Word: conducted
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...they cater to, but they do constantly broaden their standards of what is fit to print. The direction is mostly downhill, or toward more freedom, depending on your point of view. After all, women-Congressmen's girl friends, Presidents' bedmates-now gleefully sign book contracts to describe conduct that once would have earned them a scarlet A as a branded adulteress...
Heymann's comment on Pound's conduct that May Day of 1961 is short, rhetorical, but necessary and correct: he simply lists the principles Pound had uttered all of his later life: "Sinceritas? Cheng Ming? [which means "precision" or "true definition"] Decency in his conduct? Persistent awareness?" None of these were at work that day in Rome, nor in much of Pound's life; and no defense can come to the support of Pound the man for his actions...
...causes is take control of the honor code away from the cadets. Berry gave Colonel Hal B. Rhyne, deputy commandant, a new full-time job: handling honor code questions and issues. He then replaced the cadets' honor committees with an "internal review panel" that will conduct the initial hearings in cases of alleged violations. The panel is made up of three field-grade officers (major and above) and two cadets who next year will be first classmen (seniors). Still not satisfied, Berry created four separate subcommittees to investigate cheating in the junior class, where the scandal is centered. Finally...
...court's ruling upheld a lower-court decision against the Virginia State Board of Pharmacy, and was aimed specifically at a state statute that declares it "unprofessional conduct" for a pharmacist to advertise the prices of prescription drugs. That statute, claimed a Virginia consumer group, violated the consumers' right to receive information on the price of drugs...
...after a year of discussion and hearings, the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, which represents the governments of the 24 most highly developed non-Communist nations, has drawn up a code of ethics intended to guide the multinationals in the conduct of their far-flung enterprises. To Americans, who are more familiar than most with the concepts behind antitrust law and the idea of corporate disclosure, parts of the code may seem elementary or oddly archaic. Yet in many areas of the world these concepts are little known. Hence, in a sense, the OECD code...