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Manufacturing activity rose and construction activity fell in recent months, according to new economic reports released Wednesday.The Commerce Department attributed a 0.9 percent construction decline in March to a sharp drop in spending on highways, hospitals, schools and other big government projects.The decline came after construction spending rose 0.7 percent in February. The March performance was weaker than analysts expected; they were forecasting a 0.2 percent dip.However, Apr
stanley mug il was the third straight month of manufacturing growth, but at a slower rate than the previous month, an industry group reported. The Tempe, Ariz.-based Institute for Supply Management ISM said its index of business activity dipped to 53.9 in April from a revised 55.6 percent in March. Analysts had been expecting a reading of 55.0.Even
stanley thermos with the drop, the level of construction spending mdash; an annual rate of $874 billion mdash; was still considered healthy. Economists were expecting construction activity to edge down with the return of colder weather in March. Mild weather helped bolster construction activity in January and February. Because an index ove
stanley cup r 50 signifies growth in manufacturing, April s manufacturing activity figure indicates continued expansion in the sector, although at a slower rate than in March. The overall picture shows growth in manufacturing activity during April and a good beginning for the second quarter, said Norbert J. Ore, chairman of the ISM.The ISM measure Sdyt The Future of Downtown Vegas Is Somewhere in Tony Hsieh s Apartment
Newspapers may be dying, and television may be turning science into Megalodon specials, but there is one place where stories about science are exploding: on the web. MIT science journalism professor Tom Levinson has a terrific essay explaining why it a great time to be reading about science online. In this excerpt, Levinson talks about the wealth of new and expanding online publications for people who want to learn about science: I do not believe there has been a better time
stanley website to be a science reader. Ever. [In an] earlier post, I focused on a couple of fine articles turning up in one of the new venues for long-form science writing, London-based Aeon Magazine. Aeon is in some ways simply a digital expression of a conventional media type. It publishes essays and features, nicely illustrated with a bit of flat art, just like a magazine on dead trees. But even with that utterly familiar genre focus, there is still this crucial difference: that Aeon is an all-digital production means that it has no constraint either as to the overall length of the pieces it publishes, or to a need to cram its pieces into set frames, one page in the magazine for a short, say, and five for a full length feature. The news hole is what it wants to be for each and every article it chooses to put out into the world. This sounds like a small thing, or may
stanley cup be just an obvious one 鈥?but it sets up a radically different writing framework than the one that I and my friends and co
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