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  • 11:37 - 17.08.2010 News >> Latest

     Attacking Iran: The Last Thing Obama Wants to DoWhy Elliot Abrams is wrong to say the president could benefit politically from starting a warKarim Sadjadpour Read Article   

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  • 19:46 - 19.10.2008 News >> Latest

    The man who knows too much He exposed the My Lai massacre, revealed Nixon's secret bombing of Cambodia and has hounded Bush and Cheney over the abuse of prisoners in Abu Ghraib... No wonder the Republicans describe Seymour Hersh as 'the closest thing American journalism has to a terrorist'. Rachel Cooke meets the most-feared investigative reporter in Washington Rachel Cooke The Observer, Sunday October 19 2008Article history American investigative journalist Seymour Hersh. Photograph: Martha Camarillo Every so often, a famous actor or producer will contact Seymour Hersh, wanting to make a movie about his most famous story: his single-handed uncovering, in 1969, of the My Lai massacre, in which an American platoon stormed a village in South Vietnam and, finding only its elderly, women and children, launched into a frenzy of shooting, stabbing and gang-raping. It won him a Pulitzer prize and hastened the end of the Vietnam war. Mostly, they come to see him in his office in downtown Washington, a two-room suite that he has occupied for the past 17 years. Do they like what they see? You bet they do, even if the movie has yet to be made. 'Brad Pitt loved this place,' says Hersh with a wolfish grin. 'It totally fits the cliché of the grungy reporter's den!' When last he renewed the lease, he tells me, he made it a condition of signing that the office would not be redecorated - the idea of moving all his stuff was too much. It's not hard to see why. Slowly, I move my head through 180 degrees, trying not to panic at the sight of so much paper piled so precipitously. Before me are 8,000 legal notepads, or so it seems, each one filled with a Biro Cuneiform of scribbled telephone numbers. By the time I look at Hersh again - the full panorama takes a moment or two - he is silently examining the wall behind his desk, which is grey with grime, and striated as if a billy goat had sharpened its horns on it.And then there is Hersh himself, a splendid sight. After My Lai, he was hired by the New York Times to chase the tail of the Watergate scandal, a story broken by its rival, the Washington Post. In All the President's Men, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein's book about their scoop, they describe him - the competition. He was unlike any reporter they'd ever seen: 'Hersh, horn-rimmed and somewhat pudgy, showed up for dinner in old tennis shoes, a frayed pinstriped shirt that might have been at its best in his college freshman year and rumpled, bleached khakis.' Forty years on, little has changed. Today he is in trainers, chinos and a baggy navy sweatshirt and - thanks to a tennis injury - he is walking like an old guy: chest forward, knees bandy, slight limp in one leg. There is something cherishably chaotic about him. A fuzzy…

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  • 11:08 - 22.11.2009 News >> Latest

     Democrats Focus on G.O.P. Senators From Maine   Read Article HereAnxious about how little maneuvering room the weekend victory by Senate Democrats on health care provided, Obama administration officials and their Congressional allies are stepping up overtures to select Senate Republicans in hopes of winning their ultimate support.

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  • 10:11 - 31.08.2010 News >> Latest

     How to Shield Assets Like the RichThere are many lessons in the high-price McCourt divorce being argued this week, but the greatest lesson from the salacious split between Jamie and Frank McCourt has gone mostly unnoticed: the lesson of how the wealthy shield their assets from creditors. Read Article     

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  • 08:31 - 07.04.2010 News >> Latest

      Greenspan Strongly Defends Fed’s Role in MeltdownBy SEWELL CHAN and ERIC DASH Alan Greenspan on Wednesday fended off a barrage of questions about the Fed’s failure to crack down on abusive lending practices. Read Article   

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Refit on Empire State Bldg. reduces energy use. Print E-mail

 

Empire State Building: Can the tallest be the greenest?

Empire State Building and New York Skyline

$13m refit aims to cut building's energy use by 40% and save emissions equal to 20,000 cars

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