Word: foreshadowing
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Administration reaction to the spurt was mixed. Treasury Secretary William Simon, an inveterate Cassandra, warned that "inflationary pressures remain a serious and continuing problem." White House Economic Adviser Alan Greenspan more optimistically told the Congressional Joint Economic Committee that the June rise does not foreshadow "a new burst of inflation," but conceded that it does mean the U.S. will have to settle for a "base rate of inflation" higher than 3% to 4%. One reason that price boosts may not continue at the June pace: meat prices have leveled off in recent weeks as larger supplies of beef have begun...
...fictional characters participate in real history. In ways both fantastic and poetically convincing, the members of a suburban upper-middle-class family combine and change in the undertow of events. As if Clarence Day had written Future Shock into Life with Father, Doctorow's images and improvisations foreshadow the 20th century's coming preoccupation with scandal, psychoanalysis, solipsism, race, technological power and megalomania...
...indicators that traditionally foreshadow an economic recovery, few have been more doggedly consistent this year than the stock market. For nearly six months, prices on Wall Street have climbed steadily higher, higher, higher as investors have shifted more and more cash into the market in anticipation of a brisk business upturn later in the year. Last week this confidence helped propel the Dow Jones industrial average up another 17.68 points, to a new 1975 high of 873.12. While that is still well below the Dow's alltime peak of 1051.7 in 1973, it nonetheless represents a hefty 50% rise...
...Mount Baker is now venting several thousand pounds of sulfurous gases and debris every hour. Right below the mountain's summit, the 1,600-ft.-wide crater is so thick with fumes that geologists can enter only with gas masks. Does this spectacular activity foreshadow the first major eruption in the lower U.S. in a half-century? U.S. Geological Survey scientists refuse to speculate. "Some volcanoes erupt with hardly any warning," explains Geologist Mark F. Meier. "Others puff for a while, then fade back to obscurity...
Setting the Stage. The Bell action does not foreshadow a broad antitrust drive against corporations in concentrated industries. Justice's hard-pressed, 370-member antitrust staff is scarcely able to handle the few big league cases it already has underway: the Bell case, the six-year-old suit to break up IBM, and investigations of price hikes by oil and sugar firms...