T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
449.1 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Thu Aug 20 1987 12:46 | 6 |
| (I agree, Kerry...it isn't a trashnote)
Are you saying that, for example, all WM managers are fully competent
but some/most F managers are not?
=maggie
|
449.3 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Thu Aug 20 1987 13:15 | 11 |
| For one thing, I haven't noticed any substantive rights accruing to me
(or anyone else) because of being female. The "rights" that do accrue
to members of "protected classes" are paper "rights" and seem to be
worthless in all but the most blatant cases.
But that doesn't really seem to get at the heart of what you're saying,
and I'm not sure I quite follow the point that you are trying to make.
Could you be more clear? Or give more detail, I'm not sure just
what is needed.
=maggie
|
449.4 | | NISYSI::REK | Daddy in training!!!!! | Thu Aug 20 1987 13:16 | 7 |
| Sorry Kerry, but I think you're off base. Last time I checked most
managers are still white. If you go higher you'll see most VP's
are whtie males. I have yet to meet a Engineering manager that was
female, I'm not saying there isn't any but I deal with a lot of
different engineers and 85% are white males.
REK
|
449.5 | | KLAATU::THIBAULT | be-bop-a-lulu, baby | Thu Aug 20 1987 13:18 | 9 |
| RE: < Note 449.2 by CEODEV::FAULKNER "copying basenotes = stupid" >
-< >-
>> and I have enough mail to destroy about 20 marriages and if I forwarded
>> it womannotes would go belly up.
Well, I for one am confused. What does your forwarding personal mail have
to do with WOMANNOTES?
|
449.6 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Thu Aug 20 1987 13:27 | 10 |
| <--(.5)
Yah, that's part of my problem too, Jenna. How exactly do 20
marriages, =womannotes=, class action charges, and [allegedly]
incompetent women managers? There doesn't seem to be a real thread,
unless I'm exceptionally dim today.
Kerry, could you explain the connection? Thanks.
=maggie
|
449.10 | Yes and no | DSSDEV::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Thu Aug 20 1987 13:56 | 46 |
| In some ways I agree with what I hear Mr. Faulkner saying and in
some I disagree just as much.
To disagree, I don't know of any rights I've been denied because
I'm a white, male, Anglo-Saxon, protestant, heterosexual,
married, able-bodied, upper-middle class, suburban father whose
ancestors came over on the Mayflower. Unlike Mr. Faulkner, I am
sure that if I complained to my PSA or my manager (who is
female) about harassment it would be taken seriously.
To agree, however, I have taken a lot of what I feel is
unwarranted abuse for being a member of the above mentioned
minorities. When I was in college I was beaten fairly severely
by an inner-city black who was released from prison only because
he was willing to enroll in a college. He had no educational
qualifications nor any interest in being in the school
(exclusive of a desire to be outside of a prison). He
terrorized, hospitalized and stole from his fellow students with
fair impunity.
To the best of my knowledge, I have never mistreated anyone
because they were of a different race, sex or class from me.
Yet, merely by being what I am, I have often been made out to be
an oppressor of some sort.
So, yes, it is possible that in our attempts to correct the
failings of the past we don't so much correct them, but turn
them around. But, no, it is not true that women or blacks or
homosexuals or any of those things I'm not dominate our society
or our company. A white male on the whole is much more likely to
get a fair break than a woman or a black.
It is my impression that people with a chip on their shoulder
have a tendancy to lose. Anger seems to provoke anger and abuse.
Both happiness and frustration are self-reinforcing. Positive
feed-back is a very powerful force. When we are successful it
makes us happy and fills us with confidence and optimism. When
we are happy, confident and optimistic we are successful.
It is my impression that both the men who complain bitterly of
being abused by womennoters and the system, and women who
complain bitterly about the oppression of men and the system set
themselves against the system, and set themselves up for
failure.
JimB.
|
449.11 | Discrimination? | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis Marxist, tendance Groucho | Thu Aug 20 1987 13:59 | 18 |
| Well, Rome, England, and Greece were primarily run by men.
(Queen Victoria had very little actual power.)
Perhaps, now that women have "the edge when it comes to rights"
will cause all that to change.
Somehow, it all seems very silly. If you feel you are harassed,
you should go to personnel. If they "laugh at you", you should
use the open door policy to elevate your concerns through personnel.
If that fails, you can always go to MCAD (Mass. Council Against
Discrimination), or hire a lawyer.
Or, of course, you can come to the conclusion that you are incorrect
in your belief that you are being discriminated against because of
your sex, race, or religion.
Martin.
|
449.12 | clarification, please... | XCUSME::DIONNE | Life is a game of Trivial Pursuit? | Thu Aug 20 1987 14:06 | 21 |
| re .2
>i.e. the ability to threaten me with harassment, class actions
>etc... if I did that to you you would laugh all the way to personnel
>and I have enough mail to destroy about 20 marriages and if I forwarded
>it womannotes would go belly up.
I interpret this to mean that you receive e-mail that you consider
sexually harassing - from women that might be identifiable from
womannotes - and that if you were to expose this mail a lot of people
would be hurt by that (marriages?) and that you feel that you could
not bring the issue of harassment to personnel, as this issue would
not be take seriously, and that you have no recourse in this issue
of sexual harassment because you are a man.
I'm not trying to put words in your mouth, but please help me to
be sure that I (probably others as well) understand the issue that
you have brought forward for discussion. If I have not interpreted
your statements, would you please clarify the point that you are
trying to make, for those of us who are lost in this note?
thank you, Sandie
|
449.13 | "Brain trust"?? | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Thu Aug 20 1987 14:10 | 23 |
| <--(.8)
Kerry, few --if indeed any!-- people in this community think you're
an "idiot". Many are probably unsure just what to think of you,
considering your history in this and other files, but "idiot" is
not a term I can remember ever having been applied to you in a serious
way.
I'm not going to fall into the trap of trying to argue whether the flak
you get is deserved or undeserved, but I think there's an hint in your
admission that you make "mildly offensive" statements. What would
happen if you *didn't* make such statements, do you think?? Your life
would be very different, I suspect.
But in any event, as I read it in the orange book the policy against
harrassment protects everyone, female and male alike. If you think you
have enough evidence to support a charge of harrassment, I *urge* you
to lodge it with the appropriate personnel office. Today.
=maggie
|
449.14 | | KLAATU::THIBAULT | be-bop-a-lulu, baby | Thu Aug 20 1987 14:12 | 9 |
|
Okay, I think I've got it.. what you're saying is that you said something
"mildly offensive" and received all sorts of threats against you, but you cannot
forward your personal mail and "destroy about 20 marriages" and "make a lot
of people miserable" because you are a nice guy and women are "protected"
by incompetant women "getting double digit raises that can barely wash their
hands, even if someone else turns on the water for them." But that is all going
to change soon because Rome fell and all that. Am I right?
|
449.15 | someone finally turned the faucet on | XCUSME::DIONNE | Life is a game of Trivial Pursuit? | Thu Aug 20 1987 14:29 | 2 |
| re. 14
thank you, I think I'm getting the jist of all this, at last.
|
449.16 | Which Differences do we value? | PNEUMA::SULLIVAN | | Thu Aug 20 1987 14:32 | 37 |
| re 449.10
>When we are successful it makes us happy and fills us with confidence
>and optimism. When we are happy, confident and optimistic we are
>successful.
So, Jim, can you see how that gives white males an edge? If one
group starts out with the advantage of being taken seriously right
from the start, they grow self-confident and happy which leads
them to be taken seriously as candidates for success...
>It is my impression that both the men who complain bitterly of
>being abused by womennoters and the system, and women who
>complain bitterly about the oppression of men and the system set
>themselves against the system, and set themselves up for
>failure.
I have a tough time understanding why you (and others) suggest
that it is a bad thing to get angry at the system. I think it
is possible to separate how we feel about something from how
we act about it. Complaining, letting off steam can be
important steps in acknowledging a problem. The next step is to
develop a strategy for dealing with the problem. I find that I
am much more successful in managing problems when I first have a
chance to discharge the anger in a supportive environment. I
believe you when you say that you don't actively oppress people
because they are different from you, but the opposite of oppression
is not non-oppression; it's support. If men wish to be supportive
of women in their struggle for an equal share of our culture's
resources, I think a good place to start would be to be more
respectful of the anger we feel. To me valuing differences means
more than whom you agree to hire; it also means that you can
respect that each of us has different challenges and that each
of us responds to them differently.. and that it's ok.
Justine
|
449.17 | | ARMORY::CHARBONND | Post No Bulls | Thu Aug 20 1987 14:51 | 4 |
| re .16 I think that Jim meant that anger often turns into a defeatist
attitude, crippling one from the outset. Anger is fine if it fuels
determination to succeed. No 'system' can hold down a person who
knows what (s)he wants.
|
449.18 | jobs well deserved | LEZAH::BOBBITT | face piles of trials with smiles | Thu Aug 20 1987 16:03 | 24 |
| about getting raises/promotions/rights that are undeserved:
I feel most vociferously that:
those who do not deserve a position, by career ability and nothing
else, should not get the position, and often don't.
those who attain positions higher than they can handle, will be sifted
out, as it becomes increasingly obvious they can't do the job.
often, promotions that are given to minorities with less seniority
are often labeled "undeserved", when in truth the minority-member's
abilities rival those of other contenders. I see very rare cases where
a minority person is elevated to a position, leaving a person which
fits the job description more accurately in the dust.
And, just to head it off, I get the feeling I might get a response
which tells me to "wake up and smell the coffee". But I am not
living in a dreamworld, this is what I have observed, and what I
have experienced.
-Jody
|
449.19 | The need to get angry | VINO::MCARLETON | Reality; what a concept! | Thu Aug 20 1987 17:17 | 30 |
| Re: .16 and JimB
I agree with .16 that the anger is necessary. I think it is a question
of how you react when you are denied an advancement that you think
you deserve. You have one of two choices. Either you turn the
anger inward and start to doubt that you did indeed deserve the
advancement or you get angry at the organization that denied you
the advancement that you still believe that you deserve.
The problem is that there are very few people - of either sex -
that truly deserve some of the advancements that are handed out.
When you are denied an advancement that you truly were not ready
for, your ego might still cause you to lay blame on the organization
that denied you the advancement.
Every person that I know who has been fired from DEC has told me
a wild story about savage politics that shot them down. The wilder
the story the more likely I am to believe that the person deserved
to be fired. "Thou dost protest to much, Me thinks."
In the end the action of blaming the organization comes down to:
o "They are all against me so I guess there is no use in trying"
or
o "They are all against me so I will work harder and show them that
they are wrong"
MJC O->
|
449.20 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | I miss my vacation | Thu Aug 20 1987 17:25 | 47 |
|
Re .0, Kerry, just being a white, anglo-saxon, straight, male
may not make it any easier to succeed in life. But, there
are no particular drawbacks to succeeding in life because
of being a white, anglo-saxon, straight, male either.
It would be interesting to make a survey of all the people
who graduated from high school in Connecticut the same year
that you did. It would be interesting to see what percentage
of the white males are now making over $30K a year. Then,
it would be interesting to compare that with what percentage
of the black females are now making more than $30K a year.
It would be interesting to make a similar survey at Digital.
I wonder what percentage of the males working at DEC, regardless
of job, are making more than $30K a year, and what percentage
of the females working at DEC, regardless of job, are making
more than $30K a year.
I have a hunch that the results of these surveys would not
support your claim that as a white, anglo-saxon, protestant,
male in America, you have no rights.
I just filed another company organizational chart for my boss.
There's still only 3 women's names on that chart of the top
managers at DEC. No woman on the Executive Committee yet.
But, there's supposed to be more women in America than men?
Then, if there's more women, and women are getting more
rights than men, I would think it would logically follow
that women would be running DEC. But, that doesn't seem to
be the case yet.
As for the PSAs, if you knew how much they make compared to
programmers, Kerry, I think you'd be the one who died laughing.
I don't think it's even a WC4 job. Ever notice all PSA's seem
to be women, but a lot of recruiters and personnel reps are
men?
I find it difficult to believe that white, anglo-saxon, protestant,
straight, men are discriminated against in America. You guys
*wrote* the constitution and you forgot women and black men
way back then. I don't think *all* of us have caught up with
*all* of you yet.
Lorna
|
449.21 | Post Script to 449.10 | DSSDEV::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Thu Aug 20 1987 18:01 | 28 |
| (I'm posting this in response to mail without having read
449.11-449.20.)
Someone has indicated that they were uncomfortable with my
description of my assailant as an "inner-city black", because
they felt that indicated that the reasons for the attack were
racist and/or classist. They wondered if a more neutral phrasing
might be more appropriate.
Well, the attack was explicitly racist and calssist and the
gentleman (in every sense of the word) who rescued me from the
attack was able to do so only because he was black. No whites
were permitted to get anywhere near us. Ted, being black was
able to walk over, get between us, and stop Willy. In many ways
the only major difference between the incident and a good ole
1920s style lynching was the color of the victim and assailants
and the level of violence it had escalated to at the time it had
stopped. Similar attacks ended in hospitalization.
I certainly did not mean to categorize all urban blacks with my
assailant and his cronies. It is quite clear to me that there
are good and bad folk of every class, race, sex, religion, and
sexual orientation. There are also bigots of all ilk. This one
was of the inner-city black variety and his bias was against
every one who wasn't at least black and preferably urban lower
to lower-middle class black.
JimB.
|
449.22 | only disagree with the statistics | IOSG::LEVY | QA Bloodhound | Thu Aug 20 1987 20:24 | 26 |
| re: .20
>It would be interesting to make a survey of all the people
>who graduated from high school in Connecticut the same year
>that you did. It would be interesting to see what percentage
>of the white males are now making over $30K a year. Then,
>it would be interesting to compare that with what percentage
>of the black females are now making more than $30K a year.
>
>It would be interesting to make a similar survey at Digital.
>I wonder what percentage of the males working at DEC, regardless
>of job, are making more than $30K a year, and what percentage
>of the females working at DEC, regardless of job, are making
>more than $30K a year.
....
> Then, if there's more women, and women are getting more
>rights than men, I would think it would logically follow
>that women would be running DEC. But, that doesn't seem to
>be the case yet.
I don't think the above survey would 'prove' your point.
The cause of a lower percentage of women earning more than $30K
than men may be due to many reasons, one of which could be an element
of discrimination.
Malcolm
|
449.23 | we are not protected | STRATA::DAUGHAN | sassy | Thu Aug 20 1987 20:27 | 8 |
| we are definetly not a "protected minority" anymore!
a we (women) make up a major part of the work force today.
i am not sure what the new "in"minority is yet.
i also seem to reall a man winning a reverse disrimination(sp)
concerninga medical school in california.
kelly
|
449.24 | oooppppsss | STRATA::DAUGHAN | sassy | Thu Aug 20 1987 20:28 | 6 |
| i can see why i am not getting ahead
just take a look at my spelling! :-)
sorry folks
kelly
|
449.25 | My view on anger is strictly personal | HUMAN::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Thu Aug 20 1987 23:31 | 39 |
| My comments on anger are based on my own personal experience.
Your mileage may vary.
In my expereince, when I was beaten up and did nothing about it
I felt immense anger. At times I internalized the anger, at
other times I externalized it and expressed it, but at no time
did it help me one iota. When I finally stood up and said "I've
had enough. I don't have to take this any more.", it was done
with out anger.
I remember quite clearly the time in the fifth grade when I
finally fought back. The class bully knocked my books out of my
arms as I was about to get off the bus. As I was reaching for my
books, all ofthe anger and all of the fear just fell away, and I
saw that I wasn't effectively standing up to him and so I swung
my fist from the floor into the face that was looking smuggly
down.
You might think that that resorting to your fists was a sign of
anger, but in many ways it wasn't. In many ways it was only
possible when the anger left, andthe fear as well. Suddenly I
wasn't angry. I was determined. And from then on my normal
reaction to bullying became defiance and determination. I
stopped reacting with my glands and started to think.
It has been my experience that anger robs me of control. Anger
and fear seem to give the other guy the edge. They seem to waste
energy, not channel it. This may not be your experience. Anger
may work for you. It doesn't work for me, and my observation is
that it often works against others. Lots of angry people are
ineffective. I've seldom if ever met a successful person who
attributed their success to their anger. Maybe I've just talked
to the wrong people.
I can sympathize with anger and with fear. I support my friends
and acquaintances when they are wronged, but I do find it hard
to encourage anger. It held me back.
JimB.
|
449.26 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Fri Aug 21 1987 10:53 | 12 |
| The following response is from a member of our community who
wishes to remain anonymous at this time.
=maggie
==================================================================
When I was in a minor supervisor's role I pulled on the arm of a
male co-worker; it was not sexual in any way, I used it as a means
to get his attention. You can believe I heard about it later from
my supervisor. Sorry, Kerry's charges are groundless: we are
treated just like anybody else in those types of cases. To this day
I have not ever physically touched another co-worker.
|
449.27 | | PSYCHE::SULLIVAN | | Fri Aug 21 1987 12:32 | 25 |
|
Jim,
I'm not sure that we really disagree about anger and how it ought
to be used. I think we may just define it differently. What I
pulled from your last note was that it was only when you let go
of your anger that you were able to punch this guy who was bullying
you. Well, first of all, I tend to see hitting as an act of anger,
but I'll try to see it in the context in which you framed it. But
I think that it was only because you were able to be angry about
this maltreatment that you were able to act at all. If you hadn't
allowed yourself to feel angry on some level, you probably would have
felt that you somehow deserved the attack. I'm not saying that women
ought to go out and trash DEC property as an expression of anger.
I am saying that it's not only ok to be angry about injustice, but
that it's a necessary part of the process. When we get angry about being
treated unfairly, we are putting the responsibility for the behavior
on the actor. If we deny our anger, we are much more likely to
take responsibility for the unfair treatment we are receiving.
That's when you start hearing people say stuff like, "Maybe I really
didn't deserve that promotion," or "Maybe it's my own fault that
he hit me..."
Justine
|
449.29 | RE: 449.27 and anger | DSSDEV::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Fri Aug 21 1987 14:17 | 36 |
| Justine, (may I call you Justine?)
Maybe it's just because I have a terrible temper or perhaps it's
the way many boys are brought up, but it is my experience that
although anger may often result in violence, violence is most
effective when performed as coldly and as emotionlessly as
possible. When you are angry it is often hard to think clearly.
If you aren't used to violence, anger can make you flail wildly.
It can make you hesitate, flee or cower.
You are, of course, right that there was a lot of anger involved
leading up to my beginning to fight back effectively, but the
anger also interfered in many ways with being effective and the
bullies know how to use fear and don't respect anyone who can't
act effectively.
Getting your opponent to lose his temper is a very intentional
strategy in a lot of brawling and other aggressive and
confrontational interactions. Boys and men are much more often
taught the arts of violence than girls and women, and one of the
lessons that we are taught is how to be violent dispassionately.
Some teachers emphasize learning to act without thinking which
has advatnages of speed. Others teach you to think about what
you are doing, which can have advantages of precision and
effectiveness.
It's this lesson that we were taught when we learned boxing,
street fighting, self-defense, or martial arts that lies behind
the mysterious admonition to not get angry. Maybe we believe in
it because it is what we were taught, and not because it is
absolutely true. Maybe I believe in it because anger debilitates
me even more than others. It is, none-the-less a lesson I've
learned over and over again ("don't get mad--get even"), and one
that has been effective for me.
JimB.
|
449.30 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Fri Aug 21 1987 16:08 | 33 |
|
The following response is offered by a member of our community
who wishes to remain anonymous at this time.
=maggie
===============================================================
I would like to expand on a similar experience as the one mentioned
in note 449.26.
I was in a group that I was not pleased with. It seemed the more I
offered to do the more that was demanded of me.
So I took the normal recourse, told my supervisor, and her
supervisor that I was to start interviewing. They're response was to
inform me I was critical to the project's completion date and would
not be allowed to leave. They further admonished me that if I were
to go on interviews they would get me fired from DEC. I then asked
fellow employees what I should do and they suggested I should get
personnel involved, which I did.
Personnel supported me and told me I could not get fired.
When the day for my interview arrived I sat with my two (female)
supervisors and told them that I had kept everything above board and
I was going to an interview.
My supervisor then dashed after me into my office and grabbed my arm
and spun me around, I had a cup of coffee in my hand. It went all
over my office and my white shirt. I was not aware of my rights at
that time and refrained from going to personnel about the incident
since I am male and was reticent to do so since I feared the stigma
of complaining about abuse by a female; the next time I won't.
|
449.31 | Do we need a noun here? | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri Aug 21 1987 18:28 | 18 |
| Jim and Justine,
Could we have a definition problem here? Or are we missing a
word? Given that we have a spectrum of words:
calm <word> anger rage
I think that Justine is speaking of <word>, a more-intellectual-
than-emotional state, which is achieved as a rising from the
ground-state of calm, and is required in order to *do* something.
I think that Jim is speaking of anger leaning towards rage, a more-
emotional-than-intellectual state, which does not do anyone much
of any good, and makes other people find the holder an unpleasant
person, whom one would do well to avoid.
Ummm, maybe <word> is wrath, or maybe it is indignation, or ....
Ann B.
|
449.32 | one reaction | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Sun Aug 23 1987 17:05 | 11 |
| re .30
My immediate reaction to what happened to you was that it would
have been awfully hard not to want to throw the rest of the
coffee at the supervisor.
Did you go to the interview? Are you still working for the same
person?
I think you had reason to complain.
|
449.33 | remember backlash | IMAGIN::KOLBE | She's back - watch out world | Mon Aug 24 1987 02:05 | 27 |
|
To get back to Kerry's comments...The problem seems to be a classic
case of backlash. The job market is tough, the numbers of people
competing for all the higher level jobs has increased. There are
not enough well paying positions around to keep all us baby boomers
in the lifestyle we have come to expect. The lines of battle seem
to have been drawn between white males (who used to get all the good
jobs) and every other minority. If we get these jobs some white males
will obviously not get them. Who is to blame? Is anybody? Is society?
For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. If the number
of jobs does not increase but the number of job seekers does, someone
will not get the job/chance they want. I have read several magazine
articles that have mentioned that the baby boom generation will have
to accept a lower standard of living than their parents. This causes
resentment and a desire to find somewhere to place the blame.
There's always going to be people who get undeserved promotions and
opportunities. They will be men and women, white and black and every
sort of combination you can think of. It's the way life is in
business. The Peter Principle is a reality that doesn't seem to
discriminate. The difference now is that women and minorities may get
there too, I'm not sure that's what we're really striving for but
we have the same failings (as individuals) as do white males (as
individuals). I also believe we have many of the same strengths.
liesl
|
449.34 | Not okay Ms Copier... it seems to have disappeared... shame on | PIWACT::KLEINBERGER | MAXCIMize your efforts | Thu Sep 03 1987 08:57 | 40 |
449.35 | | NISYSI::REK | Daddy in training!!!!! | Thu Sep 03 1987 13:11 | 4 |
| Ms. Kleinberger, is there any need to copy he note in here?
REK
|
449.36 | | PIWACT::KLEINBERGER | MAXCIMize your efforts | Thu Sep 03 1987 13:25 | 15 |
| Mr. Happiness...
Yes, because it makes the replies 1 - .33 have less continuity...
Now, when someone who has NOT read .0, and all its replies, will
NOW understand what .1 thru .33 was responding too...
That was the MAJOR complaint I had in the first place... the author
of .0 would start a topic, and then delete his note, so that another
reader would have a difficult time in following the "total" topic...
He said he would not delete it, so I didn't "immediately" recopy
it as reply number 1, now I'm sorry I didn't...
Ms. Kleinberger
|
449.37 | | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Thu Sep 03 1987 13:26 | 4 |
| While I am not Ms Kleinberger, I would say there _is_ a need --
to keep the context of the conversation which followed.
Lee
|
449.38 | | NISYSI::REK | Daddy in training!!!!! | Fri Sep 04 1987 12:20 | 11 |
| Lee, who asked you?
Gale, If people can't follow a topic they need not reply. If I'm
going to commemt on something then I read the whole note not just
a few of the last replies. I don't think it to be right that a base
note being put in here every 30 replies. If everyone did that then
why not every note?
REK
But its a whole different story if the note got deleted......
Gale, happeness is put on hold, wifie-poo is 4 months along.....
|
449.39 | huh? | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Fri Sep 04 1987 12:32 | 10 |
| um REK, did you notice that Gale only put the copied note in
after the base note was deleted?
and why shouldn't Lee have answered?
confused,
Bonnie
(and congratulations :-) )
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449.40 | | NISYSI::REK | Daddy in training!!!!! | Fri Sep 04 1987 12:56 | 8 |
| Opps, I see Kerry is up to his old tricks again....
I didn't ask Lee, I asked Gale why she did like she did.....
Gee, even after Kerry said he wouldn't delete it.....
REK
Thanks, Donna and I are real happy. We want a little girl!!!!
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449.41 | wREKless | KLAATU::THIBAULT | be-bop-a-lulu, baby | Fri Sep 04 1987 13:29 | 7 |
| RE: < Note 449.40 by NISYSI::REK "Daddy in training!!!!!" >
>> Thanks, Donna and I are real happy. We want a little girl!!!!
E Gadz...a REKette! I hope she acts just like you REK...it's only fair..:-)
J Pooh
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449.42 | Moderator Response | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Fri Sep 04 1987 14:20 | 7 |
| Bonnie and I have decided to set .34 hidden for karmic reasons.
We apologise to the other members of our community for the
discontinuity that this (re)introduces.
in Sisterhood,
=maggie
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449.43 | | NISYSI::REK | Daddy in training!!!!! | Fri Sep 04 1987 14:40 | 7 |
| Re: 42 I don't think the note should be set hidden. I thought Gale
was putting in a note that was already there. Since it got deleted
some how Gale was within the rights of noting to reintroduce the
note. I was objecting to reintroduce a note already in the conference.
I hope this clears up my objection.
REK
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449.44 | Wasn't because of you, REK | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Fri Sep 04 1987 16:04 | 1 |
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449.45 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | Not another learning experience! | Fri Sep 04 1987 18:53 | 3 |
| Maggie -- whose karma?
;-o
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449.46 | well..... | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Fri Sep 04 1987 21:20 | 1 |
| Holly, hers and mine I guess :-).....
|