Word: rebounds
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...play started with a hard shot from the slot which Danis turned aside. Having already logged a high portion of the game’s 85 minutes, most of the skaters on both sides were sluggish; Moore was not. He collected the rebound that Danis could not hold and skated around behind the net, emerging on the other side to fire another shot towards the Brown goalie. Again Danis blocked Moore’s shot, but again he failed to collect the loose puck. Moore scooped it up once again, circled the net a second time, and emerged to wrist...
...argues, has led to extensive corporate cost cutting and downward wage pressures that will abate as the economy revives. "When demand goes up, wages will follow," Bush says. No doubt faster growth, when it comes, will help boost employment and stabilize pay. But it is unlikely that wages will rebound quickly. The world has changed. The spread of technology and skills, of Internet communication and cheap shipping, means that today more U.S. firms must compete against foreign rivals that are more formidable than ever. And this requires holding down wages...
...says Steve Cullen, director of semiconductor research at In-Stat/MDR, a Scottsdale, Arizona-based technology research group. Indeed, some tech heavyweights are coming out of the closet to say that the worst is over. Executives of Intel, the world's biggest chipmaker, demonstrated guarded optimism about a tech rebound. "The thing we are really waiting for is an enterprise commitment to upgrade," said Intel chief financial officer Andy Bryant recently. It's not surprising that he sees it that way, since computers and servers used in businesses and telecommunications networks traditionally drive chip growth. This time around, consumer sales...
...doubles, the standout pair of Bergman and Lingman will attempt to rebound from a stinging 8-2 loss to Brown’s No. 20 doubles team...
Even optimists agree that hiring will not rebound strongly before 2004. In the first quarter, job searchers needed 4.2 months to find work, the longest average stretch since 1986. Without job creation, it's not really a recovery. On the plus side, the work force has been cut about as far as possible, and those with jobs are doing pretty well. Wages are growing 3.4% a year, thanks partly to productivity gains, estimated to be 2% this year. Jobs always return after a lag--and this time will be no exception. --With reporting by Jay Carney and Adam Zagorin/Washington...