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<div><font face="Arial"><b>Celebrities to Send Bush Anti-War
Letter</b><font size="-1" color="#000000"><br>
<br>
LOS ANGELES (AP)--Mike Farrell and Anjelica Huston will release a
letter Tuesday signed by a hundred celebrities who want President Bush
to stop his war rhetoric toward Iraq.<br>
<br>
The letter reportedly is signed by stars including Kim Basinger, Matt
Damon, Laurence Fishburne, Ethan Hawke, Uma Thurman, Samuel L.
Jackson, Jessica Lange and Martin Sheen, publicists for the event said
Monday.<br>
<br>
Details of the letter weren't released.<br>
<br>
Bush has threatened military force against Iraqi leader Saddam
Hussein, saying the dictator has amassed weapons of mass destruction
that pose a danger to the United States.<br>
<br>
United Nations weapons inspectors are searching the Middle Eastern
country for such devices but have turned up little so far.<br>
<br>
Farrell, who plays a veterinarian on the NBC drama ``Providence,''
previously compiled a celebrity-endorsed letter in June asking U.S.
senators to vote against a plan to bury the nation's nuclear power
waste at Nevada's Yucca Mountain.<br>
<br>
Co-signers of that letter included Alec Baldwin and Tim Robbins, Rob
Reiner, Barbra Streisand and Harry Belafonte.<br>
<br>
On July 9, senators voted 60-39 in favor of the Yucca Mountain
project.<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
<i>AP-NY-12-09-02 1601EST</i></font></font><br>
<font face="Arial" size="-1" color="#000000"><i></i></font></div>
<div><font face="Arial" size="-1" color="#000000">December 10,
2002<br>
<br>
TODAY'S LA TIMES, CALENDAR PAGE E3<br>
Speaking against war<br>
<img src="http://www.calendarlive.com/images/standard/blackpix.gif"
width="6" height="6">A group of celebrities will issue a statement
today protesting an attack against Iraq.<br>
<br>
<img src="http://www.calendarlive.com/images/standard/empty.gif"
width="5" height="1"><img
src="http://www.calendarlive.com/images/standard/empty.gif" width="1"
height="1"><img
src="http://www.calendarlive.com/images/standard/empty.gif" width="4"
height="1"> <br>
<br>
By Hilary E. MacGregor, Times Staff Writer<br>
<br>
More than 100 Hollywood actors, producers and directors will out
themselves today as antiwar activists. Mike Farrell, Alfre Woodard, Ed
Begley Jr., Tony Shalhoub and others will hold a news conference at 10
a.m. at Les Deux Cafes in Hollywood to issue a statement protesting
the costs and risks of going to war with Iraq. Calling themselves
Artists United to Win Without War, the celebrity signatories to the
statement range from Gillian Anderson and Kim Basinger to Matt Damon,
Laurence Fishburne and Michael Stipe.<br>
<br>
Denouncing war talk in Washington "alarming and unnecessary,"
the simple, five-paragraph declaration urges the disarming of Iraq
through "legal diplomatic means."</font><br>
<font face="Arial" size="-1" color="#000000"></font></div>
<div><font face="Arial" size="-1" color="#000000">"We are
patriotic Americans who share the belief that Saddam Hussein cannot be
allowed to possess weapons of mass destruction. We support rigorous
U.N. weapons inspections to assure Iraq's effective disarmament,"
the statement reads. "However, a preemptive military invasion of
Iraq will harm American national interests. Such a war will increase
human suffering, arouse animosity toward our country, increase the
likelihood of terrorist attacks, damage the economy, and undermine our
moral standing in the world."<br>
<br>
The glitterati in the group will fill the talk shows and entertainment
magazines soon enough. This is the story of how two friends armed with
nothing but their computers and e-mail accounts quietly rounded up
some of the biggest names in Hollywood for the antiwar effort.<br>
<br>
Last summer, Robert Greenwald (director of "The Burning Bed"
and director-producer of the upcoming "My Dark Places")
started talking to his buddy, actor-activist Farrell (of "MASH"
and "Providence").<br>
<br>
"We owe it all to Andrew Card," recalls Greenwald. "It
seems like a lifetime ago now, but he said, if you have a product, you
don't release it in the summer."<br>
<br>
Greenwald recalls thinking the comment by the White House chief of
staff and former vice president of General Motors -- explaining why
the Bush administration would wait until September to make its case
for war in Iraq -- was outrageous. "I was talking to Mike
Farrell, saying, 'Did he really say that?' Here were people who were
using the language of the world we function in, only they were selling
things that were life and death decisions for an enormous number of
people."<br>
<br>
On Oct. 2, Farrell and Greenwald set up a teach-in at the home of
Stanley Sheinbaum, the Democratic fund-raiser. Speakers included Scott
Ritter, the former U.N. weapons inspector turned peacenik, and David
Cortright, a professor in the peace studies department at Notre Dame
who also runs the Fourth Freedom Forum, a private research group that
advocates the reduction and elimination of nuclear weapons. More than
50 figures from politics and entertainment attended the gathering,
including Warren Beatty and wife Annette Bening, Tom Hayden and Gary
Hart.</font></div>
<div><font face="Arial" size="-1" color="#000000"><br>
It was a turning point.<br>
<br>
"We began to discern the extraordinary amount of concern out
there -- and confusion," Farrell says. "We didn't pull that
meeting together to start another organization. But we realized
something had to be done."<br>
<br>
In the weeks following, Greenwald found himself growing more
alarmed.<br>
<br>
"I was watching the news more and more, and seeing one message,"
he says. "Even before the elections, it was being brilliantly
done by the administration. There were no other voices out there. The
argument was about when you bomb them, not if you bomb them. It was
about when you go to war, not if you go to war. The underlying
assumptions were not being questioned."<br>
<br>
Greenwald and Farrell realized that there are people with high
profiles and strong opinions who could speak out -- "and they
happen to be actors and actresses," says Greenwald.<br>
<br>
On the weekend of Nov. 15, Cortright and a group that called itself
the Win Without War coalition met in upstate New York. There they
crafted the wording that would become the basis for the Hollywood
statement.<br>
<br>
Greenwald and Farrell began circulating the declaration by e-mail.
They sent it to friends, business associates, acquaintances. It was a
low-key campaign, but steady. There were no political advisors, no
formal announcements, no fund-raisers. Word spread quietly, over
dinner tables, at preschool pickups, on movie sets.<br>
<br>
Some celebrities declined to sign, saying they preferred to wait and
see. But many leapt on board, telling Greenwald and Farrell they were
thankful finally to have an outlet to express both their patriotism
and their antiwar views.<br>
<br>
"Tea and I would love to sign the letter," David Duchovny
replied in an e-mail. "Tea was just saying at dinner -- 'We're
going to be at war soon and it's like we're just blindly accepting the
drift ... ' "<br>
<br>
"I feel the current administration and the mainstream media are
bullying the American public into blindly supporting acts of
aggression," wrote Janeane Garofalo before signing on.<br>
<br>
At best, Greenwald says, they hoped to get 15 to 20 stars to sign.
Instead, signatures of support continued to pour in over the weekend
and into Monday.<br>
<br>
The statement has also been signed by some impressively titled
non-Hollywood names, such as Edward Peck, the former U.S. ambassador
to Iraq; retired U.S. Navy Rear Adm. Eugene J. Carroll; and former
ambassador and arms control negotiator Jonathan Dean.<br>
<br>
The Los Angeles news conference will be followed by the release of a
similar statement by the Win Without War coalition Wednesday in
Washington, D.C.<br>
<br>
The coalition worked hand-in-hand with the Hollywood group in drafting
its statement and orchestrating its news conference. The Washington
coalition is made up of 15 organizations, including the National
Council of Churches, the NAACP, the National Organization for Women
and MoveOn.<br>
<br>
Artists United to Win Without War also plans to run a full-page ad in
the national edition of the New York Times. The statement will then be
forwarded to President Bush.<br>
<br>
"There was an environment created after 9/11 where somehow it
wasn't patriotic to speak out," says Greenwald. "I think
there have been an increasing number of voices raised against war, but
they have not done an effective job of reaching TV, radio and the
print media.</font><br>
<font face="Arial" size="-1" color="#000000"></font></div>
<div><font face="Arial" size="-1" color="#000000">"This is a way
to get attention."</font></div>
<x-sigsep><pre>--
</pre></x-sigsep>
<div>Marta Russell<br>
Los Angeles, CA<br>
http://www.disweb.org</div>
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