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Russ Mitchell Named Sunday Anchor

First African American Since Carole Simpson

Russ Mitchell has been named anchor of the Sunday edition of the “CBS Evening News” effective immediately, Sean McManus, president of CBS News and Sports, announced today.

The appointment makes Mitchell, 46, the first African American anchor of one of the broadcast networks’ prime-time news programs since ABC forced Carole Simpson out of the weekend anchor spot in 2003. Simpson has since retired.

A news release said Mitchell will retain his duties as co-anchor of the “Saturday Early Show” with Tracy Smith and as one of the rotating anchors of the Saturday edition of the “CBS Evening News,” along with Thalia Assuras and Mika Brzezinski. He also is a correspondent on “CBS News Sunday Morning,” and substitutes as anchor on the weekday “CBS Evening News With Bob Schieffer” and the weekday “Early Show.”

“Russ is one of our most versatile anchors,” said McManus in the statement. “He has more than earned this position, and I’m pleased to further raise Russ’ profile at CBS News.”

In 2003, Mitchell had finished co-anchoring the “Saturday Early Show” when he got word shortly after 9 a.m. that Mission Control had lost contact with the space shuttle Columbia, and was told to get back in the chair. He stayed until 4 p.m., joined about 10:20 a.m. by Dan Rather, Mitchell thus became the only black journalist anchoring television network coverage of the disaster, which killed all seven aboard.

He told Journal-isms then that his major influences in covering breaking news were Rather and Bryant Gumbel. He has also covered such breaking stories as the Elian Gonzalez affair, the impeachment hearings for former president Bill Clinton and the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

The St. Louis native is a a past co-host of the convention awards program of the National Association of Black Journalists and has spoken at the organization’s regional conferences.

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Editor Fired; Was It Because She Smoked Dope?

The editor of the Wotanin Wowapi, the tribally owned newspaper on the Fort Peck Indian Reservation in Montana, was fired last week. The editor, Bonnie Red Elk (Dakota/Lakota), said it was because the tribal chairman, Joseph Morales, believes she “has written some articles that he doesn’t agree with.”

Morales counters that Red Elk tested positive for marijuana use and the tribal council imposed a “zero tolerance” policy. Tribal members had wrecked cars after driving them while high or intoxicated.

The Native American Journalists Association is framing the firing as a free-press issue. A statement Thursday “encourages officials on Fort Peck to resolve the issue in a way that protects the freedom of the press and preserves the integrity of the Wotanin Wowapi, which is among the most respected newspapers in Indian Country.”

“I disagree with them 100 percent,” Morales told Journal-isms today. “This is not personal against Bonnie. Indian Country needs to know.” He described his philosophy as “Tell the facts and tell the truth.” The free-press issue “has nothing to do with it,” he said.

Red Elk, 53, acknowledges testing positive for marijuana and said she “was fired for six months.” The tribal council asked her to reapply for her job and hired her back. A month later, Morales became head of the tribal board. “The drug testing statements are his smoke screen. He violated the Tribes’ Drug Testing Policies in that test results are to be confidential,” she told Journal-isms today. She pointed to her termination letter, issued Tuesday, which accused her of violation of tribal personnel policies and procedures, stating, “you have been informed numerous times that the Tribal Newspaper must be unbiased as possible, which you failed to do as of this date.”

The Fort Peck tribes have 12,500 members, Morales said. Red Elk said the paper, which has a three-person staff, has a press run of 2,500 and is circulated on the reservation. She plans to start the Fort Peck Journal, an independent reservation newspaper.

Meanwhile, Morales has named Red Elk’s sister, Lois Red Elk, co-editor along with Iris Allrunner.

[Added April 25: CORRECTION. Bonnie Red Elk writes: “Lois Red Elk is not my sister. She is a distant cousin of my husband Herman Red Elk III. Lois was named co-editor, along with her own sister Iris Red Elk Allrunner.”]

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Immigration Debate Rising to Crescendo

The immigration debate is rising to a crescendo, as the Sunday talk shows played host to members of Congress discussing measures that could come to a Senate vote this week. “The kind of comprehensive immigration reform being discussed by the Senate carries the potential of transforming the politics of the country by making citizens and therefore voters of millions of mostly Hispanic residents in relatively short order,” Time magazine says this week.

Over the weekend, the public radio show “On the Media” explored the developments from the perspective of the Spanish-language media.

Felix Gutierrez, University of Southern California journalism professor, credited the Spanish-language media for producing turnouts at pro-immigration rallies that surprised the mainstream media. “It’s produced a more balanced debate,” he said of the Latino participation. “Rather than being the targets or scapegoats of right wing people, which undocumented people have been for years, they’re speaking out in their own voice, and people are seeing another side of this community that they haven’t seen over the years.”

With Héctor Tobar of the Los Angeles Times, “On the Media” followed with a discussion of the role played by news media south of the border, where the prospect of a 700-mile wall looms large. Tobar wrote Feb. 26 from Mexico City, “already the proposed 700 miles of fencing and electric sensors loom like a new Berlin Wall in the Latin American imagination.

“El muro, as it is called in Spanish, has been in the news for weeks not only in countries such as Mexico and El Salvador that are increasingly dependent on the money migrants send back home, but also those farther away, such as Argentina and Chile. Across the region, el muro is seen as an ominous new symbol of the United States’ unchecked power.”

Spanish-language radio is a different part of the equation, Karin Brulliard reported today in the Washington Post: “For many Hispanic immigrants – especially the poor, undocumented or simply flummoxed – Spanish-language radio programs offering legal advice can be key resources for answers about labyrinthine immigration laws. And these days, with tension over illegal immigration rising – and with proposals to charge and deport such immigrants gaining traction – hosts say the tenor of questions has changed. ‘More fear,’ said Jay Marks, a Silver Spring lawyer who fields immigration questions each Wednesday on the popular morning show on El Zol (99.1 FM). ‘Lots of fear’.”

The Gannett News Service Washington bureau has started a blog on the immigration debate, and columnists of color continue to offer their perspectives:

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Chicago Readers React to Column on Black Men

Last week, “I suggested that young black males who had been involved in the drug trade and have served their time should be granted an amnesty similar to what is now being considered for illegal immigrants. You would have thought I was sanctioning drug dealing,” Mary Mitchell wrote Sunday in the Chicago Sun-Times.

“Worse yet, most of the readers who disagreed with me painted young black males with such a broad brush, it was clear that they had bought into all the negative stereotypes about impoverished blacks.”

Mitchell’s original column was prompted by a New York Times story March 20 about the plight of uneducated black men. That story, and the studies it was based on, continue to generate commentary:

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Univision Sale Called Chance to Throw Out Old Ideas

“When Univision Communications said recently that it was putting itself on the auction block, the announcement was seen as a milestone,” Kyle Pope, a former editor and reporter at the Wall Street Journal, wrote yesterday in a Los Angeles Times opinion piece. “With an asking price of $11 billion, a Univision sale would almost certainly rank as the biggest deal in the history of Hispanic media in the U.S. – a testament, as if one were needed, to the economic clout of the nation’s fastest-growing ethnic group.

“But the sale of Univision needs to be viewed as much more than simply a big payday for the company and its iconoclastic chief executive, A. Jerrold Perenchio: It’s also a chance to throw out some flawed and outdated ideas about what Hispanics in this country want when it comes to entertainment.

“. . . among ad buyers and media watchers, there’s a growing sense that any deal for Univision is better than the status quo. The thinking is that the current flow of immigrants, combined with ad buyers still stuck in the old approach to Latino media, can keep the company in the black while a savvier management team retools what’s on the air.”

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Ed Bradley, N.Y. Times Columnist Tee Off

On Friday, Richard Sandomir, sports business columnist, wrote in the New York Times, “In the midst of Ed Bradley’s worshipful two-part profile of Tiger Woods on ’60 Minutes’ last Sunday, I wondered if it was an infomercial or if Woods had paid a fee for these adoring 25 minutes. With nothing new to report – and not a single tough question in his arsenal – Bradley chose to join Camp Tiger.” His piece continued in the same vein.

Today it’s Bradley’s turn. He shared with Journal-isms a letter he wrote today to the Times:

“I was surprised by the Tiger Woods story in today’s New York Times. It wasn’t tough on Tiger, and it seemed as if there was nothing new to report. It conveniently omitted the glares Woods gives fans who speak or click cameras when he swings, or the confrontations his caddie, Steve Williams, has had with those in the gallery who interrupt Woods at his work. Lest we forget – because the NY Times reporter did – the times when Woods has punctuated bad shots with expletives or whacks at the tee box.

“Those are criticisms leveled at Ed Bradley and 60 Minutes by Richard Sandomir in [Friday’s] times.

“In his column he was appalled that 60 Minutes could run such a ‘puffy profile’ of Tiger without, for example, ‘pressing Woods on what he paid’ for his house and boat.

“Can we expect a column in the New York Times critical of your Tiger Woods story which appeared in Monday’s paper? And if not, why not? Do you hold us at 60 Minutes to a different standard than you hold your own newspaper?”

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Evangelical Detroit Anchor Says Stories Miss Point

Frank Turner, who filed a complaint against WXYZ-TV in Detroit for refusing him permission to host an evangelical radio program, says some are misreporting the case.

“The two simple questions to be answered are:

“1. Is the religious accommodation I am seeking reasonable?

“2. Has the accommodation I am seeking been provided to another employee for a non-religious purpose?” Turner wrote in a letter posted on his Web site.

“Period! That’s it! The whole thing is about answering these two simple questions about my one request.”

“Contrary to the misdirected public discussion, this has nothing to do with:

“1. whether I have a contract to honor;

“2. whether channel 7 is owed gratitude for my return to television;

“3. whether anyone appreciates or approves of me being a Christian;

“4. whether it is journalistically ethical for a news anchor to be an evangelist;

“5. whether I should be able to conduct a daily broadcast ministry.”

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Pierre Thomas Breaks From Others in Lee Case

“ABC correspondent and former CNNer Pierre Thomas has filed a petition for certiorari with the Supreme Court. Thomas and several print reporters were subpoenaed in a Privacy Act lawsuit filed against the U.S. government by Wen Ho Lee. In a memo to CNN staffers on Thursday, Jim Walton explained that CNN is paying Ted Olsen to file a separate petition for Thomas,” Brian Stelter wrote in his MediaBistro blog.

Walton’s memo said: ” In contrast to the Valerie Plame case, Pierre’s case is not infected with partisan politics and it presents possibly the most favorable fact scenario for the Supreme Court to rule on whether there is a privilege that will protect not just CNN, but all journalists. That is why we felt is was both strategically necessary and financially worth it to go it alone with a separate filing on behalf of Pierre. If we succeed, the payoff will be immeasurable for everyone in the journalism community.”

A CNN spokeswoman confirmed the contents of the memo, in which Olsen, former U.S. solicitor general, was called “one of the county’s most respected Supreme Court experts.” Lee is a former nuclear weapons scientist who was the chief suspect in an espionage case. Lee sued the government to recover damages for alleged harm to his reputation caused by leaks of confidential information from the government’s espionage investigation, as R. Jeffrey Smith reported at the time in the Washington Post.

“U.S. District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson . . . ordered journalists at the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Associated Press and Cable News Network to reveal who in the government may have disclosed derogatory information to them” about Lee, Smith wrote in his 2003 story.

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