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2,294 | 0 | Eastern's cutbacks have benefited Continental in other ways, the affidavit claims: Roughly 4% of Eastern's flying capacity competes with Continental, it says, compared with 9.3% in January 1987 | VERB | 15 |
2,295 | 1 | Texas Air said the sale of the hourly New York- Boston- Washington shuttle is intended to pump cash into long- ailing Eastern | VERB | 16 |
2,296 | 1 | -- The justices refused to hear an antitrust appeal by actor Paul Newman and director George Roy Hill in a suit charging that MCA Inc. and its Universal City Studios Inc. unit conspired to fix the percentage of film revenue paid to artists | VERB | 34 |
2,297 | 0 | " In the very short term, a lot rests on the behavior of Japanese purchasers of -LRB- Treasury -RRB- bonds, " he notes | VERB | 8 |
2,298 | 0 | Thus, Forbes Inc. doesn't try to stop Chairman Malcolm Forbes from ballooning or riding motorcycles despite the dangers | VERB | 13 |
2,299 | 0 | Countless marginal players -- individuals who plowed their money into foreign mutual funds and new institutional entrants seeking a quick killing overseas -- have disappeared | VERB | 6 |
2,300 | 1 | A military group described as supporting former leader Ne Win ousted Burma's civilian president, and thousands of citizens armed with homemade weapons poured into Rangoon's streets to reject the regime, the fourth in two months | VERB | 22 |
2,301 | 0 | In short, a completely effective SDI would give the Soviets what they do not now have: the ability to strike the U.S. without fear of retaliation | VERB | 19 |
2,302 | 1 | He can no longer sleep, he says, nor even concentrate long enough to take in a newspaper article without reading it several times | VERB | 4 |
2,303 | 1 | Some mines were planted by the U.S .- backed guerrillas themselves | VERB | 3 |
2,304 | 1 | Delta Flight 943 from Cincinnati to Jackson, Miss., is an example of a flight " fixed " by schedule changes | VERB | 15 |
2,305 | 1 | One is that FDR was too unyielding toward the Japanese, and might have reached an understanding with them if he had grasped the nature of Japanese society and politics more adequately | VERB | 21 |
2,306 | 1 | " But we haven't knocked them off our list.' | VERB | 4 |
2,307 | 0 | " But there are some things we can fix right now | VERB | 8 |
2,308 | 1 | The new calculations showed the shuttle could fly safely, he said | VERB | 7 |
2,309 | 1 | The movie producer and distributor has a lot riding on the picture | VERB | 4 |
2,310 | 1 | Although SEC investigators have interviewed Mr. Salsbury, it's not clear what role if any he played in events being examined in the current probe | VERB | 19 |
2,311 | 0 | Federal regulators are expected to issue a statement as early as this week intended to reassure nervous Wall Street firms who have lent more than$ 10 billion to the thrift unit of deeply troubled Financial Corp. of America, Wall Street executives said | VERB | 22 |
2,312 | 0 | Soon after Mr. McCarthy saw society bandleader Peter Duchin on a train, W declared that riding the subways is " in.' | VERB | 15 |
2,313 | 0 | Some analysts here also poured scorn on the takeover concerns | VERB | 4 |
2,314 | 1 | Grand Metropolitan PLC's sharply higher offer for Martell& Cie. represents an attempt to knock Seagram Co. out of the bidding war for the French cognac maker | VERB | 13 |
2,315 | 1 | Because genetic targeting marries sophisticated organic chemistry with molecular genetics, Gilead says it sidesteps some of the messier problems of conventional biotechnology -- particularly the manufacture of human proteins | VERB | 2 |
2,316 | 0 | A player couldn't let the knees touch the ground, for two reasons -- one a matter of protocol, the other practical | VERB | 6 |
2,317 | 1 | White- collar Indians and Pakistanis flooded into the U.S. in the 1960s, and many of their children have reached marriage age | VERB | 5 |
2,318 | 1 | Senator Kennedy, and the handful of legislators who knew about the secret provision, intended to kill two unfriendly newspapers | VERB | 15 |
2,319 | 0 | They plow through their copy like farmers trying to meet a quota | VERB | 1 |
2,320 | 1 | Some traders said that the West German central bank was divesting itself of some of its U.S. government securities as a means of reducing its foreign reserves, swollen by more than two years of periodic interventions to smooth out the dollar's decline | VERB | 37 |
2,321 | 1 | There also are missing ingredients elsewhere at General Foods | VERB | 3 |
2,322 | 1 | Mr. Martineau also says the tractors reflect another Russian approach to manufacturing: " You could melt down one Belarus and make three American tractors with the amount of metal the Russians have put in it, " he says | VERB | 15 |
2,323 | 0 | Horace Furumoto, chairman and chief executive officer, said the company recently has completed its first phase as a public company, which included the development of lasers for removing birthmarks and for destroying kidney stones without surgery | VERB | 31 |
2,324 | 0 | When he discovers they're celebrating the sale of a property, he rudely begins to berate the older executive, in front of all, for not giving him a fair chance, only to find out he missed a telephone message | VERB | 34 |
2,325 | 0 | Among those eliminated are stocks that don't pay dividends, which include some fast- growing concerns that are plowing all available money into expansion | VERB | 17 |
2,326 | 0 | " It is better for a pitchman to die than to be caught alive in a scandal, " contends Albert Lerman, chief creative officer at D'Arcy Masius Benton& Bowles in St. Louis, whose clients include Anheuser- Busch Cos | VERB | 8 |
2,327 | 1 | Homework -- " papers and papers and papers, " Mrs. Laine says -- drags on for hours; Finn and Blue wake up early some mornings just to finish | VERB | 13 |
2,328 | 1 | To be fair, the blame for the passage of the Byrd amendment does not rest entirely with the Democrats | VERB | 14 |
2,329 | 0 | First Federal was then to absorb several other troubled thrifts in federally assisted mergers, as part of the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corp.'s so- called Southwest Plan to rescue the many ailing savings and loans based in the region | VERB | 5 |
2,330 | 0 | Jan Workinger emerges from American Airlines Flight 115 and examines the faces around Gate 25 | VERB | 9 |
2,331 | 0 | According to the presidential task force's report, some of the stock market's worst drops on Oct. 19 came after program trading was effectively knocked out of commission by a huge order backlog | VERB | 23 |
2,332 | 1 | This destroys cancerous cells but also wipes out the patient's " good " white blood cells that guard the immune system, leaving a patient vulnerable for almost a month to death by infection | VERB | 1 |
2,333 | 0 | Yet Houston Industries Inc. is flourishing, even with a unit operating the$ 5.3 billion South Texas nuclear project | VERB | 5 |
2,334 | 0 | Part of the drop was attributed to the lessening severity of Hurricane Gilbert and expectations it would miss major U.S. oil facilities | VERB | 17 |
2,335 | 1 | After seven years of Republican appointments, the courts of appeals are filled with able judges of a moderate to conservative stripe | VERB | 11 |
2,336 | 0 | Recent fears of a weakening dollar, a sudden surge in inflation and a possible disappearance of foreign investors from the U.S. markets have all but evaporated | VERB | 25 |
2,337 | 0 | This is also true, I believe, with respect to the famous Buddhist university at Nalanda, India, which too was destroyed by the Moslem hordes, who had no respect for others' learning | VERB | 19 |
2,338 | 1 | A SUMMING UP: Besides rescuing the brokers, the Hong Kong government has had to commit hundreds of millions more in recent years to bail out seven banks, including Hang Lung and Overseas Trust; though it had no legal obligation to save them, letting them die might have precipitated full- scale panic | VERB | 44 |
2,339 | 1 | The subject is Oedipus's death, and perhaps because death is the one thing that still fills us with awe, the excellence of this scene transmits a shiver of the tragedy's original force | VERB | 15 |
2,340 | 0 | But the closer to plant capacity the economy is operating, the faster low unemployment pushes up costs and prices | VERB | 4 |
2,341 | 0 | Tokyo activity was directionless as the heavy trading of the morning session evaporated in the afternoon | VERB | 12 |
2,342 | 1 | When it finally rained, it was a letdown.' | VERB | 3 |
2,343 | 1 | Big money and big media are the stuff of the Washington that Sen. Williams didn't stick around for | VERB | 15 |
2,344 | 1 | The House- passed version also includes the 4% raise, but would require agencies to absorb only half of the cost | VERB | 14 |
2,345 | 1 | Cautious bureaucrats drag their feet while progressive colleagues and scientists urge reform | VERB | 2 |
2,346 | 0 | Normal Barrett was flying to a Hawaiian island when he missed a connection in Honolulu because his United Airlines flight left late | VERB | 10 |
2,347 | 1 | But, he suspects, something may be happening: a steady disillusionment with Mr. Bush that grows out of his stumbling explanations of his role in the Iran- Contra affair, " his loss of grace under pressure " with TV's Dan Rather and other factors | VERB | 18 |
2,348 | 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 |
2,349 | 0 | It reveals that while PACs are flourishing, political competition isn't | VERB | 6 |
2,350 | 1 | Those progressive cities now building or planning transit systems for the next century are not viewing the scene from an ivory tower but realize, in a practical sense, that better transit is vital not only for the millions of Americans who currently step onto a transit bus or train over 8.3 billion times each year, but also to their future citizens as well | VERB | 42 |
2,351 | 0 | Richard Sherlund, an analyst with Goldman, Sachs& Co. said " the company is going to have to eat crow because it told a lot of people it would be profitable.' | VERB | 17 |
2,352 | 0 | The Farm Credit System Assistance Board said the government will provide more than$ 20.5 million to pay off stockholders in six lending units now being liquidated | VERB | 21 |
2,353 | 1 | In any event, Mr. Dhlomo understands better than do most U.S. congressmen that if the South African economy is destroyed by sanctions, so, too, will be the prospects for revolutionary, or even evolutionary, change | VERB | 19 |
2,354 | 0 | Sir Nicholas, who presided over many changes at the exchange, helped lay the foundation for the " Big Bang " deregulation of Britain's securities markets by agreeing to end fixed commissions and other rules | VERB | 29 |
2,355 | 0 | The soil was so rocky that they had to do something with the boulders plowed up in their fields; dry stone walls were built in other, scattered parts of the U.S., but in smaller numbers | VERB | 14 |
2,356 | 0 | Evidence in the New Jersey trial showed the driver had stepped on both pedals | VERB | 10 |
2,357 | 0 | However, there is no targeting to areas where soil erosion affects watersheds | VERB | 4 |
2,358 | 1 | " Advertisers are expected to drag their heels a little bit -LRB- now -RRB-, arguing that, hey, there just aren't that many eyeballs out there.' | VERB | 5 |
2,359 | 0 | Nevertheless, petroleum markets remain stubbornly soft despite recurring signals of a possible turnaround, including major gains in petroleum demand and supply interruptions, such as last week's explosion that destroyed the Piper Alpha platform in the North Sea | VERB | 28 |
2,360 | 0 | Television commercials expected to air in mid- April in New York and Miami will feature the homespun pair dancing the salsa, advertising sources said | VERB | 18 |
2,361 | 1 | Dropping from the sky like a truck with the motor running, the Hoosier Pride has thomped down in St. Louis and the 41-year- old Republican vice- presidential candidate is rolling away in a motorcade, past Taco Bell, Hardees, Schnuck's and assorted body- repair shops, to arrive at Fox Senior High School in the little town of Arnold | VERB | 29 |
2,362 | 1 | " But I wasn't marrying them or sleeping with them, and it didn't mean I wanted to have dinner with them.' | VERB | 7 |
2,363 | 0 | But critics say too much competition is emerging in the business for the tiny population targeted | VERB | 15 |
2,364 | 0 | A federal magistrate in New Orleans accused the brokerage unit of PaineWebber Inc. of relentless " stonewalling " -- among other things, permitting potential evidence to be destroyed -- to prevent a customer- complaint lawsuit from going to trial | VERB | 27 |
2,365 | 0 | Because exchange rates were securely fixed, the strength of international arbitrage in markets for tradable goods was remarkable | VERB | 5 |
2,366 | 1 | After a recent Barron's magazine article about the fund's woes, Kenneth Edlund, a Delmar, N.Y., investor, groused in a letter to the publication's editor that for five years he " watched in disbelief as, during the great secular bull market, David Baker destroyed my young son's$ 17, 000 college nest egg.' | VERB | 42 |
2,367 | 0 | The escaped convict's name is not Willie Horton, but Joseph Subilosky | VERB | 1 |
2,368 | 0 | Indeed, Richard Gephardt, Jesse Jackson and Michael Dukakis have all made public appearances in support of Eastern's union -- sometimes sharply attacking Mr. Lorenzo | VERB | 21 |
2,369 | 1 | He says he has been " pumping up the volume " on his staff | VERB | 6 |
2,370 | 1 | The one time the cannon was fired, the chain snapped and one cannonball " killed a cow in a distant field, while the other knocked down the chimney from a log cabin.' | VERB | 24 |
2,371 | 1 | If all OPEC members stick to the rules, Saudi Arabia would be willing to permit its production to slide even though the others are producing up to their quotas -- but only for a short period | VERB | 4 |
2,372 | 0 | The FAA found that Northwest was requiring international flight crews to fly a domestic leg as well before going off duty | VERB | 11 |
2,373 | 0 | These and other figures from a 62, 000-household survey conducted by the Census Bureau describe a flourishing economy in which the fruits of prosperity aren't equally shared by all Americans | VERB | 16 |
2,374 | 0 | Alan Greenspan, chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, warned bankers about lending too much for leveraged buy- outs and other takeovers | VERB | 11 |
2,375 | 0 | U.S. airlines are applying under the same rules allowing Pan Am to fly here | VERB | 12 |
2,376 | 0 | The constitutions of our states commonly forbid lending the credit of the state to private firms, although in recent years tax- abatement and industrial- development incentives have been common exceptions to the general rule | VERB | 7 |
2,377 | 0 | The pumps can be reprogrammed by telephone to alter dosages, and he says that one of his young patients recently resumed riding a bicycle | VERB | 21 |
2,378 | 0 | His father, a bootlegger and dance- hall operator, shot and killed his own brother in self- defense, and later drank himself to death | VERB | 19 |
2,379 | 1 | To cloak their activities, they knock out lights in elevators and stairwells | VERB | 5 |
2,380 | 1 | So far, no one is grabbing the first Concorde out | VERB | 5 |
2,381 | 0 | Load factor, or percentage of seats filled, was 56.5% in December, down slightly from 56.6% in the year- ago period | VERB | 6 |
2,382 | 1 | It reported the cheers for the conservative opposition candidate aimed at drowning out the orchestrated chants for the government party's man, and how ruling- party followers were taunted with cries of " sheep " and " rats " as security guards surrounded Mr. Salinas | VERB | 11 |
2,383 | 0 | Mr. Tyson has denied that he tried to kill himself and that he assaulted his wife | VERB | 13 |
2,384 | 0 | During the 45 minutes that followed, Sen. Dole and other Republicans complained that too much business money is flowing to Democrats | VERB | 18 |
2,385 | 1 | Meanwhile, Democratic nominee Michael Dukakis -- after a month of absorbing Republican blows on his patriotism and being portrayed as a big taxer -- tried to gain the offensive with an old Democratic chestnut: the Republicans are going to take away your Social Security | VERB | 10 |
2,386 | 0 | E.F. HUTTON& CO.: Now in the process of being absorbed by Shearson Lehman Brothers, Hutton doesn't seem to have picked stocks as well as Shearson did | VERB | 9 |
2,387 | 0 | David L. Paul, CenTrust's chairman and chief executive officer, said it has been talking with Florida Federal " for three or four weeks " but came to loggerheads over the ground rules for CenTrust to examine Florida Federal's books | VERB | 35 |
2,388 | 1 | The consulting firm of Data Resources Inc. expects business fixed investment this year to top the 1987 outlays by 11.1% | VERB | 9 |
2,389 | 0 | The doctor who removed the IUD destroyed Ms. Murdock- Vaughn's files in 1979 as part of a routine office cleaning | VERB | 6 |
2,390 | 0 | Indeed, the unrelieved pursuit of sales growth for its own sake, far from creating value, often destroys it | VERB | 16 |
2,391 | 1 | The Soviet Union is unwilling and unlikely to miss the deadline for withdrawing all its troops from Afghanistan, despite its latest blustering and military maneuvering there, Western and Soviet officials indicated | VERB | 8 |
2,392 | 1 | " I'd like the campaign to critically examine how the candidate spends his time, " says Richard Wiener, the Michigan Democratic chairman | VERB | 7 |
2,393 | 0 | There's that damn ball of the Renthals that Laurence insists I not miss, and the Todesco wedding, and the final gala for the ballet where I' m the chairperson | VERB | 12 |
Subsets and Splits