PETER'S PRINCIPLES not seeing much of either (the Kuwaiti or the Palestinian resistances). In fact, Gaza is still off- limits to western newsmen." And, he said, he had used "intifada" in its original Arabic meaning of "uprising." He had not intended it in the more discrete meaning it has acquired since 1987 to refer to the Palestinian revolt against Israeli authority. "It was," he conceded, "a dumb linguistic thing to say." But Jerusalem Post media critic David Bar-Illan pondered what Mr. Jennings could have meant "after three years of indulgent, intensive coverage of the intifada on televi- sion." And by apparently equating these two "resistances," said CAMERA's Andrea Levin, Mr. Jennings was fostering the very "linkage" bet- ween the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and Iraq's invasion of Kuwait that Saddam Hussein was trying to fi- nesse. Also criticized were the anchor's remarks on Jan. 17, the night the first Iraqi Scud slammed into Tel Aviv. After Israeli Ambassador Zalman Shoval stated that Israel had shelved a preemptive strike against Iraq at the United States' request, Mr. Jennings commented that he had "laid a pretty heavy trip on the United States." "An inappropriate remark at the time," Mr. Jennings recently ad- mitted. The anchor was also scrutinized for a question he had posed earlier that night to ABC correspondent Cokie Roberts as she stood outside the Capitol: "It is interesting, isn't it, that there is just that much more sym- pathy for Israel on Capitol Hill, and in the country at large, than there is for the two nations, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, for which this coalition has gone to war." To pro-Israel viewers, Mr. Jenn- ings seemed to be questioning the basis of America's deep-seated sym- pathy for the Jewish state. But Mr. Jennings and Ms. Roberts both recalled the episode in a diff- erent light. "It's just a simple question about political sympathy in the United States," said the anchor in disbelief that anyone could attribute a diff- erent intention into his query to Ms. Roberts. And the Washington correspon- dent remembered, "I was thinking, `This is a man who has been on the air for 26 hours and he's doing a 42 FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1991 At the National Press Club last December: Calling the Kuwaiti and Palestinian resistances an "intifada" was a "dumb linguistic thing." masterful job.' I thought he was ask- ing about Israel's influence in Con- gress. I tried to broaden my answer to say that there were some other groups in the country, such as fun- damentalist Christians, that were as adamant in their support of Israel. I said, 'Everybody's sitting down and reading the same Bible. "This was not a hard-driving an- chor-to-reporter discussion," she said. "It was a searching conversa- tion. It's such a mistake to parse something like this. When you're on the air, and you're as tired as we were, you don't think through every nuance. What tends to happen is that people who are passionate about an issue see everything as much more meaningful than it all really seems." his politics may be — and despite the temptation to espouse them in what could easily be the nightly "bully pulpit" 9f evening news — he sets them aside in the service of his craft. "Each of us in this business have biases," he said. "After all, what is a man without a bias? He's a non- thinking person." "But you can look at a good news organization and understand that the people there control their biases." The newsman alluded to this same issue two years ago in an address at the Episcopal cathedral in Baltimore. Of a Christian's duty to be engaged in the world, he said, "It's that engagement as much as anything which I'm passionate about. I try very hard in my daily job not to be judgmental. If I must tell you, the urge is sometimes power- Prisms of Truths ful." Powerful, maybe, but retorts Wall ltimately, the Jennings Street Journal columnist Dorothy Dilemma boils down to two Rabinowitz, sometimes not sup- questions: Does — or doesn't pressed. The long, tiring hours of the he? Gulf war coverage — coverage, she Does he personally side with said, in which the anchor's on- Arabs against Israel? And, perhaps camera defenses slipped ever so even more importantly, does this af- slightly — revealed him for what he fect what he does on-camera? was. One handicap in settling the first Yet, Baltimore Sun TV critic question is that the anchor balks at David Zurawik attributes claims discussing his politics: "My au- that Mr. Jennings is pro-Arab to the dience relies on me to convey other elusive psychology of the medium in people's opinions. I have strong which he works. views on everything. I just don't talk "Sometimes we just don't perceive about them." how TV affects us," he said. "Some But he does insist that whatever viewers may visually associate Jen- nings with the Arab world because of all the time he spent there." The truth may lie somewhere bet- ween the TV screen and the viewer at home, who filters everything Mr. Jennings (and every other newscaster) says through his or her own private — and, inevitable — biases and apprehensions. (As if to confirm viewers' highly personal perception of TV news, a "When you're on the air," said Cokie Roberts, "and you're as tired as we were, you don't think through every nuance." . questioner during a 1982 broadcast of "Viewpoint," an ABC program that featured correspondents being confronted by aggrieved news sub- jects, complained that the network was pro-Palestinian. The next per- son complained it was anti- Palestinian. Mr. Jennings suggested on the show that this reflected not biased reporting, but selective listening.) At this point in his career, there is probably little that the ABC anchor can do to reverse the perception that — psychologically, at least — he is allied with the Arab cause. The charges against him almost have a life of their own now, a self- perpetuating quality of which the