Word: complaints
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...former Harvard University Dining Services employee is suing Harvard for denying her disability benefits. Rosemary E. McGahey served as the director of residential dining services for five years before she was “involuntarily separated from employment,” in 2005, according to the complaint she filed with the Massachusetts district court. McGahey’s disability arose after she fell twice on the job in 2004. According to the complaint, she “left Harvard in unbearable pain” on Sept. 6, 2004 and never returned to work. The University paid McGahey disability benefits...
...clear indication of the split among conservatives, the Wide Coalition of Fundamentalists, close to the more moderate conservative figures such as former nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani and current Tehran mayor Mohammad-Baqer Qalibaf, wrote a formal letter of complaint to the Guardian Council accusing pro-Ahmadinejad conservatives of irregular activities at some polling stations...
...When a complaint is put before the Ad Board, a student is rarely informed that he is under scrutiny. Unlike in a law enforcement case in which the person under question is brought in for an interview during the fact-gathering stage, the Board usually inquires into the matter quietly, and without the participation of the accused. If the Board decides to act on the findings of its investigation, it promulgates “charges” and begins to assemble a formal case. Only once a full, written charge has been issued is the student brought into the fold...
...discrimination, saying she endured years of sexist treatment which culminated with her demotion. Carol A. Warfield is seeking recovery for the “loss of her career, her income, her reputation, and all of the consequential damages that flow from these injuries,” according to the complaint filed at the Suffolk County Courthouse. Warfield, a leading physician known for her work in pain medicine, rose from the ranks of a resident and a fellow in the 1970s to chair of the hospital’s anesthesia department in 2000. A year later, Josef E. Fischer became...
...write today with a slightly different complaint about the decision to institute women’s only hours at the Quadrangle Recreational Athletic Center (QRAC). I find fault not with the decision—it was a good one—but with the fact that a small clique of administrators made the decision, once again, with little input from anyone else. In doing so, they deprived the Harvard community of an opportunity to improve itself through the discussion of an issue that will follow us long after we leave Cambridge...