ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: THURSDAY, November 23, 1995                   TAG: 9511280050
SECTION: BUSINESS                    PAGE: B-7   EDITION: HOLIDAY 
SOURCE: Associated Press
DATELINE: TAMPA, FLA.                                LENGTH: Medium


MAN HARASSED BY FEMALE BOSS WINS $237,000 IN COURT

SHE SPOKE suggestively and groped him, and when he objected she fired him from Domino's Pizza.

For five months, David Papa's boss at a Domino's Pizza made comments about his body, touched him and told him she loved him. Six days after he told her to stop, she fired him.

Now, a federal judge has ordered the pizza chain to pay Papa $237,000 in damages in the first case the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission ever took to trial involving a man harassed by a woman.

``This was about my career," Papa said in an interview Wednesday. "I take my job very seriously. I felt very embarrassed, having her touching me, saying these things to me. It made me feel self-conscious and awkward.''

According to the verdict, Papa was repeatedly harassed in 1988 by his area supervisor, Beth Carrier.

At the time, Papa was 25, newly divorced and had just gained custody of his 3-year-old son. He had worked for Domino's for two years and was recently promoted to manager of a store in Port Richey, about 35 miles northwest of Tampa.

He was earning about $350 a week and averaged $600 in monthly bonuses. Just before firing him, Carrier had nominated him for Manager of the Year.

Several times, Papa said, Carrier touched him on the shoulders and buttocks, squeezed his buttocks and made comments about his body. Once, while making pizza dough, Carrier told Papa her bra had slipped off and asked him if that ``turned him on.''

At a meeting with two other store workers, Carrier told Papa she loved him and wanted to live with him and his son.

``There were people there who heard this,'' Papa said. ``I was so frustrated, I really lost my temper and said, `Get out of my office.' That was the big blowup.''

When she visited the store again six days later, Carrier fired Papa, saying he was improperly paying a driver from the store's mileage account rather than its labor account.

The judge ruled that Carrier earlier had told Papa that using the mileage account was allowed under company policy.

He ordered Domino's to pay Papa $237,257, post a policy on sexual harassment in each of its stores, and hold sexual-harassment training every year for its managers.

The verdict came one year after a nonjury trial.

Domino's spokeswoman Maggie Proctor said the company had not yet seen the verdict and had no comment.



 by CNB