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3,467 | 0 | The big error came in October, 1982, when the analysts failed to realize they were already in a recession and forecast moderate 2.2% growth in the inflation- adjusted gross national product in 1982, completely missing the deep downturn | VERB | 34 |
3,468 | 1 | At the time the investors stepped in, Atlantic National Bank of Florida was in foreclosure proceedings, and a court had ruled that Rep. Chappell and his partner, William W. Austin, were personally obligated to repay about$ 172, 000, according to an attorney for the bank | VERB | 5 |
3,469 | 0 | The large study, involving 17, 187 patients treated at 417 hospitals in North America, Europe and Australia, provided the strongest evidence yet that the emergency use of a clot dissolving drug can save lives, said researchers involved in the clinical trial | VERB | 29 |
3,470 | 1 | " It's not very romantic to find out that the wonderful man you married is too noisy to sleep with, " says Miss Van Buren, the columnist | VERB | 18 |
3,471 | 1 | When eaten, the worms release bacteria that kill the insects | VERB | 7 |
3,472 | 1 | But Western and Soviet officials indicated that Moscow is unlikely to miss the Feb. 15 deadline for withdrawing its soldiers from the country | VERB | 11 |
3,473 | 0 | What is problematic about the Jersey City takeover is that this strategy may come to be seen as a forceful example of can- do government types trying to solve the ills of a failing or stumbling school system | VERB | 35 |
3,474 | 0 | But the Warsaw Pact is only 15 minutes flying time from Switzerland, and Swiss skies thus represent a self- contained defense sector at Europe's core | VERB | 8 |
3,475 | 0 | Senate negotiators last week tried to persuade the House to at least include a fallback provision that would fix the problem in case Justice is right and the agreement is found unconstitutional | VERB | 18 |
3,476 | 1 | " We still have the' highly confident' letter, " he says, alluding to the letters from Drexel once brandished by corporate raiders to strike fear in the hearts of incumbent managements | VERB | 23 |
3,477 | 1 | This provides greatly enhanced trouble- shooting capabilities when something does go wrong, and can even be used to automatically switch in a good spare card if something does die | VERB | 28 |
3,478 | 1 | In addition to representing the approximately 1, 300 wineries in this country, the association also is targeting for membership thousands more wine- grape growers, according to Richard Feeney, the group's executive director | VERB | 16 |
3,479 | 0 | What steps in this direction are they overlooking | VERB | 1 |
3,480 | 0 | There's also New Media Network, which plans to target videocassette buyers instead of renters | VERB | 8 |
3,481 | 1 | Mr. Brooks tape- recorded one of the men present at the meeting saying that he believes Indians ritualistically kill and mutilate one another | VERB | 18 |
3,482 | 1 | They don't stumble over all the mentions of things like thermoplastics, the latest in feather- light composite materials, which replace metal in Stealth airframes | VERB | 2 |
3,483 | 0 | It more narrowly targets assistance to low- income families by subsidizing day care for families with less than 100% of a state's median income, down from 115% | VERB | 3 |
3,484 | 0 | Russians eat awful sausage by the ton | VERB | 1 |
3,485 | 0 | Imports grew at a fast rate, he said, because of the flourishing re- export trade and, to a lesser extent, because of strong domestic demand | VERB | 11 |
3,486 | 0 | This agreement is the product of the determination and sacrifice of the freedom fighters through years of struggle, including their heroic resistance last week to a Sandinista offensive designed to destroy them | VERB | 30 |
3,487 | 1 | In order to focus federal resources on the SSC, its backers decided that Isabelle had to die | VERB | 16 |
3,488 | 1 | Washington then all but put the game away by eating more than six minutes of the clock, and caging the Bears deep in their own end, with a drive in which Williams completed two third- down passes | VERB | 9 |
3,489 | 1 | With Iowa and New Hampshire behind them -- and victories for Rep. Richard Gephardt and Gov. Michael Dukakis -- the Democratic candidates now stumble South locked in a struggle that more and more experts and party leaders believe will go the distance | VERB | 23 |
3,490 | 0 | A revenue passenger mile is one paying passenger flown one mile | VERB | 8 |
3,491 | 0 | The U.S. armed forces are being besieged these days -- not by foreign military aggressors -- but by aggressive consumer- product marketers | VERB | 6 |
3,492 | 0 | Without spoiling too many surprises -- this play never stops surprising you -- I can say that the husband Rachel leaves behind on Christmas Eve will reappear, and so will both of the children who sleep peacefully through her escape | VERB | 35 |
3,493 | 1 | One of the highest concentrations of chemical plants in the nation, its hulking factories whir and hiss, pumping steam into a hazy, burnt- orange sky | VERB | 17 |
3,494 | 0 | Bicycles kill far more children than handguns | VERB | 1 |
3,495 | 0 | To widen the drink's appeal, a TV ad campaign was launched two years ago showing punks with fruit- colored, spiked hair drinking Pimm's | VERB | 21 |
3,496 | 0 | Officials in West Germany prepared for today's start of a trial of a Shiite Moslem for the 1985 hijacking of a TWA jet in which a U.S. sailor was killed | VERB | 29 |
3,497 | 1 | " I stayed home and drank for two years after that, " he notes sadly | VERB | 5 |
3,498 | 0 | Thus, the conventional antibody test misses an unknown segment of AIDS- infected people | VERB | 5 |
3,499 | 1 | The idea of having one child has struck a deeper root and less people are punished for violating the birth control plan... | VERB | 7 |
3,500 | 0 | " We encourage our people as much as we can to fly on United Airlines and eat Kellogg cereals, " says Jack Ryan, executive vice president of Leo Burnett Co., which also handles advertising for GM's Oldsmobile division | VERB | 16 |
3,501 | 1 | They fear Philip Morris could grab a huge portion of the retail shelf and stifle innovation by muscling out smaller and regional concerns where new products are often born | VERB | 5 |
3,502 | 0 | By spreading the benefits of economic development into depressed regions, Massachusetts economic policy has attacked structural unemployment | VERB | 14 |
3,503 | 0 | A senior First Boston official said yesterday that the firm's internal auditors were still examining the trading problem and had not yet reached any conclusions about its cause | VERB | 14 |
3,504 | 0 | Even more inadvertently hilarious is Alexander Godunov, the Soviet defector who used to dance for a living | VERB | 13 |
3,505 | 0 | He said people who criticize Wall Street's computerized trading strategies have missed the point | VERB | 11 |
3,506 | 0 | The cyanide dissolves, or leaches out the gold, and the water is collected at the bottom of the heap for treatment to remove its precious cargo | VERB | 2 |
3,507 | 1 | Judge Pollack's refusal to step aside voluntarily sets the stage for a new round of legal battles between defense attorneys and the judge | VERB | 4 |
3,508 | 1 | French and European Community officials met to discuss the French government's plan to pump 12 billion francs -LRB-$ 1.89 billion -RRB- into state- owned auto maker Regie Nationale des Usines Renault, and said the proposal will require further study | VERB | 13 |
3,509 | 0 | A car bomb exploded in a suburb of Athens, killing the U.S. military attache in Greece | VERB | 9 |
3,510 | 1 | One result: Mr. Bushkin's law firm here plans to dissolve; much of its business was Carson- related | VERB | 9 |
3,511 | 0 | " Consumer spending would mean a wider -LRB- U.S. -RRB- trade deficit, " he said, adding, " we want to examine the content " of the growth data | VERB | 20 |
3,512 | 1 | London, freed from foreign- exchange controls in 1979, has become a world financial center, pumping more than twice as much money into the country now as North Sea oil | VERB | 14 |
3,513 | 0 | Hawaiians welcome long weekends to fly to the mainland; " I' ve done it myself, " says Fidencio Mares, a vice president of Pacific Resources, Honolulu | VERB | 5 |
3,514 | 0 | It is an opera in which a fat Viking wearing glasses sings " das Gold, das Gold " from Beethoven's " Fidelio " while a nun lies on her back suggestively kicking her legs | VERB | 31 |
3,515 | 0 | " This music isn't meant to be watched, it's intended to be danced, " Mr. Gutierrez pleads from the stage | VERB | 12 |
3,516 | 1 | Mr. Marino said the the mechanism calls for debt service to be met from property and sales tax revenue that flows through the state comptroller's office before being diverted to city coffers | VERB | 20 |
3,517 | 0 | They destroyed 450, 000 acres of sugar beets and other crops | VERB | 1 |
3,518 | 0 | It would be most interesting to see an article that would examine the market value of a college degree by separating out for comparison a group of degreed and non- degreed individuals with similar social and economic backgrounds and levels of intelligence | VERB | 11 |
3,519 | 1 | The telephone companies generally have been restrained from striking out against such services because of First Amendment concerns and because, as public utilities and monopolies, telephone companies have a duty to offer services without discrimination | VERB | 8 |
3,520 | 0 | To minimize that problem and to protect their official sponsors, Olympic authorities strike back at ambushes that go too far | VERB | 12 |
3,521 | 1 | Here, they can eat gourmet kosher food and swim at a beach that is partitioned with a curtain -- one side for men, the other for women | VERB | 3 |
3,522 | 0 | One reason for success: Proponents targeted only companies held largely by institutions, says John Wilcox of proxy solicitor Georgeson& Co | VERB | 5 |
3,523 | 0 | He said these proposals " ought always to be listened to with great precaution, and ought never to be adopted till after having been long and carefully examined, not only with the most scrupulous, but with the most suspicious attention | VERB | 27 |
3,524 | 1 | The company says it now is flooded with requests from state and private health agencies and hospitals seeking their own P.R. bonanza from the cholesterol craze | VERB | 6 |
3,525 | 1 | Now that Koppers looks ready to give in, with the employee- benefits perhaps a main factor, some of the politicians who stuck their necks out undoubtedly are peeved | VERB | 21 |
3,526 | 1 | The bolt and trigger flowed silently and smoothly as a river down its banks | VERB | 4 |
3,527 | 1 | When she hears that prisoners sometimes carve their names into logs that float downriver, she grabs her child and runs with her to the river | VERB | 15 |
3,528 | 1 | A former major, he was kicked out of the army in 1979 for advocating the overthrow of the government | VERB | 5 |
3,529 | 0 | Similarly, Stephen Lister, a senior vice president of the American Stock Exchange, said that in examining the activities of brokers, the exchange's investigators sometimes encounter brokers who can't explain an investment strategy they' ve recommended to customers | VERB | 15 |
3,530 | 0 | " I was so happy that I practically danced back into the house, " Mr. Popejoy says | VERB | 8 |
3,531 | 0 | " Now if one group calls for a demonstration, the others will sit home and drink coffee because they don't want to share the credit | VERB | 15 |
3,532 | 0 | Mr. Grauer added, " The commission totally missed the point | VERB | 7 |
3,533 | 1 | By tapping the precision of the official U.S. timekeeping device, county officials say they can improve the timing of stoplights on major roads to allow traffic to flow more smoothly at posted speeds | VERB | 27 |
3,534 | 1 | " I privately examined this company's ability to deal with Japanese equities, and secretly induced the Ministry of Finance to focus on this point, " says Mr. Miyoda | VERB | 3 |
3,535 | 1 | Even then, however, Australia's new 49% tax rate kicked in at an even lower income level than the old 60% top rate did -- only 30% above average yearly earnings | VERB | 8 |
3,536 | 1 | But Cameloot was just another loser among the entries that flooded the offices of Circus Circus Enterprises Inc. during a contest to name its planned$ 290 million castle- theme resort | VERB | 10 |
3,537 | 1 | Mr. Manzi said Lotus's strategy of designing compatible versions of 1- 2- 3 for many different computers besides International Business Machines Corp .- compatible personal computers is convincing more corporate buyers to stick with Lotus | VERB | 32 |
3,538 | 0 | The advertisements featured a letter from the company's Universal Pictures unit responding to an offer from Bill Bright, president of the San Bernardino, Calif .- based Campus Crusade for Christ, to pay$ 10 million in exchange for all copies of the film, " which would promptly be destroyed.' | VERB | 47 |
3,539 | 0 | Federal researchers are exploring a possible new biological weapon against cells infected with the virus that causes AIDS. Scientists at the National Institutes of Health are studying a chemical that seeks and kills AIDS- infected blood cells without harming healthy ones | VERB | 32 |
3,540 | 0 | " And available funds are being plowed into mortar, brick and tar, " says chief of research David Swenson | VERB | 6 |
3,541 | 1 | Johnson& Johnson may have stumbled upon a Fountain of Youth cream, according to preliminary research released yesterday | VERB | 4 |
3,542 | 0 | We begged his mother for months to let us take him into Nha Trang and have it fixed | VERB | 17 |
3,543 | 1 | And as the DeRance account's losses mounted, he stepped up the pace of his trading | VERB | 8 |
3,544 | 0 | The indictment touches only lightly on the role Israel played in helping shape the Iran initiative, apparently reflecting the difficulties that Mr. Walsh and his staff encountered in obtaining documents or testimony from the Israeli government | VERB | 2 |
3,545 | 1 | Before there was much time for further decorating, the lady was dragged off to the guillotine | VERB | 11 |
3,546 | 1 | But yesterday Mr. Lawson said it would be " pretty good anti- inflationary discipline " if the pound " can stick close " to a level against the West German currency | VERB | 20 |
3,547 | 0 | And when Mr. Chirac did get an opponent, he attacked the Francois Mitterrand of 1981, not the one of 1988 | VERB | 9 |
3,548 | 0 | It also was the buyer of Safeway Stores Inc., another grocery chain unsuccessfully targeted by the Hafts | VERB | 13 |
3,549 | 0 | The 47-year- old spaceman, who flew aboard a Soyuz capsule last December, reportedly was preparing for the first manned flight of a Soviet space shuttle | VERB | 5 |
3,550 | 1 | If a lot of order- takers are drumming their fingers, the hostess can step up her spiel or drop the price | VERB | 13 |
3,551 | 0 | Rep. Bosco failed to show Feb. 1 for the hearings in Fort Bragg, and in its edition for Feb. 3 the Advertiser struck back | VERB | 22 |
3,552 | 0 | He notes that Iraq defused American anger last year by offering to pay damages after an Iraqi jet fighter mistakenly fired at the frigate USS Stark, killing 37 seamen | VERB | 26 |
3,553 | 1 | Thousands of delegates and reporters start pouring into the OMNI, soon to be featured in a Japanese horror movie with large flying insects winging out of the pods where Dan Rather and Peter Jennings are fighting the battle of the bores | VERB | 6 |
3,554 | 0 | Still, the divergence of the two candidates' views becomes clear in examining their proposals for dealing with the strifetorn regions of Central America and Southern Africa | VERB | 11 |
3,555 | 0 | Some are trying to escape childhoods troubled by missing fathers or drug- addicted mothers | VERB | 8 |
3,556 | 1 | In fact, the current drought- driven frenzy in commodity prices is already tantalizing traders with reminders of the windfall profits that rained on them when commodity prices soared in 1973 to record levels and rebounded again in 1977 | VERB | 21 |
3,557 | 1 | The Nuclear Regulatory Commission fined Detroit Edison Co.$ 25, 000 for the faulty design of a core cooling system at the Detroit- based utility's Fermi 2 nuclear reactor | VERB | 17 |
3,558 | 0 | So if he wants to return the federal money, his only option seems to be to find a friendly banker who will lend him the$ 6 million without collateral, on the strength of his predicted future receipts and his prodigious reputation for raising money when he was in the television religion business | VERB | 22 |
3,559 | 0 | All of a sudden you're grabbed.' | VERB | 5 |
3,560 | 0 | Adds George Gallup Jr., the pollster: " He's really striking a responsive chord in the populace.' | VERB | 9 |
3,561 | 0 | THE DC-10 ROSE from a runway at Chicago's O'Hare Airport, slowly rolled over onto its back and hit the ground, killing everyone aboard | VERB | 11 |
3,562 | 0 | But if the Fed and other central banks and treasuries can this time grasp the principle, the dollar's summer rally could be an important rendezvous for the world's monetary system | VERB | 13 |
3,563 | 1 | And the court rejected the attempt to foster patriotism through compulsion as an insult to the American tradition: " To believe that patriotism will not flourish if patriotic ceremonies are voluntary and spontaneous instead of a compulsory routine is to make an unflattering estimate of the appeal of our institutions to free minds.' | VERB | 25 |
3,564 | 1 | If the June deficit turns out to have been significantly wider than in May, many analysts expect the dollar to drop sharply and to drag bond prices down with it | VERB | 24 |
3,565 | 0 | Even if doctors examine a woman as soon as she comes in, they often have no time to tell if her fetus is sufficiently developed or if a Caesarean section is crucial | VERB | 3 |
3,566 | 0 | But although Motorola, with its new chips, seems to be targeting the fledgling RISC- chip market opened by Sun and others, its fiercest competitor remains microprocessor powerhouse Intel Corp., analysts say | VERB | 10 |