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Was Wolf Blitzer's father helped into US by the Harriman's/Bushes?

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KoKo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 06:18 PM
Original message
Was Wolf Blitzer's father helped into US by the Harriman's/Bushes?
How did he get here? What are his ties to the old Nazi Regime when the forerunner of the CIA allowed "former Nazi's" to come here so we could "use their technology?"

Anyone know?
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goclark Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 06:21 PM
Response to Original message
1. Blitzer's dad was a Nazi? NO, this can not be true...
: )
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Jim Sagle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 06:21 PM
Response to Original message
2. How about a link?
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ruggerson Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 06:21 PM
Response to Original message
3. I thought he was Jewish n/t
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Bumblebee Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 06:23 PM
Response to Original message
4. His father was probably a German Jew
and thus the opposite of a Nazi :) I don't know for sure but always assumed Wolf was Jewish.
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KoKo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 07:10 PM
Response to Reply #4
13. A little more info from Johns Hopkins Web Site...


Other descriptions of Wolf Blitzer
Wolf Blitzer

Wolf Blitzer (born March 22, 1948) is an American journalist and author. He has been a CNN reporter since 1990, and is currently the host of the newscast The Situation Room and the Sunday talk show Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer. Blitzer previously hosted Wolf Blitzer Reports, which was replaced by The Situation Room. Wolf Blitzer File links The following pages link to this file: Wolf Blitzer Categories: Images used with permission ... Wolf Blitzer File links The following pages link to this file: Wolf Blitzer Categories: Images used with permission ... March 22 is the 81st day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (82nd in Leap years). ... 1948 is a leap year starting on Thursday (link will take you to calendar). ... A journalist is a person who practices journalism, the gathering and dissemination of information about current events, trends, issues and people. ... Cable News Network (CNN) is a cable television network that was founded in 1980 by Ted Turner & Reese Schonfeld <1> <2> (although the latter currently is not recognized in CNNs official history). ... 1990 is a common year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar. ... The is a common article in the English language. ... The Situation Room - Wikipedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ... Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer is a United States weekly influential television Sunday-morning interview show hosted by Wolf Blitzer on CNN. This shows slogan is The last word in Sunday talk and will make each Mondays news headlines. ... The Situation Room - Wikipedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ...

Blitzer, who was named after his grandfather, grew up in Syracuse, New York, the son of Jewish Holocaust refugees from Poland. He received a B.A. degree in history from State University of New York at Buffalo in 1970, and an M.A. degree in international relations from the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies in 1972. Clinton Square in Downtown Syracuse Syracuse is an American city in Central New York. ... The word Jew ( Hebrew: יהודי) is used in a wide number of ways, but generally refers to a follower of the Jewish faith, a child of a Jewish mother, or someone of Jewish descent with a connection to Jewish culture or ethnicity and often a combination of these attributes. ... Concentration camp inmates during the Holocaust The Holocaust was Nazi Germanys systematic genocide (ethnic cleansing) of various ethnic, religious, national, and secular groups during World War II. Early elements include the Kristallnacht pogrom and the T-4 Euthanasia Program established by Hitler that killed some 200,000 people. ... A Bachelor of Arts (B.A. or A.B., from the Latin Artium Baccalaureus) is an undergraduate academic degree awarded for a course or program in the arts and/or sciences. ... ... University at Buffalo The University at Buffalo, formerly known as the State University of New York at Buffalo, is located in Buffalo, New York, USA, and is one of the four university centers operated by the State University of New York. ... 1970 was a common year starting on Thursday. ... A masters degree is an academic degree usually awarded for completion of a postgraduate course of one or two years in duration. ... The Johns Hopkins University is a private institution of higher learning located in Baltimore, Maryland. ... Categories: Stub ... 1972 was a leap year that started on a Saturday. ...

His career in journalism began in 1972, in the Tel Aviv bureau of the Reuters news agency. He soon moved to Washington, D.C., where he was White House correspondent for the Jerusalem Post. In 1990 he was hired by CNN as a military-affairs reporter. His team's coverage of the first Gulf War in Kuwait won a CableACE award and made him a household name. He became CNN's White House correspondent and later co-anchored the daily show The World Today. His coverage of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing earned him an Emmy Award. In 2000, he began hosting the CNN interview programs Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer, and Wolf Blitzer Reports. Tel-Aviv was founded on empty dunes north of the existing city of Jaffa. ... Reuters Group plc (pronounced IPA: ) is a company supplying global financial markets and news media with a range of information products and transactional solutions, including real-time and historical market data, research and analytics, financial trading platforms, investment data and analytics plus news in text, video, graphics and photographs. ... Washington, D.C. is the capital city of the United States of America. ... The southern side of the White House The White House is the official residence and principal workplace of the President of the United States. ... The Jerusalem Post is an Israeli newspaper in the English language. ... C Company, 1st Battalion, The Staffordshire Regiment, 1st UK Armoured Division The 1991 Gulf War was a conflict between Iraq and a coalition force of 34 nations mandated by the United Nations and led by the United States. ... The World Today - BBC News and BBC World Service The World Today both a radio programme on he BBC World Service and a Television programme on BBC One and BBC News 24 in the UK and BBC World around the globe. ... Damage to the Murrah building before cleanup began. ... An Emmy Award. ... This article is about the year 2000. ... Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer is a United States weekly influential television Sunday-morning interview show hosted by Wolf Blitzer on CNN. This shows slogan is The last word in Sunday talk and will make each Mondays news headlines. ...

Blitzer is the author of two books: Between Washington and Jerusalem: A Reporter's Notebook (Oxford University Press, 1985) and Territory of Lies (Harper and Row, 1989). He has written under the aliases Ze'ev Blitzer and Ze'ev Barak. "Ze'ev" meaning "wolf" and "barak" being "lightning" in Hebrew. Look up Alias in Wiktionary, the free dictionary The term alias may refer to— an assumed name, or pseudonym. ... Hebrew is a Semitic language of the Afro-Asiatic language family spoken by 6 million people mainly in Israel, parts of the Palestinian territories, the United States and by Jewish communities around the world. ...

Quotes
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Zen Democrat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 06:27 PM
Response to Original message
5. Blitzer is AIPAC.
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Cocoa Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 06:29 PM
Response to Original message
6. this is pretty dirty
I'm surprised by this, KoKo. :-(
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KoKo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 07:27 PM
Response to Reply #6
15. James Wolcott on Wolf Blitzer:
CNN Admits It Cannot Prove Authenticity of Wolf Blitzer
Posted by James Wolcott

In a shock announcement that will reverberate through broadcast journalism, CNN has acknowledged that it can no longer vouch for the authenticity of host Wolf Blitzer.

After months of being buffeted by accusations and speculation, CNN subjected Blitzer to a series of forensic tests over the weekend and determined that his beard is a polyfiber synthetic and his lack of affect was attributable to a defective chip insecurely fitted into his fliptop head.

"Though we regret learning Wolf Blitzer is animatronic," said CNN chief Bip Peterson, "this in no way undermines the integrity of the journalism he did for the network, or CNN's commitment to the reelection of George Bush."

Speculation now turns to CNN's Judy Woodruff, rumored for years to be a stick-figure pictogram, despite fierce denials from colleagues who claim to have ridden the elevator with her.

"Judy, Wolf, Larry King--none of them are real," says a former intern at the network who still has nightmares.

http://64.233.161.104/search?q=cache:PjyL83m694AJ:jameswolcott.com/archives/2004/09/cnn_admits_it_c.php+Who+is+Wolf+Blitzer&hl=en
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shadowknows69 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 07:39 PM
Response to Reply #15
18. I've said it before
All digital. CNN is the matrix
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KoKo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 07:31 PM
Response to Reply #6
16. Cocoa...don't get angry or upset about this...please...
I'm trying to do an EXPOSE' of all our TALKING HEAD PUNDITS....I'll get to Matthews and the Catholics...and work my way around so that no one is spared.

We NEED TO KNOW WHO THE HELL THESE FOLKS WHO FILTER OUR NEWS ARE!!! FGS!

It's a project I'm starting. I kicked it off with Blitzer (because I have a perverse liking for him...I'm fascinated how he handles whoring back and forth at which way the wind blows.)

Don't worry I'm going after Opus Dei and my fellow Episcopalians soon...don't take this personally...please. I've just decided it's TIME TO FIGHT BACK! :shrug:
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creeksneakers2 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 06:31 PM
Response to Original message
7. Wolf's parents were Polish Holocaust refugees
Says the Wikipedia.

I think I remember seeing somewhere that his real name is not Wolf Blitzer. Sounds fake, doesn't it?
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SoCalDem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 06:34 PM
Response to Reply #7
8. Leslie Blitzer
:snrug:
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Cocoa Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 07:39 PM
Response to Reply #8
17. lol
:snrug: that's just funny to me. :-)
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KoKo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 07:24 PM
Response to Reply #7
14. More....about Blitzer....doing a research project here....sheesh...k!
Wonder no more. He really is “Mrs. Blitzer’s little boy Wolf,” named for his grandfather. Blitzer was born in Buffalo, N.Y. He majored in history at SUNY Buffalo and spent the summer of 1968 studying at Hebrew University in Jerusalem. He went on to earn a master’s degree in international relations from Johns Hopkins University. Although he never studied journalism in college, Blitzer was intrigued by a program offered by Reuters news agency. He applied, was accepted, and went back to Israel, this time learning the ropes as a young reporter in Tel Aviv. He went on to become the Washington correspondent for The Jerusalem Post and spent 15 years reporting from the nation’s capital. He joined CNN as military-affairs reporter in 1990 and was among the network team that won a CableACE award for their Gulf War coverage. He also won an Emmy for his coverage of the Oklahoma City bombing. Currently, he anchors Wolf Blitzer Reports and hosts Late Edition With Wolf Blitzer. He lives in Maryland with his wife and daughter.
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madaboutharry Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 06:34 PM
Response to Original message
9. Blitzer is Jewish.
I don't get your post.
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KoKo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 07:42 PM
Response to Reply #9
19. Yes...but we need to know his background...don't we? If we want to
be "INFORMED" we need to know the background of those who "filter" our News...don't we?

I'm only starting with Blitzer...it's all the rest like Russert, Matthews and the rest I want to search.

WE NEED TO KNOW THEIR BACKGROUNDS....Don't We? :shrug: They always dig into our Demoratic Folks backgrounds...Cindy Sheehan's backgrounds and every one of the folks they supposedly "REPORT ON."

Why shouldn't we know THEIR BACKGROUNDS? WHY? Is it not Important?

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Jim Sagle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 08:48 PM
Response to Reply #19
24. Of course. "Herr Blitzer, your papers, please."
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KoKo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 09:24 PM
Response to Reply #24
30. Jim, it's not about his Jewishness...but about how
his background might influence how he reports and his connections. Just as Chris Matthews is a Catholic....and does his background growing up in Philly as a Catholic sway how he reports?

I think we need to know this. These folks have proven to FILTER NEWS...and it's time to get to know our Media Gate Keepers.

That's all...:shrug: We all have our own "stuff" we bring here to DU but many of us try to look at a broader picture than our "so called press" does today. Wouldn't you agree on that?
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KharmaTrain Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 09:07 PM
Response to Reply #19
27. The Jerusalem Post of the 70's isn't the Hollinger Monster Of Today
I was in Israel in 1969 and read the paper at the time. It was barely much more than a collection of wire stories and some local news. There wasn't any real political reporting or part of any international media conglomerate at the time.

Lots of American Jews went to Israel to study in communications and other fields. There was active recruitment...not by the "Likudniks" cause there weren't really any at the time. This was done by various Conseverative and Tradidtional Jewish groups that wanted American Jews to settle in Israel to fill what was then seen as a shortage of skilled professionals.

This doesn't give Blitzer a pass in my book. Kokoko, I'm as suspect as you are about who this guy is and what his motives are...but I think there's a corporate element here that might help give your investigation some legs.

Note that Time Warner just hired Tom DeLay's Chief of Staff as their Washington Lobbyist. Wolf was picked cause he could be manipulate by the corporates...now do their agenda and the one you're trying to track down intersect? If they do, you might really have something.

Cheers...
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KoKo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 09:16 PM
Response to Reply #27
28. I'm hitting a dead end with "Charles Blitzer" from Poland who might
be Wolf's Grandfather...I'm a pretty good researcher..and putting in so many combinations it's amazing that I still get CNN's blurbs.

I'll try a little more trying to connect with DeLay's Chief of Staff...(I'll find the name) and see what I can come up with.

As I said on one of my replies on this post, I do have a "perverse" liking for Blitzer but he's now the VOICE OF CNN...he has hours a day on that Cable. That means BIG POWER. I go back to remembering when he reported for the Pentagon during Poppy's Gulf War I. His claim to fame was reporting on Cheney who at that time to many of us was "refereshing" compared to the idiot Poppy who was just about as bad a bungler and tongue twister as his evil spawned son it.

I'm still digging. I think something is there that would be good to know. I had hoped some DU'ers might have some clues to help my search so thanks for the tip.

I'm not looking to have the guy fired...I just want to know as much about him as he knows about US with the constant CNN Polls and the Corporatists monitoring every purchase and demographic about the rest of us. I think, as I said, we now have a right to know who reports the news to us and what their background is. Times are tough...can't give these folks a pass anymore to be "fair and balanced." At least that's my humble opinion.

I'll keep digging...some more. Not tonight though...later.
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KharmaTrain Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 09:33 PM
Response to Reply #28
31. A Couple Of Links/Thoughts...
Edited on Sun Sep-18-05 09:36 PM by KharmaTrain
First...here's the info on the DeLay/CNN/Time Warner "marriage"...and a real good summary of things:

http://www.laweekly.com/ink/05/43/deadline-finke.php

Regarding Wolfie's grandfather, one place that has chronicled a lot family histories is the Holocoust Museum in Washington. They have a large resource library loaded with local birth records and other data.

In the 70's, my mother, whose parents also came from Poland (actually Russia prior to 1919) had a bunch of pre-WWII letters from relatives and tried to trace them down. She ended up in the village where her parents were born...which at one time had a Jewish population of 20,000...and there were only 25 Jews left. She searched archives for years...in the U.S., France and even the Mormon Church, but records from Eastern Europe were scanty at best and many were destroyed in the wars.

Good luck and please keep me posted on what you come up with. I'll keep my eye out as well.

It's important that people understand the motives of their corporate masters and how this affects what they see and hear...not just the news, but all facets of popular culture.

Cheers...

On Edit: Remember, in the 30's, the Harrimans were also very close friends with the Roosevelts and prior to WWII the concerns of Nazi attrocities were considered more verbage than actual action. That changed after Krystalnacht in 1938...and even then there were lots of East Coast elite that saw business with Germany as a necessary evil.

One more name that comes to mind from this period that might be a link is Armand Hammer. He has a lot more in common with the far right and the neo-con movement than Harriman did.
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KoKo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 10:07 PM
Response to Reply #31
34. Good Tips....

I've done some searches with the Mormon genealogy site..and some others. That might be a way around the "scrubbing" which many celebrities and business folks use to delete their pasts from the search engines.

I'll see what I can find. I've bookmarked this to keep it all together.

I also think there might be a link to Wolfowitz who was a holocaust suvivor from Poland along with Charles Blitzer. Wolf seems a bit old to be a grandson of Charles Blitzer so he might be an uncle or something.

The Harriman connection is there..I think. The Hammer connection is also worth a good look.

It might take me a few days...just wanted to throw it out here for tips to see if anyone else might have some good direction to steer me in.

Will keep you posted and do an update when I have more.

Thanks. :-)'s
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DemocratSinceBirth Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 06:36 PM
Response to Original message
10. Can We Nomimate This As The Silliest Post Of The Young Millenium?
nt
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NYCGirl Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 09:42 PM
Response to Reply #10
33. Absolutely. NT
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applegrove Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 06:50 PM
Response to Original message
11. Now with the "hate CNN" posts. Don't watch if you don't like him.
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KoKo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 06:55 PM
Response to Original message
12. Some Info about Blitzer:
History in the Making
CNN's Wolf Blitzer, B.A. '70, covers the world through history lessons learned at UB


Story by Jim Bisco
Photo by Rhea Anna


"I'm just Wolf."

This is, in a nutshell, the self-description of the man who has come to symbolize the round-the-clock, round-the-world immediacy of TV news delivery.


Born in Germany, Blitzer immigrated to Buffalo with his family when he was barely a year old. Raised in North Buffalo and in the suburb of Kenmore, Blitzer stayed in the area to earn his bachelor of arts degree in history from UB.

"I spent four of the most important years of my life-very formidable years from ages 18 to 22-at the University at Buffalo, from 1966 to 1970. It was a very tumultuous era. The Vietnam War was obviously happening at that time. was a very politically charged campus," he recalls. "I made lifelong friends and got a good education. It gave me an opportunity to go on to graduate school and pursue the kind of career that I've been doing ever since, so it was clearly very significant in my life.

"If somebody would have said to me going back to my days at Norton Union at the old campus that I'd be doing this 30 years down the road, I would have thought that they were crazy," he relates. "It's not as if journalism was a lifelong goal of mine. I did not work for the Spectrum. I did not work for the UB radio station. I never took any journalism courses either in undergraduate or graduate school. I just sort of fell into it after graduate school and, to my amazement, I discovered I had a knack for it."

Unsure of what he really wanted to do, Blitzer majored in American history. "I always liked history, politics, current events and world affairs. And history seemed, from my high school days, to be something that I was pretty good at. When I looked at the various majors, history became my first choice. UB in those days had excellent history professors, which I'm sure they still do. Professor Adler, Professor Plesur, Professor Yearley, they were very significant parts of my life. It turned out to be a good major."
Indeed, it proved to be an education that he has carried with him to his award-winning reporting. "What I really learned in history at Buffalo was the whole notion of revisionist history-that there's a conventional wisdom of what happened, and then a group of historians will come out and start revising that history and come up with a totally different explanation for what happened and back it up with original research and sources. It was the first experience that I had learning about revisionism and history," he explains.

http://64.233.161.104/search?q=cache:RJhjaEa55ywJ:www.buffalo.edu/UBT/UBT-archives/25_ubtw04/alumni_profiles/+Wolf+Blitzer%27s+Father&hl=en


-------------------------------------------------


Wolf Blitzer, Government Defender

by Karen Kwiatkowski


Instead, Wolf is blitzed and ditsy about Newsweek. He, like the White House, feels that Newsweek’s "apology" is not enough.

Wolf, I feel your pain.

Retracting a false story that led to the deaths and debilitating injuries of hundreds of thousands of people is something reporters in American ought to do.

Retracting a false story that led to the destruction of a nation is probably consistent with journalistic ethics, wouldn’t you think, Wolf?

Retracting a false story that incited a civil war and placed 150,000 U.S. troops right in the middle of it – each young American man and woman the easy target of every faction – yes, that would be journalistically noble.

Oh, I’m sorry, Wolf. I was confusing you with a real journalist, and not a government apologist, collaborator, propagandist and in the ways that count, a culpable war criminal.
http://64.233.161.104/search?q=cache:wUEYX3uTwgsJ:www.lewrockwell.com/kwiatkowski/kwiatkowski111.html++Wolf+Blitzer,+Pentagon+Reporter&hl=en


For more than two decades, Blitzer has reported on a wide range of major breaking stories around the world. He began his career in 1972 with the Reuters News Agency in Tel Aviv. Shortly thereafter, he became a Washington, D.C., correspondent for The Jerusalem Post.

After more than 15 years of reporting from the nation's capital, Blitzer joined CNN in 1990 as the network's military-affairs correspondent at the Pentagon. During his tenure at the Pentagon, Blitzer was among the team of CNN reporters who won the Golden CableACE from the National Academy of Cable Programming for coverage of the Persian Gulf War.

Mr. Blitzer also won an Emmy Award in 1996 for his coverage of the Oklahoma City bombing.

In 1994, American Journalism Review cited him and CNN as the overwhelming choice of readers for the coveted Best in the Business Award for "best network coverage of the Clinton administration." In 1999, Mr. Blitzer was honored with the International Platform Association's Lowell Thomas Broadcast Journalism Award for outstanding contributions to broadcast journalism.

Mr. Blitzer is the author of two books, Between Washington and Jerusalem: A Reporter's Notebook and Territory of Lies. He also has written articles for numerous publications, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal and The Los Angeles Times.

Blitzer earned a bachelor of arts degree in history from the State University of New York at Buffalo and a master of arts degree in international relations from the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies in Washington, D.C.

Blitzer also has honorary degrees from State University of New York at Buffalo; King's College in Wilkes-Barre, Pa.; Gannon University in Erie, Pa.; and Quinnipiac College in New Haven, Conn.

His lecture topics include: "The Clinton Presidency;" "The Presidency and The Media;" and "Between Washington and Jerusalem: A Reporter's Notebook".
http://64.233.161.104/search?q=cache:Ln9zTY3Wn5oJ:www.speaking.com/speakers/wolfblitzer.html++Wolf+Blitzer,+Pentagon+Reporter&hl=en




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KoKo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 08:14 PM
Response to Original message
20. "SLATE" reviews Blitzer's new show: "Situation Room"...
http://www.slate.com/id/2124416/

"Slate" Reviews Blitzer's "Situation Room" on CNN after it Debuted:

{b]Blitzed Out
CNN's Situation Room is live! It's now! It's ... three hours long.
By Dana Stevens
Posted Thursday, Aug. 11, 2005, at 4:04 PM PT

With the influx of information from all over the world, The Situation Room intends to show us not only the product, but also the process of newsgathering. But isn't the job of a news show to cull through the day's information and decide what's worthy of our attention? Do we really have to sift through all this crap ourselves? Blitzer likes to talk about the flow of information "streaming in" and the "data coming in in real time ... happening now." (Unlike those other news programs, which prefer to choose events that happened on some random day in the past.) As the afternoon sun slips by outside the viewer's window, Blitzer takes every opportunity to remind us that we're not just vegging out to basic-cable chitchat, interspersed with Target and Ditech commercials: "You're in the Situation Room." According to Wonkette, Blitzer uttered the show's title 58 times during Monday's premiere; by Wednesday, the total was down to a humble 53.

In between interviews and "strategy sessions" in which guests stand awkwardly around a conference table, The Situation Room offers a few regular features. "Inside the Blogs," a segment imported from CNN Inside Politics, features Jackie Shechner and Abbi Tatton, two faintly hip young women who stand around reading aloud from highlighted blog posts on huge freestanding computer screens—an improvement, at least, over the old format, in which the women hunched over tiny laptops while shaky hand-held cameras filmed the murky, nearly unreadable screens. Another hourly feature is "The Cafferty File," in which a reporter named Jack Cafferty puts out a "Question of the Hour" to viewers, whose e-mail responses are then read on-air. The cranky, balding Cafferty won my heart by complaining, twice, about the perky theme that accompanies his segment: "Wolf, my No. 1 question this hour is what is that annoying music they're playing under me?"

Today's big get on The Situation Room was an "exclusive" 15-minute interview with Bill Clinton, which was then chewed over by pundits at intervals over the next three hours. The former president sat in what appeared to be his living room in Chappaqua, looking sleek but frail (don't you sort of miss his old chipmunk cheeks?). He talked briefly about the war in Iraq and his wife's potential candidacy for the presidency before shifting focus to his work on HIV and AIDS prevention in Africa. It was a standard puff-piece interview, somewhere between public-service announcement and campaign stop, which made it all the odder that Blitzer chose to end the encounter by flashing up an old picture of Clinton White House situation room. Describing the picture to the president, Blitzer asked, "You're now in another situation room, at least via satellite. How does it feel?" Clinton seemed confused for a fraction of a second before responding with a laugh, "I liked being in the other situation room, but I like this one better. There's less pressure and more freedom. And I know I can walk out on you—I couldn't walk out on the other situation room." As the show prepared to cut to a commercial, the giant screens showed a suddenly tired-looking Clinton, waiting for an aide to remove his body mic. He seemed eager to get away from the delusional Blitzer and back to his real life. From where I sit right now at 5:15:04 p.m. ET, heading into my third straight hour of real-time data collection, I'm inclined to agree.

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KoKo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 08:28 PM
Response to Original message
21. Blitzer says: Not Sure Begala is a "Good Catholic" from "Media Matters."
Wolf Blitzer "not so sure" liberal CNN host Begala is "a good Catholic"


On the April 8 edition of CNN's Inside Politics, CNN hosts Wolf Blitzer and Judy Woodruff discussed Pope John Paul II's funeral with Crossfire co-hosts Paul Begala and Robert Novak, both Catholics. Blitzer opened the segment by suggesting that while "I'm sure Bob is a good Catholic, I'm not so sure about Paul Begala." In responding to Blitzer, Begala took exception to on-screen text* earlier in the program that characterized many Catholic doctrines as "conservative":

BLITZER: While they were united today in mourning the death of the pope, U.S. Catholics are a diverse group, as illustrated by two of our Crossfire co-hosts, the conservative Robert Novak, the liberal Paul Begala. Both good Catholics -- I don't know "good" Catholics, but both Catholics. I'm sure Bob is a good Catholic, I'm not so sure about Paul Begala.

BEGALA: Well, now, who are you to pass moral judgment on my religion, Mr. Blitzer? My goodness gracious.

BLITZER: All right, go ahead, go ahead.

BEGALA: On the day of my Holy Father's funeral. My eldest son is named John Paul, after the Pope.

BLITZER: So you are a good Catholic?

BEGALA: I'm serious, that annoys me. I don't think anybody should presume that a liberal is not a good Catholic.

NOVAK: Paul, Paul, Paul is a good Catholic.

BEGALA: The Holy Father is liberal. And in fact, when Carlos was speaking , I was in the green room. Underneath, some producer had written, "Many Catholic doctrines are conservative." Absolutely correct. Many are liberal as well. The Holy Father bitterly opposed President Bush's war in Iraq. He came to St. Louis -- and I was there -- and he begged America to give up the death penalty. President Bush strongly supports it, as did President Clinton and others. Many of the Holy Father's views -- my church's views -- are extraordinarily liberal. The Pope talked about savage, unbridled capitalism, not Bob Novak's kind --

BLITZER: I was certainly not questioning -- I was only teasing.

BEGALA: Okay.

BLITZER: Don't be so sensitive.

BEGALA: Well, it's an important day for my faith.

BLITZER: It's a very important day --

BEGALA: It's the only pope of my adult lifetime, so I'm a little emotional tonight.

BLITZER: It's a very important day for Bob Novak. Go ahead, Bob.

* Here is a shot of the on-screen text that Begala referenced in his response to Blitzer:

Posted to the web on Friday April 8, 2005 at 8:28 PM EST
http://64.233.161.104/search?q=cache:ru9Kq6qMvaIJ:mediamatters.org/items/200504090001+Wolf+Blitzer,+who+is+he%3F&hl=en
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KoKo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 08:41 PM
Response to Original message
22. Blitzer: "Breaking Out of the Pack"
http://64.233.161.104/search?q=cache:eR0_B7Q69-UJ:atlanta.jewish.com/archives/1999/071699cs.htm+Wolf+Blitzer+%2B+Holocaust+Survivor&hl=en

Breaking Out Of The Pack
Wolf Blitzer reflects on his front-line view of history and on his Jewish life.

http://64.233.161.104/search?q=cache:eR0_B7Q69-UJ:atlanta.jewish.com/archives/1999/071699cs.htm+Wolf+Blitzer+%2B+Holocaust+Survivor&hl=en
"Wyou doin'?" screams the larger-than-life face of Democratic spinmeister
James Carville as it fills the TV screen in the Cable News Network
Washington, D.C. studio. Carville is speaking, of course, to Wolf Blitzer,
CNN's senior White House correspondent.
Blitzer holds back a grin as he offers "my warmest" to the Carville
family. A half-hour earlier, he wished Finnish President Martti Ahtisaari
"good luck in your visit to Belgrade." It was the eve of the politician's
peace-seeking mission that would help end the Kosovo war. In June, Blitzer
ended his Sunday show "Late Edition" with "Happy Father's Day to all you
fathers out there, and especially to my dad in Florida."
The greetings are a typical part of the "nice-guy-of-the-news" demeanor
that has accompanied Blitzer - raised in a traditional Jewish home in
Buffalo, N.Y., the son of Polish Holocaust survivors - to the top of his
profession.
Even casual viewers of television news know his name. Recognition soared
eight years ago like a rising Scud missile from Blitzer's seemingly
omnipresent live Pentagon broadcasts during the Gulf War.
"When you are in the right place at the right time and you do something
about it, and you do it right, you get lucky," he says during an interview
on Memorial Day. "I worked hard, and obviously it was harder for me because
I was not used to television. But fortunately TV is not brain surgery, and
CNN gave me good producers and people."
After the Gulf War, Blitzer covered the 1992 presidential campaign trail,
and anchored the White House beat, along with a long list of special
assignments. Two weeks ago,, he announced he was leaving the White House to
anchor CNN's revamped 10 p.m "World Today" newscast. Blitzer will continue
to host the popular political talk show, "Late Edition.
Over the years, Blitzer's been there live when the communist flag came down
at the Kremlin, when then-Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton celebrated his
presidential victory, and when Ehud Barak triumphed in the election of
Israel's newest prime minister. Throughout, Blitzer has traded the
belligerent, in-your-face style of some of his colleagues for an
even-toned, straightforward demeanor when reporting and interviewing.
That has earned him professional respect and helped his teams win an Emmy,
a Golden CableACE award and a "Best In The Business Award" from American
Journalism Review.
Along the way, a comic sort of celebrity has arisen. It comes from the
unusual name - it's real - and the bright white beard, a rarity among
high-profile "clean-cut" newscasters. A "Saturday Night Live" television
show skit focused on Blitzer having "the best name of the Gulf War." The
popular Capitol Steps improvisation group performed a song about him, while
David Letterman featured the facial hair in a top 10 list.
Blitzer enjoys the attention. About "Saturday Night Live," he says, "That
was cool. It was really fun for my daughter and my colleagues who could
have a good laugh at me."

A pragmatic route to Israel

On this Sunday, Blitzer has just finished the live broadcast of "Late
Edition," the 90-minute behind-the-headlines show that aired on CNN at
noon. (The show has since returned to an 8 p.m. prime time hour as well on
Tuesday nights.)
His day begins, as it does every Sunday, with a 6:30 a.m. read of The New
York Times and Washington Post. Two hours later, Blitzer arrives at CNN's
office here. On weekdays, he goes straight to the White House - or wherever
the day's top story brings him.
Today, off-camera preparation with producers and assistants includes
writing and rewriting the script, figuring out Finland's time zone, and
confirming the number of dead at Arlington National Cemetery.
At 11:55 a.m., senior executive producer Lucy Spiegel tells her colleagues,
"Let's get him in the studio." So Blitzer compliantly dons his jacket and
makes the brisk walk around the corner and down the hallway.
After a last-minute check from an Atlanta director, Blitzer sips from his
"Late Edition" coffee mug and gives a final shuffle to index cards. For the
next 90 minutes, he and guest newsmakers focus primarily on the Kosovo
crisis.
When it's over, a relaxed, engaging and now makeup-free Blitzer joins a
visiting reporter in a conference room to discuss his career and his
private life.
Blitzer's obsession with national and world affairs began in the summer of
1968, which he spent at Hebrew University in Jerusalem. His first trip to
the Jewish state was in 1961, when he became a bar mitzvah.
After graduation from State University of New York at Buffalo came a
master's degree in International Relations from the Johns Hopkins
University School of Advanced International Studies. He returned to Israel
for a two-year reporting stint for the Reuters News Agency. "I wasn't sure
I wanted to be a journalist," he says, "but they had some really great
people who taught me the trade."
Why Israel? His answer, perhaps resulting from an upbringing where being
Jewish was more natural than pursued, is practical. "I had been studying
Hebrew," he says matter-of-factly. "I figured it would be a good place to
go."
He returned home to get married a few months before the 1973 Yom Kippur
War. Around the same time, the Jerusalem Post asked him to be its
Washington correspondent, triggering a 16-year tenure that made Blitzer one
of the most well-known reporters in the Jewish world - and increasingly
visible in the greater journalism community.
Blitzer's rise began with an analysis column which was soon picked up by
the London Jewish Chronicle, and then U.S. Jewish papers such as the
Atlanta Jewish Times and its sister paper in Baltimore. Several Israeli
dailies started reprinting it in Hebrew under bylines such as Ze'ev Blitzer
and Ze'ev Barak, "Ze'ev" meaning "wolf" and "barak" being "lightning,"
which correlates with "blitzer," a German word.
"I got about $50 from the big papers like Baltimore, and from the small
ones about $10 or $15, and there were some who never paid anyway," he says
with a grin. "On any week there could be 30 or 40 papers using it. I had
never had any accounting; if they used it I trusted them to pay."
Even then, Blitzer reported on some of the world's biggest stories. He flew
to Cairo to cover the breaking Israeli-Egyptian peace treaties. In 1982,
he was in Beirut for the withdrawal of Syrian and Palestine Liberation
Organization forces. Three years later, he doggedly pursued the case of
Jonathan Jay Pollard, the U.S. Naval intelligence agent convicted of spying
on the United States for Israel. The research resulted in a book,
"Territory of Lies."
"I still follow it to a certain degree," he says, "but
I'm not really up on the details."

Kuwait's troubles a boon to Blitzer

Throughout those years, Blitzer became a pipeline of trusted information
for many Jews and others. "He is regarded both within and without the
Jewish community and the journalistic community as a man of integrity,"
says Buddy Sisslin, who often invited Blitzer to speak at Washington's
Jewish Community Council. "He starts off as a man who can be trusted. He
adds to that a certain insightfulness and an ability to draw people out."
Quips Sisslin, "He's just fundamentally a really decent guy. In a world of
wolves, he's a really nice wolf."
Blitzer's Jerusalem Post days ended in 1989 with new ownership and new
ideology that took the paper to the right of center. He joined other
colleagues who felt that their era at the daily had passed.
Around that time, some top CNN executives invited Blitzer to lunch. Before
the meal check arrived, Blitzer had a job offer, one that he jumped at.
"I never had written a script for TV or anything like that," he says. "But
I was looking for something else and CNN, without knowing that, approached
me. I was amazed, and doubly amazed when they asked me to be the Pentagon
correspondent.
"Fortunately, a few months later the Iraqis invaded Kuwait," he says. "Bad
for Kuwait and good for my career. Here was a story that I knew a lot
about, covering the Middle East for so many years. Here was a story that
the whole world was watching, that I could use sources that I had used for
years."
Today, unlike many well-known television news show hosts or anchors,
Blitzer remains in the daily reporting grind.
"I have worked long hours," he says. "I'm not complaining because it's been
really fascinating. I do a tremendous amount of reporting. I'm not relying
on other people to do it for me. I'm on the phone all the time and if you
want to break stories that's what you have to do. I'm competing with some
of the best journalists in the world and when you are competing with them
your game gets better."
In doing so, he says he has always strived to be unbiased. "The highest
compliment I can get was when my readers and now viewers say, 'I don't know
if you are a Democrat or Republican,' or 'Do you favor the Likud or Labor?'
" he says. "I want people to come away from something I write or do on TV
and say, 'I learned something I didn't know.' "
Nor does he buy into claims by some Jewish media watchdog groups that CNN
is biased against Israel.
"Since he usually doesn't deal with the Middle East, it's hard to
characterize him," says Alex Safian, associate director for CAMERA - The
Committee For Accuracy in Middle East Reporting.
But Safian points to coverage after a suicide terrorist attack in Israel a
few years ago. Blitzer said that peace talks would subsequently be on hold.
"He phrased it as if he had no idea that it's a traditional mourning
period," Safian says. "One would expect someone with his history to be a
little more cognizant of some of the realities and the facts, and perhaps
be a little tougher on administration officials. I assume that he sometimes
knows more than he lets on."
Blitzer explains it this way. "I don't get any pressure from Jewish groups.
I get letters from lots of viewers, Jewish and non-Jewish. I get criticism.
A lot of people think I am unfair to Clinton, or too nice. I can't remember
any criticism or praise for that matter as far as my coverage from
the Middle East."
He did not speak of President Clinton in this interview, but during an
April address in Baltimore to the Rabbinical Assembly convention, he was
candid.
"One of the biggest senses of regret that I have had over the past year was
all of us were forced to spend so much time covering the investigation of
the president, and we had no choice," he told 500 Conservative rabbis.
"Here was a criminal investigation of the president and a trial in the
Senate, and the impeachment process in the House. So we had to cover it,
but it seemed like such a terrible waste that we had to go through.
Specifically, it drained a lot of attention away from where our focus
should have been. For example, all of sudden Kosovo sprung up."

Committed to a Jewish home life

When not on the job- and the beeper he wears means that he's almost always
on the job - Blitzer enjoys reading, playing tennis, working out "and
hanging around with my wife, daughter and friends. I have no trouble
relaxing. My problem is getting time to do it."
Sitting on his night table these days is "The Lexus And The Olive Tree," by
New York Times international affairs columnist Thomas Friedman. "When I do
read now it has to be quick," Blitzer says.
His home life has a distinctive Jewish flavor. "I believe in the
traditions," says the man who watched his mother light Shabbat candles and
whose father is known as an excellent Torah reader. "I think we've tried to
instill in our daughter, Elana, an understanding of her background and
faith, and the history of her parents and grandparents. That's very
important to us and to her, but I don't think she appreciates it as much
now as she will down the road. I can't say we're very observant or anything
like that, but it's part of our life."
Rabbi Matthew H. Simon of Congregation B'nai Israel in Rockville, Md.,
where the Blitzers have a long-standing family membership, sees a
commitment.
"What's nice about Wolf is that he's not a shy Jew in his synagogue," says
the rabbi. "Everybody knows he's around, and he and his wife have many
personal friends here."
The rabbi points to Elana Blitzer's bat mitzvah a few years ago as
reflective of the family's life and values. "It was a serious bat mitzvah
and the family were serious participants," he says. "Their commitment was
to make it a Jewish affair."
Whether it's Jewish, national or international affairs, by all accounts
Blitzer is making a lasting mark in a profession measured in seconds. And
enjoying it immensely.
As he says, "They literally pay me to have a front row seat to history and
do fascinating things around the world. As a boy growing up in Buffalo I
always loved international affairs and politics. I never in my life dreamed
that I would have a job doing this. So if it ain't broken, don't fix it."
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riverwalker Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 08:43 PM
Response to Original message
23. Ze'ev Blitzer
Edited on Sun Sep-18-05 08:47 PM by riverwalker
was the name he used in his bylines when writing for Hebrew newspapers in the 70's and 80's.
He also used Ze'ev Barak "Ze'ev" meaning "wolf" and "barak" being "lightning" in Hebrew.

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shance Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 08:53 PM
Response to Original message
25. Im confused. One source says hes born in Germany, the other here in USA.
Which is it?
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KoKo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 09:20 PM
Response to Reply #25
29. I need to do some more work on this...there are discrepancies...
Lot's of stuff might be "scrubbed" on his background but I do have a few more links to track down. Not for this post though. I have to do a deeper search.
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entanglement Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 08:54 PM
Response to Original message
26. self delete
Edited on Sun Sep-18-05 08:57 PM by entanglement
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zippy890 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 09:39 PM
Response to Original message
32. don't know but his katrina statement
(in reference to the victims in New Orleans)
"they are so poor, and so black"
was so outrageous that everytime I hear his name
thats what I think about
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KoKo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-18-05 10:11 PM
Response to Reply #32
35. yes...it was patronizing ....and disgusting, I thought, too.
like these folks were in a petri dish in a lab as he was just "observing" them, so detached.

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