Friday, October 31, 2008

PRESS RELEASES: Friday, Oct. 31, 2008---MassGOP Announces Election Night Plans

Media Advisory: Contact: Barney Keller
October 29th, 2008 617-523-5005 x245

MassGOP Announces Election Night Plans
Victory Celebration To Be Held In Boston

Boston, MA – The Massachusetts Republican Party today announced that they will hold their election night party at LIR Irish Pub in Boston. For election night questions, please contact Barney Keller at (617) 290-1544.

WHAT: Massachusetts Republican Party Election Night Celebration

WHO: MassGOP Chairman Peter Torkildsen

Governor Paul Cellucci

WHERE: LIR Irish Pub and Restaurant

903 Boylston St.

Boston, MA 02115

WHEN: Tuesday, November 4th

8:30 PM

NOTE: Indoor Lighting, Limited Wireless Internet Access

Unsubscribe

Thursday, October 30, 2008

PRESS RELEASES: Thursday, Oct. 30, 2008---MESLIFE

I just launched a healthy living social network called melslife that is targeted to younger people – "echo boomers" -- like me who want to embrace life, enjoy food, and maintain their health as well as get their entertainment online -- think of a cross between facebook, YouTube, and WebMD. We built 17 distinctive video channels -- including a Smashed Channel -- that will evolve over the next year as we continue to brand them. Whoever posts the most content between now and January can win 2 tickets anywhere in the world.

I graduated college a few years ago and know how difficult college living can be, as well as starting out in life – career wise.

Why "echo boomers?" Check out our demos (http://melslife.com/target_audience.php). Most college students want to be informed and motivated by their peers and not necessarily by experts.

Please help me get the word out.

Melissa "mel" Melcombe

Press Release
Demos
Why Do College Students Gain Weight?

Check it out at
http://melslife.com/

PRESS RELEASES: Thursday, Oct. 30, 2008---Hunger in Massachusetts

Hunger in Massachusetts Increases at an Alarming Rate; 522,000 Struggle to Put Food on the Table

Project Bread releases 2008 Status Report on Hunger as many face problems with the basics this winter
October 30, 2008 – Project Bread, the state's leading antihunger organization, has released its annual report on the status of hunger in the Commonwealth. The disquieting trends described in this report point to a sharp and continuing increase in hunger among low-income families and individuals. The report further details the multiple economic effects that hunger has on the Massachusetts economy — especially in the areas of education and health — and argues for systemic solutions designed to address the food insecurity problems of entire populations.

Over eight percent of households in Massachusetts experience "food insecurity," a measurement that captures the degree to which an individual or family cannot obtain adequate nutritious food for a healthy life. "High food prices combined with the current economic crisis are driving a crisis in food insecurity that is broader and deeper than we've seen before in this state," says Ellen Parker, the executive director of Project Bread. "There is every indication that hundreds of thousands of Massachusetts citizens will need help to cover the basics — including many who have never needed help before."

Among Project Bread's findings:

§ Rising food and fuel prices usher in a new era of hunger and there is no evidence to suggest this will change. As the costs of food insecurity and hunger ripple out across the state, the impact on individuals and the economy as a whole is dramatic. Food insecurity and hunger are associated with bad health outcomes and difficulties in learning.


§ Survey research sponsored by Project Bread found fully one-third of school children in high poverty communities live in food-insecure families. Children who are poorly fed do not learn as well in school and are more prone toward obesity and associated health problems such as diabetes and high blood pressure.


§ Data currently being collected from Food for Families, a Project Bread–funded hunger-screening project located in the pediatric service of seven community health centers in low-income neighborhoods, reveal more than 70 percent of the families have run out of money to make a meal. Nearly one third of the families say they cut the size of their children's meals or a child missed a meal because there was not enough money.


§ Reports from emergency food providers — soup kitchens, food pantries, food banks, and food salvage operations funded by Project Bread — show increases in the number of families seeking help. From July to September 2008, calls to Project Bread's FoodSource Hotline, an emergency food assistance line available in 160 languages, were 22 percent higher than in the same period of 2007.

The 2008 Status Report on Hunger also advocates for use of every solution available to hungry people, including immediate emergency help to ease the crisis and long-term solutions to manage the problem and stabilize lives:

§ Enroll every eligible resident in the federally funded nutrition programs — including food stamps, school food, after-school programs, and summer meals programs. The programs are available to every eligible citizen and bring millions of dollars into the state.


§ Bring Project Bread's Better Breakfast and Better Lunch guidelines to scale in low-income schools, potentially improving the health of 300,000 low-income school children. As a first line of defense against hunger in school-age children, the nutritional quality of school food should be improved to meet the highest nutritional standards for health and learning.


§ Provide access to Project Bread's toll-free FoodSource Hotline, 1-800-645-8333, available in 160 languages, as the first place for a family or an elder to turn for comprehensive information about emergency food and enrollment in federal benefits programs.


§ Protect isolated, homebound seniors from hunger by distributing emergency grocery vouchers through the existing system of homecare providers.

Project Bread's 2008 Status Report on Hunger in Massachusetts is attached in a PDF file. The complete report presents the data to support our findings and solutions. Ellen Parker, the executive director of Project Bread, wrote the report. For interviews with Parker, please contact Project Bread.

About Project Bread

As the state's leading antihunger organization, Project Bread is dedicated to alleviating, preventing, and ultimately ending hunger in Massachusetts. Through The Walk for Hunger, the oldest continual pledge walk in the country, Project Bread provides millions of dollars each year in privately donated funds to over 400 emergency food programs in 128 communities statewide. Project Bread also advocates systemic solutions that prevent hunger in children and that provide food to families in natural, everyday settings. With the support of the Governor and State Legislature, the organization has invested millions in grants to community organizations that feed children where they live, learn, and play. For more information, visit www.projectbread.org.

PRESS RELEASES: Thursday, Oct. 30, 2008---New England Ethnic News

Break outside of your ethnic boundaries -- into NEW ENGLAND ETHNIC NEWS (EthnicNEWz.org)!

Highlights on EthnicNEWz.org, a Web site and newswire of UMass-Boston and MIT
(click on headlines and event names to link directly to the stories and Calendar events):

LATINO DISCRIMINATION, ENTREPRENEURS and ANTI-IMMIGRATION IN RHODE ISLAND
Jaime Aguayo, a former member of Gov. Carcieri's Commission on Hispanic Affairs, talks to NEWz about Latino small-business owners in the state (2,000 in all), the Latino student drop-out rate (65% in Providence), Sarah Palin and Latino conservatism, resigning in protest from Carcieri's commission, and a "best kept secret" about discrimination among Latinos.

ITALIANS CONTINUE TO CHANGE THE WORLD
Liborio Stellinuo, the Italian consul general in Boston, takes pride in his ethnic roots in this essay for NEWz and Italian Heritage Month. No longer looked down upon as their Ellis Island forebears were, Italians are now synonymous with beauty, taste and lifestyle, he says.

MY POLISH AMERICA
Stanislaw Radosz, executive director of the Polish Center of Discovery and Learning, gives a heartfelt glimpse of the rich heritage of Poles in the US and Poland, in this essay for NEWz.

WHY DO WE CONSIDER OBAMA TO BE BLACK?
In a commentary for New America Media, Ronald Takaki ponders: Why are all African Americans, regardless of their mixed racial heritage, identified as black?

Genetics and Diet Linked to Diabetes in Latinos

Latinos in the US are twice as likely as whites to develop diabetes. Ignorance, genetics, food choices as well as the portion sizes of foods are linked to the increase, reports NEWz.

Brazilian Guilty in Bomb Attack on Love Rival
A jury has found Brazilian immigrant Joel Lemos guilty in connection with a bomb attack on fellow compatriot José Fernandes do Carmo, reports NEWz.

THE ELECTION OF OUR LIFETIME
NEWz's Eduardo de Oliveira opines on the presidential election, as a Brazilian who's been to the DNC and the rallies of Sen. Clinton and the four presidential and VP candidates.

ON UNIVISION, SARAH PALIN TALKS ABOUT IMMIGRATION FOR FIRST TIME

Univision interviewed VP nominee Sarah Palin on immigration. She devoted more time to Latin America than others in the presidential race have in a while, reports Feet in 2 Worlds.

Vietnamese Group Mobilizes Voters and Voting Power
Viet-Vote, a group of determined Vietnamese in Greater Boston, seeks to increase their community's participation in voting and public affairs, says the Dorchester Reporter.

RI Portuguese and LUSOS Honor Their 50+ Years of Public Service
Lusos in Rhode Island celebrated their political representation at the state level as well as their 50 years of continuous office in the RI Senate, reports O Jornal. * * EM PORTUGUES * *

Gandhi Inspires "Be the Change" Volunteer Day in USA
Inspired by Gandhi, Indians across the USA held a "Be The Change" volunteer day. In Boston, some 100 persons helped the homeless, parks, and other causes, reports INDIA New England.

WALLY'S JAZZ CLUB STILL A CULTURAL ICON, SINCE 1934
Wally's Jazz, Boston's first black-owned club, still draws regulars and top musicians, decades after Barbadian immigrant Joseph Walcott opened it in 1934, reports the Bay State Banner.

KOREAN AMERICAN PRESS LAUNCHES KIM KOO CLUB FOR STUDENTS
Korean American Press, with Tufts University, has created a club of middle- and high-school students to foster Korean heritage and instill civic pride, announces KAP.

IN TIGHT ECONOMY, B'NAI MITZVAH GET BACK TO BASICS
The country's economic crisis is affecting Jewish families, who are cutting back on lavish bat and bar mitzvah, reports The Jewish Advocate.

EVENTS ON THE EthnicNEWz.org CALENDAR:

S. African artist Paul Stop forth (exhibit)…'til Oct. 31…Boston

Gurjar Diwali Festival…Nov. 1…Andover, Mass.

Bhakthi Maargam (Indian dance) …Nov. 1…Littleton, Mass.

TOUMANI DIABATÉ from Mali (music) …Nov. 1…Somerville, Mass.

Mexican Day of the Dead....Nov. 2....Boston (Jamaica Plain)

Latin Views (art exhibit)…'til Nov. 2…Groton, CT

Latino de Oro 2008 Awards...Nov. 8....Hartford


Slavery and African American Life in Rhode Island…Providence, RI

The Colors of Italy (photos)…'til Nov. 8…Providence, RI

Films From Iran, at the Museum of Fine Arts …Nov. 7-30…Boston

See more events at ethnicnewz.org/en/event

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Communities of Color and Ethnic Minorities in Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont:

Send your festival/event photos, news, and Calendar listings for non-commercial events to: EthnicNews@ yahoo.com.
For Calendar listings, please state in the body of your e-mail:
• what the event is (e...g., play, film, book reading, art exhibition)
• time & date of event
• street address (so that new visitors can find you)
• Web site address and/or telephone number for the public
• cost
• brief description of event

PRESS RELEASE: Thursday, Oct. 30---Faith Leaders on Question 2

AN OPEN LETTER TO MASSACHUSETTS CLERGY AND FAITH LEADERS

To our fellow brothers and sisters in service to God and all of God's children,

Leaders of all faiths are called to certain acts of service: to minister to the poor, to visit the imprisoned, to clothe the needy, feed the hungry and, through God's word, bring peace and comfort to all. Those of us who do this work are often called shepherds. It's an image that is reassuring and captures the great responsibilities that come with this calling – to literally help guide and protect the innocent, the unknowing or the unsuspecting from the dangers that life so often presents. We do this with humility and recognition of our own limitations but also with confidence in God's assistance to help us to see clearly and speak with courage.

Today the people we serve are facing a grave threat and we are reaching out to all of you for help. Next Tuesday, the citizens of Massachusetts are being asked to consider a ballot question that would decriminalize marijuana - a drug surrounded by so much myth that minimizes the risks it poses and the harm that it does. This is an issue that transcends politics. It has a direct bearing on the physical health, the intellectual development, the personal safety and the spiritual growth of thousands and thousands of our young people. Therefore, we have a responsibility to see this issue for what it is and, with one voice, urge all parents, all grown-ups and all people of good will to speak for our children and reject this initiative.

We intend to carry this message to our congregations this weekend. We are respectfully but urgently asking that you also share this message with your congregations and in your communities. We need people to understand that there is no good reason to decriminalize marijuana and very many good reasons not to.

As ministers whose congregations are predominantly people who are poor and of color we look at this threat with the great concern because it is one with which we are already all too familiar. The history of drug and alcohol abuse in society in general, and among the poor and communities of color, is well known and dangerous to ignore or forget. It is a history whose pages are filled with individual and collective stories of pain, violence, loss, exploitation and wasted potential.

For some who do not live in inner city neighborhoods, marijuana use might be regarded as a victimless crime or even a rite of passage. In the communities we serve however, the reality is very different. Marijuana is a common denominator substance used in connection with many other crimes. Marijuana is a big business and its dealers do not hesitate to use violence to protect sales and turf. Finally, marijuana dealers look at our children as their growth market.

The proponents are arguing that possession of less than an ounce of marijuana should be treated as a civil offense and the offender should receive a fine of just $100. What most people fail to recognize is that an ounce of marijuana is no small amount. It's the equivalent of about 60 joints and can fetch up to $600 on the street. In addition, most street sales are being made in "dime" bag, eighth-of-an-ounce or quarter-of-an-ounce quantities. The result is that this ballot initiative doesn't protect kids, but it does create tremendous legal protection for drug dealers!

Proponents have misrepresented the penalties kids suffer from marijuana and CORI records. As ministers, we have and will continue to advocate for CORI reform. We know full well the long-lasting impact of a criminal record. At the same time, we have found no basis in fact for the oft repeated stories about thousands of individuals who have supposedly missed out on job opportunities or college educations because they "got caught just once with a joint."

Finally, proponents have completely ignored the facts around marijuana and its health effects. The increased potency of the drug – it is now 9 times more potent than just a few decades ago – has led to dramatic increases in young people seeking treatment for marijuana dependency. Over the past decade, objective and unassailable medical and scientific evidence are showing that the dangers of marijuana use has been underestimated, including its direct links to cancer, depression, mental illness and other health problems.

Friends, we cannot afford to ignore facts and buy into myths and urban legend. We are ministering to young people who are struggling against significant social and economic obstacles to succeeding in school. Decriminalizing marijuana will only hamper our efforts to close the achievement gap between rich and poor, white and black students. We are ministering to young parents who are struggling against significant social and economic obstacles to hold their families together. Decriminalizing marijuana will not make any family stronger. We are ministering to communities who are yearning and working and striving for social justice and economic opportunity. Decriminalizing marijuana will only bring more crime and destabilization.

We are asking for your help to carry this message forward. Please, in the coming days, share this message with your followers and your friends. May God bless and keep you,

Rev. Jeffrey Brown Pastor William Dickerson

Executive Director Greater Love Tabernacle

Boston Ten Point Coalition Dorchester

Minister Don Muhammad Pastor Ray Hammond

Minister of Muhammad's Mosque Bethel AME Church

of Islam, Mosque # 11 Board Chair, Boston Ten Point Coalition

Board Member, Black Ministerial Alliance

Pastor Bruce Wall Rev. Gregory Groover

Bruce Wall Ministries Charles Street African Methodist Episcopal Church

Dorchester Vice-president, Black Ministerial Alliance

PRESS RELEASE: Thursday, Oct. 30---Security and Auditability of Electronic Voting Machines

Security and Auditability of Electronic Voting Machines

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Interviews Available

PENNY VENETIS, 973-353-5687, 917-617-3524, pennyv@kinoy.rutgers.edu, http://www.northjersey.com/news/elections/31220364.html
Venetis is plantiff's counsel in a four-year lawsuit spearheaded by the Constitutional Litigation Clinic at Rutgers School of Law. According to expert reports conducted as a part of the lawsuit, "approximately 10,000 voting machines used in 18 out of the 21 counties in New Jersey can be manipulated to throw an election." The report concluded that "vote-stealing software can be easily installed in the AVC Advantage [Sequoia electronic voting machines] in less than eight minutes. The technical knowledge needed to write vote-stealing software is widespread and common."
Venetis said today: "The possibility for disenfranchisement due to voting machine insecurities puts at risk the more than 5 million registered New Jersey voters. It is most unfortunate that the state continues to defend these insecure voting systems."

DAVID JEFFERSON, (925) 989-3701, d_jefferson@yahoo.com, http://people.llnl.gov/jefferson6
Jefferson is a computer scientist at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California. He has also served as a technical advisor to five Secretaries of State of California on issues related to elections and voting, and has led or participated in several formal studies of voting system reliability and security. He said today: "The most important property that a voting system can have is meaningful and transparent auditability. We must not depend on the reliability of hardware or the correctness of software. Even if the voting system is proprietary and is riddled with bugs, security vulnerabilities, or even malicious code, we must be able to demonstrate we can detect the problem and call the winners properly anyway, and do so in such a way that even the losing candidates will be convinced of the correctness of the outcome. Today this is only practically achievable with scanned paper ballots (or to a lesser extent, a voter-verified paper audit trail) accompanied by a mandatory, statistically sound, risk-based post-election audit procedure."

MICHAEL ALVAREZ, JONATHAN KATZ, [via Jon Weiner], (626) 395-3227, jrweiner@caltech.edu, http://www.vote.caltech.edu/
Alvarez and Katz are both professors of political science at Caltech. They are also co-directors of the Caltech/MIT Voting Technology Project.

For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020, (202) 421-6858; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167

PRESS RELEASE: Thursday, Oct. 30---MySpace/NBC/WSJ Poll of New and Lapsed Voters

NEW MYSPACE/NBC/WSJ POLL OF NEW AND LAPSED VOTERS

Wednesday, October 29th

Here are some of the highlights of the poll findings:

· Obama has support of 69% of this voting bloc.

· This bloc makes up 13% of the total electorate.

· 70% of these voters are extremely interested in the election and are likely voters.

· At this level of support among new and lapsed voters, even if Obama only won half of all other voters (those who DID vote in 2004), he would win the presidency with 52.5% of the vote.

· In fact, his support among all other voters could drop as low as 47.3%, and he would still win the presidency with 50.1% of the total vote based on the support of new and lapsed voters. (This is based on popular vote, not necessarily Electoral College).

Thus, if these voters actually come out to the polls, then their support will secure a win for Obama.

· 64% of these voters say no matter who wins, the country will be better off in 4 years.

· Desired agenda for the next administration are big picture items, like: Good jobs, fixing Wall Street, lowering healthcare costs, insurance for more Americans, Iraq, and lowering the federal deficit.

· This voting bloc is optimistic about the future, even if they overwhelmingly think the country is currently on the wrong path.

· This voting bloc thinks the current economic crisis is the fault of numerous groups (ie not just Wall Street, but also Congress, Bush, homeowners, etc)

· Download the full poll results here.

· Blog: Interpreting the numbers
by Lee Brenner, Executive Producer of Political Programming & Director of MySpace IMPACT.

For more information please visit the IMPACT channel at http://www.impact.myspace.com

About MySpace IMPACT
MySpace IMPACT's goal is to empower users to make a difference in the world by building partnerships and programs focused on voter education, voter registration, and voter turnout. To educate MySpace users about candidates and issues, the company teamed up with MTV in the primary season to produce a series of highly interactive candidate town hall events geared toward young and first-time voters called the MySpace/MTV Presidential Dialogues; partnered with NBC News and msnbc.com to deliver high-quality election coverage and citizen journalism opportunities to users through a hub called Decision08; and worked with the Commission on Presidential Debates to power MyDebates.org, the official online companion to the Presidential Debates. MySpace IMPACT's online voter registration is powered by the non-profit nonpartisan organization Declare Yourself.

Jamie Schumacher

MySpace
Public Affairs
407 North Maple Drive, 2nd Floor
Beverly Hills, CA 90210
(310) 969-7087 office
(415) 341-2594 mobile
jschumacher@myspace.com

PRESS RELEASE: Thursday, Oct. 30---Question 2: Medical Concerns about Marijuana

No on Question 2:
Medical community warns of significant marijuana health threat

Marijuana today is more potent, addictive, and dangerous than ever, according to latest medical research. And, the Coalition for Safe Streets today urged voters to reject Question 2 and the health threat it poses for our children and communities.

Renowned health experts - from Joseph Califano, former Secretary of Health Education and Welfare and head of Columbia's National Center of Addiction and Substance Abuse, to The Lancet, the world's leading liberal medical journal - are warning about the negative impacts of marijuana on health.

Marijuana potency has increased 175 percent in the past 14 years, and the number of youth admitted for treatment has leapt almost 500 percent in the same period. Marijuana has also been linked to depression, anxiety, schizophrenia, and other mental health problems in youth

This overwhelming research has prompted health and education leaders from across the state, including MADD, SADD, Community VOICES, the Massachusetts Association of School Superintendents, and many others, to publicly oppose Question 2 and marijuana decriminalization.

District Attorney Dan Conley: Reject Question 2
In an op-ed appearing in today's Allston-Brighton TAB, Suffolk County District Attorney urged voters to Vote No on Question 2.

The Economist Magazine has called Question 2 the most radical marijuana ballot initiative in the country, and today DA Conley said if Question 2 passes, Massachusetts can expect to face "increased health costs, traffic injuries and fatalities, increased law enforcement costs, lost productivity, lowered workplace safety, and the heavy toll of addiction on communities and families."

Brockton Enterprise: Vote No on Question 2
Today, the Brockton Enterprise joined the Boston Globe, Herald, Worcester Telegram, Lowell Sun, Cape Cod Times and other papers around Massachusetts in condemning Question 2.

In its editorial urging voters to reject Question 2, the Brockton Enterprise spoke of the negative health effects of marijuana, calling the drug "a mind- and mood-altering substance that affects cognitive abilities and reasoning."

The Coalition for Safe Streets invites you read these and other stories at the links below.

For more information on Question 2, and to visit our Web site, click on the Vote No on 2 image above. A member of the No Question 2 staff can also be reached at info@noquestion2.org .

Sincerely,

The Coalition for Safe Streets

The Latest No on Question 2 Headlines

The Brockton Enterprise says Question 2 is a "solution in search of a problem" and urges voters to Vote No.

Newton Police debunk the myth that Question 2 would actually save money - "I don't see a cost savings," Lt. Bruce Apotheker told the Newton TAB. "The ramifications ... might have officers spending more time in the aftermath, like people driving under the influence of marijuana."

Hampden County Sheriff Michael J. Ashe Jr. says "the great decay and the great scourge of our communities has been drugs," and urged voters to reject Question 2.

Suffolk County District Attorney Dan Conley asked Massachusetts to say no to marijuana decriminalization, saying "Question 2 will embolden drug dealers and erase the threat of criminal prosecution."
Allston-Brighton TAB
Perspective: Vote 'No' on Question 2
By Daniel F. Conley/Suffolk County District Attorney
Tue Oct 28, 2008, 07:23 PM EDT

BOSTON -
On Nov. 4, Massachusetts voters will be asked to choose whether they want our state, our communities, and our families to be the testing ground for the most radical marijuana ballot initiative in the country. Voters will choose between a steadily declining rate of marijuana use among teenagers and the message that drug use is safe and acceptable.

Passage of Question 2 will decriminalize possession of an ounce or less of marijuana and replace criminal sanctions with a fine. For kids under 21, the penalties for marijuana possession will be reduced well below the penalties for alcohol possession. Drug use and abuse will increase among children and adults. Our communities and families - not the well-heeled, out-of-state proponents of Question 2 - will be left to deal with the consequences.

Kids who smoke marijuana are more likely to do poorly in school, more likely to require counseling, more likely to engage in violence, and more likely to get behind the wheel of a car while high. According to Mothers Against Drunk Driving, 41 percent of teens are not concerned about driving high on marijuana - a shocking number considering drivers who have smoked pot are 10 times more likely to be injured or injure others in automobile crashes.

Question 2 will embolden drug dealers and erase the threat of criminal prosecution. Despite the efforts to paint an ounce as something too small to be worth the attention of the police and courts, the fact is that one ounce of marijuana is worth from $400 to $600 and represents about 60 individual sales. And where does that ounce come from? It comes from the pounds of marijuana that traffickers will bring here and cut up in our neighborhoods once there is no downside to retailing the drug.

Question 2's supporters argue that existing laws unfairly and harshly punish people whose only crime was carrying a joint. But it simply isn't true.

Not one person went to jail last year in Suffolk County for a first-time marijuana offense alone. In fact, of the marijuana convictions that did end with a jail sentence, each one was handed down because the defendant was also carrying a gun, committing a violent crime, or pushing drugs like heroin and cocaine.

Our current marijuana laws are far from draconian - they're reasonable, graduated, and appropriate. Simple possession is punishable by six months of probation, with the case dismissed afterwards. A defendant's criminal record is wiped clean and his or her CORI record is sealed and inactive.

Perhaps most importantly, the passage of Question 2 would remove the single largest referrer of drug abusers to treatment programs - the criminal justice system. That's a massive loss to individuals who wouldn't otherwise admit that they need help. In place of that assistance, Massachusetts will end up with increased health costs, traffic injuries and fatalities, increased law enforcement costs, lost productivity, lowered workplace safety, and the heavy toll of addiction on communities and families.

I urge you to vote no on Question 2 next week.


About the Coalition for Safe Streets
The Coalition for Safe Streets is a grassroots organization composed of the state's 11 district attorneys, sheriffs, chiefs of police and educational, religious, community, political, public health and business leaders who strongly oppose efforts to make illicit drugs more readily available in our communities. The Coalition for Safe Streets was formed to educate the public about the dangers of Question 2 on the November ballot, a radical proposal to decriminalize marijuana in the Commonwealth that will put more drugs on our streets, empower the drug dealers who sell them, put more drivers - particularly young people - behind the wheel of a car under the influence of drugs, and send the wrong message to our young people. For more information, and to visit our Website, click on the Vote No on 2 image above.

Our Supporters:
Mass. Governor Deval Patrick

Boston Mayor Thomas Menino

Attorney General Martha Coakley

U.S. Senator John Kerry

Mass. State Rep. Martin Walsh

Reverend William Dickerson

Pastor Eugene Rivers

Reverend Michael Person

Minister Don Muhammad

Lawrence Mayor Michael Sullivan

Somerville Mayor Joseph Curtatone

Kevin Peterson, Ella J. Baker House, Dorchester

Majors William and Susan Dunigan, Jubilee House, Salvation Army

Gladys Vega, Chelsea Collaborative

Emmett Folgert, Dorchester Youth Collaborative

Robert Repucci, CAPIC (Community Action Programs Inter-City, Inc.)

Alexandra Oliver-Davila, Sociedad Latina

Reverend Shaun Harrison, Bird Street Community Center

Jeremy Galvin, The Gavin House

Lisa Morales, Inquilinos Boricuas en Accion (IBA), South End

Boston TenPoint Coalition

Community Voices

Mass. Association of Superintendents

Mass. Chiefs of Police Association

Mothers Against Drunk Driving

Students Against Drunk Driving

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

EVENT: Friday, Oct. 31---The Global Financial Crisis: Implications for Emerging Local Capital Markets

Friday, October 31, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.:

The Global Financial Crisis: Implications for Emerging Local Capital Markets—A CEME Local Capital Markets Seminar
Cabot Intercultural Center 7th Floor, The Fletcher School, Tufts University Campus

In a timely seminar that will provide essential information for financial and economic professionals in today's market, CEME will explore the implications of the current financial crisis on EM local capital markets. The current global credit crisis is impacting financial markets around the world—including those in emerging markets (EM). While this global crisis remains ongoing, some of the consequences for EM local capital markets and the implications for market development are already evident. Topics will include regional differences, the roles of the public and private sectors in facilitating private market access, and drivers for future development. Speakers from CEME, The Fletcher School, the World Bank, IFC, and the private sector will provide presentations and in-depth panel discussions around key topics, including: The Evolution of Local Capital Market Financing for the Private Sector; Potential Consequences of the Global Financial Crisis for Local Capital Markets; and Priorities for Market Development Policy Strategy to Facilitate Private Sector Access to Local Capital Markets. Regional differences and impacts will also be explored.

*This seminar includes lunch. Seating is limited. Please RSVP by contacting ceme@tufts.edu.

EVENT: Thursday, Oct. 30---Foundations, Enterprises, and Market Solutions to Poverty

CENTER FOR EMERGING MARKET ENTERPRISES EVENTS THIS WEEK

Please join the Center for Emerging Market Enterprises (CEME) at The Fletcher School, Tufts University for two unique events this week.

Thursday, October 30, 5:30 p.m.:

Foundations, Enterprises, and Market Solutions to Poverty
Featuring Kathryn Fuller,
Chair of the Board, Ford Foundation

and Reeta Roy, F89
President & CEO, MasterCard Foundation

The Coolidge Room, Ballou Hall, Tufts University Campus

Please join the CEME as we host two high-profile figures from the foundation world to discuss market-based solutions to global poverty. Ms. Kathryn Fuller, Chair of the Board of the Ford Foundation, and Ms. Reeta Roy, F89, President & CEO of the MasterCard Foundation will discuss their own personal and professional paths as well as innovative initiatives by foundations to promote enterprise and responsible commerce. This is a must-attend event for anyone interested in sustainable and innovative solutions to global philanthropy.

*A reception will follow the presentation. Seating is limited. Please RSVP by contacting ceme@tufts.edu.

Friday, October 24, 2008

EVENT: Oct. 25, 2008---Media Family Day

Saturday, October 25th from 10:00am-12:30pm

The Museum of Science Boston invites you to visit the Museum for Media Family Day. From 10:00 am to 12:30 pm, media will have the opportunity to visit two of the Museum's newest and exciting exhibits, "Mythic Creatures: Dragons, Unicorns, and Mermaids", and "Goose Bumps! The Science of Fear". The Mythic Creatures exhibit presents the real along with the fantastical, showcasing giant, eye-popping models including a 17-foot-long dragon flying above visitors, exquisite paintings, textiles, and prehistoric fossils from the American Museum of Natural History and other collections. Goose Bumps is a wonderful way to celebrate Halloween as visitors experience the fear challenge course, an area where visitors confront four common fears: electric shock, animals, loud noises, and falling.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

PRESS RELEASE: Wednesday, Oct. 22---Interviews Available: Millions Dead in Congo Ignored in Election

This week is "Break the Silence" Congo week, a global initiative led by students to raise awareness and provide support to the people of Congo. Events are planned in more than 30 countries and on 125 college campuses. See: .

The Congo has been virtually ignored during the campaign. It was raised in one debate by Tom Brokaw, who asked about "the use of United States combat forces in situations where there's a humanitarian crisis ... [like] the Congo, where 4.5 million people have died since 1998." But neither candidate mentioned the country in their response; Obama talked about Darfur in Sudan and McCain talked about Iraq:
.

MAURICE CARNEY, (202) 584-6512, moe@friendsofthecongo.org, http://friendsofthecongo.org
Executive director of Friends of the Congo, Carney said today: "Like 'blood diamonds,' which have fueled other conflicts, many political and corporate players profit from the conflict in the Congo because of its mineral wealth. For example, about 60 to 80 percent of the world's reserves of Coltan are in Congo. Many modern electronic devices are dependent on Coltan, including cell phones and video games. So this fuels the conflict. We're seeing mass death, systematic rape of women and children, forced child labor, vast environmental degradation and the wiping out of endangered species in the Congo. The players are rebel groups, some neighboring countries, and mining companies, but eventual beneficiaries are companies like Microsoft and Hitachi."

KAMBALE MUSAVULI, (336) 207-5819, kambale@friendsofthecongo.org
An engineering student North Carolina A&T State University, Musavuli is helping to organize events with the group Friends of the Congo. He wrote the piece "What the World Owes Congo," which states: "Last summer, the national news media announced the deaths of four gorillas killed in a national park in eastern Congo. A United Nations delegation was quickly dispatched to investigate.
"As a Congolese living in the United States and hungry for news back home, I was thankful for the coverage. But since my grandparents still live in East Congo, I would have also liked to have heard about some other recent breaking news items: women being raped, children being enslaved, men being killed, and many more horrors. I would like to hear about the nearly six million lives lost, half of them children under age five -- that every month, 45,000 people continue to die in the Democratic Republic of the Congo; that the scale of devastation in Darfur happens in the Congo every five and a half months." http://www.theroot.com/id/48478
Musavuli will be featured in a chat with the Washington Post on Wednesday at noon:
.

Background: See "Dan Rather Reports" piece on corporate profiteering from the conflict in the Congo:
. Also, see Financial Times "Congo rebels cash in on demand for tin" .

For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020, (202) 421-6858; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

PRESS RELEASE: Tuesday Oct. 21, 2008

For Immediate Release: October 21, 2008

Washington D.C. – Maude Barlow, board chair of the U.S. advocacy group Food & Water Watch, national chairperson of the Council of Canadians and founder of the Blue Planet Project, has been appointed as the first Senior Advisor on water issues by Miguel d'Escoto Brockmann, President of the 63rd session of the United Nations.

Barlow, reacting to the announcement, says she is honored to be working with someone of President d'Escoto's caliber. "I am excited for the year ahead, and am pleased to note that President d'Escoto has already adopted the call for water to be recognized as a human right."

In his letter to Barlow, confirming her appointment as Senior Advisor, President d'Escoto says, "One of the priority issues for my Presidency is the need to achieve the goals of the United Nations Decade "Water for Life" (2005-2015)… Given your outstanding experience, your creativity and your leadership in water issues, I would like to appoint you as my Senior Advisor for this 63rd session of the General Assembly."

"This is a wonderful opportunity to advance a more democratic and transparent method of policy making around water at the global level than now exists," says Barlow, in reference to her new role. "Water is a public trust, and a human right."

"I firmly believe that our Assembly, as the most representative and democratic global political body, is the right forum to debate policy, affirm principles and provide answers for the global water crisis that you have worked so hard to put on our agenda," continues d'Escoto in his letter. "I am looking to leaders like you, who combine humanitarian vision with a practical approach to problem solving, to help me."

"There has been growing momentum in the international community for water justice," adds Barlow. "I also plan to take this opportunity to get the United States and Canadian governments to change their shameful positions, and to finally join the international community in recognizing water as a human right."

"Water is not a commodity to be bought and sold on the open market," d'Escoto said in his Inaugural Address to the 63rd General Assembly. "Those who seek to derive economic advantage, even from the worst of human tragedies, are pursuing the privatization of water, thereby denying peoples a human right as basic as the air we breathe."

"Maude has spent her life effectively fighting the forces that seek to put water under the control of giant corporations," said Wenonah Hauter, Executive Director of Food & Water Watch. "She has written 15 books and contributed to many more about the right to water, democracy, and the looming threats from continuing with the global corporate economic model. But it is water, the right to water and the need to keep it out of private hands that inspires Maude. She is a driving force in the continued quest to break private control of water where it now exists, prevent the moneyed interests from controlling water in the future, and, perhaps most importantly, ensuring that we enshrine water as a human right for everyone, everywhere."

President d'Escoto's letter appointing Maude Barlow as Senior Advisor on water justice can be read in its entirety at: www.canadians.org

For More Information:

Denise Hughes, Creative-Connectors

@ 917-549-2621, For Background information on water:

http://www.foodandwaterwatch.org/water

http://www.blueplanetproject.net/

Monday, October 20, 2008

EVENT: Monday, Oct. 20---Democracy in Dakar

6:30pm on Monday, October 20th 2008,

The BU Film Society and Project Nur presents the groundbreaking documentary film, Democracy in Dakar, about hip-hop, youth, and politics in Dakar Senegal. The documentary explores the role of the youth and musical activism that spread like wild fire with the inspiring ambition to tell the truth. The film follows hip-hop artists, DJs, journalists, professors and the people of Senegal before and after the controversial 2007 presidential election and examines the surprisingly influential role hip-hop played in the political process. After the documentary screening, performers from the film will perform as well as offer a Q&A session. Come join the fun and hear hip-hop from Africa. Admission is free to the University community.

GSU BU Central, 775 Commonwealth Avenue, lower level
http://www.muslimfilm.org

Sunday, October 19, 2008

EVENT: Wednesday, Oct. 22---Mass. Congressional Hearing on Mortgage Crisis

CONGRESSIONAL HEARING ON MORTGAGE CRISIS---1:00PM in Room A-1

House Speaker Salvatore DiMasi hosts a field hearing for U.S. House Judiciary Committee with Congressman William Delahunt. DiMasi’s office said Delahunt asked for the hearing, which will focus on the impact of “toxic mortgages” and foreclosures on the national and state economies.

EVENT: Tuesday, Oct. 21---Education Board Weighs In On Question 1

9:00AM at Holyoke High School, 500 Beech St., Holyoke

Public education policymakers will get a chance on Tuesday to weigh in on one of the hottest topics on Beacon Hill: a question on the November ballot eliminating the state income tax. Education Commissioner Mitchell Chester has provided members of the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education with documents outlining the arguments for and against the initiative, along with a bulletin from the Office of Campaign and Political Finance that outlines how public officials can handle talking about a ballot question. A vote taking a position on the ballot question is possible. Maura Banta, a manager at IBM and chair of the 11-member board, told the News Service after the September board meeting that the initiative is “something the board will take a stand on.” The discussion of the initiative comes at the urging of Ruth Kaplan, a member of the Massachusetts Parent Teacher Association and a Patrick appointee. Patrick has said he would “struggle” with implementation of the question should it pass. The board will also discuss the MCAS results for 2008, educational proficiency plans, a state accountability and assistance system, and charter school amendments.

EVENT: Monday, Oct. 20, State Board of Elementary and Second Education Meets

Monday, 5:00 pm, Delaney House, 3 Country Club Road/Route 5, Holyoke

A special meeting of the state Board of Elementary and Secondary Education convenes on Monday evening to tackle the creation of a state accountability and assistance system. The responsibility was shifted to the board over the summer after Gov. Patrick signed legislation eliminating the independent Office of Educational Quality and Accountability. School administrators often complained that EQA offered duplicative and unhelpful reviews, while supporters of the agency said it provided important evaluations and held school districts accountable. In a memo to board members, Education Commissioner Mitchell Chester said he had spoken with administrators, superintendents, lawmakers and others in discussing a new accountability system that would be tied in with assistance to districts. “Important and difficult questions have been brought to the table; existing rules have been challenged,” he wrote. “Opinions and ideas from this broad range of stakeholders have been raised and I have openly declared my intention to reexamine the current system and to work collaboratively with the field in order to determine what changes should be made.”

EVENT: Monday, Oct. 20, Fiscal Hearing--October Revenues

FISCAL HEARING - OCTOBER REVENUES, Monday, 10 am, Gardner Auditorium

The Patrick administration gets three days after the 15th of each month to release its mid-month tax revenue report and the administration is taking its full allotment this month, which means Monday will likely bring more news of underperforming revenues. Members of the House and Senate Ways and Means committees have called in Leslie Kirwan, the state administration and finance secretary, Revenue Commissioner Navjeet Bal and other economic observers to try to get a handle on the devolving fiscal and economic picture facing the state and its residents. Kirwan and Bal will likely face questions regarding the cuts made by Gov. Patrick and the methodology the administration used to derive its new tax revenue estimate, which has been lowered by $1.1 billion. Patrick says that in the budget-cutting exercise, he tried to preserve “key targeted investments” in education, clean energy, health care reform and infrastructure. Committee members will then hear from a group of familiar faces and students of the local economy. They include Barry Bluestone of Northeastern University, Alan Clayton-Matthews of UMass, Yolanda Kodrzycki of the Federal Reserve Bank, Michael Widmer of the Mass. Taxpayers Foundation and David Tuerck of the Beacon Hill Institute at Suffolk University. For the most part, Beacon Hill leaders, in full retreat on spending, have taken a no-one-predicted-it-would-be-this-bad attitude towards the economic downturn and portrayed their spending proposals as victims of larger forces outside their control. But veteran legislators who experienced the highs and lows of capital gains tax collection swings appear to have failed to learn from the past or heed the rollercoaster-like trend line that cap gains collections have taken over the years.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

EVENT: Thursday Oct. 23-Monday Oct. 27--World Vision Experience: AIDS – Step into Africa

Virtual Africa exhibit brings the realities of AIDS in Africa home through a free, interactive exhibit open to the public that takes its visitors on a journey into AIDS-affected communities in Africa, as seen through the eyes of three children

WHO: Grace Community Church, is hosting the "World Vision Experience: AIDS" tent exhibit. The public is invited to go through the free, multimedia, interactive exhibit and become one of the over 30,000 people who have been through the exhibit.

WHAT: The "World Vision Experience: AIDS" exhibit is a unique, multi-media, interactive exhibit that allows Americans to step into the lives of actual children affected by HIV and AIDS in the hardest-hit region of the world: Sub-Saharan Africa, where about 25 million people are infected with HIV (2/3 of the world's total). Visitors walk through a replica of an African village and experience the effects of the pandemic in a real way as they listen to a personal audio track relating the story of one of three children – Olivia, Stephen, and Beatrice.

WHEN: The free exhibit will be open to the public from Thursday, October 23 – Monday, October 27, 10 am – 8 pm daily.

WHERE: Grace Community Church

275 Billerica Road

Chelmsford, MA 01824

Contact: Matthew Beattie, 603.770.6991

CONTACT:

Interviews for the above and additional locations and dates can be scheduled by calling Jennifer Kuntz, the contact listed at top.

Background

The World Vision Experience was launched in fall 2005. In the first year, nearly 20,000 people in 10 North American cities visited the Experience. The prototype Experience was featured at the 2006 Global AIDS Conference in Toronto and displayed in New York's Grand Central terminal. The smaller tent version was created in September 2006 to tour college campuses in Southern California; since then it has toured colleges, churches and music festivals around the country.

PRESS RELEASE: Election Fever: Who's Hot-Literally





ELECTION FEVER:
Survey Sheds Light on Who's Hot - Literally - Heading into the 2008 Presidential Election
FastLife.com's Presidential Dateability Survey Indicates That
Barack's Hot, McCain's Not, and Sarah's Anything But Pale

NEW YORK CITY (October 16, 2008) - If the winner of the Presidential election was determined by one-night stand potential, Barack Obama would be seated in the White House, with Sarah Palin as West Wingwoman. A recent on-line survey conducted by FastLife.com, the global leader in singles events, saw voters cast their ballots regarding which presidential candidate they would most want to date, have a beer with, and have a one night stand with, among other categories.

"The survey produced some surprising and entertaining responses that reveal which candidate is likeable on a more personal level," says Lisa Caroline Leung, a spokesperson for FastLife.com. "As far as our members are concerned, if elections were based on 'likeability' and were up to the ladies, Obama would take the election; left up to the men, it would be Sarah Palin in the White House!"

Results from FastLife.com's election survey include:

Quickie Love - A whopping 71.8% of women would rather have a one-night stand with Obama over McCain. One respondent commented "A one-night stand is just about all he's good for. . ."

In fact, 70.9% of women find Obama "sexier" than McCain.

Daddy Dearest - While 61.2% of women would rather set their mother up with Obama, 54.9% of men would rather it be McCain doing the wooing. "I [would] want my mom to have a little fun!" wrote one participant.

When it comes down to who would make the best father figure, 63% of men thought McCain would do a better job, while 53% of women chose Obama.

Beer Buddies - The majority of men would rather have a beer with Obama (55.1%) over McCain (44.9%). Interestingly, voter reasoning parried between who would tell better drunk stories versus who would be more entertaining to watch while drunk.

My Boyfriend's Back - When asked what kind of boyfriend they thought the candidates would be, 32.8% of women thought McCain would be "territorial," followed by "steady, stable and reliable" (28.4%), with "sneaky" taking third place at 22%.

In contrast, women imagined Obama would be "steady, stable and reliable" (28.9%), with "clingy" and "caring and sensitive" almost on par with each other at 21.5% and 20.4%, respectively.

Girlfriend Material - When asked what type of girlfriend they thought she would be, 23.5% of men thought Sarah Palin would be "steady, stable and reliable," followed by "territorial" and "spontaneous and exciting."

Men were additionally asked to describe their attraction towards Palin:
36.2% of men find Palin "Attractive - in that powerful, confident way"
28% of men find her "Not attractive - just not my type"
25.8% of men say Palin is "Hot - she turns me on!"
9.9% of men think "No way - she is opposite of my definition of attractive"

One man commented, "Palin is very hot, and if she were younger, unmarried with no children, and lived in New York I would date her."

Open to both FastLife.com members and non-members, the 10-question survey was conducted to find out the country's opinions regarding some of the lighter sociological aspects affecting candidate preference. The survey, which offered different questions for men and women, ran for 10 days beginning on October 4, and attracted responses from more than 1,000 participants across the country.

Results are summarized below; for complete results (20 questions + responses and quotable comments) or demographic information, please contact Lisa Caroline Leung.

Lisa Caroline Leung
lisa@fastlife.com
1 800 406 0832
917 545 8352
416 840 9945
FastLife International
www.fastlife.com


results table

Contact
For further information or to request an interview, please contact Lisa Caroline Leung toll-free at 1 800 406 0832 or 416 840 9945, by cell at 917 545 8352, or by email at lisa@fastlfe.com. To contact Justin Parfitt, CEO and Founder of FastLife international, please call 1 800 406 0832.

About FastLife.com
FastLife.com is the world's largest speed dating and singles events service, specializing in events that enable busy, professional singles to meet one another in a sophisticated environment. Founded in 2002, FastLife.com now offers events in six countries (United States, Australia, the United Kingdom, Canada, New Zealand and China). For more information go to www.fastlife.com.

PRESS RELEASE: The Interview People

This week we're happy to offer you interviews with three world known music acts: Tracy Chapman, Anastacia & Oasis (Noel Gallagher).Visit our website and listen to sample quotes, take a guided tour and experience this fascinating tool for radio editors.Please call or write us if you need any assistance.Of course you find all interviews to download on our website:www.theinterviewpeople.com

INTERVIEWS – all cut with Q&A transcripts, ready to use!

with Tracy Chapman on growing up, looking back on 20 years of her career and the new album (25 mp3 – takes)

with Anastacia on being married, not going to clubs and using Botox (20 mp3 – takes)

with Noel Gallagher (Oasis) on his family and the new album (30 mp3 – takes)

with Leonardo DiCaprio on art and politics (18 mp3 – takes),

with Russell Crowe on his kids, his band, rugby and Leonardo DiCaprio (14 mp3 – takes),

with Richard Gere on Tibet, China and his wife (9 mp3 – takes)

with Billy Bob Thornton on Sarah Palin, women, and hating his job (29 mp3 – takes)

with Noel Gallagher on the new album "Dig Out Your Soul", his family, being yourself in spite of the critics and politics (30 mp3 – takes)

with Mike Skinner on his new album, discipline, youth culture and modern life (19 mp3 – takes),

with George Clooney on fame, money and Oscars (5 mp3 – takes),

with Mickey Rourke on hard years, paralyzed wrestlers and his friendship to Bruce Springsteen (12 mp3 – takes),

with Daniel Radcliffe on girlfriends, kisses and his fans (25 mp3 – takes),

with Antonio Banderas on Melanie Griffith and horse riding (3 mp3 – takes),

with Drew Barrymore on her humour and asking questions about her life (3 mp3 – takes),

with Kirk Hammett on 80's revival, fatherhood and attraction of death (18 mp3 – takes)

with Selma Blair on fake breasts and feeling older than she is (22 mp3 – takes)

with Emma Roberts revealing everything on her teenage actress life (28 mp3 – takes)

with Heath Ledger on fatherhood and passion for movies (25 mp3 – takes)

with George Lucas on Untitled Star Wars TV series and his poster collection (20 mp3 – takes)

with Madonna on past, present and future (6 mp3 – takes)

with Penelope Cruz on her career (13 mp3 – takes)

with Ne-Yo on his home, his mother and independent women (25 mp3 – takes)

with Brendan Fraser on his kids and expensive hobbies (about 20 mp3 – takes)

with Michelle Yeoh on language problems and stage fright (29 mp3 – takes)

with Jet Li on never fighting in real life and stop doing movies (15 mp3 – takes)

with Colin Firth on his music style and the typical Brit (23 mp3 – takes)

with Xzibit on losing a child and god (26 mp3 – takes)

with David Duchovny on conspiracies and not being able to cook (6 mp3 – takes)

with Jakob Dylan on his father and his own music (27 mp3 – takes)

with Jason Bateman on fighting for a girl-friend (9 mp3 – files)

with Cyndi Lauper on being compared to Madonna and sucking at business (38 mp3 – tales)

with Gillian Anderson about the X-Files 2 and turning 40 (23 mp3 – takes)

with Meryl Streep on not being that fit and preparing for the movie on the closet (17 mp3 – takes)

with Pierce Brosnan on not coming back as James Bond and shooting movies far away from his family (24 mp3 – takes)

with Mike Myers on the most important thing that everybody should learn in life and about his dad (8 mp3 – takes)

with Justin Timberlake on the perfect song to serenade a lady and his personal definition of luck (13 mp3 – takes)

with Charlize Theron on food, work out, and the new movie "Hancock", (17 mp3 – takes)

with Will Smith on his wife and kids and his ambitions to become first black president (26 mp3 – takes)

with James McAvoy on kissing Angelina Jolie and many more (15 mp3 - takes)

with Supermodel Gisele Buendchen about what to wear this summer (11 mp3 – takes),

with Country Legend Emmylou Harris about her new album and how she cares about homeless dogs (28 mp3 – takes),

with Ex-Vice President of the US, Al Gore, on climate change and his private life (12 mp3 – takes),

with Guy Berryman on the making-of the album, writing under hypnosis rather than drugs, about working with Brian Eno and many more, (28 mp3 – takes)

with George Clooney on politics, why he's doing commercials and about his close friend Renée Zellweger,

with Noodles on punk rock, his little son, the joy of being at home, and why he feels bad for Britney Spears (19 mp3 - takes),

with Angelina Jolie on her new movies, her love to Europe and her children (9 mp3 - takes)

with Alanis Morissette on chaotic times, leadership and abortion (10 mp3 – takes)

with Sarah Jessica Parker on love, family and a lot more (23 mp3 - takes)

and many more: Beyonce Knowles, Cameron Diaz, Kim Cattrall, Cynthia Nixon, Kristin Davis, Patrick Dempsey, Usher, Susan Sarandon, Jim Sturgess, Katherine Heigl, Penelope Cruz, Morgan Freeman, Bryan Adams and a lot more..

Phone: +49 81 61 80 74 978

Johannisstr. 2 – 85354 Freising – Germany

Tax-ID: 115/165/05402 – Vat-Reg: DE 258085310


info@theinterviewpeople.com