Word: turnoveritis
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¶ The major voting turnover was among Roman Catholics: where 49% went for Dwight Eisenhower in 1956, only 22% supported Nixon in 1960. The G.O.P. held its own among Protestants: 63% voted for Ike and 62% for Nixon. Said the National Committee report: "A fair estimate would be that Kennedy...
Increased fines--with regular enforcement--will not solve all of Cambridge's ills but will surely cut down on blatant violations. A frequent turnover in parking spaces should keep more people happier.
An unusually large turnover in personnel and leadership has caused concern among some members of the Economics Department. However, Arthur Smithies, Nathaniel Ropes Professor of Economics and Chairman of the Department, called the situation "normal."
Thanks to the plenitude of its comforts, Los Alamos has a low personnel turnover-about 20 a month-and few of its nuclear specialists really believe that they will some day go home to Ann Arbor or Chapel Hill. Notes Robert Porton, an ex-Army sergeant who helped found Los...
Pusey also commented on the recent Harvard appointments in Washington as "supplementing the natural process of faculty turnover," but complimented the "taste which our colleague, the President-elect, has shown in his choice of officers."