Posted on 01/19/2005 9:51:40 AM PST by Mo1

This one needs to get up early. Bidding you all good night. Fun muckraking. Way to go W...........
Sleep well
sleep well, sharky....nice chatting with ya!
Aren't they adorable and fuzzy?
Sleep well we have a president who walks with God!:)
Yep; I'm gonna have to get to bed too. Got a lot to do in the morning. Night y'all. Sleep well.
Just checking in before heading off to bed
Great Speech tonight .. President Bush ROCKS!
Sweet Dreams Y'all
nighty night, sl!
Amen to that. It was very powerful.
And that.
There may or may not be someone buried in my basement. All I know is the hole was filled in...
Guess were all folding up tents......how you doing westy?
Good to you to all be around for a second or two!
He's a great President, that's for sure, mo!
Sleep well....stay warm and stay safe. nighty night to you.
time for me to head off pretty soon, too; it's midnight here and it's been a long week for me.
God bless President Bush, our military, and our Country. Thank you God for giving us such a great man as our leader!
Good night everyone who is still up! Too much fun tonight -thanks for the great discussion!
thanks to you, BQ; good night and sleep well...I'm heading out myself now.
Well said! Perfect. Good night again.
I used to think that too. Until one I thought I knew bitterly objected to me putting a US Flag in my cubicle.
ON 9/11...
Older worker constructively discharged when moved to "death cubicle" 03-02-99
Mr. Ramos had been employed for almost 20 years, most recently as a budget supervisor, when a new accounting manager was hired. The manager made several comments about wanting "to get rid of old things" and "to bring in new blood" and "to change everything that was old."
A short time later, Mr. Ramos was replaced by a younger woman whom he had recently trained. Ramos' pay and benefits were not changed. Ramos was told that the decision had been made and he could "take it or leave it." Ramos agreed to the decision, and then took his vacation which already had been scheduled.
When he returned to work, his office assignment had been changed. The younger woman was in Ramos' former cubicle, and Ramos had been transferred to "the death cubicle," so named because all employees who had been assigned to it left the company. In his new cubicle, Ramos found his personal belongings in a box on the floor and an obsolete, non-working computer on his desk.
Ramos' manager demanded that Ramos produce some reports, which Ramos could not produce since his computer was not working. Finally, the manager stood in the entrance to Ramos' cubicle and threatened Ramos with an assault. Shaken by the confrontation, Ramos began to cry and went to the company infirmary. Ramos was excused from work by the company doctor; he never returned to work, and was diagnosed with depression.
Ramos sued and won $300,000 before a jury. The verdict (and attorneys fees of $36,500) were upheld on appeal by the First Circuit Court of Appeals.
RAMOS v. DAVIS & GECK, INC., ___F4th___ (CA 1st, 1999)
Information here is correct at the time it is posted. Case decisions cited here may be reversed. Please do not rely on this information without consulting an attorney first.
http://www.fairmeasures.com/whatsnew/articles/new202.html
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Just a place marker.....
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Goodnight quiet one!:)
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