Enron Mail

From:jennifer_lamprecht@oxy.com
To:andrew.h.lewis@enron.com, caroline_champion@mhhs.org, richadr@texaco.com,elamprecht@encompserv.com, chis.gales@compaq.com, susan.hadix@elpaso.com, ian_johnston@nexeninc.com, jeff_chapman@mentorg.com, chelle1911@aol.com, rwalls@lgl.ci.houston.tx.us,
Subject:FW: Nudge your co-workers!
Cc:
Bcc:
Date:Tue, 3 Apr 2001 06:09:00 -0700 (PDT)

< < In the Birmingham Sunday Mercury (7th Jan 2001):
< < WORKER DEAD AT DESK FOR 5 DAYS
< <
< < Bosses of a publishing firm are trying to work out why
< < no one noticed that one of their employees had been
< < sitting dead at his desk for FIVE DAYS before anyone
< < asked if he was feeling okay. George Turklebaum, 51,
< < who had been employed as a proof-reader at a New York
< < firm for 30 years, had a heart attack in the open-plan
< < office he shared with 23 other workers. He quietly
< < passed away on Monday, but nobody noticed until
< < Saturday morning when an office cleaner asked why he
< < was still working during the weekend.
< <
< <
< <
< < His boss Elliot Wachiaski said: "George was always the
< < first guy in each morning and the last to leave at
< < night, so no one found it unusual that he was
< < in the same position all that time and didn't say
< < anything. "He was always absorbed in his work and
< < kept much to himself." A post mortem
< < examination revealed that he had been dead for five
< < days after suffering a coronary. Ironically, George
< < was proofreading manuscripts of medical
< < textbooks when he died. You may want to give your
< < co-workers a nudge occasionally.
< <
< < And the moral of the story: Don't work too hard.
< <
< < Nobody notices anyway.
<
<