Pubdate: Tue, 19 Oct 2004 Source: Philadelphia Inquirer, The (PA) Copyright: 2004 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc Contact: http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/340 Author: Troy Graham Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Jim+Miller (Jim Miller) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) PRESIDENT'S CHOPPER ENTRY WOWS FAITHFUL He Greeted Backers in a State Largely Bypassed in the Race. As two Marine helicopters swooped over Tuckerton Road yesterday afternoon and made a thunderous landing at the Evesham Township Recreation Center, a bolt of electricity shot through a waiting, partisan crowd that rarely had seen their man in New Jersey. "Here he comes," someone shouted as three more helicopters - one carrying the President - appeared over the trees. The crowd chanted "Four more years" until President Bush, appearing at his first campaign rally in a state once solidly in the Democratic column, strided into an open field to wave to the party faithful. "He went out of his way to greet everyone," Lenora Annibale of Cherry Hill said soon after Bush headed into the recreation center to give his speech. "He's top-notch. He's my hero." Until yesterday, the presidential campaign had largely bypassed New Jersey, but Bush's visit brought the kinds of sign-toting crowds and heated rhetoric that would have made any of the traditional battleground states proud. Howard Wilson, who described himself as a Catholic Vietnam veteran from Mount Laurel, blasted Democratic challenger John Kerry's character and positions. "I don't like cowardly people who are deceitful about what they do," he said. "I'm a Catholic, and I was an altar boy, and I make my vote count for pro-life." Wilson was among hundreds of Republicans who waited outside the recreation center for a glimpse of their candidate. Only those who could secure a ticket were allowed inside to hear the President's speech. "We tried to get inside, but that's nearly impossible," Jay Sikora of Marlton said as he waved a sign reading: "I actually did vote for John Kerry, before I voted against him." Across Tuckerton Road, about 50 Democrats gathered around a red, white and blue school bus - the "Bus for Change" - on which a costumed Pinnochio character stood and fired up the crowd with accusations that the President lies. The two sides heckled each other loudly. The only arrest reported was of a medical-marijuana activist who crossed a police line while pushing the wheelchair once used by his deceased wife. The Democrats responded with their own chants, such as "Two more weeks" and "Bush lied, grown men died." Andy Coleman, who lives near Belmar in Monmouth County, owns the Bus for Change. He said he was never politically active until this year, when he heard the famed Swift Boat ads attacking Kerry's Vietnam service. "The Swift Boat ads sent me to Home Depot with a credit card to get some paint," he said. "I said, 'This is wrong. I've got this bus. Let's do it.' " The state Kerry campaign plans to borrow the bus at six events this week, said A.J. Sabath, the state campaign director. But, he said, Kerry will not be tricked into spending resources in New Jersey because of Bush's visit. "The state is still blue," he said. "We're not going to take the bait." For the Republicans, however, Bush's visit highlighted hopes for a changing political landscape in New Jersey. A Bush victory in the state "would be huge," said John Merla, the mayor of Keyport, as he waited in line to enter the recreation center. Merla and several other Monmouth and Warren County Republicans got tickets to the speech from State Sen. Joe Kyrillos, the state Republican chairman. Terence Wall, a Township Committee member in Holmdel, also predicted an important victory for the President in New Jersey. "It would be a watershed event that would affect future elections, including the gubernatorial election next year," he said. Gov. McGreevey "has taken the wind out of the Democrats' sails." After his speech, the President came outside to make a few comments to the crowd, quickly touching on the novelty of his visit. "So, you're wondering what a Republican presidential candidate is doing in New Jersey," he said. "I'll tell you what I'm doing. I'm sending a strong message that with your help, we can carry New Jersey on Nov. 2." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake