feature: election 2008 helped change history. I voted. Stephanie Steinberg aking up on Nov. 4, I could feel the election the side and allowed the students to rejoice. in the air at the University of Michigan in Ann As a speck in the sea of students sporting Obama T-shirts, Arbor. pins and posters, I couldn't have asked for a more exhilarating The College Democrats and Republicans had chalked the and historic first election to be part of. Students — blacks, sidewalks at 3 a.m. with "Gobam" and "McCain '08" slogans. whites, Asians, Latinos, you name it — chanted Obama's I was especially impressed by the giant "Vote Obama" bubble name in unison. letters covering every inch of the tennis courts on Palmer While Obama had only been named Field. Flyers that simply stated "Vote Nov. 4" littered campus president-elect for three hours, he had buildings, lecture halls and dorms. united U-M students, ready for the fu- College Dems had posted sticky notes with the name of ture's hopeful change. the assigned precinct to every door in each dorm. Before and after classes, students and professors made nonpartisan pub- lic announcements to go vote. Residence halls flooded e-mail inboxes with voting reminders. It worked. Many students woke up at 6:30 a.m. to get to the polls before class. Others endured two-hour waiting lines. Stephanie Steinberg, 18, is a freshman at the University of Michigan. President-elect Obama Hillel's mock election chose Obama, too. Some even drove back home to vote. I voted at Markley, a dorm on campus. I arrived at 11:30 a.m. and finished at 1 p.m. Thankfully, I had a late afternoon class; but I listened to one student 20 places behind me in line fret about his class he could not miss at 1 p.m. "I have to be there," he kept repeating. "The teacher takes attendance." At 12:45 p.m., sympathetic students ahead of me let him cut to the front of the line. While I was excited to cast my ballot, I was more eager to hear the election results. I watched on a 12-inch TV in a cramped dorm room with nine other girls. As CNN projected U.S. Sen. Barack Obama, D-III., the next president, screams of joy filled the six-story building. Students hugged each other, called their families and, after listening to Obama's accep- tance speech, ran to the Diag. My friend and I decided to join the celebration. Thousands congregated on the Diag high-fiving each other, crying with joy, shouting "Obama" and waving "Yes, We Can" signs and the American flag. Out of nowhere, a band assembled with drums and started beating a celebratory rhythm. When the band moved toward the Union, we blindly followed the crowd. Behind the band, students danced down State Street blocking all traffic. The Ann Arbor police appeared, but they watched from Colton Graub Hillel Day School of Metropolitan Detroit held a mock election at the end of October, put together by social studies teachers Joshua Cutler and Leslie Baron. Students marched into an empty classroom ready to vote. Dr. Rob Bardach, head of the school's seventh- and eighth- grade division, said, "The goal of this mock election is to familiar- ize our students with the electoral Left: Seventh-grader Bradley Levin verifies seventh-grader Erin Graub's voter registra- tion card. Right: Eighth-grader Brenna Glldenberg casts her vote. process and voting at the polls." The city of Farmington Hills lent the school four voting booths and one ballot tabulation machine for the mock election. presidential election in 2012. If the students were legally able to vote, they would have Before the election, students in both grades vigorously de- helped Sen. Barak Obama become the 44th president of the bated the presidential election in class and in the hallways. United States of America. "This opportu- Both sides laid out their arguments with passion and enthusi- nity to engage our students in the mock asm that surprised even their teachers. election will serve them well in the fu- To further the students' experience, members of the Hil- ture," Dr. Bardach said. lel Day School Student Congress served as polling station Colton Graub, 13, Is an eighth-grader at officials and Hillel Day School In Farmington Hills. guided fellow classmates through the voting pro- cess. Some of these students will be able to vote in the next WE NEED YOUR HELP! Yi t 'gadal v ' yi tkadash sh raba .. T2T is doing a story on how teens are affected by Michigan's troubled economy. If you can help by sharing your story or tips, please contact Keri Guten Cohen at kcohen@thejewishnews,com and she'll connect you with a reporter. Thanks. NEW, IMPROVED T2T WEB SITE COMING SOON! Interested in blogging or providing stories? kcohen@thejewishnews.com HAPPY THANKSGIVING B2 teen2teen November • 2008 visit JNt2t.com