Thursday, October 30, 2008

120 Hours

Students from Ron Clark Academy in Atlanta came up with this reeeeeeeeemix to T.I.'s "Whatever You Like", titled "You Can Vote However You Like". Adorable.

Obama on the left, McCain on the right, we can talk politics all night and you can vote however you like. Democrats left, Republicans right, November 4th you decide, and you can vote however you like.

Today was my first time canvassing. It wasn't as scary as I thought it was going to be - no one slammed a door in my face or was overly rude. I think I might have even swayed a few undecided voters! Or they were just being nice...either way, it was a fun time, and I got lots of exercise.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Peace Corps application....

....officially submitted!
U.S. Presidential Endorsements through the years

The Economist vs. New York Times

CD vs. CR vs. Power Staplers

I'm taking a short break, 3 hours into my 6 hour stint at King Library, to write about this. Mostly because I'm ranting about it to anyone who knows me and happens to walk by, and more than once I've been told, "Caitie, keep your rage to yourself for a little bit. I have to go to class/wash my hair/jump off a bridge/something else that is more fun than listen to you rant." Oops. My French paper can wait.

Please keep in mind that I'm speaking hypothetically and please don't take offense if you fall into any of the groups I'm about to talk about.

Actually...I take that back. There is no reason I should apologize for having an opinion that goes against the grain of what my friends, or a group that I'm in thinks. Which leads me to my point.

In Tuesday's edition of the Miami Student, there was an article entitled MU students defy political stereotypes. One of those interviewed was a girl who called herself the "typical Miami girl" (for those that aren't familiar with this breed, it is as follows: parents make more than $200,000, in a sorority, walks around in leggings and boots with the fur while texting on her Blackberry, collar-popping, blonde, weighs less than 100 lbs and may or may not call 5 celery sticks a meal). I don't typically feel bad for these types of people, whose woes, easily overheard as they whine in their high pitched voices, include not getting a BMW in the correct color from their daddy, or eating one too many pieces of pizza. This one, however, I do pity.

Last year, she was in College Republicans. This year, she walks around with an Obama button pinned neatly to her North Face. She complained to the student:

"I feel like I can't go back to College Republicans next semester, after all this. That's what I was going to plan on doing. I'm not a Democrat so I can't be in College Democrats. What am I? I'm a political science major, I have to be in something. It's my career. But I'm neither right now."

"I feel like I'm betraying a lot of people in a lot of ways-family, friends, friends here."

Although [she] also said she tries to keep her political and personal life separate, she has lost at least one friend since switching over to support Obama and even received a negative message via Facebook.com.

WHAT!??!! SERIOUSLY!!?!?!?!?

I am ready for this election to be over for a lot of reasons, but this is a BIG one. People losing friends over who you're supporting to be the next leader of our country? Now, THAT is messed up.

This is my issue with College Republicans and College Democrats. I support College Dems at arms length for a lot of reasons. Tomorrow, I will be canvassing for Obama, a duty I need to fulfill in order to be invited to the College Dems' Halloween Party (something I'm not happy about, but I planned on canvassing anyways). These are organizations that force you to think what they think. This poor girl is being shunned by CR, an organization she was involved with because of her opinion. THAT is MESSED UP. I gotta give it up for College Dems. They have done a great job of getting out on campus, getting people registered to vote, canvassing for Obama. But what if someone in College Dems didn't want to be in support of Obama? Would they accept that? Doubtful.

I am so lucky to belong to an organization that encourages everyone to think for themselves...form their own opinions...be a leader, a change agent, and most of all, a bad ass.

Don't judge someone for how they're going to vote. If I've learned anything from being an Econ major, it's that we're all rational human beings that make decisions based on incentives and scarcity and marginal revenue equals marginal cost and all that fun stuff. But most importantly - rational human beings. Based on incentives. Just because someone is voting for someone you don't agree with doesn't make them a monster, or an idiot. So don't judge. Leave the judgement up to me. It's a hobby of mine.

Always gotta have the random Caitie comment at the bottom: King Library has power staplers. You put your papers into the stapler opening, and it dispenses the perfect staple. Genius. It really is the small things in life that keep me going every day.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Bloggerheads question everything I know by debating whether the financial crisis proves that markets don't work. My main man, Adam Smith, is turning in his grave.

My opinion? Man and greed intervened into the markets. Right now, the invisible hand is bitch slapping us.

On an Econ-related note, I found this quote by Keynes in a reading I was doing for class. Keynes was responding to George Bernard Shaw's suggestion that Marx's virtues could get us out of the Great Depression:

"My feelings about Das Kapital are the same as my feelings about the Koran. I know that it is historically important and I know that many people, not of whom are idiots, find it a sort of Rock of Ages and containing inspiration. Yet when I look into it, it is to me inexplicable that it can have this effect. Its dreary, out-of-date, academic controversialising seems so extraordinarily unsuited for this purpose. But then, as I have said, I feel just the same way about the Koran. How could either of these books carry fire and sword round half the world? It beats me. Clearly there is some defect in my understanding. Do you believe both Das Kapital and the Koran? Or only DK? But what ever sociological value of the latter, I am sure that its contemporary economic value (apart from the occasional but inconstructive and discontinuous flashes of insight) is nil. Will you promise to read it again, if I do?"

Monday, October 27, 2008

you go girls

Not only is my Aunt Donna one of my most faithful blog followers...but she sends me some truly incredible articles. This one I just received is an incredible inspiration for anyone who follows women in developing countries. My favorite lines are in bold.

Women Run the Show In a Recovering Rwanda

By Stephanie McCrummen
Washington Post Foreign Service
Monday, October 27, 2008; A01

KIGALI, Rwanda -- On a continent that has been dominated by the rule of men, this tiny East African nation is trying something new.

Here, women are not only driving the economy -- working on construction sites, in factories and as truck and taxi drivers -- they are also filling the ranks of government.

Women hold a third of all cabinet positions, including foreign minister, education minister, Supreme Court chief and police commissioner general. And Rwanda's parliament last month became the first in the world where women claim the majority -- 56 percent, including the speaker's chair.

One result is that Rwanda has banished archaic patriarchal laws that are still enforced in many African societies, such as those that prevent women from inheriting land. The legislature has passed bills aimed at ending domestic violence and child abuse, while a committee is now combing through the legal code to purge it of discriminatory laws.

One lawmaker said the committee has compiled "a stack" of laws to modify or toss out altogether -- including one that requires a woman to get her husband's signature on a bank loan.

"The fact that we are so many has made it possible for men to listen to our views," said lawmaker Espérance Mwiza. "Now that we're a majority, we can do even more."

The unusually high percentage of women in Rwandan government is in part a reflection of popular will in a country of 10 million that is 55 percent female.

But it also reflects the heavy hand of one man, President Paul Kagame, whose photo hangs on the walls of houses, restaurants and shops. It also hovered over the swiveling leather chair of parliament speaker Rose Mukantabana as she opened a session late last week.

Since the 1994 genocide, in which more than 800,000 ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutus were killed in 100 days of highly organized violence that included the systematic rape of Tutsi women, Kagame, a Tutsi, has enforced a kind of zealous social engineering.

With a population that was about 70 percent female after the genocide, Kagame's new government adopted ambitious policies to help women economically and politically, including a new constitution in 2003 requiring that at least 30 percent of all parliamentary and cabinet seats go to women. The remaining 26 percent of the women in parliament were indirectly elected.

"This was a broken society after the genocide," said Aloisea Inyumba, Kagame's former gender and social affairs minister, who was also a prominent official in his ruling Rwandan Patriotic Front when it was still a rebel group fighting the country's genocidal government. "We made a decision that if Rwanda is going to survive, we have to have a change of heart as a society. Equality and reconciliation are the only options."

While many African legislatures have adopted quotas reserving seats for female lawmakers, none has done so as ambitiously as Rwanda. The country's overall attitude toward gender puts it at odds with its neighbors.

Just next door, an epidemic of sexual violence has ravaged eastern Congo, where law and order have almost completely broken down. In the run-up to Kenyan elections last year, several female candidates were beaten and threatened with sexual violence. One was murdered. Out of the legislature's 222 lawmakers, 21 are women.

In this hilly and green capital city, meanwhile, women successfully lobbied for the removal of a statue in a central roundabout that depicted a woman holding a jug of water on her head and a baby on her hip.

In its place came a more neutral one: a smiling woman free of the jug, holding the hand of a little boy walking alongside her.

Not far away is the parliament building, where rows of women took their seats last Thursday, and listened to the finance minister present the midterm national budget.

Afterward came questions from women such as Bernadette Kanzayire, who was a practicing lawyer before she became a politician, or Suzanne Mukayijore, who once worked in banking. And then there was Ignacienne Nyirarukundo, who went to work for Rwanda's national reconciliation commission after surviving the genocide. She then worked on children's welfare issues, and decided to run for office this year, campaigning on a platform of eradicating poverty through reduced birth rates.

"I felt I could do better helping to build my country in parliament," said Nyirarukundo, 39.

Other female lawmakers are Hutu or Tutsi, genocide survivors or former refugees who grew up in Uganda, Burundi or Tanzania. They come from different parties, though opposition to Kagame is not exactly vigorous.

In the recent parliament session, lawmakers asked the finance minister about the impact of the global financial crisis on Rwanda's budget, the gap between exports and imports and the soundness of Rwanda's booming mortgage market. Just one question -- about funding for maternal and child health -- was gender-specific.

Sitting in her office later, Kanzayire spoke diplomatically about "working with men" and seemed sensitive to the joke going around that soon, Rwanda will need affirmative action for men.

Though profound tensions and scars from the genocide still exist here, so does a strong sense of national purpose tinged with unapologetic political correctness.

It is taboo to speak of Hutus or Tutsis these days; everyone is Rwandan. The last Saturday of every month is community work day, when neighbors gather for six hours to help with a collective project -- clearing brush, or repairing a less-fortunate neighbor's house.

"We are doing this for ourselves -- not because it's a law," said Beatrice Namyonga, who was clearing weeds with her neighbors.

When it comes to the role of women, a similar attitude prevails.

In general, men here seem to have accepted and even embraced the policy of promoting women in government, even if their endorsement at times carries a dutiful tone.

"It was the government's aim to promote women, and the biggest proportion of Rwandans are women," said Jean Muhikira, 49, a driver who said he notices many more women in his line of work these days. "Women can contribute a lot in ideas."

In some quarters of Rwandan society -- particularly among older men and Hutu men who harbor some mistrust of Kagame's government -- the policy is viewed with faint suspicion.

"Maybe now that women have more than 50 percent in parliament, it could be a big problem," said Thomas Habumuisha, 29, who was out shopping with a friend on Saturday. "Maybe women could take advantage and oppress men."

His friend, Muhire Bitorwa, whose wife, a teacher, is helping pay his way through Kigali University, nodded politely, but disagreed.

"In my view, women are more reasonable, more merciful and less corrupt than men," he offered. "And culturally, women have not been recognized."

Insomnia can be a bitch.

But not when you find great stuff like this floating around in cyberspace at 4am-ish!

http://aiesecmiami.blogspot.com/

The last post is February 20, 2006 - a semester before my time. Why does that make me feel young and old at the same time?

I don't recognize many people in this picture, but there are some great ones of Lauren, Francis, Katy, Carly C, Mark, Thomas, Katelyn, Ann...

AHH. Ghosts from the past. Loves it!

Sunday, October 26, 2008

yay for free stuff!

Yesterday we got a package from The Oprah Winfrey Show. Enclosed was as follows:
  • Two (2) Oprah baseball caps
  • Two (2) Oprah t-shirts (size XL)
  • One (1) Oprah coffee mug
  • One (1) card from Allyson, the Production Assistant, saying thank you for helping Lexie out, and if I ever need anything to let her know...
"Hi Allyson! I'm a senior at Miami, and will be graduating in May with a Bachelor of Science in Quantitative Economics..."

Apparently, on Wednesday John Boehner, the Republican representative of the 8th District of Ohio will be at Brick Street. Free drinks for anyone who goes (over 21, I'm assuming).

And on Tuesday October 28, we will be able to obtain a free Crunchy Seasoned Beef Taco from Taco Bell anytime from 2-6pm. Thank you Jason Bartlett, Tampa Bay Rays shortstop! You've got me rooting for the Rays...for sure.

Free stuff is the theme of the week, I guess. Trick or treat?
Inevitably, during every debate my friends and I have watched, we get into an argument about whether or not Cindy McCain is good looking. Granted, the percentage of my closest friends who are guys is larger than the percentage of times that John McCain voted with George W. Bush, but I consider myself a decent judge of how good a woman looks. So far, I've been outvoted. Next time such an argument breaks out, I'm pulling out this gem:

Either Halloween came early for Mrs. McCain and she's going as the crypt keeper, or Botox is taking a turn for the worse.

God Bless the Onion.

Friday, October 24, 2008

My favorite part about Halloween (besides dressing up)

All the creepy TV shows. For example, World's Creepiest Places on the Travel Channel. Another favorite - 13 days of Halloween on ABC family. I won't be sleeping tonight.

Why do I have this obsession with scaring the shit out of myself? I think part of it comes from the day that my dad brought "The Exorcist" home and said "Watch this Caitie...this is the true story of what happens to bad little Catholic girls!" I haven't been the same since.

New item for my bucket list: Stay in a haunted place overnight!

Who's with me?

My Miami

Well hello there, Homecoming Weekend of my senior year. I've been looking forward to you for a long time. Too bad my plan to spend the day on the Skippers patio with a beer tower has been thwarted by a torrential downpour. Additionally, the homecoming parade has probably been canceled. If not, it will most definitely be much wetter than anticipated. True float making abilities will be put to a test this afternoon, fa sho.

So here I sit in King Library in my favorite comfy chair, shoes off to the side, probably grossing out everyone around me with my bare feet up on the ottoman. This is a normal Monday-Thursday afternoon for me. Too bad it's Friday. I came with the intention of focusing on my job applications, getting started for my Peace Corps "cross-cultural experience" essay (being an AIESECer makes that one pretty easy), or getting started on my homework for this week. Instead, I'm blogging. Standard.

As usual, I read the Miami Student. Rooming with the editor-in-chief guarantees that I know about some of the articles before it goes to press, but there are always a few surprises scattered about.

Anyone who pays attention knows that Hurricane Ike tore through Oxford a few weeks ago. What I didn't know was that the damage cost Miami a cool $750K! Apparently, if President Bush declares Oxford and Miami a "disaster area" - which, if you strolled around at all during the week following, saw the large tree blocking Withrow, or were one of the not-so-few without power for over a week, you might agree. I'm taking this plea for being denoted a disaster area quite literally. As a university, we're experiencing the financial crisis first-hand.

The Petters situations doesn't help this fact. Tom Petters, CEO of Petters Group Worldwide was arrested a few weeks ago after the FBI raided his home and verified that he had a role in a fraud scheme involving over $100 million of investments. Why does this matter? Tom Petters has pledged $14 million to Miami over the last 4 years, including the John T. Petters Center for Leadership, Ethics and Skills Development (in memory of his son, a Miami student who was killed while studying abroad in Italy) which was going to open in the new Business School. Irony, anyone? Needless to say, Miami probably won't be receiving that money, and we have since frozen a study abroad program to China that was being funded by money given to us by Tom Petters. Another little dose of irony: his son was a poli sci major, a department which is not in the business school. If this isn't a "disaster area", I don't know what is.

When things like this happen, it saddens me. Anyone who knows me knows that I have more school pride than most people here. I literally yell at people who are bigger Ohio State fans than Miami fans. I go to the hockey games and pound on the glass, cheer for Mercier, while other girls around me are wondering why there are only "3 quarters" and what the blue line rule is. I tell anyone who will listen why Miami is in Ohio, that we're much older than those wanna-be's in Florida, and can list of Miami traditions like it's my job. I'll defend my alma mater to the death, and even though I've paid my fair share in parking tickets ($65 per? WHAT?!) I'll probably donate until (and probably past) the day I die to ensure that all Miami students, past, present, and future, are given reasons to share the love for Miami that I do. 2009 celebrates our Bicentennial. We've been here for 200 years, and you better recognize.

The slogan for Homecoming week is "Old Miami, New Miami, YOUR MIAMI." My Miami, indeed.

Love and Honor to Miami,
Our College Old and Grand
Proudly we shall ever hail thee
Over all the Land

Alma mater now we praise thee
Sing joyfully this day
Love and Honor to Miami
FOREVER AND A DAY

Oprah, con't

The live video of Lexie's interview with Oprah is now available on The Miami Student website.

Living with the editor-in-chief is pretty legit sometimes.

See the video here.

Please note that I got one (1) Art credit from Miami University for that videography. Outstanding.

[Note in retrospect: My roommate has the power to hand out $400 credits. I don't care what you say, that is pretty fucking outstanding]

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Hello, 5 mins of fame!

I just squeaked on the Oprah Winfrey Show. SQUEAKED. If you turn the volume up you can hear me.

Yesterday Lexie came over with a large suitcase full of techie stuff that the Oprah Show overnighted her. We set it up in our "dining room", which is literally just an extension of our kitchen. After about half an hour of two girls (and Jerry) fighting with wires and playing "guess and check" with plugs, we got it set up. Tah-dah!

Soon, a guy from the Oprah show who couldn't have been more than 25 (because he kept saying things like Holla!) got on skype and we tried to figure out what we wanted in the background. Seeing as this is a college apartment that has been recently decked out with Halloween decor, this was harder than expected. We took the camera around the apartment for a while to look for a primo spot. During said tour, I screamed because I found a centipede. I told Lexie not to take the camera into my bedroom, which was messy. Techie Guy, as I will call him from now on, said "No, go in her bedroom!" Weird.

We soon settled for the back of my fridge with a view of my microwave, and put a vase of fake flowers and a framed picture of me and my roommates in the background. Sweet. Now I've solidified the fact that I'm legit going to be on TV. Who need to pop up awkwardly in the background of a shot when I can just stand there and look pretty in photograph form where I KNOW I look good? Plus, this way Emily and Kellyn could be there with me even though they'd be at class/work when the taping occurred. We also had to move our Diet Coke, Special K, and Cheerios out of the scene because of product placement.

Last night Lexie slept over for our pre-Oprah slumber party, and we got up at 8am to shower and get ready for Oprah. After booting up the computer they sent us, our new bff, Techie Guy skyped us. We were told not to walk around naked because they were going to keep us on video skype until the end of the show. Easier said than done, Techie Guy...

Finally at around 9:30am, we sat down in front of the computer. I made sure again that the photograph was easily visible, Techie Guy made sure Lexie had perfect "head room" for the shot, and someone named Allison prepped her with the questions that Oprah will PROBABLY ask. Silly Oprah. Sometimes she goes off script. We got to watch people file into the audience, the camera people cue the audience with cards that said "APPLAUSE!" (didn't know that really happened) and Oprah come out and sit down on her lovely beige chairs WITHOUT her shoes on. She also talked about how her skirt hiked up a lot. Sexy. I love it.

Promptly at 10, the show started. We watched and made fun of the family that was on, how Susie Orman picked on the 15 year old girl who came on, and the questions that people called in with. Before we knew it, Lexie's dad was on. I took video. Note the reactions we have to the pictures Lexie's dad sent in.

About 5 mins later, it was Lexie's turn. I took video of that too. The picture in the background looked lovely. I couldn't stop giggling, as can be seen in the video which will be posted later because I can't get it to load. Also, for those who saw the segment, you can't help but hear a loud squeak when Lexie says "I'm in my friend Caitie's apartment." I literally almost died.
Here's a still from the video we took. This is what you saw on TV if you watched the show. You can see the picture of me, Kell, and Em in the background. I'm sitting off the the right of the screen, creepily taping the whole thing with my camera.

Lexie and I packed up the stuff and headed off the library to study for all the classes I skipped while doing Oprah stuff. I emailed both my professors, and I'm pretty sure they'll understand. Lexie got an email from the Miami press people who said they were trying to leak the story to Cincinnati and Dayton news so that they could do a story on her. And me? Maybe? I mean the Oprah stuff STILL IS at my apartment right now...

The Oprah Winfrey show was very gracious to me letting Lexie use our apartment for the segment - as if! I'd do anything for Oprah - so they're sending us a present in the mail. I hope it's a neeeeeeewwwwwww CAR! Or a helicopter. Or Johnny Depp. Ok, ok. I'll settle for David Beckham. FINE, FINE. James Marsden will do.

For those who missed it, it'll be on my DVR forever. Let me know if you want to hear me squeak. It's quite audible, I assure you.

This was seriously the funniest, most random moment of my life. I will treasure my 5 minutes of fame for all time.

double play

Now Senator McCain is just getting ridiculous. The more ridiculous thing is that I found this article while perusing BBC:

US Republican presidential candidate John McCain has accused his rival, Barack Obama, of supporting both teams playing in the baseball World Series.

Speaking in Pennsylvania, Mr McCain said: "Now, I'm not dumb enough to get mixed up in a World Series between swing states.

"But I think I may have detected a little pattern with Senator Obama. It's pretty simple really. When he's campaigning in Philadelphia, he roots for the Phillies, and when he's campaigning in Tampa Bay, he 'shows love' to the Rays.

"It's kind of like the way he campaigns on tax cuts, but then votes for tax increases after he's elected."

McCain also brings up the fact that Obama is a White Sox fan. Sorry Senator, but I gotta give it up to anyone who continuously supports Chicago sports teams. It takes persistence and patience, for sure. This coming from a true blue life-long member of Red Sox Nation (yes, even before they won the World Series in 2004. Like it or leave it).

Consequently, McCain's beloved Arizona Diamondbacks didn't make it to the playoffs. I'm sensing bitterness.

Funny. He always struck me as a Yankees fan.

Implying that Obama is trying to get votes by supporting baseball teams in the World Series is just ridiculous. Both states have two MLB teams (Marlins and Rays for Florida, Phillies and Pirates for Pennsylvania), so by supporting either team he would be pissing off half of the rest of the state. Not to mention the fans of the teams that the Rays and the Phillies outed on the way to the top. I don't even want to talk about how I felt on Sunday night after my Red Sox went down.

Any trip to an Ohio bar on a Saturday afternoon is proof. Try yelling "WHO DEY" into a crowd of Browns fans. You will not come out alive. Or you'll just get laughed at. The Bengals, by the way, are 0-7 this year. Haven't been hearing much WHO DEYing around campus. What a relief. If there's anything worse than a Yankees fan, it's a loud Bengals fan. And if there's anything worse than a presidential candidate who's falling back on his opponents apparent sports preferences to win votes...

Wait... There's not much worse than that.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

I'M FAMOUS!

I'm going to be on The Oprah Winfrey Show tomorrow! Essentially...

As posted before, her dad is going to be on and Oprah is Skyping her. Fortunately for me, Miami's firewall doesn't allow for the Skype to work. So, Lexie asked if she could come over to my apartment so that she can SKYPE WITH OPRAH!!! I think I screamed. My apartment is going to be on Oprah!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Here's the details: Wednesday, October 22 at 4pm EST on whatever station Oprah is on for you. Check local listings here.

I'll do my best to actually be ON THE SHOW, I promise. Whether it be walking through the background, writing a note, or peeking over the back of the couch...I'll figure something out.

I've never been so excited/happy in my life.
Miami had its own little article in the Boston Globe last week.

The article focuses on the fact that Miami, as a historically conservative campus (mostly due to the fact that the average income in a Miami student's household is way over $200,000) just MIGHT be going blue.

Watch the video here...and try to contain your urge to punch the College Republicans who appear in the face.

OXFORD, Ohio - It was lunchtime at the student center of Miami University in Southwestern Ohio, and the food court was hopping. Students streamed in and out, some texting friends on cellphones, others lost in their iPods. They were studying, gabbing, eating.

Traffic was heavy at a small table of Barack Obama supporters, beside which stood a life-size cutout of the candidate, a permanent smile on his face. Campaign stickers, postcards, volunteer sign-up sheets, and buttons - Warhol-like in their vibrant colors - were spread out before them.

"You want some Obama gear?" Jessica Gephart, 19, asked a student amid the bustle.

"Yeah!" he said, grabbing a fistful of stickers and buttons.

On many college campuses, where support for Obama runs deep, this scene would be nothing remarkable. But this is Miami, a historically conservative, public university in a deeply conservative region north of Cincinnati. It has long been seen as reflective of the area's Republican leanings; its reputation was well-known when I was looking at colleges as a high school senior in suburban Columbus 15 years ago.

"Liberal is a kind of a dirty word around Southwestern Ohio," said Sarah Owens, a 23-year-old botany graduate student and Obama volunteer. "Everyone's expecting this area to go red. Anything we do to put a dent in that, to overturn it a little, is going to be a success."

Indeed, the surrounding Butler County voted for President Bush by a 2-to-1 ratio in 2000 and 2004. But this year, the Democrats, buoyed by Obama's appeal among young voters and a highly organized campaign operation, are making their biggest push ever on this picturesque Georgian brick campus of more than 16,000 students.

Even the College Republicans at Miami, who are working furiously to help John McCain hold onto this critical state, concede that are finally facing some serious competition. When we visited the McCain volunteers yesterday, they were gathered at an off-campus house, painting signs for today's nearby rally with GOP vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin: "Palin git 'r' done"; "Palin Fever"; "Palin is Patriot"; "Welcome to Palin Country," the signs said.

"This year they're giving us a run for our money," said Caroline Connor, a 21-year-old geography major and McCain volunteer from Dublin, Ohio. "It's a pretty big change."

"I have close friends who are Democrats," said Thad Boggs, 21, a senior from Washington Court House, Ohio, who is majoring in political science. "And they'll say, 'I registered a couple voters for Obama today.' And then I swallow hard."

When we asked students yesterday to take a stab at guessing the political breakdown of the student body, several said 50-50. But in a brief tour of campus, we found many more Obama voters - and more Obama signs - than McCain ones.

We met Jenna Ward and Jackie Sherrick, political science majors, as they were heading to an exam in "comparative security." They were laughing with each other. They both had PDAs in their hands. But they do not share a candidate.

"I feel like Barack Obama doesn't have the experience I would like to see in a leader," said Ward, a 21-year-old junior from Virginia who objected to Obama's plan to end the war in Iraq.

"I definitely think we need to get out of the war. We need to refocus on Afghanistan," said Sherrick, a 20-year-old junior from Dublin.

The students working for Obama enjoy the challenge of being at Miami and persuading friends and classmates to join their cause. Often, they say, students here are conservative only because their parents are, and that once on their own they begin challenging long-held assumptions.

"I see the movement swallow people," said Stephen Kostyo, a 20-year-old political science major from Findlay.

There appears to be a big difference in how the Obama campaign and the McCain campaign interact with their campus volunteers.

The pro-Obama students report having constant interaction with the campaign, and their strategies and day-to-day activities are very much coordinated. The Republicans on campus, however, operate with very little oversight.

"We basically do what we do," Boggs said. "They don't really give us direction."

To some McCain volunteers, that is how it should be.

"I know the campus. I know what works here, what gets picked up, what gets popular," said Courtney Rosellini, a 21-year-old from Racine, Wis., majoring in speech communications.

But the Obama activists on campus seem to be benefiting from their close relationship with the campaign field operation, helping to organize rides so students can vote early, schedule volunteer shifts, and plan voter registration efforts.

Connor and her cohort are acutely aware that, with McCain lagging in some battleground states, the last thing they need is a strong Obama operation peeling away student votes that Republicans used to be able to count on.

"Every day matters," she said.

I asked the McCain volunteers how they would feel if Obama were their president.

"I'm moving to Italy," Rosellini said.

"I'm coming with you!" added Carly Roman, a 21-year-old zoology major from Canton, Ohio.


See the full article, along with pictures and some really fun comments to laugh at.

Such as....

Republicans - you are absolutely right corporations, free of those annoying government regulations , will make sure you are gainfully employed, your family is fully insured and you'll never ever have to worry of your job going oversees, because they believe in doing the right thing and keeping jobs here...they will also fund schools, highway police and infrastucture projects....effective government is nothing more than a socialist comunist agenda, someone making $10k a year should gosh golly pay the same as someone making $1MM a year, besides, cleaning toilets, hotel rooms, picking fruit and collecting garbage are unnecesary jobs that just are not the hard work us good christian (and only christian) rich folks do.. unrestricted .dog eat dog, survival of the fittest capitalism is best for humanity and the planet..., money making is all there is to life...we don't need government to interfere in our selfish quest! oh except when it comes to religion and morality...you MUST believe in Jesus, or we'll kill you as the devil worshiper you are.. you MUST believe that all life is precious, except when we think we should kill you for commiting a crime,God delegated capital punishment long ago......and it wouldn't hurt if you were all applie pie eating, red blooded, english speaking americans...cuz who needs diplomacy when we can just bombl you...sounds good to me...

BARF.

Monday, October 20, 2008

My friend Lexie is going to be on the Oprah show.

Ok, so her dad is.

But they're skyping her from the show.

Her dad, Dan Kadlec, is a contributing writer for Money Magazine. For one of his articles, he wrote an article about money management as a college student in the form of a letter to her.

Dear Lexie,

On your first day of college, let me congratulate you on your well-earned freedom. No more curfews. No more being dragged places you'd rather not be. No more of Dad's teachable moments about responsibility, opportunity...life. And no more boring lessons about after-tax income, saving, borrowing, compound returns and growth stocks.

While we're on the subject of "no more," let me gently mention that it applies to the car you've been driving too, and my gas card and your allowance. Freedom, you see, has its price. Sorry, I couldn't resist one more teachable moment.

I know that you will study hard and explore all the great things that a university has to offer. You are ready for this and, frankly, so am I. Your freedom and a degree of mine come wrapped together.

Yet I can't help but worry that you may get tripped up with money issues. It's easy to do, especially when you're just starting out. But happily, it's also fairly easy to avoid. So if you'll indulge me one last time, I'd like to offer some parting financial wisdom for your first semester and beyond.

Live within your means

You are fortunate to have parents that can take care of your biggest bills - tuition, room and board, transportation home. But the rest, dear child, is up to you. It would be a shame for you to end up in debt with your modest earning ability right now (the average credit-card balance for college seniors: nearly $3,000).

So estimate all of your expenses over the next 17 weeks and compare that with your available resources. Looking at the whole semester, not just a sample week, makes plain how recurring expenses add up - like, say, $4 a day at Starbucks setting you back nearly $500.

Separate your spending into categories, such as books, laundry, entertainment, food and beverages (spare me the details about what kind of beverages).

"Keep an envelope for each, and place all of your receipts in those envelopes so you can go back and count what you spent where," says Douglas Andrew, author of Millionaire by Thirty. "That way you'll quickly recognize where you may be going overboard."

Make adjustments as needed. But when you add to one category, be sure you subtract from another. If money runs tight, don't default to a part-time job unless you'd really enjoy it or it's truly a last option. You worked hard all summer and saved enough to get by. Cut your expenses instead. That's a lifetime skill worth developing now.

Get the right credit card

I have a confession: In the past few months I have - without telling you - thrown away at least a dozen credit-card offers to you. This bombardment will continue when you move to campus.

Why do credit-card companies want to hook you before you have income? They're in it for the long term. Issuers know that people tend to be loyal to their first credit card; get it in college and you're likely to still be using it years later. So they will not stop the barrage, and even without me as your guardian filter, I hope you'll keep throwing the offers away.

You need only one - a Visa, a MasterCard or an American Express. Later, when you've proved you can manage one card, I want you to add two others - a department store card and a gas card - to help build a good credit rating.

In each case, never charge more than 30% of your credit limit and pay in full every month. But just to be safe, authorize an appropriate automatic monthly payment to protect you from late fees and a credit blemish.

You don't yet appreciate how important a good credit history is. When you graduate, your credit rating will be looked at by landlords, utility companies, cell-phone providers, banks (if you buy or lease a car) and even employers.

"The worst thing you can do is miss a payment," says Ellen Cannon, managing editor of Bankrate.com. "That will damage your credit score, which is the basis of your financial life."

Look for a low-rate student card with no annual fees, like Citi mtvU Platinum Select Visa for College Students (0% interest for six months; 13.99% thereafter) or Blue Cash from American Express (0% interest for the first six months; then 8.99% to 15.99%, depending on your credit history; and a cashback feature for purchases).

I don't often get excited by a 0% introductory rate. But in this case it's a nice feature. You may charge more than you expect initially buying books and setting up your dorm room - and have to carry a balance for a month or two.

Study money

Even if you don't have to, take at least one economics and one personal-finance course. High schools don't teach much about budgets and credit or supply and demand.

These courses will open your eyes to how money works in the real world and introduce you to practical skills you'll use the rest of your life. They will also, finally, give you an inkling of what your dad's been writing about for 25 years.

See the big picture

Don't get caught up in talk on campus about which majors are the best stepping stones to financial success. You'll hear plenty of that from kids who want or may be under pressure to get a quick return from their education. Forget them. Many of those kids will end up disliking their jobs and muddling through so-so careers.

You can make a great living doing almost anything, as long as you love it. So take risks. Explore. Switch majors. Get your head out of the books and do something surprising. There's time. But find your bliss and pursue it.

Go ahead and get fluent in Spanish and study abroad if that makes your heart sing. Your knowledge and experience will pay off later on, I promise - just as you'll be rewarded for the joy you bring to tasks that excite you.

So that's it, Lexie. Of course I'll be available for more advice anytime - for the price of a phone call. Judging by how eagerly you packed your things, though, I recognize that my time would be ill spent sitting in front of the telephone waiting. That's okay, I won't. We're both ready.

Love always, Dad




Saying that I'm insanely jealous is a large understatement.

And the financial crisis hits home...

Dear Colleagues:

As we are all painfully aware, our economy is experiencing one of its most challenging times in more than a half century. This situation greatly impacts every organization and every individual in the U.S., including Miami University. We have been working hard to assess how this will affect Miami and to develop financial plans based on the best information we have about the future. However, this planning is very difficult because of the great uncertainty that still exists in the economy. We cannot yet determine, for example, the size of the drop in our investment income that now seems highly likely. Ohio’s economy is also precarious, and this will very likely have a significant negative impact on our state funding.

As we announced earlier, we will be enacting a total of $5 million in one-time cuts during the current fiscal year. (Note: the fiscal year runs from July 1st to June 30th.) Although we cannot determine the exact status of our budget situation, given the volatile and deteriorating economy, it is important that we take additional steps now to give ourselves more time to address larger budget shortfalls that now seem likely. This will help us minimize the impact on our faculty and staff and on our students’ educational experience.

Specifically, we are taking four additional actions. First, we will immediately implement a hard hiring freeze for staff for at least the rest of the fiscal year. This means that no open classified or unclassified staff positions, including administrative positions, will be filled unless approved by the Vice-President for Finance and Business Services (in consultation with the appropriate vice president) and is determined to be critical to the university’s health. Second, all previously-authorized faculty searches are being reviewed and a substantial number will be canceled. Third, we are re-evaluating the scheduling of all capital projects, with the goal of postponing what we can. This will lead to the delay of some projects, including the remodel of Kreger Hall and the construction of the Bicentennial Student Center, until the economic situation improves.

Fourth, in this period of financial uncertainty, we need to explore every avenue to eliminate unnecessary costs and/or to more effectively and efficiently carry out our mission by better utilizing our resources. We are asking each person who has budget responsibility to closely examine the necessity of all expenditures, and we encourage everyone in our community to seek ways to streamline and reduce unnecessary costs. To make it easier to share cost saving and process improvement ideas, and to recognize those ideas, a new suggestion Web site is located at http://www.muohio.edu/ThisMakesCents/ .

As we respond to the immediate financial challenges, it is vital that we remain clearly focused on our future. Our unwavering goal is to provide the exceptional student experience that Miami is known for. We will not compromise on this. In fact, even in these difficult economic times, we must strive to make this experience even better to ensure our long-term success.
Our strategic goals allow us to identify our priorities and focus our resources on those areas that move us to the future we envision. Some areas may progress more slowly than planned, but we will not lose sight of our long-term goals as we make the difficult decisions that lie ahead.

Miami University has been successful for nearly 200 years, largely because of the resilience and commitment of our faculty, staff, and students. By working together with commitment and vision, we will succeed in meeting the challenges we face today. My deepest thanks to everyone for your continuing efforts to keep Miami strong.


David Hodge


I honestly almost started crying when I read this. The fact that the financial crisis is impacting higher education is nothing short of awful - not to mention the number of early education systems this may be affecting. My heart still swells with pride for my school as we work through this as a community.

Love and Honor To Miami
Miami is evil and I had to register at 7am the morning after fall break. Per usual, I registered for more classes than I'm actually going to take. Here's my current schedule for my last semester at Miami:


Flight Fundamentals - A class that teaches me how to fly planes. The final is the test for a pilot's license (all I need to do on my own is get flying hours in)

History of Miami University - I'm excited to learn all about my school in my final semester.

Kid's Stuff: Toys in America - Self explanatory.

Great Depression Revisited - Wait...is this a study of the current economy? Or maybe a description of how I'm going to feel while taking this class. Either way, I hate Macro and the fact that the Econ department is only offering one Senior Capstone this semester.

Environmental Economics - A.K.A. preparation for what I want to do with my life?

French 102 - Do I really want to continue with a language? Not sure.


Regardless of what I'm taking, this is looking like the best semester I've ever had.

It's a gorgeous fall day outside. The leaves are all different colors and it's 67 degrees out. Ok nature, you win. I'm going for a run.

Sunday, October 19, 2008

I'm sitting on my couch in my WARM apartment in glorious Oxford, Ohio, eating pizza and pondering the age old question:

Did Madison just own me? Or was it the other way around?

I'm gonna go with both.

On Wednesday I found a kid named Ben on the Ride Board who was also visiting Madison. I called him and told him I was as well, and would he like to carpool? The answer was a resounding yes. He occasionally visits his girlfriend who goes to Wisconsin, and the 8 hour ride alone was something he was looking to avoid (as well as the gas, which ended up as $45 each. w00t).

24 hours later we're on our way to Madison. On the way there, we split the driving pretty much 50-50 and made it there in 7 hours and 40 minutes. 20 minutes faster than anticipated!

Oh, Madison, WI. The place where my grandparents went to school, met, and fell in love. I was told to have a brat for my grandpa and an ice cream cone for my grandma.

On Thursday night I stayed with Goldstein and pretty much passed out immediately. The 1 hour time difference was getting to me. The next morning we got up, made breakfast and explored State Street. I bought some sweet Kanye sunglasses, which I sported for the rest of the day/night, and Unicorn vs. Narwhal action figures for my roommate Emily. Ballin'. All in all, it was a fairly good afternoon (besides the rain and the cold. Boo the north). Around 3:30, we made it to the Union where I was delighted to see beer was served. After a pitcher, I got brats at State Street Brats (check off the list! woohoo!) and soon after we headed off to newbie social.

I always thought I knew a ton of people at Madison, but when I was at the social the other night, I was slightly disappointed by all the strange faces. Granted, I got to know people quickly and loved talking to the newbies but it was a very strange sensation - realizing many of my friends have moved on. These feelings were quickly interrupted by the drama llama. I was downstairs for a few minutes and came back upstairs to see drunk people running around like crazy. A newbie was DJing that night, and at some point, his speakers were stolen. There were a few non-@ers who had showed up, and not only stole the speakers but presumably hit a couple of the girls. As one might imagine, shit started going down. Soon after, Monica and I left to go to the bars and the night improved greatly.

The next morning I woke up at Monica's and spent most of the day helping her and Bobby set up for their birthday party. It began at about 8:30, and debauchery occured, fa sho. Dance party and beer pong on the 1st floor, hookah lounge on the second floor. Everyone was dancing, having a blast. Williams was picked up from the airport in a limo, and after stopping at Echo Tap, showed up at the party (only to berate me for not having gone). Monica, her friends and I took a quick interlude from the party to go to the bars and Taco Bell, and then returned for a late night of hookah and learning about interesting perspectives on the bailout and other fun conversations. Not to mention a beer pong game during which Williams and I murdered Luke and Jeff (or scraped by and won by a cup. Either way). I'm pretty sure I also kegstanded for longer than Luke did. Moral of the story: I'm better than Luke. The end.

Or would that have been an early morning? We left the party at 6am and I never got to sleep. I want to say Ben understood when he picked me up why I was still unsober and and slept for most of the ride, but who knows. The 8 hour ride home was anything but a blast. I slept for most of the way. Luckily, Ohio welcomed me home with this beautiful sunset. Probably the best I've ever seen, and this picture doesn't do it justice at all. It literally stretched across half of the horizon.


I've visited a lot of schools since I've been at Miami, and everytime I come back, I am reminded of why I chose the school that I did. Miami is incredible, and I cannot imagine myself anywhere else...except MAYBE Wisconsin. Maybe This is a big deal, people. I've been to Harvard, Brown, Yale, and Princeton. I've been to Notre Dame. I've been to BC. I've been to OSU. I've been to Iowa. I've been to Montgomery Community College. I'm sorry. Miami is the place for me. Except for maybe Wisconsin. But not quite...

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Can I have fries with that?

Today on the way to class I saw this flyer in the ground:

I mostly took a picture because I found it entertaining that they mixed up the words "steak" and "stake". I giggled at the image of Miami students bringing t-bones and flank steaks to the hub and putting them on the seal.













+













= ?????


An hour and one half-assed exam later, I made my own "steak" in the hub.

I also signed up to be a Campus Captain for Progressive Future. What does that mean?

That means me and 5 of my friends are in charge of calling 200 students the nights before the election to remind them to go vote!

Horray!

Who wants to be my friend?
McCainComics.com

With gems such as this one...how can you not check it out?

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Get ready....

"To be honest, I don't know if Madison is ready for C.H..."
~M.R. Goldstein

T-Minus 18 hours until I leave for my first visit to Madtown. Excitement doesn't begin to describe it...

You know you're an Econ dork when...

...this email from my Economic Growth professor makes you laugh.

There is a market failure in trying to get you to read this for your own self interest. If everyone reads the article it is much easier to get a discussion going than if one or two people read it. Of course there is a free-rider problem, it is in your own best interest to not read it and let someone else do the discussion. Your private benefits are less than your private cost (the opportunity cost of reading this is high as you must give up some other preferable activity). To solve this coordination failure, I will give a short quiz at the beginning of class on these readings.


In other news...there is hope for humanity. Today I was zoning out in my Mathematical Economics class, one which I half ashamed, half proud to say usually keeps me wide awake. My professor asked me what was wrong, and I replied that I just had an interview that sucked the energy out of me. He asked if I needed anything, and I responded that either a nap or a large amount of chocolate would do the trick.

He left the room and came back with a pack of M&M's for me.

Reason #295 to go to Miami

Reason #296 is that my interviewer today (A Notre Dame grad) admitted that Miami is not only prettier than his school, but is what he imagines a University should be like.

Cha ching!

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

GT is...still ok?

Last Thursday night, Arcadiy asked me a silly, silly question: If we visited Miami on a Monday night...would we be able to go out?

Ha.

He wasn't here the Tuesday of finals week last year when we started the festivities at 9am.

Last night, the @Miami-GT love continued in an awesome way. Arcadiy and Ryan Adams, along with some new faces - Katelyn, Morgan, and Allison - appeared on my doorstep around 7pm. Unfortunately they were too late to join us for our AIESEC meeting this week, but we made up for it by tossing a few back and going to 45East for dollar margs. After stealing the hookah from my sister, we leaned back for a good ol' game of "Never have I ever" (AKA AIESEC Gossip) and then eventually made it up to the bars. As usual on Monday nights, Brick Street was hosting Karaoke Night. We didn't make it up on stage because some girl who thought she could sing kept singing ballads such as "I Hope you Dance". Doesn't she know karaoke isn't a show-off contest?...it's awesomeness lies in its entertainment value.

Upon making it back to the apartment, we ordered calzones and stayed up til 4:30am talking about - what else? - AIESEC. The highlight for me was when Arcadiy let it slip that he thinks I'm a "super awesome AIESECer". I don't think he knows (rather, he won't know til he reads this) how much that means. It's such a compliment when people you admire within an organization have the same admiration for you.

Our time together culminated at Uptown Cafe, of course, where we enjoyed Fatty's and made me late to class. Pictures from the evening to come...

I love so much when other LCs visit. I'm hoping this happens more often in the future, because our newbies are AWESOME and are about to make a big showing at Rowdies RoKs!

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

The True Maverick

Obama Leading In Ohio, Poll Finds
Edge Is 6 Points In a State Looming Large for McCain

By Jon Cohen and Dan Balz
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, October 7, 2008; A01

Aided by the faltering economy, Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama has the upper hand in the race for Ohio, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll, putting Republican John McCain at a disadvantage in a state considered vital to his chances of winning the White House in November.

The state's voters, long suffering from a poor economy and newly battered by the turmoil in the financial, credit and housing markets, give Obama stronger marks on handling the economy, creating jobs and dealing with tax policy. The senator from Illinois also has a big lead as the candidate more in tune with the economic problems people are confronting, a significant benefit as more than half of all voters consider the economy and jobs the campaign's top issue.

Overall, among likely voters in the new poll, 51 percent said they would support Obama and his running mate, Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. (Del.), if the election were held today, while 45 percent said they would back McCain and his vice presidential nominee, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin.

McCain has the edge on handling the U.S. fight against terrorism and, narrowly, the Iraq war, but those issues are far less important this year. Just 9 percent of voters call them their top issues.

Still, about two in 10 voters are "movable," nearly double the proportion who were in that position two weeks before the 2004 election, suggesting the possibility of some significant shifts in the weeks ahead.

Beyond that, Obama holds a 2 to 1 advantage over McCain as the candidate more likely to bring needed change to Washington.

The new survey underscores the degree to which the economic crisis has shaken up the presidential race and the obstacles that now confront McCain in the final month of the campaign.

No Republican has ever been elected president without winning Ohio, and the state's 20 electoral votes are of paramount importance to McCain. If the senator from Arizona were to win every other state that President Bush carried four years ago, but lose Ohio, he would fall four electoral votes short of the 270 needed to win the White House. Only Florida, of other major battlegrounds the Republicans won in the past two elections, looms as large as Ohio in determining the next president.

The support for Obama comes at an opportune time for the Democrat, as Ohioans began early voting a week ago at polling places statewide. The Ohio secretary of state's office estimates that a quarter of all voters will cast their ballots as absentees or at an early voting location before Election Day, more than twice as many as did so four years ago.

There are indications from the survey that Obama also may have an early advantage in mobilizing and turning out Ohio voters over the next month. He has more enthusiastic supporters than McCain does, and has reached more voters in Ohio than his rival.

Nearly four in 10 voters said they have already been contacted by someone from the Obama campaign either by phone or in person. That is significantly higher than the number who said they have heard from the McCain campaign. It also is higher than the number who said they had been called or visited by the campaigns of Bush or Democrat John F. Kerry in mid-October four years ago.

Including e-mail and text messages this year, the Obama campaign has contacted 43 percent of all voters and the McCain campaign has been in touch with 33 percent. Both sides have reached out to the party faithful, but Obama has done somewhat better at targeting independents.

Obama's lead in Ohio stems in large part from broad support among women, young voters and those focused on the country's, and their own, finances.

Women divided 50-50 between Bush and Kerry four years ago. Now they break for Obama by a 14-point margin. Men tilt narrowly to the Republican nominee, just as they did toward Bush, according to network exit polling.

McCain holds a seven-point edge among white voters, narrower than Bush's 12 points in 2004, with the difference primarily among white women. Almost all black voters support Obama. Four years ago, 16 percent of African Americans supported Bush over Kerry.

Obama also is doing better with young and old voters than Kerry did on Election Day four years ago. Among those younger than 30, Obama has a 2 to 1 lead over McCain. Among those 30 and older, the candidates are tied. Dianne Amos, 60, an ardent McCain supporter from Logan, is engaged in some intergenerational politicking. In a follow-up interview, she said she is "e-mailing back and forth" with her grandson, an Obama supporter. "I keep trying to explain things to him," she said.

Obama is beating McCain by nearly 3 to 1 in Cuyahoga County, which includes Cleveland, and also holds a lead in the northeast portion of the state, an area including the hard-hit industrial cities of Akron, Canton and Youngstown.

McCain's edge in the southwestern part of the state, including Cincinnati and Dayton, is as big as Bush's win was there four years ago, but the Republican nominee's numbers in the central part of the state do not measure up to the president's. Four years ago, Bush won central Ohio and the northwest part of the state around Toledo by eight percentage points. In the Post-ABC News poll, those areas split 49 percent for Obama, 45 percent for McCain.

One clear drag on McCain is the unpopularity of the president. In the most recent Post-ABC national poll, Bush's approval rating stood at 26 percent. Four years ago, both nationally and in Ohio, just over half of all voters gave him positive marks. McCain has sought to portray himself as someone who, with Palin, would reform Washington and change the way business is done in the capital. But in the new poll, more than half of all Ohio voters see McCain as someone who would continue Bush's policies, and nearly all of these voters support Obama.

"Basically, I don't like the Reaganomics of the Republican Party," said Tina Nelson, 27, of Powell, in an interview after the survey. Nelson said an Obama speech on the financial situation "really got to me. It made a lot of sense."

It is the slumping economy that has deeply scrambled voting patterns in the state. The economy was the most important issue in Ohio in 2004, but the Iraq war and terrorism together were cited by as many Ohio voters as were economic concerns, according to a pre-election ABC News poll that year.

Obama wins "economy voters" in the new poll by 62 to 34 percent, and, as noted, more voters prefer him on dealing with the economy (by a 13-point margin), jobs (14 points) and taxes (14 points). And he has an even bigger edge on understanding the financial problems people are facing: Fifty-three percent of voters see him as more in touch on this score, compared with 35 percent who side with McCain.

This advantage on empathy is one of the things that helps Obama among white voters. He has an 11-point edge among that group on this question, and more than 80 percent of those who see him as more in tune support him over McCain.

For Russell Baron, 48, from the Cleveland suburb of Brook Park, McCain cannot compete on the economy. "He's admitted that he doesn't really know much about the economy," he said. "Well, gee, that's a bad thing to say right now."

Dessie Knight, 74, of Quaker City, by contrast, questions Obama's experience on the economy, and sides with McCain on the issue. Overall in the poll, just over half of voters said Obama has enough experience to serve effectively as president.

The unemployment rate in Ohio hit 7.4 percent in August, among the highest in the nation and the highest of any battleground state other than Michigan, territory the McCain campaign effectively ceded last week by pulling out its resources.

Obama lost the Ohio Democratic primary to Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (N.Y.) by 10 percentage points, prompting widespread concerns among Democrats that he would have a tough time winning the state.

The new data show Obama doing as well as McCain at holding on to partisans, despite any lingering disgruntlement over the Democratic nomination battle: Ninety-one percent of Democrats back Obama, while 90 percent of Republicans support McCain. But support for Obama does lag a bit among white Democratic women relative to Kerry's support in 2004. And among all Democrats who would have preferred Clinton to be atop the party's ticket, 14 percent support McCain.

Clinton holdouts do not tip the balance, however, in part because Democrats outnumber Republicans among Ohio voters, a reversal from 2004.

Many of those who described themselves as Republicans four years ago now appear to identify as independents, boosting McCain to a tie among this key voting bloc. Kerry won independents by nearly 20 points.

Another group of crucial swing voters is political moderates, and they break for Obama by 22 points, similar to Kerry's margin from 2004. McCain's choice of Palin as his No. 2 appears to be a problem for him among these voters.

Nearly four in 10 moderates in the poll said they were less apt to vote for McCain because of the Palin pick, double the proportion drawn to him as a result. By contrast, Biden attracts three times as many moderates to Obama as he pushes away.

Peggy Burkett, 52, an undecided voter from Youngstown, for one, said Biden "may tip the balance" toward Obama. But she added: "I probably won't know who I'll support until I get to the precinct on Election Day."

Another wild card in Ohio is high public doubt about the vote count on Nov. 4. Only about a third of voters are "very confident" that ballots in the state will be counted accurately, with African Americans much less likely than whites to be so confident in the tally. Voters in Cuyahoga express the highest levels of skepticism of the count, much higher than the level of concern elsewhere.

The poll was conducted by telephone Oct. 3 to 5 among a random sample of 1,010 adults in Ohio. The margin of sampling error for the full poll is plus or minus three percentage points; it is 3.5 points for the sample of 772 likely voters.

Polling analyst Jennifer Agiesta contributed to this report.