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1,394 | 0 | But bankers that lend to farmers suddenly are worrying anew about their borrower's financial health | VERB | 3 |
1,395 | 1 | By the 17th century, fashion had replaced utility, and cavalier Frenchmen donned ornate linen and lace cravats, knotted in the center with long flowing ends that accented their moustaches | VERB | 23 |
1,396 | 1 | " When it doesn't rain on my land, it will rain on my brother's, " says Antonio Avina | VERB | 10 |
1,397 | 1 | During 1987, America West added 2, 900 employees, boosted its fleet of aircraft to 69 from 46 and added 11 cities to the 34 it flew to in 1986 | VERB | 25 |
1,398 | 0 | Engineers in uniforms and hardhats are everywhere, many maintaining the technological heart of the levitating train: its roadbed of specially cooled superconducting magnets | VERB | 20 |
1,399 | 0 | The FDIC package would sharply boost the merged institution's capital and give it a huge cushion to absorb future loan losses | VERB | 17 |
1,400 | 0 | He also refused both domestic and U.S. calls to step aside for a compromise plebiscite candidate, who might have benefited from Chile's economic boom while escaping the stigma of the Pinochet regime's appalling humanrights record | VERB | 25 |
1,401 | 1 | The addition of the Iraqi Kurds, at least 20% of whom are Pesh Merga fighting for an independent Kurdistan, could pump new vigor into Turkey's indigenous Kurdish extremists | VERB | 20 |
1,402 | 1 | Texaco made the scene with a pair of investment bankers who would later send shock waves of another sort through Wall Street: Bruce Wasserstein and Joseph Perella, who recently shook First Boston Corp. by quitting that firm and striking out on their own | VERB | 38 |
1,403 | 0 | Dave Hoover rolls his 400-pound minijet above the air- show crowd, swooping to within a dozen feet of the runway and popping his landing gear in and out | VERB | 2 |
1,404 | 0 | It rained hard Saturday night along the Gulf Coast, and on Sunday morning the infield at McKechnie Field here was so wet that grounds crewmen were using plastic bottles to scoop up the standing water | VERB | 1 |
1,405 | 1 | And expense- account fliers, who learned long ago to construct elaborate flight schemes to earn extra mileage, now are battling to pick up dinner tabs to grab mileage linked to charge- card purchases | VERB | 26 |
1,406 | 1 | His public- relations people have flooded reporters with copies of his speeches | VERB | 5 |
1,407 | 0 | Wild animals are simply a nuisance, eating up crops and occasionally small children, and competing with cattle for grazing space | VERB | 6 |
1,408 | 1 | " P.O.V. " kicks off tonight with " American Tongues " by Louis Alvarez and Andrew Kolker, and " Acting Our Age " by Michal Aviad | VERB | 3 |
1,409 | 0 | Third, the finding of the same basic pattern again and again, by a variety of researchers controlling for a host of other variables, lends credence to the view that the disparities reflect a real and robust phenomenon | VERB | 23 |
1,410 | 1 | I can see the memos flying from one faceless bureaucrat to another | VERB | 5 |
1,411 | 1 | However, a lawsuit could drag on for years | VERB | 4 |
1,412 | 0 | Joseph M. Kornick, a principal, says the Minute Maid handle is more comfortably rounded " to fit adults and children " and has been placed lower " to lower the center of gravity " for easier pouring | VERB | 36 |
1,413 | 1 | He code- names companies targeted for possible acquisition with B- words, like batman, bellini -LRB- " a wonderful combination of champagne and peach juice " -RRB- and baccarat -LRB- the gambling game -RRB- simply because " it struck me as an interesting strategem.' | VERB | 4 |
1,414 | 0 | I wouldn't want my kid to ride in one, " he says | VERB | 6 |
1,415 | 0 | It said the U.S. is prepared to rule out other routes that would fly over land in the U.S. or Canada " except in the case of aircraft emergency.' | VERB | 13 |
1,416 | 1 | After years of being out of work and on welfare, many of the unemployed now lack the ability or initiative to fill openings | VERB | 21 |
1,417 | 0 | Shortly, the USS Stark failed to defend itself from an Iraqi attack and 37 Americans were killed | VERB | 16 |
1,418 | 1 | The latest rumor yesterday was that International Business Machines Corp., which earlier had been reported to be planning to license certain Next software programs, is cooling to the idea of using the programs extensively | VERB | 25 |
1,419 | 0 | First RepublicBank, besieged with rumors about a possible failure or takeover, said it wouldn't have any comment on the FDIC's activity | VERB | 2 |
1,420 | 1 | Mr. Bumps steps down and, with a colleague, resumes building the wall the old- fashioned way -- no mortar, no cement, nothing to hold the stones together except the stones themselves | VERB | 2 |
1,421 | 1 | But the euphoria is evaporating as reality sinks in | VERB | 4 |
1,422 | 0 | For the standard " pap " smear, a technician examines the cells on the swab for visual evidence of abnormalities that indicate pre- cancerous changes in the cervix | VERB | 9 |
1,423 | 1 | But if a recession strikes next year, as many economists predict, other highly leveraged companies could unravel | VERB | 4 |
1,424 | 0 | The military said three soldiers also were killed when about 300 rebels attempted to overrun a 30-man government outpost | VERB | 7 |
1,425 | 0 | Sean Penn pulls off a reasonably convincing German accent as Guenther, the surprise witness in " Judgment in Berlin, " the story of the East Germans who escaped to the West by hijacking a plane | VERB | 27 |
1,426 | 0 | But the burglar didn't touch her coat, car stereo or Walkman radio | VERB | 4 |
1,427 | 1 | " The big question is whether the pest problems are happening by themselves or whether opportunistic insects are attacking weakened trees, " said David Marvin, a maple syrup producer in Johnson, Vt | VERB | 18 |
1,428 | 0 | If crazed publications are up your alley, you won't want to miss Confused Pet Monthly, Australasian Survivor, or Rotten Island -- " a children's book about a land where everything is as bad as it possibly could be.' | VERB | 11 |
1,429 | 0 | The situation shows how the 1985 farm legislation, which flooded the farm economy with cash the past three years, also expanded the government's exposure to losses | VERB | 9 |
1,430 | 0 | Consolidated Rail Corp. said it agreed to pay$ 58 million to settle all claims outstanding on behalf of 16 people killed in a 1987 train collision | VERB | 20 |
1,431 | 0 | As the recent Ikle- Wohlstetter report, " Discriminate Deterrence " -LRB- the source of the nearby maps -RRB-, to President Reagan makes clear, it's far more likely that the Soviets would attack first on the more vulnerable fringes of the alliance, perhaps in the Persian Gulf or Norway | VERB | 31 |
1,432 | 1 | On June 15, the Senate passed by a vote of 96 to 0 a resolution -- sponsored by two Democrats, Sasser of Tennessee and Bradley of New Jersey -- urging the President to place the issue of the impact on Western security of credit flows to Warsaw- pact countries on the formal agenda at Toronto | VERB | 44 |
1,433 | 1 | Their ambassador, Oleg Sokolov, speaks fluent English, goes to prayer breakfasts with President Corazon Aquino, and gives smooth interviews to the Philippine press in which he urges the country to kick out the Americans and get friendlier with Moscow | VERB | 30 |
1,434 | 1 | The downtown shop alone is grossing more than$ 1 million a year now, but the Shihs take salaries of only about$ 2, 000 a month each from their business, plowing profits back into their drive to become the McDonald's of the flower game | VERB | 29 |
1,435 | 0 | Operation Hunger recently studied 28 rural black communities and found evidence of malnutrition in more than half of the children examined | VERB | 20 |
1,436 | 1 | Thomas McGreevy, president of the New York fathers' rights group, adds that men don't consider being struck as spouse abuse | VERB | 16 |
1,437 | 0 | Iran retaliated by firing two missiles that struck Baghdad, killing or injuring an unspecified number of people | VERB | 7 |
1,438 | 0 | The fare restructuring, aimed at tying prices to mileage flown, apparently will wipe away many of the bargain- basement fares currently available to leisure travelers, and make it likely that those travelers will pay$ 10 to$ 30 more on most fares | VERB | 9 |
1,439 | 0 | People familiar with the investigation said the SEC is examining both of these motives in its current investigation | VERB | 9 |
1,440 | 1 | To avoid being stuck with an outdated backlog, many are waiting until they run out before reordering | VERB | 3 |
1,441 | 0 | Companies still spend billions of dollars printing and storing forms --- and destroying them when, say, an address changes | VERB | 12 |
1,442 | 0 | In 1936 a German chemist, Gerhard Schrader, stumbled on a phosphorus compound extremely poisonous to insects | VERB | 7 |
1,443 | 0 | Other analysts say the company's reputation with international investors has been damaged by the sentiment that Mr. Gardini's restructuring plan rode roughshod over minority shareholders' interests | VERB | 20 |
1,444 | 1 | It poured into the vacuum created by the collapse of a Keynesian mainstream that had no explanation for simultaneous stagnation and inflation | VERB | 1 |
1,445 | 0 | He disputes the longheld theory that the Great Pyramids were made of limestone blocks cut, dragged long distances, and hoisted into place, arguing that they were made by pouring long- lasting cement | VERB | 15 |
1,446 | 0 | Mostly, the controversy leaves a black hole in the Hispanic political firmament that won't be filled for some time | VERB | 15 |
1,447 | 0 | About 150 people remain missing | VERB | 4 |
1,448 | 0 | " It knocked me off my chair, " says Mr. Bodner, a partner in Howrey& Simon, a Washington firm | VERB | 2 |
1,449 | 0 | They weren't surprised that B.A.T wanted to continue its push into financial services, or that the big British company would strike while the U.S. dollar is depressed | VERB | 20 |
1,450 | 0 | The rate on funds, or reserves that banks lend each other overnight, averaged about 7 1 2%, up from 7.42% Friday | VERB | 8 |
1,451 | 0 | " If{ Shorty} puts down his arms, the campesinos themselves will kill him.' | VERB | 11 |
1,452 | 0 | After a few years of relative calm, Burger King is about to start a new advertising campaign that attacks the way McDonald's cooks | VERB | 18 |
1,453 | 1 | Escapism is said to have flourished | VERB | 5 |
1,454 | 0 | Over the years, however, South Africa's presence in Angola became an integral part of its strategy to repel the total onslaught by keeping communism at bay in Angola and striking at the nests of the ANC, which does much of its military training there | VERB | 29 |
1,455 | 1 | Investors, analysts and members of the local banking community generally view Mr. Hillas as an able manager with a solid knowledge of the capital markets, a keen eye for evaluating banking companies and their businesses, and a knack for helping fix ailing firms | VERB | 40 |
1,456 | 0 | Now, it is said that Duivree can not die | VERB | 8 |
1,457 | 0 | Still, the administration proposal is perceived as part of a broader rethinking about venture capital targeted explicitly at minority businesses | VERB | 15 |
1,458 | 0 | An introduction by Edward Shils, the well- known sociologist of ideas -LRB- who has never been a radical -RRB- lends historical perspective to the collection | VERB | 19 |
1,459 | 1 | " We're not sleeping anymore, " says Hans Decker, president of New York- based Siemens Capital Corp | VERB | 3 |
1,460 | 1 | Last month, Judge Aguilar rejected a request by attorneys for Apple that he step aside because of his Hewlett- Packard connection | VERB | 13 |
1,461 | 1 | Recruit Cosmos is turning into the scandal that refuses to die -- but also refuses to spin out of control | VERB | 10 |
1,462 | 1 | Sponsored by the Independence Institute of Colorado, " Classrooms for the Free Society " sought to assess something scarcely touched by the press, but which may decide the role America will play in the world within a decade or two | VERB | 19 |
1,463 | 0 | Of the three intervals tested, it said one flowed 5, 325 barrels of oil a day, a second flowed 23.5 million cubic feet of gas a day and a third flowed 44 million cubic feet of gas a day | VERB | 30 |
1,464 | 1 | The recent Iraqi chemical attack on civilians in the town of Halabja combined with the Iraqi missiles raining on Iranian cities have left Tehranis petrified about possible Iraqi chemical attacks on Tehran | VERB | 17 |
1,465 | 1 | " In the long run, that does more for a car's image than if you drag your feet and wait.' | VERB | 15 |
1,466 | 0 | Another form of front- running likely to be examined in coming months is trading by Wall Street firms in October in anticipation of massive sell orders by money managers using the computerized hedging strategy known as portfolio insurance | VERB | 8 |
1,467 | 0 | He says it was the Koreans who grabbed the knife, wielded the fabric softener like a club, and, what's more, beat up Ms. Clark's 67-year- old mother, Ivy King, who was standing nearby, for no good reason except that she is black | VERB | 7 |
1,468 | 0 | Yields on big certificates of deposit surged in the latest week, but consumers who generally hold smaller CDs missed much of the ride | VERB | 18 |
1,469 | 1 | " They're afraid program trading will touch off another free fall and they' ve been through that before.' | VERB | 6 |
1,470 | 1 | In addition, Mr. Sieck said, NASA would cancel the test if it rained, on the off chance that the firing could be hit by lightning | VERB | 12 |
1,471 | 1 | He and others also figure Midwesterners are more likely than other citizens to step up and buy houses and durables if the manufacturing trend holds | VERB | 13 |
1,472 | 1 | One broker, whose business failed after the crash, began abusing drugs -- mainly sleeping pills -- and contemplated divorce and suicide, says Mari Terzaghi, a clinical psychologist who treats many Wall Street professionals | VERB | 13 |
1,473 | 0 | Because a commitment to hold open the 74.4 miles of supply road to Khost from Gardez would require even more Soviet casualties and force, the optimists surmise that the Soviets are attacking Khost to get out of Afghanistan | VERB | 31 |
1,474 | 0 | The airline said its January load factor, or the percentage of available seats filled, fell to 49.3% from 52.8% | VERB | 13 |
1,475 | 0 | Another ad for a toilet- bowl cleaner is shot from inside the toilet so you can watch a wife urge her husband to stick his head inside the bowl to see how clean she got it | VERB | 23 |
1,476 | 0 | If one of the wheels comes off the chariot and the center wheel must touch down, the nation will see a man to the left of Walter Mondale, far to the left of Jimmy Carter, and not too far to the right of George McGovern | VERB | 14 |
1,477 | 1 | " If you put a pile of candy bars out in a pasture, " Mr. Flickinger says, " they'd go eat themselves to death.' | VERB | 20 |
1,478 | 1 | A Nomura investment would reflect the growing desire by major Japanese financial institutions to grab a bigger piece of the mergers and acquisitions activity taking place between Japan and the U.S | VERB | 14 |
1,479 | 0 | But the next morning, a thin farmer from a nearby ranch who stumbled into the Contras' campsite told a different story | VERB | 12 |
1,480 | 0 | Tens of thousands were melted down for scrap metal right after the war | VERB | 4 |
1,481 | 0 | Without the boost in the capital- gains rate, congressional liberals would have attacked the tax reform plan for leaning too far in favor of the rich | VERB | 12 |
1,482 | 0 | Splashed across local papers was the picture of two burly federal marshals dragging a small woman through the car's broken window | VERB | 12 |
1,483 | 0 | And she recalls Joshua's reaction to his first week of first grade: " They don't give us enough time to rest our heads and our hands.' | VERB | 20 |
1,484 | 0 | The hug knocked off Spinks's hat, a broad- brimmed, white number | VERB | 2 |
1,485 | 0 | Last fall, on the eve of his Twins's World Series victory, the slightly stooped banker shed his white dress shirt on a downtown Minneapolis street as TV cameras rolled, to settle a bet | VERB | 28 |
1,486 | 0 | " There are a lot of fares to clean out, " says a spokeswoman for Eastern, which stopped flying from Los Angeles to San Francisco earlier this summer | VERB | 18 |
1,487 | 1 | Difficult as it was, young Miss Mills managed to grab some of the spotlight from her Papa Bear mentor | VERB | 9 |
1,488 | 0 | But the would- be happy warrior has become a disillusioned, despairing survivor: " Although I was tired to death, I could not sleep, so removing my tin hat and ruffling my hair I stood up and looked over the front of my hole | VERB | 22 |
1,489 | 0 | In interviews, he says, " you're always dancing, always having to show your best side, every day trying to be up when you already know what the outcome will be.' | VERB | 7 |
1,490 | 1 | Publisher Thomas Valentino complains BMI paid him just$ 12 when a piece he handled was played on the nationally syndicated program " Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous.' | VERB | 15 |
1,491 | 1 | " When I saw all the stories, I figured I better sell or I might get stuck, " said one portfolio manager, who last week unloaded some shares of medium- sized OTC stocks rather than risk not being able to sell off the thinly traded shares if prices started to plunge | VERB | 6 |
1,492 | 1 | Pyongyang would like nothing better than to rain on Seoul's parade | VERB | 7 |
1,493 | 0 | Mr. Dukakis is generally cast in that role, but he has stumbled badly twice in a row -- in Illinois and now in Michigan | VERB | 11 |
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