It could have been one for the record books. Stocks dived from the getgo. Within minutes the dow was down nearly 200 points. There were fresh worries about slowing growth in china, to be sure, but that wasnt the half of it. What really spooked investors was this the stunning sight of tens of thousands of prodemocracy demonstrators flooding the streets of hong ko kong. Police cracked down hard. Banks and other hong kong businesses shut down for the day. Stocks sold off in asia, then in europe. The demonstrations continued well into the Early Morning Hours Tuesday and may well continue for another day. After that early tumble, though, u. S. Stocks fought back. Heres how things looked at the closing bell. The dow down just 42 points. The nasdaq lower by 6 and the s p 500 lost 5. In hong kong, the hang seng index had a terrible monday with stocks falling nearly 2 . Susan lee is on the ground in hong kong with more on what the protesters are demanding and why investors are paying such close
Record books. Stocks dived from the getgo. Within minutes the dow was down nearly 200 points. There were fresh worries about slowing growth in china, to be sure, but that wasnt the half of it. What really spooked investors was this the stunning sight of tens of thousands of prodemocracy demonstrators flooding the streets of hong ko kong. Police cracked down hard. Banks and other hong kong businesses shut down for the day. Stocks sold off in asia, then in europe. The demonstrations continued well into the Early Morning Hours Tuesday and may well continue for another day. After that early tumble, though, u. S. Stocks fought back. Heres how things looked at the closing bell. The dow down just 42 points. The nasdaq lower by 6 and the s p 500 lost 5. In hong kong, the hang seng index had a terrible monday with stocks falling nearly 2 . Susan lee is on the ground in hong kong with more on what the protesters are demanding and why investors are paying such close attention. Reporter the street
Record books. Stocks dived from the getgo. Within minutes the dow was down nearly 200 points. There were fresh worries about slowing growth in china, to be sure, but that wasnt the half of it. What really spooked investors was this the stunning sight of tens of thousands of prodemocracy demonstrators flooding the streets of hong ko kong. Police cracked down hard. Banks and other hong kong businesses shut down for the day. Stocks sold off in asia, then in europe. The demonstrations continued well into the Early Morning Hours Tuesday and may well continue for another day. After that early tumble, though, u. S. Stocks fought back. Heres how things looked at the closing bell. The dow down just 42 points. The nasdaq lower by 6 and the s p 500 lost 5. In hong kong, the hang seng index had a terrible monday with stocks falling nearly 2 . Susan lee is on the ground in hong kong with more on what the protesters are demanding and why investors are paying such close attention. Reporter the street
Dissembling based entirely on political reasons. Technology is binary, somethings vulnerable or not. This was shown to be vulnerable back in november, its now been further demonstrated, and weve got a lot more testimony, a lot more Expert Opinion on there showing that, in fact, there are some very serious vulnerabilities with healthcare. Gov. Connell all right, tell us a little bit about them as you understand them. As this testimony continues today or throughout the day or after the hearing is over well have a summary of it and find out what they found out. However, you say it was vulnerable, and then as we went on it actually got more vulnerable. Youd think the opposite would be true. In other words, if we saw that a web site, this target storys been in the news and other stories related to it in the news, somethings vulnerable, you fix it and it gets better. Why has that not happened . Um, i dont actually know why its not happened. I can speculate that, you know, as we heard happens
He did every day in my chief of staff. Mr. President , thank you for the privilege of serving . Did you say that . I did. Sometimes there was a variation of it. But i did as chief of staff, i visited with the president first thing every morning. He got to his desk at about 6 45. And i would get five minutes to get settled. Our tradition was the first person the president sees was the chief of staff. I would walk in at about 6 50 in the morning. I always said something to the effect of, thank you for the privilege of serving. And it wasnt intended to flatter him or to thank him, it was intended to remind me and to help me remind everybody else what a privilege it was to be inside the white house. So i just made it a habit. It was a privilege. What did he say back . He would just move on. He was a president i think really understood the presidency, understood the privilege of being in the oval office. He didnt need the reminding. He probably didnt even need the reminding that i was appre