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281 | 0 | Rhinos wearing tutus daintily knock workmen aside | VERB | 4 |
282 | 0 | The rate on Federal funds, or reserves banks lend one another overnight, could climb above 8% by tomorrow from just under 7 3 4%, he said | VERB | 8 |
283 | 1 | In a reminder of nature's fickleness, the eye of this year's drought rests just a couple of hundred miles north of here, along the Red River Valley between Minnesota and North Dakota | VERB | 12 |
284 | 0 | Your Sept. 22 editorial " The Liberal Plantation " hangs on a badly flawed premise: that workfare can lead to " steady work " and help poor people " escape welfare and lead independent lives.' | VERB | 29 |
285 | 1 | Another factor that should smooth the process is simply the diminishing importance of the national contract | VERB | 4 |
286 | 1 | Mr. Hauke " is looking for a much more costly repair that is nonstandard and would knock the price beyond the the{$ 500} limit for a buy- back.' | VERB | 16 |
287 | 1 | But this is not to say that old expansions, even ones as sluggish and recession- ridden as this, will roll along indefinitely | VERB | 19 |
288 | 0 | That, analysts say, is largely because most of the banking and financial issues went into the crash at low prices, having withered from their highs in the summer of 1986 | VERB | 21 |
289 | 0 | The deity is Col. Lee Kuang- chien, the most senior KMT officer to die in the 1949 battle | VERB | 13 |
290 | 0 | Mr. Redford has assembled a great collection of faces, especially the geezers who look like they' ve spent the past half- century drinking the same cup of coffee with the same old pals | VERB | 22 |
291 | 0 | A revenue passenger mile is one paying customer flown one mile | VERB | 8 |
292 | 0 | He said the legislation shouldn't be so generous as to induce any farmers to plow under their crops, and shouldn't " bust the budget.' | VERB | 14 |
293 | 0 | As Teresina, the maiden who is drowned in the Bay of Naples and ends up as a Nereid in the Blue Grotto before being restored to life by her faithful fisherman lover, Gennaro, Linda Hindberg was too inflexible in body and too stolid in personality | VERB | 6 |
294 | 1 | Also, designers have worn their cachet thin by lending their names to such diverse products as sheets, luggage and cigarettes | VERB | 8 |
295 | 0 | Immunex said the study examined patients with lymph cancers such as leukemia | VERB | 4 |
296 | 1 | The union crew worked 35; the rest of the time it was forced to wait -- for someone to come back from the restroom or for a journeyman to become available to do work an apprentice could easily have done but was not allowed to touch | VERB | 45 |
297 | 1 | Unlike Charming Shoppes Inc. or U.S. Shoe Corp.'s Casual Corner stores, for example -- which got stuck with stockrooms of casual sportswear just as its popularity was dying -- Limited maintained tight inventory levels, enabling it to control markdowns | VERB | 16 |
298 | 1 | Mr. Smith, 44 years old, succeeds Gary W. Rhodes, 40, who has stepped down to chief financial officer for " purely personal and family reasons, " according to the company | VERB | 12 |
299 | 0 | The best of show in painting, Oleg Stavrowsky's 40-inch by 72-inch oil of a stagecoach being attacked by bandits, went for$ 14, 000 | VERB | 16 |
300 | 0 | Mr. Pickens was badly beaten in last fall's battle for Newmont Mining, a raid that baffled takeover experts because 26% of Newmont was already controlled by the ultimate victor, Consolidated Gold Fields PLC. Mesa's$ 100 million stock profit from the deal -- Mr. Pickens's estimate -- also evaporated during October's market crash | VERB | 47 |
301 | 1 | You may withdraw cash temporarily from an individual retirement account and escape a tax or penalty, if you roll it all over into another IRA in 60 days | VERB | 18 |
302 | 1 | Black& Decker Corp. stepped up pressure on American Standard Inc., indicating that it might further sweeten its$ 65-a- share bid if financial information supports a higher figure | VERB | 3 |
303 | 1 | Roger Ailes, the man who will guide George Bush's heavy media campaign, is pumping up his anger like a lineman preparing to crush the opposing quarterback | VERB | 13 |
304 | 1 | While American and Delta airlines have reputations as places " where people really like to work, " employees at Eastern and Continental " roll their eyes " when asked about their jobs, said Southern Illinois University associate professor David A. NewMyer | VERB | 23 |
305 | 1 | For years cable touted itself as the incubator for new kinds of shows the networks wouldn't touch -- like " Shandling, " rejected initially by the networks partly for its quirks: The star plays himself and talks to the audience more than he talks to the cast | VERB | 16 |
306 | 1 | Now, do all of them absorb it and grab it | VERB | 5 |
307 | 0 | The Bush strategists insist they will not attack Mr. Robertson, noting that much of their own support in the South is conservative and evangelical | VERB | 7 |
308 | 1 | So we're scoping the situation, kicking back, and all of a sudden this guy gets this insane barrel, then does a full- on airplane floater, then a full- on wraparound cutback, then a full- on snap reentry | VERB | 5 |
309 | 0 | Saudi Arabia is expected to continue flooding the market with oil for at least two more weeks, until two OPEC committees meet to consider how they might rein in production and prop up prices | VERB | 6 |
310 | 0 | He strongly attacked the Massachusetts governor, asserting that he would lead the nation toward higher taxes, economic stagnation and a weaker defense | VERB | 2 |
311 | 0 | The suit had asserted that Thiokol was wrong in telling the National Aeronautics and Space Administration that the rocket defect could be fixed | VERB | 22 |
312 | 0 | Whether that should be welcome news or cause for alarm depends on one's confidence in the ability of Congress to write rules for markets without destroying them | VERB | 25 |
313 | 0 | Ne Win, however, saw that Burma escaped the Vietnam vortex | VERB | 6 |
314 | 1 | Unfortunately, they won't work in the harbor tunnel where business travelers sometimes get stuck on the way in from the airport... | VERB | 13 |
315 | 1 | Foul weather delayed the regatta, but it finally took place on Jan. 2: " It rained during the first race, rained and hailed during the second, and snowed during the third, " Mr. Taylor wrote | VERB | 20 |
316 | 0 | Pakistani cheating could prompt Moscow to declare the accords void or to attack Afghan- resistance camps in Pakistan | VERB | 12 |
317 | 0 | The treaty requires that the Army's 420 Pershing missiles be destroyed | VERB | 10 |
318 | 0 | But the resolution probably rests more on politics than on flying skill and commercial expertise | VERB | 10 |
319 | 0 | Much is made of Mr. Hoxsey's assertion that his files were open to doubters, but only a few brief seconds are devoted to the fact that when the files were examined they were found to be so incomplete that it was impossible to tell whether the " cured " patients actually had had cancer or whether conventional treatment had been effective | VERB | 30 |
320 | 0 | This cost has been absorbed by me in the hope that the FDA would reward my efforts with its favor | VERB | 4 |
321 | 1 | All eyes are fixed on 18 television sets showing the changing of the guard at Buckingham Palace | VERB | 3 |
322 | 0 | Others say Mr. Kasparov does drink, but the champion certainly looks sober when he arrives, decked out in tasseled loafers and a spiffy plaid suit -LRB- only a clashing checked necktie mars the ensemble -RRB- | VERB | 5 |
323 | 1 | And, " These characteristics of Soviet policy, like the postulate from which they flow, are basic to the internal nature of Soviet power, and will be with us, whether in the foreground or the background, until the internal nature of Soviet power is changed.' | VERB | 13 |
324 | 1 | That's because the auto shop decided to eat its words | VERB | 7 |
325 | 0 | The U.N. said the fatalities brought to 48 the number of Palestinians killed since the wave of anti- Israeli unrest began in the occupied areas Dec. 8 | VERB | 12 |
326 | 0 | She watched an older couple dancing outside in the restaurant's courtyard | VERB | 5 |
327 | 1 | Taking over a business from a parent isn't always smooth sailing | VERB | 9 |
328 | 1 | With their boss routinely delving into the nuts and bolts of prospective projects -LRB- he likes to " kick the tires, " says a colleague -RRB-, Mr. Schwartz's team of 20 people spends roughly two- thirds of their time analyzing alternative proposals | VERB | 18 |
329 | 1 | Tobacco may have run into its first legal setback and another public relations blow this week, but the cigarettes keep rolling off the line and their makers keep rolling in big profits | VERB | 28 |
330 | 1 | A coup attempt last August against the government of President Corazon Aquino touched off fears here that her government -- and newly won democracy in the Philippines -- were in danger | VERB | 12 |
331 | 0 | More than 211 people have been killed and 586 wounded since the current fighting began between the Amal and Hezbollah | VERB | 6 |
332 | 0 | " The new irrigation tunnel has allowed us to plant 6, 000 willow trees and 600 apple trees and to earn money for the education of our children, " she says, tears welling in her eyes | VERB | 9 |
333 | 1 | He now says that specialty retailing fills the bill, but he made a number of profitable forays in the meantime | VERB | 6 |
334 | 0 | If someone wants to eat fruits, nuts and organically grown vegetables from the back yard every day, fine | VERB | 4 |
335 | 1 | Typically, he says, a company that discovers irregularities asks the offending executive to resign without a pension or severance pay, and the affair is quietly smoothed over | VERB | 25 |
336 | 0 | The U.S. Export- Import Bank could assist the Polish transaction, but it's legally forbidden to lend funds to Romania | VERB | 15 |
337 | 1 | As previously reported, Eastern, locked in a longstanding labor- management feud, has contracted with Orion Air, a unit of Primark Corp., to provide pilots to fly Eastern aircraft should contract talks end in a strike | VERB | 25 |
338 | 0 | Though riding the luge is a fairly dangerous sport, the scariest moment for the Philippines' Mr. Ocampo came a week before the Olympics when his credentials to participate were temporarily blocked by Philippine bureaucrats | VERB | 1 |
339 | 1 | Customers shouldn't " sleep too easily, " because regulatory gaps remain, such as not requiring disclosure of charges, warns Helena Wiesner, research manager at Britain's Consumers Association | VERB | 3 |
340 | 0 | This objectivity, however, need not destroy the work's subjectivity, and Mr. Palmer is wrong in asserting that moral- rights advocates " claim that a work of art is simply an extension of the personality of the artist.' | VERB | 5 |
341 | 0 | The IDB has lent more than$ 35 billion since its inception 27 years ago, much of it to create the type of parastatal companies Treasury Secretary James Baker has been trying to persuade Latin governments to dismantle | VERB | 3 |
342 | 0 | The idea is to improve NATO's ability to disrupt any breakthrough of its forward defenses -- by striking bridges, rail lines and other choke points -- and to strike deep inside Warsaw Pact defenses and supply lines | VERB | 28 |
343 | 0 | In nearby Henderson, Roger Ellis wakes up in the middle of the night because his Dallas- owned bank, which once promised him an endless supply of credit, is demanding that he pay off his construction company's note even though he has never missed a payment | VERB | 42 |
344 | 0 | He said incinerator temperatures of as much as 1, 000 degrees Celsius are enough to destroy the mineral | VERB | 15 |
345 | 1 | She lost weight, couldn't sleep, and didn't work again for six months | VERB | 4 |
346 | 0 | The May employment data will be minutely examined by economists who are sifting for clues to the pace of inflation and interest rates | VERB | 7 |
347 | 0 | You can't drink at all if you don't order something to eat, and you can't drink in a restaurant bar, even if you do order something to eat | VERB | 15 |
348 | 1 | President Reagan stepped up the volume of this chorus this year by attacking such purportedly porky projects as a$ 900, 000 catfish aquaculture facility in Stutgart, Ark.; a$ 2.4 million grant for the " tailored clothing industry, " and a$ 5 million gondola transportation system at an Idaho resort area | VERB | 2 |
349 | 0 | Many of the 96 victims of Puerto Rico's Dupont Plaza hotel fire on Dec. 31, 1986, were killed in a casino near the lobby | VERB | 17 |
350 | 0 | If widespread window dressing is occurring, then last week's rally and any upward move in prices this week could easily evaporate after the end of the quarter | VERB | 20 |
351 | 0 | Some of those arrested were dragged from buses that were to take them back to Managua; others, such as 18-year- old Norman Lenin Cardoza -LRB- who denies ever attending the rally -RRB- and attorney Roger Guevara Mena, were arrested by state security police days later | VERB | 5 |
352 | 0 | In separate incidents in the past few weeks, Israelis are being held in connection with the burning to death of three Palestinian laborers as they slept near a building site near Tel Aviv | VERB | 25 |
353 | 1 | But Mr. Quayle can't seem to escape controversy | VERB | 6 |
354 | 1 | The leader of a failed coup in August, who escaped from a Manila prison Saturday, called on his supporters in the military to " act and act boldly.' | VERB | 9 |
355 | 1 | Performing his own compositions, traditional R& B tunes, zydeco originals and his interpretations of rock numbers, Buck and the band spit out the kind of crackling music that's been missing since the heyday of Stax Records, when Booker T. and the MGs pumped a driving rhythm behind Sam& Dave, Carla Thomas and Otis Redding | VERB | 42 |
356 | 1 | Traditions die hard, and the Fed hasn't shaken its habit of targeting the real economy -- under the notion that inflation, too much money chasing too few goods, is prevented by curtailing the production of goods | VERB | 11 |
357 | 0 | Workers at General Motors Corp.'s truck assembly complex in Pontiac, Mich., are threatening to strike for the second time in less than a year | VERB | 14 |
358 | 1 | Thus he notes that when Edward Baring became Baron Revelstoke in 1883 he knocked together two Mayfair mansions to make one urban palace in which he " entertained in a style as lavish as the furnishing | VERB | 13 |
359 | 0 | So far it's difficult to see that Mr. Kemp's platform is striking a responsive chord in Iowa | VERB | 11 |
360 | 1 | A recently proposed credit for Ecuador has yet to be completed and Brazil's bank debt talks have dragged on for weeks longer than expected | VERB | 17 |
361 | 0 | If such eccentric beguilement appeals to you, don't miss this book | VERB | 8 |
362 | 1 | Six years ago, Mr. Slusher stumbled across Harry Fisher while reading about Medal of Honor winners | VERB | 5 |
363 | 0 | Whether these dancers could ever meet the requirements of " Raymonda Variations " and " Symphony in C, " the ballets they danced in New York, is doubtful | VERB | 22 |
364 | 1 | Mr. Damore, who covered the incident for the Cape Cod News, is a disciplined and relentless writer who makes his case more devastating because he never steps back and editorializes | VERB | 26 |
365 | 0 | With their wives and girlfriends in Mexico, it's common to see men dancing alone here | VERB | 12 |
366 | 1 | The people who make the decisions -- directors and big institutional investors -- seem prepared to keep the money flowing to the top so long as the return to shareholders is deemed adequate | VERB | 19 |
367 | 0 | Most seafood eaters never give a second thought to the safety of the delicacies they eat | VERB | 15 |
368 | 0 | If the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approves the plan, Panhandle will have escaped a total of about$ 4 billion in take- or- pay contract liabilities | VERB | 12 |
369 | 0 | At least 35 people have been killed as the siege enters its second week | VERB | 6 |
370 | 0 | The company had a$ 14.24 billion working capital surplus at year end, but$ 13.98 billion of that came from money lent by GMAC to the parent, which took over financing of wholesale sales to dealers | VERB | 20 |
371 | 0 | A drug dealer like Liviel McLellan should not be able to escape a prison sentence | VERB | 11 |
372 | 0 | By hitching a ride on these proteins, drugs can be very narrowly targeted to attack diseased cells, Mr. McCamant says | VERB | 12 |
373 | 0 | Care Enterprises Inc., a financially troubled nursing home operator, said negotiations with its banks are continuing for further extensions and waivers of loan covenant violations involving a$ 5 million principal payment that it missed last Friday | VERB | 33 |
374 | 1 | The GAO was also to examine if the law has caused excessive red tape for employers, and if the law is being implemented well | VERB | 5 |
375 | 1 | " Without voodoo, we would drown in our misery.' | VERB | 5 |
376 | 0 | Twenty- eight thousand buildings were leveled in the quake, but a few years later, 20, 500 new ones had been built, and people of the reborn city were dancing in the streets | VERB | 28 |
377 | 0 | Twelve- year- old Peter Reaves of Pittsburgh treasures " his free time to ride his bike, play ball and just hangout, " says his mother Debby | VERB | 13 |
378 | 1 | Mrs. Bush, who disdains what she calls fake public displays of affection by the Dukakises, also will play an important role in her husband's campaign | VERB | 17 |
379 | 0 | Although his colleagues weren't eager to satisfy him, they were even less eager to miss their flights home and a weekend of campaigning | VERB | 14 |
380 | 1 | " You lose elections if you touch these things.' | VERB | 6 |
Subsets and Splits