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In Fort Wayne
•Sarah Palin’s book-signing tour brings her to Fort Wayne today. She is expected to arrive just before noon at Meijer, 10301 Maysville Road, and sign autographs for three hours. Those wanting a book signed must present a Meijier receipt for the book and receive a wristband. Only the first 1,000 people in line with wristbands are guaranteed an autograph. If there is extra time, Palin will accommodate more people.
Associated Press
People wait in line just after sunrise Wednesday in Kentwood, Mich., to get bracelets that would allow them to meet Sarah Palin and get signed copies of her new book, “Going Rogue.”

Palin a magnet in Michigan

– College students ditched class, employees skipped work and some huddled in the cold overnight just to make sure they get an orange wristband Wednesday that would let them meet Sarah Palin.

Thousands gathered outside a Barnes & Noble and chanted “Palin! Palin! Palin!” for the kickoff of the former Republican vice presidential candidate’s “Going Rogue” book tour, which has taken on the feel of a political pep rally.

“She’s a person of faith, she has a family, she has gone through a lot of the trials and tribulations we have. I’d vote for her in a heartbeat,” said Lana Smith, a dispatcher at a bus company who took the day off work and had been waiting in line since 5:30 a.m.

“Someday I hope her name is up in lights and I’ll have had the privilege of meeting her,” Smith said.

Country music played as Palin’s tour bus, painted to resemble the cover of her book, pulled up to the Woodland Mall in Grand Rapids.

“I just can’t tell you how good it is to be back in Michigan,” the former Alaska governor told the crowd, which chanted “Palin! Palin!”

“Alaska and Michigan have so much in common, with the huntin’ and the fishin’ and the hockey moms, and just the hardworking, patriotic Americans who are here,” Palin said.

Wearing a “Palin Power” bumper sticker across her red sweat shirt, 72-year-old Rachel Baragar praised Palin’s honesty and down-to-earth manner. “She could be your nextdoor neighbor,” said Baragar, of Caledonia.

The memoir was released Tuesday but has topped best-seller lists for weeks. At the Barnes & Noble, about 1,000 orange wristbands were handed out, allowing wearers to get two copies autographed by Palin at the three-hour signing event.

College students Megan Patzky of Racine, Wis., and Sarah Cranmer of Chicago waited in line overnight and skipped their Wednesday classes at nearby Calvin College to get an autograph. Patzky planned to give the signed book to her father for Christmas.

After standing in the cold all night, Patzky and Cranmer were happy to get into the mall about 6:15 a.m. “We were hoping that someone would start selling coffee, but nobody did,” Patzky joked.

“Going Rogue” follows Palin from childhood to her departure last summer as Alaska governor. The title refers to her independent streak as a candidate, stemming from complaints within the campaign of GOP presidential nominee John McCain that she had gone “rogue” by disagreeing with the campaign’s decision to pull out of Michigan last October.

McCain halted his campaign in the state after internal polls showed Democrat Barack Obama approaching a double-digit lead. Many of those waiting at the Michigan bookstore said they would vote for Palin if she decides to run for president in 2012.

“I believe she’s a good, strong person to do the things we need to do in this country,” said David Zak, 70, who drove about two hours to see Palin. “I like her Christian philosophy. I like that she’s pro-life. I believe she can do what needs to be done to get ahead.”