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Legendary Pop Icon Lisa Lisa Set to Present at 'BET Awards' at the Shrine Auditorium in LA |
| | NewswireToday - /newswire/ - Carlisle, MA, United States, 06/23/2008 - The Queen of Latin Hiphop, Lisa Lisa will present an award at the highly anticipated BET Awards on Tuesday June 24, 2008 at 8PM. The unbelievable line-up of performers and appearances, ensures that this year's BET AWARDS will be the best yet!. | | | | | | As an original member and the electrifying front woman of Lisa Lisa and the Cult Jam, Lisa Lisa has not only made a name within the entertainment business, but also proven herself to be a staying power within the music industry. With six top selling albums and more than 20 million records sold worldwide, Lisa Lisa has become an icon in her own right; with her powerful voice and stage presence she has provided the foundation for many of today’s powerhouse diva’s such as Shakira and Jennifer Lopez. Today Lisa Lisa’s success continues to expand as she proves her versatility as an artist. From 2001 to 2002 she starred in Nickelodeon’s TV Series, Taina, as well as appeared on NBC’s Law and Order and Broadway’s Westside Story.
Lisa Lisa’s long awaited seventh album, Life N Love, will be released in the upcoming months by Mass Appeal Entertainment. Lisa Lisa is managed by Songwriter/Producer Stephanie Saraco. Please visit Lisa Lisa’s website at for much more information, including photos, music, and tour dates.
About Mass Appeal Entertainment Owned and operated by Producer/Writer Marcus “DL” Siskind (Backstreet Boys, Lauryn Hill, Queen Latifah, etc.) Mass Appeal Entertainment is a Boston, MA based company with a multitude of artists currently signed from various musical genres. Mass Appeal also has divisions in Publishing (Shakertown Music is a joint venture with Sony/ATV Publishing) and a Recording facility (world class Blue Jay Recording studio). Releasing highly-anticipated albums by artists such as the legendary Lisa Lisa (from Lisa Lisa and the Cult Jam), Boston’s Hiphop star Dre Robinson, and Singer/Songwriter Ryan Toby (formerly of City High), Mass Appeal Entertainment is an independent force taking the music industry by storm. |
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More:KIRK FRANLIN, MARVIN SAPP AMONGST FEATURED PERFORMERS JUNE 27-29: At the I Hear Music in The Air Conference in Cincinnati. Radio One and IHM presents I Hear Music in The Air Conference, Concert, Teen Summit and Gala to be held June 27-29, 2008 in Cincinnati. It will feature performances and appearances by Kirk Franklin, Marvin Sapp, LeAnne Palmore, Dorinda Clark-Cole, Vicki Winans, Byron Cage, Rev. Otis Moss, Christopher, Carnell Murell, and Pastor Gregg Patrick. On Friday June 27 the concert is held featuring the performances of Kirk Franklin, Marvin Sapp, Orinda Clark-Cole, and Vicki Winans at The Aronoff Center (www.cincinnatiarts.org). On Saturday June 28th it’s the I Hear Music in the Air Conference, New Artist Showcase and Teen Summit to be held at the Word Family Life Center and on Sunday, June 29th it’s the I Hear Music Gala at The Sheraton main Ballroom. For more information call the Cincinnati Arts at 513-621-2787513-621-2787 or log onto www.ihearmusicintheair.com. THE MANIFEST DESTINY CONFERENCE Rev. Dr. Barbara Austin Lucas and WOMB Inc. invite you to join Martha Munizzi and Donna Richardson-Joyner for the Manifest Destiny Conference on July 11-13 at the Brooklyn Marriott. For more information, visit www.wombinc.org or call 718-649-5410718-649-5410.
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DASH Diet Improves Women's Heart Health Diet Rich in Fruits and Vegetables and Low in Fat Can Cut Rates of Cardiovascular Disease April 14, 2008 -- A healthy diet rich in fruits and vegetables and low in fat has long been touted as heart smart. Now, increasing evidence suggests that a similar diet reduces blood pressure and decreases a woman's risk for heart attack and stroke. Scientists reporting in the April 14 issue of Archives of Internal Medicine have found that healthy, middle-aged women who closely followed the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) diet have lower rates of cardiovascular disease (CVD) than women who do not follow such diets. Our study provides, to our knowledge, the strongest evidence to date on the long-term benefits of the DASH diet in the primary prevention of CVD among healthy subjects," writes Teresa T. Fung, ScD, of Simmons College, Boston. National dietary guidelines promote the DASH diet as an example of a healthy eating pattern. The diet comprises plenty of fruits, vegetables, and plant proteins from legumes and nuts, and moderate servings of low-fat dairy products. It is low in meat. Considerable research has shown that such a diet substantially lowers blood pressure in people with high and normal blood pressure while also reducing LDL "bad" cholesterol. Restricting salt while on the diet provides an even greater blood pressure reduction. High blood pressure and high cholesterol are both risk factors for cardiovascular disease. However, little is known about the DASH diet's effect on heart attack and stroke. Fung and colleagues studied the eating patterns of 88, 517 female nurses aged 34 to 59 to determine if sticking to a DASH diet affected a woman's risk of such diseases. The women did not have CVD or diabetes when the trial started. Seven times over a period of 24 years the women told the researchers what types of foods they regularly ate over the previous 12 months. Fung's team grouped the foods into specific categories, giving them a DASH score for each type. The more fruits, vegetables, whole grains, nuts, and legumes a woman ate, and the closer she stayed to dairy recommendations, the higher her DASH score. Eating more red and processed meats, salt, and sweetened drinks lowered the scores. The women who had the highest DASH scores had the lowest risk for heart disease and stroke. Closely following a DASH diet resulted in a 24% reduction in heart disease risk and 18% lower risk of stroke when compared to those with the lowest DASH scores. The authors point out that the women with the highest DASH scores also appeared to live overall healthier lifestyles. They were less likely to be current smokers, more likely to exercise, and tended to consume high amounts of fiber and omega-3 fatty acids than the other study participants.
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Mystery of missing money lingers
BY KARA RHODES The state Attorney General's Office charged a clerk with stealing nearly $1,500 from the office of Erie 4th Ward District Judge Tom Robie in the fall of 2006.
But state investigators have no idea what happened to the rest of the money that disappeared from Robie's office -- another $5,979 in missing cash, checks and a money order.
Poor accounting practices at Robie's office prevented the Attorney General's Office from charging anyone other than the now-former clerk, Kelly J. Kudlak, 32, who was accused Thursday of taking $1,498 from the office and then lying about it to a statewide grand jury.
"We had to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that she was the only one that could have taken the money," said Kevin Harley, a spokesman for the Attorney General's Office. "We were only able to prove the amount of money that we charged."
He said he does not anticipate charges against anyone else in the case.
Harley said it was impossible to follow the trail of the rest of the money and the missing checks because of the accounting procedures at Robie's office at the time of the theft.
"They've been improved since, but at the time, they were lax," he said.
Robie's office did not have written records identifying who deposited revenue at PNC Bank on the 10 dates money was missing between Sept. 8, 2006, and Oct. 20, 2006, investigators said. Robie and his office workers also were not initialing deposit slips or maintaining written records of deposits.
The Attorney General's Office is alleging a total of $7,478 -- including the money Kudlak is accused of stealing -- had not been properly deposited after Robie's office is believed to have collected it. Clients submitted the money to Robie's office to pay costs, fines and other court-mandated expenses associated with criminal and civil cases adjudicated at Robie's office, 556 W. Fourth St., which covers the lower west side.
The amount of money still missing -- $5,979 -- is made up of $2,100 in cash and $3,879 in checks and a money order. Harley said the checks were never cashed.
Kudlak's defense Kudlak's lawyer, Vince Nudi, said Thursday he has asked the Attorney General's Office about the whereabouts of the funds that remain unaccounted for. He said he hasn't received a satisfactory answer.
"They won't say anything," he said.
Nudi described the criminal complaint filed against Kudlak as "weak."
"But I don't want to say anything beyond that now," he said. "There's a whole lot of factors that haven't come out."
Nudi said Kudlak is not guilty.
"She's very upset and she still maintains her innocence, just as she's done all along," he said.
Kudlak, 32, of the 2300 block of Cherry Street, testified before the grand jury that recommended the Attorney General's Office charge her with perjury, theft and other counts.
The grand jury accused her of taking money on the three dates that investigators believe she was the only person available at Robie's office to take the deposits to the bank. She is accused of taking cash that was supposed to have been deposited in the amounts of $423, $280, $560 and $235.
Robie said Thursday he feels as if the charges against Kudlak bring closure to the investigation, which has been going on since the money in his office was reported missing in November 2006.
"Our office reported money missing 17 months ago," said Robie, 59, a former Erie police detective first elected to a six-year term as district judge in 2003. "That's a long time to have a matter like this remaining unresolved. It's sad and unfortunate, but I'm hoping this will allow us to have some closure in this matter."
Robie said he did not want to discuss the charges further because he believes he might be called to testify in the case.
"I can't get into the particulars," he said. "I would just say that these charges show that they believe there was some sort of pattern."
The grand jury probe Robie has three staff members at his office. He hired Kudlak as a full time clerk Oct. 31, 2005. She was paid $18,819 a year.
The official investigation into the missing money was launched Nov. 3, 2006, after another clerk in Robie's office, DeMitta Moore, helped report the missing money to Erie County Controller Sue Weber, whose office audits the finances of the county's 15 district justices, and the county court administration.
Weber notified District Attorney Brad Foulk, whose office investigated the missing money and turned over his findings in January 2007 to the Attorney General's Office. Foulk cited his close ties to Robie, Robie's family and Robie's judicial office in referring the case to Attorney General Tom Corbett.
Erie County government later wrote a check to Robie's office to cover the $7,477.65 shortfall. Weber then took steps to recover that money by asking the affected clients at Robie's office to send the county courthouse replacement checks to cover the amounts they thought they had already paid by check. About half the clients cooperated, Weber said.
Kudlak was suspended without pay from Robie's office on Nov. 17, 2006, after she was cited for driving with a suspended license. But Kudlak was able to show paperwork showing her driving privileges had been restored, and was reinstated to her position in December.
Kudlak worked in Robie's office until May, when she underwent back surgery, Robie said. She never returned to the position.
Kudlak was called to testify before the grand jury on Sept. 27, according to the grand jury's statement of fact, which is part of the criminal complaint against her.
The grand jury said Kudlak testified she had not taken any money from the office. The grand jury also testified that Constable Greg Kindle had taken the $235 cash payment as part of restitution for a civil judgment restitution and that Kindle, Robie and Moore, the other clerk, were at the office when she wrote the receipt.
Kudlak told the grand jury that she put the money and the receipt in her desk drawer and that they later disappeared, the grand jury said.
Moore and Robie both testified they were out of the office that day, the grand jury said.
The panel said Kindle testified that the person who paid the $235 was able to provide him with a copy of the receipt that the customer said Kudlak provided him.
Kudlak "falsely testified," the criminal complaint alleges, leading to the charges of perjury and false swearing.
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