Word: output
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...consumer over a barrel because they are in such short supply and such great demand. The shortage was sedulously fostered by the A.M.A. for 30 years, beginning in the Great Depression and ending only in 1967, when it conceded that something must be done to increase the medical schools' output. "This shortage," Cherkasky says, "makes it impossible for society to deal with the medical profession. You're at their mercy...
...Harvard scoring was evenly distributed as four men tallied in double figures. Chris Gallagher and Mike Janczewski netted 17 points apiece to lead the Crimson offense, but Yale's talented sophomore Jim Morgan led all scorers with 21 points. Gallagher's output moved him to within 15 points of the tenth spot among Harvard career scorers. The Crimson's Ernie Hardy topped all rebounders with...
...auto sales. Chrysler sales are down 12% from early last year, when strikes at Ford and General Motors gave the company an unusual advantage. To bring inventories in line with current sales, Chrysler will lay off 32,000 men for as long as two weeks and reduce its February output by 25% from its originally scheduled 140,000 cars. Ford has been curtailing production of its top-of-the-line Continental Mark IIIs and Thunderbirds...
...much from its early predictions of sales of 9,300,000 cars this year. General Motors captured 55% of the market during the first 20 days of last month with sales of 204,083 cars, and last week Chairman James Roche disclaimed any intention of reducing G.M.'s output in the next few weeks...
...million workers. Another 5,000,000 suffered lesser work injuries or illnesses. Beyond the incalculable toll they took in pain and suffering, job-related accidents and ailments cost workers $1.5 billion in lost wages and deprived industry of $5 billion in production, an amount larger than the annual output of all but the eight biggest U.S. manufacturers...