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| http://www.rotarysouth.org/michaelkors-com.html WTO Meets Amid Protest http://www.rotarysouth.org/michaelkors-com.html Abraham Lincoln once said: "Public sentiment is everything. With public sentiment, nothing can fail; without them, nothing can succeed."Those include the opening words in a new book, "Lipstick with a Pig," written by Washington insider Torie Clarke, who formerly worked as Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs.As Clarke explained to The Early Show co-anchor Hannah Storm, she never had believed in an "era of spin." She added, "When you might be talking about 24/7 news, information that moves around the globe with incredible volume and velocity, it won't hold up."Clarke worked with Sen. John McCain during his early years in the Senate, when McCain was those types of involved in a scandal during the core savings and loan crisis. Clarke said she learned a lot about how to control such incidents through the way he reacted compared to that situation.What did McCain do?"He didn't do exactly what the other four senators did," recalled Clarke. "They pretty much went underground on the story and decided, 'If unfortunately we cannot talk about it and don't answer questions about it, maybe people won't notice it.'"He (McCain) said, 'To heck with this. I'm going to lean into this and answer every question and do every interview and tell my side in the story again and again and again, since i believe the more people see and hear, the more they'll recognize I didn't really do anything that terrible.'"He was right," concluded Clarke. "The allegations unanswered are now and again challenges accepted. … Confess your mistakes — and get it done early and do it often."Clarke also declared that if you don't say "I was wrong" six times a year, you aren't really being honest. Storm raised Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, Clarke's former boss at the Pentagon, as someone who a lot of people say, never admits he's wrong.Clarke disagreed strongly. "He absolutely does. Anyone spends a lot of time with him, or perhaps the reporters that cover him on a regular basis at the Pentagon, will tell you the same thing."So why does Rumsfeld have that reputation?"He features a reputation for being very tough," countered Clarke. "You desire a tough secretary of defense. You don't want a wimp. You want someone that believes in important principles and follows through in it. But he always encouraged we all, everyone who work for him and around him, to convey, 'If I make a mistake, let me know and let's clear up.'" no previous page next 1/2 http://www.rotarysouth.org/michaelkors-com.html About three-quarters in men with prostate cancer have elevated amount PSA protein. Testing blood for PSA is a standard screening method for older men since about 1990. Giuliani said he had that test 2 1/2 weeks ago. http://taniaroxborogh.com/uggsaustraliauk.html A study completed just yesterday by the General Accounting Office discovered that computers at 22 with the largest federal agencies are vulnerable, CBS News Correspondent Lisa Hughes reports. The U.S. government's own hackers -- who regularly test home alarm systems -- were even able to break into critical financial systems like Social Security.The GAO's Jack Brock explains, "We could actually get into those systems, we were able to obtain access when we should not have been able to, if we had chosen to do so, could have taken control over those operations."The congressional agency says you'll find serious security problems outside and inside federal facilities. "We walk into open doors that contain classified material with computers left on," Brock recalls. "We've seen the conventional: the yellow stickie on the computer monitor together with the password on it. We've seen all that."Even more troubling to experts is the fact that former CIA Director John Deutch could have compromised intelligence by writing classified CIA documents on his family computer while on the Internet.Employees at Global Integrity in Reston, Va. help it become their business to find the weaknesses in desktops by breaking in -- hacking -- using publicly-available software. "We might be looking at every keystroke you are typing into the computer and observe everything that you do," says Global Integrity computer security expert Eroll Weiss.Expert hacker Ron Ruprecht showed CBS News what it is done. He detailed a procedure possibly requiring minutes or weeks whereby, "Eventually we'll crack. We're gonna find his user ID and password by simply brute-force attacking it."The victim is online somewhere, writing e-mail or browsing Websites, completely oblivious to the attack. Right away, Ruprecht scores results. "I can now see each of the folders on his drive," he says. "There's an interesting folder here called 'secrets' as well as a document called 'secret.text,' usually are not knows what you're going to find on there."This Tuesday, John Deutch -- the man at the center of the computer firestorm -- will be asked to explain to the Senate Intelligence Committee exactly what level of risk he may have exposed the united states to.The committee previously asked current CIA director George Tenet why Deutch hasn't been prosecuted for storing the sensitive documents on his home pc when Taiwanese-American Wen Ho Lee, a former nuclear scientist for your U.S. government, is facing life in prison for having downloaded nuclear secrets to unclassified computer tapes. http://fotoristo.com/uggbootsonsalewarm.html U.S. President George W. Bush pressed China to expand religious, political and social freedoms and won renewed promises — but no concrete actions — from President Hu Jintao to open China's huge markets to U.S. farmers and businesses.Hu said the 2 leaders sought an outcome of "mutual benefit and win-win results."But their meeting Sunday with the Great Hall of the People about the edge of Tiananmen Square appeared to produce no breakthroughs on U.S. demands for currency reforms in China, no details about how China would cut its trade surplus with the United States, on track to hit US$200 billion this year.Mr. Bush's two-day China stop — his third as president on the communist giant — was the centerpiece of a weeklong Asia tour, that also includes a four-hour stop in Mongolia on Monday. But in his tour, an acrid debate at home about the war in Iraq has followed him. While overseas, the White House has not yet let a day go by without a no-holds-barred verbal counterattack against Democratic critics in the president's war policies.Mr. Bush again Rep. John Murtha's call to get troops out of Iraq. CBS News chief White House correspondent John Roberts reports that Mr. Bush was careful to state that while he disagrees with Murtha's policy he respects the Congressman. The gentle language stood as opposed to an earlier White House attack which compared Murtha to anti-war filmmaker Michael Moore (video).Mr. Bush appeared determined Sunday to relieve the rhetoric. Appearing before reporters at his hotel before he attended a deluxe dinner with his Chinese hosts, Mr. Bush rejected the concept it is unpatriotic to disagree with him."People should feel relaxed about expressing their opinions about Iraq," he explained. "This is not an issue of that is patriotic and who is not patriotic. It is really an issue of an honest open debate in regards to the way forward in Iraq."A Chinese crackdown on dissidents before Mr. Bush arrived dismayed U.S. officials, and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said the U.S. side would continue to raise the issue "quite vociferously with the Chinese government."She also expressed disappointment with China's reaction to a U.S. request in September to use it on specific human rights cases — an inventory Bush described bluntly as "dissidents that individuals believe are unfairly imprisoned.""We've most certainly not seen the progress that people would expect," Rice said.Yet Bush took satisfaction inside the fact that Hu mentioned human rights once the two leaders made joint statements towards the press."Those who watch China closely would point out that maybe a decade ago, a pacesetter wouldn't have uttered those comments," Bush said. "He discussed democracy." no previous page next 1/2 http://taniaroxborogh.com/shortuggboots-uk.html Claude Lemieux, the free-agent right wing who's played on four Stanley Cup championship teams, signed a one-year contract with all the Phoenix Coyotes on Saturday. Financial details of the contract were not disclosed. Lemieux, 35, helped New Jersey to its second title last season, and is also second to Wayne Gretzky with 19 game-winning goals from the playoffs. He also was a person in New Jersey's 1995 championship team, and helped Montreal (1986) and Colorado (1996) to titles. Lemieux donned a Coyotes jersey along with his familiar No. 22 at the news conference hours before Phoenix faced the Dallas Stars at America West Arena. "I thought I'd be standing up here in July. It's been an extended wait. It's been very difficult for everyone," said Lemieux. "Hopefully I can move forward and start playing again." Lemieux has 345 goals, 353 assists and 1,584 penalty minutes in 1,001 games. He has 80 goals and 77 assists in 221 playoff games. Lemieux said he hoped to be uniform for Wednesday night's home game against Vancouver. Coyotes gm Bobby Smith "is going to let it be my call," Lemieux said. "I want to get on the ice and see how I feel. I've been working out by myself but it's not quite the same as a casino game." Lemieux has been training at the Coyotes' practice facility in Scottsdale since recently as he waited for Hall of Famer Wayne Gretzky and Phoenix developer Steve Ellman to work through final details to buy the Coyotes from current owner Richard Burke. That $87 billion dollar deal now is expected to close in mid-December.©2000 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This fabric may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed
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