Word: turnoveritis
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Three immediate activities were on the agenda for the Council investigation. One was a survey of wages paid to dining hall workers, their relations to those offered by local competitors in the labor mart, and the rate of turnover of labor in College cafeterias.
The play has its faults (it lags and sags and sprawls a bit), and its limitations-it is less a play than a show, with a show's quick turnover of impact and emotion. But it is a show well worth seeing.
Hearst's afternoon daily, the Herald & Express, has had a high turnover in city editors. One reason is the managing editor, crusty, hard-riding John B. T. Campbell, who used to be city editor himself and still acts like one; he is a fast man with the pink slip...
Boston, which President Helen M. Horion of Wellesley College dolorously referred to as the marriage market of the East, does, however, suffer a recession in volume turnover during the summer months. This, of course, is due to the departure of the collegiate gentler sex.
The prescription turnover, always the first concern of the store, has shown a fourfold increase in the last six years, seriously overtaxing the present facilities.