The Centre County Board of Commissioners voted on Tuesday to do away with the electronic touch screen voting systems the county purchased just two years ago. They will replace them with paper ballots.The county will be purchasing more than $924K in new equipment that will read the paper ballots.
“The safe (vote) in this area would be voting no."
-- David Sosar, assistant professor of political science at King’s College, on the political implications of U.S. Rep. Paul E. Kanjorski’s vote in favor of the bailout bill