Monday, April 7, 2014

Job Reports

An employee works on the automated teller machine production line at the Diebold Inc. manufacturing facility in Greensboro, North Carolina.
Domm, Patti.
"March Jobs Report Proves a Just-Right Mix."
 Photograph. CNBC. 
Thomson Reuters, nd. Web.
4 Apr. 2014.
<
http://www.cnbc.com/id/101555078>.
This article is about the jobs in March, and talking about how they increased hiring people. They also want to maintain the Fed as it is, not decrease it or increase it. They also said that "payrolls for March totaled 192,000, slightly below 200,000 forecast, and the unemployment rate was 6.7 percent, above the expected 6.6 percent" (March Jobs Report Proves a Just-Right Mix). 

I can connect to this news article by my civics and economics history class I had in my school. Since this article deals with the money and hiring people, I'd put this under economics. They also talk about increasing hiring but to make sure they don't decrease their Fed, which in economic and history we can learn and see that; back then it was similar for all the companies and factories or industries.

My reaction to this was happy and surprised that people now can get jobs there. Also its really fascinating about the payrolls and the unemployment rate. If I were an adult and needed a job I would totally agree in trying to get a job there.

What is the impact of using [quotations]? The impact in using quotations is to show that someone else is saying it. For example, "It only meets expectations. It wasn't like a blow-out number," said Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at Wells Capital Management" (March Jobs Report Proves a Just-Right Mix). By these quotations we can tell the difference in the narrator and the person that states something about the subject. Quotations are normally always separated from the text by a comma for example, "This kind of confirms their view that it was more weather than anything else," said John Canally, investment strategist and economist with LPL Financial" (March Jobs Report Proves a Just-Right Mix).


Domm, Patti. "March Jobs Report Proves a Just-Right Mix." CNBC. Thomson Reuters, nd. Web. 4 Apr. 2014. <http://www.cnbc.com/id/101555078>.

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