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...made history by re-taking the Senate. He helped rescue his brother's wobbly gubernatorial campaign and, in doing so, buried a lot of the ghosts of the Florida 2000 presidential recount. Oh, and he also left his opposition in chaos and disorder without looking like a political hack-keeping clean and crisp the wartime posture that has sustained his high approval ratings...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How Will Bush Manage his Triumph? | 11/6/2002 | See Source »

...observers that Fourtou was parachuted in to clear the air of scandal. But this rejection of Vodafone's offer risks plunging Vivendi deeper into the abyss. The big question now is how long Vivendi's shareholders - and lenders - are willing to stay there. MEDIA Hacker, Or Just A Great Hack? saying a reporter breaks news too quickly is like saying a priest is too religious. But when employees of Swedish information technology group Intentia saw a Reuters story broadcasting their third-quarter results a full hour before they were to be released, they began to lose faith in the integrity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Beggar Vivendi Decides to Be Choosy | 11/3/2002 | See Source »

Davis attributed this to a number of factors, including how easy it is to hack into computer systems...

Author: By Laura L. Krug, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Computer Hackings Plague Harvard | 10/30/2002 | See Source »

...thousands of undergraduates at George Washington University will set their alarm clocks to wake up at dawn for the ghastly semiannual ritual known as preregistration. Students will battle it out on the web for seats in coveted courses for the spring 2003 semester. Churchgoers will pray, computer geeks will hack and others will simply hope for the best. That same day, undergraduates at Harvard College might be asked by a relative or a friend what courses they plan to take the next semester. Most of us will simply reply with a sigh of relief...

Author: By Rohit Chopra, | Title: A Case Against Preregistration | 10/16/2002 | See Source »

...when homeland security and amber alerts have informally deputized every Shoney's customer and freeway commuter, TV is reflecting reality: this fall it seems everyone is on the beat. There's the cabbie who solves crimes (CBS's Hack), the ex-cop who sees ghosts (UPN's Haunted) and the amnesiac genius who helps nab crooks (Fox's John Doe). What stands out is that several of the shows are packaging their hoary stories in some of the flashiest visuals on TV. As the old 7-Up slogan goes, they're the same thing, only different...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TELEVISION: Polishing Up the Badge | 9/30/2002 | See Source »

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