Actor Kal Penn campaigns for Barack Obama at URI
Andy Blais
Issue date: 2/29/08 Section: Campus
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Penn talked to a group of about 20 students in the Multicultural Center yesterday about getting out the vote for Illinois senator. He encouraged students there to volunteer a half an hour of their time for Obama.
Penn came to URI because, "It's small, but that doesn't mean it's not important." He continued saying every state and every school is personally important to Obama.
"Often with tears in his eyes, he has said how proud he was that college students were finalizing mobilizing to prove cynics wrong," Penn said.
He continued to say that he knows Obama has a real chance of becoming elected.
"The Democratic National Convention was on TV and I had it on in the background and I sort of overheard some guy say ... 'Especially after 9-11, we shouldn't be divided between blue states and red states, we should focus on being the United States,'" he said. "My ears kind of perked up and I looked at the TV, and I'm like who's this guy with the big ears and the funny name and why is he saying all these amazing things?" Penn told students.
Penn first addressed an issue that most college students deal with on a daily basis: financial aid and money concerns. Penn spoke about Obama's $4,000 college student tax credit. The American Opportunity Tax Credit would cover the first $4,000 of college costs for every citizen.
"Some families have had three, four, five brothers and sisters, and the family has to decide which one goes to college," Penn said. "That's not acceptable to Senator Obama, nor do I think [it] should be acceptable for any of us."
Penn added many thought that the demographic that they fit into, 18 to 30, has often been taken as an age that won't mobilize to vote. He said Obama takes pride in being a candidate who has mobilized and energized the youth demographic.
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