stratton in A Sentence

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    Dr. Claire Stratton.

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    In 1989, he ran his own investment operation, Stratton Oakmont.

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    He was running his own investment operation, Stratton Oakmont, by 1989.

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    He was running his own investment operation, Stratton Oakmont, in 1989.

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    Stratton noted that the blind did have a sense of space.

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    Two years later, he created Stratton Oakmont, his own investment company.

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    Two years later, Belfort was operating his own trading company, Stratton Oakmont.

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    Briggs & Stratton, Tecumseh, Kohler, Robin, and Honda are manufacturers of such engines.

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    This got Stratton thinking about how exactly a person could game the music delivery systems in place today, specifically Spotify.

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    In the United States, Dirt oval classes(which often use Briggs & Stratton industrial engines) are prominent in the Southeast and Midwest.

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    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission sought to end Stratton Oakmont's shady stock operation in 1992, claiming that the company had defrauded investors and manipulated stock prices.

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    Barnum and the 25-inch(64 cm) tall General Tom Thumb(Charles Sherwood Stratton) visited Stamford in 1846 and donated one of Thumb's costumes to Dixon to be displayed alongside Lambert's.

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    According to Stratton, the band had received hundreds of requests to play concerts around the states, but simply couldn't due to lack of funds, as is the case for many non-mainstream musicians.

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    With this figure in mind, Stratton then scoured through Spotify's terms and conditions and found that the service defined a“play” as a user listening to a single song for more than 30 seconds.

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    The National Association of Securities Dealers ejected Stratton Oakmont from its association in 1996, and the company was ordered to be liquidated to pay off its numerous fines and settlements the following year.

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    It recounts Belfort's perspective on his career as a stockbroker in New York City and how his firm Stratton Oakmont engaged in rampant corruption and fraud on Wall Street that ultimately led to his downfall.

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    Stratton later recalled that Fair was oddly proud of the fact that consumers would have to pay around $18 to listen to that single hit, remarking that Fair referred to it as“a big win”.

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    With this goal in mind, Stratton logged on to, to quote him, the band's“Spotify thing” and attempted to calculate exactly how much money they were making from each play of one of their songs.

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    Stratton notes that he was especially intrigued when he learned that one of Fair's most popular songs, a cover of“Lady Marmalade” he produced for the Moulin Rouge soundtrack, could only legally be obtained at the time if a person purchased the film's full soundtrack.

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    When later asked about how the band would describe the album- whether or not they thought it challenged the normalised criteria for what“music” is and whether or not it was a statement about the current state of the music industry, Stratton quipped,“I see it as an art piece- or something.”.

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    Other examples of major corporate expansions and relocations in progress in the cities on this list include a $1 billion investment in a new battery plant at the Mercedes Benz production facility in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, a new Briggs & Stratton engine production facility in Auburn, Alabama, and a $1 billion Fiat Chrysler factory in Warren, Michigan.

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