NEWS Monday, August 16, 2004 - The Michigan Daily - 3 Ants Marc/ing Students overseas face additional step in absentee voting Students from the School of Art and Design began painting a series of murals In the alley between the Nickels Arcade and State Street near Borders Books and Music Thursday. The mural above depicts a line of ants following each other. By Genevieve Lampinen Daily Staff Reporter Every registered vote will count in the November presidential election, but students studying abroad will face an especially lengthy process voting as a Michigan resident from overseas, said Bill Nolting, director of overseas opportunities at the University's Inter- national Center. "There are some specific regula- tions so that students from the state have to take certain measures that they wouldn't have to take if they were from other states," Nolting said. Typically, a U.S. citizen living abroad must fill out a Federal Post Card Appli- cation for an absentee ballot and then mail it to election officials in order to receive their absentee ballot. For students whose voting residence is Michigan, their postcards must also be notarized. Michigan is one of only three areas in the United States - along with Puerto Rico and Mis- sissippi - to require notarization of the FPCA. A person applying for an absentee ballot must also be able to provide their foreign address. Janet Afonso, program coordinator for student international services at the International Center, said she hopes that students from the University who are studying abroad in Spain - which is the second most popular destina- tion for American students studying abroad, with England as the first, will recognize how important it is to apply for absentee ballots on time. "All students that are going to be abroad during the election have already been sent two messages giv- ing them a Web site and reminding them that they can (apply) online and how they can vote," Afonso said. However, for some students in the midst of studying abroad, taking the time to vote isn't high on the priority list. "I'm not sure how (voting overseas) will work. If it's a pain, then I prob- ably won't do it. If it's easy, then I will. It's probably not worth the frus- "Don't let your get ahead of yu99 304 1/2 S. STATE ST. 2ND FLOOR ANN ARBOR, MI 48104 668 9329 W WW.DASCOLABARBERS.COM 1YA MI#trmENT tration of doing it," said LSA senior Dan King, who will be studying in Japan. The Republican and Democratic parties are campaigning for interna- tional votes more seriously than in 2000 when President Bush won by a 537-vote margin in Florida. In an attempt to earn votes for the Democrats from Americans living or studying abroad, Diana Kerry - sister to presidential candidate John Kerry - has created Americans Overseas for Kerry-Edwards, a grassroots group aiming to register as many expatriates as possible to vote and provide them with absentee ballots before the Sep- tember deadline. "What we are trying to do basically is because the 2000 elections were so close, we decided it would be a good idea to reach the seven million Ameri- cans that live abroad," said David Hymen communications and strategy coordinator for AOK. AOK has also initiated a world tour that will travel to the 100 cities with the most American citizens, and has a university outreach program that will visit 10 university campuses in Spain with American exchange programs. "Registering to vote and requesting an absentee ballot isn't the first thing on (students') minds. In the U.S. you are bombarded by all kinds of cam- paigns. We want to bring that energy to students studying abroad. It's not fair for them to be left out of that pro- cess," Hymen added. See VOTING, Page 9 Pi's RECORDS & USED CDS 617 Packard Upstairs from Subway Paying $4 to $6 $°4 for top CD's in top condition. Al.o buying premium fps and cassettes. Open 7 days }yj,'Y c 663-3441. The selection is ENDLESS Post-convention p -younger voters fav By Justin Miller Daily Staff Reporter In a nation evenly divided between the political parties, it might seem that everything is split down the middle. But perceptions can be deceiving, especially among 18 to 24-year-old vot- ers, according to a recent Washington .P ost-ABC News poll. Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry is beating President Bush in what was, as recently as April, an even- ly split slice of the electorate. The poll, taken after the Democratic National Convention, showed Kerry with a two- to-one lead over the commander in chief among registered voters under 30 years old. Five subsequent surveys of the youth vote since the convention Wave shown an average 18 point deficit for Bush among 18 to 24-year-olds. "I don't think there's any slippage among the Republican faithful," said Scott Foley, chairman of Students for Bush. "We're going to try to. reach out to apathetic voters. We'll be cam- paigning at football games, outside the dorms, passing out stickers, getting people to wear buttons, making phone calls," said Foley, a Business student. One reason for the slip in Bush's poll numbers might be due to the decline of terrorism as an issue for young vot- ers - something that generally favors Bush according to most polls. Only 9 percent of voters in the Post-ABC poll said it was their top voting concern, compared to 22 percent of total voters in the most recent Fox News/Opinion Dynamics poll. "It was the war in Iraq," said Victor Stover, a Kalamazoo College graduate, when asked what the most important election issue is for him. "But Kerry hasn't pinned it down," he added. Kerry attempted to do so last week after answering a question Bush posed to him about whether the senator would have voted for the Iraq war, knowing what he knows now. 'I would have voted for the.authority. [il shows or Kerry I believe it is the right authority for a president to have but I would have used that authority effectively," Kerry said, adding that he would have given United Nations weapon inspectors more time and worked harder to get the interna- tional community on board. "After that, I'd say the economy and the environment," Stover said of the isstes that concern him. Economic worries were likely not eased when the U.S. Department of Labor reported that only 37,000 jobs were created in July - less than the 200,000+ expected. "It's moral values," said Ann Arbor resident Ben Kim about his decision to vote come November. "I'm leaning towards Bush. I was pretty pro-Bush last time," said Kim. The youth vote has been on and off for Republicans over the past two decades. The margin of victory for former President Ronald Reagan's re- election was the biggest among youth See BUSH, Page 9