Monday, 12 March 2012

AP mistakes impersonator for Christopher Walken

WASHINGTON (AP) — An Associated Press reporter mistook an impersonator of actor Christopher Walken on a sports-talk radio program Friday for Walken himself, leading the news cooperative to include comments mistakenly attributed to the actor in its coverage of the Natalie Wood death investigation.

The AP corrected the story about an hour later and told its members not to use the incorrect information.

The radio station, Washington, D.C.-based ESPN 980, informed the AP that the Walken impersonator appears weekly to discuss sports-related topics for a humorous segment. Walken has a distinctive, staccato style of speaking.

Walken was sharing a yacht with Wood and her husband, actor Robert Wagner, when the actress drowned on Nov. 29, 1981. The death was ruled an accident. But this week, authorities in Los Angeles reopened their investigation into Wood's death based on new information but said that Wagner is not a suspect.

The Walken impersonator, Marc Sterne, appeared Friday afternoon on "The Sports Fix," an afternoon talk show hosted by Kevin Sheehan and Thom Loverro.

Chuck Sapienza, ESPN 980's program director, told the AP on Friday evening that Sterne has made regular Friday appearances impersonating Walken during the past few football seasons. While playing Walken, Sterne gives fantasy football advice and sometimes discusses other topics.

"It's not set up as real. It's not like we're trying to fool anybody," Sapienza said. "We say it's the person on the air but we never believe that someone actually thinks the person's actually there."

After the story was published, an AP reporter phoned the station and left a message. A station employee called back to say a Walken impersonator, not the actor, had been on the air.

ESPN 980 is owned by Washington Redskins owner Daniel Snyder.

During Friday's appearance, Sheehan asked Sterne about the Wood case. Sterne, impersonating Walken, remarked: "We had a lot to drink that night. There was Sambuca. There was shouting. And then there was tragedy. And that's all I can remember."

The Walken impersonator added that he went to bed after reading "one of the Hardy Boys novels" and awoke to learn that Wood was dead.

The AP incorporated those comments into its story Friday afternoon, attributing them to Walken.

"It was a mistake," AP spokesman Jack Stokes said in a statement.

US, Cuba to hold immigration talks next week

The United States and Cuba have agreed to hold immigration talks in Washington within days, a U.S. official said Saturday, the first since a similar meeting in Havana in February.

The talks scheduled for Friday are intended to monitor adherence to a 16-year-old agreement under which the United States issues 20,000 visas to Cubans a year, though in the past the sides have used the meeting to delve into more contentious issues.

In the last round of talks, U.S. diplomats pressed Cuba to release Alan Gross, a jailed American contractor that Cuba has accused of spying. Gross has been jailed for more than 6 months without charge.

The American delegation also met with dissidents in Havana, raising the ire of Cuban officials.

The latest round of talks will take place at an as-yet undetermined location in Washington, Gloria Berbena, a spokeswoman for the U.S Interests Section in Havana, told The Associated Press. The U.S. maintains the Interests Section instead of an embassy.

After a brief period of hope that U.S. President Barack Obama would usher in a new era of rapprochement with America's longtime Caribbean foe, relations between the United States and Cuba have been on a downward trajectory for some months.

Fidel Castro, once a grudging admirer of the president, has been harshly critical lately of everything from Obama's work at global climate change talks, to America's backing of Israel, to the use of American soldiers as part of relief efforts in quake-ravaged Haiti.

Cuba was particularly angry when Washington included the island on a list of state sponsors of terrorism back in December.

For its part, U.S. officials have made clear that there is little hope for improved relations while Cuba holds Gross. They have also continued to call on Fidel and his brother, President Raul Castro, to open up the island's political system to democratic reform. Cuba insists that the U.S. drop its 48-year trade embargo and stop meddling in the island's internal affairs.

Despite the lukewarm relations, there have been far more contacts between U.S. and Cuban officials than in years past. The State Department confirmed bilateral talks a few weeks ago on how to respond to the Gulf oil spill, which could threaten Cuban shores. And American and Cuban officials have met to discuss ways to coordinate aid to Haiti.

Patrick Sticks With IRL, Joins Andretti

CHICAGO - Danica Patrick's "heart and soul" are with the Indy Racing League, so that's where she'll stay - for now. A new career in NASCAR will have to wait.

Though she isn't ready to give up the speed of open-wheel racers for the popularity of stock cars, Patrick is switching teams. One of the IRL's most popular drivers in years signed Tuesday with Andretti Green Racing, which has produced two straight series champions and last year's Indy 500 winner.

Her current contract with Rahal Letterman Racing expires at the end of the season, and she had toyed with the idea of joining NASCAR - a possibility she left open for the future.

"NASCAR is not out for good," she said. "It's out for right now."

Patrick said she was just exploring every option and was always leaning toward staying in the IndyCar series. She will start driving for the team led by Michael Andretti in 2007.

"My heart and soul is in IndyCar racing," Patrick said at a news conference.

Patrick burst on the scene in 2005 when she nearly won the pole at the Indianapolis 500 as a rookie, then went on to become the first woman to lead laps at the Brickyard and finished fourth. She was also named IndyCar rookie of the year.

"She has made it very clear that one of her goals as a driver is to win the Indianapolis 500," Andretti said, "and we are looking forward to giving her a great opportunity to do that."

Patrick is the third driver under contract to Andretti Green racing for 2007, joining Tony Kanaan and 19-year-old Marco Andretti, Michael Andretti's son and the sport's other budding young star.

"Danica has shown great talent during her first two seasons in the IndyCar Series," Michael Andretti said in a statement. "Our focus has been and always will be on winning races and winning championships. We certainly believe Danica will do that."

Patrick has finished fourth in back-to-back races and is currently ninth in the IndyCar standings, but her Rahal team had problems this season before switching to a more competitive chassis.

"I've had a very good run, a very good relationship with Rahal Letterman and Bobby Rahal," Patrick said. "He helped me when no one else stepped up. And I will be forever grateful for that.

"But at some point in time, there's just time for a change, time for something new. I feel Andretti Green is going to give me the opportunity to win races, and while Rahal Letterman still can, too, I have to go with what I think is best for my future. I feel like that's the place."

Patrick and AGR officials did not release the length or terms of the deal.

Brent Maurer, Rahal Letterman's director of public relations, said: "She told us she's leaving and we wish her well in her future endeavors."

Patrick's father, T.J., caused a stir earlier this month when he showed up at a Nextel Cup race at Chicagoland Speedway and told a Chicago Tribune reporter that Patrick was interested in switching to NASCAR.

But for now, the IRL is keeping one of its most popular drivers.

"She's been an important part of our growth and general awareness," IRL president Brian Barnhart said. "We're excited that's going to continue in the future."

Patrick's year got off to an awful start, as teammate Paul Dana died in a warmup session for the season-opening race at Homestead-Miami Speedway. IRL ran the race, but the Rahal-Letterman team withdrew.

It didn't get much better after that, as the Rahal-Letterman cars weren't able to keep pace with the dominant Penske and Ganassi teams. Through the first eight races, her best finish was sixth.

But the team began to turn things around after switching from the Panoz chassis to the more competitive Dallara. After the Milwaukee race on Sunday, she credited her team for working hard to make the midseason switch.

"We've struggled a bit with the transition of cars, but we're getting the hang of it," Patrick said. "It's just time for a change."

Andretti Green also has had a hard time keeping up with Penske and Ganassi this year. When AGR driver Tony Kanaan won at Milwaukee on Sunday, it was the first non-Penske or Ganassi car to win this year.

The Andretti father-and-son combo had a surprising run at Indy, with Michael leading the race late and Marco nearly winning it before Penske's Sam Hornish passed him in the final stretch.

But they younger Andretti's second-place finish established him as the series' next popular, up-and-coming driver. Now he and Patrick will race not as rivals, but as teammates.

"Obviously, I've been frustrated over the past year, but I promise you even Andretti Green has been frustrated," Patrick said. "Everybody at some point in time has been. I'm excited to go to a team that has a lot of drivers I can learn from and knows how to win. They've been doing a lot of that."

---

AP Sports Writer Chris Jenkins in Milwaukee contributed to this report.

WAY OUT THERE

Timothy Egan, The New York Times's eye on the West

Timothy Egan is happy to admit that he and a myriad of other marquee-name thinkers about the West were wrong about their home turf. That lack of hubris may be one of the reasons that Egan is still one of the more compelling members of the mainstream media writing about the West.

Egan, for years a Seattle-based national enterprise reporter for The New York Times, came to Boise this week to address the City Club of Boise and to sign copies of his 2006 book, The Worst Hard Time, a National Book Awardwinning recounting of the Dust Bowl era. Egan began his career with the Times as a correspondent covering the Exxon Valdez oil spill in 1989. He's been with the paper ever since, covering Western issues from his home in Seattle, but also in travel throughout the West. In recent years, he began writing books of essays about his home country, including 1991's The Good Rain about the Pacific Northwest, and 1999's Lasso The Wind.

These days, Egan is back in the pages of the Times, writing an online opinion column, "Outposts," that allows him to roam from pillar to post around the country, with a predictable emphasis on Western issues. He's also used the column to reach back to Pulitzer Prize-winning work he did for the Times about race in politics-writing that has become prescient in this year of Barack Obama's candidacy.

His talk at the City Club was titled "Enough of the New West: Bring On The New, New West."

The title of the speech, Egan said in an interview, was intended to "have some fun with my preconceptions," to note "how I've been wrong, and how others have been wrong."

Egan said he was just as wrong as anyone in the early 1990s who thought that a new sort of Western politics would emerge in the interior West. At least wrong on timing. Egan recalled speaking with former Arizona governor and Interior secretary Bruce Babbit, who predicted then that Democrats would control Western states because, he said, "environmentalist!! was ascendant."

Then came 1994's midterm elections, which Democrats have been trying to forget.

"The'y got clobbered," Egan said. The "Republican Revolution" of that year toppled many a Western Democrat's dreams. Western states seemed red to the core. GOP candidates ran on basic Republican issues: guns, god and gays.

Well, that was then, Egan said. Looking across the Western political landscape, Egan sees several Democratic governors in the West, recent turnovers of long-held Republican congressional posts and other advances from the party of the donkey.

."I think what Babbitt thought about the New West in the 1990s is sort of happening," Egan said. New Democratic politicians like Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer "take the gun issue off the table. They take the culture issue off the table," Egan said.

"We always thought, 'This is how the Republicans will win the West: on gays, guns and god,'" Egan said. "Schweitzer was the first to say, 'Wait a minute.'"

Egan himself was brought up short on the question of race in Western politics. In 2000, he was part of a Pulitzer Prize-winning team of reporters for a Times series called "How Race Is Lived in America." In an article about former Washington State Gov. Gary Locke, who is Asian, and King County executive Ron Sims, who is black, Egan described many of the pitfalls and challenges that are now being faced by Barack Obama.

Sims struggled every day, Egan reported, with the dilemma of trying to succeed not just as an elected official, but also as a black man in a largely white state.

"The way to succeed is to be seen but not seen," Egan wrote then. "Flesh without color. What people want to hear from the second-highestranking elected official in the state are his views on property taxes, traffic, growth."

Sims told Egan that he leads a "dual life" between Ron Sims, the person, and Ron Sims, the public official.

"In the new century, in the New West, the expressed hope is that politics has shed its color barriers, and even its color consciousness," Egan wrote then.

Egan reconnected with Sims to talk about his cautions for Obama.

"He's got to stay away from race," Sims said, in an article that ran on The New York Times Web site in mid-January. "Race remains the one thing a black cannot talk about openly in a political campaign in this country."

So much for that.

Obama's recent speech on race, in the wake of the imbroglio over his controversial pastor Jeffrey Wright, seemed to go directly where Sims cautioned not to.

"All of the things he said you couldn't do, Obama is doing," Egan said in a recent interview on NYTimes.com.

The Web, Egan said, has been a boon to his work. Whether he's posting his "Outpost" columns or subbing in for other op-ed columnists from time to time, Egan said he's found the Web to be "the most valuable piece of journalistic real estate in the world."

"You get these fantastic responses from people," he said.

The "Outposts" online column, Egan said, is quick satisfaction. He was brought on to bring a Western perspective to the election news cycle. And in so doing, he may be one of the luckiest journalists working today.

"You get an amazing amount of freedom," Egan said. "After a while, the topics just start to pop up." Offl

To listen to Egan's speech, check Boise State Radio listings for a broadcast at Radio.BoiseState.edu.

Phil Collins acts shady in Bristol

The Latimer Towers music collection, it must be admitted, tends tobe dominated by regimental bands and Vera Lynn's wartime recordings -although Mrs L is into folkie types - and, for some reason,recordings of Latvian dance tunes.

The younger Latimers - Lancelot and Leaticia - seem to preferemaciated young men in black who scream about how lonely they are, orobese American rappers with odd-sounding names like Daddy Piddly.

But even they were excited to discover that Phil Collins wasgetting involved in a music project in the city. Of course, it turnsout to be a completely different Phil Collins - not the Genesis frontman and drummer at all, but an internationally-acclaimed contemporaryartist, who just happens to share the same name.

This Phil Collins is setting up a video production company inBristol called Shady Lane Promotions, which will create promotionalvideos for local unsigned acts. It's a major new art projectcommissioned by Bristol Legible City for Thinking Of The Outside.

Working with a film crew, choreographers and stylists, Shady LanePromotions will select three acts from a city-wide campaign andcreate videos for them in various locations.

Acts of all ages and musical styles are invited to submit a CD -or cassette - with a note describing who they are and where they'regoing. A photo is essential. These should be sent to: Shady LanePromotions, 4th Floor, Bush House, 72 Prince Street, Bristol, BS14HN. The company says: "By accepting Shady Lane's final decision, allthree selected acts must agree to the wildest fantasies of our pop-svengali."

Collins, a Paul Hamlyn Award-winning artist, is best known for hisstriking, intimate, often controversial portraits, but he oftencommunicates through forms of popular and youth culture such as danceand pop music.

His work, according to reviews, "combines an infectious humour andenergy that creates an immediate connection with the viewer andparticipant".

Recent projects have included They Shoot Horses, a real-time videoof a disco-dance marathon in Ramallah, and The World Won't Listen,the re-recording of a Smiths album made in Bogota in Colombia withlocal musicians to produce a karaoke machine for fans.

Racism conference connects oppressed people [World Conference on Racism]

Media coverage of the recent United Nations Conference on Racism in Durban, South Africa, left the impression that little was accomplished due to disagreements over Israeli-Palestinian relations and reparations for slavery. Three Mennonite Central Committee U.S. staff who attended the event tell a different story.

"The conference was an incredible opportunity to learn and make connections," said Iris de Leon-Hartshorn, director of MCC U.S. Peace and Justice Ministries. "Oppressed people from all over the world were there, and they were meeting each other and finally speaking for themselves."

A forum for non-governmental organizations took place before the official August 31 to September 7 conference. The MCC staff participated in discussions on indigenous peoples, Africans and African descendents, women, immigrants and religions. They heard the stories of Dalits, India's "untouchables," and Roma (gypsies) from Europe.

Attended by representatives from over 130 countries, the pre-conference event compiled a document for government delegates at the UN conference. Michelle Armster, director of Mennonite Conciliation Services in the U.S., and Conrad Moore, co-director of the Damascus Road anti-racism program, were part of discussions on reparations for slavery.

"Most people picture reparations as African-Americans getting a cheque in the mail to make up for 400 years of slavery," Moore said. But discussions at the conference also focused on debt relief for struggling African nations and the recognition of slavery as a "crime against humanity."

Armster got a unique perspective on anti-Zionism protests during a discussion with a Hasidic Jewish rabbi.

"He and two other rabbis were there protesting Israeli policies," Armster said. "His family had lived for centuries in what is now Israel and had always maintained good relationships with their Arab neighbours."

On a panel, De Leon-Hartshorn gave an overview of racism in the Mennonite church and steps being taken to address it. Many who knew of MCC's work were surprised to meet African-American and Hispanic Mennonites.

"They would ask us, 'So, are you really Mennonite?'" Armster remembered. After the conference, the three visited MCC projects in South Africa and Zambia. In Zambia, they shared anti-racism analysis with students.

"They said they finally had a language to put to their experiences," Armster said. Moore added that the students helped him understand the Rwandan genocide of the 1990s by applying the Damascus Road analysis to conflict between Hutus and Tutsis.

"I returned with a real hunger to educate my community--people of colour in America, especially African descendants--about what people are facing all around the world," Moore said. "We are all connected, and we are not in our struggle alone."

How the major stock indexes fared Wednesday

Widespread gains in commodity prices lifted energy and materials companies as part of a broad stock market rally Wednesday after three days of declines. Stocks built on morning gains after the Federal Reserve released minutes that showed that officials agreed that the economy is improving, which could lead to higher demand for raw materials like steel and fertilizer.

The Dow Jones industrial average added 80.60 points, or 0.6 percent, to close at 12,560.18.

The S&P index rose 11.70, or 0.9 percent, to 1,340.68.

The Nasdaq composite gained 31.79, or 1.1 percent, to 2,815.

For the week:

The Dow is down 35.57, or 0.3 percent.

The S&P is up 2.9, or 0.2 percent.

The Nasdaq is down 13.47, or 0.5 percent.

For the year to date:

The Dow is up 982.67, or 8.5 percent.

The S&P is up 83.04, or 6.6 percent.

The Nasdaq is up 162.13, or 6.1 percent.