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Latinos like that Teresa speaks their language

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  • Latinos like that Teresa speaks their language

    Latinos like that Teresa speaks their language
    Frank Cerabino
    Thursday, July 29, 2004

    BOSTON -- Short takes from the Democratic National Convention:
    -Playing ketchup with the Cuban-American vote
    Teresa Heinz Kerry was a hit with the Latino Caucus on Wednesday,
    effortlessly switching from Spanish to English to Portuguese and saying shehad a new
    appreciation for Cuban-Americans and their struggles, likening it to her own
    young life living in a dictatorship.
    "I now understand, because I remember," she said.
    "Te-re-sa! Te-re-sa!" the caucus members chanted as she left. "Viva Teresa!"
    -Star of vegetarian-friendly movie meets vegan candidate
    Every politician has his own celebrity, it seems. Even Dennis Kucinich. The
    elfin former candidate was making the rounds Wednesday flanked by his 6-foot-6
    new friend, actor James Cromwell, who is perhaps best known as the farmer in
    the pig movie Babe.
    "I put on a fund-raiser for him in my house in California," Cromwell said,
    explaining how he met Kucinich. "Dennis speaks to my heart."
    That'll do, Dennis. That'll do.
    -Instead of limousine liberals, it's cuisine liberals
    The Kerry campaign has an ethnic outreach director. George Kivork is an
    Armenian-American born in Syria. Kivork can almost name from memory the 17
    hyphenated-American ethnic groups he is trying to rally -- most of them from
    European countries.
    Kivork urged members of the Ethnic Caucus to drum up local support for
    Kerry.
    "You could travel the country in August, going to ethnic festivals," he told
    them. "The food is amazing."
    -A stronger bladder for America
    Inside the FleetCenter, the official slogan is "A stronger America." But in
    the streets of Boston, strolling delegates are more likely to see the words,
    "Rest rooms are for customers only."
    -Cheney behind the scenes?
    Vice President Dick Cheney recently told off Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., in
    colorful language on the floor of the U.S. Senate. So when Leahy got his chance
    to speak from the podium at the convention Wednesday night, he started out
    by trying to fire back at Cheney.
    Convention speakers rely on a two huge television screens that face them from
    behind the Florida delegation. The words scroll as they talk, allowing the
    speakers to look straight ahead, rather than down at papers on the lectern.
    "If the vice president is watching, he might want to turn off his TV," Leahy
    said in his speech.
    And then the TelePrompTer malfunctioned, leaving the senator to ad lib:
    "Apparently, he turned off the TelePrompTer, too."
    -How quickly they forget
    John Wertman, 27, of Alexandria, Va., is a volunteer at the convention. It
    got him onto the floor of the convention hall earlier in the week. But
    Wednesday, he didn't have a floor pass, so he tried to barter for one.
    Earlier in the week, he stood in line for three hours to get a signed copy of
    former President Clinton's autobiography, My Life.
    Wertman brought the book with him to a convention hotel lobby, standing with
    the book in one hand and a sign in the other: "Autographed Bill Clinton My
    Life for a floor pass."
    He waited, and waited, and waited. An hour later, he was still there.
    "This is tougher than I thought," he said.
    -The Medea is biased
    Medea Benjamin, 51, of San Francisco, was hauled off the convention floor
    Tuesday night by Boston police officers when she unfurled a banner that read
    "End the Occupation of Iraq" during Teresa Heinz Kerry's speech.
    Benjamin founded a women's peace group called Code Pink.
    On Wednesday, Benjamin was back at one of the convention hotels with a
    similar banner.
    "I wasn't arrested," she said. "They interrogated me for a half-hour, then
    let me go."
    She had borrowed a press pass to get on the floor, she said, and had hidden
    the banner when going through security. She said Kerry's wife inspired her to
    unfurl it.
    "She said that a true patriot speaks truth to power," Benjamin said.
    Benjamin said she wasn't surprised to be hauled away.
    "They've made this convention one void of debate about the one issue that's
    so important," she said.
    Benjamin is a frequent visitor to Palm Beach County. Her father and
    stepmother live in Highland Beach.
    As for politics: "Like most families, we're divided."
    -Team players
    The convention has its own house band, an ensemble led by New York drummer
    Steve Jordan and featuring a horn section and three singers. Many of the
    convention speakers get to take the stage while the band strikes up what is known
    as "play ons." These are usually just snippets of popular songs that seem
    appropriate for the speaker.
    For example, Jimmy Carter walked on to Georgia on My Mind, and the Rev.
    Jesse Jackson got the the gospel anthem People Get Ready.
    But what does the band play for someone such as Cheryl Jacques, president of
    the Human Rights Campaign?
    The answer: An instrumental version of Isley Brothers' It's Your Thing.
    It's your thing. Do what you want to do.
    -Sounds more like hold-the-mayo than hold-the-marriage
    It's hard keeping track of the alphabet soup that is all the special interest
    groups at the convention. The unions are all known by their abbreviations,
    and then there's the Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender Caucus, known as the
    GLBT Caucus.
    When U.S. Rep. Eleanor Holmes Norton addressed the caucus Wednesday, she
    repeatedly mixed up the acronym, calling them "my good friends of the GBLT
    community." Find this article at:
    http://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/content/auto/epaper/editions/today/news_1480
    d64145bd323d007a.html
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