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Robert Novak, ace reporter who was never afraid to be Right, now reporting from Heaven

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Columnist Novak,
78,
dies of brain cancer


By David Jackson

August 19th, 2009


USA Today




Robert Novak,
the aggressive reporter
and conservative commentator
who became a
television celebrity,
died Tuesday of brain cancer
at the age of 78.

For three decades, from Presidents Kennedy to Clinton, Novak and partner Rowland Evans, wrote a syndicated column about the inner workings of Washington; Novak then did the column solo until he fell ill last year.

After CNN debuted in 1980, the acerbic Novak became a fixture on such programs as Crossfire, in which he battled verbally with liberal foes.

“I tried to find out

what the politicians

were up to,

which is a difficult job,”

Novak told Washingtonian magazine after he stopped his column in November.

“I find that politicians

as a class are up

to no good.

Sometimes they

accidentally do

the right thing.”

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A journalist dubbed Novak

“the prince of darkness;”

he used the phrase as the title of his 2007 memoir.

Near the end of his career, Novak triggered a federal investigation of the George W. Bush administration when he published the name of CIA operative Valerie Plame Wilson in July 2003.

The column appeared after her husband and former diplomat Joseph Wilson, challenged the rationale behind the Iraq war.

Novak — who opposed the invasion of Iraq — was never charged with wrongdoing.

CNN refused to let him back on the air after he stalked off the set during a 2005 debate with Democratic consultant James Carville.

Novak finished his television career with Fox News.

Born Feb. 26, 1931, in Joliet, Ill., Novak was a newspaper reporter while in high school and at the University of Illinois.

He later reported for the Associated Press before going to the Wall Street Journal in 1958.

In 1963, Evans asked Novak to be his partner.

The Evans-Novak column ran 30 years and often enraged politicians.

A frequent target, Lyndon Johnson, became one of many who called them “Errors and No Facts.”

Novak is survived by wife Geraldine — a former secretary for Johnson — and their two children.

Novak bridged the eras between a powerful print news media and 24-hour cable news, says Robert Thompson, a professor of television at Syracuse University.

Novak was “an old school reporter and columnist who at the same time could deliver dish for us to talk about,” he says.

Bill Press, a “proud liberal” who co-hosted Crossfire with Novak for six years, said they became friends because they respected each others’ principles.

He called Novak the hardest-working reporter in Washington who

“had sources because

he worked them,

he thanked them,

and he never

double-crossed them.”

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