Word: torrents
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Securities trading became one of the greatest growth industries. On the Big Board, the year's volume jumped 20% to a tape-taxing record of nearly 3 billion shares. The torrent swamped securities-delivery channels, spurring belated efforts to computerize archaic clerical procedures. All the trading also lifted Wall Street profits to a level that even Big Board officials consider embarrassing. Brokerage commissions reached about $5 billion, and some top customers' men earned as much as $500,000 each. Prodded by the Securities and Exchange Commission, the New York Stock Exchange cut commissions by 7% on orders...
FLASH! Elvis is back! Oh wow! Yank those beers out of the mother icebox. The man, the MAN, the whole cause of everything. He's on the tube, can you believe, singing in a torrent of sweat in a black leather suit--no, wait, it's a high-roll collar dealie, and can you dig his pants? Heartbreak Hotel? Raunchy as ever? Hound Dog? It's too good to be true! That quiver that makes girls moan from their stomachs made me shriek at the top of my lungs: "Elvis, Elvis, you son of a bitch, you are the KING...
...search for Croesus' refinery began when Andrew Ramage, one of the Harvardmen on the expedition, noticed some oddly similar circular depressions in a clay floor near the site of a shrine built to Cybele, the goddess who protected ores and metals. Not far off was the Pactolus Torrent, which once was noted for its gold-rich sands. Moreover, slag similar to that produced in metal smelting rimmed the edges of the depressions. Ramage and his colleagues soon realized that they had stumbled on an ore refinery...
Your force came on like a torrent toward...
...argue that higher income taxes will shortly begin to quell the consumer buying spree that has kept the U.S. economy humming. As evidence that there is little real steam behind the market surge, they cite the fact that trading volume on the Big Board has slipped below its spring torrent. The bulls point to such rosy predictions as last week's forecast by the National Association of Business Economists that the economy faces only a "brief hesitation late this year and early in 1969." Moreover, say the bulls, so much money is pouring into the coffers of institutional investors...