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3,031 | 0 | Lawsuits and lawsuit- threats are flying | VERB | 5 |
3,032 | 0 | Industry consultants predict groupware will flourish because personal- computer software that helps individuals work better hasn't noticeably increased the productivity of groups | VERB | 5 |
3,033 | 0 | For the group dances, Mr. Morris devised choreography that was more athletic and no less compelling | VERB | 3 |
3,034 | 0 | They were greeted by dancing pigs, flying pigs and several hundred thousand people pigging out | VERB | 4 |
3,035 | 1 | And he scored the highest- charting guitar instrumental album in a dozen years when his " Surfing With the Alien, " released on the independent Relativity label, rode into Billboard's Top Thirty | VERB | 27 |
3,036 | 0 | Jack Scowen, a Conservative member of parliament from northern Saskatchewan, said that " unless somebody wants to stir up a bunch of garbage, " the language issue should be " left to die.' | VERB | 32 |
3,037 | 1 | The once high- flying company stumbled in 1986 when competition intensified in the mainframe market, and it has been revamping its product line since then | VERB | 5 |
3,038 | 1 | About 25% of those children die of liver cancer or cirrhosis | VERB | 5 |
3,039 | 1 | Second, the U.S. has tried to squeeze Panama's economy without destroying it, both to spare ordinary Panamanians further suffering and to permit recovery once Gen. Noriega goes | VERB | 10 |
3,040 | 0 | Now when a NATO ship touches the land between the Baltic and North seas, Denmark will notify the ship's embassy the visit must " take place in agreement with the rules laid down by the Danish government.' | VERB | 5 |
3,041 | 1 | Long term, he says Newnam will live or die on its efforts to stress quality | VERB | 8 |
3,042 | 0 | The moves may also signal that more of the marketing clout at Coca- Cola may flow out of the domestic soft- drink division and upstairs to corporate headquarters, according to both insiders and industry experts | VERB | 15 |
3,043 | 0 | But as most of those certificates are destroyed in favor of computer records, the investor who requests a certificate will have to wait until it's delivered by the city or state that issued the bond | VERB | 7 |
3,044 | 1 | Then two industry trade groups sued the state, attacking the lemon law's constitutionality | VERB | 8 |
3,045 | 0 | History slept soundly in Teenie Harris's stale- smelling brick basement -- 70, 000 photographic negatives, tucked inside a bunch of old metal cabinets and cobweb- covered cardboard boxes, lost for 50 years | VERB | 1 |
3,046 | 0 | We certainly do not need price limits; Washington won't be any better at fixing stock prices than it was at fixing gasoline prices | VERB | 20 |
3,047 | 0 | He sees many cars every day, and the Reatta clearly sticks out on first sight | VERB | 10 |
3,048 | 1 | Colgate Venture has stumbled, too | VERB | 3 |
3,049 | 0 | " Young adults tend to drink beer more for refreshment than any kind of connoisseur taste, " he says | VERB | 5 |
3,050 | 0 | Perhaps the most surprising finding of the commission was that in 50 major Big Board stocks, 30% of the specialists sold more shares on Oct. 19 than they bought, apparently pouring gasoline on an already raging fire | VERB | 30 |
3,051 | 0 | In one spectacular 508-point swan dive Oct. 19, the industrial average crashed back to the level it first surpassed in March 1986, vaporizing the stunning advances of the intervening months -- along with many investors' paper profits | VERB | 22 |
3,052 | 1 | " Most people can not believe that in the late 1980s this racist stereotype is still in existence anywhere, " says Dara Demmings, an Interfaith Center executive, who says the company is dragging its feet | VERB | 32 |
3,053 | 0 | David L. Meister was named president of this provider of cable television programming, filling a vacancy | VERB | 13 |
3,054 | 1 | Ms. Richards had them rolling in the aisles with her lacerating jibes at George Bush's silver foot in the mouth, etc | VERB | 4 |
3,055 | 0 | The partnership was dissolved so that SunCor " could directly and completely control the development " of nearly 2, 000 acres of property the partnership had purchased | VERB | 3 |
3,056 | 0 | And Mr. Gorbachev's proposal to remove aircraft -- which easily can fly back to Central Europe during a crisis -- would be meaningless unless they are destroyed, Mr. Chalmers says | VERB | 26 |
3,057 | 0 | One of St. Bonaventure's books ends with the sentence: " Let us die then and enter into that darkness.' | VERB | 12 |
3,058 | 0 | The last Volkswagen made in North America has rolled off the assembly line, but it isn't for sale | VERB | 8 |
3,059 | 0 | However, Robert M. Bass Group Inc. of Fort Worth, Texas, which has agreed to pump$ 550 million in new capital into American Savings and acquire the thrift with$ 2 billion of federal aid, apparently plans to launch its own campaign to market various financial services through American Savings | VERB | 14 |
3,060 | 0 | Prices were also elevated by speculation that frigid high winds in the Midwest could erode topsoil and expose the soft red winter wheat crop planted last fall, said Daniel Basse, an analyst at GNP Commodities Inc., Chicago | VERB | 24 |
3,061 | 0 | The funds rate, which is the rate on reserves that banks lend each other overnight, strongly influences many other rates, including those that dealers must pay to finance their bond holdings | VERB | 11 |
3,062 | 0 | A Dr. E " examined a horse that had warts on its forelegs, " begins one item in the newsletter, which withholds names of vets and patients | VERB | 4 |
3,063 | 1 | Even if the return to seasonals helps smooth month- to- month carry- overs from numbers that slipped through the cracks or were in error, there are still plenty of other items to complicate the trade series | VERB | 7 |
3,064 | 1 | In return it got to shape the festivities, glamorizing things with a sprinkling of film and rock music personalities -LRB- Jane Seymour, Pierce Brosnan and Ringo Starr supplied this year's dazzle -RRB- and flying in a roster of writers and photographers for publicity | VERB | 33 |
3,065 | 1 | Issues of race and racism would seem to be central to the Duke Ellington story, but film maker Carter touches on them only enough to tantalize us, no more | VERB | 19 |
3,066 | 0 | At the Chicago seminar, a participant named Jackie says: " I like to touch their arm and say their name | VERB | 13 |
3,067 | 0 | The U.S. military stood by its claims that intruders entered a fuel- storage area at a military base in Panama, touching off a two- hour firefight Tuesday night, but said it has uncovered no evidence so far to support the story | VERB | 20 |
3,068 | 0 | But he said Cigna's after- tax gain won't be material because the company will absorb certain deferred taxes of the division | VERB | 14 |
3,069 | 0 | The oil company disclosed earlier yesterday that last week's fire had damaged a pumping station and conduits, inhibiting the flow of gasoline product into the Colonial Pipeline | VERB | 13 |
3,070 | 0 | However, S& P said a tentative renegotiation of$ 63 billion in Brazilian loans will more than offset the missed interest payments from Argentina | VERB | 18 |
3,071 | 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 |
3,072 | 0 | The Finn thought about it, and then reluctantly dragged a bottle of vodka from his coat and kissed it and dropped it over the side | VERB | 8 |
3,073 | 0 | As exchange- listed issues plummeted, OTC stocks merely stumbled -- relatively speaking | VERB | 8 |
3,074 | 1 | But mindful of Daedalus's brash son, Icarus, who flew too close to the sun, melted his wings and fell fatally to the sea, they carefully avoid hubris | VERB | 14 |
3,075 | 0 | The company didn't fix the problems fast enough | VERB | 3 |
3,076 | 0 | The chemicals, widely used in refrigerants and styrofoam, are suspected of eating away the Earth's protective ozone layer | VERB | 11 |
3,077 | 1 | " It has taken a long time because there's this inertia to stick with traditional media advertising and coupons.' | VERB | 12 |
3,078 | 0 | A revenue passenger mile is one paying passenger flown one mile | VERB | 8 |
3,079 | 0 | Franklin Phillips, he ruled, would rest in peace as Harry Fisher | VERB | 5 |
3,080 | 1 | But GM is stuck with more than a 200-day supply of Novas, far above the 60-day to 65-day supply considered normal | VERB | 3 |
3,081 | 1 | An earthquake that shook Los Angeles in October knocked out computer equipment at California Federal Savings and Loan Association | VERB | 8 |
3,082 | 0 | Joffrey Ballet: The bicoastal company dances its first Manhattan season since the death of founder Robert Joffrey, whose own " Remembrances " pas de deux will be revived | VERB | 5 |
3,083 | 0 | " We lend to the rich to improve their quality of life.' | VERB | 2 |
3,084 | 1 | Billion- dollar offerings could flounder or flourish on what Mr. Rudloff said | VERB | 6 |
3,085 | 1 | Jaime Rosenthal said he was stepping down as President Azcona's economic adviser, but staying on as vice president | VERB | 5 |
3,086 | 1 | The ad struck a nerve in a public made more jittery by the obsessed mob that, in Sen. Goldwater's name, hooted and jeered former President Eisenhower at the Republican National Convention that summer | VERB | 2 |
3,087 | 0 | But a union- company panel later reviewed the pay of workers whose responsibilities had changed as job demarcations dissolved | VERB | 18 |
3,088 | 1 | Similar in appearance and texture to petroleum- based plastics, the plastic decomposes into water and carbon dioxide when attacked by certain enzymes in the soil | VERB | 18 |
3,089 | 0 | Boston is flourishing, office space in the South End is still cheaper than in nearby business districts, and deregulation of deposit rates allows banks to compete in new ways | VERB | 2 |
3,090 | 1 | Drought concerns are so great that " they're examining thunderstorms through a microscope, " hoping every cloud will bring a downpour, says David Taylor, meteorologist for Weather Services Corp. of Bedford, Mass | VERB | 8 |
3,091 | 0 | Showing off a rose garden he planted with his own hands, Mr. Lance quietly volunteers: " One of the great things about roses, unlike people from time to time, is that you get back what you put into them.' | VERB | 6 |
3,092 | 1 | About 170 people were killed in Petropolis two weeks ago | VERB | 4 |
3,093 | 1 | The monitor on Megaquest's bisexual line recently got the conversation rolling by discussing the relative merits of different gender combinations | VERB | 10 |
3,094 | 0 | The preacher and civil rights leader went after Mr. Dukakis yesterday, attacking him for failing to give specifics on budget questions | VERB | 11 |
3,095 | 1 | The focus on takeover issues provided market players with a chance to " keep the juices flowing without going to sleep, " said Edward P. Nicoski, a market analyst at Piper Jaffray& Hopwood, Minneapolis | VERB | 20 |
3,096 | 0 | My impression is that he doesn't drink.' | VERB | 6 |
3,097 | 1 | " That would have an impact on aid flowing to El Salvador.' | VERB | 8 |
3,098 | 0 | The Corolla sedan escaped any price increase | VERB | 3 |
3,099 | 1 | Economists are sticking to predictions of slow going for the economy in the first half | VERB | 2 |
3,100 | 1 | Thierry Liebaut, director of development for a French media group, says if he had to pay top price for it in a restaurant, " I would make the chef eat the tubes.' | VERB | 29 |
3,101 | 0 | But the future of the bill remained unclear as the Senate stumbled forward on its version of the measure without the leadership of Lloyd Bentsen, the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee | VERB | 11 |
3,102 | 0 | A virus is a computer program, often hidden in apparently normal computer software, that instructs the computer to change or destroy information at a given time or after a certain sequence of commands | VERB | 20 |
3,103 | 1 | Domestic private consumption has been eating up about$ 3 billion or more a year, even during the war | VERB | 5 |
3,104 | 0 | One lamenter of impeccable credentials is Peter G. Peterson, who in a recent Atlantic complains that we have let our infrastructure crumble, our productivity dwindle, our savings evaporate and our foreign markets dwindle | VERB | 27 |
3,105 | 1 | This version stated that " the other two men in the plane died, probably before Lt. Bush touched the water.' | VERB | 17 |
3,106 | 1 | Here is how it works: Conventional plastics are composed of repeating hydrocarbon molecules, called polymers, which are derived from petroleum. -LRB- The lengthy chains are too long for micro- organisms to eat; that is what makes plastic so resistant to decay. -RRB-/-R | VERB | 31 |
3,107 | 0 | About 5, 000 union members struck five of Northern Telecom's Canadian plants Feb. 29, the day that talks broke off | VERB | 5 |
3,108 | 0 | Pace Industries Inc. was in the process of selling its Rheem Manufacturing Co. unit, a maker of water heaters, when the stock market collapsed last year and destroyed the buyer's financing plans | VERB | 27 |
3,109 | 1 | " You think we can knock these things out like hamburgers | VERB | 5 |
3,110 | 0 | So far this year, investors have snapped up$ 2.12 billion of Eurobonds carrying Japanese equity warrants; warrants let investors buy an issuer's stock at a fixed price within a set period | VERB | 25 |
3,111 | 0 | When the warm vapor flows through the narrowed midpoint, it speeds up and its pressure drops | VERB | 4 |
3,112 | 1 | When he tries a curve he can't resist rolling his eyes skyward in open homage to the L.A. Dodgers' Fernando Valenzuela | VERB | 8 |
3,113 | 1 | All the publicity caused the canine officer who had overlooked the dynamite to step forward | VERB | 13 |
3,114 | 1 | She wanted to roll over his IRA into one in her own name, so she sought the IRS's opinion | VERB | 3 |
3,115 | 0 | When radicals besieged his hotel while he was visiting Seoul last week, he promised them he would make yet another effort to play up to North Korea -- by renewing the offer to let the North host several Olympic events | VERB | 2 |
3,116 | 0 | The leak and pump problems developed Friday soon after technicians began pouring more than half a million gallons of liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen propellant into the spaceship's external fuel tank on Launch Pad 39B | VERB | 11 |
3,117 | 0 | A senior Afghan official said President Najibullah wouldn't step down to satisfy rebel conditions for joining the government as part of a year- old national reconciliation initiative | VERB | 8 |
3,118 | 1 | But if all sides discover self- interest in moving toward effective control of the toxics problem, instead of sticking grimly to their familiar trenches, the results will be as remarkable as the law itself | VERB | 18 |
3,119 | 0 | Another trader almost had his glasses knocked off in the jostling | VERB | 6 |
3,120 | 1 | And while RJR Nabisco Inc. has low- salt Ritz Bits crackers, Supermarkets General Corp.'s Pathmark is about to roll out its own no- salt version | VERB | 18 |
3,121 | 0 | It was Jack Germond and Jules Witcover who divined his " thunderstorm strategy " -- he keeps wandering around waiting for lightning to strike | VERB | 23 |
3,122 | 0 | Most patients will not be aware of an expensive test forgone or a consultation not provided -- omissions that can readily escape detection if they are limited in scope | VERB | 21 |
3,123 | 1 | Mr. Instone, 64 years old, stepped down in February from his posts as president and chief executive officer | VERB | 5 |
3,124 | 0 | That's pretty much it, plotwise, except for coming up with the various modes of transportation the bounty hunter cop has to use to drag the con man accountant across country | VERB | 23 |
3,125 | 0 | His native caution strikes a responsive chord with the average German | VERB | 3 |
3,126 | 1 | China poured tens of thousands of dollars into producing the country's first batch of U.S .- trained M.B.A.s, including Mr. Wang | VERB | 1 |
3,127 | 1 | For the first century of its existence, the republic somehow managed to stumble along, winning independence, surviving civil war, without any pledge at all | VERB | 12 |
3,128 | 0 | But sometimes there is a loosening of former rigidities: The communists once declared golf a capitalist evil and plowed up courses to plant crops | VERB | 18 |
3,129 | 0 | When it was first dedicated, residents flooded local newspapers with letters saying they hated it; they likened it to a banana or a kid relieving himself from a bridge | VERB | 6 |
3,130 | 0 | Mike Trial, a passenger on the ill- fated fishing trip, testified in probate court last May that Mrs. Von Bergen stumbled into him on the deck of the boat and that they fell overboard | VERB | 20 |
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