tim Russert, the moderator of "MEET THE PRESS" and NBC's Washington Bureau Chief, collapsed and died early this afternoon while at work in the NBC news bureau in Washington. Tim had just returned from a family trip to Italy with his wife, Maureen Orth, the writer, and his son, Luke. They were celebrating Luke's graduation from Boston College just this spring. Tim, of course, has been the host of "MEET THE PRESS" longer than any other person in that long-running television broadcast. He has been a very familiar face on this network and throughout the world of political journalism as one of the premier political analysts and journalists of his time.

    Tim, 58-years-old, grew up in Buffalo and he wrote a No. 1 best selling "New York Times" book called, "Big Russ and Me," about his childhood and especially about his relationship with his father, big Russ. That was followed by another No. 1 "New York Times" best seller called, "The Wisdom of our Fathers." That book was inspired by the many letters that he received from other children talking about their relationship with their fathers.

    This was one of the most important years in Tim's life for so many reasons. He loved this political campaign. He worked to the point of exhaustion so many weeks, not just on "MEET THE PRESS," but on MSNBC, and with our colleague, Brian Williams, of course, during the debates and on "Special Coverage" on NBC Nightly News.

    Tim was a true child of Buffalo and the blue collar roots in which he was raised. For all of his success, he was always in touch with the ethos of that community. Just last week, he was back in Buffalo moving his father from his home to another facility. His father now in his late 80s. Big Russ, it goes without saying, our heart goes out to him and all members of Tim's family.

    Tim loved his family, his faith, his country, politics. He loved the Buffalo Bills, the New York Yankees and the Washington Nationals.
    He of course had season tickets to that team when they moved to Washington. We will have additional details throughout the evening here on NBC News and MSNBC, of course.

    Brian Williams will have continuing coverage.

    But to repeat, our beloved colleague, one of the premier journalists of our time, Tim Russert, died this afternoon after collapsing at work at the NBC News bureau in Washington, D.C. And I think I can invoke personal privilege to say that this news division will not be the same without his strong, clear voice. He will be missed as he was loved, greatly.

    I'm Tom Brokaw, NBC News in New York.

    BRIAN WILLIAMS, NBC NEWS ANCHOR: As we welcome our family of viewers on MSNBC, first off, to explain where we are. We are at Bogram (ph) Airfield in Afghanistan. And of course, the NBC News family going through the very painful knowledge, the painful first word of the loss of our friend and colleague, Tim Russert.

    Tim was 58-years-old. We first learned word this afternoon that something was wrong. Tim collapsed in the Washington bureau, where he was bureau chief, also senior vice president of NBC News and as needs no mention, a long-time moderator of "MEET THE PRESS," the hugely successful and longest running Sunday morning public affairs show in American television.

    Tim, as Tom Brokaw first mentioned, was a lot of things. First, and foremost, of course, a beloved son of Buffalo, New York. Went back frequently. It is the home of his surviving father, big Russ, "Big Russ and Me" the title of Tim's first of two best-selling books.

    Again, at the age of 58, an unfathomable loss.

    Tim knew Washington as well as anyone alive, having worked for Daniel Patrick Moynahan and Andrew Cuomo, among others. He was an attorney, a member of the bar in New York and a member of the bar in Washington, D.C.

    Apologies are required. We are in Afghanistan in preparation for tonight's broadcast of NBC Nightly News from Bogram (ph) Airfield. And when there is a launch of one jet here, it is usually immediately followed by the launch of a second.

    We, of course, have been here for much of this week reporting the U.S. military effort here in Afghanistan. We are going to require a lot of help from family members for this coverage as we go on into the evening. All of us are suffering this same great loss. For a lot of us, it's the first time we have spoken.

    And with that, as we have another launch here -- to my colleague, Andrea Mitchell on the NBC News Washington bureau, a very sad place this afternoon -- Andrea.

    ANDREA MITCHELL, NBC NEWS: Well, the shock waves cannot be fully expressed.

    Tim was our friend, our leader, our cheerleader, our teacher, my mentor. Tim came to this bureau in 1988, 20 years ago, as the bureau chief. Even before that, he, of course, was a vice president of NBC News and was in charge of the today program and a great contributor to shaping political coverage. He was a guide to all things political.

    I have always felt that Tim's involvement in "MEET THE PRESS" and, I'll never forget, his first time as an on-camera person, not just an executive on "MEET THE PRESS," But put on camera and asking questions and then becoming the host of "MEET THE PRESS" 17 years ago. I have always felt that it was his background as someone who had gone through Jesuit schools, who had had the training from the sisters whom he so fondly talked of, who had taught him to ask questions, to ask the questions that average people would want to know, and also ask the questions that would stump the political figures, because it wasn't a gotcha moment. It was that Tim had a fabulous memory and would always ask what people needed to know about their political leaders.

    Tim's leadership in this bureau, Brian, you know it better than anyone, having taught us -- here is Tim on "MEET THE PRESS" just very recently.

    Tim was the person who was really the historian of all things political here. He also, as a partner on debate questions, was the host and moderator of many debates, singly and together with you, Brian Williams. He had huge impact on so many political campaigns. The political campaign of Hillary Clinton in 2000, running for office, it was the Buffalo debate hosted, by hometown boy Tim Russert, that put Rick Lazio (ph) on the spot and memorably had Hillary Clinton proving herself in that debate and then going on to victory as the senator from New York.

    Brian, there are so many things that we can say about Tim Russert today. But the other thing that we need to say is Tim Russert as a teacher and as a friend.

    Tim has been a friend, a father figure to many, an older brother to some, who has carried this bureau through 9/11, through the attacks on the Pentagon, through all of the tragedies and the triumphs of these years here in Washington. It is Tim who has taught all of us how to be journalists and better journalists.

    And as someone who has participated with him on the "Today" program as a friend and fellow political analyst in the early years when we were partners with Al Hunt (ph), his closest and dearest friend, Al Hunt of Bloomberg news, and the extended family. When I think of all of us here as journalists, and as people, we are all so much the better for being friends and students of Tim Russert. The preeminent journalist of our time in any measure who knew how to make the adjustment as we went into cable and on the Internet and expanded all of our horizons in an instantaneous way.

    Brian, you in Bogram know better than anyone what we have learned from Tim Russert.

    WILLIAMS: Well, Andrea, you put it so well and raised such an important point. No. 1, his reach through the industry, his reach through politics and journalism. And sadly for all the wrong reasons, over the next few days, we are about to find out just how far and deep that reach was. But also, his approach, which was so carefully honed and trained through years of education. His Jesuit education absolutely jermaine to any discussion about Tim, Irish Catholic upbringing in, as he often put it, a lunch box neighborhood, a father who held down two jobs for a large portion of his adult life, worked for the city. It helped to form who Tim Russert was.

    And then his legal training, because his mind was so neatly divided like a legal pad. His arguments and his questioning were just like a courtroom lawyer.

>Rep. Jerry Nadler:

    The passing of Tim Russert is a great loss to this nation. While he may be best known for his work on Meet the Press, New Yorkers cannot forget his service as an aide to both the late Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan and former Governor Mario Cuomo. Tim's passion and dedication to his work was clear and well respected, and he was an exemplary political journalist. My thoughts and prayers are with his family, friends and colleagues during this difficult time.

>Noonan: There was a lot of sweetness there. Journalists aren't known for sweetness.

>Jon Meachem: He was kind of a journalistic Theodore Roosevelt. He had a great joy for life.

>Obama:

>Barbara Walters:

    There is no one who knew Tim, and that includes millions of Americans who felt they knew him too, who isn’t deeply shocked and saddened by his death. Tim was everyone's idea of what a journalist should be and he made us proud. He interviewed me just one month ago for his weekly television show and much of our conversation had to do with his love for his father, Russ, and his son, Luke. My heart goes out to his wife, Maureen, and to Luke and Russ.

>Schieffer on MSNBC: I was devastated and stunned. Tim and I, in addition to being head to head competitors, had become very good friends over the years. ... He loved politics over all and it was infectious. ... I have lost a bit of my life ... Whenever I pulled one over on Russert, it was like hitting a homerun out of the park. ... Tim not only made journalism better, I think he made politics better. ... I just feel so bad for his dad. No one loved his dad more than Tim Russert.

>Keith Olbermann reads the hospital statement (via TVNewser):

    Tim Russert collapsed while preparing for Meet the Press. Resuscitation was begun immediately and the DC EMS arrived and a full code was initiated and he was transported to Sibley Memorial Hospital where resuscitation efforts were continued but to no avail. The cause of death is yet to be determined. An autopsy is being performed.

>Charles Kaiser remembers...

>So does Wonkette...

>HuffPo: "Remembering The Proud Father And Loyal Son (SLIDESHOW)"

>WaPo is taking comments...

>Richard Minister (via Instapundit):

    Richard Miniter remembers Russert. "He was two things that most Washington journalists are not: tough and fair."

>Kelly O'Donnell: "The Russert test was an important one and you had to pass it."

>Madeleine Albright: I don't know how we're going to get through the political season without Tim. ... This is an amazing loss to all of us. I am just so, so sad.

>CBS' Sean McManus:

    All of us at CBS News are incredibly saddened by this shocking news. Tim Russert was a giant in our industry and was universally respected for his talent as a journalist, his perspective and his integrity. There wasn't a better interviewer on television, someone who was tough but always fair. There is today a void in our industry and in our hearts. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family and all of his many colleagues.

>There is a vigil starting on Nebraska Avenue outside the NBC news Washington bureau.

>Facebook groups pay tribute:

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>From Steny Hoyer:

    I was deeply saddened to hear today that NBC News' Washington Bureau Chief Tim Russert had passed away. Tim Russert was a consummate professional. Every Sunday, millions of viewers counted on Tim to cut through the clutter, to ask tough questions with even-handed fairness, and to elicit answers from key officials on the important issues that confront our nation. His death is an enormous loss for American journalism and for the civil, yet direct, discourse that is so important to our democracy. Today, my thoughts and prayers are with his wife, Maureen, and his son, Luke, and his family and many, many friends across the nation.

    >From the release:


      Tom Brokaw will anchor a special edition of "Meet the Press" dedicated to the extraordinary life of Tim Russert on Sunday, June 15.

      >Rudy Giuliani:

        Statement From Mayor Rudy Giuliani On The Passing of Tim Russert


        "I join the nation in mourning the loss of Tim Russert an American icon in the world of politcal journalism. Having sat in the studio with him, I can only say that he was a gentleman when the "on air" light was lit as well as when it was not. I was fortunate enough to have seen him and shared a stage with him just recently and his ability to communicate the issues adn connect with a live audience was not only informative, but inspirational. His respect and love of the political process