I was expecting you to be top 10, although you haven't performed overly well yet barring the more
obvious headline results.
What could be a
bad headline result for Labour in a batch of seats they only just missed out on in 2010 could be an excellent one in a batch of target seats they need for an overall majority.
In California and North Carolina, state officials
reporting headline results lumped together groups of students who either passed or nearly passed the tests.
«A lot of firms published
positive headline results over the summer so it will be interesting to see what the verified accounts say during analysis over the coming months.
The headline result was up 5.9 per cent, adjusted for the timing of Easter, which fell in the third quarter of fiscal 2013 but will push into the fourth quarter.
Leaving aside your counterintuitive choice of target, you are a seasoned media player: you could have predicted in advance
the headlines resulting from your action, that they would feature your name prominently, and the other activists with you would be ignored; that the majority of the press would use it as an excuse to criticise Corbyn (again) and that Syria would be mentioned only in passing.
But behind
those headline results, the Lib Dems have piled on a lot of votes compared to 2013 - a near - eight point gap has become a two point gap.
The headline results are already solidly familiar.
That charmed fusion was the first reaction of particles on this scale ever found to emit energy in this way, and is
the headline result of the new study, published Nov. 1 in the journal Nature.
Beyond
that headline result, the data from this sting operation reveal the contours of an emerging Wild West in academic publishing.
And, if one looks beyond
the headline results, the detailed findings of the Career Academy raise a number of important questions about the mechanisms, and thus generalizability, of the impacts.
Cardiff - based examining board WJEC issued
the headline results on Tuesday, and it is believed students will get them on Wednesday morning.
Governors are sometimes briefed on likely Progress 8 scores for a year group, guiding them on whether this year's
headline results are likely to be up or down on the last.
I haven't had a chance to read through the full results yet, having just glanced at
the headline results, but this is an example of a classic situation I try to take advantage of... Big Lots has been appearing on the 52 week low list (a -LSB-...]
Given these considerations, we would argue that coastal homeowners, insurers, the re-insurance industry, and every other potential stakeholder in this debate would be wise not to take false comfort from the notion (which
the headlines resulting from this paper will inevitably feed) that climate change poses no future Atlantic hurricane threat.
This is in stark contrast to
the headline result.
Yes, it's true that the latest numbers are an improvement over a similar survey four years ago (which was also roughly in line with Gallup at the time, showing that 52 percent of respondents agree that humans are at least half - responsible for climate change), but
the headline result these reports picked up on — that 96 percent of respondents think climate change is happening — is moot.
The headline result is that 16 % of American adults, about 39 - million people, now own a smart speaker.