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27 | 1 | The moles were just doing what comes naturally, planting a micromanagement time bomb in another massive piece of legislation | VERB | 8 |
28 | 0 | The Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Japan's leading business daily, reports that U.S. companies take an average of six months to a year to fill orders for Japanese buyers | VERB | 22 |
29 | 1 | Bush and Dukakis should be asked to clarify where they stand on this important distinction, for it's clear that the real work of fixing the schools will fall to local politicians and school boards | VERB | 23 |
30 | 0 | In case you missed it, this low- budget exploitation flick is one of the record 263 films that qualify for Academy Award nominations by virtue of the fact that they opened in 1987 and played for at least a week in Los Angeles | VERB | 3 |
31 | 0 | If Intelsat Director General Dean Burch can't strike a deal with Ford Aerospace and its major partners, Alcatel Espace of France and Mitsubishi Electric Co. of Japan, he will negotiate with a French aerospace company, Matra, an Intelsat spokesman said | VERB | 7 |
32 | 0 | More recently, Pablo Casals's widow lent him her husband's precious Goffriller cello for two years and the teen- ager played chamber music at Carnegie Hall with Isaac Stern, Yo- Yo Ma and other luminaries | VERB | 5 |
33 | 1 | Today's slogan: " The fever of war will not cool down while -LRB- Iraqi President -RRB- Saddam Hussein is in power.' | VERB | 9 |
34 | 0 | Leasing defers more of the profit from filled orders to the future, he said | VERB | 7 |
35 | 0 | Never mind that, with the weight of America's expectations riding on his mere four years' pro experience, he made crucial errors in the big game last year | VERB | 7 |
36 | 0 | Mr. Groner touches down at the Orlando airport at 5:54 a.m., and a dumpster- size container carrying our package is rolled onto a truck bound for a sorting center in Longwood, Fla | VERB | 2 |
37 | 1 | But then, when they sleep together for the first time, he wakes up in the morning with her lying next to him and he knows something strange is happening to him | VERB | 4 |
38 | 1 | " If it's successful, we'll roll out the concept elsewhere, " said Craig Kirsch, General Nutrition's chief financial officer | VERB | 5 |
39 | 0 | As late as Wednesday night, jets carrying signatures were still touching down at the airport in Brasilia, and motorcades were flowing into town | VERB | 10 |
40 | 1 | At Bobby's house she is forthright in saying she wants to sleep with him; why is she then accused of being devious | VERB | 11 |
41 | 0 | Although the office towers filled up quickly -LRB- they're still 96% occupied -RRB-, the tony stores -- including Cartier and Mark Cross -- foundered | VERB | 4 |
42 | 1 | Long renowned with East Germany for its relatively respectable economic performance, Czechoslovakia has lately been displaying worrying symptoms of the ills that have, in fact, long been eating away at its core | VERB | 27 |
43 | 0 | Despite the potential drawbacks, the networks are plowing ahead | VERB | 7 |
44 | 1 | Mr. Syiem says there are times when it rains heavily, day and night, for two weeks running | VERB | 8 |
45 | 1 | The beef market also has kicked up despite increased slaughterings of cattle that were expected to hold prices down | VERB | 5 |
46 | 1 | The insurance industry, facing mounting competition on several fronts, is undergoing a personnel and cost retrenchment such as those that have struck the securities and banking industries | VERB | 21 |
47 | 1 | The Tokyo Stock Exchange has twice this year raised margin requirements in an effort to cool the Tokyo market's sharp rally, but share prices have continued upward as the moves were widely viewed as, if anything, healthy and reassuring | VERB | 15 |
48 | 1 | Sometimes it stumbled | VERB | 2 |
49 | 1 | The new Clore- backed directors viewed their counterparts as stodgy pillars of the San Francisco establishment who failed to grasp KaiserTech's financial quandary | VERB | 19 |
50 | 0 | Mr. Parkin says that in 1982, he lent$ 13, 000 to Mr. Cohen, the Air Force official responsible for tactical air systems and a close friend of Mr. Galvin | VERB | 7 |
51 | 1 | Mostly, though, her technique rests on a meticulous sifting of every shred of testimony, searching for inconsistencies that may buy her client a better verdict | VERB | 4 |
52 | 0 | Despite the problem, the Daedalus is almost ready for its main mission: a recreation this spring of the flight of the mythological Greek inventor Daedalus, who escaped from prison on the island of Crete by making wax- and- feather wings and flying 70 miles to the mainland of Greece | VERB | 26 |
53 | 0 | Nearly all of this growth is in the developing countries of Africa, Asia and Latin America, which are least capable of absorbing it, the report said | VERB | 21 |
54 | 1 | They poured gasoline over the pile and set it on fire | VERB | 1 |
55 | 1 | EMPLOYEE LEASING was supposed to be killed, or at least maimed, by the Tax Reform Act of 1986 | VERB | 6 |
56 | 1 | Kubota Ltd., for example, has poured about$ 75 million into some of Silicon Valley's hottest companies, including MIPS Computer Systems and Ardent Computer | VERB | 5 |
57 | 0 | " Money does tend to flow into the best- performing funds rather than the bottom funds that are poised for recovery, " says Fidelity's Mr. Litvack | VERB | 5 |
58 | 1 | Soon it grew to include all sorts of folks: fashion fiends with shaved heads and leather jackets, artsy egghead New Wave types with angular guitars -LRB- Blondie, Television, Talking Heads -RRB- -- and especially bored teens with big boots who liked to get tanked up on cheap beer and kick the stuffings out of people who didn't agree with their neo- Nazi views | VERB | 49 |
59 | 0 | If the " done deal " is undone by one of the regulatory bodies, he expects back- up bidders to move in and has targeted a worstcase price of$ 22 a share | VERB | 24 |
60 | 0 | Indeed, thanks to a well- oiled political machine and skilled manipulation of Panamanian nationalism and class rivalries, Gen. Noriega may well remain in charge for months, even under withering pressure from the U.S | VERB | 28 |
61 | 0 | In the Challenger accident, hot gases escaping through motor seals ignited the shuttle's external fuel tank | VERB | 6 |
62 | 0 | The chief substitutes will likely be variations on this chemical structure but with less chlorine, the element thought to destroy atmospheric ozone | VERB | 19 |
63 | 0 | The missiles, which only on rare occasions are pointed skyward, rest obscurely behind a wire fence at the western edge of town | VERB | 10 |
64 | 1 | Friends say a 1975 auto crash that killed his wife and two children pushed Mr. Kiley deeper into his work and seared new priorities into his management approach | VERB | 7 |
65 | 1 | Many American industries suffer a comparative wage disadvantage vs. foreign competitors, but this single factor is hardly prima facie evidence that such companies should roll over and play dead | VERB | 24 |
66 | 0 | One person was killed -- an engineer on one of the trains | VERB | 3 |
67 | 0 | In spite of her wifely obligations -LRB- which ceased upon her official separation from Teddy in 1911, followed by divorce -RRB-, her wealth and social standing allowed her to go where she pleased, read what she liked, and enjoy all she could absorb of a world that seemed to her to overflow with richness and beauty | VERB | 42 |
68 | 0 | " Wall Street has missed how valuable brands really are and how much growth they can give you, " says Ms. Page of Bear Stearns | VERB | 4 |
69 | 0 | Lazuli, an itinerant peddler, who stumbles into the kingdom singing one of the prettiest tunes ever composed for any operetta, " My little star, " is nearly sacrificed to this nutjob, before the mayhem ends on a cheerful note with Lazuli standing next to a goo- goo- eyed princess | VERB | 5 |
70 | 1 | But the World Bank effectively is stepping into the breach left by a recalcitrant IMF. Ironically, in an apparent attempt to challenge the U.S .- dominated international debt strategy, Mr. Camdessus -- who usually takes a soft line toward heavily indebted countries -- seems to have put the squabble with the U.S. before Argentina's interests | VERB | 6 |
71 | 1 | In the market, he sticks with winning positions no longer than three or four days and tries to bail out of losers in minutes -- hours at most | VERB | 4 |
72 | 0 | Here in Masaya, supporters of a group known as the Mothers of Political Prisoners were brutally attacked by turbas in a well- documented incident in March | VERB | 16 |
73 | 1 | Foreign central bankers like to think that with U.S. economic growth apparently cooling, the Federal Reserve is less compelled to further tighten monetary policy before the November presidential election | VERB | 12 |
74 | 0 | Baseball flourished in certain parts of England and Wales before World War II | VERB | 1 |
75 | 0 | In company with Susan Jaffe, Christine Dunham and Leslie Browne, Mikhail Baryshnikov, formerly of Leningrad's Kirov Ballet, and now director of American Ballet Theatre, danced the revised version of Balanchine's sublime " Apollo " with a blend of spontaneity and concentration that charged the entire evening with wonder | VERB | 24 |
76 | 1 | But the bigger companies' stocks have dragged down the group's performance | VERB | 6 |
77 | 1 | " I'd heard about Powelson from another classicist at the University of Maryland, and then Powelson began to besiege me with letters asking for an invitation, " Mr. Ambrose says | VERB | 18 |
78 | 1 | Last week, though, some of them were dragged off a train and prevented from traveling to Moscow to meet with President Reagan | VERB | 7 |
79 | 0 | " He will take up my gun when I die, " the captain says | VERB | 9 |
80 | 0 | When a New York magazine confronted Wasserstein Perella with an as- yet- unpublished unflattering story about the new firm, Wasserstein Perella officials suspected First Boston of planting it | VERB | 26 |
81 | 1 | Seagram must decide by Feb. 9 whether to come up with a higher offer that would knock Grand Met out of the bidding war and frustrate its expansion strategy | VERB | 16 |
82 | 0 | Oh, for the day when we all drive Yugos to our stagnant jobs, secure in the knowledge that no one will lend us money | VERB | 21 |
83 | 1 | But let's be specific and kill off only those programs that aren't working | VERB | 5 |
84 | 1 | Especially for Sen. Gore, who must worry that all the publicity enjoyed by the winners in Iowa and New Hampshire could all but drown him out | VERB | 23 |
85 | 0 | British farmers flourish under the EC's Common Agriculture Policy, and its food companies have grown to global giants, in part because of EC markets | VERB | 2 |
86 | 0 | " A German, " said Mr. Bradford, " is just not going to drink beer out of a can.' | VERB | 13 |
87 | 1 | But concern about inflation stepped up Friday when the Labor Department announced that employment increased strongly in July and that hourly earnings rose at a 6% annual pace | VERB | 4 |
88 | 1 | They will eat crow for what they have been saying | VERB | 2 |
89 | 1 | But party leaders' hopes of writing a broadly worded document began to evaporate, as early versions of platform planks were cluttered with specific promises | VERB | 12 |
90 | 0 | Like tiny beacons at night, alligators' eyes reflect a brilliant red when struck by a beam of light | VERB | 12 |
91 | 0 | The plane's landing gear collapsed as it plowed through the soft earth at the end of the runway | VERB | 7 |
92 | 1 | The long war over, blacks found that they had little more than the freedom to drown in the white world's misery | VERB | 15 |
93 | 0 | U.S. conservatives attacked the accord, but it helps clear the way for an upbeat superpower summit in Moscow at the end of May | VERB | 2 |
94 | 1 | The New York Times is already rehabilitating Michael Dukakis as a " centrist, " but if that's true why are Democrats now grabbing every reporter in town to whisper, " Sam Nunn for vice president " | VERB | 22 |
95 | 0 | A spokesman for the real estate investment trust, which was set up a year ago to lease properties to American Medical International Inc., a health- care concern, said there isn't any immediate plan to fill the chief executive position | VERB | 34 |
96 | 1 | " Ten years ago, it was enough to latch onto something 100% proven, " says Shoji Kumagai, general manager of technical development at giant Sumitomo Corp. " Today we have to grab it at the idea stage.' | VERB | 31 |
97 | 0 | He fills a vacancy created by the resignation of Henry W. Lorin | VERB | 1 |
98 | 0 | Meanwhile, though, we may ask what will happen to dance back here, where the facilities Brussels has offered Mr. Morris, including a$ 1.5 million annual budget, are apparently not to be thought of | VERB | 9 |
99 | 0 | In any case, Mr. Luce pointed out, banks could be more reluctant to lend Texaco money in light of this huge new claim | VERB | 13 |
100 | 1 | " Where I live, in Silkstone in Yorkshire, we just had a memorial service as we put up a monument for some kids who were killed underground about 100 years ago -- about 80 kids, three, four, and five years of age, " she said | VERB | 25 |
101 | 0 | As a result, Mr. Bhirud said, the market may have trouble escaping from its recent trading range | VERB | 11 |
102 | 0 | " It can now be examined in more detail if the model for restructuring the aerospace industry will hold water, " Mr. Reuter said | VERB | 5 |
103 | 1 | The sell- off cooled inflation fears, but farm futures prices are now expected to be volatile | VERB | 3 |
104 | 0 | In the West Bank, troops fired on Arab youths, killing at least one | VERB | 9 |
105 | 0 | Coke is even directly attacking coffee's breakfast appeal with radio ads urging people to drink something cold to come " alive in the morning.' | VERB | 4 |
106 | 0 | While much of the world points to a still- stubborn 8% unemployment rate, and argues that providing jobs for these 2.2 million Germans would create a new consumer demand, German officials insist that flooding the economy with money won't necessarily create jobs | VERB | 33 |
107 | 1 | " By lending for reckless deals, some lenders are helping the borrowers drown themselves, " asserts Dean Dickie, an attorney specializing in bankruptcy law | VERB | 12 |
108 | 0 | In " Elephant, " the suffocating burden of adult responsibility gives way to a moment's memory of childhood joy when a boy could ride carefree on his father's shoulders | VERB | 23 |
109 | 0 | Other investigators say faulty idling valves can make cars surge by suddenly pumping extra air into the engines | VERB | 12 |
110 | 1 | The indictment alleges that Ms. Myerson gave Justice Gabel's daughter a$ 19, 000-a- year city job in exchange for fixing Mr. Capasso's 1985 divorce case | VERB | 19 |
111 | 0 | They subsist on freeze- dried foods, patch their own wounds and sleep on the ground | VERB | 11 |
112 | 0 | The agreement appears to allow Wilson, a pork processor and producer, to escape the clutches of Doskocil Cos., a Hutchinson, Kan., maker of pizza toppings that has waged an aggressive takeover battle | VERB | 12 |
113 | 1 | " Meese's pudgy shape and face give him no advantage at all, " but " Baker looks like someone who has just stepped out of Gentlemen's Quarterly.' | VERB | 22 |
114 | 1 | Nearly 600 entries poured in, and ten finalists were announced recently | VERB | 3 |
115 | 0 | The amount of the missed payments wasn't disclosed, but Magma said if the payment aren't received within 15 days, existing agreements between the two companies will terminate | VERB | 4 |
116 | 0 | The West German Bundesbank's decision to boost its rate on securities repurchase agreements by 0.25 percentage point to a fixed 4.25% rate came as no surprise, traders said, and lent little or no support to the mark against the dollar | VERB | 29 |
117 | 0 | Banks have lent small amounts of gold for decades to borrowers such as jewelers, who use gold in their business | VERB | 2 |
118 | 1 | Now, do all of them absorb it and grab it | VERB | 8 |
119 | 0 | " We just missed it, " says a spokeswoman for Newsweek | VERB | 3 |
120 | 0 | Futures brokers have seen their wildest business in many years evaporate | VERB | 10 |
121 | 0 | In the hallway beyond, the shouts of students changing classes reverberate, reminding Mrs. Black that this soon- to- be mother of two needs an excuse to give her teacher for missing a class | VERB | 30 |
122 | 0 | Yamaha is grabbing for prestige more than sales -- Steinway makes 6, 000 pianos a year, compared with Yamaha's nearly 200, 000 | VERB | 2 |
123 | 0 | Texas is indeed the most dramatic and scandalous example of S& L managers plowing money into dubious projects, often with less than an arms- length relationship with developers and totally unrealistic estimates of the potential income streams of the commercial and residential buildings they were financing | VERB | 13 |
124 | 0 | " We are offering now to free them from their nightmares of security -- we don't want to destroy Israel, we want to coexist | VERB | 18 |
125 | 0 | Indeed, one imagines her taking almost malicious pleasure in her cleverness at assigning Ms. Oppens to play harpsichord, an instrument she had barely touched before, in the " Concerto for harpsichord, flute, oboe, clarinet, violin and cello " that Manuel de Falla wrote for Wanda Landowska in 1923 | VERB | 23 |
126 | 0 | A federal judge reversed a decision that had given investors an apparent loophole to escape from the arbitration agreements their stockbrokers often require | VERB | 14 |