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1. Treble, John Worker absenteeism and sick pay

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 16537984
2. Jones, Dallas L. (Dallas Lee), 1920-2010 Reducing worker absenteeism

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 423535
3. United States. Office of War Information. Thanksgiving, 1942. Cooperation in industry. America's employees and employers throughout the country answered the call for more production for victory by setting up 1,650 labor-management councils, representing more than 3,200,000 workers. These committees concentrate their united energies on improving production, speeding operations, reducing absenteeism, and eliminating waste. Here, a labor-management committee of the Anthracite industry in Pennsylvania confers on the ways and means of increasing production in the mines

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19639805
4. Palmer, Alfred T. Absentee posters. How absenteeism helps the Axis is dramatically presented to the workers of the Nordberg Manufacturing Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in this display outside the company's plant

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19639565
5. United States. Office of War Information. No absenteeism here. Knoxville, Tennessee. As he threw the switch that started the first generators of Tenessee Valley Authority's (TVA) Douglas Dam, a vital war power-production unit, Patrick P. Marshall, steam-fitter, said: "I realized that any day I was absent was a day given to the enemy." Marshall had been on the job for 374 consecutive workdays. He was chosen among eighteen workers, all of whom never missed a day of work on Douglas, to speak for the employees. He is shown here being congratulated by W.L. Batt, War Production Board (WPB) vice-chairman, on the completion of a job that is making aluminum for bombers ahead of schedule

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19642225
6. Thanksgiving, 1942. Cooperation in industry. America's employees and employers throughout the country answered the call for more production for victory by setting up 1,650 labor-management councils, representing more than 3,200,000 workers. These committees concentrate their united energies on improving production, speeding operations, reducing absenteeism, and eliminating waste. Here, a labor-management committee of the Anthracite industry in Pennsylvania confers on the ways and means of increasing production in the mines

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19639805
7. Palmer, Alfred T. Absentee posters. How absenteeism helps the Axis is dramatically presented to the workers of the Nordberg Manufacturing Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in this display outside the company's plant

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19639565
8. No absenteeism here. Knoxville, Tennessee. As he threw the switch that started the first generators of Tenessee Valley Authority's (TVA) Douglas Dam, a vital war power-production unit, Patrick P. Marshall, steam-fitter, said: "I realized that any day I was absent was a day given to the enemy." Marshall had been on the job for 374 consecutive workdays. He was chosen among eighteen workers, all of whom never missed a day of work on Douglas, to speak for the employees. He is shown here being congratulated by W.L. Batt, War Production Board (WPB) vice-chairman, on the completion of a job that is making aluminum for bombers ahead of schedule

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19642225
9. Reducing worker absenteeism

BIBFRAME Works
Work
Text
Monograph
423535
10. Treble, John Worker absenteeism and sick pay

BIBFRAME Works
Work
Text
Monograph
16537984


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