index
int64
0
3.74k
label
int64
0
1
sentence
stringlengths
12
466
pos
stringclasses
1 value
v_index
int64
1
72
681
1
The first time I read an article by humorist P.J. O'Rourke -- " Among the EuroWeenies " in Rolling Stone magazine -- I thought I was going to die laughing
VERB
28
682
0
PARENTS with mildly ill children don't have to miss work under a program initiated for Minneapolis- area employees of Honeywell Inc
VERB
8
683
0
The Doles said they hadn't known about the gain because it was in a blind trust, dissolved over the weekend, that was set up by Mrs. Dole in 1985 when she was secretary of transportation
VERB
16
684
0
There is also an outsized, shiny, Egyptian- style statue of Hadrian's catamite Antinous, who drowned in the Nile
VERB
14
685
0
But now he says he would rather risk missing the start of any bull market than being caught in another collapse, " which would be unforgivable in the eyes of my clients.'
VERB
8
686
1
He noted that the Minnesota Twins, accustomed to the deafening Metrodome noise, used visual signs to communicate during critical plays, while the losing Cardinals yelled to each other, and were drowned out...
VERB
30
687
0
In addition to filling a hole in United's top management, the action marks the first big personnel move by Mr. Wolf, who was named to his posts last month
VERB
3
688
0
But these corporate gains appear more like personal setbacks to Mr. Collyer and many of the other 32, 500 British workers who struck Ford's British plants eight days ago
VERB
22
689
0
Another problem facing Mr. Gorbachev is the growing nationalist sentiment among the Soviet Union's ethnic minorities, sentiment that is flourishing in the current political climate
VERB
19
690
1
In ground tests, parts keep fracturing and flying apart
VERB
7
691
0
It was then that a 747 crash killed 520 people, the worst single- aircraft accident in aviation history
VERB
7
692
1
Still, it's a flinty character indeed who wouldn't be touched by this delicately crafted piece of work
VERB
9
693
0
To hold the property- tax rate low, Addison never built a system to process the sewage flowing from its many developments
VERB
16
694
0
The unit's soda ash business is flourishing, analysts say
VERB
6
695
0
Iranian gunboats attacked an Indian tanker in the Persian Gulf, setting the vessel ablaze and wounding at least one crew member, gulf- based shipping executives reported
VERB
2
696
0
Their plans were immediately attacked by the so- called social wing of the ruling Christian Democratic Union, which wanted more tax revenue to go to the poor
VERB
4
697
1
Eastern Airlines Inc. is stepping up its marketing war in the busy, competitive Northeast shuttle- service market, offering discounts of as much as 30% for passengers buying tickets in bulk
VERB
4
698
0
Heavy water is used to control and cool the reaction of small research reactors
VERB
7
699
0
So in February 1985, three years after her paintings were destroyed, Ms. Smith sued Chase in a New York civil court for$ 25, 000
VERB
10
700
1
Among the tantrums he admits: heaving a faulty phone across the control room, kicking in a TV screen to force NBC to buy a new one, and assaulting construction workers who were too noisy during taping
VERB
13
701
0
One of the contracts prosecutors are examining -- the development job for the Navy's carrier- based advanced tactical aircraft -- was subject to a " best and final offer, " known as a BAFO, and then a " best and revised final offer, " known as a BARFO. Investigators are looking at whether Melvyn Paisley improperly steered the multibillion- dollar job to McDonnell Douglas Corp. and General Dynamics Corp. while he was assistant Navy secretary
VERB
6
702
0
But now, he adds, " I couldn't even hazard a guess " about the whereabouts of the missing painting
VERB
17
703
1
But in the intervening years, so much criticism has been poured upon Chamberlain's failed policies that they have dissolved into caricature
VERB
18
704
0
" We were just riding along on a design that was doomed to failure, " he says
VERB
4
705
0
But thanks to glasnost, people here know that about a dozen people die from mishaps in the factory every year
VERB
12
706
0
Ad agency J. Walter Thompson Co., moving to fill what is widely viewed as a critical management gap, hired a senior executive from rival Omnicom Group Inc. to become its top financial officer
VERB
8
707
0
Nearly four- fifths of this increase would be absorbed by the rising cost of Social Security benefits and the cost of keeping outlays for defense and education even with inflation, as Mr. Bush has proposed
VERB
8
708
0
To ride the next wave of orders in the extended boom time manufacturers expect, McDonnell is trying to capitalize on an edge it will have in the 1990s over Boeing: the ability to produce a plane powered by fuel- efficient " prop- fan " engines
VERB
1
709
0
He added that employees who don't move to the rival's factory in Chicago probably will be absorbed by Bally's growing fitness- equipment manufacturing businesses
VERB
16
710
1
Last week after months of litigation, the company was dissolved, and the trademark was sold for$ 8 million to a Stamford, Conn., investment firm
VERB
9
711
1
Three new funds targeted toward Japanese, Asian and European investors will prompt a fresh influx of foreign cash into the Thai stock market
VERB
3
712
0
It even regulates where kites can be flown and how candy should be displayed in markets -- and fines offenders
VERB
7
713
1
Some analysts say that if Burger King fails to turn around soon, heads will roll at the top
VERB
14
714
1
A giant bank, once rumored to be failing, suddenly flourishes
VERB
9
715
1
The Soviet Germans generally are simple people with little education -- like America's Pennsylvania Dutch, they' ve stuck together in small Protestant communities and speak an antiquated German
VERB
17
716
0
A powerful earthquake struck Nepal and eastern India, triggering landslides and floods and killing at least 500 people and injuring more than 3, 000
VERB
3
717
0
And for those of you planning ahead, this year the troupe will dance " The Nutcracker " Dec. 1- 31. -LRB- 212 -RRB- 870- 5690
VERB
12
718
1
Meanwhile, state and private testing laboratories were flooded with thousands of grain samples as merchants and farmers sought reassurance that their commodities were safe
VERB
7
719
1
Cohen and Kravis was described as cordial, angry charges flew like hail behind the scenes
VERB
9
720
0
My late father- in- law, Jean Le Gorre, once recounted an early experience in the French army during World War I where on bivouac he examined his field ration -- a piece of issue " hardtack.'
VERB
25
721
0
" This case is the next logical step in our efforts to put a halt to Lorenzo's oppressive and unlawful campaign to destroy organized labor at Eastern.'
VERB
22
722
0
Operations at metal and wood coffin manufacturing plants in Missouri, Indiana and Pennsylvania will remain open and, in fact, be expanded with additional shifts to absorb some of the workers and production idled elsewhere
VERB
25
723
0
Reserving enables banks to absorb losses on bad credits
VERB
4
724
1
Most of the machinery in Toyota Motor Corp.'s$ 800 million auto plant in Georgetown, Ky., came from Japan, for example, and Toyota spokesmen say that when the first cars roll off the assembly line this spring, 40% of the total value will be imported
VERB
29
725
1
On the stage, looking tired from ceaseless concertizing at just about every summer festival there is, Vladimir Feltsman attacked his recital program with typical confidence and power
VERB
18
726
0
For that, Dillard needs to study hard, retailing analysts and consultants say, because the small cities where Dillard has flourished aren't much of a training ground for the markets it wants to enter
VERB
19
727
1
Given a choice between two such frail reeds, Western Europe, led by West Germany, is likely to grasp at the chimera of Soviet good will rather than risk relying on increasingly remote and dubious American protection
VERB
17
728
0
If McDonnell Douglas can't land those orders this year, it risks losing its temporary lead over Boeing and missing out on perhaps hundreds of midrange aircraft orders in the long run
VERB
18
729
1
They " may have a hard time grasping " that their offspring wasn't " somehow responsible.'
VERB
7
730
0
Mr. Muth is president of Real Estate Advisors Inc., a Los Angeles investment management firm that agreed to lend Wespac as much as$ 1.5 million under the agreement
VERB
18
731
0
A typist's fingers rest in indentations; moving a finger within an indentation " types " a character
VERB
3
732
1
The latest truce in the week- old battle, which has killed 188 and injured 534, was arranged by Syrian President Assad and Iranian President Khamenei
VERB
10
733
0
Every night at the Dukakis hotel, the Hyatt Regency, the New York and Washington reporters and the Dukakis people intermingled, drinking till three or four in the morning
VERB
20
734
0
As usual, consumers will be stuck with the tab: higher prices and less choice
VERB
5
735
0
Ms. Long clearly relishes the hands- on work of running a winery and overseeing the evolution of a vineyard planted to her specifications
VERB
19
736
0
As the wiry Mr. Rios dances with a plump, middle- age woman, he yells in Spanish, " I' m legal now.'
VERB
5
737
0
Knight- Ridder stumbled in one past push into information services
VERB
2
738
1
But the judge's opinion said that the agitator for the vacuum cleaner " was melting " and " making a loud noise, the foot pedal handle release was breaking and the vacuums were not equipped with a steel- encased motor as had been advertised to the trade, but rather with a less desirable and less reliable " motor
VERB
14
739
1
Thus, Airbus's proposed cargo sleepers -- ordinary metal freight containers outfitted with beds that would ride in the belly of the plane -- are being studied by carriers such as Lufthansa German Airlines, but only for its crew
VERB
15
740
0
Emulating Japan's broad- based conglomerates, Samsung Electronics Co. will officially absorb Samsung Semiconductor& Telecommunications Co
VERB
10
741
0
Mr. Andrews ate rancid mutton fat and drank mare's milk in the Gobi with the best and worst of them
VERB
1
742
1
The lawmaker suggested that Thiokol might be trying to kill the advanced- rocket program to ensure that the current rocket is used even longer
VERB
9
743
1
" Suddenly with Monday, they not only had to do an enormous amount of selling, they had an enormous holdover, and the front- runners just ate them alive, " said Mr. Kirby
VERB
25
744
0
Russians planted the first trees in 1805 near the eastern Aleutian village of Unalaska; a few survive and enjoy National Historic Landmark status
VERB
1
745
0
And as it does, the importance of the " farm issue " in next month's Iowa caucuses is melting away like snow in a January thaw
VERB
18
746
0
The union leaders also will attack one of Wall Street's most dearly held beliefs about Texas Air -- something that has long helped to sustain its stock price: that for all its losses and labor travails, the company still sits on a motherlode of cash
VERB
5
747
0
Some are trying to escape childhoods troubled by missing fathers or drug- addicted mothers
VERB
4
748
0
Its administration expenses come to only 0.5% of its assets -- an enviably low figure -- and its rock- solid finances, coupled with the good repayment record on its lending, have earned it an AAA rating on the world's capital markets where it raises nearly 90% of the capital that it lends
VERB
51
749
0
A federal appeals court here struck down the law on Jan. 22, saying the appointment of independent counsels by a special three- judge court violates the Constitution's separation of powers
VERB
5
750
1
The honor of these Pulitzer- predators will be vindicated only if Mr. Anderson does all sorts of demeaning acts pursuant to article 48a of the Civil Code of California, mostly in the order of eating humble pie
VERB
34
751
0
If Mr. Icahn is successful in dissolving that agreement, he could seek Pennzoil's support for his plan, which, like Texaco's plan, includes a$ 3 billion settlement
VERB
6
752
0
One ad in the campaign developed by Lintas: Campbell- Ewald& Co. shows a Chevrolet S-10 compact pickup dragging a Ford Ranger into a " crater of fire.'
VERB
17
753
0
Since the international debt crisis erupted in 1982, banks have been increasingly reluctant to lend to Latin American countries
VERB
14
754
1
The scenes two weeks ago of ordinary people in Krasnoyarsk verbally assaulting Mikhail Gorbachev because of the shortage of goods in the shops reflect how deep popular disappointment is over the results of " perestroika " thus far
VERB
11
755
1
Soviet leader Gorbachev, in a second address to the forum, appealed to the 5, 000 delegates to adopt his restructuring proposals, saying " socialism will die unless we reform " the Soviet political system
VERB
25
756
0
The truck manufacturers, bidding on 15, 000 trucks rather than 5, 000, were able to offer a better price because of the greater quantity and the ability to spread their start- up and fixed costs over a larger base
VERB
33
757
0
Most of the rules are left unspoken: Don't move, don't talk, don't laugh, don't sneeze -- and, definitely, don't dance
VERB
19
758
0
" Such a big piece of the total company is riding on that pony, " he says
VERB
10
759
0
But the commission's most controversial recommendation by far would remove the FAA from the Transportation Department and re- establish it as the independent and renamed Federal Aviation Authority, complete with an administrator and a " safety czar, " both of whom would serve fixed terms of seven years
VERB
43
760
0
And a current red- and- black billboard in Mount Vernon, N.Y., warns that " People who do drugs go to hell before they die.'
VERB
23
761
0
" As the amount of copper available for delivery rose above the number of contracts that had to be satisfied, the threat of a squeeze' in the March contract evaporated, " said William O'Neill, research director for Elders Futures Inc., New York
VERB
29
762
0
Instead of dancing they watch rock video.'
VERB
2
763
0
The company hasn't filled the board vacancies
VERB
3
764
1
Shares of the biotechnology firm reached a 52-week low at 25 1 8 Friday before coming to rest at 25 5 8
VERB
17
765
1
For the past eight years, all the pious high- mindedness has been flowing in one direction
VERB
12
766
0
In 1981, he and his second wife were able to escape Cuba by joining a group tour of Czechoslovakia
VERB
10
767
0
Poor Roger, however, gets zapped and bammed and splatted over and over again, ending up on the floor with little birds flying around his head
VERB
21
768
0
This suggests a panicky response from the Vincennes, particularly since a Pentagon air- combat specialist quoted by Mr. Kaplan in the Boston Globe said that an attacking F-14 probably would be traveling " at at least 550 to 580 knots, " 100 knots faster than Adm. Crow says the Airbus was flying, and " well under 1, 000 feet...
VERB
26
769
0
The airline said load factor, or the percentage of seats filled, was 39.3%, up from 37.7% a year earlier
VERB
10
770
0
I confess I fear word will get out that " the man in the green house is a soft touch " -- and that I will soon have several " Clints " knocking on my door
VERB
32
771
0
One grandfather had a sugar- cane field, until alternating patrols of Contras and Sandinistas ate it, stalk by stalk
VERB
14
772
0
Trading volume often evaporates just ahead of the monthly employment statistics, which are exceptionally difficult to predict
VERB
3
773
0
A revenue passenger mile is one paying passenger flown one mile
VERB
8
774
0
He flew off in one of his three 707s for long weekends in places like Australia with people like John and Bo Derek
VERB
1
775
0
Skywest said its load factor, or the percentage of seats filled, decreased to 38.3% from 41.5%
VERB
10
776
1
There are truths of which we shall remain unaware forever because we don't have the intelligence to grasp them
VERB
17
777
1
The writers' strike forced CBS Inc. yesterday to delay the debut of its critical fall season until the end of October, killing the third- place network's plan for a head start on its rivals
VERB
21
778
0
Carole Pfeffer put an ad seeking them in a trade publication and was flooded with close to 1, 000 pictures
VERB
13
779
0
" I have long suspected that more people are sleeping apart because of snoring than are sleeping together for all other reasons combined.'
VERB
16
780
1
A synthetic version, prepared by means of recombinant DNA, is to be given in an intravenous infusion in the hope that flooding the body with false targets would mop up virus particles and prevent them from infecting cells of the body
VERB
21