Word: dicke
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...says. "Someone who had something and lost it." For Democrats, the political beauty of the corporate scandals is that they "play into what people already believe" about Republicans--"that these guys are in the tank with corporate special interests," says Steve Elmendorf, chief of staff to House minority leader Dick Gephardt. "I don't see any downside to this for us." But when the interests of voters clash with the interests of donors, the Democrats too put on the brakes, helping kill McCain's demand that companies list stock options as expenses on their books...
...done. The gentle, self-policing era that SEC chairman Harvey Pitt proclaimed last October is dead and gone, but even some battered investors don't trust grandstanding lawmakers to distinguish between reforms that are needed and those that will cramp the recovery even more. That was the argument Dick Cheney and others made to the President--that in the long run, Bush will suffer more if he gets a quick political boost from reforms that strangle the economy. While more Americans now see Big Business as a threat, polls show they think Big Government is more dangerous...
...Bush White House is strictly top-of-the-organizational-chart, an outfit run by corporate bosses: Dick Cheney from Halliburton, the oil-services giant; Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill from Alcoa; and Commerce Secretary Don Evans from the Denver oil-and-gas outfit Tom Brown. These are capitalists who know how to make a buck and were never ashamed...
...parlayed his Harken money into a piece of the Texas Rangers, which he later sold for a $15 million profit. But his political account has taken a loss. "His whole persona has been, 'I'm a straight shooter,'" says Steve Elmendorf, chief of staff to House minority leader Dick Gephardt. "He's not looking like such a straight shooter...
...former writer for the "Dick Tracy" comic strip and the author of historical crime novels, Max Collins has a talent for both comix writing and verisimilitude. Aided by Rayner's photo-based drawings, "Road," the book, combines great action with believable atmosphere. Michael O'Sullivan (changed to Sullivan for the movie), a lieutenant to real-life Midwestern crime boss John Looney (re-named Rooney in the film), provides for his wife and two sons as a killer nicknamed The Angel of Death. When O'Sullivan's oldest boy, Michael, witnesses a rub-out, old man Looney and his homicidal...