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2,731 | 0 | At the Pavilion, Mr. Worthington pours a last glass | VERB | 5 |
2,732 | 0 | A sudden flush of buy or sell orders touched off by a single index- arbitrage program typically involves$ 25 million of trading -- and sometimes far more | VERB | 8 |
2,733 | 0 | Fred J. Kupel, chief financial officer and vice president, finance and administration, at this forest products concern, was named a director, filling a vacancy and returning board membership to 11 | VERB | 21 |
2,734 | 1 | It recently earmarked$ 50 million to patch up the 70-year- old Mustang assembly plant; both the plant and the car had been scheduled to die | VERB | 24 |
2,735 | 0 | Christian and Jewish scholars flourished in the Moslem courts | VERB | 4 |
2,736 | 0 | " The market is absorbing all of the mill's output of supercalender paper, " Mr. Nugent said | VERB | 4 |
2,737 | 1 | Why " wait six weeks and get something you haven't picked up and touched, when you can get something equivalent or better today? " she asks | VERB | 13 |
2,738 | 0 | He urged the Norwegian government to press its rights to inspect the Dimona reactor and examine any materials, such as plutonium, possibly made from using the heavy water | VERB | 15 |
2,739 | 0 | It will examine all the data on the economy, together with the best forecasts its economists can dream up, and plan a monetary policy that will fit the need | VERB | 2 |
2,740 | 0 | It flourishes in dry weather, occasionally infecting peanut and cottonseed crops in the Southeast | VERB | 1 |
2,741 | 0 | One young man, out of work for two years, says all the jobs he applies for are being filled by blacks; another man, nearing retirement, bitterly complains that the wages of his black colleagues are rising faster than his | VERB | 18 |
2,742 | 1 | Donell -RRB- is guilty, and he is obviously grasping at straws in terms of what defense he can use.' | VERB | 8 |
2,743 | 1 | Next time he should produce his own movie, as he has here, so that if it becomes a blockbuster he isn't stuck with his director's salary of a paltry million or two | VERB | 21 |
2,744 | 0 | That was because in Brandon, Fla., during the waning hours of Aug. 1, the' 84 Olympic silver medalist's sports car plowed into a group of 30 teens | VERB | 20 |
2,745 | 0 | But by 1985 the boom was over, and sales had withered to$ 100 million | VERB | 10 |
2,746 | 0 | " We' ve been plowing a lot of new furrows, " says Richard Burket of Archer- Daniels- Midland Co., Decatur, Ill | VERB | 4 |
2,747 | 0 | Mr. Hane, the Fort Motte farmer, planted only 250 acres in soybeans this spring, just one- third as much as six years ago | VERB | 6 |
2,748 | 0 | It said it expects to absorb " the vast majority " of those jobs in its private health- care business | VERB | 5 |
2,749 | 0 | If that sounds like obstinacy, perhaps it's time once more to examine carefully the forces that have kept the Arab- Israeli conflict boiling so long | VERB | 11 |
2,750 | 1 | Since kicking off coordinated intervention with other central banks at the start of the year, the Fed has won greater respect from commercial bank traders it deals with | VERB | 1 |
2,751 | 1 | Sound is not the only thing with which the audience is assaulted at " Chess.' | VERB | 11 |
2,752 | 1 | And with just one sibling, he has been struck by the contrast between his own small, far- flung family and the large, close- knit Arab households | VERB | 8 |
2,753 | 0 | " The day that trade pressures evaporate,{ Airbus's} interest in McDonnell Douglas cooperation is over, " says one U.S. aerospace executive | VERB | 6 |
2,754 | 0 | A car bomb exploded in a Palestinian refugee camp near Sidon, Lebanon, killing two sons of Mohammed Mrad, a leader of the dissident Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine | VERB | 12 |
2,755 | 1 | Mr. Moyers tut- tuts about " dirty " political ads but never seems to grasp that his 1964 ads opened the era, not of " negative " media campaigns based on honest discussions of the issues, but of vicious, distortive propaganda | VERB | 14 |
2,756 | 1 | Its chairman, Bruce Judge, stepped down as chief executive of Ariadne in favor of Mr. Cafiero | VERB | 4 |
2,757 | 1 | That point was rammed home during his recent visit to Siberia, where he was flooded with complaints about awful living standards, a lack of basic foodstuffs and bureaucrats who were blocking improvements | VERB | 14 |
2,758 | 0 | The regional carrier, which has three DC-9 aircraft and uses two of them for charter flights, also said William E. Lindsey, its chairman, was elected to the additional post of chief executive officer, filling a vacancy created by the resignation in February of Thomas Volz | VERB | 33 |
2,759 | 0 | While public attention in the West remains focused on the recent INF Treaty and nuclear arms control issues, a less dramatic Soviet diplomatic initiative is under way -- a new " peace offensive " that thus far has escaped the careful evaluation it merits | VERB | 38 |
2,760 | 0 | Many had believed that the heavier- than- expected weekend rains would dampen for at least several days a rally that has been based primarily on conjecture that the newly planted corn and soybean crops were too dry to start growing | VERB | 29 |
2,761 | 1 | There are a host of reasons why the January price increase should be sticking and why prices might go up another few cents in July, when by tradition the industry will reset them | VERB | 13 |
2,762 | 1 | According to this view, a work of art is an extension of the personality of the artist; to alter or mutilate it is to attack the very personality of the artist | VERB | 24 |
2,763 | 1 | As I drank water and ate for the first time in two days, my determination to continue the opposition crusade was strengthened | VERB | 2 |
2,764 | 1 | Ever since President Reagan in February 1986 called for U.S. development of an " Orient Express, " a futuristic aircraft that would fly from New York to Tokyo in two hours, MITI's aerospace mavens have been itching to get Japan into the action | VERB | 22 |
2,765 | 0 | This is one developing nation where U.S. banks haven't been left holding the bag, as under U.S. regulations they aren't allowed to lend to North Korea | VERB | 22 |
2,766 | 0 | Mr. Pickens was badly beaten in last fall's battle for Newmont Mining, a raid that baffled takeover experts because 26% of Newmont was already controlled by the ultimate victor, Consolidated Gold Fields PLC. Mesa's$ 100 million stock profit from the deal -- Mr. Pickens's estimate -- also evaporated during October's market crash | VERB | 47 |
2,767 | 0 | Before examining them, Mr. Araujo says he has to read the MiG flight manual, an unwieldly volume he discovered was written in Chinese | VERB | 1 |
2,768 | 0 | The brainchild of amateur inventor Craig Culver of Woodside, Calif., the Isopoint is a sliding and rolling cylinder about the diameter of a cocktail straw that fits along the bottom of the keyboard's spacebar | VERB | 16 |
2,769 | 1 | Thomas V. Chema, chairman of the utilities commission said it will examine the utilities' request, especially trying to determine why an accounting change permitted by the commission didn't meet the utilities' concerns about possible default | VERB | 11 |
2,770 | 0 | Dr. Grosssbard added that the apparent equality in pumping power obscured the fact that more streptokinase patients had died in the first three weeks | VERB | 8 |
2,771 | 0 | While the Olympics are evoking thoughts of ancient Greece, don't miss these new productions of the tragedies of Sophocles -- " Oedipus the King, " " Oedipus at Colonus " and " Antigone.' | VERB | 10 |
2,772 | 0 | At the same time, revenues from merchant banking poured in | VERB | 8 |
2,773 | 1 | Mr. Ruder has such a zeal to regulate that two of his commissioners are ready to roll him off the gangplank | VERB | 16 |
2,774 | 0 | If you had asked Lenin this question when he was drinking coffee in Zurich at the beginning of 1917, he probably would have said:' Oh, it will be a protracted struggle.'' | VERB | 10 |
2,775 | 0 | And the black middle class has flourished in the past 20 years as opportunities in various professions have opened up | VERB | 6 |
2,776 | 0 | Meetings degenerated into shouting matches; after one, a copywriter kicked a hole in a wall | VERB | 9 |
2,777 | 1 | MOSCOW APPEARS unwilling to miss a deadline for its pullout from Afghanistan | VERB | 4 |
2,778 | 0 | Most analysts expect farmers to plant 66.7 million to 70 million acres, up from 65.7 million acres last year | VERB | 5 |
2,779 | 0 | Most of the pressure on the currency came in overseas trading, where the dollar touched a six- year low against the pound | VERB | 14 |
2,780 | 1 | They are irate about new capital- adequacy requirements that force securities firms to pump at least 20% more capital into reserves | VERB | 13 |
2,781 | 0 | Then he packed the fish cavity with plastic bags full of ice to maintain freshness. -LRB- After all, somebody would be eating his models when he was done with them. -RRB-/-R | VERB | 21 |
2,782 | 0 | As a result, Drexel is plowing more money into leveraged buy- outs, employee buy- outs and other friendly transactions | VERB | 5 |
2,783 | 0 | As a result, total investment from all sources, domestic and foreign, of about 16% of gross national product is still way short of the 25% analysts believe is needed to absorb a fast- expanding labor force | VERB | 30 |
2,784 | 0 | " We' ve tried to set up a barrier against such people, " says an official at one institute that has been flooded with applications | VERB | 22 |
2,785 | 0 | In 1984 Acorn was ready but the market was evaporating | VERB | 9 |
2,786 | 0 | It had been long assumed that the agency wouldn't act until late on a Friday afternoon in order to give market participants a weekend to absorb the news | VERB | 25 |
2,787 | 1 | The two firms retained management consultant Bradford Hildebrandt to analyze the compatibility of the firms and smooth the transition | VERB | 16 |
2,788 | 0 | The yellow beta carotene pigment absorbs blue -LRB- not yellow -RRB- laser light | VERB | 5 |
2,789 | 1 | The Bells have versions of many of these services ready to roll | VERB | 11 |
2,790 | 1 | The international Food Court, serving up a melting pot of fast food, approximates a municipal park | VERB | 7 |
2,791 | 0 | Three submarine crewmen remained missing following an explosion and fire on the USS Bonefish that injured 22 of 92 aboard during a training mission 160 miles off Florida Sunday | VERB | 4 |
2,792 | 0 | While Mr. McClean hadn't fully examined the materials released by Gazelle, he noted that " the gallium- arsenide market has really been in a chicken- or- egg situation, " with prices remaining high in part because they are produced in such small volume, and demand curtailed because prices are high | VERB | 5 |
2,793 | 1 | For Latin America, which has generally stumbled through years of stagnation or low growth since it became mired in foreign debt in 1982, Chile's economic record is enviable | VERB | 6 |
2,794 | 1 | " People are a little afraid to touch steels because they' ve been up so much lately, " said one dealer | VERB | 7 |
2,795 | 0 | The action began a few months ago when Fred Carr, First Executive's chairman, moved to spruce up the lot by planting some grass | VERB | 20 |
2,796 | 0 | One can not help but be absorbed by portions of Mr. Bouwsma's diligent labor, but readers should be warned that the Calvin of this book is presented not as a dramatic heretic, but as a rather schematic schismatic | VERB | 6 |
2,797 | 0 | Mr. Haraszti, a Budapest dissident and co- editor of the opposition journal Beszelo, examines the intimate and in his view " symbiotic " relationship between artists and the state | VERB | 13 |
2,798 | 0 | No bank would lend him money | VERB | 3 |
2,799 | 1 | Moreover, the latest resignations are bound to boost continuing efforts by White House intimates, Republican Party officials, aides to Vice President George Bush and others trying to convince President Reagan that Mr. Meese has become a major political liability and should step down | VERB | 41 |
2,800 | 0 | The point of view of the economist here misses the essential by being too technical, namely that the values associated with a free- market economy can be destroyed by the tax system | VERB | 8 |
2,801 | 0 | It started in late August when supporters concerned with Mr. Chavez's health were urging him to eat | VERB | 16 |
2,802 | 0 | One reason there's room for more magazines is because so many die, industry officials say | VERB | 11 |
2,803 | 0 | Secretary of State George Shultz last week attacked as " shocking " Mr. Dukakis's willingness to recognize Jerusalem rather than Tel Aviv as Israel's capital -- a move that has been long sought by the Israelis and would be popular with Jewish voters in the U.S., but that Mr. Shultz asserts would complicate efforts to find a Mideast peace | VERB | 7 |
2,804 | 1 | Asset managers and institutions, which have been selling some of their old OTC favorites for two days now, began pumping proceeds into former OTC high- flyers, mostly issues that plummeted in the crash | VERB | 19 |
2,805 | 0 | For the most part the events flow swiftly, from the decision by the gamblers to bribe the players, to the players' decision to accept the bribe, to the games, to the newspaper expose, to the trial | VERB | 6 |
2,806 | 0 | Most historians of the Tulipmania were so intent on demonstrating the follies of speculative markets and thereby providing a case for controlling market activities that they neglected to examine the market fundamentals of bulb pricing | VERB | 28 |
2,807 | 0 | He said that parties looking to strike joint venture arrangements with Texaco " want to know who they're going to be dealing with in the future.' | VERB | 6 |
2,808 | 1 | Authors are starting to grasp this simple fact | VERB | 4 |
2,809 | 0 | In fact, the debate found him at one point cross- examining the senator like a prosecutor | VERB | 10 |
2,810 | 0 | Custom demands that cognac be poured from a freshly opened bottle | VERB | 5 |
2,811 | 0 | Mr. Weiss suggests that the new approach, once developed, could be used in combination with CD4: The CD4 would handle the free- floating viruses, while the new drug would kill infected cells | VERB | 29 |
2,812 | 0 | Sparrows used to have a rep for selectively attacking yellow crocuses such as " E.A | VERB | 8 |
2,813 | 0 | A person who actually believes in something is likely to have his or her reputation and career destroyed by letting substance get in the way of image | VERB | 17 |
2,814 | 1 | And he still knows how to grab an audience: Yesterday, he made people sit up with his announcement of a$ 225 million offer for Resorts International Inc., although it was rejected within hours | VERB | 6 |
2,815 | 1 | The Federal Reserve has shown its alarm over wage inflation by nudging interest rates higher in an attempt to cool economic growth | VERB | 19 |
2,816 | 0 | The fatty deposits have a yellowish hue and therefore absorb more of the yellow laser energy than the surrounding, almost colorless artery wall | VERB | 9 |
2,817 | 0 | Later they were burned as railroad fuel and plowed under as fertilizer | VERB | 8 |
2,818 | 1 | Sixteen people were killed in the crash | VERB | 3 |
2,819 | 0 | In general, though, as long as the spouse who filed for divorce is a bona fide resident of the state that grants the divorce, the state " where the marriage is dissolved is where the law -LRB- on financial settlement -RRB- applies, " says Ms. Gold- Bikin | VERB | 31 |
2,820 | 0 | Its theme -- Peter dragging Russia out of the dank Dark Ages -- is vast and lofty, and perhaps only a man who dreamed and drank too much would have had the gumption to cut so wide and deep a swath into the heart of Russia | VERB | 25 |
2,821 | 1 | While many collegiate groups stick to rah- rah alumni songs and occasionally stretch to a Broadway show tune, Wayne State's repertoire ranges from Stravinsky's " Oedipus Rex " to resonant arrangements of American Negro spirituals | VERB | 4 |
2,822 | 1 | It's no longer mandatory that Indiana patronage employees kick back 2% of their salaries to their political party | VERB | 8 |
2,823 | 0 | The CDC report did not deal with the so- called " good cholesterol " -- the high- density form of lipoprotein that gathers up cholesterol in the body and carries it to be destroyed | VERB | 33 |
2,824 | 1 | But his uncle tells the story: When the family arrived, the boy went out exploring near the abandoned base and stepped on a mine | VERB | 20 |
2,825 | 1 | It also neglected to mention that not only is it self- funding through a payroll tax but includes safeguards to assure that general revenue will not be touched to underwrite the costs | VERB | 27 |
2,826 | 1 | " The specialness evaporates when a hands- on operation becomes a finger on a monolithic hand.' | VERB | 3 |
2,827 | 1 | On a work visit to a small town, she elected to spend the night at the home of a friend's father rather than sleep on the floor, commune- style, with her colleagues | VERB | 23 |
2,828 | 1 | Mr. McMillin doubts a rash of food takeovers will occur, because many companies already are dancing to Wall Street's tune | VERB | 15 |
2,829 | 0 | NCNB has been losing market share in its most important market, Florida, and it has ever slimmer profit margins from lending to some of its important big- businesses customers | VERB | 20 |
2,830 | 0 | A revenue passenger mile is one paying passenger flown one mile | VERB | 8 |
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