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Word: misconduct (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...which includes behavior ranging from unwanted touching to rape—must provide “sufficient independent corroboration” or “proof” before the College will launch an investigation. Previously, an investigation would begin after a student submitted a written account of the misconduct. This old method is the way things should be done. And it is the way things are done in the real world and in campuses around the country. When people report crimes, the allegations are investigated, period. Imagine how it would feel to walk into a police station after having...

Author: By Ellenor J. Honig and Wendy J. Murphy, S | Title: Skirting Campus Rape | 9/9/2002 | See Source »

...ducking questions, insisting all that matters is the economy's reviving fundamentals. The next he is doing what an adviser calls "his Charles Schwab imitation"--discussing price-earnings ratios and suggesting that bonds might be a good buy. Even his speech to Wall Street on corporate misconduct, which was promoted as proof that he shared investor outrage, was unconvincing to some. "You can tell when he really cares about something, when he's into it," says an adviser to the President's father. "And he didn't look into...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Inside The Mind Of The CEO President | 8/5/2002 | See Source »

...same. But Bush's view is "more old-fashioned," as an adviser puts it. To him, corporations and businessmen who produce things are the backbone of the economy, while the markets and investors are a vaguely sinister sideshow. Bush's first reaction to revelations of corporate misconduct was to assume the best. Yes, corporate America tripped up here and there, but the subsequent hysteria was stirred up by the overheated media. He didn't want to overreact lest he hamstring honest executives. "He didn't want to do something that would hurt the real economy just to fix a perception...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Inside The Mind Of The CEO President | 8/5/2002 | See Source »

...ducking questions, insisting all that matters is the economy's reviving fundamentals. The next he is doing what an adviser calls "his Charles Schwab imitation"-discussing price-earnings ratios and suggesting that bonds might be a good buy. Even his speech to Wall Street on corporate misconduct, which was promoted as proof that he shared investor outrage, was unconvincing to some. "You can tell when he really cares about something, when he's into it," says an adviser to the President's father. "And he didn't look into...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Inside the Mind of the CEO President | 7/28/2002 | See Source »

...same. But Bush's view is "more old-fashioned," as an adviser puts it. To him, corporations and businessmen who produce things are the backbone of the economy, while the markets and investors are a vaguely sinister sideshow. Bush's first reaction to revelations of corporate misconduct was to assume the best. Yes, corporate America tripped up here and there, but the subsequent hysteria was stirred up by the overheated media. He didn't want to overreact lest he hamstring honest executives. "He didn't want to do something that would hurt the real economy just to fix a perception...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Inside the Mind of the CEO President | 7/28/2002 | See Source »

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