EEOC v. Federal Express (2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 1260 [4th Cir.]) Facts: FedEx appealed a case awarding a disabled employee‚ Ronald Lockhart‚ with compensatory and punitive damages. Under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) the employer must be acting with malice for punitive damages to be awarded; in addition‚ there was evidence that questioned if punitive damages were warranted. FedEx claimed that Lockhart’s supervisors failed to accommodate him at work‚ not FedEx‚ and they did engage in a
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TARAMANI THUNDERS Integrating Street Hawkers into the urban ecology- The Case of T. Nagar‚ Chennai Anand Raj Irene Baby R. C. Sudheesh Uttara Narayan Vishnu Prasad The Problem • T. Nagar- quagmire of vendors‚ pedestrians‚ vehicles • Street vendors perceived as primary cause of bottleneck • Policy interventions lack implementation Who are the Stakeholders? Retailers Motorists Residents Street Vendors Pedestrians Corporation Street Vendors Economic Social
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1. In the case of Hampton v. Snead State Community College (SSCC)‚ the one element that Hampton failed to establish of a prima facie case of racial discrimination was the forth element in the case. The forth element in the case stated‚ “SSCC treated similarly situated employees outside of Hampton’s protected class more favorably” (Hampton). According to the court‚ Hampton failed to establish the prima facie case of bring substantial evidence of employees of another race who were tried fairly. The
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Telecommunications 1. Describe a local land line phone system based on the following Landline Telephone Components. a. Local Loop - consists of twisted pair copper cables with a maximum length of three miles. It is a physical link from the customer to the service provider’s network; the local loop terminates in a circuit switch housed in a local exchange carrier or telephone exchange. b. Central Office - a building used to house the inside plant equipment including support for up to 20 local exchanges
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1. Title and Citation: Dennis v. united States 341 U.S. 494 71 S. CT. 857 (1951) 2. Facts of the Case: a. The Smith Act made it a criminal offense to knowingly or willfully advocate the overthrowing of any government in the United States by force or to attempt to commit or conspire to commit the crime the same. The Petitioners were brought up on charges under the Act for allegedly willfully and knowingly conspiring to organize as the Communist Party of the United States‚ a group whose members advocated
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Tinker v. Des Moines is a court case that happened in 1969 and was a dispute about wearing armbands to school for a protest against the Vietnam war. The principals did not like the idea of the protest and decided to shut it down by banning all armbands. The students weren’t going to go down without a fight and wore them anyway. This case all started with a meeting at Christopher Echardt’s house to do a silent protest of the Vietnam war. The “Tinker kids” decided the wear two-inch-wide black armbands
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Miller v. StateSupreme Court of Nevada‚ 1996991 P. 2d 1183People in the United States commit crimes and make up excuses why they should not be held accountable for a crime. Insanity and temporary Insanity have significant differences. One might ask themselves is there really any meaningful difference? During the history of our court system there has been many significant court decisions which address the controversy topics of insanity and temporary insanity as it relates to criminal procedures. One
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specifically during designated semesters at specific times. This is a weakness because in some time conflicting schedules‚ students are forces to wait an entire academic year to select a required course offered only during that one semester and in some cases adding to the retention rate of the university. As mentioned earlier the second weakness is the shortage of professors. This is a weakness because with a shortage of professors some departments are forced to offer fewer classes for the majors in
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Case Analysis: Sub-Continental Telecommunications Solution Problem Identification World Wide Telecommunications (WWT) attempted a joint venture with an Indian firm‚ a Subcontinental Software Solutions (SSS). This joint venture (JV) caused several symptoms; equipment difficulties‚ a sexual harassment‚ revised budget‚ and an intellectual property stealing. The problem was the failure of risk management and it resulted in the delays in finishing the software. The initial symptom of the delays
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The Korematsu v. United States (1944) case was an unjustifiable case towards individuals with a particular race‚ but even though at the moment it seemed like the appropriate action to take for the protection of the people in our country‚ the action towards this race was completely inappropriate and unconstitutional. During the War of World War II‚ the president of the United States‚ Franklin Roosevelt put a float the Executive Order 9066 that targeted individuals from the Pacific Coast of Japanese
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