Robert Novak writes about his brain tumor

ProfJohn

Lifer
Jul 28, 2006
18,251
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I know this doesn't have anything to do with Sara Palin, but I thought it was interesting.

Especially the part about the Kennedy's.
The Kennedy's showed pure class, <redacted>
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The main reason I am writing this column is that many people have asked me how I first realized I was suffering from a brain tumor and what I have done about it.
But I also want to relate the reaction to my disease, mostly compassionate, that belies Washington's reputation.

The first sign that I was in trouble came on Wednesday, July 23, when my 2004 black Corvette struck a pedestrian on 18th Street in downtown Washington while I was on my way to my office.

I did not realize I had hit anyone until a shirt-sleeved young man on a bicycle, whom I incorrectly thought to be a bicycle messenger, jumped in front of my car to block the way. In fact, he was David A. Bono, a partner in the high-end law firm Harkins Cunningham. The bicyclist was shouting at me that I could not just hit people and then drive away. That was the first I knew about the accident. Mr. Bono called the police, and a patrolman soon arrived.

After I said I had no idea I had hit anyone until they flagged me down and informed me, Mr. Bono told The Washington Post, "I would not believe that." Fortunately, the investigating officer, P. Garcia, was a policeman who listened and apparently believed me. While Mr. Bono and other bystanders were taking on aspects of a mob, shouting "hit-and-run," Officer Garcia issued a right-of-way infraction against me, costing me $50, instead of a hit-and-run violation that would have been a felony. Following Officer Garcia's instructions, I promptly paid the $50 fine at Third District Police Headquarters in Northwest Washington, in cash and in person.

Officer Garcia's justification in believing me was soon confirmed by the diagnosis of my brain cancer, in which I have lost not only left peripheral vision but nearly all my left vision, probably permanently. Several people have asked me whether the person I hit was crossing in front of me on my left. I answer, "I never saw him."

The person I hit, identified by police as Don, with no fixed address, was taken to George Washington University Hospital, where police said, "There are no visible injuries."

On the next day, Thursday, July 24, there were more clues that something was seriously wrong. I lost my way to my dentist's office in Montgomery County and never found it. I also had trouble finding my way back to my office. After returning from a speaking engagement in North Carolina on Friday, I found it difficult locating my office in the 13-story building where I have been a tenant since 1964.

My wife Geraldine and I left Washington Saturday to spend the weekend with our daughter, Zelda, and her husband, Christopher Caldwell, and their children at their summer house at Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass. When Geraldine noticed that I was having trouble following her in the Boston airport, she suggested I go to a hospital emergency room. I always resist such suggestions and did so this time, but fortunately Zelda prevailed. The CT scan at Salem Hospital showed a brain mass. I returned to the summerhouse and went into seizure the next day.

When Zelda said to call 911, I again resisted, but she again prevailed. I promptly suffered another seizure in the ambulance, the second of three seizures that day. I gained admittance to the high-quality Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, which has an excellent oncology staff. A biopsy was performed, which showed a large, grade IV tumor. In answer to my question, the oncologist estimated that I had six months to a year to live. Being read your death sentence is like being a character in one of the old Bette Davis movies.

I believe I was able to withstand this shock because of my Catholic faith, to which I converted in 1998.

I then called Dr. Donald Morton of the John Wayne Cancer Institute in Santa Monica, Calif., who removed a cancer from my lung in 1994 and has been a friend and close medical advisor. He told me that different people react to serious cancers in different ways and reminded me that I was a three-time cancer survivor.

Dr. Morton recommended Dr. Allan H. Friedman, a master surgeon who is chief of neurosurgery at the Duke University Medical Center.

After studying my CT scan and MRI, Dr. Friedman said a resection -- that is, a removal of the tumor -- was possible by surgery. Dr. Friedman had performed a similar operation this summer on Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts.

In today's world, it is up to the "informed patient" to make many decisions affecting treatment. Dr. Morton recommended that I go ahead with surgery by Dr. Friedman.

My dear friend, the Democratic political operative Bob Shrum, asked Sen. Kennedy's wife, Vicki, to call me about Dr. Friedman. I barely know Mrs. Kennedy, but I have found her to be a warm and gracious person. I have had few good things to say about Teddy Kennedy since I first met him at the 1960 Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles, but he and his wife have treated me like a close friend. She was enthusiastic about Dr. Friedman and urged me to opt for surgery at Duke, which I did.

The Kennedys were not concerned by political and ideological differences when someone's life was at stake, recalling at least the myth of milder days in Washington. My long conversation with Vicki Kennedy filled me with hope.

The irony of my going to Duke to save my life can only be appreciated by somebody who knows that I am a fanatic University of Maryland basketball fan with no use for the Duke Blue Devils and their student basketball fans, who certainly have not turned the other cheek toward me.

The ingenious taunts by the students at Duke's Cameron Indoor Stadium are usually directed against opposing players, but I am one fan who also has been the target of the "Cameron Crazies."

During my last visit there to watch a game won by Maryland, students raised a placard with two pictures: one of Benedict Arnold and one of me. "Two Traitors, " said the headline.

But I was treated with immense courtesy and skill by the great Duke neurosurgical team. Dr. Friedman operated on me for over four hours, starting at 7:30 a.m. on Friday, Aug. 15. He later showed me before-and-after pictures, revealing that the 3-by-1.5-inch tumor had been removed. Of course, cancer cells remain, requiring a rigorous regimen of radiation and chemotherapy, managed by the Duke team and conducted at the George Washington University Hospital in Washington.

Al Hunt, who has become a close friend, though we disagree about almost everything, says it will be very difficult for me to inveigh against Duke in the future. I do believe he is correct. Al and his wife, Judy Woodruff, have been staunch pillars of support during this ordeal and helped arrange our living accommodations at Duke.

I am now at home in Washington, awaiting further therapy. Dr. Friedman recommended that I try to get back to at least parts of my normal life. He suggested reading, but also that I try to write columns, which is the reason I've composed this piece.

There are mad bloggers who profess to take delight in my distress, but there's no need to pay them attention in the face of such an outpouring of good will for me. I had thought 51 years of rough-and-tumble journalism in Washington made me more enemies than friends, but my recent experience suggests the opposite may be the case.

But Joe and Valerie Wilson, attempting to breathe life into the Valerie Plame "scandal," issued this statement: "We have long argued that responsible adults should take Novak's typewriter away. The time has arrived for them to also take away the keys to his Corvette."

Thanks to my tumor, the Wilsons have achieved half of their desires. I probably never will be able to drive again, and I have sold the Corvette, which I dearly loved. Taking away my typewriter, however, may require modification of the First Amendment.

Support for me and promises of prayers sent for me poured in from all sides, including political figures who had not been happy with my columns. I'm told that President George W. Bush has not liked my criticism, particularly of his Iraq war policy. But the president is a compassionate man, and he telephoned me at 7:24 a.m. on August 15, six minutes before I went into surgery. The conversation lasted only a minute, but his prayerful concern was touching and much appreciated.
Knowing this crowd I am sure we will see lots of evil mean spirited response, but wouldn't it be nice if everyone showed as much class as Mrs Kennedy did?
 

alchemize

Lifer
Mar 24, 2000
11,489
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Just a couple nobody federal employees who managed to get 15 minutes of fame trying to extend it.
 

Harvey

Administrator<br>Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
35,052
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Originally posted by: ProfJohn

Especially the part about the Kennedy's. And even more so the part about Mr and Mrs Wilson.
The Kennedy's showed pure class, the Wilson's showed pure crass.

I don't wish anyone to suffer brain cancer or any other life threatening or form of suffering or debilitating disease, but that doesn't alter the fact that Novak is a mean-spirited embarrassment to journalism and a true turd in the punchbowl of life. The Wilsons have every right to be pissed at him.

As with your Traitor In Chief, I don't wish him physical harm, but I won't miss him when he's gone.
 

Blackjack200

Lifer
May 28, 2007
15,995
1,685
126
The Wilsons made that statement the day of the accident, when no one knew he had a tumor. That Novak mentioned it in his column shows unusual pettiness for a cancer survivor. That you trolled it up even further shows your complete partisanship and lack of interest in anything resembling honesty.
 

Harvey

Administrator<br>Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
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Originally posted by: Blackjack200
The Wilsons made that statement the day of the accident, when no one knew he had a tumor. That Novak mentioned it in his column shows unusual pettiness for a cancer survivor. That you trolled it up even further shows your complete partisanship and lack of interest in anything resembling honesty.

If you've ever read or seen Novak, you'd know it isn't unusually petty for him.
 

ProfJohn

Lifer
Jul 28, 2006
18,251
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Not sure why Novak included that cheap shot at the Wilson's. But I guess the Wilson's comment was kind of mean spirited as well. A pox on both their houses.
 

Harvey

Administrator<br>Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
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Originally posted by: ProfJohn
Not sure why Novak included that cheap shot at the Wilson's. But I guess the Wilson's comment was kind of mean spirited as well. A pox on both their houses.

Nope. The Wilsons were right, and given the context and how bad Novak shit on them and their lives, their statements were very reasonable.
 

RKDaley

Senior member
Oct 27, 2007
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Originally posted by: Blackjack200
The Wilsons made that statement the day of the accident, when no one knew he had a tumor. That Novak mentioned it in his column shows unusual pettiness for a cancer survivor. That you trolled it up even further shows your complete partisanship and lack of interest in anything resembling honesty.
I agree.

 

ProfJohn

Lifer
Jul 28, 2006
18,251
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ummm I didn't "troll" it up. I just repeated his charge. Had no idea it was given in a false context.
 

musicman64

Senior member
Jun 29, 2003
339
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Originally posted by: Harvey
Originally posted by: ProfJohn
Not sure why Novak included that cheap shot at the Wilson's. But I guess the Wilson's comment was kind of mean spirited as well. A pox on both their houses.

Nope. The Wilsons were right, and given the context and how bad Novak shit on them and their lives, their statements were very reasonable.



Originally posted by: ProfJohn
ummm I didn't "troll" it up. I just repeated his charge. Had no idea it was given in a false context.



You find the Wilson's comment mean-spirited? Guy runs over a pedestrian and they say take away the keys (before they knew it had anything to do with the tumor).

He says, I have cancer, those mean assholes get half of their wish.

The fact that he even brings the Wilson's into it, in order to inflict MORE harm upon them just shows how big of a jackass he is.

A pox on his house and his alone.
 

Perknose

Forum Director & Omnipotent Overlord
Forum Director
Oct 9, 1999
46,042
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Originally posted by: ProfJohn
ummm I didn't "troll" it up. I just repeated his charge. Had no idea it was given in a false context.

You continue to "troll it up" by keeping your original comments in your OP now that you know better.
 

nageov3t

Lifer
Feb 18, 2004
42,816
83
91
at the very least, I can respect the fact that Novak crawled out of his death bed just to tell McCain not to pick Lieberman as his VP.
 

JSt0rm

Lifer
Sep 5, 2000
27,399
3,947
126
I actually wished a brain tumor on novak. Ya'll better look out nanananan here I come.
 

sapiens74

Platinum Member
Jan 14, 2004
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Originally posted by: Harvey
Originally posted by: Blackjack200
The Wilsons made that statement the day of the accident, when no one knew he had a tumor. That Novak mentioned it in his column shows unusual pettiness for a cancer survivor. That you trolled it up even further shows your complete partisanship and lack of interest in anything resembling honesty.

If you've ever read or seen Novak, you'd know it isn't unusually petty for him.

Once on Crossfilre his fake tooth came loose...... it was bizarre