index
int64 0
3.74k
| label
int64 0
1
| sentence
stringlengths 12
466
| pos
stringclasses 1
value | v_index
int64 1
72
|
---|---|---|---|---|
2,058 | 0 | This time, the ground absorbed the shock waves enough to transfer her images to the metal in bas- relief | VERB | 4 |
2,059 | 0 | Mr. Hudson didn't provide any details about who destroyed documents, how they were destroyed or how they might have been related to the investigation | VERB | 13 |
2,060 | 0 | That Mr. Lafontaine now talks of the need for higher profits for business and fewer demands from labor reflects his propensity for riding the waves of public opinion | VERB | 22 |
2,061 | 0 | Most of the land will be flooded when the project is finished | VERB | 6 |
2,062 | 0 | The Agriculture Department announced late Monday that it had targeted the Soviet Union for an additional one million metric tons of subsidized wheat, bringing to 8.8 million metric tons the amount of U.S. wheat offered to the Soviet Union since October | VERB | 9 |
2,063 | 1 | More mines than maize is planted in the countryside, much of which is controlled by the guerrillas | VERB | 5 |
2,064 | 0 | He insists that Ashley's death was an accident caused by the child tipping over a trash can and eating discarded pills | VERB | 18 |
2,065 | 1 | But despite all, the economy keeps on rolling along | VERB | 7 |
2,066 | 0 | Mr. Lee said he proposed the committee " as a simple way to put the matter quietly to rest.' | VERB | 18 |
2,067 | 0 | Mr. Williams thus launched a divestiture binge that ended only last year, ultimately raising more than$ 1.2 billion in cash -- money that the company plowed not only into reducing debt and upgrading its its natural- gas pipelines, but also into transforming old pipelines into new telephone lines | VERB | 25 |
2,068 | 0 | " He just tried to eat the propeller, " says Mr. Fox | VERB | 5 |
2,069 | 1 | Vice Chairman William J. McDonough, a former State Department official and now the peacekeeper between First Chicago's two executive camps, smooths it all over this way: " A traumatic decision in 1986 became a no- brainer in 1987.' | VERB | 20 |
2,070 | 0 | Edward A. Brennan, chairman and chief executive officer, repeated to analysts something he said he recently told his managers about Sears's businesses: " If it isn't achieving its expected return on capital, their mandate is to fix it in a timely fashion, or exit the position and redeploy assets.' | VERB | 36 |
2,071 | 0 | GM can't continue to absorb indefinitely the large fixed costs represented by unused capacity, he says | VERB | 4 |
2,072 | 0 | And they die anyway.' | VERB | 2 |
2,073 | 1 | Increasingly he will be the leper nobody wants to touch.' | VERB | 9 |
2,074 | 1 | Earlier, he explains to his girlfriend why, on a bet, he slept with a woman he didn't care about: " A guy lays down a dare you got ta take it.' | VERB | 11 |
2,075 | 0 | Lord Bryce noted in 1888, " The conjunction of the forces of rank, wealth, knowledge, and intellect " in a great metropolis like New York " makes such a city a sort of foundry, " a key place where " opinion is melted and cast, " and " easily and swiftly propagated and diffused throughout the country.' | VERB | 42 |
2,076 | 1 | That measure assumed surpluses were the problem; now the surpluses are evaporating | VERB | 11 |
2,077 | 1 | This weapon could be extremely powerful, perhaps ideal for the European battlefield -- simply put attacking troops to sleep | VERB | 18 |
2,078 | 1 | Wynfred Joshua of the Defense Intelligence Agency says that if the U.S. doesn't seize the opportunity to engage the Iranians, the Soviet Union will fill the void | VERB | 24 |
2,079 | 1 | He will certainly take great offense to my description of the Taiwanese as being not much in tune with the outside world, betting gleefully with stocks that no foreign fund manager would touch, and happily oblivious to what the history of financial markets has taught the rest of mankind | VERB | 32 |
2,080 | 0 | Although most of the major airlines have such affiliations, they generally aren't involved in the operations of the smaller airlines- even when the commuters are flying under the big airlines' logos | VERB | 25 |
2,081 | 0 | Anyone can dance the hokey- pokey | VERB | 2 |
2,082 | 0 | Friends and analysts predict it will be very difficult for the hard- driving entrepreneur to let go of his company that, early on, succeeded in coming up with a highly successful device to monitor sleeping infants | VERB | 34 |
2,083 | 0 | Upstairs over the bufyet is the ballroom where Natasha danced | VERB | 9 |
2,084 | 0 | Pounds have melted off, she says, during the months of one- night stands | VERB | 2 |
2,085 | 0 | Creating the special food solved the problem of what he could eat on future flights, but supplying fare for astronauts seemed limited as a business concept | VERB | 11 |
2,086 | 0 | " It's no scarier than stepping out my door at home, " says Davoru Sperling, a Torah student from the West Bank | VERB | 5 |
2,087 | 0 | About half of Cray's R& D budget now goes into creating software, a combination art and science that so totally engrosses some Cray designers that they sometimes have to be dragged away from their terminals and told to get some rest | VERB | 30 |
2,088 | 1 | " We can't seem to put this issue to rest, " says C.A. Pei, who is I.M. Pei's son and a senior associate with New York- based I.M. Pei& Partners | VERB | 9 |
2,089 | 1 | U.S. Stinger missiles, machine guns and mangled human limbs came raining down on what was left | VERB | 10 |
2,090 | 0 | The company has said a cash- flow shortage caused it to miss$ 3.3 million in interest payments on its 10 7 8% senior debentures due Dec. 31, 1995 | VERB | 11 |
2,091 | 0 | But the rally evaporated around midday as rumors began to spread that Wall Street would open lower | VERB | 3 |
2,092 | 1 | By pumping money into coverage of local business, the papers aimed at an affluent and influential audience in their communities | VERB | 1 |
2,093 | 0 | A revenue passenger mile is one paying passenger flown one mile | VERB | 8 |
2,094 | 1 | Thrift liquidations may be stepped up through payouts to depositors, Bank Board Chairman Danny Wall said | VERB | 4 |
2,095 | 0 | A steep falloff in U.S. oats production " strikes terror in our hearts, " says a commodity buyer for Quaker Oats Co | VERB | 8 |
2,096 | 1 | " I was in the stands when it rained, " said Victor Lespinasse, a floor broker for Dean Witter Reynolds, Chicago | VERB | 8 |
2,097 | 0 | Thanks to a new formula and colder dispensing equipment, Twistee Treat Corp. says its cones can be held for 12 minutes before starting to melt, twice as long as other brands | VERB | 24 |
2,098 | 0 | Last month, a report in the Journal of the American Medical Association suggested that Johnson& Johnson's potent prescription cream, long used to treat teen- age acne, could help smooth sun- aged skin | VERB | 28 |
2,099 | 1 | Fed officials hope for signs soon that the economy is slowing, which would cool the need for further rate increases | VERB | 13 |
2,100 | 0 | In 1347, Mongols besieging the Black Sea port of Caffa began to sicken and die from the plague | VERB | 14 |
2,101 | 0 | Equally important, his Socialist government absorbed and then, in effect, destroyed the French Communist Party | VERB | 5 |
2,102 | 0 | His father, a bootlegger and dance- hall operator, shot and killed his own brother in self- defense, and later drank himself to death | VERB | 19 |
2,103 | 0 | When Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak steps off his plane at Andrews Air Force Base tomorrow to begin a visit to Washington, he will be a changed man | VERB | 5 |
2,104 | 0 | A revenue passenger mile is one paying passenger flown one mile | VERB | 8 |
2,105 | 0 | About 40, 000 newborns are afflicted each year with the disease; about 10, 000 die from it | VERB | 14 |
2,106 | 1 | That means just patching their patches, like some farmer making do with a secondhand tractor, until they wither away | VERB | 17 |
2,107 | 1 | But I couldn't make it rain.' | VERB | 5 |
2,108 | 0 | The Geneva talks stumbled on two issues: U.S. insistence that Moscow promise not to arm the Afghan regime after withdrawal and Pakistan's demand that an interim government be established, including Afghan resistance fighters | VERB | 3 |
2,109 | 1 | Neither company has a big presence in the other's businesses, and their alliance is aimed at grabbing a larger share of the converging computer and telecommunications markets | VERB | 16 |
2,110 | 0 | Bishop de Landa, recalled to Spain in 1568, went down in history as a book- burner for destroying the Maya codices, an act that seems more understandable as we learn more about their civilization | VERB | 17 |
2,111 | 1 | When he kicks the pipe holding water back from Milagro, the water floods his dying bean field | VERB | 2 |
2,112 | 1 | It is time these escapist myths are put to rest | VERB | 9 |
2,113 | 0 | Dollars flowed from automated teller machines | VERB | 1 |
2,114 | 1 | They' ve poured millions of dollars into lawmakers' campaign coffers | VERB | 2 |
2,115 | 0 | Others fly them out as personal luggage | VERB | 1 |
2,116 | 1 | A sales representative, who is trying out as an announcer, first talks too slowly, then stumbles when asked to speed up | VERB | 15 |
2,117 | 0 | Spain has begun restoring the Seville monastery where Christopher Columbus rested between sailings, and where he lay buried for a quarter century after he died, as part of an$ 800 million extravaganza to commemorate his discovery of America | VERB | 10 |
2,118 | 0 | Johnson& Johnson, caught off guard by the sudden surge in demand, says it is several weeks behind filling orders | VERB | 17 |
2,119 | 1 | Not surprisingly, Helsinki is most appealing when things are kept Finnish, be it architecture, artifacts or sailors. -LRB- Finnish sailors, who train on one of Helsinki's bucolic islands, sport blond hair, tans and jaunty white caps that look like flying saucers. -RRB-/-R | VERB | 39 |
2,120 | 1 | Donald Kessler, a project scientist at NASA's Johnson Space Center, told an international conference on space pollution that a particle could strike and damage a spacecraft | VERB | 21 |
2,121 | 1 | It is particularly upset over population growth, namely that the millions of foreign dollars pumped into the country haven't convinced Filipinos that zero population growth is the path to prosperity | VERB | 14 |
2,122 | 1 | International Business Machines Corp. will announce tomorrow a slew of telecommunications products that will smooth over some of the problems with large computer networks, industry sources said | VERB | 14 |
2,123 | 1 | Four new studies strongly suggest that heart disease can strike individuals with especially low amounts of high- density lipoproteins, or HDL -- the body's so- called good cholesterol -- even if their total cholesterol level is below 200 milligrams per deciliter, an amount doctors currently think is safe | VERB | 9 |
2,124 | 1 | Edouard Balladur, finance minister of France, who in the adjoining columns today sets out his thoughts on smoothing the recent disruptions in the world economic system -LRB- see: " Rebuilding an International Monetary System --- Three Possible Approaches " -- WSJ Feb. 23, 1988 -RRB- | VERB | 17 |
2,125 | 1 | In the year ended March 31, North Sea oil pumped# 8.2 billion into government coffers | VERB | 9 |
2,126 | 0 | The World Wildlife Fund is trying to attack the problem at its source, by working with developing countries to control the poaching and set up wildlife management programs | VERB | 7 |
2,127 | 0 | He escaped with only minor cuts | VERB | 1 |
2,128 | 0 | " The celebrity could bring more damage to the program and to somebody else's recovery if they started drinking again, " says Chris Jorgensen, vice president of communications | VERB | 18 |
2,129 | 0 | Last year, the NRA ran a newspaper ad featuring a harrowing photo of a frightened woman and asserting that a 20-year- old American woman has a 72% chance of being raped, robbed or assaulted in her lifetime | VERB | 33 |
2,130 | 1 | That is, they taught me how to get up in the morning when I wanted to sleep another few hours | VERB | 16 |
2,131 | 0 | The amendment didn't cover the National Security Council -LRB- a fact that continues to escape Lawrence Walsh -RRB-, so helping the Contras fell to a few workaholics in the Old Executive Office Building | VERB | 14 |
2,132 | 1 | You allege that there still remain hundreds of state- owned companies targeted for privatization, bureaucratic delays in trade movements and aid flows, high tariffs, and a land- reform movement that may promote unemployment | VERB | 11 |
2,133 | 0 | And while TPA early showed itself far superior to streptokinase in dissolving deadly blood clots, that advantage hasn't been transferred to the medical bottom line: better survival rates for patients | VERB | 11 |
2,134 | 0 | It is targeted at space testing of SDI technologies | VERB | 2 |
2,135 | 1 | The idea of having one child has struck a deeper root and less people are punished for violating the birth control plan... | VERB | 7 |
2,136 | 1 | Mr. Groner touches down at the Orlando airport at 5:54 a.m., and a dumpster- size container carrying our package is rolled onto a truck bound for a sorting center in Longwood, Fla | VERB | 20 |
2,137 | 0 | " As these -LRB- new fat substitutes -RRB- flow through the body, they may have laxative properties, " he says | VERB | 8 |
2,138 | 1 | He confirmed that the U.S. is negotiating to persuade Noriega to step down, but refused to confirm he has approved a deal involving the dropping of U.S. drug charges | VERB | 11 |
2,139 | 1 | In the past month, the company's shares have been bouncing around in the mid- to- high$ 50s and touched$ 60 | VERB | 18 |
2,140 | 1 | Claiborne says in the complaint that Avon's failure to meet its obligations for the " crucial 1988 Fall Christmas seasons, which together account for over 70% of annual sales, " would " irreparably harm and likely destroy the business.' | VERB | 36 |
2,141 | 1 | " I' ve been kicked everywhere, " he says | VERB | 4 |
2,142 | 0 | So the kids gave Mom a watch, said a couple of nice things, and drank a retirement toast in her honor | VERB | 14 |
2,143 | 1 | Coca- Cola Co., which stalked out of India 11 years ago, is knocking on the door again | VERB | 12 |
2,144 | 0 | " You have to destroy another human being, " Mr. Espinosa says | VERB | 4 |
2,145 | 0 | Even Mr. MacKay can't escape the national party virus altogether, however | VERB | 4 |
2,146 | 1 | As a sport, though, sea kayaking suddenly has begun to flourish on both coasts of North America and far beyond, to the point where you can take sea kayak tours in such wet Edens as Belize, Baja California, Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Fiji, Tonga, the Maldive Islands and Patagonia, or go on " full- moon paddles " off the star- strewn beaches of Malibu, where I first took the plunge | VERB | 10 |
2,147 | 0 | This money would also be targeted to those who truly need it | VERB | 5 |
2,148 | 0 | This approach is just one of several being weighed to fix the small leak on the launch pad and avoid rolling Discovery back to a hangar for repairs, which could delay the planned early September launch by as much as two months | VERB | 10 |
2,149 | 1 | Mr. Questrom's appointment comes two months after he stepped down as vice chairman of Federated Department Stores, following its takeover by Campeau Corp. Acclaimed by analysts, Mr. Questrom is lauded for the revival of two ailing Federated divisions: Rich's Department Stores in Atlanta and Bullock's Bullock's Wilshire in Los Angeles | VERB | 8 |
2,150 | 1 | Bellini's flowing line is served only by the conductor, Alberto Zedda | VERB | 1 |
2,151 | 1 | Claiborne had said in its complaint last month that Avon's failure to meet its obligation for the Fall and Christmas seasons, which together account for more than 70% of annual sales for the venture, would " irreparably harm and likely destroy the business.' | VERB | 40 |
2,152 | 0 | Limited grew so quickly and was such a hit on Wall Street for so long " that some of us thought it could escape the current fashion retail slump, but that isn't the case.' | VERB | 23 |
2,153 | 0 | McDonald's is flourishing in 11 other nations in the region | VERB | 2 |
2,154 | 1 | Atlantic currently has melting and casting operations at both sites | VERB | 3 |
2,155 | 0 | The Bank Board is examining various alternatives that would bypass the need for any California state approvals | VERB | 4 |
2,156 | 1 | The management group backed by Reliance is led by J. Livingston Kosberg, the company's former chairman, who stepped down this week to concentrate on the proposed recapitalization | VERB | 17 |
2,157 | 0 | Next to it the firm planted a sign: " Little things like this will never come between us.' | VERB | 5 |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.