The Brown Daily Herald M onday, N ovember 3, 2008
Volume CXLIII, No. 104
THE HERALD POLL
Students support Obama, Herald poll shows By Emmy Liss Senior Staff Writer
The real ballots will not be counted until tomorrow, but according to The Herald poll conducted last week, 86.1 percent of Brown students support Sen. Barack Obama, while 6.3 percent support Sen. John McCain. Most students interviewed by The Herald said they expected Obama to come out on top in the Herald polls, though the difference was larger than they anticipated. “It sounds high, but not surprising,” Emanuel Buzek ’12 said. The numbers did not surprise Max Chaiken ’09, deputy field officer for the Rhode Island for Obama campaign and president of Brown Students for Barack Obama, though he said he thinks the number of Brown students voting for Obama is even higher than the poll reflected. He said Brown students are “overwhelmingly rational,” and even if they may not typically vote Democrat, they “recognize that McCain is offering more of the same.” “This is certainly not the case nationally,” he added. “The race is still close.” Wendy Schiller, associate professor of political science and public policy, said she thought Obama
Students’ picks for presidential election
Since 1866, Daily Since 1891
U. responds to families’ financial concerns By George Miller Senior Staf f Writer
A change in University policy announced over the weekend will allow all students to pre-register for spring classes regardless of outstanding balance, and will raise the limit on how much debt students can have in order to return to campus next semester. Provost David Kertzer ’69 P’95
P’98, who announced the change in an e-mail to the community on Friday, told The Herald the move was prompted by the concerns of some families whose financial situation had changed as a result of ongoing turmoil in the global economy. President Ruth Simmons heard some families’ concerns over Family Weekend, Kertzer said. Under the changed policy, which will affect undergraduates as well as
The number of banking and finance companies recruiting on campus this year has decreased by one quarter, and the number of positions these firms are looking to fill has dropped by one third from last year’s numbers, according to a representative of the Career Development Center. Some factors that may be contributing to these decreases include the disappearances and mergers of some
would be more popular than McCain among students, but “the ratio was really large.” “Even for Brown, that seems to be very high,” she said. Based on the numbers, she said
Min Wu / Herald
The altar dedication in Manning Hall for El Dia de los Muertos, the Day of the Dead. SEE CAMPUS NEWS PAGE 5
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major firms, companies’ decisions to delay hiring until their financial future is more certain and the growing trend of hiring past summer interns rather than new applicants, CDC Communications and Public Relations Officer Bill Bordac wrote in an e-mail to The Herald. Statistics from the National Association of Colleges and Employers show that after five years of steady increases in the hiring of recent college graduates in all fields, the class of 2009 should fare about as well as
the class of 2008 did. “The last five years have been very strong for students,” said NACE Director of Strategic and Foundation Research Ed Koc. “It’s been a sellers’ market and employers have had to compete (for students). ... That’s going to change.” While hiring in the financial sector is expected to be down this year, fields such as engineering and computer science may be less affected, Koc said. But some students are sensing
a more dramatic change than the estimates from the CDC might suggest. “There has been an extremely noticeable decrease in the number of financial firms recruiting on campus,” said Billy Doyle ’09, who interned at Lehman Brothers last summer and said he was looking for finance jobs. “One of the biggest indicators of the difficulty of finding a job now is continued on page 4
In last few days, students head to N.H. for Obama By Isabel Gottlieb News Editor
NORTH HAMPTON, N.H. — Harrison Kreisberg ’10 and Lise Rahdert ’10, armed with a clipboard and covered with Barack Obama stickers, walked down a gravel driveway and knocked on the door of a small blue house. A woman in a Red Sox T-shirt answered, and they asked which presidential candidate she planned on voting for. “I haven’t decided yet,” the woman answered while a young girl peered from behind her legs. “That’s my project for later today.” She had
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CAMPUS NEWS
no more questions, she said, and waited patiently for the canvassers to leave her doorstep. “For me, those door knocks are the most infuriating,” said Rahdert, vice president of the Brown Democrats. “If they’re not decided, there should be a reason.” But only two days before the presidential election, many people in North Hampton, N.H., still had not decided which candidate they would support. New Hampshire is a swing state and its voters are notorious for their last-minute decisions.
chills and trills Yearly Halloween midnight organ concert at Sayles impresses attendees
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S a n t isi m a v i r g e n m a r ia
Fewer job opportunities in finance available to students By Joanna Wohlmuth Senior Staff Writer
graduate and medical students, students will be allowed to pre-register, even if they have an unpaid balance from the fall semester of more than $1,000, the usual limit. Additionally, the University will allow students with an outstanding balance of up to $7,500 to return to campus in the spring and take classes. The usual limit is $5,000. A student with an
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CAMPUS NEWS
Isabel Gottlieb / Herald
Brown students canvassed in New Hampshire for Barack Obama this weekend.
BrYTE FUTURE Brown students volunteer as tutors for refugees who resettled in Providence
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OPINIONS
Kids suffrage Graham Anderson ‘10 advocates allowing young people a say in the election
195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
Candidates for Congress debate By Simon Van Zuylen-Wood Senior Staf f Writer
Friday afternoon, with many people still at work or preparing for a night of tricks and treats, Rhode Island’s candidates for U.S. Congress sparred in their third and final debate for the District 2 seat. In the radio debate, aired on WPRO’s The Dan Yorke Show, GOP challenger Mark Zaccaria and Democratic incumbent Congressman James Langevin argued mostly about the economy in the hour-long discussion. Friday’s debate signaled a shift in the makeup of recent Ocean State political races. In recent campaigns, neither District 1 Congressman Patrick Kennedy nor Senator Jack Reed, both Democrats, has accepted debate requests from underdog challengers. Langevin said he would not take any race for granted, despite being elected four times in a row, and once again appealed to Rhode Islanders to “place their trust and confidence” in him during the discussion. “I take ever y opponent continued on page 6
12 SPORTS
Brown’s number one Football prevails over Penn, 3427, to secure the top ranking in the Ivy League
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