Friday, July 01, 2005

Getting some Spirit of '76 into Live 8

New York Daily News: "The message of tomorrow's star-studded Live 8 rock 'n' roll extravaganza - a worldwide fund-raiser for poverty-stricken Africa - is all about human rights and equality.
So it seemed like a good idea to concert organizer
Bobby Shriver to have the Declaration of Independence on the stage in Philadelphia.
Shriver, who's helping at the request of U2 front man
Bono, asked a colleague to look into obtaining television mogul Norman Lear's $8.14 million version of the historic document - one of 25 remaining copies that were printed by the Founding Fathers on the night of July 4, 1776.
'I have good news and I have bad news,' the colleague told Shriver.
'What's the bad news?'
'The Declaration is going to be on display in a museum in Sacramento.'
'Oh no,' Shriver lamented. 'So what's the good news?'
'It's your sister's museum.'
Turns out that California First Lady
Maria Shriver, Bobby's younger sister, had persuaded Lear to lend his Declaration to her pet project, the California Museum for History, Women and the Arts.
It's scheduled to go on display - the centerpiece of a patriotic ceremony to be conducted by
Governator Arnold Schwarzenegger - from July 4 through Oct. 9.
'The negotiations were detailed and delicate, and finally the governor stepped in to arbitrate,' Shriver told me, half in jest but wholly in earnest. 'The Declaration will be flown from California to Philadelphia on Saturday - and it has to be back in Sacramento on Sunday.'
Comic actor
Chris Tucker and Academy Award nominee Djimon Hounsou - a native of Benin in West Africa - will accompany the Declaration on a Gulfstream jet lent by a computer mogul."

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