Word: flatted
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Consumers just aren't showing up, we're going to see flat sales next year [relative to the last half of 2008] and we're not going to see improvement until 2010," said Jesse Torpak, an analyst with Edmunds.com, which tracks auto sales data...
...repair this economy if you can’t repair those families, and I’m not sure the people directing the bailout see that as their job,” she said in the article. Warren did not return requests for further comment yesterday. She said that flat wages, low savings, and high debt have left American households in financial limbo over the past few years. Warren, who was appointed to the four-member oversight committee by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, said that asking the right questions will be crucial to moving the economy...
...sales decrease ever." For the first 23 days of November, holiday online spending reached $8.2 billion, a 4% decline compared with the corresponding days last year, when online sales hit $8.5 billion, according to the online-marketing research firm comScore. The firm predicts that online-shopping growth will be flat for November and December - significantly lower than 2007's growth rate of 19% and below the retail e-commerce growth rate of 9% year to date in 2008. "I don't know that this is the only prediction to go by," says Ried, noting that other firms like Forrester Research...
...lead in shots and showed aggressive offensive play. The attack won Minnesota the first goal when Gopher Brittany Francis beat Harvard junior goaltender Christina Kessler with 14:40 to go in the period.“In the second [game], I think that we came out a little flat in the first, but definitely picked it up in the second and third periods,” Kessler said.The Crimson shined in the second period. At 13:09, tri-captain Sarah Vaillancourt grabbed the puck and made an unassisted slick shot beneath Gopher goalkeeper Jenny Lura’s skate, straight...
...engineering, the number of degrees awarded to women also grew at a faster rate than the number awarded to men. But the most drastic difference between the genders was in the humanities: awards to women in these fields grew by 7 percent since 2003, while awards to men remained flat. Jaquelina C. Falkenheim, a co-author of the report, said in an interview yesterday that the “numbers for women have been going up—this is a new time trend that should be watched.” At Harvard, the picture is more mixed. Asian women...