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1,658 | 0 | Tomorrow night at New York's swank Pierre Hotel, 200 advertising executives in black tie will dance to the jazz of Ann Hampton Callaway and dine on grilled salmon, filet of beef Peregourdine and pastry tulips filled with praline ice cream | VERB | 15 |
1,659 | 0 | In May, Pinnacle said the partnership between SunCor and Mr. Diddy had been " dissolved " so that SunCor could control development of the property that the partnership had acquired, but Pinnacle didn't give further details of his departure | VERB | 14 |
1,660 | 1 | The new jobs may pay less, but they will also be less likely to evaporate all at once | VERB | 14 |
1,661 | 1 | The summit, therefore, is an important domestic event in Germany, where Mr. Gorbachev has been riding a wave of popularity | VERB | 15 |
1,662 | 1 | He has tried to convince the public his company isn't, in his words, " a nice building on the park with everybody sleeping inside.' | VERB | 22 |
1,663 | 0 | Mr. Paulson also flew over China | VERB | 3 |
1,664 | 1 | One option being considered: Hire a clinic doctor as the company's medical director in Wenatchee, partly to smooth relations | VERB | 17 |
1,665 | 1 | To get some idea of how far back down the mountain American politics has rolled consider that the biggest individual political decision George Bush and Michael Dukakis have made so far in their runs for the presidency is selecting Dan Quayle and Lloyd Bentsen as their running mates | VERB | 14 |
1,666 | 1 | This was one of the lesser- known reasons why President Zia abruptly dismissed the whole cabinet and dissolved the national assembly on May 29 | VERB | 17 |
1,667 | 1 | " The market had a bad spill on Friday, and normally when that happens they absolutely kill it on Monday, " said Bernard Savaiko, senior precious metals analyst for PaineWebber Inc., New York | VERB | 16 |
1,668 | 0 | Japan has long fended off accusations that Japanese companies use U.S. and European technologies without permission to grab a market lead, most recently in semiconductors | VERB | 17 |
1,669 | 1 | Failure to pull off the buy- back can only add to problems that have dragged Home Shopping's stock down from a peak of$ 47 a share in January 1987 and left management with credibility problems | VERB | 14 |
1,670 | 0 | Director John McTiernan -LRB- " Predator " -RRB- has efficiently slapped together the ingredients for a big, ear- shattering action film: slick, heavily armed villains; a wife in peril; stupid TV journalists who only make things worse; a renegade cop who singlehandedly destroys the bad guys against impossible odds | VERB | 42 |
1,671 | 0 | But David Lett was a visionary, and in 1966 he planted pinot noir in the red hills near Dundee | VERB | 10 |
1,672 | 0 | A young Oxford graduate comes to Southwest Ireland in 1904 to examine the connections between two incidents in local history that might illuminate the inner logic of a bloody quarter century | VERB | 11 |
1,673 | 0 | Compaq Computer Corp. is expected to unveil today a long- awaited line of laptop computers, filling a gaping hole in the company's product line | VERB | 15 |
1,674 | 1 | Roberto Macedo, president of the Association of Sao Paulo Economists, said in a statement that, " This pact was born distorted and will die distorted.' | VERB | 23 |
1,675 | 0 | The revised terms stem from ITT's review of Portland, Ore .- based American Network's operations, including actual and expected losses, plus ITT's plan to lend the company short- term financing | VERB | 24 |
1,676 | 1 | For most promoters, the preferred scam is " pump and dump " -- pump up the per- share price with hot air and hype, then dump the stock on duped investors for immense profits | VERB | 13 |
1,677 | 1 | General Cinema has announced plans to fix up and expand the 22-store flagship chain, an undertaking estimated at more than$ 100 million | VERB | 6 |
1,678 | 1 | He can be oblivious to how calculated he sometimes appears, yet he can also touch people, as when, at the close of the Louisville rally Saturday, he brought forward Georgia Powers, a black Kentucky state senator | VERB | 14 |
1,679 | 1 | At the State Fair in Lincoln early this month, Mr. Karnes prompted a furor when he said, " We need fewer farmers at this point in time, " a remark that underlined his tendency to stumble into gaffes | VERB | 35 |
1,680 | 0 | Two years ago, Utah state engineers came up with what seemed a logical solution to the seasonal flooding of the Great Salt Lake: Create yet another lake nearby, and pump the excess water into it | VERB | 29 |
1,681 | 1 | And, like Mr. Bush, he rests his platform on often untested optimism | VERB | 5 |
1,682 | 0 | This has given a sheepskin a rarity value unimagined in the 1970s, when the well- educated flooded the labor market and the cabbie with a doctorate drove his way into national folklore | VERB | 16 |
1,683 | 1 | Pop music did get stuck in the 1970s, as evidenced in the second film, " The Gospel According to Al Green.' | VERB | 4 |
1,684 | 1 | As compressed water rushes through its gills, a fish is knocked unconscious | VERB | 10 |
1,685 | 1 | Southdown Inc., stepping up its efforts to take over Moore McCormack Resources Inc., said it began soliciting consents to have Moore McCormack cancel its poison pill | VERB | 2 |
1,686 | 1 | Mr. Hudson hears that the Chinese eat the things, and someone's looking into it | VERB | 6 |
1,687 | 0 | That's not to say the taxpayers can rest easy | VERB | 7 |
1,688 | 1 | But he grasped the potential of putting the two together | VERB | 2 |
1,689 | 1 | The storm killed about 100 people on land, and left more than 100, 000 homeless | VERB | 2 |
1,690 | 1 | I would sleep better knowing Dan Quayle was in the National Guard than on the national ticket | VERB | 2 |
1,691 | 0 | Since May, he has hired a marketing consultant, a creative director and a new marketing manager to help Hanover use its consumer lists more effectively, targeting only those consumers most likely to buy | VERB | 25 |
1,692 | 0 | By January 1993, societies would be able to lend 25% of their assets for such nontraditional purposes as commercial property development and unsecured personal loans | VERB | 8 |
1,693 | 0 | Nelson Peltz and Peter May, whose junk- bond wizardry built Triangle Industries and won them the sobriquet of " the new aces of low tech, " may have missed out on a pot of money at CJI Industries | VERB | 28 |
1,694 | 1 | Mr. Joseph wasn't worried because the company was riding high when Ms. Bruck started her research in 1985 | VERB | 3 |
1,695 | 0 | The Kidney Patient Association, an independent group, estimates that some 1, 500 Britons die every year because of lack of kidney treatment | VERB | 13 |
1,696 | 1 | Then, after 3 1 2 innings, it rained, with the Cubs ahead, 3- 1 | VERB | 7 |
1,697 | 1 | Although the editorial mentioned the deficiencies of the traditional, peer- review method of funding university research, it nevertheless failed to grasp the underlying realities that now have impelled Congress to fund university projects directly | VERB | 20 |
1,698 | 0 | A front is then expected to move in but it will cool temperatures only slightly, to 40 to 50 degrees | VERB | 11 |
1,699 | 0 | Once, he said, the page turner at a professional concert knocked over the whole score, causing a crescendo where none was intended | VERB | 10 |
1,700 | 1 | And now that the winter snows are melting along the Indo- Chinese border in the Himalayas, tension between the two Asian rivals is again rising | VERB | 7 |
1,701 | 0 | City Capital Associates, a group led by Steven and Mitchell Rales of Washington, D.C., indicated that it would be willing to raise its bid for the company to$ 72 a share from$ 70 if it can examine certain non- public documents | VERB | 36 |
1,702 | 1 | In ground tests, parts keep fracturing and flying apart | VERB | 7 |
1,703 | 1 | He also attacked a House panel for disclosing at least three pending SEC inquiries | VERB | 2 |
1,704 | 0 | In late June, for example, a group that included Teddy Roosevelt's great- great- granddaughter stood down some bulldozers trying to plow a road through a moor near the island village of Siasconset | VERB | 20 |
1,705 | 0 | Equally important, his Socialist government absorbed and then, in effect, destroyed the French Communist Party | VERB | 10 |
1,706 | 0 | The indictment also charges that Mr. Frankel, 32, and Mr. Yagoda, 44, committed perjury and obstruction of justice when they testified before the SEC in 1986, and that Mr. Frankel further attempted to obstruct the SEC's investigation when he directed a co- conspirator at Drexel to destroy certain documents | VERB | 46 |
1,707 | 1 | There is suspicion in U.S. industry and government that the latest effort is a political exercise to cool American complaints about subsidies and avert a trade war | VERB | 17 |
1,708 | 1 | Mr. Davis openly has a bone to pick with urban renewal, but this hardly seems a prejudice on his part: Urban renewal did in fact come into Fulton and systematically destroyed the old neighborhood, and there wasn't anything subtle about it | VERB | 30 |
1,709 | 1 | Carl Rowan, of course, is the famous liberal newspaper columnist and TV commentator who may have become even more famous Tuesday for pumping a bullet from a .22-caliber handgun into the wrist of Ben Neal Smith, 18, of Chevy Chase | VERB | 22 |
1,710 | 1 | The Peloponnesian War, that devastating conflict between Sparta and Athens that broke out in 431 B.C. and dragged on until 404 B.C., has long been regarded as the turning point in the career of the Athenian experiment in democracy | VERB | 17 |
1,711 | 0 | Then the sports market stumbled in the months leading up to bidding for summer rights, which were awarded in October 1985 | VERB | 4 |
1,712 | 0 | Japanese, West German, Taiwanese and other foreign machine tool builders grabbed business away from U.S. machine builders, both in the U.S. and abroad | VERB | 10 |
1,713 | 0 | Sure enough, someone drop- kicked an extra point in last year's " preview " season, and this year Dave Jacobs of the New England Steamrollers got a field goal and three PATs | VERB | 4 |
1,714 | 0 | The pas de deux danced the past week by Secretary of State Shultz and Senator Sam Nunn has been dreadful political ballet, with the Reagan administration discovering what happens when you choose to dance with your political enemies | VERB | 33 |
1,715 | 1 | The last Polish leader who recognized Solidarity, Edward Gierek, lost his job in the process; Gen. Jaruzelski has rested his political base on a refusal to do the same | VERB | 18 |
1,716 | 0 | It is to this purpose that SDI laser technology can be uniquely directed, where moving targets can be attacked almost immediately after they are detected | VERB | 18 |
1,717 | 1 | And it's far from certain that the latest increases on business fares will stick -- already, the airlines have postponed the move for seven days, and some smaller carriers such as Midway Airlines say they won't match the increases | VERB | 13 |
1,718 | 1 | " Does somebody have to get hurt -- or killed?' | VERB | 9 |
1,719 | 1 | As the wifely paragon sits, waiting and weaving, you nearly go to sleep the piece is so static | VERB | 12 |
1,720 | 1 | There has been a consequent letdown in political suspense; and, since too many reporters these days cover politics as if it were a form of horse racing, the press is now doing its best to pump drama into the vice presidential nominations | VERB | 35 |
1,721 | 0 | It kills the parasite residing in red blood cells and has few side effects, SmithKline said | VERB | 1 |
1,722 | 1 | He adds that he " wouldn't be at all surprised " if Congress made changes that could " really kill or seriously impair this whole area.' | VERB | 19 |
1,723 | 1 | As the first issue was rolling off the press, Mr. McGovern threw a party in Moscow and eagerly leafed through the magazine | VERB | 5 |
1,724 | 0 | Gary Floyd, owner of Johnson's Corner, says he pumped one million fewer gallons of diesel fuel in 1987 than a year earlier | VERB | 8 |
1,725 | 1 | A Wall Street Journal story yesterday said sales of the company's clot- dissolving drug TPA have cooled a bit from the fast pace in December | VERB | 16 |
1,726 | 0 | The thaw in U.S .- Soviet relations has touched many areas of Soviet life | VERB | 8 |
1,727 | 1 | " Not having him -- or her -- that's where we're stuck, " he said | VERB | 11 |
1,728 | 0 | A letter from Mayor Ed Koch went out early this month to chief executives of 11, 000 companies, urging them to reduce the city's traffic woes by encouraging employees to ride subways | VERB | 30 |
1,729 | 0 | Common Cause has attacked the Ways and Means Committee's proposal to repeal the$ 3, 000 limit on the deductibility of congressional living expenses in Washington, D.C | VERB | 3 |
1,730 | 0 | These Protestants retaliate by physically attacking Catholics, Mr. Donnelly says | VERB | 5 |
1,731 | 1 | Money managers who pattern their portfolios on this index usually buy the new additions, causing a flurry of activity and pumping up the price of the shares | VERB | 20 |
1,732 | 1 | " It's like they're bleeding from the carotid artery, and we're having to fix it with a Band- Aid.' | VERB | 13 |
1,733 | 0 | " This is serious because the financial community is getting flooded with these things, " said Robert Siller, an FBI agent investigating the Ohio incidents | VERB | 10 |
1,734 | 1 | He also said that if the dispute can't be settled by the end of the new cooling off period, Messrs | VERB | 16 |
1,735 | 1 | If so, human cells may also make similar proteins -- potentially confusing immune cells that target foreign stress proteins and inducing them to attack a person's own cells | VERB | 23 |
1,736 | 1 | But the euphoria soon evaporated | VERB | 4 |
1,737 | 1 | That deal, like the Minnesota Mining acquisition, was struck for purely strategic reasons; it gave Hughes 40% of the British market for military flight simulators | VERB | 8 |
1,738 | 1 | Elise holds out empty arms, pleading with Andrew to fill them, but the chasm is too wide, the distance traveled in different directions too great | VERB | 9 |
1,739 | 1 | It is time to join the X- maquis, go gray like artemisia, and start planting toward the xeric year 2000 | VERB | 14 |
1,740 | 0 | In 1962, when a fierce drought withered even the thorn trees, he sold his emaciated camels and moved, along with many others, to Tamanrasset | VERB | 6 |
1,741 | 0 | Canadian National said that Canadian Pacific Hotels agreed to maintain all existing labor contracts and pension benefits and to absorb all of CN Hotels' current employees | VERB | 19 |
1,742 | 0 | Under the new agreements, LivingWell will lend T.H.E. about$ 1.2 million on a secured basis, cancel prior T.H.E. indebtedness to a LivingWell unit, and return about two million T.H.E. common shares | VERB | 6 |
1,743 | 1 | The candidates will step up and swing at the fast ones, pitchouts and curves tossed by Ann Compton of ABC News, Andrea Mitchell of NBC News and Margaret Warner of Newsweek | VERB | 3 |
1,744 | 0 | Watch these acclaimed motor- mouths crank it to the max, in order to " examine all aspects of the electoral process " in a single hour | VERB | 14 |
1,745 | 0 | Koversada, maybe humanity's greatest undraped conurbation, sleeps more than 100, 000 | VERB | 6 |
1,746 | 0 | Displaying his erudition, however, Mr. Bonin soon says he will handle the position the way Mr. Kasparov himself once played against Grandmaster Ljubomir Ljubojevic, the leading Yugoslav player | VERB | 19 |
1,747 | 0 | As usual, Ms. Larsen strove to avoid the obvious by focusing on her emotional response rather than the natural phenomenon itself: " I want to give the listener not the sound of a bird as much as the feeling of flying.' | VERB | 40 |
1,748 | 0 | -- Last September, 22-year- old Kimberly Isaac of Baton Rouge, La., was badly scraped over a large part of her body when a 1977 LTD she had just parked in a grocery- store lot backed up, knocking her over and dragging her in circles | VERB | 36 |
1,749 | 0 | " Jeez, " you can just hear Joe Exec sighing, his shirt- sleeves rolled up, his arms buried deep in the trash, " there must be something in here we can salvage.' | VERB | 13 |
1,750 | 0 | Last summer, escaping an unwanted takeover, USG effected a leveraged recapitalization | VERB | 2 |
1,751 | 1 | France was drowning in wheat and it needed to get wheat out of warehouses | VERB | 2 |
1,752 | 0 | The federal funds rate, which is the rate on reserves banks lend each other overnight, averaged 6.79% Friday, according to Fulton Prebon -LRB- U.S.A. -RRB-/-R | VERB | 11 |
1,753 | 0 | The way to topple Gen. Noriega economically was to knock him completely off balance with a sanctions blitz that would have made the Panamanian economy scream -LRB- as the Nixon administration tried to do to Salvador Allende's Chile -RRB- | VERB | 9 |
1,754 | 1 | As a regional brand, however, Stokely already can't come close to matching the dollars that both the biggies pour into advertising and trade promotion | VERB | 18 |
1,755 | 0 | A revenue passenger mile is one paying passenger flown one mile | VERB | 8 |
1,756 | 0 | " Americans regard as safe something you could plow into a wall without hurting yourself, " he said | VERB | 8 |
1,757 | 0 | Prince Norodom Sihanouk, the former Cambodian leader, said this week he was withdrawing from the resistance because the Khmer Rouge continues to attack his forces along the Thai- Cambodia border | VERB | 22 |
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