Rowland Evans

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Rowland Evans (April 28, 1921 - March 23, 2001) was an American journalist known best for his decades-long syndicated column and television partnership with Robert Novak, a partnership that endured, if only by way of a joint subscription newsletter, until Evans's death.

He attended Yale University briefly, but left to join the U.S. Marines and saw action in the Solomon Islands during World War II. Evans began his journalism career with the Philadelphia Bulletin, before he joined the New York Herald-Tribune and working his way up to becoming the paper's Congressional correspondent.

It was in that role that he met his lifelong partner, the Capitol Hill correspondent for The Wall Street Journal. When Evans was offered a syndicated column, he invited Novak to team with him, and "Inside Report" became noteworthy among syndicated political columns for being what the trade called "dope pieces" almost exclusively: inside reporting more than intellectual exercising or polemicising, even though the team's conservative inclination gradually became evident.

By 1980, Evans & Novak were among the most widely syndicated columns in the United States as well as frequent guests on news-oriented radio and television talk programs. The team was among the first to join the fledgling CNN, with Evans & Novak becoming one of the cable network's best-watched discussion programs. In addition, Evans---on his own and with his writing partner---contributed essays to such magazines as Harper's, The Saturday Evening Post, The New Republic, The Atlantic, and others, not to mention joining his partner as a Reader's Digest contributing editor.

The team also co-wrote several books, including Lyndon B. Johnson: The Exercise of Power (1966); Nixon in the White House: The Frustration of Power (1971); and The Reagan Revolution (1981). They were featured prominently in The Boys on the Bus, Timothy Crouse's memorable best-seller about the workings of the Washington press corps during the 1972 presidential campaigns.

Evans retired from the Evans & Novak syndicated column in 1993, but he remained Novak's partner on television and in publishing a bi-weekly newsletter, The Evans & Novak Political Report. He was diagnosed with cancer in 2000 and died a month shy of his 80th birthday.

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