Word: output
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...loss spoiled a tremendous effort from co-captain Katie Shaughnessy, who scored four goals and added an assist against Stanford. It was her highest scoring output since she notched seven goals against Columbia last year...
...perfect center in which to showcase "great writing with Asian roots," a category that can include just about anything with a gloss of soy sauce: expats writing Asia-based historical fiction, hyphenated Asians getting back to their roots, nonfiction writers discovering the region. Not to mention the proliferating literary output from the other side of the border with mainland China. Asian books are hot in the literary capitals of New York and London, and regional publishers are priming their presses for local authors. "It's all getting up to an international standard," says Vittachi. If Hong Kong can't produce...
THEY CAME TOGETHER Time has reduced the Fab Four to a dynamic duo, but the BEATLES still have a healthy output. A DVD to be released next month will include an hour of never-before-seen footage from a 1994 jam session with Paul, Ringo and George. Paul, the Beatle formerly known as the Cute One, has just announced his first tour in Britain in 10 years, and police in Australia have found two reels of Beatles tape stolen from the Abbey Road studios 35 years ago. The tape is believed to be from the White Album sessions. Maybe...
...such devastating results are predictable under these policies. In the first decade of Communism, Russia reversed from being the world’s largest grain exporter to the largest importer. Output plunged such that 7 million Russians starved while another 10 million were narrowly saved by Western donations. Similar mass starvation followed socialized “land reforms” in Eastern Europe, China and post-colonial Africa...
...price of uranium has crept back to more than $10 a lb. from its all-time, inflation-adjusted low of $7.10 at the end of 2000. Demand for uranium has risen steadily over the past decade, as stockpiles have dwindled and nuclear-power plants have increased their output. The U.S. nuclear-power industry generated a record 778 billion kW-h in 2002. That year marked the third consecutive all-time annual high, and experts estimate that 2003 will continue the streak...