Upcoming Fall 2005 Trunk Shows JON BY TERRI JON VOTRE NOM June 15th - 18th, Wednesday - Saturday Meet Representative Steve Mirkin June 15th - 17th First Round Throaty Perspective all him hero, trai- tor, whistle- blower or snake, "Deep Throat" came forward last week and we can all sleep better at night. HARRY Although Mark KI RS BAUM Felt — No. 2 at the FBI in the early Columnist 1970s — led Washington Post SALLY S DESIGN BOUTIQUE 248.626.0886 inside Orchard Mall West Bloomfield LAFAYETTE 148 June 28th - July 2nd, Tuesday - Saturday Meet Representative James Goodman June 28th - 29th GREAT SELECTION of VERY COOL &P.tkD 6+FTS COAAPLIAAENTARY &IFT WRAPPING! swop swEizt#00D... ITS WOR-rW It c.. 6/ 9 2005 6 Fine Furniture • Accessories • Gifts • Complimentary Gift Wrapping 6644 Orchard Lake Road at Maple West Bloomfield • 248 855.1600 Mon & Thur 10-9 • Tue-Wed-Fri-Sat 10-6 • Sun 11-4 www.sherwoodstudiosinc.com stu di os GIFTS ALWAYS 30% OFF MOST MFRS reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein from a second-rate burgla- ry to the halls of the White House, the story of his identity captured our interest for about a week, which is called a story with legs ... these days. The story broke when Felt, now 91 and in frail health, fessed up to Vanity Fair in an upcoming inter- view. He paused briefly to wave to reporters and photographers from the doorway of his home in California last week. Although his photo made the front page of almost every newspaper in the country the next day, we'll have to wait until the issue hits the news- stands on June 14 to hear from him. But it will be old news by then. For now, we get to hear from Post reporters and editors and a slew of Watergate burglars and their bosses. Woodward, Bernstein and then- Post editor-in-chief Ben Bradlee appeared on television, rehashing Watergate and reminding people that "Deep Throat" was only one of many sources on the story. Felt gave them direction, but nothing concrete, they said. It was also refreshing to see that all the president's men in Nixon's White House hadn't lost - their edge, espe- cially Pat Buchanan and Chuck Colson. Those guys got me all misty-eyed. President Nixon's former speech- writer and senior adviser Buchanan referred to Felt as a snake of the first order on weekend television, then backed up his idea in his syndicated column on June 6. He called Woodward and Bernstein "a pair of stenographers for an FBI Harry Kirsbaum's e-mail address is hkirsbaum@thejewishnews.com. hack who was ratting out President Nixon for passing him over as direc- tor." Felt "leaked the fruits of an honest FBI investigation to the nest of Nixon-haters over on 15th Street, then lied about it for 30 years," Buchanan wrote. "Why did Felt lie? Because Felt knew he had disgraced himself and dishonored everything an FBI agent should stand for. He didn't want his old comrades to know what a snake he had been." According to Buchanan, Nixon would have won the Vietnam War, but the "Liberal Establishment" used Watergate to destroy his presidency — and they brought down Southeast Asia as a bonus. This is the same guy who won- dered last month whether World War II was worth fighting for. Chuck Colson, former Nixon hatchet man, also took to the air last week with his deep thoughts on Mark Felt. "Hero is not the word I would use," Colson said to the Fox and Friends crew. "I'll give him the bene- fit of the doubt that he was acting nobly, that he really was concerned about the welfare of the country — but he should have walked into a grand jury, he should have walked into the head of the FBI and said, `We gotta go see the president.' "I know everybody said there was a paranoid attitude in Washington in those days," he said. "That's a lot of nonsense." Wrong, John, paranoia wasn't just an attitude in Washington in those days, it was a way of life. Ask anyone on the president's enemies list. What's nonsense is what Colson said next. After watching schoolchildren being asked the night before about "Deep Throat's" role in Watergate, Colson said, "all the kids said Felt did the right thing, that it was hero- ic. "When you begin to teach young people that the ends justifies the means, we're in big trouble," said Colson, who serves as head of Prison Fellowship Ministries. "This is a mis- take I made in my life ... don't make it. Sorry, Chuck, the mistake you made doesn't equal anything Felt did. He may have ratted you out, but you broke the law. ❑