
1. Barack Obama's father was a black Kenyan and his mother was a white   Kansas native. The two met while attending the University of Hawaii.
2.   Mr. Obama grew upin Hawaii and lived in Indonesia for a few years.   From age 10 on, he lived with his maternal grandparents in a Honolulu   apartment.
3. He admits that as a teenager, he used drugs such as   marijuana and cocaine to cope with questions of racial identity.
4.   Mr. Obama played forward on his high school basketball team and was   known as "Barry O'Bomber" for his left-handed double pump shot.
5.   He wasn't the first in his family to attend Harvard. His father,   Barack, also attended the university.
6. Mr. Obama has been a   first black president before. He was elected president of the Harvard   Law Review.
7. He stopped going by the nickname "Barry" in   college after reading The Autobiography of Malcolm X.
8. He had a   pet ape named Tata when he lived in Indonesia as a child.
9.  Mr.  Obama is only the third black U.S. senator since Reconstruction.
10.   His wife, Michelle, agreed to allow him to run for president only if  he  agreed to quit smoking. But he recently admitted that he still has  an  occasional cigarette.
11. Mr. Obama is quite the "Renegade."   That's the code name he chose for his Secret Service detail to use.
12.   Ms. Obama once told Glamour magazine that her husband is smelly in the   morning.
13. He has never faced significant opposition from a   Republican opponent.
14. His desk in the Senate once belonged to   Robert Kennedy. Mr. Obama was only 6 when Mr. Kennedy, who was running   for president, was assassinated in 1968.
15. If elected, he will   be the third president in a row without sons. Mr. Obama has two   daughters: Sasha, 7, and Malia, 10.
16. Mr. Obama says his   daughters made him promise that, as a condition for running for   president, they can get a dog after the election, win or lose.
17.   He was elected to the Illinois Senate in 1996. He initially had a hard   time fitting in because the chamber was controlled by Republicans, and   some of his fellow Chicago Democrats thought he was pretentious and "a   white man in blackface."
18. As a state senator, he was  selected  to give his now-famous keynote speech at the Democratic  convention in  2004 after presidential nominee John Kerry heard him  speak in Chicago.
19.  He is 6 feet 2 inches tall, and his wife  is almost 6 feet in heels.
20.  He once joked, "I'm so  overexposed, I make Paris Hilton look like a  recluse."
21. As a  kid, he collected Spider-Man and Conan the  Barbarian comics, and as a  teen, he listened to jazz saxophonist Grover  Washington Jr. and Earth,  Wind and Fire.
22. He grew up without  any particular religious  beliefs. His mother, Stanley Ann Dunham, was  not religious, and his  father was an atheist. Mr. Obama joined the  United Church of Christ as a  young man in Chicago, saying he was  inspired by the good work of  Christians he had met and "felt God's  spirit beckoning me."
23.  Mr. Obama earned a starting salary of  $13,000 a year as a community  organizer in Chicago in the 1980s. In  2007, he and his wife made $4.2  million, according to their tax return.
24.  He won a Grammy  award this year for the audio version of his book The  Audacity of Hope.
25.  In 2000, he lost by a landslide when he  challenged former Black  Panther Bobby Rush, an Illinois Democrat, for  his seat in the U.S.  House. Mr. Rush is still in office.
26. Mr.  Obama easily won his  2004 U.S. Senate race, defeating Republican Alan  Keyes with 70 percent  of the vote. Mr. Keyes was a late replacement for  primary winner Jack  Ryan, who dropped out of the race when after his  divorce records  revealed sex club allegations from his ex-wife, actress  Jeri Ryan.
27.  Mr. Obama formally announced his presidential  candidacy in February  2007 on the steps of the Old State Capitol in  Springfield, Ill., where  Abraham Lincoln once declared that "a house  divided against itself  cannot stand."
28. Throughout 2007, he  trailed Hillary Rodham  Clinton, whom many pundits characterized as the  Democrats' "inevitable"  presidential nominee. He found an opening in an  October debate, when  Mrs. Clinton gave a convoluted answer to the  question of whether she  supported driver's licenses for illegal  immigrants. After that, the  race became more competitive.
29.  Oprah Winfrey joined Mr. Obama  on the campaign trail in December for a  series of rallies starting in  Des Moines, Iowa. Nearly 30,000 people  came to see them in Columbia,  S.C.
30. Mr. Obama wasn't an  overwhelming favorite among black  voters early in the campaign. Some  didn't think he was "black enough,"  and others doubted that an  African-American could be elected president.  But his victory in  predominantly white Iowa convinced many black  voters that he could win  the nomination.
31. Mr. Obama's  campaign inspired many music  video spin-offs, including "Obama Girl"  from the Web site  barelypolitical.com. Hip-hop star will.i.am of the  Black Eyed Peas also  wrote a song, "Yes, We Can," based on a speech  given by Mr. Obama after  his loss in the New Hampshire primary and made  it into a video for the  Web.
32. In February, Mr. Obama racked  up 11 straight victories  and gained the lead in the number of delegates  needed to win the  nomination.
33. Mr. Obama lost the Texas  primary to Mrs. Clinton  but drew big crowds, including an estimated  15,000 at Dallas' Reunion  Arena in late February. He ended up winning a  majority of delegates in  the Lone Star State because his supporters  flooded precinct caucuses on  election night.
34. Mr. Obama did  well in states with large  numbers of black and college-educated voters.  But he struggled to draw  working-class whites, Latinos and rural  residents, especially after  making comments in San Francisco that some  rural voters "cling to their  guns and religion."
35. Ms. Obama  stirred up controversy after  saying that for the first time in her  adult life, she was "really proud"  of her country. She later said she  misspoke, and others, including  first lady Laura Bush, defended her.
36.  During the primaries,  tensions grew between Mr. Obama and former  President Bill Clinton over  the ex-president's comments that seemed to  belittle Mr. Obama's victory  in South Carolina.
37. The tension  between Mr. Obama and Mrs.  Clinton grew as well. The New York senator  released a TV ad that  questioned whether Mr. Obama would be ready for a  "3 a.m." foreign  crisis phone call, and Mr. Obama criticized her  judgment and derided her  as a Washington insider.
38. Mr.  Obama's association with  longtime pastor Jeremiah Wright proved  troublesome during the primary  season. Dr. Wright was criticized for  racially incendiary sermons and  views. Mr. Obama initially tried to  defend him and gave a widely praised  speech on racial relations in  America, but he later renounced Dr.  Wright after the pastor made  controversial remarks at the National Press  Club. The Obamas left  Trinity United Church of Christ soon afterward.
39.  Opponents –  most recently the McCain-Palin campaign – have criticized  Mr. Obama's  association with 1960s radical Bill Ayers, a member of the  Weather  Underground. Mr. Ayers and Mr. Obama were involved with a  Chicago  education reform group, and Mr. Ayers hosted a party for Mr.  Obama when  he announced his Illinois Senate run. Mr. Obama has denounced  Mr.  Ayers' "detestable acts" but says he was only 8 years old during  Mr.  Ayers' bombing campaign.
40. Mr. Obama clinched the  nomination  June 3 and claimed victory in a speech in St. Paul, Minn.,  later the  site of the GOP convention. Four days later, Mrs. Clinton  suspended her  presidential campaign and endorsed Mr. Obama.
41. A  few weeks  later, Mr. Obama and Mrs. Clinton campaigned together for the  first  time in the appropriately named town of Unity, N.H. But he  struggled to  win over her supporters, including white blue-collar  voters.
42.  Mr. Obama spoke to a huge crowd in Berlin this  summer, just as former  President John F. Kennedy had done decades ago.
43.  In a  campaign ad, Mr. Obama talked about his mother's death from cancer  in  1995 and how, in her final days, she was more worried about paying  her  medical bills than getting well.
44. Mr. Obama's momentum   stalled during the summer when the McCain campaign ran ads – including   one with Paris Hilton – accusing him of being a vapid celebrity without   substance or a proven record of leadership.
45. Mr. Obama   selected Delaware Sen. Joe Biden as his running mate to help bolster his   foreign-policy credentials, disappointing many Democrats who favored   Mrs. Clinton. Early in the presidential campaign, Mr. Biden had   questioned Mr. Obama's readiness to be president.
46. Mr. Obama   was the first presidential candidate since Kennedy to accept his party's   nomination at an outside venue. He gave his acceptance speech at   Denver's Invesco Field on Aug. 28, drawing a crowd of 85,000.
47.   Mr. Obama was accused of sexism and disparaging Republican vice   presidential nominee Sarah Palin when he referred to Mr. McCain's   policies as "lipstick on a pig." His campaign denied the allegations,   saying he was referring to Mr. McCain's policies as the "pig."
48.   Campaigning in Pennsylvania, Mr. Obama tried to connect with   blue-collar voters by bowling, but ended up with an embarrassing score   of 37. "My economic plan is better than my bowling," he told fellow   bowlers. "It has to be," a man called out.
49. Mr. Obama told 60   Minutes earlier this year that every time he played basketball before a   key primary, he'd win. He said he plans to play before the general   election.
50. If elected, Mr. Obama will be the fifth-youngest   president ever at inauguration.
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50 things you should know about Barack Obama
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1 comments:
First Comment...
Hehee.
Obama. I hope U can bring better change for USA. And can use diplomatic ways for solve all of problem with others country....
---Keep Blogging, Bro---
http://zebhi-adventure.blogspot.com
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