Word: patly
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When Bush listened to his p.r. team and worried about his image, he was at his worst. When he listened to his conscience, turned his back on evangelists Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson, who had suggested that the bombings might be God's wrath on gays, lesbians, feminists and civil libertarians, he was becoming the kind of leader we need. And when he mourned victims and comforted survivors and rallied the nation from the rubble, he began to discover his best...
...that televangelists Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson have softened up the book-buying public with their remarks about the ACLU, gays and abortion rights supporters being responsible for the terrorist attacks, it?s time for "The Broken Hearth: Reversing the Moral Collapse of the American Family" by William J. Bennett (Doubleday; September...
...recruitment is the first step in diversity, retention is its more critical companion. "Companies get real focused on recruitment, [but] creating a welcoming culture is harder to do," notes Pat Bissonnet, Continental Airlines' director of diversity. "If you don't have the right culture, all the things you do to recruit won't help you a bit." Continental's hubs are home to large Latino populations, and the company gets 15% of its revenues from Latin and Caribbean countries. Hispanics now make up 20% of Continental's work force...
...these thoughts as he strolled to his car to drive back to the Capitol. "The thing that I personally saw was the intensity of the President," Reid, a Democrat, told me. "I've been in a number of meetings with him and he's kind of a hale, hearty, pat-you-on-the-back-nice-man. But here he was a nice man but extremely intense. Obviously he was really in tune with what the program was going to be. He was really sincere and intent. Everyone got the impression of how this had affected him personally...
...John Wayne movie," and he was right.) But this was the wrong time for spinning. When Bush listened to his p.r. team and worried about his image, he was at his worst. When he listened to his conscience, turned his back on evangelists Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson, who had suggested that the bombings might be God's wrath on gays, lesbians, feminists and civil libertarians, he was becoming the kind of leader we need. And when he mourned victims and comforted survivors and rallied the nation from the rubble, he began to discover his best...