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The need for candor transformed his style.
The Court emphasized the need for candor.
In 1966, White House aides found themselves precariously perched between apprehension of looming disaster in Vietnam and the need for candor with their boss, President Lyndon Baines Johnson.
William P. Alford, Double-Edged Swords Cut Both Ways Laww and Legitimacy in the People's Republic of China, 122 Daedalus, Spring 1993, at 45. William P. Alford, Introduction: The North American Free Trade Agreement and the Need for Candor, 34 Harv.
In the wake of the Enron debacle, in which numerous executives have been charged with issuing misleading statements about the company's prospects, the indictment of Ms. Stewart has signaled an expansion of the need for candor by executives -- even in personal financial matters -- if investors might care.
When George C. Marshall (who had a portrait of Lee in his Leesburg home for just this reason) was Army Chief of Staff, he refused to socialize with President Roosevelt or even vote, fearing that both could compromise his objectivity and the need for candor when he disagreed with his boss.
Similar(54)
But I'm guessing that, if he had stayed at Boeing, there would be no need for such radical candor today.
Executives need to listen to unfamiliar voices and set the tone for candor and risk taking.
The opposition must always speak with vigor and candor on the need for wholesale repeal and for real reform to fix what's broken in health care.
He's known in the business community for his forceful candor on the need for much more transparency and better payment systems in health care.
[Applause for candor.
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