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2,631 | 1 | That implies production slowdowns, which could result in job losses and weaker consumer spending, which in turn would cause the economy to drag its heels further | VERB | 22 |
2,632 | 0 | I, for one, am " dancing on the ceiling.' | VERB | 5 |
2,633 | 1 | It pours toilet paper in parts of Michigan | VERB | 1 |
2,634 | 0 | IBP attacked the report as not factual and full of innuendo and as " egotistical " grandstanding by the subcommittee chairman, Rep. Tom Lantos -LRB- D., Calif. -RRB- | VERB | 1 |
2,635 | 0 | They use list cleaning and other computer- based targeting techniques to find interested prospects and to eliminate non- interested prospects | VERB | 8 |
2,636 | 0 | You may withdraw cash temporarily from an individual retirement account and escape a tax or penalty, if you roll it all over into another IRA in 60 days | VERB | 11 |
2,637 | 0 | " Some analysts felt that many if anything during the' 60s and' 70s were overcapitalized and missed out on some business opportunities for not being as aggressive as they should have been | VERB | 16 |
2,638 | 0 | The EPA's current emission standard for radium is five picocuries per liter, a standard that corresponds to a risk whereby one of 10, 000 people exposed to such an emission level over a lifetime would die | VERB | 35 |
2,639 | 1 | And Bank of Japan Governor Satoshi Sumita said the central bank would " act appropriately and flexibly " if needed to smooth currency and price movements | VERB | 21 |
2,640 | 1 | And so it is on the grounds of insufficient candor that the resourceful Mr. Goldman, hot to debunk, attacks his subject | VERB | 18 |
2,641 | 0 | Almost one- third of the heavy smokers sleep less than six hours | VERB | 7 |
2,642 | 0 | Many farmers reduced wheat planting under a government program that requires them to idle 27.5% of their acreage to qualify for price- support subsidies, said Ewen Wilson, assistant agriculture secretary for economics | VERB | 4 |
2,643 | 0 | CO- OPS CONVERTING to condominiums can escape a tax on assets | VERB | 6 |
2,644 | 1 | " The question is, how many times does Congress have to stick its hands in the meat grinder before it notices it hurts?' | VERB | 11 |
2,645 | 0 | What I can say is that these things are inexplicably beautiful, as is almost always the case in Mr. Wilson's work; that Mr. Muller's text, in the translation of Carl Weber, keeps finding new ways to express the contradictions of the human spirit; and that " Quartet " seems to flow through its two- hour running time like a shifting stream of hot lava -- you don't know where it's going next, but you want to be sure and leave it plenty of room | VERB | 50 |
2,646 | 0 | At state dinners, the president pours wine for his guests, but in adherence to Islam never touches a drop himself | VERB | 5 |
2,647 | 0 | He said global capital flows that once primarily went from the Northern to the Southern Hemisphere " now flow within the golden triangle of London, New York and Tokyo.' | VERB | 18 |
2,648 | 0 | ERG Resources Inc. said Australia's Giant Resources Ltd. agreed to lend the company 43 million Canadian dollars -LRB- US$ 35.5 million -RRB- and provide security for a C$ 60 million gold loan planned by ERG | VERB | 10 |
2,649 | 0 | Alain Minc, Patrick Ponsolle and Maurice Lippens were flying from Paris to Brussels last Monday night when they uncorked a bottle of warm champagne and toasted the future of Societe Generale de Belgique S.A., the giant Belgian holding company | VERB | 8 |
2,650 | 1 | Remington has the cooperation of the state, which lowered its tax on parimutuel wagering and has vowed to limit competing tracks for now, and the deep pockets of the DeBartolos, who kicked in$ 1 million to supplement purses during the inaugural 70-day meet | VERB | 31 |
2,651 | 0 | When dissolved in water, the protein acts as a catalyst to aid the freezing process by increasing the effective freezing point of water by 8 degrees to 10 degrees Fahrenheit | VERB | 1 |
2,652 | 0 | He also brought his will to throw bats, batting helmets and anything else handy when he strikes out, but it's part of the same package | VERB | 16 |
2,653 | 0 | Yet under a Start regime, the committee report said, " The Soviet incentive to cheat could increase because of a greater difficulty in meeting targeting requirements " in Europe and the U.S. Mr. Boren urged a big new investment to improve U.S. intelligence collection | VERB | 24 |
2,654 | 0 | In retelling the story of Freud's life and work, Peter Gay plows a furrow already dug deep by many previous Freud biographers and historians of psychoanalysis | VERB | 11 |
2,655 | 1 | For his part, Mr. Jacobs, the Minneapolis investor who last summer is said to have held about 1.5 million shares, didn't stick around to find out | VERB | 21 |
2,656 | 0 | About 165, 000 pieces had been lent to government offices and embassies around the world, and many never came back, he said | VERB | 6 |
2,657 | 0 | " This memo was withdrawn and destroyed and someone got it by going through our trash and resurrecting it, " the EDS spokesman said | VERB | 6 |
2,658 | 0 | Economists' food- inflation forecasts have been heating up as crops wither in the Midwest | VERB | 10 |
2,659 | 0 | " While physicians should never directly cause death, they must always act in the best interest of their patients and that sometimes includes allowing them to die, " Dr. Sammons said in a statement | VERB | 26 |
2,660 | 1 | The calm way in which she discards some of the more unlikely legends and willful misinterpretations that flourish among Bronte scholars is admirable | VERB | 17 |
2,661 | 1 | He quashed the legislation despite the fact that first- degree murder involves killing with premeditation or with particular cruelty, such as torture | VERB | 12 |
2,662 | 1 | Since the middle of August, there have been some signs that the economy has begun to cool off | VERB | 16 |
2,663 | 0 | The horses' handler, a young woman, leapt onto Mr. Ricci's horse and kicked away in a cloud of dust | VERB | 12 |
2,664 | 1 | PS of New Hampshire stepped in after efforts by others to negotiate an agreement with MMWEC failed | VERB | 4 |
2,665 | 1 | In the years since 1853, when 4, 058 steamboats arrived at the Cincinnati waterfront loaded with " foreign " people and exotic merchandise, Cincinnati residents have absorbed chili and pizza and wontons and dirty rice while adjusting to electric music and jet lag | VERB | 26 |
2,666 | 1 | The U.S. and Pakistan long had sought such a " front- loading " of the agreement to ensure that the Soviets don't reap the political benefits of beginning a withdrawal, and then drag their feet in carrying it out | VERB | 32 |
2,667 | 0 | Finally, Texas Air's financing has left Mr. Lorenzo some breathing room to wage his cost war with organized labor and to attack his operating problems | VERB | 21 |
2,668 | 1 | But in the short- term it will absorb a lot of top management's energy and attention, " says Philippe Haspeslagh, a business professor at the European management school, Insead, in Paris | VERB | 7 |
2,669 | 0 | Next door, two rifle- toting guards patrol outside the shack where Mr. Ngxobongwana is sleeping | VERB | 14 |
2,670 | 1 | Business confidence remains buoyant despite the October market crash, according to the survey, though it has cooled somewhat since the previous poll | VERB | 16 |
2,671 | 1 | Offers for more projects pour in every day, spurring Mr. Vinton to mull over the possibility of opening satellite offices in New York and Los Angeles to deal with all the people clamoring for Claymation | VERB | 4 |
2,672 | 0 | After such warfare killed or maimed millions in World War I, public horror brought an international agreement in 1925 to ban it forever | VERB | 3 |
2,673 | 0 | " We tried to protect as many people as we could, examining every job, every structure and every expense, " Mr. Traub said | VERB | 11 |
2,674 | 1 | Efforts to improve on- board bedding are aimed not at passengers but at pilots and cabin staff, who are supposed to get a chance to rest after working a certain number of hours | VERB | 25 |
2,675 | 1 | As to competitive advantages from devaluation, they will evaporate quickly | VERB | 8 |
2,676 | 0 | Automatic transmissions of all makes are sometimes mis- shifted by careless drivers, it says, adding that its later models weren't fixed, just refined | VERB | 20 |
2,677 | 1 | But the latest- quarter results were about flat with the second quarter's$ 7.2 million, or 17 cents a share, as the rate of new orders cooled a bit from the previous period's hot pace | VERB | 25 |
2,678 | 0 | The U.S. sales arm of Honda Motor Co. of Japan said it is recalling approximately 66, 000 Honda Prelude cars to fix a defect that could cause smoke or fire under the hood | VERB | 21 |
2,679 | 0 | The park has been besieged for nearly three months by dry weather and fires that have charred more than half its 2.2 million acres | VERB | 4 |
2,680 | 1 | Any bad news knocks stocks down, " he said | VERB | 3 |
2,681 | 1 | He ignores the fact that if the defendants were less affluent, it is unlikely that either plaintiff or lawyer would be playing in this legalistic sweepstakes | VERB | 21 |
2,682 | 1 | Agreement was reached that an initiative to roll back and cap property taxes should be placed on the November ballot | VERB | 7 |
2,683 | 0 | Smugglers countered by flying low and slow | VERB | 3 |
2,684 | 0 | Domestic aluminum companies have been riding an upturn for the past 18 months, and are now operating at 104% of capacity, a statistic that indicates previously written- off facilities have been brought back on line | VERB | 5 |
2,685 | 0 | But the Baylor Research Foundation in Dallas soon will unveil a technique for using this versatile laser to vaporize tumors without hurting the surrounding healthy cells | VERB | 18 |
2,686 | 1 | " This gets the ball rolling.' | VERB | 5 |
2,687 | 1 | At Russell Field here he is besieged for autographs and his ears are bent relentlessly by people, mostly older ones, who want to share baseball memories | VERB | 6 |
2,688 | 1 | Nearly every scene seems to be missing something | VERB | 6 |
2,689 | 0 | Mr. Pavarotti sounded like a young man as he grabbed the hand of his old pal from Modena, Mirella Freni, and they both seemed to soar through the sets like the Chagall creatures, levitated by the force of Carlos Kleiber's baton | VERB | 9 |
2,690 | 1 | Also, suggestions that the Saudis are intent on rebuilding a once- huge offshore stockpile tended to " strike some fear in some of the participants in this market, " said Stephen W. Platt, a Chicagobased analyst for Dean Witter Reynolds Inc | VERB | 17 |
2,691 | 1 | The court has been flooded with briefs by manufacturers and the insurance industry, which argue for limits on liability and damages, and by consumer groups and plaintiffs' lawyers, which oppose limits | VERB | 4 |
2,692 | 0 | Baaron Pittenger, a long- time USOC aide who had served as acting executive director after Mr. Miller left, was named to fill the vacant post until year end, when Mr. Schiller's contract expires | VERB | 21 |
2,693 | 0 | The curator who answered our loud knocking was so happy to have two Americans visit she opened up the entire museum for us | VERB | 6 |
2,694 | 1 | An immense, loving labor of critical scholarly skills is poured into the study of this remarkable woman, who will be a discovery to many readers, as she was to me | VERB | 9 |
2,695 | 1 | While many analysts debate how last October's stock market crash compares with the 1929 debacle, Martin J. Pring is stepping further back in time -- to Black Friday, 1869 | VERB | 19 |
2,696 | 0 | Thomas E. Bolger, chairman and chief executive officer of Bell Atlantic Corp. in Philadelphia, said that although " the entire industry will miss " Mr. Olson, he doesn't believe the company will suffer any substantial setbacks | VERB | 22 |
2,697 | 0 | Mr. Guez, of Old Westbury, N.Y., also is currently under indictment and awaiting trial for allegedly assaulting a deputy U.S. marshal who tried to seize Sasson records last year at the posh$ 5.5 million Manhattan townhouse where Mr. Guez once resided | VERB | 16 |
2,698 | 1 | But as we survey a world that is about to commemorate Good Friday, Passover and Easter, we are struck by religion's large presence in the political affairs of secular life | VERB | 18 |
2,699 | 1 | The suit, filed against the unions representing pilots and machinists, stepped up the war over Eastern's labor costs that has raged through the company, the Congress and the courts for more than a year | VERB | 10 |
2,700 | 1 | It's not that Mr. Ferri isn't trying to step aside | VERB | 8 |
2,701 | 0 | When these components, known as antigens, are added to infected blood, they stick to antibodies in the blood, causing an easily detectable reaction | VERB | 12 |
2,702 | 0 | Phalanx can be overwhelmed when a ship is attacked by several missiles at once -LRB- the Stark was struck by two Exocets -RRB- | VERB | 8 |
2,703 | 0 | The difference: An ever wealthier South Korea can imagine absorbing the poorer, less- populated Communist North, but Taiwan, no matter how rich, would be swallowed whole by the massive Chinese mainland | VERB | 9 |
2,704 | 1 | She's been able to stick to this policy, largely because of the nature of her music | VERB | 4 |
2,705 | 0 | From the start, the women are trodden upon, dragged across the stage, pushed around, used as wheelbarrows | VERB | 8 |
2,706 | 0 | Many traders and analysts said they think yesterday's gains will soon evaporate | VERB | 11 |
2,707 | 0 | His antics once provoked an elderly ruling- party legislator to attack him with a cane | VERB | 10 |
2,708 | 1 | Mr. Ennis said he believes Rockwood got into financial difficulty because its expansion efforts " outstripped its ability to absorb those activities.' | VERB | 19 |
2,709 | 1 | But even though the Sox are off to a typically lousy start this season, plenty of Chicagoans don't want to see them strike out for Florida | VERB | 22 |
2,710 | 0 | Oil prices continued to fall yesterday in trading torn by rumors and growing evidence that Saudi Arabian crude is pouring into the market | VERB | 19 |
2,711 | 0 | Mr. Waters sets his sights on the " hairhoppers, " the polished amateurs who dance on " The Corny Collins Show, " his version of " American Bandstand.' | VERB | 14 |
2,712 | 0 | Police said managing partner John A. Mulheren Jr., whom they arrested Feb. 18 carrying a loaded rifle outside his home in Rumson, N.J., intended to kill arbitrager Ivan F. Boesky, who has implicated Mr. Mulheren in Wall Street's insider trading scandal | VERB | 25 |
2,713 | 1 | Since introducing its first cooler in late 1985, Seagram has grabbed a 36% market share and with eight flavors on the market has kept increasing its revenue at the expense of others | VERB | 10 |
2,714 | 0 | " Some of these older people would die before they'd go to a hospital in Huntsville or Decatur, " says Tony Williams | VERB | 7 |
2,715 | 1 | He takes a sip of brandy and adds an afterthought: " America should go to sleep for 50 years so we can catch up.' | VERB | 15 |
2,716 | 1 | The non- OPEC group's proposal fixes different cuts for each participant for the months of May and June -- then to be re- evaluated -- as follows: Mexico, 68, 000 barrels a day; Egypt, 22, 500; Oman, 27, 500; China, 30, 000; Angola, 20, 000, and Malaysia, 15, 000 | VERB | 5 |
2,717 | 0 | The report noted that whoever sent the SOS would have had to open a small hatch at the top of the boat in order to extend the radio's antenna, thereby permitting water to pour in and capsize the craft | VERB | 33 |
2,718 | 1 | If it cools off, they worry about lower earnings, which also would hurt the market | VERB | 2 |
2,719 | 1 | Aside from Ms. Hepburn's painfully brilliant performance, the film's fame rests on the sequence in which Alice and her parents try to impress her rich boyfriend -LRB- Fred MacMurray -RRB- with a fancy dinner in their hopelessly shabby home, served by a hopelessly indifferent cook hired for the evening -LRB- Hattie McDaniel -RRB- | VERB | 10 |
2,720 | 1 | Some people can go out to the ball park once a year, knock back a few brews and compare frequent- flier mileage with their buddies while the Great Game goes on before their unseeing eyes | VERB | 12 |
2,721 | 1 | " He couldn't take being dragged in | VERB | 5 |
2,722 | 1 | But many others constitute a sleeping giant best left unwakened | VERB | 5 |
2,723 | 1 | " These guys who are poisoning our youth with drugs and who are making money on it, we'll make them eat it, " he said | VERB | 20 |
2,724 | 1 | And while profits are booming at Capital Cities' TV stations, ABC's loss dragged down the broadcast group | VERB | 12 |
2,725 | 1 | The campaign against Boston's rats will require pouring, in a manner of speaking, millions of dollars down rat holes | VERB | 7 |
2,726 | 0 | In a Batman comic book hitting newsstands next week, DC Comics Inc. is killing off one of its oldest characters, the younger half of the Dynamic Duo | VERB | 13 |
2,727 | 1 | But last year a team of investors pumped about$ 3 million in new equity into the company and restructured some of its debt | VERB | 7 |
2,728 | 1 | The Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church was formally dissolved by Moscow in January 1930 | VERB | 7 |
2,729 | 1 | That mandate, like Mr. Brown's, will rest on gerrymander, dominance over political money, and liberalism cloaked in conservative rhetoric | VERB | 6 |
2,730 | 0 | While Abideen reminisces, Abegi's son smooths the sand to make a table and serves the simple, traditional meal that is all their hard life affords: a flat cake of mixed grains and a drink made of crumbled goat cheese, crushed dates and water | VERB | 5 |
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