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1,594 | 0 | A further$ 150 million in bank loans, the last slice of a$ 1.95 billion bank loan agreed on last year and linked to those IMF loans, also probably won't be lent now, compounding Argentina's payments difficulties | VERB | 30 |
1,595 | 0 | A revenue passenger mile is one paying passenger flown one mile | VERB | 8 |
1,596 | 1 | Separately, a Soviet news agency said as many as 15, 000 Soviet troops were killed in the 8 1 2-year war | VERB | 14 |
1,597 | 0 | Don't take them with orange juice. -LRB- They won't dissolve well. -RRB-/-R | VERB | 9 |
1,598 | 1 | Oil shares, higher at the end of the morning session on a flurry of merger rumors, gave back most of their gains in the afternoon, while financials such as brokers fell, dragging down the Nikkei index | VERB | 31 |
1,599 | 0 | A few years ago, Dr. Zimmerman and his colleagues dragged nests of two different termite species into the lab and measured their methane output | VERB | 9 |
1,600 | 0 | Lung congestion is a result of weakened or impaired pumping action by the heart's key lower left chamber | VERB | 9 |
1,601 | 0 | Ford, Chrysler and GM are responding with strategies of their own, and all essentially incorporate the same truth: A lot of headaches can be prevented by planning ahead, sticking to decisions and working as a team | VERB | 28 |
1,602 | 0 | The situation for soybeans doesn't become critical until next week, when the crop's need for moisture soars as its pods begin to fill with beans | VERB | 22 |
1,603 | 1 | But when Sun became larger and " decision making slowed, " Mr. Khosla recalled, he stepped back from day- to- day management | VERB | 15 |
1,604 | 1 | While the rest of the nation watched with mere curiosity or slight concern, the nation's fourth- largest city was thoroughly absorbed by the approach of Hurricane Gilbert | VERB | 20 |
1,605 | 0 | PRESS RELEASES about lawyers are flooding newspaper offices as the profession becomes more aggressive about marketing | VERB | 5 |
1,606 | 1 | The paved highway abruptly turns into a dirt road, and South Africa, without warning, dissolves into Bophuthatswana | VERB | 14 |
1,607 | 1 | They're stumbling through middle age beset by debts, boring jobs, needy parents, unloving children | VERB | 1 |
1,608 | 1 | As Judge Anthony Kennedy rolls on toward confirmation, the Bork fallout continues, not least in raising the issue of whether the organized bar has any special role to play in judicial selection | VERB | 4 |
1,609 | 0 | " Most Koreans' stomachs turn when they think of eating snails, " Mr. Lee concedes | VERB | 9 |
1,610 | 1 | Investor enthusiasm cooled considerably in the wake of reports that Lilco's demand was a bargaining tactic aimed at getting its talks with the state back in high gear | VERB | 2 |
1,611 | 1 | The Republican campaign is sticking to its story of not releasing Mr. Bush's vice- presidential selection until Thursday | VERB | 4 |
1,612 | 0 | F.W. Christian, a traveler and writer of the 19th century, said that, after drinking sakau, " the head remains clear but the legs sometime suffer a temporary paralysis.' | VERB | 13 |
1,613 | 1 | Golden Nugget Inc. announced ambitious plans to roll back into the New Jersey gambling scene by buying the Claridge Hotel- Casino, and Golden Nugget Chairman Steven A. Wynn may be betting on a novel marketing strategy to make his re- entry work | VERB | 7 |
1,614 | 1 | Young Jean escaped her family into literature and into a fast crowd she found at the University of Colorado | VERB | 2 |
1,615 | 0 | When a triumphant Michael Dukakis flew to Erie from the Democratic National Convention in July, they lined the exit from the airport and Perry Square downtown with signs -- not handmade but professionally printed -- saying " Dukakis Wants Taxes For Abortion.' | VERB | 5 |
1,616 | 0 | Nearly every local union either voted to strike or planned to since the Acustar issue flared up, and while most of those possible walkouts will likely never take place, about three plants are still seriously pursuing grievances, a union official said | VERB | 7 |
1,617 | 1 | Ethnic hatred and economic hardship, neither of them new to Yugoslavia, have begun to blend over the past few weeks into a political poison the country's leaders may be about to drink | VERB | 31 |
1,618 | 0 | Last Tuesday, a federal jury in Akron, Ohio said it couldn't identify a defect that could have caused an Audi 5000 to suddenly accelerate in an accident that killed a six- year- old boy | VERB | 28 |
1,619 | 1 | In 1985, we took a write- off to finance all this restructuring that knocked a third of our equity away | VERB | 13 |
1,620 | 0 | Medserv also signed a$ 10 million licensing agreement to provide equipment, training and raw materials for a dental- technology facility that will be able to produce enough fillings to fix 50 million Soviet cavities | VERB | 29 |
1,621 | 1 | Vista Group's$ 16-a- share offer quickly evaporated in the controversy | VERB | 6 |
1,622 | 0 | What struck me most about the interview with Dr. Murphy was his challenge to Dr. Paul Leber, the FDA's director of neuropharmalogical products, to look an Alzheimer's patient in the eye and tell him that in his lifetime there will never be a cure | VERB | 1 |
1,623 | 0 | A Reichmann official makes clear that Mr. Campeau can't afford to stumble | VERB | 11 |
1,624 | 0 | For now, he rides around his opponents like a modern Jeb Stuart, staging lightning raids before returning to safety in the South | VERB | 3 |
1,625 | 0 | A revenue passenger mile is one paying passenger flown one mile | VERB | 8 |
1,626 | 1 | According to Mr. Bellrose, the decline is due to a two- fisted villain that has struck the ducks where they're the most vulnerable -- on the prairies of the Dakotas and southern Canada | VERB | 15 |
1,627 | 1 | The House panel is examining whether Rep. Wright's 55% royalties from his book " Reflections of a Public Man " amounted to improper conversion of campaign funds to personal use; the publisher was paid more than$ 250, 000 by Mr. Wright's political committees in 1985 and 1986 for campaign work | VERB | 4 |
1,628 | 1 | Most American cities show to their best advantage when seen from a height or a distance, at a point where the ugliness of the buildings dissolves into the beauty of an abstraction | VERB | 25 |
1,629 | 0 | The fast- paced, slapstick nature of the commercials for Goodyear's automotive service centers contrasts sharply with previous campaigns that subtly stressed the safety of Goodyear tires while also striking an emotional chord with viewers | VERB | 28 |
1,630 | 1 | While the answer isn't clear, it is clear that Mr. Cristiani, who has headed Arena since Mr. D'Aubuisson stepped aside for him in 1986, has altered the tone of its campaigning | VERB | 18 |
1,631 | 0 | We lend him a stately and beautiful home and permit him to live on its topmost floor, attended by servants | VERB | 1 |
1,632 | 1 | The Australian experience might be of interest to the U.S., which just agreed to pump nearly$ 1 billion of development aid into the Philippines | VERB | 14 |
1,633 | 0 | Alfred Goldman, a market strategist with A.G. Edwards& Sons in St. Louis, said with the move in the industrial average beyond its old high, some money managers were probably gripped by the " classic fear of missing the boat, " and they scrambled to buy some stocks late in the day | VERB | 36 |
1,634 | 1 | The tacky Formica kiosks from behind which East Berlin border guards stare down at entering visitors, the tinny board- game feel of East German currency, and the vanilla- white paint on the trams combine to make the visitor feel he's stepped back in time to a hungrier, postwar Germany | VERB | 40 |
1,635 | 1 | Now he relies on a rather uncomfortable machine to force air down his trachea, but he is sleeping better than ever, and so is Mrs. Ponce | VERB | 17 |
1,636 | 0 | " But, Doc, I' m going to die of this, " you plead | VERB | 7 |
1,637 | 0 | He is part of a growing air force of amateur aces around the country who rebuild and fly aging warplanes, indulging in weekend flights of fantasy like Mr. Deakins's Battle of Stuart. -LRB- He won, he says, by keeping Mr. Stephenson, 48, in his gun sights for 10 seconds; the planes are unarmed | VERB | 17 |
1,638 | 1 | Management of three of the five highest yielding general purpose funds, as ranked by the Donoghue Organization, absorb a portion of fund expenses | VERB | 17 |
1,639 | 0 | But other officials, who asked not to be identified, said the helicopter was an MH-6 flying from one of two large barges moored in the northern Persian Gulf | VERB | 15 |
1,640 | 0 | The South's overall softwood growth of 5.7 billion cubic feet annually could be increased by 2.1 billion cubic feet by planting pine on 22 million acres of marginal crop land and pasture, the study says | VERB | 20 |
1,641 | 1 | THIS YEAR marketers are again flooding supermarket shelves with new products -- everything from Cajun popcorn to ketchup in spray cans | VERB | 5 |
1,642 | 0 | Nothing dates faster than a business book because trends change, statistics lose meaning, companies get liquidated, executives get the ax, and people die | VERB | 22 |
1,643 | 1 | Her daughter demanded that she keep silent, telling her, " You won't have a home to sleep in if you say anything about this.' | VERB | 16 |
1,644 | 1 | Ideas may strike it but they just bounce off | VERB | 2 |
1,645 | 1 | Recriminations already are beginning to fly in Israel as Foreign Minister Shimon Peres, who hopes to be Israel's next prime minister, attacks the present one for lost opportunities to make peace while Iraq was distracted | VERB | 21 |
1,646 | 0 | Here Mr. Brown plays barkeep mentor to Mr. Cruise, the wise old hand who teaches the pup how to succeed at the high- stakes game of pouring brew | VERB | 26 |
1,647 | 0 | Every morning he stumbles into work still a wreck from the drugs and booze of the night before, clearly contemptuous of the drudgery set before him | VERB | 3 |
1,648 | 0 | On the show, he has threatened to broadcast the home phone numbers of port commissioners so that residents who can't sleep Sunday night can call them up and keep the officials awake | VERB | 20 |
1,649 | 0 | Because of sharp drops in grain stockpiles, the department is likely to allow farmers to plant more acreage next year | VERB | 15 |
1,650 | 1 | Julian Pierce, a Lumbee Indian running for Superior Court judge in Robeson County, was killed Saturday | VERB | 14 |
1,651 | 1 | Back in the early 1970s, when Mr. Trudeau created " Doonesbury, " he was able to invent quirky countercultural characters that allowed his delicately accurate barbs to fly in all directions | VERB | 27 |
1,652 | 0 | John Gil, a San Diego landlord, and Mike Black, an apartment manager, were sued in state Superior Court in San Diego by a tenant who was assaulted by a pet monkey owned by two other renters | VERB | 26 |
1,653 | 1 | But as long as Washington keeps pumping in those subsidies, the situation will remain stabilized, even improving a bit | VERB | 6 |
1,654 | 0 | Kim Sang Up, a 51-year- old ginseng farmer here, says some of his 5, 000 pyong of ginseng land are now as far as two hours from his house, and only 2, 000 are planted in ginseng at any one time. -LRB- A pyong is about four square yards. -RRB-/-R | VERB | 34 |
1,655 | 0 | The specter raised by economic nationalists is that the country will be flooded with foreign materials | VERB | 12 |
1,656 | 1 | It happens every year, says Dusty Saunders of the Rocky Mountain News, in Denver: Reporters put in long and weary days on the tour only to have their editors spot them drinking beer with a starlet on TV | VERB | 31 |
1,657 | 1 | Their eyes roll back into their heads.' | VERB | 2 |
1,658 | 0 | Tomorrow night at New York's swank Pierre Hotel, 200 advertising executives in black tie will dance to the jazz of Ann Hampton Callaway and dine on grilled salmon, filet of beef Peregourdine and pastry tulips filled with praline ice cream | VERB | 15 |
1,659 | 0 | In May, Pinnacle said the partnership between SunCor and Mr. Diddy had been " dissolved " so that SunCor could control development of the property that the partnership had acquired, but Pinnacle didn't give further details of his departure | VERB | 14 |
1,660 | 1 | The new jobs may pay less, but they will also be less likely to evaporate all at once | VERB | 14 |
1,661 | 1 | The summit, therefore, is an important domestic event in Germany, where Mr. Gorbachev has been riding a wave of popularity | VERB | 15 |
1,662 | 1 | He has tried to convince the public his company isn't, in his words, " a nice building on the park with everybody sleeping inside.' | VERB | 22 |
1,663 | 0 | Mr. Paulson also flew over China | VERB | 3 |
1,664 | 1 | One option being considered: Hire a clinic doctor as the company's medical director in Wenatchee, partly to smooth relations | VERB | 17 |
1,665 | 1 | To get some idea of how far back down the mountain American politics has rolled consider that the biggest individual political decision George Bush and Michael Dukakis have made so far in their runs for the presidency is selecting Dan Quayle and Lloyd Bentsen as their running mates | VERB | 14 |
1,666 | 1 | This was one of the lesser- known reasons why President Zia abruptly dismissed the whole cabinet and dissolved the national assembly on May 29 | VERB | 17 |
1,667 | 1 | " The market had a bad spill on Friday, and normally when that happens they absolutely kill it on Monday, " said Bernard Savaiko, senior precious metals analyst for PaineWebber Inc., New York | VERB | 16 |
1,668 | 0 | Japan has long fended off accusations that Japanese companies use U.S. and European technologies without permission to grab a market lead, most recently in semiconductors | VERB | 17 |
1,669 | 1 | Failure to pull off the buy- back can only add to problems that have dragged Home Shopping's stock down from a peak of$ 47 a share in January 1987 and left management with credibility problems | VERB | 14 |
1,670 | 0 | Director John McTiernan -LRB- " Predator " -RRB- has efficiently slapped together the ingredients for a big, ear- shattering action film: slick, heavily armed villains; a wife in peril; stupid TV journalists who only make things worse; a renegade cop who singlehandedly destroys the bad guys against impossible odds | VERB | 42 |
1,671 | 0 | But David Lett was a visionary, and in 1966 he planted pinot noir in the red hills near Dundee | VERB | 10 |
1,672 | 0 | A young Oxford graduate comes to Southwest Ireland in 1904 to examine the connections between two incidents in local history that might illuminate the inner logic of a bloody quarter century | VERB | 11 |
1,673 | 0 | Compaq Computer Corp. is expected to unveil today a long- awaited line of laptop computers, filling a gaping hole in the company's product line | VERB | 15 |
1,674 | 1 | Roberto Macedo, president of the Association of Sao Paulo Economists, said in a statement that, " This pact was born distorted and will die distorted.' | VERB | 23 |
1,675 | 0 | The revised terms stem from ITT's review of Portland, Ore .- based American Network's operations, including actual and expected losses, plus ITT's plan to lend the company short- term financing | VERB | 24 |
1,676 | 1 | For most promoters, the preferred scam is " pump and dump " -- pump up the per- share price with hot air and hype, then dump the stock on duped investors for immense profits | VERB | 13 |
1,677 | 1 | General Cinema has announced plans to fix up and expand the 22-store flagship chain, an undertaking estimated at more than$ 100 million | VERB | 6 |
1,678 | 1 | He can be oblivious to how calculated he sometimes appears, yet he can also touch people, as when, at the close of the Louisville rally Saturday, he brought forward Georgia Powers, a black Kentucky state senator | VERB | 14 |
1,679 | 1 | At the State Fair in Lincoln early this month, Mr. Karnes prompted a furor when he said, " We need fewer farmers at this point in time, " a remark that underlined his tendency to stumble into gaffes | VERB | 35 |
1,680 | 0 | Two years ago, Utah state engineers came up with what seemed a logical solution to the seasonal flooding of the Great Salt Lake: Create yet another lake nearby, and pump the excess water into it | VERB | 29 |
1,681 | 1 | And, like Mr. Bush, he rests his platform on often untested optimism | VERB | 5 |
1,682 | 0 | This has given a sheepskin a rarity value unimagined in the 1970s, when the well- educated flooded the labor market and the cabbie with a doctorate drove his way into national folklore | VERB | 16 |
1,683 | 1 | Pop music did get stuck in the 1970s, as evidenced in the second film, " The Gospel According to Al Green.' | VERB | 4 |
1,684 | 1 | As compressed water rushes through its gills, a fish is knocked unconscious | VERB | 10 |
1,685 | 1 | Southdown Inc., stepping up its efforts to take over Moore McCormack Resources Inc., said it began soliciting consents to have Moore McCormack cancel its poison pill | VERB | 2 |
1,686 | 1 | Mr. Hudson hears that the Chinese eat the things, and someone's looking into it | VERB | 6 |
1,687 | 0 | That's not to say the taxpayers can rest easy | VERB | 7 |
1,688 | 1 | But he grasped the potential of putting the two together | VERB | 2 |
1,689 | 1 | The storm killed about 100 people on land, and left more than 100, 000 homeless | VERB | 2 |
1,690 | 1 | I would sleep better knowing Dan Quayle was in the National Guard than on the national ticket | VERB | 2 |
1,691 | 0 | Since May, he has hired a marketing consultant, a creative director and a new marketing manager to help Hanover use its consumer lists more effectively, targeting only those consumers most likely to buy | VERB | 25 |
1,692 | 0 | By January 1993, societies would be able to lend 25% of their assets for such nontraditional purposes as commercial property development and unsecured personal loans | VERB | 8 |
1,693 | 0 | Nelson Peltz and Peter May, whose junk- bond wizardry built Triangle Industries and won them the sobriquet of " the new aces of low tech, " may have missed out on a pot of money at CJI Industries | VERB | 28 |
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