NEIL RUBIN Senior Editor, Jewish News Group olfmaaaan! How you doin'?" screams the larg- er-than-life face of Democratic . spinmeister James Carville as it fills the TV screen in the Cable News Network's Washington, D.C., studio. Carville is speaking, of course, to Wolf Blitzer, host of CNN's Sunday talk show Late Edition. Blitzer barely holds back a grin as he offers "my warmest" to the Carville family. A half-hour earlier, he'd wished Finnish President Martti Ahtisaari "good luck" in his visit to Belgrade, on the eve of the politi- cian's peace-seeking journey that would help end the Kosovo war. He ended another broadcast with "Happy Father's Day to all you fathers out there, and especially to my dad in Florida." The greetings are a typical part of the "nice guy of the news" demeanor that has accompanied Blitzer — raised in a traditional Jewish home in Buffalo, N.Y., the son of Polish Holocaust survivors and a for- mer Camp Ramah participant — to the top of his profession. Even casual viewers of the television news world know his name. Recognition of it soared eight years ago, like a ris- ing SCUD missile that refused to land, from Blitzer's seemingly omnipresent live Pentagon broadcasts dur- ing the Gulf War. When you are in the right place at the right time and you do something about it, and you do it right, you get lucky," he says during an interview in the nation's capital. "I worked hard, and obviously it was harder for me because I was not used to television. But fortunately TV is not brain surgery, and CNN gave me good producers and people." After the Gulf War, Blitzer covered the 1992 presi- dential campaign trail. Since then, he's served as senior White House correspondent and taken special assignments. He just left his White House post to prepare for his new job as anchor of the network's revamped World Today broadcast, which will air week- days at 8 p.m. In addition, he'll continue to serve as host of Late Edition, which airs noon Sundays. Along the way, he's been there live as the commu- nist flag came down at the Kremlin, when then- Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton celebrated a presidential victory, and when Ehud Barak reveled in becoming Israel's prime minister-elect. And he's traded the belligerent, in-your-face style of some colleagues for an even-toned, straightforward demeanor when reporting and interviewing. That has earned Blitzer professional respect and helped his reams win an Emmy, a Golden CableACE award and a "Best In The Business Award" from American Journalism Review. In addition, a comic sort of celebrity has arisen. It comes from the unusual name — it's real — and, of all things, the bright white beard. A Saturday Night Live skit focused on Blitzer having "the best name of the Gulf War." The popular Capitol Steps improvisation group performed a song about him. Television talk show host . David Letterman featured the facial hair in a top 10 list. For his part, Blitzer seems to enjoy the attention while not being consumed by it. About Saturday Night Live, he says, "That was cool. It was really fun for my daughter and my colleagues who could have a good laugh at me." This interviewer catches up with Wolf Blitzer just as he finishes the live broadcast of Late Edition, the 90-minute, behind-the-headlines pro- gram that's become regular viewing for Sunday morn- ing talk show fans. His day begins, as it does every Sunday, with a 6:30 a.m. perusal of the New York Times and Washington Post, Two hours later, Blitzer arrives at CNN's office in Washington. Today, off-camera preparation with producers and assistants includes writing and rewriting the script, figuring out Finland's time zone and confirming the number of dead at Arlington National Cemetery. Finally, at 11:55 a.m., comes the order. "Let's get him in the studio," senior executive producer Lucy Spiegel tells her colleagues. So Blitzer dons his jacket and makes the brisk walk around the corner and down the hallway. After a last moment check from the Atlanta director, Blitzer sips from his Late Edition coffee mug and gives a final shuffle to index cards. For the next 90 minutes, he and guest newsmakers primarily focus on the Kosovo crisis. When it's over, a relaxed, engaging and now make- up-free Blitzer appears in the nearby conference room to discuss his career and his private life. Blitzer's obsession with national and world affairs began in the summer of 1968, which he spent at Hebrew University in Jerusalem. (His first trip to the Jewish state was in 1961 when he became a bar mitzva.) After graduation from State University of New York at Buffalo came a master's degree in international relations from the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies. Blitzer then returned to Israel for a two-year reporting stint with the Reuters News Agency. "I wasn't sure I wanted to be a journalist," he says, " but they had some really great people who taught me the trade. "