Brexit Polls Gives 'Remain' A Boost As Referendum Nears

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By William Schomberg and Paul Sandle

LONDON (Reuters) – The campaign to keep Britain in the European Union regained its lead in two opinion polls published on Saturday, giving a boost to Prime Minister David Cameron who is battling to avoid a historic “Out” vote in Thursday’s referendum.

A third poll also showed a change in momentum in favor of the “In” camp and Cameron got the backing of a leading newspaper when the right-leaning Mail on Sunday urged its readers to vote to remain in the EU.

“We are now in the final week of the referendum campaign and the swing back towards the status quo appears to be in full force,” Anthony Wells, a director with polling firm YouGov, said.

Financial markets around the world are on edge ahead of the June 23 referendum. Recent polls showing the “Out” camp in the lead have weakened sterling and helped wipe billions of pounds off stock markets as investors worried not only about the hit to Britain’s economy and its trading partners, but also about the implications of a so-called Brexit for the EU’s future.

A YouGov poll for the Sunday Times newspaper showed support for Britain staying in the EU had restored a narrow 44-43 percent lead over the “Out” campaign.

That poll was based on interviews conducted on Thursday and Friday, but the Sunday Times said the shift did not reflect the fatal attack on a British lawmaker on Thursday which led to the suspension of referendum campaigning.

Instead, the bounce in support for “In” was more a reflection of growing concerns among voters about the economic impact of a so-called Brexit, it said.

Cameron and his finance minister, George Osborne, have tried repeatedly to focus voters on the economic risks of leaving the EU’s single market, pointing to forecasts of a hit from the International Monetary Fund, the Bank of England and most private economists.

 CAMPAIGNING SET TO RESUME

Another YouGov poll reported on Saturday but based on surveys conducted on Wednesday and Thursday showed the lead of the “Out” campaign had narrowed to two points from as wide as seven points less than a week ago.

A third poll on Saturday, by polling firm Survation, gave the “In” campaign a three-point lead, reversing a similar lead for “Out” in a Survation poll published as recently as Thursday.

A fourth poll, by Opinium, showed the two camp were running neck and neck with 44 percent support each. That poll was conducted between Tuesday and Friday.

While Cameron got support from the Mail on Sunday’s backing of the “In” campaign, its rival The Sunday Times, which sells around half the number of copies as the Mail on Sunday, said it was backing the “Out” campaign.

The Sunday Times urged voters to vote to leave the EU as a way to press for deeper reform which might make the bloc more acceptable for Britain to actually remain in after a second referendum, an idea floated by “Out” campaigner Boris Johnson.

But Cameron told the newspaper that there would no second chance to decide Britain’s role in Europe. “This is an irreversible decision with very bad consequences for the British economy,” he said in an interview.

Campaigning was due to resume on Sunday after a suspension lasting more than two days following the fatal attack on lawmaker Jo Cox, a member of the opposition Labour Party and a strong supporter of Britain staying in the EU.

The man charged with her murder, Thomas Mair, gave his name as “death to traitors, freedom for Britain” when he appeared in court on Saturday.

(Writing by William Schomberg; editing by Paul Sandle and Cynthia Osterman)

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The Greatest Star: Visiting Shoshana Bean in 'Funny Girl'

As soon as Shoshana Bean was announced for Funny Girl at North Shore Musical Theatre, I knew I had to go. Months ago I wrote that I was going and friends expressed some disbelief. But how could I miss Shoshana Bean in Funny Girl? I’ve seen her in all her notable theater appearances–Godspell at the York, Hairspray and Wicked on Broadway and Beaches in Chicago. Plus, it’s Funny Girl. I’m not stupid, I know how perfect Bean is for Fanny Brice. 2016-06-19-1466302775-7783096-bean.jpg

While there is a West End mounting of Funny Girl (with a revised book by Bean’s Hairspray costar Harvey Fierstein) right now, the show rarely has major mountings. Plans for a Broadway revival in the 2011-2012 season, oddly with Lauren Ambrose as Fanny Brice, were scuttled. My trip to Beverly, Massachusetts–where the show closes tomorrow after a two-week run–marked the third time I’ve seen it live onstage. The first time was over 15 years ago, sitting at Paper Mill Playhouse seeing Leslie Kritzer wow the crowd. (Coincidentally when this happened she had just finished costarring with Bean in Godspell.) I had hardly noted her Godspell performance, so I basically had no idea who Kritzer was. She was amazing. I thought: “Why isn’t this show done more often?” Of course Funny Girl isn’t a perfect musical–many say the shift in character and tone from Act I to Act II is too hard to swallow–but the main reason it isn’t done is Barbra Streisand. Most say you can’t watch Funny Girl and not think Streisand. The shadow looms too large. And no one is as good at doing Streisand as Streisand herself, despite what many drag queens might think. However, sitting there watching Kritzer I didn’t think about Streisand. I simply enjoyed the tour-de-force performance she was giving and the show itself which, despite its flaws, is winning. (Kritzer has gone on to become a New York stage fixture, earning raves for a host of things and winning a Lucille Lortel Award last month for her performance in The Robber Bridgegroom. She enters Something Rotten! next month.)

Number two I won’t get into detail on. An actress who had helped me with my first New York Times story desperately wanted me to see her in a small community production. I of course did. And never have I wished more that I could fake reactions or even delivery a cursory “you were so great” post-performance. Sadly I’m too honest for all that. You need someone who can completely carry this show or else the whole thing comes off as embarrassing. Any good moments are overshadowed by the hollow center. You think “Streisand” to get yourself out of thinking about what is on the stage. Her performance is iconic enough that you can picture it while the orchestra plays.

The thing about Bean is that I thought she could do it. This seems like a role she was born to play. Unlike my trip to Paper Mill so many years ago, the trip to Massachusetts came with expectations. It is hard to live up to pre-existing high expectations, that’s why I tell producers to undersell. Bean impressively exceeded my expectations. I did not love much of the production’s staging, as I felt like it did not properly use the in-the-round stage. Half the time in Act I I unhappily watched the back of Bean for full numbers or scanned the crowd to gauge the reactions of people seeing the performance from the front. The start was also a tiny bit rocky sound-wise, which didn’t help. (Though shout out to supporting players, and Broadway vets, Rick Faugno, as Eddie Ryan, and Sandy Rosenberg, as Mrs. Strakosh. Most of the time I saw their work, and they were wonderful.)

But in the end it didn’t matter–I was so happy I came. Again I didn’t think of Streisand. Bean made the role her own, with particularly special takes on “People,” “Who Are You Now?” and “The Music That Makes Me Dance.” Bean was Elphaba in Wicked, so I think everyone knows she can belt. Those of you, like me, who saw Beaches or have listened to her recordings have a better idea of her vocal range. The thing that is really impressive in this is her inflection, as silly as that sounds. Many folks have heard these songs sung in cabaret performances with varying degrees of success. It is typical to internalize them as the standards that they are. But Bean imbued them with a degree of emotion that perfectly accompanied her performance in the book scenes, so the songs seemed uniquely suited to this particular performance. At intermission I was listening to all the audience members around me talk about how great she sounded. One said he was expecting this, because he listens to her CD during yoga. An older woman said she thought Bean might be better than Streisand. (Jews reading, I would never dare say that. I’m smart enough to fear my people. I’m just reporting.)

Bean is older than Streisand was by a good amount, but she got right the character’s naivety and youthful zeal in the first act. You felt her falling for Nick Arnstein (played here by Bradley Dean). A certain spunk present in all of Bean’s performances (both theatrical and concert) propelled her work here. I was a tiny bit afraid that her final scene wouldn’t have the emotional resonance it needed; it’s a tricky one to pull off. Fanny has spent the whole first act being swept up, and the whole second act being brought down to earth. The character in that final book scene can come across as too dejected. Bean nailed it because you truly felt that Fanny was going to move on.

I know she is busy touring with her music and more, but I hope Bean returns to the theater soon. I’m thrilled she got to play her dream role, and I’m so glad I made the trek out to see it. Though preferably next time no trek will be involved–Broadway is where she really should be. And that is also where Funny Girl should be. As the West End revival is proving, and as I’ve now seen twice, this is a show that can shine with Streisand or without.

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Kuwaiti rulers fight their internal battles on the sports field

By James M. Dorsey

Political infighting within Kuwait’s ruling family is about to take a dramatic turn with reports that the Gulf state plans to dissolve its national sports organizations in a blatant illustration of the incestuous relationship between sports and politics.

The expected Kuwaiti move, part of an effort to sideline Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahad Al-Sabah, a member of the Gulf state’s ruling family and one of world sports’ most powerful men, and his brother, Sheikh Talal Al-Fahad, the head of Kuwait’s National Olympic Committee (NOC), is the latest episode in a longstanding power struggle that has played out in Kuwaiti courts and international sports.

Sheikh Ahmad as a member of the International Olympic Council (IOC) and the FIFA Council that governs world soccer as well as his detractors in the ruling family who control the levers of power in Kuwait have both involved and manipulated international sports associations in what is effectively a political battle unrelated to sports.

The plan reported by the country’s authoritative Al Rai newspaper constitutes the government’s response to a decision by the Lausanne-based Court of Arbitration of Sports (CAS) to uphold FIFA’s banning last year of the Kuwait Football Association (KFA) on the grounds that a new Kuwaiti sports law amounted to political interference.

The IOC followed by FIFA and 15 other international sports associations banned their Kuwaiti members on the grounds that the law compromised the autonomy of sport. It was the second time in five years that Kuwait was banned by the IOC and prevented from participating in Olympic Games. The current ban bars Kuwait from taking part in this summer’s tournament in Rio de Janeiro.

CAS backed FIFA in a case brought to the court by Kuwaiti soccer clubs, including Kuwaiti Premier League champions Kuwait Sporting Club, Al-Arabi SC, Al-Fahaheel FC, Kazma SC and Al-Salmiya SC.

The government hopes that it can get the bans lifted by creating new sports associations while cancelling the controversial law. The new organizations would effectively lock Sheikhs Ahmad and Talal as well as their supporters out of Kuwaiti sports.

Al Rai quoted government sources as saying that the news associations would keep “troublemakers and those who created corruption in sport in Kuwait and put their personal interests ahead of the interest of Kuwait and its youth out of sports.”

Earlier, Kuwait’s Public Authority for Youth and Sports headed by Sheikh Ahmad Mansour Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, another relative of Sheikhs Ahmed and Talal, sued the brothers as well as other members of the NOC for $1.3 billion in damages.

The authority asserted that the damages resulted from Sheikh Ahmad’s complaint to the IOC about government interference.

Youth minister Sheikh Salman Sabah Al-Salem Al-Homud Al-Sabah further charged without mentioning him by name that Sheikh Ahmed was responsible for the “total decline” in Kuwaiti sports. Sheikh Salman claimed that the decline stemmed from “false complaints to international organizations in a bid to suspend the country’s sport activities.”

Sheikh Salman blames Sheikh Ahmad for his failure in 2014 to win an International Shooting Sport Federation (ISSF) presidential election. Sheikh Salman was at the time accused of abusing his position in government to garner votes.

The ISSF has since said that it was investigating Sheikh Salman for ethics breaches. It said that the government’s legal action against Sheikh Ahmad may constitute an “escalation” of political wrangling over control of sport in Kuwait.

“The ISSF experienced already during Sheikh Salman’s campaign to become ISSF President in 2014 that he showed little sensitivity for a democratic process, the autonomy of sports and ethical behaviour within an election process,” the group said in a statement.

Sheikh Ahmad, a former oil minister and head of Kuwait’s national security council who is also president of the Olympic Council of Asia and the Association of National Olympic Committees, was last year forced to publicly apologize to Kuwaiti Emir Sheikh Jaber Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, his uncle, and other senior officials for levelling false allegations against them.

The allegations were widely believed to be part of an effort by Sheikh Ahmad to leverage his status in international sports to engineer his return to government in a prominent position.

Sheikh Ahmed had hoped to strengthen his position by accusing his relative, former prime minister Sheikh Nasser Al-Mohammad Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, and former parliament speaker Jassem Mohammad Abdul-Mohsen Al-Karafi of plotting to topple the government, launder money and misuse public funds.

Sheikh Ahmad had no choice but to withdraw the allegations and publicly apologize on television after a Kuwaiti court dismissed as fabrications his evidence in the form of digital documents and video recordings. A Swiss Court had earlier ruled that the voices heard in the recordings were those of the former prime minister and the speaker. Sheikh Ahmad’s forced television appearance was intended to humiliate him and thwart his ambitions in a country in which status and face are important.

“As I seek pardon from Your Highness, I stress that what happened will be a lesson from which I will benefit and draw appropriate conclusions. I am in full compliance with the orders and directives of Your Highness and I promise to turn the page on this matter and not to raise it again,” Sheikh Ahmed said in his apology.

Sheikh Ahmed has nonetheless insisted that he was the victim of a “personal attack” that was indicative of strained relations between the government and the sports movement.
Perhaps more to the point, Sheikh Ahmad and Kuwait’s travails are the inevitable consequence of the politicization and political manipulation of sports in Kuwait as well as elsewhere in the Middle East and North Africa in which international sports associations are as a complicit as are the region’s autocratic rulers.

Dr. James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, co-director of the University of Würzburg’s Institute for Fan Culture, and the author of The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer blog and a just published book with the same title.

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Vanderbilt Rape Trial Finds Brandon Vandenburg Guilty

By Tim Ghianni

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (Reuters) – A Tennessee jury found a former Vanderbilt University football player guilty on Saturday for the June 2013 rape of an unconscious female student in a case drawing national attention to sexual assaults on college campuses.

The trial of Brandon Vandenburg, 23, was heard by a jury brought in from Memphis, 200 miles (300 km) from the university in Nashville, because of concern that media coverage had made it hard to find impartial local jurors.

In a retrial after his first conviction was thrown out in a mistrial, Vandenburg was once again found guilty of five counts of aggravated rape, two counts of aggravated sexual battery and one count of unlawful photography.

Vandenburg showed no emotion when the verdicts were read, although he did exchange emotional hugs with his defense team before he was escorted to jail.  

He faces 15 to 25 years in prison for each rape charge when sentenced in July.

Vandenburg and teammate Cory Batey, two of four former Vanderbilt football players charged in the case, were found guilty when tried together in January 2015. Batey has since been retried and convicted.

Judge Monte Watkins declared a mistrial in June 2015 and set aside the convictions because one of the jurors had failed to disclose that he had been a victim of rape.

Vandenburg and the victim, who had been dating, met on that June evening for drinks at a bar popular with Vanderbilt students. Both had been drinking prior to meeting, according to testimony.

Vandenburg tried to take the victim, who was unconscious, to her apartment, but could not get in. He then took her back to his dormitory, where the other three men who were charged in the case helped cart her to his room, where the attacks took place.

The men used cell phones to video their crimes, with those videos playing crucial roles in the convictions.     

Defense attorneys had argued that Vandenburg was too intoxicated to commit an assault and should be acquitted.

Prosecutors and a university spokeswoman praised the victim for having the strength to testify once again at the retrial.

“It is our sincere hope that today’s verdict strongly sends the message to victims and to perpetrators that sexual assault will not be tolerated in our communities,” Beth Fortune,Vanderbilt‘s vice chancellor for public affairs, said in a statement.

 

(Reporting by Tim Ghianni; Editintg by Daniel Trotta)

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California Wildfire Spreads, Forms Fire Tornadoes

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By Jon Herskovitz

(Reuters) – A wildfire fed by parched land and high winds spread in Southern California on Saturday, prompting hundreds of people to evacuate their homes as the blaze formed destructive columns of flames known as fire tornadoes.

The so-called Sherpa Fire in Santa Barbara County, about 90 miles (145 km) northwest of Los Angeles, had burned through about 7,811 acres (3,161 hectares) by Saturday evening, officials said.

 

Firefighters estimated the fire was 45 percent contained after early evening “sundowner winds” that can whip through the area’s coastal canyons did not emerge overnight on Friday.

“We had a very good night last night,” Santa Barbara County Fire Chief Eric Peterson told a news conference, adding “we’ve had no life loss, no major injuries and no major structural loss.”

But county officials issued a new “red flag warning” for gusty winds from Sunday to Tuesday.

More than 1,200 firefighters have been dispatched to battle the flames, fueled by dry chaparral and grass in coastal canyons about 20 miles (32 km) northwest of the affluent city of Santa Barbara.

“Now is the time to gather your family members, pets and important documents in case you need to leave quickly,” the Santa Barbara Sheriff’s Office warned people living in areas threatened by the fire.

The fire broke out on Wednesday and has been expanding since then, forcing mandatory evacuations in some areas and putting others under evacuation warnings.

The fire is one of a series of blazes in western and southwestern states brought about by high temperatures and a prolonged dry spell. One of the largest has been southeast of Albuquerque, New Mexico, that has destroyed about two dozen homes and forced evacuations.

 

More than 700 personnel were fighting the so-called Dog Head Fire that has burned through about 17,600 acres (7,125 hectares) of timber and logging zones in four days. Firefighters said it was 5 percent contained as of Saturday evening. Governor Susana Martinez this week declared a state of emergency to free up resources to fight the blaze.

For an area stretching from southern California to southern Nevada and into Arizona, the National Weather service has put out “red flag warnings,” indicating conditions that could lead to dangerous fires.

It has also issued a heat advisory for large parts of New Mexico, Texas and Oklahoma.

 

(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz in Austin, Texas; Editing by Cynthia Osterman and Dan Grebler)

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When We Needed It Most, The World Came To Orlando's Aid

One week ago, 49 souls were stolen from Orlando, murdered in an unimaginable act of terror. Hundreds more were injured or witnessed unthinkable violence.

Our City remains in a state of shock, our hearts broken as we grieve for the victims and their families. Everyone in our City is struggling to comprehend how Orlando, a place known around the world for joy and fun, is now also the site of the worst mass shooting in American history.

In Orlando’s darkest hour, our community has been uplifted by the love and support from across our country and around the world. For decades, the world has come to Orlando to have fun. This week, when we needed it most, the world came to Orlando’s aid.

We heard Americans singing outside of the White House. We saw rainbow flags flying above Seattle’s Space Needle and iconic landmarks lit up from coast to coast, all to show Orlando that we weren’t alone. Tens of thousands gathered in London, chanting, “Orlando, we have your back.” We witnessed candles alight in honor of our victims in front of The Coliseum in Rome. We saw the Eiffel tower lit up in the colors of the rainbow. So many of our victims are Hispanic, and we felt the love and strength of Latin America. Every day, we continue to watch unique and powerful displays of support from Germany, Sweden, India, Chile, Brazil, and on and on.

My hope is that we will be remembered, not as the city where a horrible shooting took place, but as the city that showed others that love can conquer hate.

On behalf of everyone in Orlando, we want to thank our brothers and sisters from across America and around the world for standing with us, praying with us and mourning with us. Your shared strength and resolve has helped our City.

If there is any good to be found in the darkness that has consumed our City, it is that the world has had the chance to see the other side of Orlando. Not our famous theme parks, but the growing City that still has a small town feel. The place that in many ways is America’s new melting pot. The City where diversity and inclusion are a vital part of our way of life.

When the worst that humanity has to offer visited our City, the residents of Orlando showed they were more than capable of showing the world the best of humanity. My hope is that what happened in Orlando and our response to it compels others to find ways to work together to overcome hate, intolerance and injustice. Incredibly, we’ve already begun to hear from those who say what has happened here and how our community has responded has sparked a change in their hearts.

My hope is that we will be remembered, not as the City where a horrible shooting took place, but as the City that showed others that love can conquer hate. And, my hope is that Orlando’s tragedy is remembered as the event that led our country into a new ear of embracing diversity, equality and fairness.

On behalf of everyone who calls Orlando home — thank you, thank you, thank you.

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Fathers Can't End Violence In A Day, But There Is No Better Day To Start.

This month, the public expressed justified outrage that a 20-year-old Stanford student received a 6-month sentence for raping an unconscious girl. The most disturbing thing about the light sentence should not be how grossly out of the norm it was, but just the opposite; that it is all too normal. The judge’s June 2 sentence tracked a probation officer’s recommendation that the rapist should get 4-6 months, because — in the department’s view — the perpetrator had been drinking, had not committed other crimes, and had otherwise been an upstanding student-athlete with his whole life ahead of him.

That evening there were no outraged headlines in newspapers. There were no noisy protests by prosecutors or pickets outside of the courthouse. The sentence that was handed down was business-as-usual in a system that still does not get it. The only reason that people discovered this injustice and reacted so angrily was the bravery and eloquence of the victim whose impact statement was published by Buzzfeed.

This situation is familiar to us. There was a time when courts operated in the same way when it came to drunk driving or domestic abuse. Until the 1980s, it was common for a court to give drunk drivers a light sentence — because it was normal to drink, because people’s judgment is impaired when they drink, the lines of when someone was too drunk to drive were blurry, and because many drunk drivers were otherwise upstanding citizens or young people with their lives ahead of them.

This reasoning led courts and society to tolerate the notion that a certain number of innocent people would die or be horribly maimed each year because of drunk drivers. Likewise, for most of our lifetimes, courts took a lenient view toward domestic abuse. Light sentences were given to domestic abusers –because a person who is drinking might momentarily lose his temper, the lines of fault between a fighting couple can be blurry, and because many abusers were often otherwise upstanding citizens or young people with their lives ahead of them. And so Courts and society accepted that a certain number of women would live in terror in their homes with no protection from their abusers.

Today, we live in a world where based on that same logic we accept that 1 in 4 girls are sexually assaulted before the time they are 18.

The veil of silence about these sexual assaults has finally begun to lift from college campuses, military barracks, high schools and middle schools where these sexual assaults are all too common. Thanks to movies like The Hunting Ground, The Invisible War, and Audrie & Daisy, the public is finally coming to terms with the epidemic of violence against our girls that has been tolerated for far too long. The solution, as with drunk driving and domestic violence, is for the public to rise up and demand more from their courts, from their communities, and from themselves.

There is no excuse, ever, for getting behind a wheel drunk, or hitting a spouse, or having sex with a person who did not or cannot consent. This message needs to be reinforced among judges, prosecutors, probation officers, campus administrators, military commanders, principals, teachers, doctors, but also parents. The public also needs to understand that most people who engage in these actions are not usually upstanding. The vast majority of these crimes are caused by a small number of people who have not been deterred.

Between the two of us, we have three sons and three daughters, and it’s our responsibility to make sure our boys know that it is never okay to assault a girl, or to look away as another boy does. It’s also our responsibility to make sure our daughters know that it is never okay for them to be assaulted, and that we will have their back if and when they choose to speak out. If a parent, or coach, or mentor, or teacher, or a judge does not know how to start, there is a manual to help: http://teachearly.org

This Father’s Day offers us all a chance to reflect on doing the two things every father is expected to do: raise their kids to lead good lives, and protect them until they are old enough to protect themselves. We can’t be good fathers as long as we tolerate the epidemic of sexual assaults against young women and girls. Re-educating courts is a start. But changing a culture that has allowed this situation to exist, means taking that a step further and pledging to change all of our attitudes.

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Q&A: A. Scott Berg on His Classic Max Perkins Biography, Now a Big Movie Starring Jude Law

The following article first appeared in The National Book Review:

A. Scott Berg’s Max Perkins: Editor of Genius has become a classic since its publication in 1978, shining a light on an overlooked but critically important literary figure — and on a golden age of editing. Berg went on to write acclaimed biographies of Charles Lindbergh, Samuel Goldwyn, Woodrow Wilson, and Katharine Hepburn. He answered questions from The National about his Perkins book, the major motion picture that has just been made of it, and book editing today.

1. Max Perkins: Editor of Genius is, among other things, an inspiration for college thesis writers everywhere. You started it as your undergraduate thesis at Princeton, and it ended up winning a National Book Award. How did this happen?

I should start by saying that I went to Princeton because of an extreme passion for F. Scott Fitzgerald. Almost immediately after I arrived there, I went to Firestone Library to look at Fitzgerald’s papers; and I kept seeing Max Perkins’s name popping up — in personal correspondence and professional correspondence.

I could see that Perkins changed not only what F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote but also what an editor did. He offered creative solutions to literary problems; and often, he put himself in the role of marriage counselor, money lender, and friend.

Around this time, Scribners gave most if its archives to Firestone — thousands of pages of letters from Scribners authors and carbon copies of every letter in reply. I spent one day at the end of freshman year looking for everything I could find that was written on Perkins, and I found shockingly little — a Malcolm Cowley profile for The New Yorker, and not much more. I began to think, “There’s an interesting subject for someone — why isn’t there a book?”

At the start of sophomore year, I went to talk with Carlos Baker, who was a Princeton professor and had just published a Hemingway biography. He said, “Certainly there should be a biography of Perkins, the question is whether you” — I was 18 1/2 years old at the time — “should be the one to do it.” He said Perkins was the great enigma of American literature, and that after 7 years of working on his biography of Hemingway, who was edited by Perkins, he still knew as little about Perkins as he did when he started.

The Princeton English Department gave me an A+ on my senior thesis and its thesis prize, and they also said, “There is a book here.” They didn’t tell me it would take seven years to write it. But powerful is the urge not to go to law school . . .

I began active research on the book sophomore year, in the fall of 1968, and it was published in July 1978. So I spent three part-time years on it in college, and seven full-time years after that.

2. Max Perkins is credited with being a major influence on many of the greatest writers of the 20th century — Fitzgerald, Hemingway, and of course Wolfe. How different do you think their careers, and their writings, would have been if Perkins had remained a journalist, and not become an editor?

I don’t do really do crystal-ball biographies, but F. Scott Fitzgerald’s first book, This Side of Paradise, was turned down by three or four publishers. Hemingway’s first book, The Torrents of Spring, had been turned down — and acquiring that led to publishing his next book, The Sun Also Rises. And Thomas Wolfe had been turned down by virtually every publisher in New York.

There is no question Perkins saw something — heard something — that others did not. And there is no question he had to go to bat for these authors. With Fitzgerald, he put his job on the line, and said that if Scribners was not publishing the likes of Fitzgerald, he was not sure he wanted to stay.

And This Side of Paradise became an enormous success. The only thing I can compare it to is The Catcher in the Rye. It reflected what young people were feeling and gave them a way to recreate it — young people were suddenly imitating Amory Blaine, the way they later would behave like Holden Caulfield.

Perkins had a great personal influence on the lives of these authors, who were in need not only of money and editing, but of somebody acting in loco parentis. This was true of Fitzgerald, and certainly of Wolfe, much of whose work was about men who were in search of their fathers. He found a father figure in Perkins–who had five daughters and always wanted a son. And so it made sense that he would adopt these “literary sons.”

3. At times it was hard to tell where the writer ended and the editor began — probably most of all with Perkins’s relationship with Thomas Wolfe. Do you think Perkins ever went too far — or, to put it another way, would you say that Perkins was really the co-author of a book like Of Time and the River?

I’m on Team Perkins. I believe he didn’t go too far. Perkins had a credo that he often stated: “The book belongs to the author.” I think one could make the best argument that Perkins overreached with Thomas Wolfe, because he really did take these boxes and boxes of words that Wolfe scribbled on paper and never reread; and it was Perkins who gave them shape. One could argue that Wolfe should have been published raw; but I take Perkins’s side here, because it is not as if Perkins forced Wolfe to do anything — the decisions were always Wolfe’s own.

When it came to The Great Gatsby, I went and counted the words. A good 20 percent of that small book was changed because of suggestions from Perkins. Again, Perkins never said, “Scott, you have to do these things” — they were put out as suggestions, often quite subtly. Of course, when Wolfe came along, he [Wolfe] knew this was the guy who gave us The Great Gatsby and The Sun Also Rises; and that gave Perkins plenty of cred.

4. Perkins certainly feels like a figure from another century, with his pencil marking up — and often heavily rewriting — paper manuscripts. Are there Max Perkinses today, or does modern publishing not have room for people like him any more?

I think there are many editors out there who have the same editorial ability. But two things have changed. First, the business itself. My Max Perkins biography is largely about the golden age of the 1920s and 1930s. Today we live in the conglomerate era, when acquiring editors tend to acquire more than they edit. .

The second big difference was Max Perkins’s character. This is not to say that there aren’t many in the publishing industry today with great character. But I remember my editor on my first book, Thomas Congdon, saying that if Perkins had become a plumber he would have been the world’s best plumber, simply because of his deep personal values. He would have made plumbing so much more interesting.

5. Some people might not have expected a book about an editor — particularly one who said editors should remain invisible — to become a major Hollywood movie starring Colin Firth, Jude Law, Nicole Kidman, Guy Pearce, and Dominic West. How surprised are you that this came about?

Honestly, it wasn’t a surprise to me. There has been interest in making a movie of this book ever since it was announced in 1978. The first interest surfaced even before the book came out, from Universal. There was a possibility of Paul Newman playing Perkins, which would have been perfect — including the blue eyes.

What attracted them to making a movie was not necessarily the possible drama of editing a book but the personal relationships between the editor and his authors. What I think really comes across in the film — and I like to think in the book — is all the passion involved in the work — passion so great that it caused friendships and marriages to fall apart.

6. The movie is called Genius, a word taken, of course, from the title of your book. In the end, what would you say Perkins’s real genius was?

Perkins’s genius had several elements. He clearly had a great eye for talent. He really did hear and appreciate this new sound — this American language — that was starting to appear after World War I, and he responded to it.

The next level of his genius was his personal nature. He was, in many ways, a slave to duty. He made a promise as a teenager never to refuse a responsibility. His father, you see, had died when he was young, and so he grew up fast; and then he was involved in a nearly fatal accident when a friend almost drowned, and that deeply affected him. All this shows up in his editing — in his dedication to those around him. The final level was his compassion — he had a real gift for friendship.

This interview was edited for publication.

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Pentagon wants more people to hack its websites and networks

The Department of Defense’s Hack the Pentagon program was apparently so successful, the agency has decided to extend and develop new initiatives for it. Similar to Facebook’s, Twitter’s and Google’s bug bounty projects, Hack the Pentagon paid white h…

Orlando Shooting Funeral Procession Hit By Car, Officers Injured

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By Bernie Woodall and Roselle Chen

ORLANDO, Fla. (Reuters) – Funerals for two of the 49 victims killed in the shooting at a nightclub in Florida were marked by tense scenes on Saturday, as an impatient driver was accused of injuring two law enforcement officers and another took place under the watch of anti-gay protesters.

Two Osceola County Sheriff’s deputies on motorcycles were injured at the funeral procession for Jean Carlos Mendez in Kissimmee, Florida, some 20 miles (32 km) south of Orlando, when a driver cut through the cortege and struck them with her car, according to a statement on the sheriff’s Facebook page.

The deputies were taken to the hospital, where both were in stable condition, said the sheriff’s spokeswoman Twis Lizasuain.

At the funeral of another victim, Christopher Leinonen, at a church close to the center of Orlando, a handful of protesters from the Kansas-based anti-gay Westboro Baptist Church stood silently for about 45 minutes. They were blocked from view of those attending the funeral by about 200 counter-protesters, some holding rainbow screens, who cheered when the Westboro members left. 

 

Authorities are still investigating what motivated Omar Mateen to kill 49 people at the popular gay nightclub Pulse in the early hours of last Sunday, perpetrating the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history. Mateen was later killed in a shoot-out with police.

The shooting has sparked a new push for gun control legislation and Congress is expected to vote on proposals starting next week, including one on stopping people on terrorism watch lists from buying guns.

Democrats, including President Barack Obama, are framing gun restrictions as a national security issue after Mateen professed loyalty to Islamist militants. But authorities believe he was “self-radicalized” and acted without any direction from outside networks.

TROUBLED PAST

U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation agents on Friday questioned a member of the Florida mosque attended by Mateen, as new information surfaced revealing the killer had exhibited chronic behavioral problems during his youth.

Academic records obtained by Reuters showing Mateen was frequently suspended as a student added to a disturbing portrait of the long-troubled gunman.

Mateen, a 29-year-old private security guard, has been described by his first wife as an abusive, mentally disturbed man with a violent temper.

Others who knew him recalled Mateen, a U.S. citizen and Florida resident born in New York to Afghan immigrants, as a quiet, socially awkward individual who kept largely to himself.

The FBI has acknowledged interviewing Mateen in 2013 and 2014 for suspected ties to Islamist militant groups but concluded he posed no threat. Still, evidence in the Orlando case points to a crime at least inspired by extremist ideology.

Authorities have said Mateen paused a number of times during his three-hour siege at the Pulse nightclub to place cell phone calls to emergency 911 dispatchers and to post internet messages professing support for various Islamist militant groups.

U.S. officials have said his second wife, Noor Salman, had known of his plans to carry out the attack and a federal grand jury was convened earlier in the week to decide whether to charge Salman.

Obama, who met with survivors of the shooting and families of the dead in Orlando on Thursday, urged Congress to make it more difficult to legally acquire high-powered weapons like the semi-automatic rifle used in the attack.

The Senate is expected to vote on Monday on four proposals for limited gun restrictions, although all four are expected to fail. A group of Republican senators attempted on Friday to craft compromise legislation that might stand a better chance of passing.

(Additional reporting by Barbara Goldberg in New York and Jim Young in Orlando; Writing by Bill Rigby; Editing by Mary Milliken)

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