Word: misconducts
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...October 1993, Galatis was writing to the chief of Northeast's nuclear group, John Opeka, and to Fox, who was then company president. Galatis mentioned the criminal penalties for "intentional misconduct" in dealings with the NRC. Opeka objected to Galatis' abrasive tone but hired another consulting firm, which also agreed with Galatis. Northeast moved on to yet another consultant, a retired NRC official named Jim Partlow...
...were handed out in the fracas. In RPI's next game--against Harvard--the officials did their best to avoid that situation. While players were allowed to breathe on each other, little else was let go, as the zebras called a total of 25 minors and one 10-minute misconduct...
INVESTCORP IS PROUD OF ITS HARD-earned reputation for business and financial success and, more important, for its unquestioned integrity. That is why we were shocked by the report "All That Glitters" [BUSINESS, Nov. 6], unfairly attacking us. Two examples: the article states that Investcorp stands accused of serious misconduct in a lawsuit involving the Circle K Corp., noting that the case received almost no public attention. In fact, the case was covered in the press and disclosed to investors in the Circle K prospectus filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. TIME also alleges that the purchase of slow...
...Simpson murder trial, they may well conclude that Johnnie L. Cochran Jr. did not, in fact, play the "race card." He didn't have to because in many ways Cochran was the race card--a lawyer who had built a lucrative career representing minority victims of police misconduct. By the time he joined what was to become known as the Dream Team, Cochran, 58, had already won some $45 million in damages and an impressive rate of acquittal for minority clients by exposing corruption, prejudice and incompetence in law enforcement. The unofficial motto of his 10-lawyer African-American...
Jesse Jackson Jr., the 30-year-old son of the civil rights activist, will bring his famous name to Washington after trouncing Republican Thomas Somer to capture the congressional seat vacated by Rep. Mel Reynolds, who resigned after being convicted of sexual misconduct. "Although it is clear that he won the post largely because of his famous name, and he isn't as well credentialed as Reynolds who was a Rhodes Scholar, he can still really help a district that is in horrible condition," says Chicago bureau chief James Graff. "The fact that his name is Jesse Jackson will enable...