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Hosted by the Georgetown Center on National Security and the Law.
Say hello to Security Law Brief.
Hosted by the Georgetown Center on National Security and the Law.
From the White House Press Office:
Friday, October 10
2:35 pm THE PRESIDENT attends a Congressional Trust 2008
ReceptionPrivate Residence | Coral Gables, Florida
CLOSED PRESS
3:45 pm THE PRESIDENT meets with Cuban-American Community Leaders
TBA Location | Coral Gables, Florida
TBD PRESS
Miami Herald Naked Politics Blog coverage: President Bush heading to Miami to raise $$$
The White House says Bush — who has low popularity ratings but remains a formidable fundraiser — will attend a fundraiser at a private residence in Coral Gables benefitting the Congressional Trust 2008, a joint fund-raising operation that benefits both the National Republican Congressional Committee and the Republican National Committee.
Following the fundraiser, Bush is to meet with Cuban-American community leaders, the White House says.
Please, someone, leak the address.
Dana Millbank Unleashed, Palin Makes a Pit Bull Look Tame at the Washington Post:
Palin then went on to blame Katie Couric's questions for her “less-than-successful interview with kinda mainstream media.” At that, Palin supporters turned on reporters in the press area, waving thunder sticks and shouting abuse. Others hurled obscenities at a camera crew. One Palin supporter shouted a racial epithet at an African American sound man for a network and told him, “Sit down, boy.”
'Attaturk' at Eschaton summarizes it brilliantly:
McCain/Palin taking off the
gloveshoods
It will only get uglier if they get more desperate.
The comments to University of Miami Law Tops Florida Bar Pass devolved into a discussion of the employment prospects of our graduates.
In the course of that discussion, questions were raised about the data the law school publishes in its Viewbook. In particular, commentators questioned the claim made there that the average starting salary for UM grads who work in firms is over $100,000. I wondered about that myself, as the breakout data later on the same page seemed to suggest something lower.
Could the law school have made a (convenient) error in the viewbook?
I took my concerns to the law school administration, who responded by giving me a full data dump and a full explanation. I don't have the energy to try to type in all the data, so I'll just try a simplified version of the explanation. [If you really have to have more, or have further questions, the Dean of Career Development, Marcy Cox, mcox@law.miami.edu (305-284-2668), says she's happy to address them.]
According to Career Development Office, the reason why the both $104,500 number and the more detailed but somewhat different pie charts accompanying it are accurate has to do with response rates, differing data sets, and national reporting standards.
Not everyone who responded to the law school's survey about what they were doing immediately after graduation chose to disclose their salary. Thus, the charts about firm size, for example, are based on a bigger data pool than the salary number. In 2007 we had 378 JDs. Of that group, 346 had replied to our survey at the time the Viewbook was produced. Of that 346, however, not all worked for firms — and of the group that worked for firms only about 46% gave us salary data. So the average salary number of $104,500 is based on the data provided by that 46%.
Since firm size and starting salary are related, you might reasonably object — as I did — that it would be more reasonable to pro-rate the responses of the people who gave salary data on the assumption that the people who didn't fill in that part of the survey earned similar amounts by comparable firm size. And I still think there's something to that. But I'm told by the Career Office — and I believe them — that the average salary data is presented the way it is because that's how all law schools do it and the goal is to provide prospective students with numbers that can fairly be compared to what is provided by other law schools.
The Career Development Office avers that it collects the data and reports it in accordance with ABA and NALP guidelines, using the same methods that every other accredited law school in the country uses. Were the law school to do something else, the administration notes, it would no longer be reporting to students in the way it reports to the ABA and NALP. That would mean our data would have an asterisk. And even if we were doing it in order to provide better data the inevitable conclusion that most people would draw is that we were trying to hide something. So the Catch-22 is that we have to do it this way, possibly sacrificing some statistical excellence and even accuracy, or else we'll look like we're engaged in some sort of cover-up. And, of course, in addition to having an asterisk, we'd be harming our competitive position since we'd have gone to some trouble to calculate and report a lower number which would harm marketing and recruiting.
It seems to me that UM is between a rock and a hard place here. I would prefer that we use the best statistical techniques, pro-rate the data we have, and let the chips fall where they may. Following the national standards will, I believe, tend to cause this (and apparently almost every other) law school to report a number as “average” that is in fact likely to be higher than the reality. By my back-of-the-envelope calculations, what UM — following a methodology its competitors use — reports as an “average” salary for graduates in firms, is most likely closer to what someone in the 75th percentile of the salary distribution gets. And given the law firm salary structure is now a notoriously double-humped curve (see Starting Salaries For Law Students are BiModal — If Not Bipolar for more details), this is a fairly severe truth-in-advertising problem.
Students nationally have some right to be upset. On the other hand, it seems pretty hard to ask UM to engage in unilateral disarmament in the recruitment wars: this is a job for the ABA or the AALS to resolve on a national level. (It also means that students thinking about a law career and hoping for the giant salaries offered by the biggest firms should really understand what that double-humped curve means to their prospects.)
Meanwhile, however, I've asked the Career Development Office to include something in the next edition of the Viewbook that makes clearer the relationship between the various data sets it uses. They've agreed in principle, and we'll thrash out some language when time comes to do the next edition.
According to Rep. Brad Sherman, speaking on the House floor, the administration sought to whip House members into supporting the original bailiout by threatening not just economic collapse but — in some cases — suggesting things would get so bad we'd need martial law.
As far as I know, Rep. Sherman is not one the House's notorious loons. On the other hand, his testimony is hearsay. Plus, he's not saying that the Administration was threatening anything nefarious, rather the White House was just painting disaster scenarios — but that's bad enough, thank you.
There are some rays of light in this gloom. I gather that someone slipped into the redrafted bill the power to demand equity stakes from the banks feeding at the federal trough. That doesn't address the pricing issue, and it's just an option not a requirement, but it's something.
Then again, so far the markets seem to have shrugged off the value of this move. “$700bn and nothing doing” is much worse than “400 channels and nothing on”.
Today is the last day to register to vote in Florida.
You must either mail (with today's postmark) or hand deliver a completed application to any Supervisor of Elections' office in the state, a driver’s license office, a voter registration agency, an armed forces recruitment office, or the Division of Elections.
And if you are a US citizen who is a Florida resident and is not already registered, you must do it today — or miss out on what will undoubtedly be the most important Presidential election since we re-elected the current disaster. And maybe even more than that.