Word: topically
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...Faculty's process lot resolving complaints of sexual harassment I welcomed The Crimson's invitation to say a little more than I think is generally understood about that process and my role in it and to make some general observations as well. There has been considerable attention to the topic of late both because of the inherent interest of the topic and also in response to the recent letter from Henry Rosovsky dean of the Faculty to members of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences...
...issue and its complexities and also on the existence of disciplinary procedures. In its recognition of possible uncertainties in the course of professional and personal relationships, and in its emphasis on the professional responsibilities of instructors the letter will surely contribute to the quality of community discussion of the topic. Certainly the letter will not end the discussion. There are, after all, a number of other was to think about the phenomena to which we refer as "sexual harassment" Some believe that the University should not presume to meddle in the personal associations of Faculty members who after all might...
...believe it is realistic to predict that instructors and students will continue to find each other personally attractive ...My hope is that the current interest in the topic of sexual harassment...will make all of us more sensitive to the appropriateness of our actions...
...hold us together is the economic one-shared economic values in the sense that prosperity in Europe is beneficial to prosperity in the United States and vice versa." Said West German Social Democrat Ulrich Steger, his party's spokesman on international economic affairs: "The economic issue is a topic that affects our people and the Western alliance more than all the quarrels about missiles." According to Steger, 95% of West Europeans believe that American economic policies have pushed them deeper into the recession. But the experts also recognized that coordinating economic policies among the Western industrial nations was easier...
...unclear whether the conference topic was "third world" women (joint issue), women and the "third world" (related issue), of on women and on the "third world" (separate issue). The result was a conference characterized by a lack of cohesion, outdated information, no sense of direction, and simplistic models wherein slogans took the place of rigorous analysis. The panelists seemed to suggest that--structural constraints notwithstanding--with good planning and a little good will the problems of women and of development would be resolved...