Today's main topic was supposed to be about ninjas, but something else has happened. I am a published writer. Granted, it was in a free, weekly college paper but published is published. That said, here is my article.
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November 6, 2008
WILLIAMSPORT TAKES CENTER STAGE IN ELECTION
Both V.P. cadidates make last-minute stop in Williamsport to win over undecided voters
By Cristina Sorrells
The Lycourier Staff
Both vice presidential hopefuls, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and Delaware Sen. Joe Biden were hosted by Lycoming County last Thursday.
Both were in the state, considered a major battleground with 21 crucial Electoral College votes to give away; aiming to motivate their base of supporters to vote on Election Day, Nov. 4.
According to the web site, http://www.electoral-vote.com, Pennsylvania has been split nearly evenly between Democrats and Republicans in the last four presidential elections, starting in 1992.
Biden spoke in Lycoming College’s Lamade Gymnasium on behalf of Democratic presidential hopeful, Illinois Sen. Barack Obama, and Palin later spoke at Historic Bowman Field, for the Republican hopeful, Arizona Sen. John McCain.
Biden spoke about four years of “failed economic policies,” and “restoring the middle class, and reclaiming America’s respect in the world.” He called for a timeline for a military drawdown for the troops in Iraq. The senator promised tax cuts and “the creation of 82,000 new jobs in Pennsylvania.”
He told the crowd of about 450 supporters that the American people cannot wait until January for change, when a new president is sworn in, and that he and Obama would return to Washington after the election and propose a three-month moratorium on all foreclosures to give people a chance to renegotiate their mortgages.
Despite the thin crowd of mostly older people, Biden proposed to the young people in the audience that “If you serve your country in the military, in public service, in a nursing home or senior center . . . you will get into college.”
Palin’s rally at Bowman Field drew a much larger crowd, according to Williamsport Mayor Gabriel Campana, who said about 13,000 people attended. Republicans on hand to address the audience prior to Palin’s arrival were State Senate hopeful Gene Yaw; State Rep. Matthew E. Baker, the John McCain campaign chairman for Tioga County; and Campana and his family.
Yaw, the first speaker, spoke about needing tested leaders and less government. Baker disagreed with the Obama campaign’s promise of change saying “A promise of change espoused by higher taxes does not stand.” He was pleased to announce to the cheering crowd that the local newspaper, the “Williamsport Sun-Gazette,” endorsed McCain and Palin.
Then Palin and her husband, Todd, arrived to an enthusiastic greeting. The governor thanked the veterans in the crowd. Addressing the people in general, she spoke about cutting spending, reducing government, and about military spending, demanding “Let’s not retreat from a war that’s almost won.”
She emphasized Obama’s lack of experience. “The rousing speeches of our opponent can fill a stadium, but cannot make this country safe,” she said.
Palin called for more domestic drilling. “There is more coal and natural gas in this country than there is oil in Saudi Arabia,” she said. “We have to use it and stop the flow of money to countries that don't like us.”
The crowd was delighted and began chanting, “Drill, baby, drill.”
Palin responded, “You betcha. Drill, baby, drill. And mine, baby, mine. We need to develop a clean coal technology.”
She discussed one of her core issues, expanding the funding for special needs children.
After the rally at Bowman Field, Palin, and her husband, Todd, and Biden at Lycoming College, mingled briefly with the crowd, signing autographs.
PLEASE NOTE:
Election results were not available as of press time.
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NEXT: NINJAS!
Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts
Thursday, November 6, 2008
Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Bow your heads and pray for America. It's going to be long, long, long four years and we're going to need it. Badly.
The flag's at half-staff in mourning for the loss of my country.
Labels:
politics
Wednesday, September 10, 2008
September 11, 2001

BY CRISTINA
MTV’s first music video, “Video Killed the Radio Star” by The Buggles played on August 1, 1981. I was born twenty four days later, making me truly a child of the so called ‘MTV generation.’ When I was younger, I often lamented the lack of truly significant causes and events for my generation that had marked the previous two. For my grandparents, it was World War II, the horrors of the Holocaust, the advent of television, and the start of the Cold War. My parents’ generation was shaped by the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Vietnam War, the Civil Rights movement, and the assassination of four very significant people.
As I think back, very few people in my generation may recall the following events, but I remember them distinctly. I remember the fall of the Berlin Wall, and feeling as excited as the young people with their sledgehammers, dancing on top of the Wall’s ugly, graffiti covered surface. I remember the first Iraq War, and being afraid of what I was seeing on the TV. I was nine at the time, and the TV was on twenty-four hours a day, locked on CNN. I recall the first World Trade Center bombing, the fall of Communism and thus the end of the Cold War, I remember Tiananmen Square.
But the impact on my life because of these events was small. The biggest event, though it still only affected me indirectly, was September 11, 2001. It was a bright, sunny Tuesday—a perfect early fall morning— and I was on my way to work, when the radio made the first announcement that started eighteen months of worldwide confusion fear, anger, grief, and loss of life:
“This just in—a small aircraft has just struck the World Trade Center in New York City . . .”
It has been seven years. Let us never forget.

We shall lay and bleed awhile,
Then rise to fight again.

Labels:
archaeology,
politics,
sociology
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