![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjLB55oC_BA4h9wxZFBX4GnbR4ilaEK7h2TkMe_tVOpqyMklAngnPZdOd3TwVMHgzHTH9gqn-sUxy30JJ5mSSjrovzHeutt1nNDBnjZOOJLY8eTCqw9R6rfKJTvh9ub0Lgx4Oz5wg2losI/s400/150804-6-20081105202607.image.jpeg)
She was the toast of the town—and much of the nation—today, but 106-year-old Ann Nixon Cooper isn't letting her starring role in Barack Obama's acceptance speech go to her head, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports. "It's nothing unusual really," said Cooper, the Atlanta resident Obama talked about at length because she was born "just a generation past slavery" but lived to see a black man be elected president.
“I never thought we’d see that happen," said Cooper, who made a point to vote early for Obama. "I always thought it would be a white man. Now I see that things can change and I’m glad to know it.” As for the endless stream of reporters traipsing through her home today: “I’ve had all the excitement one could expect when something like this happens,” she said. "It’s been real nice.”
No comments:
Post a Comment