A major challenge for colleges of pharmacy is to produce competent pharmacy practitioners while minimizing student attrition. |
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You may build only within this zone, and enemies will suffer attrition damage inside it. |
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Sounds like we're in for a war of attrition, minus the trenches and the mustard gas. |
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They have greatly increased the fear that we are only at the beginning of an open-ended struggle of attrition with homegrown suicide bombers. |
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That conflict had been dominated by slow-moving forces employing heavy firepower and waging a war of gradual attrition. |
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The tedium of dredging and sounding very likely accounted for the high attrition of ship's personnel by desertion. |
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After these meetings, our employee attrition rate dropped from 13 percent to 11 percent. |
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The three largest causes of attrition were contract termination, resignation and mortality. |
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Steps like these have helped it shrink its workforce through attrition, from a peak of 804,000 in 1999 to 701,000 today. |
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Studies on the retention of laboratory personnel have focused on the causes of employee attrition and strategies to promote retention. |
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Studies of employee attrition across multiple disciplines would also be helpful in identifying common problems and shared solutions. |
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To that end, given the demographics of our workforce, we plan to achieve much of this reduction via attrition and early-retirement programs. |
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Some attrition in morphology, plural and past irregular morphemes, in particular, is also observed. |
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World War I was characterized by the extensive use of trench warfare, massive artillery bombardments, and battles of attrition. |
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He appears to desire the absolute destruction of the enemy forces, not the gradual erosion of the enemy force which is attrition. |
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Heritage-rich nations and tribal groups alike sound bellicose in defence of heritage whose attrition they are impotent to prevent. |
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The first cohort effect could be attributable to the selective attrition of inactive records. |
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It can then be argued that treatment effects result from selective attrition of higher risk cases. |
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This would point to the mammillated appearance being caused by a certain amount of attrition on the rough, pointed, matrix gold. |
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Needless to say, there is nothing pleasurable about the ailments caused by muscle attrition or a lack of bone density. |
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Mechanical attrition processes often involve ball milling in various machines and environments. |
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Teeth may be damaged by dental caries, trauma, erosion, attrition, and abrasion or lost through periodontal disease. |
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The major difference in the nation's new military doctrine is that it is based on speed, rather than attrition. |
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In this hypothesis, the silts form by aeolian abrasion and attrition of sand grains and by rock-weathering processes. |
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There is no gold found more perfect than this, as the current polishes it thoroughly by attrition. |
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This, combined with early retirement and natural attrition, could see relatively few staff being forced to exit compulsorily. |
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Changes of this magnitude are more likely to occur through concentrated efforts to reduce the workforce than through attrition. |
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For example, it's very common for unions to resist plans to reduce the workforce through attrition. |
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Last year was little better, with little overtaking and an absurdly low attrition rate which saw only five cars fail to finish. |
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Diaries can suffer from a process of attrition, as people decide they have had enough of the task of completing a diary. |
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In addition, the carmakers will now be able to use attrition to scale back the workforce. |
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Why not wait and see how far we can move it towards disarmament of weapons of mass destruction by the attrition of political pressure? |
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The biggest cause of this attrition is loss or degradation of their seagrass habitat. |
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The Francoists took control of Spain through a comprehensive and methodical war of attrition. |
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Another heavy struggle for the clock, with one team finally imposing its will in a war of attrition, minus the stand-to and the morning hate? |
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In the wake of the tsunami that claimed over 250,000 lives in Aceh, the military has continued its war of attrition. |
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He planned on this kind of war of attrition from the minute he knew he was militarily finished. |
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They have no education, no job and are prepared to sacrifice their lives in a war of attrition against the US military machine. |
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They will also seek to engage the New Zealand front five in a war of attrition. |
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The midfield sector at this stage of the game resembled a war of attrition with neither side gaining a stronghold. |
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Neglected and drab, this once-grand Regency mansion had been the battlefield for a war of attrition between John's mother and father. |
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I have put myself through a war of attrition, willing the other side to win. |
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The eight-year war of attrition which followed cost thousands of lives on both sides. |
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In the first quarter, the clubs have decreased their annualized attrition rate by 3 percent. |
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Financial support, and changes in USDE guidelines in allowable expenses, could also be extremely important in minimizing student attrition. |
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Under the agreement Eurotunnel is to shed 750 jobs from its 3,200-strong workforce through attrition and voluntary departures. |
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Equally important to strength maintenance are programs that would reduce attrition while enhancing retention of trained soldiers. |
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Departments with high rates of attrition among graduate students need to look to their own practices for answers and solutions. |
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With the advent of national companies through attrition and consolidation, competition has widened to a national scope. |
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While he says there have been few layoffs at his firm, he's reducing head count through attrition. |
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Research on graduate attrition shows that only 50 percent of Ph.D. students complete their degree. |
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Despite the continuous debilitating attrition in the value and effectiveness of the UN, we hope that there may be at least one hope. |
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The Congregational establishment had given birth to a radical, antidoctrinal movement, and it seemed locked in a fruitless war of attrition. |
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Guerrillas can lose battle after battle and yet still win the war, because guerrilla warfare is a form of attrition. |
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The size of the study population decreased with increasing age, due, primarily, to attrition through mortality. |
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We have two great field games and we should never let them become wars of attrition. |
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His rank and age reflected the high pilot attrition rate we suffered early on in the battle. |
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As long as the war was kept in that context, they could sustain the years of attrition. |
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Therefore, attrition rates at IT companies should also differentiate between those who are leaving voluntarily for greener pastures and those who have been given the heave-ho. |
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Despite his reputation as a ruthless practitioner of attrition warfare, Grant was amenable to Lee's request. |
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It is not a decisive war, with a single, signature victory, but a war of attrition. |
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The past two months have been a war of attrition between the Hong Kong government and pro-democracy protestors. |
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Following the attrition of heavy industry in the 1980s, the income gap across the United Kingdom has grown substantially. |
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The combat is certainly much better than it was last year, so it's a shame that some of the boss battles turn into wars of attrition with petty single-hit attacks. |
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Where it is not a question of outright retrenchment, natural attrition is allowed to follow its relentless course and vacant positions are simply not being filled. |
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No other army in the world would choose to sustain such an attrition rate. |
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Their game is a form of physical attrition of the opposition. |
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Other studies find that some aspects of part-time instruction could be the causes of student attrition, which in turn affects the eventual transition into the workplace. |
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He counted on air supremacy to allow his forces to reduce the communists by attrition, and he seemed to believe that UN ground forces could handle the survivors. |
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Otherwise, I think the United States is going to continue to suffer this attrition in its moral authority and I think the price will be very high. |
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Some of those job losses will come through natural attrition. |
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Matthews also let attrition reduce his commission-based staff. |
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Further, X-rays showed there was no deposit of secondary dentine as would have been expected if the abrasion had been due to natural attrition before death. |
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Only a single score down and bags of attrition time still left to play. |
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Her game just kept improving with every round, she played some tough matches, demolished the defending champion in the semis and survived a battle of attrition in the final. |
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Desert warfare was, by definition, mobile warfare, the antithesis of the lethal attrition in the mire of the Western Front. |
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Those older than young people still use South Slavey in smaller, isolated communities, but there is serious attrition among children and young people. |
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Today, perspiration triumphed over inspiration, style over sinew, brawn over brain, athletics over aesthetics, attrition over attraction and haymakers over playmakers. |
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This will be a war of attrition and a pyrrhic and Camdean Victory for myself. |
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This is one war of attrition where Detroit is clearly outgunned. |
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It is impossible, with the best of wills to conduct free and fair elections under occupation with a war of attrition taking place between rebels and occupiers. |
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Many lieutenant colonels and colonels express frustration at being labeled as poor mentors, and portrayed as contributing to the attrition of captains. |
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The sponge is pulverized in an attrition mill employing titanium plates to minimize contamination which would result from conventional cast-iron plates. |
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Greene evaded combat with Cornwallis, instead wearing his army down through a protracted war of attrition. |
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Cassius Dio records that the Caledonians inflicted 50,000 Roman casualties due to attrition and unconventional tactics such as guerrilla warfare. |
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German Chief of Staff Erich von Falkenhayn decided to break away from the Schlieffen Plan and instead focus on a war of attrition against France. |
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It will be achieved through attrition, early separation incentives or severance packages, and the outplacing of employees. |
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The Luftwaffe believed it was weakening Fighter Command at three times the actual attrition rate. |
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By taking account of ethnic attrition, the assimilation rate of Hispanics in the United States improves significantly. |
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In order to examine possible diagenetic processes, skeletal element representation was correlated to density-mediated attrition. |
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Research shows that ethnic attrition is sizable in Hispanic and Asian immigrant groups in the United States. |
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No effort was made to address the low production output of the German aviation industry to support the expected increased attrition rates. |
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The company expects to further reduce headcount by approximately 20 percent from the restructuring announced today and further attrition. |
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The unified Allies were now better able to respond to each of the German drives, and the offensive turned into a battle of attrition. |
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Neil and Bridgwater also tested granular materials in an annular attrition cell, a fluidized bed and a screw pugmill. |
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The steady toll of attrition on both sides in the conflict in Syria may well be about to explode like the mother-of-all fragmentation bombs. |
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Kari Frisch is well aware of the fact that online courses suffer from high rates of attrition and are sometimes held in low regard. |
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Palmer Manufacturing introduces this low level shakeout deck with attrition mill. |
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Oversized particles are screened out and refed to the roll mill for further attrition. |
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But there is no consensus about what the attrition of ISIS looks like. |
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He burned his boats and supplies to show resolve in continuing operations, but the Sassanids began a war of attrition by burning crops. |
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The towns suffered attrition in the later 4th century, when public building ceased and some were abandoned to private uses. |
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As players become more skilled and, in particular, better able to retrieve shots, points often become a war of attrition. |
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From a safety perspective, the twin-engine solution offers reduced attrition rates compared to single-engine types. |
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Sgraffito and surface attrition are used to reveal successive layers of underpainting and capture the essential characteristics of the landscape. |
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The raids disturbed civilians, and continued the war of attrition against Fighter Command. |
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A lengthy war of attrition, conducted on his behalf by his younger brother Ferdinand, continued for the rest of Charles's reign. |
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What occurred, and has been occurring ever since, is a process of language attrition, whereby successive generations have adopted more and more features from Standard English. |
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The decline of Irish in Ireland and a slowing of emigration helped to ensure a decline in the language abroad, along with natural attrition in the host countries. |
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Nashville and central Tennessee fell to the Union early in 1862, leading to attrition of local food supplies and livestock and a breakdown in social organization. |
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Weygand decided on hedgehog tactics, which were to implement defence in depth operations and use delaying tactics, to inflict maximum attrition on German units. |
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Instead they were reduced to the slow attrition of a tonnage war. |
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Unlike thermal attrition, which kills and embrittles all the clay binder, it preserves the desirable active clay, which cannot be simply knocked off through physical contact. |
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The attrition was beginning to affect the fighters in particular. |
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One of the reasons identified for this attrition has been students' underperformance in calculus classes and their inadequate preparation in precalculus content. |
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The Cornish people and their Brythonic Cornish language experienced a process of anglicisation and attrition during the Medieval and early Modern Period. |
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Ten months of attrition and slaughter result in a million casualties, the bleached bones of many of them now piled in viewing galleries at the epic Douaumont ossuary. |
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However, Scheer seems to have quickly realised that further battles with a similar rate of attrition would exhaust the High Seas Fleet long before it reduced the Grand Fleet. |
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He could keep winning through attrition, with a relentless barrage of topspinning ground strokes and a tireless defense of his own side, where would-be winners go to die. |
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This fluctuated over time, as the royal duties, costs of outfitting and rate of attrition and risk of loss on India runs were sometimes too high for private houses to bear. |
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French forces began to arrive to support the Spaniards, but like their allies they began to suffer high levels of attrition through disease and desertion. |
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The FA Cup Final became a grindingly familiar war of attrition. |
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The war was initially inconclusive, as the Italian army get struck in a long attrition war in the Alps, making little progress and suffering very heavy losses. |
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