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Press
Releases
12/28/2007
Massacre at
Virginia Tech voted top news story of 2007
Polling for this story took place before the assassination
of Benazir Bhutto on Dec. 27
By DAVID CRARY
AP National Writer
NEW YORK (AP) -- The massacre of 32 people at Virginia Tech
by a mentally disturbed student gunman was chosen the top
story of 2007 by U.S. editors and news directors in The Associated
Press' annual vote.
The rampage, which prompted colleges nationwide to reassess
their emergency response systems, received 82 first-place
votes out of 271 ballots cast for the top 10 stories.
The mortgage crisis, which roiled the U.S. housing market,
was the No. 2 story, and the war in Iraq placed third. Iraq
was the No. 1 story in 2006, and has finished in the top three
since 2002 -- the year of the prewar buildup.
Here are 2007's top 10 stories, as voted by AP members:
1. VIRGINIA TECH KILLINGS: Seung-Hui Cho, 23, who had avoided
court-ordered mental health treatment despite a history of
psychiatric problems, killed two fellow students in a dormitory
on April 16, detoured to mail a hate-filled video of himself
to NBC News, then shot dead 30 students and professors in
a classroom building before killing himself. It was the worst
mass shooting in modern U.S. history.
2. MORTGAGE CRISIS: A record-setting wave of mortgage foreclosures,
coupled with a steep slump in the housing market, buffeted
financial markets, caused multibillion-dollar losses at major
banks and investment firms, and became an issue in the presidential
campaign.
3. IRAQ WAR: The "surge" that sent more U.S. troops
to Iraq was credited with helping reduce the overall level
of violence. But thousands of Iraqis and hundreds of U.S.
personnel were killed nonetheless during the year, and Iraqi
political leaders struggled to make meaningful progress toward
national reconciliation.
4. OIL PRICES: Oil prices soared to record highs, at one point
reaching nearly $100 a barrel. The high prices, which burdened
motorists and owners of oil-heated homes, nudged Congress
to pass an energy bill that ordered an increase in motor vehicles'
fuel efficiency.
5. CHINESE EXPORTS: An array of Chinese exports were recalled,
ranging from toys with lead paint to defective tires to tainted
toothpaste and food. Despite the high-profile problems, America's
trade deficit with China was running at record-high levels.
6. GLOBAL WARMING: Warnings about the consequences of global
warming gained intensity with new reports from scientific
panels and a Nobel Prize to Al Gore for his environmental
crusading that included the film "An Inconvenient Truth."
Across the U.S., many state governments sought to cap emissions
blamed for global warming.
7. BRIDGE COLLAPSE: An Interstate 35 bridge over the Mississippi
River in Minneapolis collapsed during the evening rush hour
on Aug. 1, killing 13 people and injuring about 100. The disaster
fueled concern about possible structural flaws in other bridges
nationwide.
8. PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN: In a yearlong drama with shifting
subplots, large fields in both major parties battled for support
ahead of the caucuses and primaries that will decide the 2008
presidential nominees. Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama led
among the Democrats; some polls showed five Republicans with
double-digit support.
9. IMMIGRATION DEBATE: A compromise immigration plan, backed
by President Bush and Democratic leaders, collapsed in Congress
due to Republican opposition. The plan would have enabled
millions of illegal immigrants to move toward citizenship,
while also bolstering border security. The issues remained
alive in the presidential campaign.
10. IRAN'S NUCLEAR PROGRAM: Worried that the ultimate goal
is a nuclear arsenal, the United States and other countries
pressed Iran to halt uranium enrichment. Iran said it never
had a weapons program. A U.S. intelligence report concluded
there was such an effort, but it stopped in 2003.
Just missing the Top 10 were the Southern California wildfires
and the resignation of Alberto Gonzales as attorney general.
The balloting reflected a diverse news year, with 27 different
stories receiving at least one first-place vote. The mortgage
crisis got 48 first-place votes, Iraq 40 and oil prices 25.
Write-in votes were cast for two events that occurred after
AP's ballot was distributed -- the shooting at an Omaha mall
that left nine people dead, and the Mitchell Report on use
of performance-enhancing drugs in baseball.
Another write-in vote was for "cheaters and liars"
-- collectively addressing the many athletes and other public
figures entangled in scandals.
Among stories about pop culture celebrities, the saga surrounding
the death of Anna Nicole Smith got the most votes, finishing
in 32nd place ahead of such stories as the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, the departure of Tony Blair as British prime minister,
and the military crackdown in Myanmar.
"Anyone who picks the Anna Nicole Smith story in the
Top Ten should be beaten with sticks," commented Mike
Bailey, managing editor of The Courier News in Elgin, Ill.
John Moeur, managing editor of the Daily Herald in Roanoke
Rapids, N.C., suggested that 2007's top development was broader
than those on the ballot -- and distinctly bleak.
"In our opinion, the top story must reflect the nation's
stifling problems and the inability of either the Bush administration
or the Democrat-led Congress to find solutions other than
bickering," he wrote on his ballot.
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