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UF Economists: Florida Consumer Confidence Dips Slightly

GAINESVILLE — Consumer confidence in Florida lost one point in June from the previous month, reflecting doubts about personal finances and the national economy, University of Florida economists report.

Filed under Research, Business, Florida on Wednesday, June 30, 1999.

UF Study Shows Despite Ads, Cities Catch The ‘Net While Small Towns Lag

GAINESVILLE — Even as the hype portrays the Internet as a tool that will level the economic playing fields for big cities and small towns, the virtual reality is that a few select cities will get the lion’s share of the information action, a new University of Florida study finds.

Filed under Research, Business, Technology, Sciences on Monday, June 28, 1999.

UF Report: Three Florida Metro Areas’ Per Capita Income Rank In Top 20

GAINESVILLE —Three South Florida coastal metro areas rank in the top 20 nationally in per capita personal income, while the state’s poorest individuals tend to reside in more remote northern counties, according to the latest report on income released today by University of Florida economists.

Filed under Research, Business, Florida on Friday, June 25, 1999.

UF Researcher’s New Geographic Technology Can Eliminate Urban Decay

GAINESVILLE — A new geographic market analysis technique that forecasts demand for office space can replace huge white elephants with black ink for taxpayers, says a University of Florida researcher.

Filed under Research, Business, Technology, Architecture on Wednesday, June 16, 1999.

UF Researchers: Man-Made Wetlands Can Help Urban Farms Treat Runoff

GAINESVILLE — An environmentally friendly solution to farm runoff could help dairymen survive in an increasingly urban and regulation-filled world, say University of Florida researchers.

Filed under Research, Business, Environment, Florida, Agriculture on Wednesday, June 2, 1999.

UF Study: Graveyard Shift May Have Benefits For Shift Workers

GAINESVILLE — Graveyard shifts can be killers, but employees whose schedules include the wee hours actually stay alert and are more attentive on the day shift than other shift workers, a new University of Florida study finds.

Filed under Research, Health, Business on Tuesday, June 1, 1999.