Word: smith
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...call government regulation of encryption the Bosnia of technology," said panelist Clint Smith, who is an attorney with Steptoe and Johnson, a Washington law firm...
...Mackay-Smith says that outside lawyers (she's referring to me) "do not know very much about College procedures" and hence should not represent students in Ad Board cases. In fact, however, I am a criminal defense and civil liberties lawyer, and I do not generally represent students in Ad Board cases unless they are also facing criminal charges. In this case, I got involved initially in order to make arguments to the dean of the College that the matter should not be escalated into a complaint to the District Attorney but instead should be resolved internally and with...
...Mackay-Smith not succumbed to the ridiculous sex harassment spin that was given to this case, and had all parties been afforded their appropriate share of due process, the truth would have come out. However, neither the Board nor Mackay-Smith were too concerned about the truth. They had their minds made up from the beginning...
...longtime tracker of corporate behavior and co-author of 100 Best Places to Work in America: "There are a lot more 'good' companies. Originally, way back, corporate responsibility had to do with an external commitment to the community and philanthropic contributions. Now it's even broader." Says Craig Smith, president of Corporate Citizen, a watchdog group in Seattle: "There has been a dramatic shift. It's less about how much money a company gives and more about whether a company offers its intellectual capacities, its technology, and develops programs that focus on what to do to affect society...
...politely out of sight--it's usually smacking you in the face. Buried Child, first produced in 1978, opens with a marital conversation conducted across a chasm. Dodge, a foghorn-voiced geezer (a hilarious James Gammon), sits nearly immobile on a couch, exchanging shouts with his wife (Lois Smith), who spends most of the first act offstage. One grown son (Terry Kinney) shuffles in and out with armfuls of corn; another (Leo Burmester) stomps around on a false leg and terrorizes his father by snipping his hair while he sleeps. "You think just because people propagate, they have to love...