David Tereshchuk

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Aussie Power – in UK … and in US

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[First published in ‘AM New York’]

TODAY VOTERS DECIDE if Tony Blair gets returned to office for an historic third term as Britain’s Prime Minister. He’s sure to win, but not by as big a margin as he wants.

He’s been endorsed by the U.K.’s top-selling daily newspaper, The Sun – owned by Australian-American Rupert Murdoch (below, right). Surprisingly. possible terms for that support emerged here in Manhattan last week.   Continue reading “Aussie Power – in UK … and in US” »

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Soft-Pedaling Popes; and Losing Credibility

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[First published in ‘AM New York’]

POPE BENEDICT XVI is enjoying quite a media honeymoon. As Cardinal Ratzinger he was such a severe disciplinarian, and his guarding of Church orthodoxy so steely, that he was nicknamed “God’s Rottweiler” and “the Panzer Cardinal“. But he’s now a darling of the press.

Professor Robert Scott Appleby from America’s best­known Catholic university, Notre Dame, has assessed the Pope’s press treatment: “I am not saying that he has been given a pass, but some appropriate deference has been shown.”     Continue reading “Soft-Pedaling Popes; and Losing Credibility” »

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Following the Code – And Getting More Accurate About Origins

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[Originally published in ‘AM New York’]

ANOTHER POPE IS FINALLY CHOSEN, and so ends another historic episode of ritual, mystique and secrecy – more suited to the novelist’s craft than the journalist’s.

And publishers are re­doubling their efforts to find another ”Da Vinci Code” – Doubleday‘s canny exploitation of public hunger for arcane informa­tion about religion and his­tory, mixed in with dizzy­ing conspiracy theories. Continue reading “Following the Code – And Getting More Accurate About Origins” »

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NYT – Columbia Trade-off?  …  And Brevity, Please?

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BILL KELLER, NY Times Executive Editor

[First published in AM New York]

SOME OF OUR CITY‘s ever­-suspicious press corps are spotting conspiracies again.

Last week’s entirely creditable Pulitzer national reporting prize for The New York Times and its expose of killer railroad-crossings is being linked – much less creditably – with a sloppy Times debacle.   Continue reading “NYT – Columbia Trade-off?  …  And Brevity, Please?” »

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