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1,994 | 0 | In an even more barbed letter sent earlier in the month, James Miller, director of the Office of Management and Budget, charged that in examining the controversial issue of shareholder voting rights, the SEC " lost sight of an important value -- that of competition.' | VERB | 24 |
1,995 | 0 | The New York Stock Exchange composite index also touched a high since the crash but pulled back to close at 144.82, up 0.28 but below its Oct. 21 level of 145.02 | VERB | 8 |
1,996 | 0 | And they claim -- butter not melting in their retinyl- palmitated, Heather Mist tinted mouths -- to " rebuild the epidermis and strengthen its natural defenses, " to " enhance the natural rate of repair of cells, " and to " virtually reverse the visual signs of age on surface skin.' | VERB | 6 |
1,997 | 0 | They sell their fruit, save the money, and borrow against it to plant more trees | VERB | 12 |
1,998 | 0 | Mr. Della Femina became a fixture on TV news reports about acquired immune deficiency syndrome, for example, after his agency created the line, " I enjoy sex, but I' m not ready to die for it, " for LifeStyles condoms | VERB | 33 |
1,999 | 0 | Letters flooded in to Social Work, most of them chastising both the authors and the respected journal, which has a circulation of 116, 000 | VERB | 1 |
2,000 | 1 | " The trick is to capture assets so that when -LRB- investors are -RRB- ready to roll out of a CD, the money's already here.' | VERB | 16 |
2,001 | 0 | Even as danced by four of ABT's most talented males, John Gardner, Robert Hill, Kevin McKenzie and the astonishingly agile Robert Wallace, Mr. Tippet's latest work is tough going | VERB | 2 |
2,002 | 0 | Sugar tried to divorce itself from soybeans last week but couldn't escape price declines as traders continued to play both markets | VERB | 11 |
2,003 | 0 | Last September a federal agent even tried to plant a listening device in the building housing MCA's home video unit, but was discovered by MCA security guards | VERB | 8 |
2,004 | 1 | The villagers -LRB- using dynamite purchased with His Highness's money -RRB- channeled melting mountain snow -- the only water available in this high desert -- to previously arid land | VERB | 12 |
2,005 | 1 | Sunworld had recently been operating as a charter airline flying 120 flights a month | VERB | 9 |
2,006 | 1 | " A Bright Shining Lie " will be attacked by those who have trimmed their judgments to this decade's prevailing winds | VERB | 8 |
2,007 | 0 | The three pairs of lovers are members of the European planter class; the mechanicals are Brazilian workmen; and the fairy folk are practitioners of the voodoolike religion of Macumba, the African- based cult worship that flourished outside the law in Brazil's jungles | VERB | 35 |
2,008 | 1 | Francis Bouygues plans to step down tomorrow as chairman of the television station TF1 but will remain at the helm of Bouygues S.A., the construction company he founded that controls the station, sources said | VERB | 4 |
2,009 | 0 | " We drank a lot of tea.' | VERB | 2 |
2,010 | 0 | Last July, Ohio and Colorado raised a white flag, putting Wyoming in the unfortunate position of being the only place in the country where 19- and 20-year- olds could drink legally | VERB | 29 |
2,011 | 0 | Most of these losses must be absorbed by the FSLIC, the industry's insurer, analysts said | VERB | 6 |
2,012 | 1 | In doing so, the state is trying to use retirees as a vehicle to achieve a public- policy aim: pumping more jobs and money into its poorest region | VERB | 19 |
2,013 | 1 | By the time he was laid to rest in a solemn procession of 100 garbage trucks, a frenzied struggle for control of his empire was under way | VERB | 7 |
2,014 | 1 | Mr. Dill, 48 years old, succeeds Donald K. Thostenson, 53, who stepped down for health reasons | VERB | 11 |
2,015 | 0 | Among the tantrums he admits: heaving a faulty phone across the control room, kicking in a TV screen to force NBC to buy a new one, and assaulting construction workers who were too noisy during taping | VERB | 27 |
2,016 | 1 | Karen Stern has played the harp surrounded by ice sculptures at a restaurant and as part of the display for a three- foot- high cake at a pastry competition | VERB | 3 |
2,017 | 0 | It is way past time for us to examine our relationship with Japan, its treatment of U.S. inventors, and our treatment of patent applications sent from Japan or its local companies | VERB | 8 |
2,018 | 0 | They induced shopper Aileen Schmieder to temporarily stop trying to get her family to drink more milk and juice | VERB | 14 |
2,019 | 0 | The administration tried again in mid-1987, suspending military and economic aid to Panama after rioters, led by some government officials, attacked the American Embassy in Panama City | VERB | 20 |
2,020 | 0 | Even when men and women dance together, they never touch | VERB | 9 |
2,021 | 0 | One million of the acres were already in soil- saving grasses or trees when put into the reserve, and roughly a third of the cropland now idled was previously planted in crops that were not defined by the Agriculture Department as surplus -- meaning a dead loss for consumers and the U.S. economy | VERB | 29 |
2,022 | 0 | As Jim Wells, head of the pesticide- use branch of the California Department of Food and Agriculture, notes, " We can not escape one fact: we are living older, healthier and more mentally acute than we have ever lived in the history of mankind | VERB | 22 |
2,023 | 0 | Most of the banks specifically have targeted marketing campaigns at profitable small companies. -LRB- Separately, Dai- Ichi Kangyo said it will name Ichiro Nakamura, now a vice president, as chairman, succeeding Tetsuya Fujimori | VERB | 6 |
2,024 | 0 | The best way to reduce erosion is to lower price supports and target- prices that make it profitable for farmers to plant on marginal, highly erosive low- yielding ground | VERB | 21 |
2,025 | 1 | But after several months of talks with each other and with clients, their ardor has cooled considerably | VERB | 15 |
2,026 | 0 | Cats can fly | VERB | 2 |
2,027 | 0 | The rest would go to more than 30 international banks that lent the National Bank money before it was seized and closed by Brunei in November 1986 | VERB | 11 |
2,028 | 1 | Grand Met's letter describes the spinoff plan as " another time bomb, planted by Pillsbury's management, to deter the acquisition of the company by Grand Met or any other party.' | VERB | 12 |
2,029 | 1 | Some say interest rates may have to rise further to cool domestic demand, while others say the problem is more deep- rooted and requires greater investment by United Kingdom industry | VERB | 10 |
2,030 | 0 | If we hesitate to let teen- agers drink until they're 21, why entrust them with shaping the fate of the Republic at 18 | VERB | 7 |
2,031 | 0 | As the water runs down, it leaches salt from the earth and carries it to the Mother of Poisons, where water evaporates in the searing sun, crystallizing the salt in a thick white crust on the surface | VERB | 21 |
2,032 | 0 | A revenue passenger mile is one paying passenger flown one mile | VERB | 8 |
2,033 | 1 | In Popular Front Hollywood it smoothed one's career to evince a diffuse " progressivism.' | VERB | 5 |
2,034 | 1 | A rippling of boos at the introduction of Mr. Bentsen was drowned out by organ music | VERB | 11 |
2,035 | 0 | I drank Vodka, So did you " and saw the doors opening to the glittering life of an octave- thundering concert pianist | VERB | 1 |
2,036 | 1 | 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 | 11 |
2,037 | 1 | On one occasion, intelligence sources say, a rebel band took its Stingers to the Soviet air base at Qandahar, set up shop not far from the end of the runway, blasted a few Soviet planes as they tried to take off laden with fuel and ammunition, then melted into the hills | VERB | 47 |
2,038 | 0 | The grave of sleep swallows you, but still you don't rest, your brain still chases phantoms | VERB | 10 |
2,039 | 0 | A New York radio real- estate adviser has been touting Camden's proximity to Philadelphia, and a busload of speculators drove through the city recently to examine homes | VERB | 25 |
2,040 | 0 | But past compositions have included " absorbed water, " which evaporates at high temperatures, causing the fluids to break down | VERB | 10 |
2,041 | 0 | Saudi Arabia openly declared war on the rest of OPEC, vowing to continue flooding the market with crude oil until the cartel's members honor their production quotas | VERB | 13 |
2,042 | 1 | The parts, which included a tail assembly for the F-104 and a key component of the A-7's stability system, were critical items, and Navy fliers could have been killed if the parts were used, the prosecutor said | VERB | 28 |
2,043 | 0 | This was obvious in the professional manner in which he rolled across the stadium floor after firing on his target, hoping to avoid being shot by Mr. Ozal's bodyguards | VERB | 10 |
2,044 | 1 | Grain and soybean futures prices plunged because it rained in Iowa | VERB | 8 |
2,045 | 0 | But the report, published in today's edition of Science, lends credence to a body of opinion that HIV-2 in some cases may not ravage T-4 cells -- immune sentries of the bloodstream -- as much as it harms cells of the brain or bowel, said Dr. Levy in an interview | VERB | 9 |
2,046 | 1 | Jamie Securities Inc., once one of Wall Street's most powerful arbitrage firms, is dissolving because of the continuing legal problems of John A. Mulheren Jr., its managing partner arrested for allegedly threatening to kill insider trader Ivan F. Boesky | VERB | 13 |
2,047 | 0 | JAMIE SECURITIES Inc. is dissolving, firm officials have said, but the company hasn't formally announced the move | VERB | 4 |
2,048 | 0 | Racism has gone largely unnoticed as images of Brazilians of all shades dancing the samba at Carnival created a sense of racial harmony | VERB | 12 |
2,049 | 0 | The size of a Dalmatiner, these horses were ridden by teen- age boys dressed up as Valkyries to give an illusion of distance in the first production of the " Ring.' | VERB | 8 |
2,050 | 1 | The growing consensus in the computer industry is that midsized products are the weakest part of IBM's business right now, and that IBM needs to fix that problem in 1988 | VERB | 25 |
2,051 | 0 | Tears flowing, he stares at the picture till dawn | VERB | 1 |
2,052 | 1 | FMC officials long have complained that government officials in those countries play an aggressive role in marketing their industries' war machinery | VERB | 11 |
2,053 | 0 | So far, the rare discovery of aflatoxin in the Midwest two weeks ago has only served to slow the normal drop in corn futures prices that comes as the harvest flows into hundreds of grain elevators, and they in turn sell futures contracts at the Chicago Board of Trade in order to hedge their purchases from farmers | VERB | 30 |
2,054 | 1 | But it's another thing to simply pour money into a fiscal black hole | VERB | 6 |
2,055 | 0 | Another major Japanese concern is that any mold that slips throught U.S. screening procedures would flourish during the long passage to Japan | VERB | 15 |
2,056 | 0 | Plunging into a market most investors are struggling to escape, Henley spends$ 600 million | VERB | 9 |
2,057 | 1 | Now its 12, 000 acres of manmade hills, soaring granite towers and glistening plazas linked by Venetian canals are flooded with almost a billion dollars in debt | VERB | 19 |
2,058 | 0 | This time, the ground absorbed the shock waves enough to transfer her images to the metal in bas- relief | VERB | 4 |
2,059 | 0 | Mr. Hudson didn't provide any details about who destroyed documents, how they were destroyed or how they might have been related to the investigation | VERB | 13 |
2,060 | 0 | That Mr. Lafontaine now talks of the need for higher profits for business and fewer demands from labor reflects his propensity for riding the waves of public opinion | VERB | 22 |
2,061 | 0 | Most of the land will be flooded when the project is finished | VERB | 6 |
2,062 | 0 | The Agriculture Department announced late Monday that it had targeted the Soviet Union for an additional one million metric tons of subsidized wheat, bringing to 8.8 million metric tons the amount of U.S. wheat offered to the Soviet Union since October | VERB | 9 |
2,063 | 1 | More mines than maize is planted in the countryside, much of which is controlled by the guerrillas | VERB | 5 |
2,064 | 0 | He insists that Ashley's death was an accident caused by the child tipping over a trash can and eating discarded pills | VERB | 18 |
2,065 | 1 | But despite all, the economy keeps on rolling along | VERB | 7 |
2,066 | 0 | Mr. Lee said he proposed the committee " as a simple way to put the matter quietly to rest.' | VERB | 18 |
2,067 | 0 | Mr. Williams thus launched a divestiture binge that ended only last year, ultimately raising more than$ 1.2 billion in cash -- money that the company plowed not only into reducing debt and upgrading its its natural- gas pipelines, but also into transforming old pipelines into new telephone lines | VERB | 25 |
2,068 | 0 | " He just tried to eat the propeller, " says Mr. Fox | VERB | 5 |
2,069 | 1 | Vice Chairman William J. McDonough, a former State Department official and now the peacekeeper between First Chicago's two executive camps, smooths it all over this way: " A traumatic decision in 1986 became a no- brainer in 1987.' | VERB | 20 |
2,070 | 0 | Edward A. Brennan, chairman and chief executive officer, repeated to analysts something he said he recently told his managers about Sears's businesses: " If it isn't achieving its expected return on capital, their mandate is to fix it in a timely fashion, or exit the position and redeploy assets.' | VERB | 36 |
2,071 | 0 | GM can't continue to absorb indefinitely the large fixed costs represented by unused capacity, he says | VERB | 4 |
2,072 | 0 | And they die anyway.' | VERB | 2 |
2,073 | 1 | Increasingly he will be the leper nobody wants to touch.' | VERB | 9 |
2,074 | 1 | Earlier, he explains to his girlfriend why, on a bet, he slept with a woman he didn't care about: " A guy lays down a dare you got ta take it.' | VERB | 11 |
2,075 | 0 | Lord Bryce noted in 1888, " The conjunction of the forces of rank, wealth, knowledge, and intellect " in a great metropolis like New York " makes such a city a sort of foundry, " a key place where " opinion is melted and cast, " and " easily and swiftly propagated and diffused throughout the country.' | VERB | 42 |
2,076 | 1 | That measure assumed surpluses were the problem; now the surpluses are evaporating | VERB | 11 |
2,077 | 1 | This weapon could be extremely powerful, perhaps ideal for the European battlefield -- simply put attacking troops to sleep | VERB | 18 |
2,078 | 1 | Wynfred Joshua of the Defense Intelligence Agency says that if the U.S. doesn't seize the opportunity to engage the Iranians, the Soviet Union will fill the void | VERB | 24 |
2,079 | 1 | He will certainly take great offense to my description of the Taiwanese as being not much in tune with the outside world, betting gleefully with stocks that no foreign fund manager would touch, and happily oblivious to what the history of financial markets has taught the rest of mankind | VERB | 32 |
2,080 | 0 | Although most of the major airlines have such affiliations, they generally aren't involved in the operations of the smaller airlines- even when the commuters are flying under the big airlines' logos | VERB | 25 |
2,081 | 0 | Anyone can dance the hokey- pokey | VERB | 2 |
2,082 | 0 | Friends and analysts predict it will be very difficult for the hard- driving entrepreneur to let go of his company that, early on, succeeded in coming up with a highly successful device to monitor sleeping infants | VERB | 34 |
2,083 | 0 | Upstairs over the bufyet is the ballroom where Natasha danced | VERB | 9 |
2,084 | 0 | Pounds have melted off, she says, during the months of one- night stands | VERB | 2 |
2,085 | 0 | Creating the special food solved the problem of what he could eat on future flights, but supplying fare for astronauts seemed limited as a business concept | VERB | 11 |
2,086 | 0 | " It's no scarier than stepping out my door at home, " says Davoru Sperling, a Torah student from the West Bank | VERB | 5 |
2,087 | 0 | About half of Cray's R& D budget now goes into creating software, a combination art and science that so totally engrosses some Cray designers that they sometimes have to be dragged away from their terminals and told to get some rest | VERB | 30 |
2,088 | 1 | " We can't seem to put this issue to rest, " says C.A. Pei, who is I.M. Pei's son and a senior associate with New York- based I.M. Pei& Partners | VERB | 9 |
2,089 | 1 | U.S. Stinger missiles, machine guns and mangled human limbs came raining down on what was left | VERB | 10 |
2,090 | 0 | The company has said a cash- flow shortage caused it to miss$ 3.3 million in interest payments on its 10 7 8% senior debentures due Dec. 31, 1995 | VERB | 11 |
2,091 | 0 | But the rally evaporated around midday as rumors began to spread that Wall Street would open lower | VERB | 3 |
2,092 | 1 | By pumping money into coverage of local business, the papers aimed at an affluent and influential audience in their communities | VERB | 1 |
2,093 | 0 | A revenue passenger mile is one paying passenger flown one mile | VERB | 8 |
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