Ph.D., Boston College
After studying biology, Babich turned to philosophy, writing her dissertation in Germany and Belgium. A professor of philosophy at Fordham, she has also taught in Milwaukee, San Diego, the German city of Tübingen, and Washington, D.C. Babich is the author of The Hallelujah Effect: Philosophical Reflections on Music, Performance Practice, and Technology; Words in Blood, Like Flowers; and Nietzsche’s Philosophy of Science. She is a contributing editor of several book collections on continental philosophy of science, aesthetics, and critical theory, and serves as executive editor of the journal New Nietzsche Studies.
Juliana Gilheany,
so we ve got to look at things that are going to really create jobs. really get the economy moving. jon: all right, let s hope it can happen. governor ed rendell, thank you. thanks jon. jon: you can get complete, up to the minute race results with our interactive election map, foxnews.com/results. you can follow the same races that we are watching on the channel. you can also track the overall balance of power in the house and in the senate. fox is your election headquarters on tv, on the web, and on your mobile device and i might just add that i ll be anchoring election coverage on foxnews.com this evening, along with harris faulkner, so be sure to check it out. jon: jenna: looking forward to that. jon, midterm elections follow patterns. presidents can see their numbers drop no matter what their popularity and congress can lose the balance of power. what s different this year? nina goss is presidential
scholar. nina, what makes 2010 different? well, jenna, it s typical, as you said, for the president s party to lose seats in congress during the midterm election but for the president s party to lose control of one, if not both changes of congress, which the predictions are as have been discussed this morning, this will be the third time in two decades, and the first time in two decades and that is unusual. today s elections are not a referendum directly on president obama but they are a reflection of his leadership, particularly because his successes over the past two years have been tied so closely to the 111th congress, the stimulus pang, health care reform, financial regulation. so 2010 will be remembered if the democrats lose control of the house. jenna: let me stop you there we are talking about this flipflopping back and forth as far as power of congress changing so quickly over the
we ll bring them to you, but a breaking situation out of virginia this morning. we ll start off with breaking news. that s the way to start the hour, right jon scott? jon: always an exciting time in the fox newsroom. jenna: so glad you re joining us, i m jenna lee. jon: i m jon scott. election day 2010, americans across the country voting for their representation right now. take a live look at capitol hill, a whole lot at stake as we decide who controls congress. republicans hope they see a net gain of 39 seats to take control. jenna: in the senate the number is ten, if republicans gain ten seats in today s voting they take power from the democrats. but control of congress, not all that s at stake in this election. we re also watching a record number of governors races this year, 37 in all. that s important, because congressional districts will be redrawn next year, governors have a big hand in that, and if the governor in power is a is of a certain party, they have the