Obama proud of his first 100 days Los Angeles Times Wed, 29 Apr 2009 17:14 PM PDT Though he will tell the nation he is 'pleased with our progress,' according to advance excerpts from the White House, he will acknowledge there are challenges ahead. During a prime-time news conference this evening to mark his 100th day in office, President Obama plans to tell the nation that "we are off to a good start." | Obama's third prime time press conference is tonight CNNMoney.com via Yahoo! Finance Wed, 29 Apr 2009 17:13 PM PDT President Obama used a prime-time news conference Wednesday to tout his efforts to rebuild the economy in his first 100 days in office, while reminding the public that the pain of the downturn will continue for some time. | Schools: We're prepared for any swine flu outbreak The Observer-Dispatch Wed, 29 Apr 2009 17:12 PM PDT Local school officials say they're prepared to deal with the swine flu outbreak, after President Barack Obama said Wednesday it could require closing schools in areas where outbreaks occur. | Obama pivots from first 100 days to rest of agenda Greensboro News & Record Wed, 29 Apr 2009 17:12 PM PDT WASHINGTON (AP) â" His first 100 days behind him, President Barack Obama expressed confidence about the next hundred and accelerated his drive toward contentious goals â" sweeping health care overhaul, new rules to curb global warming and financial sector reform â" even while working to end a recession and two wars. "I'm pleased with the progress we've made, but I'm not satisfied," Obama said ... | CNN Has A âSwagger Expertâ Columbia Journalism Review Wed, 29 Apr 2009 17:11 PM PDT Then again, would you expect anything less of The Best Political Team on Television (in this, The Week Of Obamaâs 100th Day)? The other cable channels may have (or call in) body language experts or lip-reading experts but can anyone but CNN claim its own âswagger expert?â | Analysis: Team Obama floods airwaves about flu AP via Yahoo! News Wed, 29 Apr 2009 17:11 PM PDT President Barack Obama tries to learn from his predecessors' mistakes, and some see his fast, wide-ranging response to the swine flu threat as a lesson learned from George W. Bush's much-maligned handling of Hurricane Katrina. | | |
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