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Politics

William H. Regnery II, 80, Dies; Bankrolled the Rise of the Alt-Proper,

Mr. Regnery attended the University of Pennsylvania, where he studied political science and joined the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, a conservative student organization co-founded by Mr. Buckley. He left before graduating to work on Senator Barry Goldwater’s 1964 presidential campaign.

In the 2017 interview with Buzzfeed, one of the few times he spoke to the news media, he claimed that his efforts on behalf of Mr. Goldwater included what he called “Operation Dewdrop,” in which he attempted to deter Democratic voters in Philadelphia by hiring a plane to seed the skies with dry ice, in the hopes of making it rain. He failed — though, he recalled, he burned his fingers on the ultracold dry ice containers.

Mr. Regnery later returned to Chicago, where he worked for Joanna-Western Mills. He became the company’s president in 1980 but was ousted a year later, after several quarters of poor financial performance. According to his own account, he spent the rest of his career in a variety of businesses, while also dabbling in Illinois politics.

In his memoir, he recounted how he first began to turn against the Republican Party after listening to a speech in 1993 in which the economist Milton Friedman declared that the end of the Cold War meant that the free-market economic doctrines of the Reagan era had won. In an early sign of that break, according to a 2017 profile in Mother Jones, Mr. Regnery ran unsuccessfully for Illinois secretary of state in 1994 on the Term Limits and Tax Limits Party ticket

Five years later, he convened a Who’s Who of white supremacists for a conference in Florida, where he delivered a speech, “For Our Children’s Children,” in which he said the only way to save America’s white identity was for it to break up into several smaller countries, one each for the country’s various ethnic groups.

His racism grew more explicit. He announced plans in 2004 to start a whites-only dating site. It never happened, but he continued to worry that white people were in danger of extinction: In 2006 he delivered a speech in Chicago in which he said, “The white race may go from master of the universe to an anthropological curiosity.”

By then he had severed most of his ties with mainstream Republicans, and they with him. T hat same year the leadership of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, which he had joined in college, removed him from its board.

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Entertainment

William Smith, Motion Star Recognized for His Onscreen Brawls, Dies at 88

William Smith, an actor known for his portrayals of villains and his onscreen movie brawls, died on Monday in Woodland Hills, Calif. He was 88.

Mr. Smith’s wife, Joanne Cervelli Smith, said he died at the Motion Picture and Television Fund’s Country House and Hospital. She did not specify the cause.

While Mr. Smith was best known for his roles in action movies like “Any Which Way You Can” (1980), and television shows including “Laredo,” “Rich Man, Poor Man” and “Hawaii Five-O,” the real action came from his offscreen life.

He was a polyglot, a bodybuilder, a champion discus thrower and an Air Force pilot during the Korean War, according to his website.

Mr. Smith had more than 300 acting credits listed on IMDb from 1954 to 2020. He did many of his own stunts, and sometimes those scenes got heated. He was throwing punches with Rod Taylor for the 1970 film “Darker Than Amber” when the two began fighting each other for real. Both walked away with broken bones.

“Now that was a good fight,” Mr. Smith recalled in a 2010 interview with BZ Film.

The Columbia, Mo., native solidified his Hollywood status after tussling onscreen with actors like Clint Eastwood, Nick Nolte and Yul Brynner. In the 1980s, the 6-foot-2 actor earned roles in Francis Ford Coppola’s “The Outsiders,” (1983) and in “Conan the Barbarian” (1982), for which he was cast as the father of Conan, who was played by Arnold Schwarzenegger.

His last role was in “Irresistible,” a 2020 film directed by Jon Stewart.

In “Rich Man, Poor Man,” he played the dangerous and eccentric character Anthony Falconetti, which he would later reprise in a follow-up to the series, “Rich Man, Poor Man Book II.”

Mr. Smith, who was born on March 24, 1933, grew up on a cattle ranch in Missouri owned by his parents, William Emmett Smith and Emily Richards Smith. At the ranch, he would develop a love and admiration for horses and the classic Western lifestyle, according to his website.

His family later moved to Southern California, and Mr. Smith immediately began to seek work in films, finding jobs as a child performer and later as a studio extra.

Ms. Smith said in a phone interview on Sunday that besides the tough guy roles that made her husband a star onscreen, he had a compassionate side as well. “He’s definitely tough as nails but he had the heart of a poet,” she said.

In 2009, Mr. Smith published a book of poetry, “The Poetic Works of William Smith.”

The place to find Mr. Smith, even as an older man, was the gym, Ms. Smith said. Young actors often would talk to him between workout sets, and he would share advice, sometimes inviting them to his home to discuss upcoming auditions.

In addition to his wife, Mr. Smith is survived by his son, William E. Smith III, and his daughter, Sherri Anne Cervelli.

Alyssa Lukpat contributed reporting.

Categories
Politics

AG William Barr says Russia behind SolarWinds hack, contradicts Trump

WASHINGTON – Outgoing Attorney General William Barr said Monday that the massive SolarWinds hack by US government agencies “certainly” appears to be Russia’s job, which President Donald Trump contradicts.

Barr identified Russia as the likely perpetrator of the cyber attack and sided with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and the rest of the National Security Institute, but contradicted the president.

Barr made the remarks during an impromptu press conference just two days before he was due to leave his job.

After several days of silence over the sweeping violation of government and private sector networks, Trump downplayed the severity of the attack in two tweets over the weekend. He suggested with no evidence that it could be China, not Russia, to blame.

“The cyber hack is far bigger in the fake news media than it is in reality,” wrote Trump. “I’ve been given full information and everything is well under control. Russia, Russia, Russia is the primary chant if something happens because Lamestream is petrified, for largely financial reasons, to discuss the possibility that it could be China (it can be !). “”

Trump also suggested without evidence that the hack could have affected the election software in the November presidential election. This was the latest in a series of increasingly far-fetched conspiracy theories put forward by the president in his refusal to accept that he lost the November 3rd election.

Pompeo’s first public comments on the attack came during a radio interview on Friday night on “The Mark Levin Show”.

“This has been a very significant effort and I think it is the case that we can now say fairly clearly that it was the Russians who took part in this activity,” said Pompeo.

Several news outlets have also reported that White House officials prepared a public statement on the cyberattacks late last week, transferring responsibility for the hack directly to Russia. But at the last minute they were forbidden from releasing it.

More than a week after the first breach was reported, both U.S. government agencies and private sector companies affected by the attack are still working to get a full picture of the extent of the breach and the potential harm to U.S. cyber infrastructure and critical ones Develop information systems.

The initial investigation revealed that the breach was malicious code hidden in a software update from widely used IT management company SolarWinds. Russia has denied any involvement in the attack.

The three lead agencies responsible for investigating the attack and protecting the nation from cyber threats – the FBI, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence – announced last week that they were one have formed joint command in response to what has been termed a “major and ongoing cybersecurity campaign” against the United States.

Trump’s refusal to acknowledge either the full extent of the attack or his likely perpetrators fits his pattern over the past four years as he downplayed Russia’s malicious actions around the world.

As part of this pattern, Trump has ignored and dismissed U.S. intelligence assessments of Russia’s guilt for several major operations, particularly the 2016 cyberattacks and disinformation campaign that harmed Trump’s then-opponent Hillary Clinton.