Prez no match for ‘Grey’s’ star
President Bush was upstaged Thursday by an American actor-cum-African tribal chief.
The president and Mrs. Bush participated in the White House Summit on malaria, but the talk was all about the emcee — Isaiah Washington, one of the stars of the immensely popular ABC drama “Grey’s Anatomy.” The actor’s connection to Africa, where malaria is particularly devastating, is beyond reproach: Visiting his relatives on the continent earlier this year, he was inducted into the Mende tribe as a tribal chief.
Before Bush took the stage at the National Geographic building, South African music star Yvonne Chaka Chaka performed, inspiring Madeline McElveen, mother of American Red Cross Chair Bonnie McElveen-Hunter, to get up and dance largely by herself, according to photographer Carrie Devorah, who covered the event.
Also in attendance: Bill Gates’ wife Melinda, Sens. Bill Frist, R-Tenn., and Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., former NBAer Sam Perkins, and President Clinton’s Canadian friend, Belinda Stronach. Pastor Rick Warren, author of the bestselling “The Purpose-Driven Life,” was seen trailing an assistant with an armful of books for him to sign. According to one source, at the end of the event, “Rick had a few more books left over than normal.”
To the disappointment of many, Angelina Jolie was rumored around the halls of National Geographic to be showing up. But alas, it was not to be.
Lott’s son railroaded by ‘railroad to nowhere’?
When the House of Representatives and the president scuttled the so-called “railroad to nowhere” earlier this year, it was seen as a blow to Mississippi Republican Sens. Trent Lott and Thad Cochran, both of whom championed the measure.
But it turns out that Lott’s son, lobbyist Chet Lott, might also have come out on the wrong end of the deal, as he was working for a firm that could have benefited from the legislation.
The now-infamous pork project would have spent $700 million to move a private CSX freight rail line in Mississippi a few miles inland to make room for a relocated Interstate 90 and a beach and gaming district along the Gulf coast. Trouble was, CSX and its insurers had just spent $300 million to rebuild the track in its current location after it was hit by Hurricane Katrina. According to reports, the project would have entailed paying off CSX for the land on which the tracks sit, destroying those tracks and expanding the capacity of other tracks in the area.
In late winter — about the same time that Lott began pushing for the appropriation — his son Chet registered as a lobbyist for the R.J. Corman Railroad Group, which calls itself “one of the major builders of new and rehabilitated rail in the United States.” In fact, it was Corman that did the repair work on CSX’s existing tracks earlier this year.
The younger Lott, who consults for the Livingston Group in Washington, also owns the Lott & Hopkins lobby shop in Lexington, Ky., only a short drive from Corman’s headquarters in Nicholasville, Ky. He filed his lobbying disclosure form for Corman on Jan. 25.
Chet Lott told Yeas & Nays via e-mail on Thursday, “I have had no involvement what so ever with the railroad relocation project. R.J. Corman is a Kentucky-based company.”
That’s true, but Corman’s own Web site states that it has “operations in Kentucky and more than a dozen other states.”
Sen. Lott’s spokeswoman, Susan Irby, said Thursday that her boss had authorized the relocation of the track “years before” the hurricane. This time around, he was simply trying to appropriate the funds for the project.
As far as Corman’s potential involvement, she said, “My understanding is this would not have been a project for them, so this was not an issue.”
But a representative for Corman’s construction division told us Thursday that had the appropriation gone through, “I’m sure that CSX probably would have wanted us to place a bid on that, yes. We work for CSX and many times they do ask us to do work like that.”
In addition, Ron Utt, a scholar with the Heritage Foundation who has followed the railroad controversy, noted that Corman has many ex-CSX officials on its board. Thus, when it came time to bid for the project, Corman certainly could have expected “preferential treatment” by CSX.
A spokesperson for CSX did not respond to a request for comment.
Ballers’ night on the town
After the Denver Nuggets lost to the Washington Wizards Wednesday night, they decided to ease their pain with a night on the town.
First, Nuggets players Marcus Camby, Andre Miller and Eduardo Najera — and their respective posses — swung by nearby Clyde’s for dinner and drinks. The winners? The players, who got to enjoy adoring groupies staring at them as they ate. These same groupies slowly strutted their stuff by the boys on their way out, hoping to be checked out. The losers? Everyone else in the restaurant.
“As soon as these guys walked in, let’s just say that the service shifted,” says our source.
Later, the players joined Nuggets teammate Carmelo Anthony for a party he was hosting at the kstreet Lounge.
Dave Chappelle can’t sell
Wow. Dave Chappelle really has fallen from grace. The Duke Ellington School of the Arts had to reduce the starting auction bid for their Dave Chappelle Package from $1,500 to $500, after no one placed a bid at the original price. (The comedian is an alumni of the school.)
The package includes two premium tickets to see Chappelle at any performance in the continental U.S., plus backstage passes. A spokeswoman for the school told us that they lowered the price because they “we wanted to get as many people interested in the package as possible. Didn’t seem to be very interesting at $1,500, and now it does.” A package with opera singer Denyce Graves, another Ellington alum, also had to be reduced. You can bid at www.dukeellingtonauction.com.
Think Tank
Who’s on Santa’s naughty list this year?
“Mayor Mike Bloomberg deserves a lump of coal made from partially hydrogenated vegetable oil for pushing New York’s unprecedented and overreaching ban on trans fats.”
– Nick Gillespie, Reason magazine
“Rep. William Jefferson’s Maytag repairman.”
– Howard Mortman, New Media Strategies
“Despite being re-elected, seems likely Rep. William J. Jefferson could find a few lumps of coal in his freezer this year.”
– Sommer Mathis, DCist.com



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"When will the public finally rise up and DEMANDING an honest media that represents the views of the country?!"
She was honest. The media is not supposed to represent the views of the country. That would be "state" media. Then again, you probably would have preferred that the media had continued to support the racist segregation of blacks given that most of the country, at that time, supported it.
The media is supposed to report the news. If the news puts the United States in a poor light, then so be it. The truth is what matters. Not the viewpoint of the public.
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"it took me 15 minutes on the internet using google and ebay to determin that an IBM Selectric II could produce the leaked document"
It took less time to determine the Yellowcake documents were fake considering that the were "signed" by a leader who had not been in power for quite some time. Yet, the administration went with them anyway.
If you are this confident that the rather documents are forgeries, than you should encourage an investigation, not discourage it.
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"mad moon man seems to be a little weak on the whole history and constitution thing"
If you are going to try to throw something like this out there, how about rebutting with facts? I assure you that I know the "whole history and constitution thing," how about you showing me where I am wrong? Otherwise, you simply show yourself to be one of the many simple minded fools, unable to back up your ignorant statements.
I also assume that you believe that Bruce Fein, conservative constitutional scholar is truly a liberal? I assume that, in your mind, the CATO institute is a bastion of liberal thought? You have no idea what is liberal and what is conservative. You only believe that anyone who rejects Bush's philosophy is a liberal.
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I long for the days when we had a president with honor and integrity. One who respected the Constitution that he swore to uphold. One who went after the enemy instead of what he believed was a convenient target. One who lived up to his words and go after those nations who harbor terrorists, such as Pakistan, who provides safe haven for bin Laden. One who would acknowledge that nearly all of the hijackers who attacked us on 9/11 were Saudi, and over 50% of the foreign insurgents in Iraq are Saudi -- and actually go after the Saudi's instead of embracing them as allies and friends. George Bush is an embarrassment to this nation. He will go down in history as the most incompetent and corrupt leader our country has ever had.
The blind love an loyalty to this president is sickening. The neo-cons seem more like those who embraced the British crown while the Framers sought to bring real liberty to our nation. All it took was fear to rollback all that they worked for.
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