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1,158 | 0 | Mr. Borge ridicules anti- government marchers and muses about establishing a " museum of political parties " to show future generations what some of the more- conservative groups were like, since he expects them to wither under the forces of history | VERB | 35 |
1,159 | 1 | It no longer fills its stage with second- rate English aria- mongers | VERB | 3 |
1,160 | 0 | But Korea's booming economy can absorb them, economists say | VERB | 5 |
1,161 | 1 | The Nasdaq Composite Index slumped to a 2 1 2-month low of 374.07, down 4.88, in quiet trading that underscored the simple problem of over- the- counter stock market: no one's stepping up to the counter | VERB | 31 |
1,162 | 0 | The agreement between the Bank Board and Bass group also represents a defeat for Ford Motor Co., which has for more than a year been trying to strike a deal with the Bank Board to acquire American Savings | VERB | 27 |
1,163 | 1 | Though Telepictures was considered a high- flying entrepreneurial company when it merged with Lorimar, Lorimar's troubles dragged the company down after the merger, and Mr. Garin clashed over strategy and style with Lorimar Chairman Merv Adelson | VERB | 16 |
1,164 | 1 | Shortly afterward, Bob Adams Inc. in Boston flooded 21 universities nationwide with 10, 000 copies of its annual two bits of advice, a publication called " Careers and the M.B.A.' | VERB | 7 |
1,165 | 0 | In one illustrative case, they voted to strike down a state statute denying public funds for abortions under a provision they found " implicit " in the Massachusetts constitution | VERB | 7 |
1,166 | 0 | Already, President- elect Carlos Salinas de Gortari has found himself and his closest advisers attacked by the nation's two strongest labor leaders: Fidel Velazquez, boss of the Confederation of Mexican Workers -LRB- CTM -RRB-, and oil union chief Joaquin Hernandez Galicia | VERB | 14 |
1,167 | 1 | L.A. Style, a monthly with a circulation of about 50, 000, is one of several trend- seeking publications such as Taxi and Details that grew rapidly in recent years by targeting upscale readers in search of the latest nightspots, restaurants and fashions | VERB | 30 |
1,168 | 1 | C- Span's call- in shows had a separate number for international calls, and the signal was being kicked back to Europe via satellite | VERB | 17 |
1,169 | 1 | And each, according to lawsuits filed in connection with the accidents, was injured or killed because those belts did not provide the safety that auto makers should have been giving to rear- seat passengers | VERB | 14 |
1,170 | 1 | It turned out that a protein segment in cartilage is similar to the bacterial protein segment, which explained why the white cells also attacked the cartilage | VERB | 23 |
1,171 | 0 | I knocked at the bedroom door, and Father said the security company had just called to say there were certain " irregularities " that prevented them from keeping a watch over our store | VERB | 1 |
1,172 | 1 | " Of course, the bondholders will have to ask: Is dissolving the company better than reorganization?' | VERB | 10 |
1,173 | 0 | It also said that 35, 478 troops were wounded and that 311 remained missing in the Soviet Union's battle with anti- Kabul Moslem insurgents | VERB | 13 |
1,174 | 0 | Chaus said it rebounded the next year, gaining other retail accounts, but since then the company has stumbled on a flurry of problems typical of those hurting the industry | VERB | 17 |
1,175 | 0 | But confidence in that forecast began to evaporate on March 4 when the Labor Department reported a much larger increase in employment last month than anyone had expected | VERB | 7 |
1,176 | 0 | Formerly senior vice president of the international division of the New York Stock Exchange, he fills a vacancy created by recent resignations | VERB | 15 |
1,177 | 0 | Camille's father, Wolfy, former winner of the Indianapolis 500, is driven to drink by the exploits of his ex- wife Rose, author of a feminist denunciation of the Daleys and the host of her own talk show | VERB | 12 |
1,178 | 1 | David Seiders, chief economist for the National Association of Home Builders, is sticking to his forecast of mortgage rates of between 11% and 11.5% by year end | VERB | 12 |
1,179 | 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 | 19 |
1,180 | 0 | They are pouring lots of free drinks, especially champagne and liqueurs, at art events in Los Angeles and New York | VERB | 2 |
1,181 | 0 | With the pace of the campaign now heating up, the two leaders will be stepping up their appearances: At least four more debates are scheduled between now and March | VERB | 14 |
1,182 | 1 | Excessive rates of income tax destroy enterprise, encourage avoidance, and drive talent to more hospitable shores overseas | VERB | 5 |
1,183 | 1 | But yesterday it was a dollar- boosting dispatch from a Japanese news service that was primarily responsible for dragging precious metals prices back down, analysts said | VERB | 18 |
1,184 | 1 | " I thought I was eating him alive, " recalled a rueful Mr. Bailey of a long- ago debate | VERB | 5 |
1,185 | 1 | The opening salvo came on Memorial Day, when the Guard kicked off a celebration of its 75th year at Camp Grayling | VERB | 10 |
1,186 | 1 | British Trade and Industry Secretary Lord Young said he plans to appoint an independent investigator to examine his department's regulatory oversight of James Ferguson Holdings PLC, an investment- management company whose Barlow Clowes Gilt Managers Ltd. unit is being liquidated | VERB | 16 |
1,187 | 0 | A Treasury official yesterday attacked Mr. Robinson's proposal as " clearly a commercial venture on the part of American Express " and one that contains nothing new | VERB | 4 |
1,188 | 1 | Similarly, Victor Munoz, a Chihuahua- born U.S. labor leader, credits the PAN for planting the seeds of democracy | VERB | 13 |
1,189 | 0 | The department's Commodity Credit Corp. has flooded the market with corn " to contain the damage to the livestock sector from rising prices or a shortage of feed, " said Ewen Wilson, assistant agriculture secretary for economics | VERB | 6 |
1,190 | 0 | Smokers are more likely than non- smokers to sleep less than six hours daily, skip breakfast, be physically inactive and be heavier drinkers, according to the National Center for Health Statistics | VERB | 8 |
1,191 | 1 | Some 16% of surveyors for Zagat's restaurant guide said they had felt the pinch and were eating out less often than last year | VERB | 16 |
1,192 | 1 | " The most harrowing time is when it rains, and this year it rained every single day except for two days in six weeks | VERB | 13 |
1,193 | 0 | He frets that industry's failure to plow profits back into new capacity will constrain exports, considered by many economists as the brightest hope for maintaining U.S. growth, even if consumer spending weakens | VERB | 6 |
1,194 | 0 | Moody's said it will examine the effect of such a tender offer, if sucessfully completed, on Facet's capital structure and debt- protection measurements | VERB | 4 |
1,195 | 0 | " That doesn't stop us from missing Brian, of course.' | VERB | 6 |
1,196 | 0 | John Matt, a 25-year- old stock- index options trader, started riding his bicycle to work to save money, then couldn't afford to replace it when it was stolen | VERB | 10 |
1,197 | 0 | Specifically, they contend the Soviet leadership would be less likely to risk an all- out war if their most protected command posts could be struck | VERB | 24 |
1,198 | 1 | Scientists in their labs when the virus struck called reinforcements for help | VERB | 7 |
1,199 | 0 | A revenue passenger mile is one paying customer flown one mile | VERB | 8 |
1,200 | 0 | " Fat and cowardly generals had a good chance of being kicked out; company commanders who weren't any good have either been kicked out or killed in battle | VERB | 25 |
1,201 | 0 | Longtime American expatriates here like to recall what happened in the 1970s when Japan easily absorbed the same heavy body blows from the organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries that bring other developed nations to their knees | VERB | 15 |
1,202 | 0 | Terry Knowles, special agent in charge of the Sacramento FBI office, declined to say why California was targeted or provide other details | VERB | 17 |
1,203 | 0 | At the same time, Coleco's diversification plan -- which industry analysts approve of as a way to smooth out the company's ups and down of the past -- has been disappointing so far | VERB | 17 |
1,204 | 1 | The central banks may have to step up their efforts to support the dollar if new U.S. employment figures disappoint strongly bearish players this week | VERB | 6 |
1,205 | 0 | Over- the- counter stocks began November in the same funk in which they plowed through October, as OTC indexes slipped slightly on low volume | VERB | 13 |
1,206 | 1 | It razed the Sirri and Sasson platforms in the southern gulf, knocking out the command and control radar facilities of the Iranian military that come to bear on the Hormuz Strait choke point | VERB | 11 |
1,207 | 0 | But the EPA and medical specialists have estimated that, even if schools eliminate asbestos quickly, 1, 000 to 7, 000 people already exposed to the substance in their school years would die from asbestos- related diseases over the next 30 years | VERB | 31 |
1,208 | 0 | In no case did expenditures rise enough after the war to absorb the revenue that would have been available if the war taxes had been retained | VERB | 11 |
1,209 | 0 | The kinky Keynesians who devised it will be lucky to escape across the Potomac with their pie charts | VERB | 10 |
1,210 | 0 | President Reagan issued a list of 107 examples of " wasteful " spending approved by Congress last December, but backed away from his earlier vow to formally ask Congress to strike them from the fiscal 1988 budget | VERB | 30 |
1,211 | 0 | Then again, other gases might cause a lot of clouds to form, blocking sunlight and cooling things off | VERB | 15 |
1,212 | 1 | " There's a lot of engagements I didn't get, " Mr. Meredith told the Roanoke Times and World- News, because " I don't stick to the white- liberal, black- bourgeoisie line- cussin' Reagan, affirmative action and all that.' | VERB | 23 |
1,213 | 1 | Brian J. Luedtke, a technical analyst at Piper, Jaffray& Hopwood, Minneapolis, said he believes investors need further evidence about the economy's direction before the market will be able to escape from its recent malaise | VERB | 29 |
1,214 | 0 | Field stone, generally rounder, is hard to come by because much is already in old stone walls, and few farmers are plowing new fields | VERB | 21 |
1,215 | 0 | Furthermore, records that were supposed to be destroyed sometimes aren't, and they, too, occasionally surface | VERB | 7 |
1,216 | 0 | Vitro Corp., a unit of Penn Central Corp., won a$ 22.3 million Navy contract for shipboard missile targeting equipment | VERB | 17 |
1,217 | 0 | Ronald Simmons, the board's president, said the meeting was scheduled because the board has been " flooded with phone calls " for several weeks about rumors of a sweeping IBM cut of the Boca Raton work force | VERB | 16 |
1,218 | 0 | You're stuck with it | VERB | 1 |
1,219 | 1 | In Taunton, he called together business, labor, political and education leaders to examine the city's problems | VERB | 12 |
1,220 | 1 | But it's still a fragile recovery, one that may evaporate with the next U.S. monthly trade figure, some bankers warn | VERB | 9 |
1,221 | 1 | " I fix it too many times already, " he says, adding that he is waiting for a formal treaty | VERB | 2 |
1,222 | 0 | Currently, if they don't plant an allotted percentage of their so- called crop base with subsidized crops, the government penalizes them the next year by reducing the size of their base, thus cutting their subsidy payments | VERB | 4 |
1,223 | 1 | By endorsing bank authority to underwrite corporate equities, the senators gave the Fed a defense against claims that such a move would fly in the face of congressional opposition | VERB | 22 |
1,224 | 0 | The spokesman wasn't able to quantify pumping capacity; the refinery has a crude oil input capacity of 400, 000 barrels a day, but runs between 250, 000 barrels and 275, 000 barrels a day | VERB | 6 |
1,225 | 1 | It is impolite to drink less than three glasses and, after the third, it is generally impolite for guests to linger | VERB | 4 |
1,226 | 1 | The Oct. 19 stock market crash, however, cooled Home Group's enthusiasm for the deal | VERB | 7 |
1,227 | 0 | Herbert Weisberg, a political scientist at Ohio State University, analyzed national election data compiled by the University of Michigan and concluded, " When one examines voting in the 1984 election, one finds the largest voting differences on the basis of race and income, followed by differences based on marital status, religion, gender, and region.' | VERB | 24 |
1,228 | 1 | The lower court had enjoined the effect of its decision, pending the appeal, but the appeals court dissolved the injunction | VERB | 17 |
1,229 | 0 | The real estate division, which reports to Mr. Brown, has also lost seasoned leadership at a time when it has been aggressively lending to developers | VERB | 22 |
1,230 | 0 | Eric Johnson, the researcher, found that it also destroys certain kinds of botulism | VERB | 8 |
1,231 | 0 | U.S. officials said evidence suggests that a Japanese terrorist arrested last month in New Jersey with homemade bombs was on his way to attack a target in New York City | VERB | 23 |
1,232 | 0 | " I miss my camp, my camels, my cheese, " he says wistfully | VERB | 2 |
1,233 | 0 | Conceivably, either the Federal Land Bank of Columbia, S.C., or the Federal Land Bank of Texas, based in Austin, or both, could extend their operations to fill the lending void after the liquidation, said Mr. Naylor, the system's chief regulator | VERB | 26 |
1,234 | 0 | In 1925, Congress said that the Supreme Court has discretion to refuse to hear cases, except when a state supreme court strikes down a federal law or upholds a state law that was challenged as violating the Constitution, or when a federal appeals court strikes down a state law or a federal appeals or district court strikes down a federal law, all on constitutional grounds | VERB | 56 |
1,235 | 0 | They danced to the funk rock of a live band and grilled hot dogs and ribs | VERB | 1 |
1,236 | 0 | The press release for an upcoming miniseries describes Nina, its heroine, as " a manipulative woman determined to love and, if need be, destroy the men in her life.' | VERB | 23 |
1,237 | 0 | In 15 years, Ms. Tsemel says, " I can count my wins on one hand -- with two fingers missing.' | VERB | 19 |
1,238 | 0 | Mr. Galvin's interest in the condo subsequently withered | VERB | 7 |
1,239 | 1 | " In a small company, the CEO and his people become so absorbed in the Eleven that it dominates the existence of the company.' | VERB | 12 |
1,240 | 0 | Mechanics have stripped one airworthy helicopter down to its skeleton for parts to fix three others | VERB | 13 |
1,241 | 1 | Neither man is currently a government official, but the idea of a reprise of Mr. Kissinger's famed opening to China in the early 1970s is so tantalizing that the rumor refuses to die | VERB | 32 |
1,242 | 0 | While proposing such cuts to attack the current deficit, Mr. Jackson is vague on how the expensive new social programs he proposes would pay for themselves | VERB | 5 |
1,243 | 1 | At the mawkish end of the scale, where nothing is funny and everything is terribly high- minded, we find several of the public personalities who were kind enough to lend their services to " Tanner' 88.' | VERB | 29 |
1,244 | 1 | With huge amounts of debt needed to pay for megadeals, buyers are seeking targets with rich cash flows to cover interest costs on that debt | VERB | 17 |
1,245 | 0 | Lucky's widely respected management appeared to have escaped Mr. Skaggs when it announced its$ 61-a- share buy- out plan in April | VERB | 7 |
1,246 | 1 | Justin makes building products, cooling towers and boots | VERB | 4 |
1,247 | 0 | But Mr. Mitterrand has said he wouldn't dissolve parliament and call new elections unless it voted down his government | VERB | 7 |
1,248 | 0 | But the Nazis didn't occupy Hungary, and kill half a million Jews, until 1944 | VERB | 7 |
1,249 | 0 | A few aspirin facts: Aspirin tablets take up to 20 minutes to dissolve in your stomach | VERB | 12 |
1,250 | 1 | " You're not going to be able to dance and diddle here.' | VERB | 8 |
1,251 | 1 | In fact, the biggest problem facing a Jimmy Snyder or Gary Hart today isn't the loss of job or candidacy but the likelihood that he will have to drag his offense forever, like a tin bell, all across the land | VERB | 28 |
1,252 | 0 | He was at first left alone, but was then dragged before a military court and given a 12-year prison sentence | VERB | 9 |
1,253 | 0 | The new automated system pumps the solvent through a thin catheter inserted into the gallbladder under local anesthesia, the center said | VERB | 4 |
1,254 | 1 | The Democratic contender will step up attacks on Bush's proposal to cut capital- gains taxes | VERB | 4 |
1,255 | 0 | So far, two participants have died, a child has apparently been struck and killed, two racers have received paralyzing injuries and close to 30 more have been seriously hurt | VERB | 11 |
1,256 | 0 | Mr. Hauke says he discovered that in Philadelphia when he smelled glue in a car and later found fresh glue and fibers sticking to his pants | VERB | 22 |
1,257 | 1 | " You couldn't give the shares away if you tried, " adds Vahid Fathi, an analyst with Prescott, Ball& Turben Inc. Mr. Munk himself recalls, " I had many people kick me out.' | VERB | 30 |
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