FRONT PAGE news in Waterbury Connecticut

that was yesterday
today they did "compare the candidates" and left Ron out
at least there was an ad for Ron Paul paid by the litchfield meetup
 
Anyone have a snapshot of both articles? And the advertisement placed by the meetup group?
 
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Sunday, February 3, 2008 6:08 PM EST

Ron Paul cultivates small but committed following

BY GARY GENTILE | REPUBLICAN-AMERICAN
Cory Soulier couldn't help noticing the red, white and blue lawn signs for long-shot Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul that kept popping up around Litchfield County last fall.

But it was the enormous homemade banner, with letters outlined in flashing Christmas tree bulbs in front of Jim Davis' Torrington home that made the 24-year-old grocery store worker and student see the light.

Last December, Soulier knocked on Davis' door and asked for a Ron Paul bumper sticker to place over his Barack Obama one.

"One of the biggest things voters are looking for in this next election is honesty and if there is one candidate who's got it, it's him," Soulier said Friday.

Soulier is one of a small, but passionate group of state voters who not only believe Paul, a Texas congressman, is the best qualified Republican, but that he will stage an enormous come-from-behind surge and grab the nomination.

Paul is an obstetrician who is staunchly anti-abortion. His non-interventionist foreign policy has won fans who cite his vote against authorizing the Iraq war. Paul opposed the Patriot Act and is against gun control. His libertarian views also include abolishing the Federal Reserve system and eliminating the income tax.

Around the state, Paul supporters gather in groups known as "meet ups," like the one that gets together every Thursday at the Food Shop restaurant in Litchfield.

About a dozen supporters met this past Thursday, sipping coffee made by restaurant owners Tim and Christine Winans and talking about steps they could take to encourage people to support Paul in Tuesday's primary election.

Surrounded by pop art on the walls and looking earnestly at their printed agendas, they did not rehash Paul's performance the night before in the televised Republican debate. No one spoke about Paul's wardrobe, his snappy comebacks or whether their candidate looked more presidential than challengers John McCain, Mitt Romney or Mike Huckabee.


http://www.rep-am.com/articles/2008/02/03/news/314999.txt
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Wow, that is great news, since The Connecticut Post totally ignored us on the cover of Sunday's edition in which they had a full breakdown of the other 3 major candidates for the Republican nomination. Don't worry they already received a phone call earlier.
 
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