Apr 2, 2008 | News, The New Nixon
In “Hearts and Minds, Again” —his Wonder Land column in today’s The Wall Street Journal—Daniel Henninger raises some provocative points. Mr. Henninger writes about the importance —and the importance of watching— the 1974 Oscar...
Apr 2, 2008 | News, The New Nixon
The Washington Post reached new heights of populist aesthetic dudgeon over the architecture of the just-opened National Stadium. In today’s paper, the snarky Style sectionistas took on the question of naming rights. The Redskins play at FedEx Field, the...
Apr 2, 2008 | News, The New Nixon
The South Side Inn is at the corner of State and Main Streets in my hometown, New Albany, Indiana, directly across from the town’s oldest building – the house constructed by the three Scribner brothers when they arrived in 1813 from (logically enough)...
Apr 1, 2008 | News, The New Nixon
Reverend Jeremiah Wright has at least temporarily retired the phrase “chickens coming home to roost” but that’s the phrase that comes to mind reading Dan Calabrese’s column about Hillary Clinton’s performance as a staff attorney on the...
Apr 1, 2008 | News, The New Nixon
The friends seemed uncharacteristically preoccupied as they idly chatted before ordering their usual Eggs Benedict. When the plates appeared —literally— on the table, even though the sight was familiar it was impossible not to admire the artistry involved....
Mar 31, 2008 | News, The New Nixon
William G. Hyland, former deputy national security advisor to President Ford and former editor of Foreign Affairs magazine, died of an aortic aneurysm March 25 at Inova Fairfax Hospital in Virginia. He was 79. Hyland, an expert on U.S.-Soviet relations during the...