Word: sullivans
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...Jessie Sullivan is 42--"just old enough for the bottom to start falling out of things," as one character puts it--and suffocating in a Stepford-perfect marriage. "I lived molded to the smallest space possible," she says, "my days the size of little beads that passed without passion through my fingers." When word arrives that her mom has cut off her index finger in a fit of religious mania, Jessie rushes off to take care of her, back to the tiny island off the coast of South Carolina where Jessie grew up. (She's secretly grateful for any excuse...
Corwin S. Sullivan, a student of paleontology at GSAS, said that he abstained from voting on the second statement because he found it difficult to voice his support for Summers’ right to free speech while simultaneously condemning his management style...
Corwin S. Sullivan, a student of paleontology at GSAS, said that he abstained from voting on the second statement because he found it difficult to voice his support for Summers’ right to free speech while simultaneously condemning his management style...
Bernie Ebbers left no paper trail. He didn't like e-mail, preferring to give vague orders to subordinates, like telling his chief financial officer, Scott Sullivan, to "hit the numbers." According to Ebbers' trial lawyer, Reid Weingarten, there was no smoking gun, no hard evidence to implicate the former chief of WorldCom--a college dropout, Sunday-school teacher and small-town basketball coach--as the orchestrator of the largest accounting fraud in U.S. history. "You thought you could trust him," says Alex Bryant, an ex--WorldCom sales manager in Springfield, Mo. Soon after WorldCom bought MCI, Bryant recalls, Ebbers...
Perhaps most unsettling for CEOs in the hot seat is that Ebbers was convicted despite scant evidence connecting him to the crime. The prosecution's star witness, former CFO Sullivan, admitted in court to drug use, lying to WorldCom's board and filing false financial statements. Yet while most of the jurors didn't find Sullivan very credible, it was even less plausible that Ebbers would not have detected accounting fraud on such a massive scale right under his nose. As the jury heard, this was a man so obsessed with saving a buck that he sniffed...