Word: rapid
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...Miller '89 of Thayer Hall and Baltimore, Md.; Mary E. Sarotte '88 of Mather House of Morristown, N.J.; Gregory R. Schwartz '89 of Canaday Hall and New York, N.Y.; Alan Z. Segal '89 of Canaday Hall and Vestal, N.Y.; Sophia A. Van Wingerden '89 of Lionel Hall and Rapid City, S.D.; John C. Yoo '89 of Weld Hall and Gladwyne...
...Boston, the Burger King fast-food chain, which employs 160,000 people nationwide, took the unusual step of advertising jobs on MTV, the cable rock-music channel, to attract young prospective workers into its management program. In the throes of a rapid expansion, Burger King felt a strong need to try new avenues that might help ease its worker shortage...
...more outgoing Maurice has excelled at courting outside financing for the company's rapid growth. Until the Saatchis came along, London's stuffy financial community shunned advertising agencies as unreliable investments. The brothers changed all that by posting an unbroken pattern of 50% annual growth after they went public in 1975. Last week the company announced a $600 million stock sale, the third largest in British history. With all that spending money, the snowballing Saatchi & Saatchi will undoubtedly be growing even faster...
...NAME OF the game is changing faster than you can say "ahhh," and no mean tongue depressor is going to hold back the course of history. Every facet of the medical world is undergoing rapid transformation. And smack in the middle of this revolution and its concomittant crisis is the state of Massachusetts...
Japan, which imports 99.8% of the oil it uses, could save as much as $23 billion on crude this year, which will help offset the loss of export business it has suffered because of the rapid appreciation of the yen. Oil-using nations that are less well off will benefit too. In sub-Saharan Africa, lower expenses for transportation and farming could start to raise living standards after many years of decline. Some countries with state-owned oil companies, notably India and Pakistan, have so far refused to pass savings along to consumers, deciding instead to spend the money...