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Titre: skhw Search continues for 7 missing off Mexican coast
Posté par: MethrenRaf le Décembre 09, 2024, 08:18:55 pm
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 A federal judge has awarded a former Army Special Forces commander nearly $500,000 because she was rejected from a job at the Library of Congress while transitioning from a man to a woman.Diane Schroer of Alexandria, Va., applied for the terrorism analyst job while she was still a man named David Schroer. He was offered the job, but the offer was pulled after he told a library official that he was having surgery to change his gender.U.S. District Judge James Robinson ruled Tuesday that Schroer was entitled to $491,190 in back pay and damages because of sex discrimination.The Library of Congress and the Justice Department argued unsuccessfully that discrimination because of transsexuality was not illegal sex discrimination under the Civil Rights Act.The American Civil Liberties Union had argued the case on Schroer s behalf. Paul Cates with the ACLU s Lesbian and Gay Rights Project said the ruling was significant because a federal judge said that discriminating against someone for changing genders is sex discrim stanley cup (https://www.stanley-cups.de) ination under federal law.        Schroer is a former U.S. Army colonel who directed a classified group that tracked and targe stanley ca (https://www.cup-stanley-cup.ca) ted terrorists. Schroer retired in 2004 and worked briefly in the private sector before applying for the Congressional Research Service job at the Library of Congress.After being offered the job, Schroer h stanley cup (https://www.cups-stanley-cups.us) ad lunch with a Library of Congress official and explained the upcoming surgery. Schroer testified the official called the next day and said the Skkg The Hypnotic Power Of Repetitive Architecture
 Today, BlackBerry is giving us our first look at one of the key features of BB 10.3: A voice assistant. Like everything else the company formerly known as RIM does these days, BlackBerry Assistant would have been revolutionary years ago. Today, it   just an obvious feature that   too late to make it a differentiator.     The blog post announcing Blackberry Assistant is thin on details or any kind of demo, but it does give us a very basic overview of what the tool might be capable of. All of it, seems pretty standard. For example: If I ;m driving and I ask it to read my latest email message to me, it does so. I can then ask it to stanley flask (https://www.cup-stanley.co.uk)  Mark Unread without having to enter the BlackBerry Hub. If I ;m in a meeting and I type  stanley mug (https://www.stanleymug.us) Remind me to follow up with Matt about our whiteboard session, it builds me a reminder note that I can save without leaving the Assistant. Oh and you can use your voice to turn on the flashlight. That   pretty nifty I guess. But overall, the voice assistant doesn ;t do anything we haven ;t seen from the Apple, Google, and Microsoft competitors. And like the company   boxy new Passport phone, it probably won ;t be enough to fight back against the decline, no matter how many tim stanley cup (https://www.stanley-cups.pl) es the company says it   still alive. But since we haven ;t tried it yet, it   only fair to wait and see if BlackBerry Assistant can keep up when it   available in the fall. Wait! What about thi