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Clinton’s hometown is proud but divided

Hillary Clinton greets her supporters at the Manhattan Center Studios, Grand Ballroom in New

York late Tuesday night..

Civic pride in Park Ridge, Ill., where she spent her youth, doesn’t necessarily translate

into votes for the Democratic presidential hopeful on Super Tuesday.
By P.J. Huffstutter, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
February 6, 2008
The hottest political souvenir in the childhood hometown of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton is a

smallgreen “Rodham Corner” sign hanging at Wisner and Elm streets, just a few doors from the

two-story brick house where she spent her youth.

The sign has been stolen so many times that last year city workers bolted it 30 feet up a

wooden light pole, said Mayor Howard P. Frimark.
“It’s been nonstop political talk here ever since Hillary announced her candidacy,” Frimark

said Tuesday afternoon. “We’ve had a gigantic voter turnout, about 50% more turnout so far

than any other presidential primary in recent history.”

But civic pride was no guarantee of support at the ballot box in this upper-middle-class

community of 38,000 located about 11 miles northwest of Chicago — not even at the

elementary school the New York senator attended, one of the town’s polling places.

As the students at Eugene Field Elementary School pelted one another with snowballs, voters

shivered in the morning air and discussed their choices.

“I’m a Republican,” said Barton Ravin, 53, who said he had lived here for more than a

decade. “I like Romney’s stance on social issues, so that’s how I’m voting.”

A few feet away, a supporter of Illinois Sen. Barack Obama listened and discreetly buttoned

her jacket to cover an “Obama for President” T-shirt.

Park Ridge has seen an influx of families from heavily Democratic Chicago over the past few

years, so it is no longer the solid GOP stronghold it was in Clinton’s youth.

The former farming community is predominantly white, and its close-knit neighborhoods are

filled with pre-World War II brick homes and graceful elm-lined streets. Residents boast

about its low crime rate and — given its proximity to Chicago — lack of factories.

While Obama is considered the Democrat of choice by much of the state, Clinton’s fans here

have helped raise voter support and reportedly surpassed Obama’s backers in fundraising.

And some of them don’t appreciate their neighbors supporting her rival from Hyde Park, a

neighborhood on Chicago’s South Side.

“She’s intelligent, she’s experienced, I like what she’s saying about the economy and I

think she deserves more credit from us than just the fact that she’s from here,” said Kate

Boychuck, 27, who grew up in Park Ridge and planned to vote for Clinton.

“I like Obama, but I simply don’t think it’s his time yet. It’s Hillary’s time.”
source:latimes

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