by Nicholas F. Benton
Falls Church News-Press
Index
Walking into the local branch of Wachovia Bank at the intersection of N. West and W. Broad Streets in Falls Church this week, you couldn’t tell from looking around that anything had happened. The massive fire sale on Wall Street Monday morning to avert the collapse of the
gigantic Wachovia organization, the fourth-largest bank holding company in the U.S, requiring emergency action by both Citibank and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), did not result in a visible beehive of frenzy on Broad Street in Falls Church. On the contrary, there was an almost-eerie mood of calm in the popular Falls Church branch. Wachovia, nationally,
experienced a run on its retail accounts last week, precipitated by depositor fears, driving it near bankruptcy over the weekend. However, as one regular customer noted, “there was no panic here.” He attributed it to the fact that personal relationships had been cultivated with many customers over the years.
Buoyed by national polls showing almost two-thirds of newly-registered voters favor Sen. Barack Obama for president, volunteers for Obama are fanning out by the hundreds from the campaign’s Falls Church headquarters in a final push before the voter registration deadline of Oct. 6. Kate Stanton, a volunteer coordinator at the S. Maple St. Obama office, told the NewsPress yesterday that every Metro station, the Northern Virginia Community College campuses, groceries stores and all heavilypopulated assemblies are being inundated with campaign volunteers to find new people to register. Stanton, a graduate of McLean High School, just graduated from the University of Michigan and is now a full-time, non-paid volunteer for Obama. She spoke with the News-Press over the clamor of scores of volunteers working phone banks and otherwise crawling over the expansive space that the campaign rented at 360 S. Maple. “Come in here around 6 o’clock tonight, and you’ll see hundreds of people cramming into this place,” she said. A major “canvass” of the City of Falls Church, involving 45 volunteers, was slated last night, involving going door-todoor to promote their candidate and register voters where needed. This weekend, canvassing teams will pour out of the office at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. on Saturday, and noon and 3 p.m. Sunday. Stanton said she had no inten-
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