Email @ireland.com
Find your ancestors
Limited edition Martyn TurnerPresumptive Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama has opened the election campaign with a six-point lead over Republican John McCain, according to an NBC News/ Wall Street Journal poll.
The Illinois senator leads McCain among registered voters, 47 to 41 per cent. In a previous NBC/ Journal poll in late April, Mr Obama was leading the Arizona senator by three points, 46 per cent to 43 per cent.
Among respondents who said they voted for Senator Hillary Clinton in the Democratic primaries, 61 per cent favoured Obama, and 19 per cent said they preferred Mr McCain.
The poll found Mr Obama leading his rival among African Americans, Hispanics, women and blue-collar workers.
Among white men, who made up 36 per cent of the electorate in the 2004 presidential election, the Republican has a 20-point lead over Mr Obama, however - 55 per cent to 35 per cent, NBC reported.
Mr Obama's lead over Mr McCain expands when Hillary Clinton is added as the former's running mate, the survey found.
An Obama-Clinton ticket would defeat a Republican one of McCain and former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney by nine points, 51 per cent to 42 per cent, NBC said.
It was not all good news for Mr Obama, however. The chief of his search for a vice presidential running mate stepped down from that role yesterday over questions about loans he received from a company involved in the US housing crisis.
Mr Obama said that Jim Johnson had decided to quit the unpaid position to avoid being a distraction from the process of gathering information about possible vice presidential candidates.
© 2008 ireland.com


A catholic approach to learningAs keeper of the Catholic flame, Bishop Leo O'Reilly is keen to ensure that matters of faith are still given robust consideration in a new educational landscape which reflects the diversity of a new Ireland
Learning to box clever for lunchBringing your own food to work - whether it is a sandwich or something more exotic - is a surefire way to trim the fat from your expenditure as these financially challenging times begin to bite
Fruit of their own endeavoursWhen children grow and pick their own fruit and veg, they will eat it - some schools have found
Tackling the poetry patriarchyIrish poetry operates in something of a male-dominated culture, but is being a female poet a raison d'etre or a clunky categorisation? Fional McCann canvasses five well-versed women
Trainee teachers face unsure futureThere was no talk of recession or education cuts when the current cohort of trainees signed up to become secondary school teachers. But things have changed and, uncertain of getting a job, some are even thinking of emigrating