From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
Stanley Bruce Herschensohn |
| Born |
September 10, 1932(1932-09-10)
Milwaukee, Wisconsin |
| Residence |
Washington, D.C. |
| Nationality |
United States |
| Spouse(s) |
Bunny Domenic, March 8, 1963 |
| Parents |
Herbert Lawrence Herschensohn
Ida Esther (Erlichman) Herschensohn |
|
|
Stanley Bruce Herschensohn (born September 10,
1932) is an American political commentator and senior fellow at the Pepperdine School of Public
Policy near Malibu, California.
Previously, Herschensohn has been a Distinguished Fellow at the
Claremont Institute and a fellow at
the Institute of Politics at
Harvard's John F. Kennedy School
of Government in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Political
campaigns
1986 U.S. Senate primary
election
In 1986, Herschensohn unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination for the United
States Senate held by the liberal Democrat Alan Cranston. He
did well in the San Fernando Valley[2] but
finished second to U.S.
Representative Ed
Zschau of the Silicon Valley, who won the nomination
by plurality.
In the general election, Cranston defeated
Zschau to secure his fourth and final Senate term. Zschau,
considered a moderate to liberal Republican later left the GOP and became an independent.
1992 U.S. Senate primary
election
In 1992, when Cranston retired, Herschensohn won the Republican
nomination narrowly defeating U.S. Representative Tom Campbell, a
libertarian Republican who had been on the faculty of Stanford
University. Herschensohn received 956,136 votes (38.2 percent)
to Campbell's 895,970 (35.8 percent). The remaining 417,848 ballots
(16.7 percent) went to Mayor Sonny Bono of Palm Springs. During the primary
campaign and afterwards, Herschensohn became a close friend of Bono
and encouraged his former rival to seek election to the United States House
of Representatives in 1994. Bono was part of the freshman
class in 1995 which brought a Republican majority to the U.S.
House for the first time in forty years.
1992 U.S. Senate general
election
Herschensohn, a Los Angeles area television commentator, lost the 1992
general election, to liberal Democrat then U.S. Representative
Barbara Boxer
after a last-minute revelation that Herschensohn had attended a
strip club..[3]
Four days before the election polls showed Herschensohn closing
the gap and only one point behind. Political
operative Bob
Mulholland disrupted a campaign appearance with a large poster
advertising a strip
club shouting "Should the voters of California elect someone
who frequently travels the strip joints of Hollywood?" Herschensohn
admitted he had visited a strip club once, with his girlfriend and
another couple. But press coverage of his
"frequenting" such establishment required him to spend the waning
days of the campaign denying related allegations. Barbara Boxer won
the election by five points. (Mrs. Boxer subsequently denounced
Mulholland, and then party chairman Phil Angelides suspended him from his employment as political
director of the California Democratic
Party. The party reinstated him weeks later.)[4][5][6]
Career
- RKO Pictures,
Los Angeles, CA
- studio messenger, 1950-51
- in art department, 1953-55
- General Dynamics
Corp., Convair Division,
San Diego, CA, film maker and director,
1955-56
- self-employed film director, producer, and writer in Los
Angeles, CA, 1956-68
- U.S.
Information Agency, Washington, DC, director of Motion Picture
and Television Service, 1968-72
- White House, Washington,
D.C.
- staff assistant to president, 1972-73
- deputy special assistant, 1973-74
- self-employed film director, producer, and
writer, 1975-76
- free-lance writer, 1976--
- Teacher in "U.S. Image Abroad" program of University of Maryland, 1972
- lecturer at universities and institutes of learning
- Member of board of trustees of American Film Institute,
1967--
- U.S. delegation to International Film Festival
- Member of board of governors of Charles Edison Memorial Youth
Foundation
- consultant to 1972 Republican
National Convention
- commentator for Los Angeles television station KABC-TV in the 1980s
Authorship
Herschensohn has written a number of books on foreign policy,
his most recent being Taiwan: The Threatened
Democracy.
- The Gods of Antenna, Arlington House, 1976.
- Hong Kong at the Handover (Editor), Lexington Books, Lanham, Maryland,
1999.
- Across the Taiwan Strait: Democracy: The Bridge Between
Mainland China and Taiwan (Editor), Lexington Books,
2002.
- Herschensohn, Bruce (2008). Above Empyrean : a novel of the final days
of the war on Islamic terrorism (1st ed.). New York: Beaufort Books. ISBN
9780825305160. http://lccn.loc.gov/2008015698. Retrieved
2008-12-07.
- Herschensohn, Bruce (2006). Taiwan : the threatened democracy.
Los Angeles, CA: World Ahead Pub. ISBN
9780977898428. http://lccn.loc.gov/2006933774. Retrieved
2008-12-07.
- Herschensohn, Bruce (2003). Passport:
A Novel of The Cold War (1st ed.). New York: I Books. ISBN
9780743479844.
- Author of films
- "Tall Man Five-Five", (Strategic Air Command)
- "Karma", International Communications Foundation
- "The President", U.S. Information Agency
- "Bridges of the Barrios", U.S. Information Agency
- "The Five Cities of June", U.S. Information Agency
- "John F. Kennedy: Years of Lightning, Days of Drums", U.S.
Information Agency
- "Eulogy to 5:02", U.S. Information Agency
- Contributor of stories to, among others
Awards
References
- ^
Contemporary Authors Online, Gale, 2008. Reproduced in Biography
Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Gale, 2008. http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/BioRC
Document Number: H1000044950. Retrieved 7 December 2008. Fee.
Source: Contemporary Authors Online, Gale, 2002. Entry
Updated : 10/17/2001.
- ^
Simon, Richard (Jun 5, 1986). "Valley Candidates Took a
Drubbing at Home in GOP Senate Voting" (Fee). Los Angeles
Times Archives -Metro; 2; Zones Desk (Valley Edition):
p. 8. http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/latimes/access/58614265.html?dids=58614265:58614265&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&date=Jun+05%2C+1986&author=RICHARD+SIMON&pub=Los+Angeles+Times+(pre-1997+Fulltext)&desc=Valley+Candidates+Took+a+Drubbing+at+Home+in+GOP+Senate+Voting&pqatl=google. Retrieved
2008-12-11.
- ^
Eu, March Fong (December 12, 1992). "Statement of Vote General
Election November 3, 1992" (PDF). p. 14 (24 in PDF). http://www.sos.ca.gov/elections/sov/1992_general/statement_of_vote_general_1992.pdf. Retrieved
2008-12-11.
- ^ Steinberg, Arnold (2000-11-17). "Beware the Trickster: Bob
Mulholland oversees the recounting of the ballots in Florida".
National
Review. http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/comment111700g.shtml. Retrieved 2008-12-07. "That
vintage Mulholland maneuver made it all but impossible for
Herschensohn to stay on-message during the campaign's crucial
closing days."
Steinberg is a
Republican political strategist in Sherman Oaks.
- ^ Fund,
John (December 5, 2005). "Arnold's 'Harriet Miers
Moment' - Has Gov. Schwarzenegger jumped the shark?". John
Fund on the Trail - WSJ.com (Wall Street
Journal). http://www.opinionjournal.com/diary/?id=110007637. Retrieved
2008-12-07.
- ^ Salladay, Robert (December 7, 2005). "Governor Faces Revolt in
GOP". Los Angeles Times:
p. A-1. http://articles.latimes.com/2005/dec/07/local/me-arnold7. Retrieved 2008-12-09. "Bob
Mulholland, publicly accused Republican U.S. Senate candidate Bruce
Herschensohn of visiting a Sunset Boulevard strip club.
Herschensohn had been running as the traditional-values
candidate.
Amid the controversy, Herschensohn lost the Senate race to Democrat
Barbara Boxer, and the GOP was outraged at what it called a “smear
campaign.” Kennedy suspended Mulholland, but he soon returned to
the party."
External
links
| Persondata |
| NAME |
Herschensohn, Bruce S. |
| ALTERNATIVE
NAMES |
|
| SHORT
DESCRIPTION |
American television personality |
| DATE OF BIRTH |
|
| PLACE OF
BIRTH |
|
| DATE OF DEATH |
|
| PLACE OF
DEATH |
|