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1,458 | 0 | An introduction by Edward Shils, the well- known sociologist of ideas -LRB- who has never been a radical -RRB- lends historical perspective to the collection | VERB | 19 |
1,459 | 1 | " We're not sleeping anymore, " says Hans Decker, president of New York- based Siemens Capital Corp | VERB | 3 |
1,460 | 1 | Last month, Judge Aguilar rejected a request by attorneys for Apple that he step aside because of his Hewlett- Packard connection | VERB | 13 |
1,461 | 1 | Recruit Cosmos is turning into the scandal that refuses to die -- but also refuses to spin out of control | VERB | 10 |
1,462 | 1 | Sponsored by the Independence Institute of Colorado, " Classrooms for the Free Society " sought to assess something scarcely touched by the press, but which may decide the role America will play in the world within a decade or two | VERB | 19 |
1,463 | 0 | Of the three intervals tested, it said one flowed 5, 325 barrels of oil a day, a second flowed 23.5 million cubic feet of gas a day and a third flowed 44 million cubic feet of gas a day | VERB | 30 |
1,464 | 1 | The recent Iraqi chemical attack on civilians in the town of Halabja combined with the Iraqi missiles raining on Iranian cities have left Tehranis petrified about possible Iraqi chemical attacks on Tehran | VERB | 17 |
1,465 | 1 | " In the long run, that does more for a car's image than if you drag your feet and wait.' | VERB | 15 |
1,466 | 0 | Another form of front- running likely to be examined in coming months is trading by Wall Street firms in October in anticipation of massive sell orders by money managers using the computerized hedging strategy known as portfolio insurance | VERB | 8 |
1,467 | 0 | He says it was the Koreans who grabbed the knife, wielded the fabric softener like a club, and, what's more, beat up Ms. Clark's 67-year- old mother, Ivy King, who was standing nearby, for no good reason except that she is black | VERB | 7 |
1,468 | 0 | Yields on big certificates of deposit surged in the latest week, but consumers who generally hold smaller CDs missed much of the ride | VERB | 18 |
1,469 | 1 | " They're afraid program trading will touch off another free fall and they' ve been through that before.' | VERB | 6 |
1,470 | 1 | In addition, Mr. Sieck said, NASA would cancel the test if it rained, on the off chance that the firing could be hit by lightning | VERB | 12 |
1,471 | 1 | He and others also figure Midwesterners are more likely than other citizens to step up and buy houses and durables if the manufacturing trend holds | VERB | 13 |
1,472 | 1 | One broker, whose business failed after the crash, began abusing drugs -- mainly sleeping pills -- and contemplated divorce and suicide, says Mari Terzaghi, a clinical psychologist who treats many Wall Street professionals | VERB | 13 |
1,473 | 0 | Because a commitment to hold open the 74.4 miles of supply road to Khost from Gardez would require even more Soviet casualties and force, the optimists surmise that the Soviets are attacking Khost to get out of Afghanistan | VERB | 31 |
1,474 | 0 | The airline said its January load factor, or the percentage of available seats filled, fell to 49.3% from 52.8% | VERB | 13 |
1,475 | 0 | Another ad for a toilet- bowl cleaner is shot from inside the toilet so you can watch a wife urge her husband to stick his head inside the bowl to see how clean she got it | VERB | 23 |
1,476 | 0 | If one of the wheels comes off the chariot and the center wheel must touch down, the nation will see a man to the left of Walter Mondale, far to the left of Jimmy Carter, and not too far to the right of George McGovern | VERB | 14 |
1,477 | 1 | " If you put a pile of candy bars out in a pasture, " Mr. Flickinger says, " they'd go eat themselves to death.' | VERB | 20 |
1,478 | 1 | A Nomura investment would reflect the growing desire by major Japanese financial institutions to grab a bigger piece of the mergers and acquisitions activity taking place between Japan and the U.S | VERB | 14 |
1,479 | 0 | But the next morning, a thin farmer from a nearby ranch who stumbled into the Contras' campsite told a different story | VERB | 12 |
1,480 | 0 | Tens of thousands were melted down for scrap metal right after the war | VERB | 4 |
1,481 | 0 | Without the boost in the capital- gains rate, congressional liberals would have attacked the tax reform plan for leaning too far in favor of the rich | VERB | 12 |
1,482 | 0 | Splashed across local papers was the picture of two burly federal marshals dragging a small woman through the car's broken window | VERB | 12 |
1,483 | 0 | And she recalls Joshua's reaction to his first week of first grade: " They don't give us enough time to rest our heads and our hands.' | VERB | 20 |
1,484 | 0 | The hug knocked off Spinks's hat, a broad- brimmed, white number | VERB | 2 |
1,485 | 0 | Last fall, on the eve of his Twins's World Series victory, the slightly stooped banker shed his white dress shirt on a downtown Minneapolis street as TV cameras rolled, to settle a bet | VERB | 28 |
1,486 | 0 | " There are a lot of fares to clean out, " says a spokeswoman for Eastern, which stopped flying from Los Angeles to San Francisco earlier this summer | VERB | 18 |
1,487 | 1 | Difficult as it was, young Miss Mills managed to grab some of the spotlight from her Papa Bear mentor | VERB | 9 |
1,488 | 0 | But the would- be happy warrior has become a disillusioned, despairing survivor: " Although I was tired to death, I could not sleep, so removing my tin hat and ruffling my hair I stood up and looked over the front of my hole | VERB | 22 |
1,489 | 0 | In interviews, he says, " you're always dancing, always having to show your best side, every day trying to be up when you already know what the outcome will be.' | VERB | 7 |
1,490 | 1 | Publisher Thomas Valentino complains BMI paid him just$ 12 when a piece he handled was played on the nationally syndicated program " Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous.' | VERB | 15 |
1,491 | 1 | " When I saw all the stories, I figured I better sell or I might get stuck, " said one portfolio manager, who last week unloaded some shares of medium- sized OTC stocks rather than risk not being able to sell off the thinly traded shares if prices started to plunge | VERB | 6 |
1,492 | 1 | Pyongyang would like nothing better than to rain on Seoul's parade | VERB | 7 |
1,493 | 0 | Mr. Dukakis is generally cast in that role, but he has stumbled badly twice in a row -- in Illinois and now in Michigan | VERB | 11 |
1,494 | 1 | " If Roger had purposely set out to destroy all morale in what was once the most confident and secure company going, he couldn't have done a better job, " Mr. Lee quotes an unnamed GM executive | VERB | 8 |
1,495 | 1 | Some diamond analysts said dealers may find it difficult to absorb De Beers latest price increase, particularly since it followed a 10% rise in prices in early October | VERB | 10 |
1,496 | 0 | The escaped gas can cause a problem if it mixes with moisture in the air, forming corrosive nitric acid | VERB | 1 |
1,497 | 0 | Omnicom's Tracy- Locke unit in Texas recently struck a deal to buy back 20% of its stock from the parent | VERB | 7 |
1,498 | 1 | He says manufacturers are increasingly rolling out questionable products that aren't fully researched, justified and tested | VERB | 5 |
1,499 | 0 | With so many people earning free tickets so easily, the market is flooded with coupons, depressing their value | VERB | 12 |
1,500 | 1 | Thankfully, none of it stuck | VERB | 4 |
1,501 | 1 | Some burn out nearly overnight, leaving someone stuck with lots of unmovable inventory | VERB | 7 |
1,502 | 0 | -- The peaceful absorption into the world economy and polity of nations now moving swiftly to absorb all the major technologies, a group including among others, China and India, Brazil and Mexico | VERB | 16 |
1,503 | 1 | Heinz is targeting such countries as Germany, France and Portugal for growth in anticipation of the European Community's plan to eliminate trade barriers within the 12-nation trading bloc by the end of 1992, the spokesman added | VERB | 2 |
1,504 | 1 | As he has in previous contests this year, Vice President Bush rode President Reagan's coattails | VERB | 11 |
1,505 | 0 | Since then Mr. McCrea has bounced an all- state candidate off the team for a year for missing his summer basketball camp | VERB | 17 |
1,506 | 1 | That was altogether appropriate, because some minutes before Tyson had knocked Spinks's block off, figuratively speaking | VERB | 10 |
1,507 | 1 | Separately, a Kurdish group claimed responsibility for the downing of a West German airliner in Turkey Saturday in which 16 were killed | VERB | 21 |
1,508 | 1 | Indeed, the U.S. maintains that the bases pump many millions of dollars into the Philippine economy, over and above whatever compensation and aid the U.S. gives to Manila | VERB | 7 |
1,509 | 0 | Indeed, the one truly revolutionary asssumption at loose in the world now is economic: Economies flourish in free markets | VERB | 15 |
1,510 | 1 | Nevertheless, scientists are sticking to plans to trap and kill wild colonies in the BRZ and flood the area with European males | VERB | 3 |
1,511 | 0 | It grabbed 21.7% of U.S. car sales in the first nine months of this year, up from just 16.6% in all 1981 | VERB | 1 |
1,512 | 0 | People with AIDS, however, should understand that the forces arrayed to kill any proposal to suspend Kefauver are formidable | VERB | 11 |
1,513 | 0 | The agreement, to be announced today, marks the first time an industry using chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs, has voluntarily decided to phase out the chemicals because they can destroy the Earth's protective ozone layer | VERB | 27 |
1,514 | 1 | In 1946, Stalin in his campaign to break Ukrainian nationalism brutally forced the Russian Orthodox Church to absorb the Ukrainian Catholic Church | VERB | 17 |
1,515 | 0 | Free riding occurs when a member of an underwriting account withholds part of a public offering and then resells it at a profit | VERB | 1 |
1,516 | 0 | Says Romy Enriquez, an independent candidate for mayor of Zamboanga City: " You might think Cory is still a candidate the way people like to ride on her popularity.' | VERB | 25 |
1,517 | 0 | It may help explain why insider trading could have flourished unchecked for so long on Wall Street | VERB | 9 |
1,518 | 1 | In a sense, the 43-year- old Mr. Lucas has more riding on " Willow " than anybody | VERB | 10 |
1,519 | 1 | Since 1977, fund manager Peter Lynch has stuck to the same basic strategy: buy any attractive stock, no matter what size or sector, or what the market is doing | VERB | 7 |
1,520 | 1 | Using another feed formula, Rosemary Farms in Santa Maria, Calif., has started rolling out an egg that it says has 55% less cholesterol than normal -LRB- though such claims are controversial -RRB- | VERB | 12 |
1,521 | 0 | In April 1981, the task force targeted some 30 regulatory changes -- reducing the cost of producing automobiles by more than a billion dollars a year without compromising legitimate regulatory protections | VERB | 6 |
1,522 | 0 | One sure sign has reappeared to attest that the interests of the United States must be taking a turn for the good in El Salvador: The country is being attacked | VERB | 29 |
1,523 | 1 | He preferred to stick to instant photography.' | VERB | 3 |
1,524 | 0 | " You could change husbands, but not the situation, " she thinks as she examines snack foods | VERB | 14 |
1,525 | 1 | Should any child with a telephone be able to reach out and touch " Missy, " the star of one Megaquest vignette, as she writhes ecstatically on a restaurant table filled with fresh fruit | VERB | 12 |
1,526 | 0 | In an extraordinary act of courage, the archbishop of Manila, Jaime Cardinal Sin, has just stated publicly that the Philippine bishops' own social- action organization was so " highly infiltrated " that it would have to be dissolved | VERB | 37 |
1,527 | 1 | " Jesse's been knocked out of the box so many times before, " says City Councilman George Burrell, a Jackson supporter | VERB | 3 |
1,528 | 0 | " We're evaluating and talking to our customers, " a spokesman says, " but it is not clear what role biodegradable plastics will fill.' | VERB | 23 |
1,529 | 0 | Others continue to die in unsuccessful attempts to escape the East | VERB | 3 |
1,530 | 1 | You'll probably want to eat a crab salad.' | VERB | 4 |
1,531 | 0 | It missed some opportunities, for example, because it hadn't made sure AT& T's salesmen received incentives for pushing its products | VERB | 1 |
1,532 | 1 | In addition, the eight- warhead missiles carry guidance systems allowing them to strike Soviet targets precisely | VERB | 12 |
1,533 | 1 | In Louisiana, CIT was stuck with repossessed ships that had supplied drilling platforms in the Gulf of Mexico | VERB | 4 |
1,534 | 0 | Fern C. Portnoy was named to the board of this membership warehouse chain, filling a vacancy | VERB | 13 |
1,535 | 1 | American life being filled with headaches, aspirin began to catch on | VERB | 3 |
1,536 | 0 | LAW SCHOOLS are besieged by applicants, after a five- year slump | VERB | 3 |
1,537 | 1 | Puma spokesman Uto Duethorn said Mr. Becker and Puma mutually agreed to dissolve the agreement this month | VERB | 12 |
1,538 | 0 | After losing overseas business to Japanese rivals in recent years, U.S. construction and engineering concerns are starting to worry that their home turf now is being targeted by aggressive Japanese builders | VERB | 26 |
1,539 | 1 | The last clatterings of a standing ovation die down | VERB | 7 |
1,540 | 0 | Mr. Chun, one DJP official said, fought the resignations, " believing he could just ride out the storm.' | VERB | 14 |
1,541 | 0 | The Nestle spokesman rebutted the anti- monopoly charge, noting that Perulac has only a 15% share of the evaporated milk market | VERB | 18 |
1,542 | 1 | Their report, to be published here Saturday in the Lancet, a leading British medical journal, immediately was attacked by some radiation specialists as too optimistic | VERB | 17 |
1,543 | 1 | Last year the movies were filled with babies | VERB | 5 |
1,544 | 0 | Since late January, the Fed has pushed the rate on federal funds, or reserves banks lend one another overnight, down a quarter of a percentage point to 6 1 2% and then back up to about 6 3 4% | VERB | 15 |
1,545 | 0 | For Koppers, selling off part of its construction- materials business is seen as crucial, because no matter how it decides to improve upon Beazer's bid, it is likely to absorb considerable debt | VERB | 29 |
1,546 | 0 | " Vitamins could be passed right out of the body without being absorbed, " he says | VERB | 12 |
1,547 | 1 | As it is, the current capacity utilization rate of about 83% at the nation's factories " typically touches off a capital spending boom.' | VERB | 17 |
1,548 | 0 | Compact and vital, feisty as ever, the maestro shows no signs of withering into one of those grand old men of legend who creak to the podium, radiating aura but little else | VERB | 12 |
1,549 | 0 | For entrepreneurship to flourish, it must be clear to all Poles that money- making not only will be permitted but also will be fostered | VERB | 3 |
1,550 | 0 | Dr. Kinlen, who directs the university's Cancer Epidemiology Unit, examined leukemia deaths from a U.S. study that had tracked veterans' smoking between 1954 and 1969 | VERB | 9 |
1,551 | 0 | Outraged at the sentence, the black community mounted an international campaign attacking the country's legal system | VERB | 11 |
1,552 | 0 | Federal investigators also are examining whether Peck employees may have emulated any improper trading for their own or the firm's account, people familiar with the investigation said | VERB | 4 |
1,553 | 0 | Deutsche Bank is establishing a consortium to lend another$ 2.1 billion to the Soviets and doing what it can to prepare the way for a large Soviet issue of deutsche mark bonds | VERB | 7 |
1,554 | 1 | The spokesman said, however, that the plane was transmitting an identifying signal usually associated with civilian aircraft when a U.S. cruiser fired two missiles and killed all 290 aboard | VERB | 25 |
1,555 | 1 | The commissions would eat up my profits.' | VERB | 3 |
1,556 | 0 | About 100, 000 Kurds -- a people not previously known for running -- have fled across the border to Turkey to escape the onslaught | VERB | 21 |
1,557 | 1 | One of their favorite songs has the line: " It rains and rains Until the stones will break.' | VERB | 10 |
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