Staff morale must be sapped by the ordeal of coping with crisis conditions day after day. |
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Their armed forces were crippled and the country's morale was vastly deflated. |
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Indeed Mr Jones is right to acknowledge the impact the whole saga has had on staff morale. |
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Complaining deflates morale, makes you look weak, and creates an environment that breeds negativity like a contagion. |
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Scott drove into the rough and had to lay up, but he pitched to six feet and, crucially for his morale, holed for a half to keep him level. |
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News that a mystery benefactor has chipped in money to provide City with more time to find a buyer will further boost morale. |
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Frontline troops are finding their tours of duty extended, causing huge morale problems and an epidemic of breakdowns and mental health problems. |
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Correctly understood, psychological warfare does not treat home morale or concern itself with public relations involving friendly countries. |
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Over the decades, the beautiful game has helped to boost and bolster the nation's morale and has lifted spirits even in the darkest of times. |
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A thumping defeat at this point in time could have done some serious damage to morale. |
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The team was coming from two defeats out of three previous games and needed morale boosting in front of the second leg tonight. |
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He is usually in charge of morale boosting, but his long pause to the first question spoke volumes. |
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There are many very low-cost solutions for morale boosting and for re-emphasising what the organisation wants to focus on. |
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Having lost his job at Watford, Dyke's task at Burnley was one of morale boosting. |
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And then for morale boosting within the company, I also put some simple marketing metrics on there. |
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I get lots of morale boosting, advice and critiques from my personal writer friends. |
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During this war the revival of traditional values was a vital part of the morale boosting needed to tackle such an obviously evil enemy. |
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They say a change is as good as a rest, and one day away from work helping a local project could be a superb way to boost morale and team spirit. |
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Before concluding, we reiterate the importance of high morale and caution against false rumors, defeatism, uncertainty, and discouragement. |
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The sound of immense boulders tearing through stone was thunderous and struck a powerful blow to the men's morale. |
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The process of implementation has been suboptimal, leading to reports of low morale by the NHS staff responsible for implementation. |
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Because the hospitality business is high-touch and, therefore labor-intensive, high employee morale and low employee costs are critical. |
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The win will boost the team's morale ahead of the first round of the IRB rugby sevens tournament which kicks off in Durban next week. |
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There's even a newly unveiled statue of a girl in a shell suit, apparently put there to raise the morale of the area's young folk. |
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So for someone who is broke, with low morale, can you see how easy it is to become homeless? |
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When you win, it's a great boost for morale, both personally and professionally, and it encourages you to innovate. |
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His removal from command of the army he had forged had a calamitous effect on the morale of his men. |
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Those sort of leaders are just as fatal to regimental morale as the control freaks. |
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The intangibles, family readiness, morale of troops, those type of things are hard to measure. |
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The succession of unexecuted missions was wearing on the morale of the SF soldiers, who were eager to get into the fight. |
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One South African newspaper has even used muti to attempt to counter low staff morale and flagging circulation. |
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We are committed to increasing the membership, morale, organisation and fighting strength of the union movement. |
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It gets Andrew a new editor and the group a much more emollient senior manager who can lift morale. |
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The plans are often extolled, rightly, for improving employee morale and loyalty. |
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A defeat on January 12, while not spelling the end of the world, would hardly do morale all that much good. |
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After the past 10 days in the spotlight, internal morale for the 200 STB staff is dismal. |
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People are briefly distracted, Gable concedes, but she says the boost in morale makes it worthwhile. |
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The program manager, unable to stand the hot breath of the bald eagle, has left the building, and morale is again in the dumper. |
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But the subculture has many serious negative effects, eroding morale and confidence in the church. |
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They are better paid than conscripts, they get more training and they have higher morale and more esprit de corps. |
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If the staff are unhappy then production falls, morale is low and things go haywire. |
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Prior to WWII air power advocates considered strategic bombing to be key to breaking enemy production capacity and civilian morale. |
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Scobell is credited with providing valuable intelligence on Confederate order of battle, status of supplies, and troop morale and movements. |
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It could be viewed as old-style, Communist pomp and ceremony aimed at boosting the morale and devotion of the people. |
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His enforced retirement from the scene would have a catastrophic effect on paediatric morale. |
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A member of the health care team experiencing low morale may perform at a lower standard of practice than usual. |
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That crisis of civilizational morale, in turn, helps explain why European man is deliberately forgetting his history. |
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The officers were suffering from low morale caused by their guv'nor who was intensely disliked. |
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The symptoms of decline are everwhere to seen and the impact on the country's morale has been dire. |
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Although bad blood over the contract may hurt morale, for now execs are happy to have a victory in hand. |
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Just as sharing information can build esprit de corps, withholding it can severely depress morale. |
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Hayner's nose art is considered some of the best produced during the war, when the artwork was a popular morale booster for pilots and aircrews. |
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While rats may not seem like a huge menace, they have a terrible effect on neighborhood morale and the quality of everyday life. |
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Unit formations, command vehicles, radio nets and unit morale have no effect on the game play. |
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Afterwards, the American team became discouraged by the loss and their morale sagged. |
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At least Boro have no injuries to worry about, save for the damage to morale caused by their recent slump. |
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For this fee, the converted say miracles have happened in quality, productivity and staff morale. |
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Another acknowledged the troops for a job well done, and morale lifted 100 percent. |
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He fears that the morale of the county will be unable to cope with further job losses. |
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The new Queen spent much of February touring the stricken areas to try to boost morale. |
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Hurd must try and revive morale while still improving HP's operations in the eyes of Wall Street. |
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The visit had been a morale raiser for his crew and a profile raiser for the Navy. |
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Captain Baker said morale among the called-up squaddies remained high despite the painful separation from loved ones. |
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But with the president riding high in public opinion and paying morale boosting visits to his troops, nothing was further from the truth. |
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He suggested that boosting the workers' morale would translate into safer streets and better services. |
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All this was good for morale, but rivalries could have a damaging effect on operational efficiency. |
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You sense that staff morale is high and the eagerness to please is palpable. |
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Yet all was not powder snow twinkling in a rosy sunrise, and morale continued at a low ebb. |
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If morale and motivation are poor, consider the possibility that you are simply spreading yourself too thin. |
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Low morale among the soldiers had not been the cause of defeat, but it undoubtedly helped to turn defeat into rout. |
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So they need to prove they're still effective to their supporters, to rally morale, to convince their financiers that they're still a good bet. |
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The reconstruction process has strongly affected the position and morale of local residents. |
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The plans, thankfully, have been postponed but not without a huge loss of morale within the service. |
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Despite the fact that the destitution still lingers in my mind, trips like these strengthen the morale within a squad. |
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As a result his goals dried up, his form and morale declined, and he was marginalised within the first team squad. |
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The presenters claim morale within the rank and file of the BBC is disintegrating as a result. |
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Several soldiers and I are trying to build a recreation room to boost morale. |
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This has created a crisis in the armed forces with high desertion rates, poor morale and a sharp drop in military recruitment. |
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At the moment we don't have a neat solution to the problem and it really is stretching staff and eroding morale. |
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Noye says job cuts will only punish loyal staff and do nothing to improve staff morale or customer service. |
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This unrest was part of a much wider crisis of morale that covered the whole urban world, workers and middle classes alike. |
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More worrying, however, is the effect low morale and constant worry could have on managers' performance, he says. |
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These characteristics of good morale and team spirit were evident in Kerry's last few matches. |
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During the course of that game Derry showed all the symptoms of a team that had very poor morale and team spirit. |
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This must be an indication that team spirit and morale was not as good as it should be. |
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The Pysch-war boys may say it would most likely reduce their morale but I didn't agree, we could just be making an entire regiment of martyrs. |
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At the risk of laboring the point, we believe, high morale is the cornerstone of any successful organization. |
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The most significant result of the raid was on morale, as the Allies had had few big victories to that date. |
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In some of the loneliest seas in the world the Navy appeared to help support the yachtswoman's morale. |
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It also reflected a respect for standards and for the public with whom staff were in contact and it reinforced morale. |
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So while student numbers are increasing, quality is falling, and morale is in free-fall. |
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Recruitment levels and morale within the sector were affected by a series of high profile lay-offs. |
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We've gone in third and come out in the lead several times lately, and that is a real morale booster for the team. |
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He said he was visiting the oil terminals, coastguard cutters, patrol boats, and larger vessels for morale and ceremonial purposes. |
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The keyboard warriors should learn to distinguish between morale and sentimentality. |
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I don't mind pitching in a situation where staffing is short, supplies are scarce, morale is low. |
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There is no particular reason to say the police are demotivated or have low morale. |
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The business of health care combined with staff turnover and being short-staffed can affect a perioperative nurse's morale. |
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The careful grooming of hair of the face is the most potent calmative that could ever be prescribed for dyspeptic morale. |
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The sad outcome of this nonsense is that the boy's morale and self-confidence will be damaged. |
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Mrs Cooper was concerned about the effect in terms of staff and morale if these proposals went through. |
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Usually morale hits a low around January or February, though last year we had a biphasic low due to an early start to flu season. |
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Ndunda said morale was high in the squad ahead of the game tomorrow and the players were looking forward to the clash. |
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Sherman's prime targets in his famous marches were Confederate war-making resources and morale. |
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With morale at an all time low, it is not hard to understand that the volunteers wonder if it is worth going on. |
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United States intelligence estimates 350,000 soldiers in the regular army, poorly equipped with low morale. |
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Such animosity stems from a particularly low level of morale among the Guardsmen and reservists. |
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It's very good for the morale of the troops, with it usually comes some hardware, and that's important. |
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Here's another thing that leads to bad health, depression and general low morale. |
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Since the disaster it's been a constant challenge to maintain motivation and morale. |
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This had a serious impact on morale and many teachers were on the point of leaving their jobs. |
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When the Navy was seen to retreat to the safety of the open sea, the morale of the land forces was severely damaged. |
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I know from experience the difference a few games undefeated can make to morale in the camp. |
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An inability to act on instructions from the skip can be damaging to team morale, and can be the foundation of doubt and dissension. |
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Accordingly, troop morale attracted the detailed attention of military and medical authorities. |
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An employee at the company says staff morale is low due to the lack of job certainty in the future. |
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Former servicemen and women in Colchester have helped boost the morale of British troops fighting in the Gulf. |
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Earlier this year there were claims that discipline had slipped and staff morale was at rock bottom. |
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They clearly are a team in a need of a win just to boost morale for the second half of the season. |
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He said that despite hostile desert conditions, morale among the servicemen was high. |
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Workers will be more productive, cooperative, flexible and their morale higher without unions. |
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Dining arrangements also contributed to the morale of the seasonal work force. |
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Support and guidance from managers is regarded as good, but over a third say morale at work is not good. |
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The general morale among young people in this country is so low at the moment it is no wonder there are so many problems. |
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We must focus on boosting workforce morale, and improving workers' happiness and job security. |
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Patients were losing confidence in our services, and staff morale was threatened. |
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The morale of the team was high following their win at the same venue a couple of weeks ago. |
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Your letters did much to boost his morale and lift his spirits. |
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We even conducted sessions on motivation and morale boosting. |
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To his credit, Gunn keeps up his morale with witty rejoinders. |
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James brought little in the way of survival skills, but his companionship at night raised the team morale. |
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From the fall of France in May 1940 the role of the RAF was essentially defensive, save for raids on enemy airfields and occasional bombing attacks to boost morale. |
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Thirdly, the utter chaos of one daily delivery as the public clamours for an early service, not an afternoon delivery, causes friction and further saps staff morale. |
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Potential changes also need to consider the impact that invasive security measures would have on morale. |
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But the U.S. Army is stretched so thin that it's continually extending the tours of duty of soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan, and morale is suffering. |
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Nonetheless, at a time when health care organizations are under intense pressure to do more with less, employee morale is one of management's topmost concerns. |
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That announcement dealt a huge blow to our morale internally and to the case that we made to minority voters externally. |
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Itani told me that news of the letter was awful for the morale of the opposition forces. |
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There is also the possibility, which in the nature of things must remain shadowy, that military propagandists fostered the rumours as a way of boosting morale. |
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Detroiters, now erecting a Robocop statue as a half-joking, half-serious morale boost, may want to consider bronzing Mulally next. |
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After all, football had been hugely important for morale during the war. |
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Even though morale on the show was said to be low, Chanel, the fired announcer, has no hard feelings. |
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Unsurprisingly, morale was low and normal etiquette went up in smoke. |
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Given the level of morale and team spirit in the camp at the moment, it would be no surprise if the winning run is extended all the way to headquarters. |
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The morale of the army only reflected that of the country as a whole. |
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The Government announces higher pay scales to encourage recruitment and bolster morale, yet doesn't mention that schools are expected to foot much of the bill. |
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Sometimes, moreover, the backstage discussions that occur in public bathrooms are at least partially concerned with a team member's morale or that of the entire team. |
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The crew's morale bottomed out when the Wave Warrior hit the Doldrums, an area near the equator that is notorious for its calms and its light, shifting winds. |
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The results reflected the change that has come over Indian morale and training since the grim days of 1962, when the Chinese walked all over them. |
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Creatively, this adds a heightened amount of tension to the timed face-off, as a win crushes the morale of your foes, while a loss ends your game immediately. |
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Changes to pension schemes are very damaging for staff morale and given much greater employer awareness, could also lead to deteriorating industrial relations. |
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Wert makes his most intriguing assessment in describing the morale and attitudes of the common soldier who filled the ranks of the Army of the Potomac. |
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It is part of the function of establishing high morale within the school. |
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A Thanksgiving Day morale booster for federal air marshals has instead turned into possible pink slips for air cops who ignore their strict dress code. |
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They have drunk the Kool-Aid, and few companies have morale as high, employees as driven, or customers as loyal and growing. |
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There is room for improvement to morale and community spirit in the town. |
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The tragic loss of this extraordinary young man will seem a heavy blow to our nation's morale, as it is surely a grievous injury to his loved ones. |
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The disastrously negative effects on investors ' morale cannot be denied. |
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Haven't you seen that kind of locker-room talk bolster morale? |
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The arrival of my family, friends and colleagues for the send-off was a huge boost to my morale and I am very grateful that they had all made such an effort to be here. |
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Like Grandma, the two guerrillas had taken revolutionary names to bolster their morale and, in the advent of capture, to shield their villages and families from reprisals. |
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Ukraine dropped three points and probably suffered a blow to their morale. |
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In any case, he adds, a good employer, for the sake of employee morale, is going to want to at least show willing and give your request a fair hearing. |
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Soldiers in combat units report that being sent to a combat zone improves morale, and the possibility that they will re-enlist, despite the danger. |
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The loan of a USN helicopter for combat search and rescue duties in place of the obsolete Sea Otter biplane flying boat had an outstanding effect on aircrew morale. |
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People feel it is a real plus to develop personally while climbing the corporate ladder, and this policy of making training available has helped build employee morale and longevity. |
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That Redstone rocket was meant to boost American morale after the Soviets launched sputnik. |
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With the Pentagon concerned about fatigue and morale, a lost piece of valuable property is the last thing these families need. |
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He required a replay to despatch his lowly opponent in the previous round, and all the blabber about plummeting morale and squad antagonism is surely not helping their cause. |
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Unable to buy supplies, military commanders resorted to impressment of food and animals, undermining civilian morale and burdening farmers nearest the troops. |
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None of these cost much or had much relevance but collectively, in a period where morale was weak, they were silly, petty little annoyances that were easy to avoid. |
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It is alive to the need for strong internal morale and discipline. |
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The cardinal's ecclesiastical leadership also helped to engender a renewed sense of religious devotion within the army, raising spirits and morale. |
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While the initial goal of the war bond campaign was to finance the war, the positive impact on the morale of Americans was perhaps its greatest accomplishment. |
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Although the marshy terrain minimized casualties, the morale of the Jacobites began to suffer. |
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Unifying various states into one nation required more than some military victories, however much these might have boosted morale. |
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Such a surprise attack would either produce a devastating effect on morale, or force him to weaken his main battle line. |
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I have seen first-hand the damage this controversy has done to morale within the Rehab group. |
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Nevertheless, morale was boosted by events such as the marriage of Princess Elizabeth in 1947 and the Festival of Britain. |
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Firefighters said morale was low after selectmen went for a couple of months without reappointing the board. |
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Popular support wavered, morale ebbed away, and Congress abandoned Philadelphia. |
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The decisive victory rescued the army's flagging morale, and gave a new hope to the cause for independence. |
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The two armies fought at Monmouth Court House on June 28, with the Americans holding the field, greatly boosting morale and confidence. |
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It also has a huge effect on those staff left behind, creating poor morale, problems with retainment, and reduced output. |
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The education community is effectively divided, its esprit de corps and morale conquered. |
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With morale at an all-time low at the Castel-owned offie, it certainly can't come a minute too soon. |
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His Highness praised the team's excellent performance, high sports morale, willower and persistence to meritoriously win the title. |
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Starbucks also faces slumping morale and employee burnout among its store managers and its once-cheery army of baristos. |
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We shall harry the enemy at every turn until his morale breaks and he is at our mercy. |
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She raised the morale of the troops, and they attacked the English redoubts, forcing the English to lift the siege. |
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The Luftwaffe ravaged British cities during The Blitz, but failed to break British morale. |
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It could be claimed civilians were not to be targeted directly, but the breakdown of production would affect their morale and will to fight. |
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Still, at Southampton, attacks were so effective morale did give way briefly with civilian authorities leading people en masse out of the city. |
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Although official German air doctrine did target civilian morale, it did not espouse the attacking of civilians directly. |
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These attacks produced some breaks in morale, with civil leaders fleeing the cities before the offensive reached its height. |
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Minister of Home Security Herbert Morrison was also worried morale was breaking, noting the defeatism expressed by civilians. |
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Operations against London up until May 1941 could also have a severe impact on morale. |
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Aviation strategists dispute that morale was ever a major consideration for Bomber Command. |
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The first three directives in 1940 did not mention civilian populations or morale in any way. |
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However, the humiliation of the Suez Crisis of 1956 badly hurt morale of Britain and the Commonwealth as a whole. |
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Judith is depicted as an exemplar woman, grounded by ideal morale, probity, courage, and religious conviction. |
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Discriminatory and sexual harassment erode the morale and the integrity of our workplace, and undermine the activities of the Department. |
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During the continent's struggle against colonial rule, nationalistic songs boosted citizens' morale. |
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Large sections of the fans began to question the coach's ability and as a result crowds began to dwindle and morale was beginning to suffer. |
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This marked the end of Richard's crusading career and was a calamitous blow to Frankish morale. |
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Success in single ship battles raised American morale after the repeated failed invasion attempts in Upper and Lower Canada. |
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Washington entered winter quarters at Morristown, New Jersey, having given a morale boost to the American cause. |
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Although the battle was a tactical draw, it gave a great boost to French morale. |
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In an effort to destroy German morale, many sorties were intentionally given civilian targets. |
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Intensified air attacks against shipping and the economy could affect food supplies and civilian morale in the long term. |
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Reprisal attacks of terror bombing had the potential to cause quicker capitulation, but the effect on morale was uncertain. |
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These gave crews practice in navigation and avoiding air defences, and set off air raid alarms which disturbed civilian morale. |
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British morale was to be broken by destroying infrastructure, armaments manufacturing, fuel and food stocks. |
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According to the General Medical Council, many doctors experience low morale which can put patients at risk. |
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The Iraqi army suffered from poor morale, even amongst the elite Republican Guard. |
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Meanwhile, the long British naval blockade of French ports had sapped the morale of the French populace. |
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The arrival of British soldiers boosted morale in the country, and many foreign citizens opted to stay. |
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He expected that the losses would cause enemy morale to drop and the British assault to stall. |
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He helped boost public morale during the war by extensive concert tours around the country conducting for nominal fees. |
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Sikhs warned the British government that the morale of Sikh troops in the British Army would be affected if Pakistan was forced on them. |
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The contest of strength is not only a contest of military and economic power, but also a contest of human power and morale. |
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The raid, although a morale boosting victory in Britain, was also claimed as a victory in Germany. |
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To raise morale following the blitz, the King and Queen as well as the prime minister, Winston Churchill, visited Swansea. |
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The cathedral must be saved, he said, damage to the fabric would sap the morale of the country. |
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It was a fast, pulse-jet powered pilotless aircraft aimed at London and intended to destroy civilian morale. |
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Nelson knew that the superior seamanship, faster gunnery and better morale of his crews were great advantages. |
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The morale of the troops of the 55th Infantry Division further back was broken by the air attacks and French gunners had fled. |
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Certainly the Territorial divisions are inferior to the Regular troops in training, but where morale is concerned they are their equal. |
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Reprisal attacks of terror bombing had the potential to cause quicker capitulation but the effect on morale was uncertain. |
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Despite initial heavy losses in the assault phase, Allied morale remained high. |
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Agamemnon heeds the dream but decides to first test the Greek army's morale, by telling them to go home. |
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The French inability to counter this had led to a collapse in morale among French seamen and the wider population. |
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A few effective artillery hits would stop the charging warriors and destroy morale because of the noise and carnage. |
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Yet the hereditary military continued to be inefficient and to suffer from poor morale. |
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The victories gave an important boost to Patriots at a time when morale was flagging, and have become iconic events of the war. |
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American defeats at the Siege of Detroit and the Battle of Queenston Heights thwarted attempts to seize Upper Canada, improving British morale. |
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He did this with the hope of cultivating the best possible morale in his army for the upcoming campaign, which he knew was going to be difficult. |
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Stokker reports that hostile humour against the Germans helped maintain morale and build a wall against collaboration. |
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Bottom club Southport Trinity failed to build on their morale boosting win over St Helens Recs as they lost to Newton le Willows by six wickets. |
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I am here to correct and calibrate your morale compasses to true north. |
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His acting flag captain, Egbert Bartholomeusz Kortenaer, on the Brederode kept up fleet morale by not lowering Tromp's standard, pretending Tromp was still alive. |
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Felmy was convinced that Britain could be defeated through morale bombing. |
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Some writers claim the Air Staff ignored a critical lesson, that British morale did not break and that attacking German morale was not sufficient to induce a collapse. |
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My mates and I wrote to The Mirror asking for penpals and we must have received about 300 replies, which was fantastic and really boosted our morale. |
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She says education stiflers when there is high turnover and low morale. |
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The aerial bombing was now principally aimed at the destruction of industrial targets, but also continued with the objective of breaking the morale of the civilian population. |
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For all the destruction of life and property, the observers sent out by the Ministry of Home Security failed to discover the slightest sign of a break in morale. |
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The relocation of the government and the civil service was also planned but would only have occurred if necessary so as not to damage civilian morale. |
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Historians such as Adams and Horrox believe that Richard lost the battle not for any mythic reasons, but because of morale and loyalty problems in his army. |
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Richard knew that both Philip and his own brother John were starting to plot against him, and the morale of Saladin's army had been badly eroded by repeated defeats. |
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With the loss of Llywelyn, Welsh morale and the will to resist diminished. |
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The operation lifted Mujahidin pride and morale countrywide. |
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I now have several penfriends who suffer from depression and I try to use my experience to boost their morale and low self-esteem, which is often a reason for their problem. |
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However, when retreating from Kosovo after NATO intervention, Yugoslav units appeared combat effective with high morale and displaying large holdings of undamaged equipment. |
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This show, set just before the outbreak of the Second World War, reveals the vital role the WI played in keeping communities together and boosting morale on the Home Front. |
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In the final Battle of Scheveningen on 10 August 1653 Tromp was killed, a blow to Dutch morale, but the English had to end their blockade of the Dutch coast. |
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According to him, the long debate over the last two years about whether there should be a zero option in Afghanistan had led to improved morale for al-Qaida and others. |
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The checkpoints provide an opportunity for RMR staff to assess the fitness, progress and morale of each team, ensuring their safety throughout the competition. |
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Little material damage was done to the Second Army but morale collapsed. |
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By the end of the First Battle of Ypres both sides were exhausted, short of ammunition and suffering from collapses in morale and refusals of orders by some infantry units. |
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Due to wartime censorship and the desire to keep up British morale, the full extent of the unfolding disaster at Dunkirk was not initially publicised. |
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Call it a morale killer, a disruptor, a delayer, an imbroglio. |
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The raid had the added objectives of boosting morale and demonstrating the firm commitment of the United Kingdom to open a western front in Europe. |
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In 1944, the popular German film actress Lil Dagover arrived to entertain German troops in Jersey and Guernsey with a theatre tour to boost morale. |
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The victories proved instrumental in convincing the French and Spanish that the Americans were worthwhile allies, as well as recovering morale in the army. |
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The morale of both civilians and soldiers continued to sink. |
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As Chef Nydia debarks toward her next training responsibility, she has left in her wake an impact on the morale and palates of Monterey's crew not to be forgotten. |
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The 10th directive in October 1940 mentioned morale by name but industrial cities were only to be targeted if weather prevented raids on oil targets. |
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