21100001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Westinghouse Electric Corp. said it will buy Shaw-Walker Co.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21100002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Terms weren't disclosed.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21100003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Shaw-Walker, based in Muskegon, Mich., makes metal files and desks, and seating and office systems furniture.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21101001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Israel has launched a new effort to prove the Palestine Liberation Organization continues to practice terrorism, and thus to persuade the U.S. to break off talks with the group.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21101002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@U.S. officials, however, said they aren't buying the Israeli argument.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21101003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Israeli counterterrorism officials provided the State Department with a 20-page list of recent terrorist incidents they attribute directly to forces controlled by PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21101004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Arafat publicly renounced terrorism Dec. 15, satisfying the U.S. precondition for a direct "dialogue" with the PLO.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21101005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A U.S. counterterrorism official said experts are studying the Israeli list.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21101006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"We have no independent evidence linking Fatah to any acts of terrorism since Dec. 15, 1988," he said, referring to the specific PLO group that Mr. Arafat heads.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21101007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"So far, this list doesn't change our view.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21101008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Israel wants to end the dialogue, but our analysts take a different view than theirs."@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21101009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir's top adviser on counterterrorism, Yigal Carmon, was here Monday to present the report to members of Congress, reporters and others.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21101010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Carmon said he also presented the list last week to William Brown, U.S. Ambassador to Israel.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21101011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Separately, the New York Times reported that the Israeli government had provided its correspondent in Jerusalem with different documents that Israel said prove the PLO has been conducting terrorism from the occupied Arab territories.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21101012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The State Department said it hasn't yet seen copies of those papers.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21101013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"If the dialogue was based on the assumption that Arafat or the PLO would stop terrorism, and we have evidence of continued terrorism, what would be the logical conclusion?" Mr. Carmon asked.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21101014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Israel has long claimed Mr. Arafat never meant to renounce terrorism, particularly because he and his lieutenants reserved the right to press "armed struggle" against the Jewish state.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21101015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Now, Jerusalem says it is backing up its contention with detailed accounts of alleged terrorist acts and plans linked to Mr. Arafat.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21101016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It blames most of these on Fatah.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21101017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The new accusations come at a delicate time in U.S. efforts to bring about talks between Israel and Palestinian representatives.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21101018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The State Department said it had received a new letter on the subject from Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Arens, restating Israel's previous objection to negotiating with any Palestinian tied to the PLO.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21101019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Deciding what constitutes "terrorism" can be a legalistic exercise.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21101020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The U.S. defines it as "premediated, politically motivated violence perpetrated against noncombatant targets by subnational groups or clandestine state agents."@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21101021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@To meet the U.S. criteria, Israel contended it only listed incidents that involved civilians and occurred inside its pre-1967 borders.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21101022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@At the heart of Israel's report is a list of a dozen incidents Jerusalem attributes to Fatah, including the use of bombs and Molotov cocktails.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21101023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But U.S. officials say they aren't satisfied these incidents constitute terrorism because they may be offshoots of the intifadah, the Palestinian rebellion in the occupied territories, which the U.S. doesn't classify as terrorism.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21101024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In addition, the officials say Israel hasn't presented convincing evidence these acts were ordered by Fatah or by any group Mr. Arafat controls.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21101025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@U.S. terrorism experts also say they are highly uncertain about the veracity of the separate documents leaked to the New York Times.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21101026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The papers, which Israel says were discovered in Israeli-occupied Gaza, refer to terrorist acts to be carried out in the name of a group called "the Revolutionary Eagles."@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21101027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some supporters of Israel say U.S. policy on Palestinian terrorism is colored by an intense desire to maintain the dialogue with the PLO.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21101028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But State Department officials accuse Israel of leaking questionable claims to embarrass the U.S.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21102001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The dollar finished lower yesterday, after tracking another rollercoaster session on Wall Street.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21102002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Concern about the volatile U.S. stock market had faded in recent sessions, and traders appeared content to let the dollar languish in a narrow range until tomorrow, when the preliminary report on third-quarter U.S. gross national product is released.@@@@1@39@@oe@2-2-2013 21102003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But seesaw gyrations in the Dow Jones Industrial Average yesterday put Wall Street back in the spotlight and inspired market participants to bid the U.S. unit lower.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21102004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@UAL's decision to remain an independent company sent share prices tumbling.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21102005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@By midmorning, the DJIA had plunged 80 points and foreign-exchange dealers quickly drove the dollar down.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21102006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@When the DJIA modestly rebounded, the dollar bounced back in choppy dealings but ended the day below the levels of late Monday.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21102007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Stock prices, meanwhile, posted significant gains in later trading and closed down by only 3.69 points on the day.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21102008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some dealers said that the market's strong reaction to Wall Street reflects a general uneasiness about the dollar.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21102009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They added that the DJIA's swift drop proved an easy excuse for the market to drive the U.S. currency in the direction it was already headed.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21102010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In late New York trading yesterday, the dollar was quoted at 1.8355 marks, down from 1.8470 marks Monday, and at 141.45 yen, down from 141.90 yen late Monday.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21102011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sterling was quoted at $1.6055, up from $1.6030 late Monday.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21102012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In Tokyo Wednesday, the U.S. currency opened for trading at 141.57 yen, down from Tuesday's Tokyo close of 142.10 yen.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21102013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Tom Trettien, a vice president with Banque Paribas in New York, sees a break in the dollar's long-term upward trend, a trend that began in January 1988.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21102014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He argues that the dollar is now "moving sideways," adding that "the next leg could be the beginning of a longer term bearish phase."@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21102015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Analysts peg the dollar's recent weakness to an underlying slowdown in the U.S. economy, highlighted by recent economic data, particularly a surprisingly sharp widening in the August U.S. trade gap.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21102016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They also point out that narrowing interest-rate differentials between the U.S. and its major trading partners tend to make the U.S. currency less attractive to foreign investors.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21102017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Despite several spurts of dollar trading, it was noted that mark-yen cross trade grabbed much of the market's attention.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21102018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Following the dive in U.S. stocks, the mark has strengthened more than its major counterparts.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21102019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Traders attribute the mark's surge to a robust West German economy and higher rate differentials.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21102020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But, they add that the mark's strength is in part a reflection of a shift away from U.S. assets by Japanese investors into West German investments.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21102021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"The question remains: how much can the West German market absorb?" says one senior dealer.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21102022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some dealers say that Bank of Japan Governor Satoshi Sumita's reassurance that Japanese monetary policy won't be changed for the time being has given investors an added excuse to push the yen down even further against the mark.@@@@1@38@@oe@2-2-2013 21102023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Despite the yen's weakness with respect to the mark, Tokyo traders say they don't expect the Bank of Japan to take any action to support the Japanese currency on that front.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21102024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Meanwhile, sterling slumped on news that the United Kingdom posted a wider-than-expected trade deficit in September.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21102025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The news also knocked the British unit to below 2.95 marks in London, but a bout of short-covering helped sterling recoup some of its earlier losses.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21102026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@On the Commodity Exchange in New York, gold for current delivery jumped $3.20 to $370.20 an ounce.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21102027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The close was the highest since Aug. 15.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21102028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Estimated volume was a light two million ounces.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21102029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In early trading in Hong Kong Wednesday, gold was quoted at $368.25 an ounce.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21103001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Boston Co., the upper-crust financial services concern that was rocked by a management scandal late last year, has had a sharp drop in profitability -- mainly because a high-risk bet on interest rates backfired.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21103002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Boston Co.'s fall from grace is bad news for its parent, Shearson Lehman Hutton Holdings Inc., which has relied heavily on the banking and money management unit's contributions in recent years.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21103003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In 1988, for example, Boston Co. had an estimated pretax profit of at least $110 million, while Shearson managed net income of just $96 million.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21103004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Shearson doesn't break out the earnings of its subsidiaries.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21103005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But people familiar with Boston Co.'s performance say the unit had profit of around $17 million for the third quarter, after barely breaking even for the first six months.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21103006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Shearson, meanwhile, posted net income of $106 million for the first nine months of the year, down slightly from $110 million for the year-ago period.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21103007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Moody's Investors Service Inc. last week downgraded the long-term deposit rating of Boston Co.'s Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. subsidiary, to single-A-1 from double-A-3, citing problems in the company's "aggressively managed securities portfolio."@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21103008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@John Kriz, a Moody's vice president, said Boston Safe Deposit's performance has been hurt this year by a mismatch in the maturities of its assets and liabilities.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21103009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The mismatch exposed the company to a high degree of interest-rate risk, and when rates moved unfavorably -- beginning late last year and continuing into this year -- "it cost them," Mr. Kriz said.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21103010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Kriz noted that Boston Safe Deposit "has taken some actions to better control asset-liability management and improve controls in general, and we think these will serve to improve credit quality."@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21103011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@As some securities mature and the proceeds are reinvested, the problems ought to ease, he said.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21103012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But he also cited concerns over the company's mortgage exposure in the troubled New England real estate market.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21103013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Boston Co. officials declined to comment on Moody's action or on the unit's financial performance this year -- except to deny a published report that outside accountants had discovered evidence of significant accounting errors in the first three quarters' results.@@@@1@40@@oe@2-2-2013 21103014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@An accounting controversy at the end of last year forced Boston Co. to admit it had overstated pretax profits by some $44 million.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21103015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The resulting scandal led to the firing of James N. von Germeten as Boston Co.'s president and to the resignations of the company's chief financial officer and treasurer.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21103016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The executives were accused of improperly deferring expenses and booking revenue early, in an effort to dress up results -- and perhaps bolster performance-related bonuses.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21103017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. von Germeten, in turn, attributed the controversy to judgmental errors by accountants and accused Shearson of conducting a "witch hunt."@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21103018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Kriz of Moody's said the problems in the securities portfolio stem largely from positions taken last year.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21103019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company's current management found itself "locked into this," he said.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21104001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mexico exported an average of 1,296,800 barrels of crude oil a day at an average of $15.31 a barrel during 1989's first eight months for a total of $4.82 billion, Petroleos Mexicanos S.A. said.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21104002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The state petroleum monopoly said sales in the period gained 15%, and $262.4 million more than originally projected at an average of $10 a barrel on an export platform of 1,250,000 barrels a day.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21105001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@CHICAGO -@@@@1@2@@oe@2-2-2013 21105002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sears, Roebuck & Co. is struggling as it enters the critical Christmas season.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21105003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Yesterday, the retailing and financial services giant reported a 16% drop in third-quarter earnings to $257.5 million, or 75 cents a share, from a restated $305 million, or 80 cents a share, a year earlier.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21105004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But the news was even worse for Sears's core U.S. retailing operation, the largest in the nation.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21105005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sears said its U.S. stores had a loss of $6.9 million, their first deficit for the period in more than five years.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21105006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Analysts estimated that sales at U.S. stores declined in the quarter, too.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21105007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The results underscore Sears's difficulties in implementing the "everyday low pricing" strategy that it adopted in March as part of a broad attempt to revive its retailing business.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21105008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Under the new approach, Sears set prices that were somewhere between its old "regular" and "sale" prices.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21105009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company said it would resort far less often to slashing prices to woo shoppers.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21105010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sears officials insist they don't intend to abandon the everyday pricing approach in the face of the poor results.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21105011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Instead, a spokesman blames the dismal third-quarter showing on "an environment that is being distorted by a very harsh climate for sales of durable goods," which account for roughly two-thirds of Sears's annual merchandise volume.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21105012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The new pricing strategy "is working," the spokesman asserted.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21105013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He added that, after an initial surge triggered by an advertising blitz in March, Sears expected that the pricing program wouldn't have any effect on revenue.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21105014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sears has been counting on growth coming from the large displays of brand-name merchandise it is adding to its stores over the next two years in what it calls "power formats."@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21105015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But analysts say Sears faces an especially daunting challenge on the eve of the Christmas shopping season.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21105016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"I believe everyday pricing in the current environment doesn't work," says Walter Loeb of Morgan Stanley & Co., pointing to soft durable-goods sales.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21105017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Sears is likely to be unsuccessful if it continues with its pricing policy when everyone else is offering unusual values."@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21105018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In what amounts to an admission that the transition hasn't gone as smoothly as Sears had hoped, the giant retailer is now trying new ways to drum up business without appearing to abandon its seven-month-old strategy.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21105019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company is highlighting more special deals in its advertising and stores, and it's offering to defer finance charges on certain big-ticket items.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21105020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sears is also stepping up its television ads and changing its message.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21105021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In a new TV ad, for instance, a woman going through the Sunday newspaper brands as hype claims by other stores that they are offering goods for "50%, 60% and 70% off.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21105022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@" By lowering prices throughout its stores, she says, "Sears has the right idea."@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21105023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But the ad also mentions Sears's sales -- a topic that the retailer has avoided since switching to everyday pricing.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21105024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"When Sears has a sale at a special price," the woman in the ad declares, "it's something you don't want to miss."@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21105025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Recent surveys by Leo J. Shapiro & Associates, a market research firm in Chicago, suggest that Sears is having a tough time attracting shoppers because it hasn't yet done enough to improve service or its selection of merchandise.@@@@1@38@@oe@2-2-2013 21105026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The number of people who said they were more likely to shop at Sears fell in September to 37% from 66% in March, when Sears blanketed the airwaves with ads about its new pricing strategy.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21105027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Moreover, the number of people who spontaneously cited lower prices as the reason for their interest in Sears declined to 16% in September from 33% in March.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21105028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Just 5% of the respondents mentioned brands in September, up slightly from 2% in March.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21105029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Only 2% of the people in September cited Sears's "friendly personnel."@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21105030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"The power of price as an appeal, which was very considerable in driving traffic in March and April, has diminished," says George Rosenbaum, president of Shapiro & Associates.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21105031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"You see some improvement in these other areas, but it's a very small and slow process."@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21105032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For the third quarter, Sears said its total revenue rose 4.8% to $13.18 billion from $12.57 billion a year earlier.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21105033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Net income at Sears's merchandise group, which includes international and credit card operations, as well as U.S. stores, fell 25%.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21105034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Profit at Sears's Allstate insurance unit fell 38% to $126.1 million because of Hurricane Hugo, which inflicted the greatest single storm damage loss in the company's history.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21105035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sears said claims from the storm, as expected, reduced its third-quarter net by $80 million, or 23 cents a share.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21105036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Allstate is expected to absorb another big hit in the fourth quarter as claims pour in from the San Francisco earthquake.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21105037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But a spokesman said the quake won't have as big a financial impact on Allstate as Hurricane Hugo did.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21105038@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Net income at Sears's Dean Witter Financials Services group, meanwhile, rose nearly 32% to $35.7 million, reflecting improvements in its basic stock brokerage and Discover credit card businesses.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21105039@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Profit at Sears's Coldwell Banker Real Estate Group nearly quadrupled to $81.2 million because of gains on sales of property.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21105040@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In New York Stock Exchange composite trading yesterday, Sears shares closed at $40.50, up 87.5 cents.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21106001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Oil imports to Japan rose 12% in September from year-earlier levels, according to statistics released by the government's Ministry of International Trade and Industry.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21106002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The imports, totaling 98.5 million barrels, were 11% lower than August levels.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21106003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The year-on-year rise was partly because of higher demand for petroleum products, and partly because of tax changes in 1988 that left oil companies with high inventories in the late-summer/early-FALL PERIOD.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21106004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Imports of crude from the Middle East grew 17% from year-earlier levels, and Southeast Asian crude imports grew 43%.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21106005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@While Mideast crude imports were higher compared with year-earlier levels, they fell 18% compared with August imports.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21106006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Southeast Asian crude imports, however, were 3.6% higher than August.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21107001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@This is in response to George Melloan's Business World column "The Housing Market Is a Bigger Mess Than You Think" (op-ed page, Sept. 26).@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21107002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In Houston, we have seen how bad the housing problem can become.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21107003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Unused houses deteriorate rapidly, affecting the value of nearby homes; in a domino effect, the entire neighborhood can fall victim.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21107004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@At this stage some people just "walk away" from homes where the mortgage exceeds current market value.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21107005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But most of them could have afforded to keep up their payments -- they chose not to do so.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21107006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The problem is so vast that we need to try innovative solutions -- in small-scale experiments.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21107007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Here are some ideas:@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21107008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@1) Foreclosed homes could be sold by the FHA for no down payment (the biggest obstacle to young buyers), but with personal liability for the mortgage (no walking away by choice).@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21107009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@2) Encourage long-term occupancy by forgiving one month's payment (off the tail end of the mortgage) for every six months paid; or perhaps have the down payment deferred to the end of the mortgage (balloon), but "forgiven" on a monthly pro-rata basis as long as the owner remains the occupant.@@@@1@50@@oe@2-2-2013 21107010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@3) Develop rental agreements with exclusive purchase options for the renter.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21107011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@An occupant will, in most every case, be better for the home and neighborhood than a vacant house.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21107012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In this way, the house is not dumped on to a glutted market.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21107013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@John F. Merrill@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21107014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Houston@@@@1@1@@oe@2-2-2013 21107015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Federal Housing Administration, Veterans Administration and the Department of Housing and Urban Development further aggravate the problem of affordable housing stock by "buying in" to their foreclosed properties (of which there are, alas, many) at an inflated "balance due" -- say $80,000 on a house worth $55,000 -- instead of allowing a free market to price the house for what it's really worth.@@@@1@64@@oe@2-2-2013 21107016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Worse, the properties then sit around deteriorating for maybe a year or so, but are resold eventually (because of the attractiveness of the low down payment, etc.) to a marginal buyer who can't afford both the mortgage and needed repairs; and having little vested interest that buyer will walk away and the vicious cycle repeats itself all over again.@@@@1@59@@oe@2-2-2013 21107017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Paul Padget@@@@1@2@@oe@2-2-2013 21108001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Italy's unemployment rate rose to 12% of the labor force in July from 11.9% in April, and was up from 11.7% a year earlier, according to quarterly figures from the state statistical institute.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21108002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Istat said a national survey during the first week of July showed the number of job seekers was 2,888,000 up from 2,822,000 in April, and from 2,853,000 a year ago.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21108003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The unemployment rate was by far the highest in the southern, so-called Mezzogiorno region.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21108004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The southern unemployment rate rose to 21.3% in July from 21.2% in April and from 20.6% a year earlier.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21108005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Istat said 369,000 more people were employed in July than in April.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21109001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Xerox Corp.'s third-quarter net income grew 6.2% on 7.3% higher revenue, earning mixed reviews from Wall Street analysts.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21109002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Quarter net for the business-machines and financial-services company rose to $155 million, or $1.41 a share, from $146 million, or $1.37 a share, in the year-earlier period.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21109003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Revenue rose to $4.45 billion from $4.15 billion.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21109004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In New York Stock Exchange composite trading, Xerox closed at $62.75 a share, up $1.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21109005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sales growth and profit in business products and systems -- Xerox's main business -- were "disappointing," said B. Alex Henderson, who follows the company for Prudential-Bache Securities Inc.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21109006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sales of Xerox copiers and other office products grew 1.6%; "we expected growth of 6% to 7%," Mr. Henderson said.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21109007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Operating-profit margins slipped almost 18%, to 4.3% of sales, the analyst noted.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21109008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Still, with competitors such as Eastman Kodak Co. faltering in copier sales, Xerox's sales increases "were encouraging," says Eugene Glazer of Dean Witter Reynolds Inc.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21109009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"They are holding their own in a weak market, and the restructuring is working," he says.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21109010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@David T. Kearns, Xerox chairman and chief executive officer, cited the restructuring and "strong" cost controls for the 13% growth in profit from business products and systems operations.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21109011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Glazer expects Xerox to experience tough sledding, though, in financial services because of rate pressures and uncertainty surrounding tax treatment of capital gains.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21109012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In the quarter, the Crum & Forster insurance unit reported $200 million before tax of capital gains from property and casualty operations.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21109013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The subsidiary also increased reserves by $140 million, however, and set aside an additional $25 million for claims connected with Hurricane Hugo.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21109014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For the nine months, Xerox earned $492 million, or $4.55 a share, up 5.8% from $465 million, or $4.32 a share.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21109015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Revenue rose 7.6% to $12.97 billion from $12.05 billion.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21110001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@New orders for durable goods fell back slightly in September after shooting up the month before, reflecting weakening auto demand after a spurt of orders for new 1990 models, the Commerce Department reported.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21110002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Orders for military equipment, household appliances, machinery and other goods expected to last at least three years dipped 0.1% last month, to $126.68 billion, after leaping 3.9% in August, the department said.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21110003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Most analysts had expected a sharper decline after the steep rise in August.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21110004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Moreover, a recent government report showing widespread layoffs in manufacturing had contributed to perceptions that the manufacturing sector of the economy had slowed to a crawl.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21110005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But many economists pointed to a 1.8% September rise in orders outside the volatile transportation category.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21110006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@That "suggests the manufacturing sector is not falling apart," said Sally Kleinman, an economist at Manufacturers Hanover Securities Corp. in New York.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21110007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@She added, however: "It is not robust by any means."@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21110008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@While a decline in orders for cars and civilian airplanes pulled down the orders total, an enormous jump in orders for heavy military equipment propped it up.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21110009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Orders for capital defense goods skyrocketed 56%, and a government analyst said nearly all areas saw increases, including airplanes, missiles, ships, tanks and communications equipment.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21110010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Orders for military goods usually catapult in September, government officials say, as the Pentagon scrambles to spend its money before the new fiscal year begins Oct. 1.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21110011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@While all the numbers in the durable goods report were adjusted for seasonal fluctuations, a Commerce Department analyst said that the adjustment probably didn't factor out all of the wide-ranging surge in defense orders.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21110012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Without the increase in defense bookings, September orders would have plummeted 3.9%.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21110013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Analysts were most unsettled by evidence the backlog of orders at factories is slipping.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21110014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Unfilled orders for durable goods rose 0.4% in September, to $476.14 billion, after declining for the first time in 2 1/2 years in August.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21110015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In July unfilled orders grew 1%.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21110016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But analysts noted that excluding transportation-where what they believe was a temporary surge in auto demand pushed up the figures-order backlogs have declined for three months in a row.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21110017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"It means we're eating into the bread that keeps us going.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21110018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@That is a little disturbing," Ms. Kleinman said.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21110019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"It also means if you have a real drop-off in orders, production will likely fall off very quickly because there is less to keep things going."@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21110020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Capital goods orders outside of the defense sector tumbled for the second month in a row, posting a 5.6% drop after a 10.3% decline.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21110021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Such steep drops in a category seen as a barometer of business investment would customarily be grave news for the economy.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21110022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But a Commerce Department analyst said that in both months orders would have risen had it not been for a drop in civilian aircraft bookings, a category that is showing declines only after a huge surge earlier this year.@@@@1@39@@oe@2-2-2013 21110023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Still, Milton Hudson, senior economic adviser at Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. in New York, said: "If you look back a half-year or so the evidence was pretty good of affirmative strength in the capital-goods sector.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21110024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Now at least there are question marks about that, and without any question the pace of growth has slowed.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21111001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Norfolk Southern Corp. directors authorized the railroad company to buy back as many as 45 million of its shares, which would have a current value of more than $1.7 billion.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21111002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The buy-back, coupled with a nearly completed earlier purchase of 20 million shares, would reduce shares outstanding by more than 26%.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21111003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Norfolk, Va., company has 172.2 million shares outstanding.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21111004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In a statement, Arnold B. McKinnon, chairman and chief executive officer, noted that the new repurchase program "should serve to enhance shareholder value."@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21111005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A spokeswoman said the company will finance the buy-back with cash on hand, borrowing and "cash Norfolk expects to generate."@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21111006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Analysts said they expected the action, and investors applauded the move.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21111007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In composite trading on the New York Stock Exchange, Norfolk Southern shares closed at $37.875, up $1.125.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21111008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Still, analysts don't expect the buy-back to significantly affect per-share earnings in the short term.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21111009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"The impact won't be that great," said Graeme Lidgerwood of First Boston Corp.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21111010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@That is in part because of the effect of having to average the number of shares outstanding, she said.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21111011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In addition, Mrs. Lidgerwood said, Norfolk is likely to draw down its cash initially to finance the purchases and thus forfeit some interest income.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21111012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Longer term, however, the buy-back is expected to increase earnings, especially after 1990, Mrs. Lidgerwood said.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21111013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Moreover, the extensive program in effect establishes a floor for the stock price, said Joel Price, analyst for Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21111014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The buy-back "is really a comfort to those who want to buy the stock that there is a {price} floor," he said.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21111015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"At a certain price, if the management thinks {the stock} is cheap, they can go in and buy it."@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21111016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Under the program, Norfolk plans to acquire shares in the open market.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21111017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Under the earlier plan, Norfolk was authorized in 1987 to buy up to 20 million shares.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21111018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It has purchased about 19 million of them.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21112001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@John B. Curcio, 55 years old, resigned as chairman of this diesel truck manufacturer, effective upon appointment of a successor.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21112002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Last month, Mr. Curcio was succeeded by Ralph E. Reins as chief executive officer following several quarters of lackluster or declining performance.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21113001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Falcon Holding Group Inc. said it agreed to acquire about 54,000 subscribers from First Carolina Cable TV Limited Partnership for about $100 million, or roughly $2,000 a subscriber.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21113002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The subscribers are in 52 different communities in Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21113003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Completion of the sale is expected early next year, Falcon said.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21113004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Currently, Falcon has about 750,000 cable-television subscribers around the nation; the company's cable-television unit reported 1988 revenue of about $100 million.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21113005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In composite trading on the American Stock Exchange, Falcon closed at $20, unchanged.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21114001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Richard W. Lock, retired vice president and treasurer of Owens-Illinois Inc., was named a director of this transportation industry supplier, increasing its board to six members.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21115001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@USX Corp. said it delayed the proposed initial public offering of common stock of RMI Titanium Co. because of market conditions.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21115002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@RMI Titanium is owned jointly by USX and Quantum Chemical Corp.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21115003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@USX, which hadn't set a date for the offering, didn't disclose any timetable for the offering.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21116001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Your Oct. 2 editorial "Reding, Wrighting & Erithmatic" on the recent "education summit" was like most pieces on the subject of education: It had little to say.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21116002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Oddly, though, on the very same page you printed a comment that addresses one of the most serious shortcomings of the American education system.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21116003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Unfortunately, the comment was buried in another article, so it could not stand out in an education context.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21116004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In the Manager's Journal, Atsushi Kageyama, in commenting on many differences between American and Japanese culture, said, "Japanese children are raised in a way many Americans would find severe.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21116005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@After a wonderfully frivolous early childhood, they are exposed to rigid discipline as soon as they enter school."@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21116006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@What far too many people concerned about education either fail to understand or choose to ignore is that American children, on the whole, are among the most undisciplined in the world, making any attempt at improvements in the mode of education potentially unsuccessful.@@@@1@43@@oe@2-2-2013 21116007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Unless parents and educators alike start to develop more discipline in children, all the worthy concern, discussions and actions will not solve the problem.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21116008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Allen B. Richards Peterborough, N.H.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21117001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Retired Adm. William J. Crowe, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Robert P. Luciano, chairman and chief executive officer of Schering-Plough Corp., were elected directors of this securities firm.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21117002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The board expanded to 17 seats.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21118001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Tuesday, October 24, 1989@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21118002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The key U.S. and foreign annual interest rates below are a guide to general levels but don't always represent actual transactions.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21118003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@PRIME RATE: 10 1/2%.@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21118004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The base rate on corporate loans at large U.S. money center commercial banks.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21118005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@FEDERAL FUNDS: 8 3/4% high, 8 5/8% low, 8 11/16% near closing bid, 8 11/16% offered.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21118006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Reserves traded among commercial banks for overnight use in amounts of $1 million or more.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21118007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Source: Fulton Prebon (U.S.A.) Inc.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21118008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@DISCOUNT RATE: 7%.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21118009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The charge on loans to depository institutions by the New York Federal Reserve Bank.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21118010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@CALL MONEY: 9 3/4% to 10%.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21118011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The charge on loans to brokers on stock exchange collateral.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21118012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@COMMERCIAL PAPER placed directly by General Motors Acceptance Corp.: 8.45% 30 to 44 days; 8.25% 45 to 68 days; 8.30% 69 to 89 days; 8.125% 90 to 119 days; 8% 120 to 149 days; 7.875% 150 to 179 days; 7.50% 180 to 270 days.@@@@1@44@@oe@2-2-2013 21118013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@COMMERCIAL PAPER: High-grade unsecured notes sold through dealers by major corporations in multiples of $1,000: 8.55% 30 days; 8.475% 60 days; 8.45% 90 days.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21118014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT: 8.09% one month; 8.09% two months; 8.06% three months; 8% six months; 7.94% one year.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21118015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Average of top rates paid by major New York banks on primary new issues of negotiable C.D.s, usually on amounts of $1 million and more.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21118016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The minimum unit is $100,000.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21118017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Typical rates in the secondary market: 8.55% one month; 8.50% three months; 8.35% six months.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21118018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@BANKERS ACCEPTANCES: 8.48% 30 days; 8.30% 60 days; 8.28% 90 days; 8.10% 120 days; 8% 150 days; 7.90% 180 days.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21118019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Negotiable, bank-backed business credit instruments typically financing an import order.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21118020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@LONDON LATE EURODOLLARS: 8 11/16% to 8 9/16% one month; 8 5/8% to 8 1/2% two months; 8 5/8% to 8 1/2% three months; 8 9/16% to 8 7/16% four months; 8 1/2% to 8 3/8% five months; 8 7/16% to 8 5/16% six months.@@@@1@45@@oe@2-2-2013 21118021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@LONDON INTERBANK OFFERED RATES (LIBOR): 8 11/16% one month; 8 11/16% three months; 8 1/2% six months; 8 1/2% one year.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21118022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The average of interbank offered rates for dollar deposits in the London market based on quotations at five major banks.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21118023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@FOREIGN PRIME RATES: Canada 13.50%; Germany 9%; Japan 4.875%; Switzerland 8.50%; Britain 15%.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21118024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@These rate indications aren't directly comparable; lending practices vary widely by location.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21118025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@TREASURY BILLS: Results of the Monday, October 23, 1989, auction of short-term U.S. government bills, sold at a discount from face value in units of $10,000 to $1 million: 7.52% 13 weeks; 7.50% 26 weeks.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21118026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@FEDERAL HOME LOAN MORTGAGE CORP. (Freddie Mac): Posted yields on 30-year mortgage commitments for delivery within 30 days.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21118027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@9.78%, standard conventional fixed-rate mortgages; 7.875%, 2% rate capped one-year adjustable rate mortgages.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21118028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Source: Telerate Systems Inc.@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21118029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION (Fannie Mae): Posted yields on 30 year mortgage commitments for delivery within 30 days (priced at par) 9.75%, standard conventional fixed-rate mortgages; 8.70%, 6/2 rate capped one-year adjustable rate mortgages.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21118030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Source: Telerate Systems Inc.@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21118031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@MERRILL LYNCH READY ASSETS TRUST: 8.59%.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21118032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Annualized average rate of return after expenses for the past 30 days; not a forecast of future returns.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21119001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Roy E. Parrott, the company's president and chief operating officer since Sept. 1, was named to its board.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21119002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The appointment increased the number of directors to 10, three of whom are company employees.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21119003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Simpson is an auto parts maker.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21120001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Japan has climbed up from the ashes of World War II and a gross national product of about $800 per capita to reach the heavyweight class among industrialized nations.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21120002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Now this remarkable economic growth seems to be coming to an end because the government has not converted itself into a modern, democratic, "developed nation" mode of operation.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21120003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Until 1980, when Japan joined the $10,000 per capita GNP club of the advanced countries, it was a model developing nation.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21120004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The government built ports, bridges, highways, schools, hospitals and railways.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21120005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@When industries were weak, it protected them.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21120006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It gave the Japanese people a value system, based on the rationalization that given the country's lack of natural resources, they must work hard to create value through exports and buy food with the surplus.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21120007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Individual prosperity inevitably would result.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21120008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@That system has worked.@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21120009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The standard of living has increased steadily over the past 40 years; more than 90% of the people consider themselves middle class.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21120010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The people have given their leading and only credible political party, the Liberal Democratic Party, clear and uninterrupted power for those 40 years.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21120011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The LDP won by a landslide in the last election, in July 1986.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21120012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But less than two years later, the LDP started to crumble, and dissent rose to unprecedented heights.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21120013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The symptoms all point to one thing: Japan does not have a modern government.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21120014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Its government still wants to sit in the driver's seat, set the speed, step on the gas, apply the brakes and steer, with 120 million people in the back seat.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21120015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In a modern system, the government's role is to give the people as much choice as possible and to keep them well informed so they are capable of making a choice.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21120016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It also allows people to buy the best and the cheapest goods from anywhere in the world.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21120017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Japanese government doesn't allow this.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21120018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Ministry of Agriculture and Fishery actually is a ministry for farmers and fishermen instead of a ministry of provisions.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21120019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Ministry of Health and Welfare is a ministry of doctors and pharmaceutical companies rather than an organization dedicated to protecting the health of the people.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21120020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Ministry of Education is nothing but a cartel for licensed teachers, and certainly does not act on behalf of students.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21120021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Ministry of Construction spreads concrete throughout the country and boasts in international conferences that Japan's paved roadway per capita is the longest in the world, but they seldom think of the poor commuters who spend so much time sitting in traffic.@@@@1@42@@oe@2-2-2013 21120022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Ministry of Transportation serves the industry, certainly not the passengers who must pay extraordinarily high prices.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21120023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And the Ministry of Foreign Affairs works for itself, supporting Japanese diplomats who sprinkle abundant aid money around the world to ensure that their seat at the dinner table is next to the host's.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21120024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@This ministry has done nothing to correct the misunderstandings and misperceptions that are at the root of Japan's deteriorating image.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21120025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Instead, it seems to be using foreign pressure and even the trade conflict to expand its sphere of influence vis a vis other ministries.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21120026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@All this illustrates that Japanese ministries still have a "provider" mentality; they do not serve the people, and particularly not consumers.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21120027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They serve the industries and the special-interest groups.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21120028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The rest of the world accepted such methods when Japan was developing.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21120029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Japanese put up with it because the government provided job stability and growing paychecks.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21120030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Japan is not a political country.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21120031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It is a bureaucratic country.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21120032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Diet plays a minor role compared with the powerful bureaucratic system.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21120033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Most bills are drafted by bureaucrats, not politicians.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21120034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Diet doesn't normally even debate bills because the opposition parties are so often opposed to whatever LDP does that it would be a waste of time.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21120035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@So most bills are passed without full discussion; particularly difficult bills are passed in the absence of the opposition parties.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21120036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A recent example is the 3% consumption tax on all commercial activities.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21120037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@This makes enormous sense in Japan, where direct tax accounts for more than 70% of revenues and the capture rate of direct tax is so unfair.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21120038@unknown@formal@none@1@S@If you are a salaried man, Amen! 100% captured.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21120039@unknown@formal@none@1@S@If you are a retailer, 50%, and a farmer, 30%.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21120040@unknown@formal@none@1@S@To correct this inequality, most people would have favored an indirect tax, like the consumption tax.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21120041@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But the bill was passed without debate in the Diet, in the absence of the opposition.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21120042@unknown@formal@none@1@S@As a result, the Japanese people didn't know what to expect when the new law was introduced on April 1.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21120043@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They were frustrated by the longer queues at the cashier and the small coins given as change.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21120044@unknown@formal@none@1@S@All of a sudden, prices were no longer in denominations of 100 or 200.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21120045@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They were 103 or 206.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21120046@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Pockets exploded with one-yen coins.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21120047@unknown@formal@none@1@S@While people were jingling their change, the LDP politicians were caught in scandals.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21120048@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Money, such as in Recruit's political donations, and women, as in the cases of Prime Minister Sosuke Uno and Secretary General Tokuo Yamashita, seldom have caused political scandals in Japan.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21120049@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Whereas most men were a bit ambivalent about the sex scandals (though they were furious about Recruit), women were upset about both and surged to the polls.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21120050@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In the recent Upper House and Tokyo metropolitan congressional elections, in which the Socialist Party won a runaway victory, 60% of all women voted, as opposed to the usual 40%.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21120051@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It is difficult to analyze how much of their anger was due to Recruit, the sex scandals, or the one-yen coins in their purses, but they obviously were voting to punish the LDP.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21120052@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Taken by surprise, the Socialist Party is busy changing its doctrines.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21120053@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It's now OK to deal with the U.S., but not the Soviet Union.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21120054@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Nuclear power plants are acceptable.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21120055@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The U.S.-Japan Security Treaty can continue, sort of.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21120056@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And so on.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21120057@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Against the rapid cosmetic overhaul of the Socialist Party the LDP has been paralyzed.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21120058@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Now is the time to reform the government from a provider, developing-country vanguard role to that of a modern, industrialized nation in which consumers have the ultimate choice.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21120059@unknown@formal@none@1@S@If the LDP, as currently composed, can't make the transformation, then it should split into two parties.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21120060@unknown@formal@none@1@S@One party could stand for consumer interests, small government, free trade and globalism to put Japan clearly among the most developed and open countries.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21120061@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The other party could continue on the traditional track of the LDP, representing the manufacturers' preference for larger government, control, regulation and protectionism.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21120062@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The LDP must make a decision immediately; Lower House elections must take place before June.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21120063@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In the current mood of the Japanese people, journalists and even some industrialists, giving power to the Socialists might be good for the LDP, cleansing it of past sins.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21120064@unknown@formal@none@1@S@We must not forget, however, that such a humble political experiment could cause a global tidal wave of shocks in real-estate and financial markets.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21120065@unknown@formal@none@1@S@At the most there is only nine months before the LDP fuse burns out.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21120066@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Ohmae is managing director of McKinsey & Co. in Japan.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21121001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Early this century, diamond mining in the magnificent dunes where the Namib Desert meets the Atlantic Ocean was a day at the beach.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21121002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Men would crawl in the sand looking for shiny stones.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21121003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It was as easy as collecting sea shells at Malibu.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21121004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Men are still combing the beach with shovels and hand brushes, searching for that unusual glint.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21121005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But only after a fleet of 336 gargantuan earthmoving vehicles belonging to De Beers Consolidated Mines Ltd., the world's diamond kingpins, do their work.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21121006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Last year, 43 million tons of desert were moved from one dune to another to recover 934,242 carats, which comes to 46 tons of sand per carat, or one-fifth gram.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21121007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Oh yes, the Atlantic was also pushed back 300 yards.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21121008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"If there's diamonds out there, we'll get to them," says Les Johns, De Beers's engineering manager.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21121009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Here, wedged between shifting dunes and pounding waves at the world's most inhospitable diamond dig, lies the earth's most precious jewel box.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21121010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Thanks to centuries of polishing by Mother Nature -- first in the gentle current of the Orange River that carried the stones from South Africa's interior, then in the cold surf of the ocean, and finally in the coarse sands of the desert -- 98% of the diamonds uncovered are of gem quality.@@@@1@53@@oe@2-2-2013 21121011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@While other mines might yield more carats, a higher percentage of them go to industrial use.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21121012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Since this treasure chest is too big to fit in a bank vault, it has been turned into one.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21121013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Months after railway worker Zacharias Lewala first picked up a diamond from the sand in 1908, the German colonialists who controlled Namibia proclaimed a wide swath of the desert -- about 200 miles north from the Orange River and 60 miles inland from the Atlantic -- a restricted area, a designation normally reserved for military operations.@@@@1@56@@oe@2-2-2013 21121014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@When the Germans lost World War I, they lost Namibia to South Africa and the diamonds to Ernest Oppenheimer, patriarch of Anglo American Corp. and De Beers.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21121015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Today, no one gets in or out of the restricted area without De Beers's stingy approval.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21121016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The mining zone has thus remained one of the most desolate places in Africa.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21121017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Ghost towns dot the Namib dunes, proving diamonds aren't forever.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21121018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Oranjemund, the mine headquarters, is a lonely corporate oasis of 9,000 residents.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21121019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Jackals roam the streets at night, and gemsbok, hardy antelope with long straight horns, wander in from the desert to drink from water sprinklers.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21121020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@On most days, the desert's heat and the cool of the ocean combine to create a mist like a damp rag.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21121021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The wind, stinging with sand, never seems to stop.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21121022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Still, miners from all parts of Namibia as well as professional staff from De Beers's head offices in South Africa and London keep coming.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21121023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And Oranjemund boasts attractions besides diamonds.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21121024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@There are six video rental shops, three restaurants, one cinema and 34 sports and recreation clubs for everything from cricket to lawn bowling.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21121025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The pride of Oranjemund is the 18-hole golf course -- with the largest sand trap in the world.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21121026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Last year, when the rising Orange River threatened to swamp the course, the same engineers who are pushing back the Atlantic rushed to build a wall to hold back the flood.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21121027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Nothing is too good for our golf course," says Tony George, a mining engineer.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21121028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Despite fears the mine may be partially nationalized by the new Namibian government following next month's elections freeing the country from South African control, De Beers engineers are working to extend the mine's productive life for another 25 years, from the current estimate of 10.@@@@1@45@@oe@2-2-2013 21121029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Huge machines that look as though they came from the Star Wars desert-battle scene lumber among the dunes.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21121030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mechanized vacuum cleaners probe the sand like giant anteaters; a whirring ferris wheellike excavator, with buckets instead of seats, chews through layers of compacted sand; tracks and conveyor belts, shuttling sand to the screening plants, criss-cross the beach.@@@@1@38@@oe@2-2-2013 21121031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Then there is the artifical sea wall, 600 yards long and 60 yards thick, jutting into the ocean.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21121032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Made of sand, it receives around-the-clock maintainence against the battering waves.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21121033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@When the mining in front of the wall is complete, it is moved northward.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21121034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A companion jetty that helps hold back the sea looks like a rusting junkyard.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21121035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Engineers first used concrete blocks to bolster the barrier, but the ocean tossed them aside like driftwood.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21121036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Then someone decided to try broken-down earthmoving equipment that, inexplicably, held against the waves.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21121037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"The Caterpillar people aren't too happy when they see their equipment used like that," shrugs Mr. George.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21121038@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"They figure it's not a very good advert."@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21121039@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Despite all these innovations, most of the diamonds are still found in the sand swept away by the men wielding shovels and brushes -- the ignominiously named "bedrock sweepers" who toil in the wake of the excavators.@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 21121040@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Laboring in blue and gray overalls, they are supposed to concentrate on cleaning out crevices, and not strain their eyes looking for diamonds.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21121041@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But should they spy one, the company will pay a bonus equal to one-third its value.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21121042@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For these workers at the bottom of the mine's pay scale, this is usually enough to overcome the temptation to steal -- a crime that could earn them up to 15 years in jail.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21121043@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Still, employees do occasionally try to smuggle out a gem or two.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21121044@unknown@formal@none@1@S@One man wrapped several diamonds in the knot of his tie.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21121045@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Another poked a hole in the heel of his shoe.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21121046@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A food caterer stashed stones in the false bottom of a milk pail.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21121047@unknown@formal@none@1@S@None made it past the body searches and X-rays of mine security.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21122001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@DISASTER STATES aren't jumping to raise taxes for relief and recovery.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21122002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Not yet, anyway.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21122003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Just after Hurricane Hugo battered South Carolina, some officials talked of perhaps adding a penny to the state gasoline tax or raising property taxes.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21122004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Gov. Campbell responded, "They're mentioning rope when there's been a hanging in the family."@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21122005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A spokesman says the governor believes he can avoid increases by relying on federal aid and shifting funds in state programs.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21122006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Still, Hugo's impact may revive unsuccessful proposals to give local governments authority to levy sales taxes.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21122007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A spokesman for North Carolina Gov. Martin says Hugo hasn't prompted proposals for state or local increases.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21122008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@California, where earthquake damage may top $5 billion, plans a special legislative session.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21122009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Property-tax relief is likely.@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21122010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Legislators are talking about temporary rises in sales or gasoline taxes, although Gov. Deukmejian says they should be a last resort.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21122011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Needs aren't clear, and the state constitution makes increasing taxes and spending very difficult.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21122012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But some legislators think the time may be ripe to revise the constitution.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21122013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@THE IRS WILL PAY if its error burdens you with bank charges.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21122014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Policy statement P-5-39 sets out terms.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21122015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@As a result of an erroneous IRS levy on a bank account, a taxpayer may incur administrative and overdraft charges.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21122016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@If the IRS admits its error and the charges have been paid, it will reimburse a taxpayer who hasn't refused to give timely answers to IRS inquiries or hasn't contributed to continuing or compounding the error.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21122017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The IRS recently amended the policy to cover stop-payment charges for checks lost by the IRS.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21122018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@If the IRS asks for and gets a replacement for a check that it concedes it lost in processing, it will reimburse the taxpayer for the stop-payment charge on the original.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21122019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Reimbursement claims must be filed with the IRS district or service-center director within a year after the expense accrues.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21122020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@If the IRS seeks late-payment interest because of the lost check, you should request interest abatement, publisher Prentice Hall notes.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21122021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@JUST FIVE ACRES MORE are all we need to feel really at home, they say.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21122022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A couple we'll call the Blandings spent nearly $800,000 on a 15-acre plot and main home and have an old $175,000 mortgage exempt from the new limit on mortgage-interest deductions.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21122023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They plan to expand the home site by buying five adjoining acres for $200,000, borrowed against a first mortgage on the five acres and also collateralized by the 15 acres.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21122024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Their debt will be well under the $1 million limit -- on borrowing to acquire, build, or improve a home -- that qualifies for mortgage-interest deductions.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21122025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@As you can guess, the Blandings want to deduct home-mortgage interest on the $200,000 loan.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21122026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But, IRS private ruling 8940061 notes, no rule or court case bears directly on the issue of adding land to a principal residence.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21122027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@So the IRS has drawn a rationale from the sale of a home site split in two and sold in different years to the same buyer; a court let the seller in that old case treat this as the sale of one residence.@@@@1@43@@oe@2-2-2013 21122028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Thus, the IRS says, the Blandings' $200,000 loan is home-acquisition debt, and interest on it is fully deductible.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21122029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@EARTHQUAKE VICTIMS facing imminent filing and payment deadlines will get extensions and penalty waivers like those provided for Hugo's victims; IRS Notice 89108 has details.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21122030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Notice 89-107 offers added relief for hurricane-hit concerns that must file pension and benefit-plan returns.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21122031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@REPORTS OF PAYMENTS to independent contractors for services must be filed by businesses, but don't bet that contractors' unreported income will be detected that way.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21122032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The General Accounting Office estimates that 50% of IRS audits don't spot companies that fail to file the reports.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21122033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@UH HUH:@@@@1@2@@oe@2-2-2013 21122034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A claim by Peter Testa of New York that a stranger paid him $500 to go into a bank and change $44,400 in small bills into large bills "is unconvincing," the Tax Court found.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21122035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It held that Testa is taxable on $44,400 of unreported income.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21122036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@WHY BE A MIDDLEMAN for charitable gifts? a retiree asks.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21122037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A retired electrical engineer we'll call Ben works part-time as a consultant, but he doesn't want to earn so much that Social Security reduces his benefits.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21122038@unknown@formal@none@1@S@So he has arranged for a university foundation to set up a scholarship fund for undergraduate engineering students.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21122039@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He plans to tell clients to pay certain fees directly to the foundation instead of to him; he would omit those fees from income reported on his return.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21122040@unknown@formal@none@1@S@So he asked the IRS if the plan would work.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21122041@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Well, notes IRS private ruling 8934014, "a fundamental principle" is that income must be taxed to whoever earns it.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21122042@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The rule goes back at least as far as a 1930 Supreme Court decision, Robert Willens of Shearson Lehman Hutton says.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21122043@unknown@formal@none@1@S@If you assign your income to another, you still have controlled its disposition and enjoyed the fruits of your labor, even if indirectly.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21122044@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Ben earns any fees sent directly to charity and is taxable on them, the IRS says; of course, he also may take a charitable deduction for them.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21122045@unknown@formal@none@1@S@BRIEFS:@@@@1@1@@oe@2-2-2013 21122046@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Ways and Means veteran Gephardt (D., Mo.) moves to the House Budget Committee; Rep. Cardin (D., Md.) replaces him. . . .@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21122047@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Seattle's license fees for adult peep shows vary from those for other coin-operated amusements without serving a substantial government interest and are unconstitutional, the ninth-circuit appeals court holds for Acorn Investments Inc.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21123001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Blue-chip advertisers have plenty of complaints about the magazines they advertise in, ranging from inadequate consumer research to ad "clutter" and a seemingly unchecked proliferation of special interest magazines.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21123002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Criticism from such big advertisers as Estee Lauder Inc., Colgate-Palmolive Co. and Seagram Co. put a damper on the euphoria at the American Magazine Conference here.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21123003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The conference opened Monday with glowing reports about consumer magazines' growth in circulation and advertising revenue in the past year.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21123004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Magazines are not providing us in-depth information on circulation," said Edgar Bronfman Jr., president and chief operating officer of Seagram, in a panel discussion.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21123005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"How do readers feel about the magazine?@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21123006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@How deeply do they read it?@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21123007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Research doesn't tell us whether people actually do read the magazines they subscribe to."@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21123008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Reuben Mark, chief executive of Colgate-Palmolive, said advertisers lack detailed demographic and geographic breakdowns of magazines' audiences.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21123009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"We need research that convinces us that magazines are a real value in reader's lives, that readers are really involved."@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21123010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The critics also lambasted the magazine industry for something executives often are very proud of: the growth in magazine titles during the 1980s.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21123011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Leonard Lauder, president and chief executive officer of Estee Lauder, said consumer magazines are suffering from what he called "niche-itis,"the increasing number of magazines that target the idosyncratic interests of readers.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21123012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Niche-itis fragments our advertising dollars," said Mr. Lauder.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21123013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"We are being over-magazined.@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21123014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@We are constantly faced with deciding which partnerships {with magazines} we can keep."@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21123015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He added: "There's probably even a magazine for left-handed golfers . . . but the general interest magazine is something we all miss, and it should come back."@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21123016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Lauder also attacked what he sees as the wide imitation of Elle, a fashion magazine published by Diamandis Communications Inc., and criticized the practice of stacking ads at the front of magazines.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21123017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Readers don't want to face all those ad pages at the front of a magazine," he said.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21123018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Magazine editors did not take the criticisms lying down.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21123019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"We spend a fortune on research information," said Steve Burzon, publisher of Meredith Corp.'s Metropolitan Home.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21123020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And Tina Brown, editor of Conde Nast Publications Inc.'s Vanity Fair, said advertisers are frequently asked to take advertising positions in the back of her magazine to relieve ad clutter.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21123021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"But advertisers wouldn't think of it," she said.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21123022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Bernard Leser, president of Conde Nast, added: "Our research shows we sell more of our heavier issues . . . because readers believe they are getting more for what they pay for.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21124001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Wall Street securities giant Salomon Inc. posted a big, unexpected earnings gain in the third quarter, buoyed by its securities trading and investment banking activities.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21124002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Salomon said net income soared to $177 million, or $1.28 a share, from $65 million, or 38 cents a share, a year earlier.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21124003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Revenue more than doubled to $2.62 billion from $1.29 billion.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21124004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A Salomon spokesman said its stock, bond and foreign exchange trading, as well as its investment banking operations, were mostly responsible for the earnings jump.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21124005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"The earnings were fine and above expectations," said Michael W. Blumstein, an analyst at First Boston Corp.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21124006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Nevertheless, Salomon's stock fell $1.125 yesterday to close at $23.25 a share in New York Stock Exchange composite trading.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21124007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"I suspect October wasn't as good as the third quarter, and they'll have difficulty matching the third quarter in the fourth quarter," Mr. Blumstein said.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21124008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But some analysts say Salomon has turned the corner.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21124009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"I upgraded the firm to my buy list because I certainly see signs of improvement," says Lawrence Eckenfelder, an analyst at Prudential-Bache Securities.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21124010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"The market has been overly harsh to them."@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21124011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Analysts say investors remain skittish toward Salomon because of its volatile earnings.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21124012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In the first quarter, Salomon had a record loss of $28 million on revenue of $1.54 billion.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21124013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But in the second quarter, Salomon posted a record $253 million net on revenue of $2.33 billion.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21125001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For the real estate industry, a watchword for the 1990s will be buy, more than build.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21125002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@That's the word expected to be on the lips of the more than 3,000 developers, pension-fund advisers and real estate financiers slated to attend a four-day conference, beginning here today, sponsored by the Urban Land Institute.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21125003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The ULI is a non-profit research and education group based in Washington, D.C., with 14,000 members nationwide.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21125004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@With the market overbuilt, builders are finding limited opportunities and increased risks.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21125005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Developers and money managers are looking for bargains among the thousands of financially troubled properties around the country.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21125006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Real estate professionals now often bill themselves as "turnaround experts" and "workout specialists."@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21125007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Conference attendees are expected to be buzzing about the workings of the recently formed Resolution Trust Corp., a federal agency charged with disposing of an estimated $200 billion of real estate dumped in government hands by insolvent savings and loans.@@@@1@40@@oe@2-2-2013 21125008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Developers are also eyeing the real estate portfolios of major corporations.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21125009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some plan to pursue foreign development ventures, mostly in Europe.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21125010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And other developers may shift from commercial to residential development in the U.S.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21125011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"There aren't as many economically viable alternatives for real estate developers in this country as 10 years ago," says Charles Shaw, a Chicago-based real estate developer. "@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21125012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@So developers are saying they will look into distressed properties.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21125013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They'll go into someone else's pasture as long as it's greener than the one they're in now."@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21125014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Developers are also forming more joint ventures with pension funds and insurance companies that can finance big projects.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21125015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The builders are more willing to give up some equity and rely on management and consulting fees to stay afloat in the soft market.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21125016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Developers are teaming up with institutions often acting as project managers," says Smedes York, ULI president and president of York Properties Inc., of Raleigh, N.C.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21125017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"They are growing more pragmatic about their role."@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21125018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Real estate firms are also using their alliances with financial institutions to amass acquisition funds.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21125019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Why should you beat your brains out fighting the environmentalists, the neighborhood groups, dealing with traffic mitigation, sewers and fighting city hall, then try to convince a lender to lend you money in an overbuilt market when you can get pension fund money, buy a portfolio, sell off pieces off it and play your own game?" says Jack Rodman, managing partner of the Los Angeles office of Kenneth Leventhal Inc. a national accounting firm.@@@@1@74@@oe@2-2-2013 21125020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But experts say that when it comes to distressed properties, finding diamonds in the rough isn't easy.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21125021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The level of interest in the RTC's properties has been greater than expected, and has come from larger companies than initially anticipated, says Stan Ross, Leventhal's co-managing partner.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21125022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And to succeed in the turnaround business, he says, developers may have to put in a lot of money and time.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21125023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Finding pension funds and other sources willing to invest is a high priority.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21125024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Quips David Shulman, director of real estate research for Salomon Brothers Inc.: "A theme of the Urban Land conference will be `take a pension fund manager to lunch.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21126001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sheraton Corp. and Pan American World Airways announced that they and two Soviet partners will construct two "world-class" hotels within a mile of Red Square in Moscow.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21126002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@U.S. and Soviet officials hailed the joint project as a new indication of the further thaw in U.S.-Soviet relations.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21126003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"This is an outstanding example of how the East and the West can work together for their mutual benefit and progress," said Soviet Ambassador Yuri Dubinin, who hosted a signing ceremony for the venture's partners at the Soviet embassy here.@@@@1@40@@oe@2-2-2013 21126004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Commerce Secretary Robert Mosbacher, who attended the ceremony, called the undertaking a "historic step" in the evolution of U.S.-Soviet ties.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21126005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He added that it likely will have a "mulitiplier effect" in stimulating further trade between the two countries.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21126006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The project will be the largest U.S.-backed joint venture to be undertaken in the Soviet Union in recent years.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21126007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@One of the hotels, to be called the Sheraton Moscow, will have 450 rooms and will cost an estimated $75 million to build.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21126008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The six-story hotel will be on Gorky Street and initially will cater mostly to business travelers.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21126009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It will have a Russian tavern, an English pub, a discotheque and Japanese and Italian restaurants, according to a Sheraton announcement.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21126010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The hotel is scheduled to open in 1992.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21126011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The second hotel, to be called the Budapest Hotel, is to be constructed at a site even closer to Red Square.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21126012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Details about its size and cost haven't yet been determined.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21126013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sheraton, a subsidiary of ITT Corp., will have a 40% share in the two hotels; Pan American, a subsidiary of Pan Am Corp., will have a 10% share.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21126014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Soviet owners will be Mossoviet, Moscow's city governing body, and Aeroflot, the Soviet national airline.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21126015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Although a Finnish group has a minority interest in an already operating Moscow hotel, the Sheraton-Pan Am venture will be the first joint-venture hotels in the Soviet Union to have as much as 50% foreign ownership.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21126016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@U.S. companies account for less than 8% of the 1,000 or more Soviet joint ventures that have been announced since the Soviets began encouraging such undertakings in 1987.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21126017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But some U.S. companies are negotiating projects that could be among the biggest ones to be launched.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21126018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Chevron Corp., Amoco Corp., Archer-Daniels-Midland Co., and Eastman Kodak Co. are among the U.S. companies known to be considering such ventures.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21126019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sheraton and Pan Am said they are assured under the Soviet joint-venture law that they can repatriate profits from their hotel venture.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21126020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Sheraton Moscow will charge about $140 to $150 a day for each of its rooms, and it will accept payment only in currencies that can be traded in foreign exchange markets, according to a Sheraton executive.@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 21126021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Thomas Plaskett, Pan Am's chairman, said the U.S. airline's participation is a natural outgrowth of its current arrangements with Aeroflot to jointly operate nonstop New York-Moscow flights.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21126022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He said the rising volume of passenger traffic on this route justifies a major investment in new high-standard Moscow hotels.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21127001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@David Shaffer was named to the new post of executive vice president of the Maxwell Macmillan group of this communications giant.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21127002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Shaffer takes primary responsibility for the electronic and technical-services group.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21127003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He had been group vice president of the electronic-publishing group.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21127004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Also, Sheldon Aboff, formerly a vice president at Maxwell, was named group vice president with responsibility for various electronic and publishing-group companies.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21128001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Soichiro Honda's picture now hangs with Henry Ford's in the U.S. Automotive Hall of Fame, and the game-show "Jeopardy" is soon to be Sony-owned.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21128002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But no matter how much Japan gets under our skin, we'll still have mom and apple pie.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21128003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@On second thought, make that just mom.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21128004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A Japanese apple called the Fuji is cropping up in orchards the way Hondas did on U.S. roads.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21128005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@By 1995 it will be planted more often than any other apple tree, according to a recent survey of six apple-industry sages by Washington State University horticulturist Robert Norton.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21128006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some fruit visionaries say the Fuji could someday tumble the Red Delicious from the top of America's apple heap.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21128007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It certainly won't get there on looks.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21128008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Compared to the Red Delicious, the exemplar of apple pulchritude, the Fuji is decidedly more dowdy -- generally smaller, less-perfectly shaped, greenish, with tinges of red.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21128009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@To hear most U.S. growers tell it, we'd still be in Paradise if the serpent had proffered one to Eve.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21128010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But how sweet it is.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21128011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It has more sugar "than any apple we've ever tested," says Duane Greene, a University of Massachusetts pomologist, or apple scholar.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21128012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It has a long shelf life and "doesn't fool the public," says Grady Auvil, an Orondo, Wash., grower who is planting Fujis and spreading the good word about them.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21128013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"It doesn't look nice on the outside while getting mealy inside."@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21128014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Auvil, razor sharp at 83, has picked and packed a zillion pecks of apples over the past 65 years.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21128015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He is known as the father of the U.S.-grown Granny Smith, a radically different apple that the conventional wisdom once said would never catch on.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21128016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It did, shaking the apple establishment to its roots.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21128017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Now, even more radical changes seem afoot as the grand old maverick of American apples plays the role of Hiroshi Appleseed.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21128018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"The Fuji is going to be No. 1 to replace the Red Delicious," he says.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21128019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Delicious hegemony won't end anytime soon.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21128020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@New apple trees grow slowly, and the Red Delicious is almost as entrenched as mom.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21128021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Its roots are patriotic -- with the first trees appearing in 1872 in an orchard near Peru, Iowa, to be exact.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21128022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For more than 50 years, it has been the apple of our eye.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21128023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A good Delicious can indeed be delicious.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21128024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@More than twice as many Red Delicious apples are grown as the Golden variety, America's No. 2 apple.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21128025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But the apple industry is ripe for change.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21128026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Red Delicious has been overplanted, and its prices have dropped below the cost of production," says Washington State's Mr. Norton.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21128027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The scare over Alar, a growth regulator that makes apples redder and crunchier but may be carcinogenic, made consumers shy away from the Delicious, though they were less affected than the McIntosh.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21128028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The glut and consequent lower prices, combined with cancer fears, was a very serious blow to growers.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21128029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"A lot of growers won't be around in a few years," says Mr. Norton, although they have stopped using Alar.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21128030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@One may be William Broderick, a Sterling, Mass., grower.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21128031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"This is beautiful stuff," he says, looking ruefully at big boxes of just-picked Red Delicious next to his barn.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21128032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"But I'm going to lose $50,000 to $60,000 on it.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21128033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@I'm going to have to get another job this year just to eat."@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21128034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Besides rotten prices, he has been hit recently by hail, a bark-nibbling horde of mice, fungi and bugs.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21128035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some 500 insects and 150 diseases wiggle, chew and romp through growers' nightmares, including maggots, mites, mildew, thrips, black rot and the flat-headed borer.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21128036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Even if a grower beats them back, his $2,000 rented bees might buzz off to the neighbors' orchards instead of pollinating his, Mr. Broderick says.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21128037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Though growers can't always keep the worm from the apple, they can protect themselves against the price vagaries of any one variety by diversifying -- into the recently imported Gala, a sweet New Zealand native; the Esopus Spitzenburg, reportedly Thomas Jefferson's favorite apple; disease-resistant kinds like the Liberty.@@@@1@48@@oe@2-2-2013 21128038@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"I've ripped out a lot of Delicious" and grafted the trees with many different shoots, says Steve Wood, a West Lebanon, N.H., grower, tramping through his 100-acre Poverty Lane Orchard on a crisp autumn day recently.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21128039@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"I've got 70 kinds of apples.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21128040@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Here's a Waltana," he exclaims, picking one off a tree.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21128041@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He bites it, scowls and throws it down. "@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21128042@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It's a real dog."@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21128043@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Supermarkets are getting into the variety act, too.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21128044@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They still buy apples mainly for big, red good looks -- that's why so many taste like woodchucks' punching bags.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21128045@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But freshness counts more than it once did, and stores are expanding shelf space for unconventional, but tastier, and often pricier, apples.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21128046@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Rather than sell 39-cents-a-pound Delicious, maybe we can sell 79-cents-a-pound Fujis," says Chuck Tryon, perishables director for Super Valu Inc., a Minneapolis supermarket chain and food distributor.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21128047@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Fuji is a product of meticulous Japanese pomological engineering, which fostered it 50 years ago at a government research orchard.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21128048@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Japanese researchers have bred dozens of strains of Fujis to hone its color, taste and shelf life.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21128049@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Now the best of them age as gracefully as Grannies, the industry's gold standard for storability.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21128050@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In the cornucopia of go-go apples, the Fuji's track record stands out: During the past 15 years, it has gone from almost zilch to some 50% of Japan's market.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21128051@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"The Japanese apple market is very keyed to high quality," says David Lane, a scientist at a Canadian horticulture research center in Summerland, British Columbia, and so apples are more of a delicacy there than a big food commodity.@@@@1@39@@oe@2-2-2013 21128052@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates that this year Americans will eat about 40% more fresh apples per capita than the Japanese.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21128053@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Fuji is still small potatoes in the U.S., sold mainly in fruit boutiques.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21128054@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But in California, says Craig Ito, a Fuji-apple grower, "There's a Fuji apple cult.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21128055@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Once somebody eats one, they get hooked."@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21128056@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Auvil, the Washington grower, says that he could sell Fujis to Taiwan buyers at $40 a box if he had them.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21128057@unknown@formal@none@1@S@(Taiwan already is a big importer of Fujis from other places, he adds.)@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21128058@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But his first crop won't be picked till next year.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21128059@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"I expect to see the demand exceed supply for Fujis for the next 10 to 15 years," he adds.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21128060@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Washington Red Delicious, by the way, are wholesaling for less than $10 a box these days.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21128061@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Auvil sees Fujis, in part, as striking a blow against the perversion of U.S. apples by supermarkets.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21128062@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"When the chain stores took over, there was no longer a connection between grower and consumer.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21128063@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A guy is sitting up in an office deciding what you're going to eat."@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21128064@unknown@formal@none@1@S@After all, until the 1950s even the Red Delicious was a firm, delectable morsel.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21128065@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Then, as growers bred them more for looks, and to satisfy supermarket chains' demands of long-term storage, the Red went into decline.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21128066@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Now, those red applelike things stores sell in summer are fruitbowl lovely, but usually not good eating.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21128067@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They do deserve respect, however -- they are almost a year old, probably equal to about 106 in human years.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21128068@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Fuji, to be sure, has blemishes too.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21128069@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It ripens later than most apples, and growing it in U.S. areas with chilly autumns may be tricky.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21128070@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Moreover, the frumpy Fuji must compete with an increasingly dolledup Delicious.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21128071@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Broderick, the Massachusetts grower, says the "big boss" at a supermarket chain even rejected his Red Delicious recently because they weren't waxed and brushed for extra shine.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21128072@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And he hadn't used hormones, which many growers employ to elongate their Delicious apples for greater eye appeal.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21128073@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Still, Mr. Auvil points out, Grannies became popular without big, red looks, so why not Fujis?@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21128074@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He sees a shift in American values -- at least regarding apples -- toward more emphasis on substance and less on glitz.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21128075@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Taste has finally come to the fore," he says.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21128076@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Or, for that matter, the core.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21129001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Brush Wellman Inc. said its board increased the number of shares of common stock to be purchased under a previously authorized program to 3.9 million from 2.9 million.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21129002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The maker of engineered materials has acquired more than 2.7 million shares under the program.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21130001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The state attorney general's office filed suit against five New York brokerage firms, charging them with responsibility for much of a $200 million loss incurred by the state treasurer's office in 1987.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21130002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The suit sets the firms' liability at more than $185 million.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21130003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The firms are Morgan Stanley & Co., Salomon Brothers Inc., County Natwest Government Securities Inc., Greenwich Capital Markets Inc. and Goldman, Sachs & Co.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21130004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The firms have all said that West Virginia's suit is without merit.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21130005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@On Friday, the firms filed a suit against West Virginia in New York state court asking for a declaratory judgment absolving them of liability.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21130006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@That suit is pending.@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21130007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The suits relate to a $200 million loss, disclosed in December, that was suffered by West Virginia's consolidated investment pool.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21130008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The pool invested idle cash for many state agencies and local governments.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21130009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In its suit, the attorney general's office alleges that brokers encouraged members of the treasurer's office to engage in high-volume, high-risk transactions that benefited the brokers.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21131001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Few people are aware that the federal government lends almost as much money as it borrows.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21131002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@From 1980 to 1988, while federal budget deficits totaled $1.41 trillion, the government issued $394 billion of new direct loans and an additional $756 billion of new primary loan guarantees.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21131003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@These figures omit secondary guarantees, deposit insurance, and the activities of Government-Sponsored Enterprises (a huge concern in its own right, as detailed on this page May 3).@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21131004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Federal credit programs date back to the New Deal, and were meant to break even financially.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21131005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Since the 1950s, federal lending has experienced extraordinary growth in credit volume, subsidy rates, and policy applications, spurred on by the growth of government in general and budget gimmicks and deceptive management in particular.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21131006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@As we will see, many of these obligations don't show up as part of the federal deficit.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21131007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But recent events indicate that federal credit is out of control.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21131008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Student loan defaults remain high at about 12%, and the program has been rocked by allegations of fraud and mismanagement.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21131009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Farmers Home Administration (FmHA) loans have turned into de facto giveaway programs; losses over the next three years are expected to exceed $20 billion.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21131010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Defaults on Veterans Affairs loan guarantees have quadrupled in the past eight years.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21131011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Last month, the General Accounting Office reported that defaults in Federal Housing Administration guarantees were five times as high as previously estimated, and that FHA's equity fell to minus $2.9 billion.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21131012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@GAO's findings are particularly troubling because the FHA has about $300 billion in obligations outstanding and had previously been considered one of the most financially secure credit programs.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21131013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Scores of other credit programs, subsidizing agriculture, small business, exporters, defense, energy, transportation and others, are less visible but in no better shape.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21131014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@If the programs continue their present path, the potential government losses are staggering: The federal government holds $222 billion in direct loans outstanding and backs an additional $550 billion in primary guarantees.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21131015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@(Secondary guarantees of pools of FHA- and VA-backed loans by the agency known as Ginnie Mae currently exceed $330 billion.)@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21131016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Although external events have contributed to the morass, the principal causes of the current crisis are internal and generic to all programs.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21131017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@To reduce the risks while still retaining the legitimate benefits these programs can provide, credit policy must: 1. Use credit to improve the operation of capital markets, not to provide subsidies.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21131018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@There is a fundamental conflict between providing a subsidy and maintaining the integrity of a credit program.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21131019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@If the program is meant to provide a subsidy, collecting the debt defeats the original goal.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21131020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Thus, subsidized loans tend to turn into giveaway programs, with increasing subsidy and default rates over time.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21131021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@To avoid this problem, government should issue credit only if it intends to use every legal method to collect.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21131022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In contrast, credit programs can be appropriate tools to improve the operation of capital markets.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21131023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For example, legal restrictions on interstate banking once inhibited the supply of credit to the agricultural sector.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21131024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Farm lending was enacted to correct this problem by providing a reliable flow of lendable funds.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21131025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@However, this in no way justifies the huge government subsidies and losses on such loans.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21131026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Credit policy should separate these two competing objectives and eliminate aspects that provide the subsidy.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21131027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For example, student loans currently attempt to subsidize college attendance and mitigate problems created by the fact that students' future earnings are not accepted as collateral.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21131028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The program provides highly subsidized loans to any student whose family earns less than a particular amount.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21131029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@High default rates, a low interest rate, and government coverage of all interest costs while the student is in school make program costs extremely high.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21131030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Families that do not need the loan can make money simply by putting the loan in the bank and paying it back when the student graduates.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21131031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In contrast, a student loan program that was meant solely to correct capital-market imperfections would allow loans for any student, regardless of family income, at market or near-market rates.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21131032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@While the student was in school, interest costs would either be paid by the student or added to the loan balance.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21131033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@This program, combined with cash grants to needy students, would reduce program costs and much more effectively target the intended beneficiaries.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21131034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@2. Provide better incentives.@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21131035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Given the structure of most credit programs, it is surprising that default rates are not even higher.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21131036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Guarantee rates are typically 100%, giving lenders little reason to screen customers carefully.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21131037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Reducing those rates moderately (say, to 75%) would still provide substantial assistance to borrowers.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21131038@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But it would also encourage lenders to choose more creditworthy customers, and go a long way toward reducing defaults.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21131039@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For example, the Small Business Administration has had reasonable success in reducing both guarantee rates and default rates in its Preferred Lenders' Program.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21131040@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Borrowers' incentives are equally skewed.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21131041@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Since the government has a dismal record of collecting bad debts, the costs to the borrower of defaulting are usually low.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21131042@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In addition, it is often possible to obtain a new government loan even if existing debts are not paid off.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21131043@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Simple policy prescriptions in this case would be to improve debt collection (taking the gloves off contracted collection agencies) and to deny new credit to defaulters.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21131044@unknown@formal@none@1@S@These provisions would be difficult to enforce for a program intended to provide a subsidy, but would be reasonable and effective devices for programs that attempt to offset market imperfections.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21131045@unknown@formal@none@1@S@3. Record the true costs of credit programs in the federal budget.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21131046@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Since the budget measures cash flow, a new $1 direct loan is treated as a $1 expenditure, even though at least part of the loan will be paid back.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21131047@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Loan guarantees don't appear at all until the borrower defaults, so new guarantees do not raise the deficit, even though they create future liabilities for the government.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21131048@unknown@formal@none@1@S@By converting an expenditure or loan to a guarantee, the government can ensure the same flow of resources and reduce the current deficit.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21131049@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Predictably, guarantees outstanding have risen by $130 billion since 1985, while direct loans outstanding have fallen by $30 billion.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21131050@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The true budgetary cost of a credit subsidy is the discounted value of the net costs to government.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21131051@unknown@formal@none@1@S@This figure could be estimated using techniques employed by private lenders to forecast losses, or determined by selling loans to private owners (without federal guarantees).@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21131052@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Neither technique is perfect, but both are better than the current system, which misstates the costs of new credit programs by amounts that vary substantially and average about $20 billion annually, according to the Congressional Budget Office.@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 21131053@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A budget that reflected the real costs of lending would eliminate incentives to convert spending or lending programs to guarantees and would let taxpayers know what Congress is committing them to.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21131054@unknown@formal@none@1@S@4. Impose standard accounting and administrative practices.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21131055@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Creative accounting is a hallmark of federal credit.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21131056@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Many agencies roll over their debt, paying off delinquent loans by issuing new loans, or converting defaulted loan guarantees into direct loans.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21131057@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In any case, they avoid having to write off the loans.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21131058@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some agencies simply keep bad loans on the books; as late as 1987, the Export-Import Bank held in its portfolio at face value loans made to Cuba in the 1950s.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21131059@unknown@formal@none@1@S@More seriously, FmHA has carried several billion dollars of defaulted loans at face value.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21131060@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Until GAO's recent audit, FHA books had not been subject to a complete external audit in 15 years.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21131061@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The administration of federal credit should closely parallel private lending practices, including the development of a loan loss reserve and regular outside audits.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21131062@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Establishing these practices would permit earlier identification of emerging financial crises, provide better information for loan sales and budgeting decisions, and reduce fraud.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21131063@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Government lending was not intended to be a way to obfuscate spending figures, hide fraudulent activity, or provide large subsidies.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21131064@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The reforms described above would provide a more limited, but clearer, safer and ultimately more useful role for government as a lender.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21131065@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Without such reforms, credit programs will continue to be a large-scale, high-risk proposition for taxpayers.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21131066@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Gale is an assistant professor of economics at UCLA.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21132001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Malcolm S. Todt was named vice president and senior officer in charge of equipment leasing to municipalities, a new effort of this bond insurer.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21132002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Todt had been vice president and treasurer of Insilco Corp.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21133001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@President Bush is considering casting a line-item veto as a test to determine whether the courts will rule that he has such authority.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21133002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Bush has long campaigned for passage of a bill or a constitutional amendment that would explicitly give him a line-item veto, which would enable him to kill individual items in a big spending bill without having to kill the entire bill.@@@@1@42@@oe@2-2-2013 21133003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He has argued that such presidential power is necessary to rein in congressional spending.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21133004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But some analysts, particularly conservative legal scholars, have urged Mr. Bush not to wait for explicit authorization but simply to assert that the Constitution already implicitly gives him the power to exercise a line-item veto.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21133005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Such an assertion most likely would bring about a court challenge from Congress that would clarify whether a president already has such power.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21133006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater, confirming comments made this week by Vice President Dan Quayle, said Mr. Bush is "interested" in finding a suitable test case.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21133007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But he also said that exercising a test line-item veto isn't a "top initiative" on the president's agenda because he faces more-pressing budget issues at the moment.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21134001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Harris Ravine, executive vice president of customer satisfaction, was named executive vice president, finance and administration of this maker of data storage equipment.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21134002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Ravine succeeds William R. Mansfield Jr., who will remain with the company until the end of the year to support the transition and to complete important projects.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21135001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Bush administration said it is submitting a "comprehensive" proposal for overhauling agricultural trade that could help break an impasse in the current round of multilateral trade negotiations.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21135002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The proposal reiterates the U.S. desire to scrap or reduce a host of trade-distorting subsidies on farm products.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21135003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But it would allow considerable flexibility in determining how and when these goals would be achieved.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21135004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The U.S. plan also would ease the transition to freer agriculture trade by allowing some countries to convert non-tariff barriers into tariffs that, together with existing tariffs, then would be phased out over 10 years.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21135005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Trade Representative Carla Hills, who along with Agriculture Secretary Clayton Yeutter unveiled the proposal, said she is confident it will gain considerable support from the U.S.'s trading partners.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21135006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Yeutter, seeking to allay European objections to an earlier U.S. plan that called for eliminating all farm-trade barriers by the year 2000, said the new U.S. proposal wouldn't "put farmers out of business" but would only encourage them to "grow what the markets desire instead of what the government wants."@@@@1@51@@oe@2-2-2013 21135007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The U.S. is submitting the proposal today in Geneva, hoping that the initiative will spur members of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade to reach agreement on new trade rules before their current negotiating round concludes in December 1990.@@@@1@40@@oe@2-2-2013 21135008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Another U.S. proposal filed Monday urges more "fair play" in services trade, including predictable and clear rules and equality in the treatment of foreign and domestic service companies.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21135009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Unlike the earlier U.S. farm-trade proposal which struck European countries as too extreme, the latest plan would provide some room for maneuver.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21135010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For instance, the new U.S. package makes clear there would be a transition period during which GATT members could use a combination of tariffs and quotas to cushion their farmers from foreign competition.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21135011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It also says countries could temporarily raise tariffs on certain products if they experience an unusually heavy volume of imports.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21135012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Instead of proposing a complete elimination of farm subsidies, as the earlier U.S. proposal did, the new package calls for the elimination of only the most tradedistorting ones.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21135013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Less objectionable ones would be subject only to some restraints, and others with a "relatively minor trade impact" would be allowed to continue under certain conditions.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21135014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The new U.S. plan also would establish procedures to prevent countries from using health and sanitation rules to impede trade arbitrarily.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21135015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The goal would be to resolve disputes such as one prompted by the European Community's current attempt to bar imports of beef from hormone-treated U.S. cattle.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21135016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The U.S. contends that the rules aren't justified on health grounds.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21135017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@To encourage more competition among exporting countries, the U.S. is proposing that export subsidies, including tax incentives for exporters, be phased out in five years.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21136001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Procter & Gamble Co., helped by a gain from a lawsuit settlement and continued growth overseas, posted a 38% rise in fiscal first-quarter net income.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21136002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Net for the quarter ended Sept. 30 climbed to $551 million, or $1.66 a share, from $400 million, or $1.18 a share, a year earlier.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21136003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Per-share figures have been adjusted for a 2-for-1 stock split effective Oct. 20.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21136004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sales increased 6% to $5.58 billion from $5.27 billion.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21136005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Earnings at the consumer-products giant were boosted by a gain of $125 million, or about 25 cents a share, stemming from last month's settlement of litigation with three of P&G's competitors over patents on P&G's Duncan Hines cookies.@@@@1@38@@oe@2-2-2013 21136006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Excluding the gain, P&G's earnings were close to analysts' predictions of about $1.40 a share for the quarter.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21136007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Wall Street had expected a modest rise in the company's domestic sales and earnings, and more substantial increases in overseas results.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21136008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@One factor helping sales and earnings was a 3% price rise for most P&G products, except coffee, analysts said.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21136009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Unit volume, or amount of products shipped, rose about 11% in the international segment, with P&G continuing to win market share in Japan's diaper and detergent markets.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21136010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Jay Freedman, analyst with Kidder, Peabody & Co., said P&G's Always sanitary napkin, sold under the Whisper name in Japan, has firmly established itself as a leading brand.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21136011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He figures P&G will expand its personal-care product line in Japan to "continue that momentum."@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21136012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@P&G's U.S. shipments were up just 1%, partly because the company decided to shift more promotions and sales for health and beauty products to the fiscal second quarter.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21136013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Hugh Zurkuhlen, analyst with Salomon Bros., predicts the shift will mean P&G's sales growth in the second quarter will be "in the double digits."@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21136014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Also slowing growth in the U.S. were lackluster results for P&G's cooking oils, which had a strong year-earlier first quarter.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21136015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Last year's drought in the Midwest prompted retailers to stock up on oils ahead of anticipated price increases, boosting sales for Crisco and Puritan oils, analysts said.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21136016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For fiscal 1990, analysts expect P&G's sales to continue to grow, with earnings climbing between 15% and 20%.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21136017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Lynne Hyman, vice president of equity research for First Boston Corp., expects P&G to post net of about $4.20 a share, on a post-split basis.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21136018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"But I'm recognizing there's a good chance they'll do a bit better than that," she says.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21136019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In fiscal 1989, P&G earned $3.56 a share, adjusted for the stock split.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21136020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@One big factor affecting the fiscal second half will be the new stewardship of Edwin L. Artzt, who becomes chairman and chief executive officer in January.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21136021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Because of his remarkable success turning around P&G's international operations, analysts have high hopes for his tenure.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21136022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"If he does to the domestic operations what he did internationally," says Mr. Zurkuhlen, "this company will earn $6 or $7 a share in a few years.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21137001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Voting Rights Act of 1965 was enacted to keep the promise of the Fifteenth Amendment and enable Southern blacks to go to the polls, unhindered by literacy tests and other exclusionary devices.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21137002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Twenty-five years later, the Voting Rights Act has been transformed by the courts and the Justice Department into a program of racial gerrymandering designed to increase the number of blacks and other minorities -- Hispanics, Asians and native Americans -- holding elective office.@@@@1@43@@oe@2-2-2013 21137003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In the 1980s, the Justice Department and lower federal courts that enforce the Voting Rights Act have required state legislatures and municipal governments to create the maximum number of "safe" minority election districts -- districts where minorities form between 65% and 80% of the voting population.@@@@1@46@@oe@2-2-2013 21137004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The program has even been called upon to create "safe" white electoral districts in municipalities where whites are the minority.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21137005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Although Section 2 of the act expressly disclaims requiring that minorities win a proportional share of elective offices, few municipal and state government plans achieve preclearance by the Justice Department or survive the scrutiny of the lower federal courts unless they carve out as many solidly minority districts as possible.@@@@1@50@@oe@2-2-2013 21137006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The new goal of the Voting Rights Act -- more minorities in political office -- is laudable.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21137007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For the political process to work, all citizens, regardless of race, must feel represented.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21137008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@One essential indicator that they are is that members of minority groups get elected to public office with reasonable frequency.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21137009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@As is, blacks constitute 12% of the population, but fewer than 2% of elected leaders.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21137010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But racial gerrymandering is not the best way to accomplish that essential goal.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21137011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It is a quick fix for a complex problem.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21137012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Far from promoting a commonality of interests among black, white, Hispanic and other minority voters, drawing the district lines according to race suggests that race is the voter's and the candidate's most important trait.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21137013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Such a policy implies that only a black politician can speak for a black person, and that only a white politician can govern on behalf of a white one.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21137014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Examples of the divisive effects of racial gerrymandering can be seen in two cities -- New York and Birmingham, Ala.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21137015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@When they reapportion their districts after the 1990 census, every other municipality and state in the country will face this issue.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21137016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@New York City:@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21137017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Racial gerrymandering has been a familiar policy in New York City since 1970, when Congress first amended the Voting Rights Act to expand its reach beyond the Southern states.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21137018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In 1972, the Justice Department required that the electoral map in the borough of Brooklyn be redrawn to concentrate black and Hispanic votes, despite protests that the new electoral boundaries would split a neighborhood of Hasidic Jews into two different districts.@@@@1@41@@oe@2-2-2013 21137019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@This year, a commission appointed by the mayor to revise New York's system of government completed a new charter, expanding the City Council to 51 from 35 members.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21137020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sometime in 1991, as soon as the 1990 census becomes available, a redistricting panel will redraw the City Council district lines.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21137021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Charter Revision Commission has made it clear that in response to the expectations of the Justice Department and the commission's own commitment to enhancing minority political leadership, the new district lines will be drawn to maximize the number of solidly minority districts.@@@@1@43@@oe@2-2-2013 21137022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Blacks and Hispanics currently make up 38% of the city's population and hold only 25% of the seats on the council.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21137023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Several of the city's black leaders, including Democratic mayoral nominee David Dinkins, have spoken out for racial gerrymandering to accord blacks and Hispanics "the fullest opportunity for representation."@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21137024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In this connection, it is important to note that several members of New York's sitting City Council represent heterogeneous districts that bring together sizable black, Hispanic, and non-Hispanic white populations -- Carolyn Maloney's 8th district in northern Manhattan and the south Bronx and Susan Alter's 25th district in Brooklyn, for example.@@@@1@51@@oe@2-2-2013 21137025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@To win their seats on the council, these political leaders have had to listen to all the voices in their district and devise public policies that would benefit all.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21137026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Often they have found that the relevant issue is not race, but rather housing, crime prevention or education.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21137027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Birmingham, Ala.:@@@@1@2@@oe@2-2-2013 21137028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The unusual situation in Birmingham vividly illustrates the divisive consequences of carving out safe districts for racial minorities.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21137029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In Birmingham, which is 57% black, whites are the minority.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21137030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Insisting that they are protected by the Voting Rights Act, a group of whites brought a federal suit in 1987 to demand that the city abandon at-large voting for the nine member City Council and create nine electoral districts, including four safe white districts.@@@@1@44@@oe@2-2-2013 21137031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The white group argued that whites were not fully and fairly represented, because in city-wide elections only black candidates or white candidates who catered to "black interests" could win.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21137032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@No federal court has ruled that the Voting Rights Act protects a white minority, but in June the Justice Department approved a districting plan for Birmingham that carves out three white-majority districts and six black-majority districts.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21137033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Richard Arrington, Birmingham's black mayor, lamented the consequences.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21137034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"In the past, people who had to run for office had to moderate their views because they couldn't afford to offend blacks or whites," he said.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21137035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Now you go to districts, you're likely to get candidates whose views are more extreme, white and black, on racial issues."@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21137036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Two hundred years ago, critics of the new United States Constitution warned that the electoral districts for Congress were too large and encompassed too many different economic interests.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21137037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A small farmer and a seaport merchant could not be represented by the same spokesman, they said.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21137038@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But James Madison refuted that argument in one of the most celebrated political treatises ever written, No. 10 of the Federalist Papers.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21137039@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Madison explained that a representative's duty was to speak not for the narrow interests of one group but instead for the common good.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21137040@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Large, heterogeneous election districts would encourage good government, said Madison, because a representative would be compelled to serve the interests of all his constituents and be servile to none.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21137041@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Madison's noble and unifying vision of the representative still can guide us.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21137042@unknown@formal@none@1@S@As long as we believe that all Americans, of every race and ethnic background, have common interests and can live together cooperatively, our political map should reflect our belief.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21137043@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Racial gerrymandering -- creating separate black and white districts -- says that we have discarded that belief in our ability to live together and govern ourselves as one people.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21137044@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Ms. McCaughey is a constitutional scholar at the Center for the Study of the Presidency in New York.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21138001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Justice Department has distributed these new guidelines for U.S. Attorneys prosecuting RICO cases.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21138002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A related editorial appears today.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21138003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Under {RICO}, the government may seek a temporary restraining order (TRO) upon the filing of a RICO indictment, in order to preserve all forfeitable assets until the trial is completed and judgment entered.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21138004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Such orders can have a wide-ranging impact on third parties who do business with the defendants, including clients, vendors, banks, investors, creditors, dependents, and others.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21138005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some highly publicized cases involving RICO TROs have been the subject of considerable criticism in the press, because of a perception that pre-trial freezing of assets is tantamount to a seizure of property without due process.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21138006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In order to ensure that the rights of all interested parties are protected, the Criminal Division has instituted the following requirements to control the use of TROs in RICO prosecutions.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21138007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@(It should be noted that these requirements are in addition to any other existing requirements, such as review by the Asset Forfeiture Office.):@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21138008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@1. As part of the approval process for RICO prosecutions, the prosecutor must submit any proposed forfeiture TRO for review by the Organized Crime and Racketeering Section.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21138009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The prosecutor must show that less-intrusive remedies (such as bonds) are not likely to preserve the assets for forfeiture in the event of a conviction.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21138010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@2. In seeking approval of a TRO, the prosecutor must articulate any anticipated impact that forfeiture and the TRO would have on innocent third parties, balanced against the government's need to preserve the assets.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21138011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@3. In deciding whether forfeiture (and, hence, a TRO) is appropriate, the Section will consider the nature and severity of the offense; the government's policy is not to seek the fullest forfeiture permissible under the law where that forfeiture would be disproportionate to the defendant's crime.@@@@1@46@@oe@2-2-2013 21138012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@4. When a RICO TRO is being sought, the prosecutor is required, at the earliest appropriate time, to state publicly that the government's request for a TRO, and eventual forfeiture, is made in full recognition of the rights of third parties -- that is, in requesting the TRO, the government will not seek to disrupt the normal, legitimate business activities of the defendant; will not seek through use of the relation-back doctrine to take from third parties assets legitimately transferred to them; will not seek to vitiate legitimate business transactions occurring between the defendant and third parties; and will, in all other respects, assist the court in ensuring that the rights of third parties are protected, through proceeding under {RICO} and otherwise.@@@@1@122@@oe@2-2-2013 21138013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Division expects that the prosecutor will announce these principles either at the time the indictment is returned or, at the latest, at the first proceeding before the court concerning the TRO.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21139001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sales of North American-built cars and trucks plunged 20.5% in mid-October from a year earlier, as domestic manufacturers paid the price for heavy incentives earlier this year.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21139002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"People are waiting for {new} factory giveaways," said Ben Kaye, sales manager of Bob Brest Auto World in Lynn, Mass., whose sales are slow.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21139003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@This trend appears to be especially true at General Motors Corp., which used both dealer and consumer incentives to ignite sales in August and September.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21139004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Since then, deliveries have slumped.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21139005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@GM's car sales dropped 24.8% in mid-October to 69,980, while truck sales fell 26% to 37,860.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21139006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@GM also had dismal results in the first 10 days of the month, while other auto makers reported mixed results.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21139007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@All of the Big Three suffered in the just-ended period, however, with sales of all domestically made cars, including those built at Japanese-managed plants, falling 19% to 158,863 from a year earlier.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21139008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The seasonal adjusted annual selling rate was six million vehicles, a small improvement from the 5.8 million rate of early October, but a big drop from the 7.1 million rate a year ago.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21139009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sales of domestically made trucks also continued to be sluggish in mid-October, dropping 22.8% to 94,543 from a year ago.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21139010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Big Three auto makers already have slashed fourth-quarter production plans 10.4% below year-ago levels, but that may not be enough to prevent inventories from ballooning if sales don't improve.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21139011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Industry analyst John H. Qualls, a vice president with Hill & Knowlton in St. Louis, forecasts that domestic auto makers will have a 93-day supply of cars at the end of the year, even if car sales improve to a 6.5 million vehicle rate for the quarter.@@@@1@47@@oe@2-2-2013 21139012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Ford Motor Co. reported a 21.2% drop in sales of domestic-made cars to 46,995 and a 24.2% drop in domestic trucks to 31,143.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21139013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The sales are being dragged down by a glut of 1989 vehicles, said Joel Pitcoff, a Ford analyst.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21139014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The earlier use of incentives depleted the market of "scavengers" for bargain-basement 1989 cars, he said.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21139015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Town & Country Ford in Charlotte, N.C., still needs to move about 850 1989 cars and trucks.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21139016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Business had been fairly strong until Hurricane Hugo hit the area, but has been down since.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21139017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Chrysler Corp. also hit the rocks in mid-October.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21139018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The No. 3 U.S. auto maker had a 23.7% plunge in car sales to 22,336 and a 17.5% drop in truck sales to 22,925, which include its minivans and Jeeps.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21139019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Honda Motor Co., which continues to have short supplies of domestically made Accords, saw its sales of North American-built cars fall 14.1% to 8,355.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21139020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But sales of domestic cars and trucks at Nissan Motor Corp. rose 26.1% to 5,651.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21139021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A Nissan spokesman attributed the increase to the use of incentives this year and not a year ago and to higher fleet sales.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21139022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Toyota Motor Corp., which opened a plant in Georgetown, Ky., last year, saw sales triple to 6,256 vehicles.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21139023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@a-Totals include only vehicle sales reported in the period.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21139024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@c-Domestic car@@@@1@2@@oe@2-2-2013 21139025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@d-Percent change greater than 999%.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21139026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@x-There were 9 selling days in the most recent period and 9 a year earlier.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21139027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Percentage differences based on daily sales rate rather than sales volume.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21140001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Short interest in Nasdaq over-the-counter stocks rose 6% as of mid-October, its biggest jump since 6.3% last April.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21140002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The most recent OTC short interest statistics were compiled Oct. 13, the day the Nasdaq composite index slid 3% and the New York Stock Exchange tumbled 7%.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21140003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The coincidence might lead to the conclusion that short-sellers bet heavily on that day that OTC stocks would decline further.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21140004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@As it happens, the Nasdaq composite did continue to fall for two days after the initial plunge.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21140005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@However, the short interest figures reported by brokerage and securities clearing firms to the National Association of Securities Dealers include only those trades completed, or settled, by Oct. 13, rather than trades that occurred on that day, according to Gene Finn, chief economist for the NASD.@@@@1@46@@oe@2-2-2013 21140006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Generally, it takes five business days to transfer stock and to take the other steps necessary to settle a trade.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21140007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The total short interest in Nasdaq stocks as of mid-October was 237.1 million shares, up from 223.7 million in September but well below the record level of 279 million shares established in July 1987.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21140008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The sharp rise in OTC short interest compares with the 4.2% decline in short interest on the New York Stock Exchange and the 3% rise on the American Stock Exchange during the September-October period.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21140009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Generally, a short seller expects a fall in a stock's price and aims to profit by selling borrowed shares that are to be replaced later; the short seller hopes the replacement shares bought later will cost less than those that were sold.@@@@1@42@@oe@2-2-2013 21140010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Short interest, which represents the number of shares borrowed and sold, but not yet replaced, can be a bad-expectations barometer for many stocks.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21140011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Among 2,412 of the largest OTC issues, short interest rose to 196.8 million shares, from 185.7 million in 2,379 stocks in September.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21140012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Big stocks with large short interest gains as of Oct. 13 included First Executive, Intel, Campeau and LIN Broadcasting.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21140013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Short interest in First Executive, an insurance issue, rose 55% to 3.8 million.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21140014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Intel's short interest jumped 42%, while Campeau's increased 62%.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21140015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Intel makes semiconductors and Campeau operates department-store chains and is strained for cash.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21140016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Meritor Savings again had the dubious honor of being the OTC stock with the biggest short interest position on Nasdaq.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21140017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Meritor has headed the list since May.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21140018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@First Executive and troubled Valley National Corp. of Arizona were next in line.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21140019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Short selling isn't necessarily bad for the overall market.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21140020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Shorted shares must eventually be replaced through buying.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21140021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In addition, changes in short interest in some stocks may be caused by arbitrage.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21140022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For example, an investor may seek to profit during some takeover situations by buying stock in one company involved and shorting the stock of the other.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21140023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Two big stocks involved in takeover activity saw their short interest surge.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21140024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Short interest in the American depositary receipts of Jaguar, the target of both Ford Motor and General Motors, more than doubled.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21140025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Nasdaq stocks that showed a drop in short interest included Adobe Systems, Class A shares of Tele-Communications and takeover targets Lyphomed and Jerrico.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21140026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The NASD, which operates the Nasdaq computer system on which 5,200 OTC issues trade, compiles short interest data in two categories: the approximately two-thirds, and generally biggest, Nasdaq stocks that trade on the National Market System; and the one-third, and generally smaller, Nasdaq stocks that aren't a part of the system.@@@@1@51@@oe@2-2-2013 21140027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Short interest in 1,327 non-NMS securities totaled 40.3 million shares, compared with almost 38 million shares in 1,310 issues in September.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21140028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The October short interest represents 1.04 days of average daily trading volume in the smaller stocks in the system for the reporting period, compared with 0.94 day a month ago.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21140029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Among bigger OTC stocks, the figures represent 2.05 days of average daily volume, compared with 2.14 days in September.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21140030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The adjacent tables show the issues in which a short interest position of at least 50,000 shares existed as of Oct. 13 or in which there was a short position change of at least 25,000 shares since Sept. 15 (see accompanying tables -- WSJ Oct. 25, 1989).@@@@1@47@@oe@2-2-2013 21141001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@From the Sept. 30-Oct. 4 issue of The Economist:@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21141002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@What defeated General Aoun was not only the weight of the Syrian army.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21141003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The weight of Lebanon's history was also against him; and it is a history Israel is in danger of repeating.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21141004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Like Lebanon, and however unfairly, Israel is regarded by the Arab world as a colonial aberration.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21141005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Its best hope of acceptance by its neighbours lies in reaching a settlement with the Palestinians.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21141006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Like Lebanon, Israel is being remade by demography.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21141007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In Greater Israel more than half the children under six are Muslims.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21141008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Within 25 years Jews will probably be the minority.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21141009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Yet Israel will neither share power with all these Arabs nor, says its present prime minister, redraw its borders closer to its pre-1967 Jewish heartland.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21141010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@By not choosing one of these options, Israelis will condemn themselves, as the Maronites did, to perpetual war with the Muslims in their midst, and so to the internal erosion of their state.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21141011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Unlike the Maronites, Israel's Jews will not let themselves become the weakest force in a system of private armies; Jerusalem will become Belfast before it becomes Beirut.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21141012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But that is not much of a consolation to draw from the failure of General Aoun.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21142001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Nasdaq over-the-counter market didn't fully recover from a selling stampede, and closed down 1.2%.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21142002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The effects on the market of the mostly computer-driven sell-off among exchange-listed stocks irked many market makers, who watched the Nasdaq Composite Index tumble in sympathy with the Dow Jones Industrial Average, and then saw it get left behind in the subsequent rally.@@@@1@43@@oe@2-2-2013 21142003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@After plummeting 1.8% at one point during the day, the composite rebounded a little, but finished down 5.52, at 461.70.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21142004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In contrast, the industrial average recovered almost completely from its skid and closed down 0.1%.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21142005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The New York Stock Exchange Composite was 0.4% lower for the day.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21142006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@As usual, the over-the-counter market's biggest technology stocks were hardest hit.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21142007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Microsoft, battered by profit taking in recent sessions, sank as much as 4; but it finished at 80 7/8, down 2 1/4 on volume of one million shares.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21142008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@MCI Communications, the most active issue, finished down 5/8 to 42 1/8.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21142009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@MCI traded as low as 41 3/8 during the session.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21142010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Other active stocks included Jaguar, whose American depositary receipts added 1/8 to 11 1/4.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21142011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Apple Computer improved 7/8 to 47 5/8; Intel slipped 1/4 to 33 1/4, and Valley National Corp. was up 1/8 to 15 1/8.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21142012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"The market started with several strikes against it," said Peter DaPuzzo, head of retail equity trading at Shearson Lehman Hutton, referring to news that the labor-management buy-out of UAL Corp. continued to unravel, and reports that the junk-bond market is disintegrating.@@@@1@41@@oe@2-2-2013 21142013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But the computer-guided selling in response to those developments dealt a serious blow to the over-the-counter market, Mr. DaPuzzo said.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21142014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Even though the over-the-counter market usually doesn't fall by as much as listed stocks during program-selling blitzes, he said, "when the market does recover, the damage is done and it leaves Nasdaq down more than the Big Board."@@@@1@38@@oe@2-2-2013 21142015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. DaPuzzo also complained that the sharp swings in stock prices lately is scaring away retail and foreign investors.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21142016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@While Shearson doesn't do computer-guided program trading for its own account, the firm does execute orders for clients involved in the buying and selling of shares tied to movements in certain stock indexes, Mr. DaPuzzo acknowledged.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21142017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The volatility inherent in program trading troubled other traders, too.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21142018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They don't like the risks they are forced to assume when prices swing so drastically.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21142019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Market makers are supposed to keep supplies of stocks on hand to maintain orderly trading when imbalances occur.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21142020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@That means that on days when prices are tumbling and sellers abound they must be willing to buy shares from sellers when no one else will.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21142021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In such an environment, a market maker can absorb huge losses.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21142022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But the recent volatility in stock prices caused by the program trading has made some market makers less willing to soak up the stocks that are for sale.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21142023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The market makers say they aren't comfortable carrying big positions in stocks because they realize prices can tumble quickly.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21142024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The situation makes it harder to buy and sell shares quickly, exacerbating the rise and fall in stock prices during program-dominated trading.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21142025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Groused Robert Antolini, head of over-the-counter trading at Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette: "It's making it tough for traders to make money."@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21142026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He said that when sell programs kick in, many traders believe that "there's no sense in sticking your nose out because you're an instant loser."@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21142027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Kinder-Care Learning Centers added 1/4 to 4 7/8 on 461,200 shares.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21142028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Lodestar Group said it will make a $6-a-share offer for the remaining Kinder-Care Learning Center common stock if it acquires a majority of the company's shares in a pending rights offering by Kinder-Care Learning Center's parent, Kinder-Care Inc.@@@@1@38@@oe@2-2-2013 21142029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Shares of KinderCare Inc. closed at 3 1/2, also up 1/4, on volume of 700,000.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21142030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Ohio Casualty dropped 2 1/8 to 49 1/2.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21142031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company posted third-quarter earnings of 95 cents a share, down from $1.26 a year earlier.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21142032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company estimated that losses from Hurricane Hugo reduced net income by 32 cents a share in the most recent quarter.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21142033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company said losses from the Oct. 17 earthquake in California haven't yet been determined, but that it provides earthquake coverage to about 1,400 properties in the stricken area.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21142034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Any quake-related losses will be reported in the fourth quarter, the company said.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21142035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@North Atlantic Industries jumped 1 to 5 3/4.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21142036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The electronics-instruments maker is to be acquired by Asset Management Associates for $7.25 a share.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21142037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@LIN Broadcasting slid 1 3/8 to 108 3/4, despite reporting third-quarter net of 46 cents a share, up from 39 cents the previous year.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21142038@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company said the latest quarter included about $3.4 million in special legal and financial advisory costs related to McCaw Cellular Communications' bid for the company and LIN's merger pact with BellSouth.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21142039@unknown@formal@none@1@S@McCaw was unchanged at 40.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21142040@unknown@formal@none@1@S@XL/Datacomp slid 2 1/4 to 16 1/2 amid continuing concerns about the company's contract negotiations with International Business Machines.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21142041@unknown@formal@none@1@S@IBM is reviewing its entire business-partners program, and XL/Datacomp confirmed earlier this month that it was in talks with the company about possible modifications to its current IBM-remarketer contract.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21142042@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Remarketers make modifications to IBM's computer hardware and resell the products.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21142043@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Omni Capital Group surged 1 3/4 to 16 1/4.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21142044@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company said net rose to 38 cents a share in its fiscal-first quarter ended Sept. 30, from 35 cents a shares a year ago.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21143001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Probably the most clear-cut Soviet violation, for example, is the Krasnoyarsk radar.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21143002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@-- "Arms Control Reality," Nov. 20, 1984, the first of some 20 Journal editorials saying that Krasnoyarsk violated the ABM treaty.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21143003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@-- "Whether the installation is for early warning or space track, it clearly is not deployed," the lawmakers said.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21143004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Thus we judge it to be not a violation of the ABM treaty at this time."@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21143005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The delegation included a reporter from the New York Times, aides to Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and Rep. Les AuCoin, and Natural Resources Defense Council staff members.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21143006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@-- The Washington Post, Sept. 9, 1987.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21143007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@-- The U.S.S.R. has taken unprecedented unilateral measures of openness, by giving American representatives a possibility to inspect the building site of the Krasnoyarsk radar as well as radar vans in the areas of Gomel and Moscow, so as to see for themselves that there are no violations of the ABM treaty of 1972 on the part of the Soviet Union.@@@@1@61@@oe@2-2-2013 21143008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@-- Letter from Eduard Shevardnadze to U.N. Secretary-General Perez de Cuellar, reported in Tass, June 10, 1988.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21143009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@-- The construction of this station equal in size to the Egyptian pyramids constituted, I say it directly, a clear violation of ABM.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21143010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@-- Eduard Shevardnadze, Oct. 23, 1989.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21143011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@We're happy, we guess, to receive confirmation of the Krasnoyarsk violation from the Soviets, five years after we started writing about it.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21143012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Perhaps even the American apologists will now accede.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21143013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Without question, something intriguing is going on in the policy chambers of the Politburo.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21143014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@As it bids for new agreements, new loans and indeed admission to the civilized world, the Soviet government has recognized it has a credibility problem.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21143015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@So after 70 years, it is confessing the obvious, hoping to be believed about other things.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21143016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It's not enough.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21143017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@If the Soviets want to be believed, they need to start telling the truth about more than the totally obvious.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21143018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Our own test of "glasnost's" authenticity would be a Soviet decision to open itself to a complete international examination of one of the most troubling mysteries in U.S.-Soviet relations -- the reported 1979 anthrax outbreak at a Soviet military facility in Sverdlovsk.@@@@1@42@@oe@2-2-2013 21143019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The U.S. government has never waivered in its assessment of this incident as an accident at a biological weapons facility there, and hence a violation of the 1972 Biological Weapons Convention.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21143020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Pentagon's recently issued "Soviet Military Power," though in general adopting a softer line, repeated the Sverdlovsk assessment.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21143021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It also was detailed in Congressional testimony this past February: An explosion at the Microbiology and Virology Institute in Sverdlovsk released anthrax germs that caused a significant number of deaths.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21143022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Since Mr. Shevardnadze did not address this topic before the Supreme Soviet, the Soviet Union's official position remains that the anthrax deaths were caused by tainted meat.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21143023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@We doubt this claim just as we doubted Mr. Shevardnadze's assurance last year that Krasnoyarsk didn't violate the ABM treaty.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21143024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And just as we did not believe the tendentious claims of the Congressmen and arms-control advocates who visited Krasnoyarsk, we are in no way persuaded by the assent to the tainted-meat theory by a U.S. team of scientists who met with Soviet counterparts in Washington last year.@@@@1@47@@oe@2-2-2013 21143025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Soviets' explanation is that the anthrax came from one lot of animal feed made from the bones of cattle that grazed on soil that was naturally infected with anthrax spores.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21143026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Harvard's Matthew Meselson -- who we read has sold something called the "scientific community" on the notion that "yellow rain" attacks on the Laotian Hmong were in fact the result of fecal showers by giant bees -- found the Soviet anthrax scenario "completely plausible."@@@@1@44@@oe@2-2-2013 21143027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@We don't believe it.@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21143028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And we certainly do not believe that Mr. Gorbachev or any of his emissaries yet deserve to have the West take their word for it.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21143029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sverdlovsk is a large gray cloud over glasnost and indeed over the legitimacy of the arms-control process itself.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21143030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The U.S. government's Sverdlovsk complaint, as with Krasnoyarsk, is no mere political posturing.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21143031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Biological weapons violations have figured little in political debate, and indeed have not been pressed vigorously enough by the U.S. government.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21143032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But the stated U.S. position is detailed and specific, and the prospect of biological warfare is profoundly chilling.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21143033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Soviets should be willing to set in motion a process that would allow them to acknowledge that Sverdlovsk violated the 1972 agreement or, alternatively, that would give U.S. specialists reasonable confidence that this was a wholly civilian accident.@@@@1@39@@oe@2-2-2013 21143034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Until that happens, glasnost cannot begin to deserve the kind of credibility Mr. Shevardnadze was bidding for with his confessions on Monday.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21144001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Manville Corp. said it offered to buy $500 million of its convertible preferred stock from the Manville Personal Injury Settlement Trust in a move that would improve the trust's liquidity and reduce the potential number of Manville shares outstanding.@@@@1@39@@oe@2-2-2013 21144002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Manville said it made the offer within the past several weeks as part of an effort to improve shareholder value.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21144003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It said it would purchase the stock at market price.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21144004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Manville and a spokeswoman for the trust said that the two are discussing the proposal but a decision hasn't been made.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21144005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"We are considering that offer along with all other alternatives," the trust spokeswoman said.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21144006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"We need to look at how to maximize our cash flow to pay our beneficiaries."@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21144007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The trust, created as part of Manville's bankruptcy-law reorganization to compensate victims of asbestos-related diseases, owns 7.2 million of the Series A convertible preferred shares, which are each convertible into 10 Manville common shares.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21144008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The trust also owns half of Manville's 48 million common shares outstanding.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21144009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Based on Manville's closing price yesterday of $9.25 a share, Manville's offer would purchase about 5.4 million of its preferred shares, or about 75% of the trust's preferred stock holding.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21144010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In addition to the stock and 20% of Manville's profits beginning in 1992, the trust is supposed to receive $2.5 billion over its 27-year life.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21144011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But it initially was funded with about $765 million and may soon face a cash crunch.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21144012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@As of June 30, it had settled about 15,000 of 81,000 claims filed and its unpaid claims totaled $136 million, a large portion of its $268 million in cash and marketable securities.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21144013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Since most of its assets are tied to Manville, a forest and building products concern, the trust might also want to diversify its holdings.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21144014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@As part of its offer, Manville said it requested changes in some covenants between it and the trust to allow Manville to "reflect a more typical corporate ownership and financial structure."@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21144015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A Manville spokesman wouldn't elaborate on the proposed changes.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21144016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But he said they are "to a large degree, housekeeping," although some may generate some disagreement.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21144017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Manville said the shares issued to the trust were intended to be sold, as needed, and that Manville has the right of first refusal to buy those shares.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21145001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Northeast Utilities raised its bid for Public Service Co. of New Hampshire, which is operating under Bankruptcy Code protection, to $2.25 billion from $1.85 billion.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21145002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Northeast's raised bid, which was supported by PS of New Hampshire's official shareholder committee, is a prelude to what is expected to be a round of higher bids by the other groups trying to acquire the company, the largest utility in New Hampshire.@@@@1@43@@oe@2-2-2013 21145003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The $2.25 billion value claimed by Northeast, based in Hartford, Conn., is the highest yet given to a bid.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21145004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some of the three other bidding groups are expected to increase their offers tomorrow, a date set for revised offers by a bankruptcy court judge.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21145005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A hearing is set for Nov. 15, but participants don't expect a resolution until July 1990.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21145006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Under the new Northeast Utilities plan, it would pay $1.65 billion in cash to creditors and assume $100 million in pollution control bonds.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21145007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Secured creditors would recover both principal and interest, while unsecured creditors would receive only principal and interest accrued before PS of New Hampshire filed for Bankruptcy Code protection in January@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21145008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The biggest change in Northeast's offer was in improvements made for equity holders who had been given short shrift previously.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21145009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Assuming full operation of the Seabrook nuclear power plant, which is completed but isn't yet operating, equity holders would receive up to $500 million in cash, preferred stock and new 10-year Seabrook bonds.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21145010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Northeast's previous offer had proposed that equity holders receive just $165 million.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21145011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In addition, Northeast promised the State of New Hampshire that rate increases would be limited to 5.5% annually for seven years.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21145012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Its previous proposal had conditioned rate limits on Seabrook operations and other contingencies.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21145013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Wilbur Ross, financial adviser to the equity holders said, "Given the state's strong bargaining position . . . we believe the NU plan provides the best recovery available" to PS of New Hampshire's equity holders.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21145014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Officials of PS of New Hampshire couldn't be reached for comment.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21145015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company has filed an internal reorganization plan it valued at $2.2 billion that would require 5.5% rate increases.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21145016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@That plan would leave existing preferred shareholders with at least a 41% stake and give common shareholders as little as 13%.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21145017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@New England Electric System, Westborough, Mass., has proposed buying the company for $2 billion as part of a plan that would require rate increases of only 4.8% annually for seven years.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21145018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The state of New Hampshire has favored that plan.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21145019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The other bidder is United Illuminating Co., New Haven, Conn., with a bid valued at $2.2 billion and and a proposal for seven years of 5.5% rate increases.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21146001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Polish rat will eat well this winter.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21146002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Tons of delectably rotting potatoes, barley and wheat will fill damp barns across the land as thousands of farmers turn the state's buyers away.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21146003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Many a piglet won't be born as a result, and many a ham will never hang in a butcher shop.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21146004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But with inflation raging, grain in the barn will still be a safer bet for the private farmer than money in the bank.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21146005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Once again, the indomitable peasant holds Poland's future in his hands.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21146006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Until his labor can produce a profit in this dying and distorted system, even Solidarity's sympathetic new government won't win him over.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21146007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In coming months, emergency food aid moving in from the West will be the one buffer between a meat-hungry public and a new political calamity.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21146008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Factory workers on strike knocked Poland's Communist bosses off balance last year; this year, it was the farmers who brought them down.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21146009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In June, farmers held onto meat, milk and grain, waiting for July's usual state-directed price rises.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21146010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Communists froze prices instead.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21146011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The farmers ran a boycott, and meat disappeared from the shops.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21146012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@On Aug. 1, the state tore up its controls, and food prices leaped.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21146013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Without buffer stocks, inflation exploded.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21146014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@That was when the tame old Peasants' Party, desperate to live through the crisis, broke ranks with the Communists and joined with Solidarity in the East Bloc's first liberated government.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21146015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But by the time Solidarity took office in September, the damage was done.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21146016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Shortageflation," as economists have come to call it, had gone hyper.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21146017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The cost of raising a pig kept bounding ahead of the return for selling one.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21146018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The farmers stayed angry.@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21146019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They still are.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21146020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@At dawn on a cool day, hundreds travel to the private market in Radzymin, a town not far from Warsaw, hauling pigs, cattle and sacks of feed that the state's official buyers can't induce them to sell.@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 21146021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Here, they are searching for a higher price.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21146022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In a crush of trucks and horse carts on the trodden field, Andrzej Latowski wrestles a screeching, overweight hog into the trunk of a private butcher's Polish Fiat.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21146023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Of course it's better to sell private," he says, as the butcher trundles away.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21146024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Why should anybody want to sell to them?"@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21146025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The young farmer makes money on the few hogs he sells here.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21146026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He won't for long, because his old state sources of rye and potatoes are drying up.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21146027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"There's no feed," he says.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21146028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"You can't buy anything nowadays.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21146029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@I don't know why."@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21146030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Edward Chojnowski does.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21146031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@His truck is parked across the field, in a row of grain sellers.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21146032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Like the others, it is loaded with rye, wheat and oats in sacks labeled "Asbestos. Made in U.S.S.R."@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21146033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The farmer at the next truck shouts, "Wheat!@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21146034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It's nice!@@@@1@2@@oe@2-2-2013 21146035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It won't be cheaper!@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21146036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@We sell direct!"@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21146037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A heavy, kerchiefed woman runs a handful through her fingers, and counts him out a pile of zlotys.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21146038@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Country people breed pigs," says Mr. Chojnowski, leaning against the back of his truck.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21146039@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"They can't buy feed from the state.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21146040@unknown@formal@none@1@S@There isn't enough.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21146041@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some state middlemen come to buy from me.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21146042@unknown@formal@none@1@S@I sell -- a little.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21146043@unknown@formal@none@1@S@I am waiting.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21146044@unknown@formal@none@1@S@I have plenty more at home."@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21146045@unknown@formal@none@1@S@On this morning, he doesn't sell much in Radzymin, either.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21146046@unknown@formal@none@1@S@At closing time, farmers cart out most of what they carted in.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21146047@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A private market like this just isn't big enough to absorb all that business.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21146048@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The hulk of Stalinism, it seems, will not quickly crumble away.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21146049@unknown@formal@none@1@S@State monopolies will keep on stifling trade, "free" prices or not, until something else replaces them.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21146050@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Polish agriculture will need a whole private network of procurement, processing and distribution -- plus a new manufacturing industry to supply it with tractors, pesticides, fertilizers and feed.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21146051@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Communists spent 40 years working to ensure that no such capitalistic structures ever arose here.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21146052@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Building them now will require undergirding from the West, and removal of political deadwood, a job that Solidarity has barely started.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21146053@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But Polish agriculture does possess one great asset already: the private farmer.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21146054@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"We are dealing with real entrepreneurs," says Antoni Leopold, an economist who advises Rural Solidarity, the union's countryside offshoot.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21146055@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"There are a lot of them, and they have property."@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21146056@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Polish peasants, spurning the collectivizers, were once a source of shame to orthodox Communists.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21146057@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Now, among Communist reformers, they are objects of envy.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21146058@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Food is the reformer's top priority, the key to popular support.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21146059@unknown@formal@none@1@S@As the Chinese have shown and the Soviets are learning, family farms thrive where collectives fail.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21146060@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Ownership, it seems, is the best fertilizer.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21146061@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Poles have had it all along.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21146062@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Poland's 2.7 million small private farms cover 76% of its arable land.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21146063@unknown@formal@none@1@S@On it, a quarter of the country's 39 million people produce three-quarters of its grain, beef, eggs and milk, and nine-tenths of its fruit, vegetables and potatoes.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21146064@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Like the Roman Catholic Church, the Polish peasant is a pillar of the nation.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21146065@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Try as they might, the Communists could neither replace nor break him.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21146066@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And they did try.@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21146067@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A few miles past Radzymin, a dirt road narrows to a track of sand and leads into Zalubice, a village of tumbledown farms.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21146068@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Czeslaw Pyszkiewicz owns 30 acres in 14 scattered scraps.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21146069@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He grows rye and potatoes for a few hens, five cows and 25 piglets.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21146070@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In patched pants and torn shoes, he stands in his barnyard eyeing the ground with a look both helpless and sardonic.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21146071@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"It's bad soil," he says.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21146072@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Until 1963, it was good soil.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21146073@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Then the state put in a reservoir to supply the area with drinking water.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21146074@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Farmers lay down before the bulldozers.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21146075@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Their protest was ignored.@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21146076@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The dam caused the water level to drop in Zalubice.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21146077@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr Pyszkiewicz smiles and his brow furrows.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21146078@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He expected as much.@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21146079@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In his lifetime, 47 years, the Communists brought electricity to his village and piped in drinking water from the reservoir.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21146080@unknown@formal@none@1@S@No phones.@@@@1@2@@oe@2-2-2013 21146081@unknown@formal@none@1@S@No gas.@@@@1@2@@oe@2-2-2013 21146082@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"We wanted them to build a road here," he says.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21146083@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"They started, and then abandoned it."@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21146084@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A tractor, his only mechanized equipment, stands in front of the pigsty.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21146085@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"It's Russian.@@@@1@2@@oe@2-2-2013 21146086@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Good for nothing.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21146087@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Parts are a tragedy.@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21146088@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Even if I had a lot of money, I couldn't buy what I need."@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21146089@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The farmer can say the same for coal, cement, saw blades.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21146090@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In Poland, only 4% of all investment goes toward making things farmers want; in the West, it is closer to 20%.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21146091@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The few big state farms take first crack at what does get made.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21146092@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They use 60% more fertilizer per acre, twice the high-grade feed.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21146093@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Yet their best boast is that they produce 32% of Polish pork.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21146094@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"I've heard from friends that state farms are subsidized," Mr. Pyszkiewicz says as his wife, Wieslawa, sets some chairs out in the sun.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21146095@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"We have one near here.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21146096@unknown@formal@none@1@S@There is a lot of waste.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21146097@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A private farmer never wastes anything."@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21146098@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The state quit shoving peasants onto its subsidized farms over 30 years ago.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21146099@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But it never did let up on the pressure.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21146100@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Until recently, a farmer with no heir had to will the state his land to collect his pension.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21146101@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The pension's size still depends on how much produce he sells the state.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21146102@unknown@formal@none@1@S@His allotment of materials also did, until the state couldn't hold up its end of that bargain.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21146103@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Yet the state alone sells seeds and machines.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21146104@unknown@formal@none@1@S@When supplies are short, it often hands them over only in exchange for milk or grain.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21146105@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A private farmer in Poland is free to buy and sell land, hire help, decide what to grow and how to grow it.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21146106@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He is free to invest in chickens, and to fail for lack of chicken wire.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21146107@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He has plenty of freedom -- but no choices.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21146108@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"I'm on my own land," Mr. Pyszkiewicz says.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21146109@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"I don't have to listen to what anybody tells me to do."@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21146110@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Sometimes," says his wife, "we're happy about that."@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21146111@unknown@formal@none@1@S@By starving the peasant, the Communists have starved Poland.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21146112@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Villages like Zalubice exist in a desert of poor schools and few doctors.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21146113@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Farm income is 15% below the average.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21146114@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The young leave, especially girls who won't milk cows by hand.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21146115@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some men stay, their best friend a bottle of vodka, but two million acres have gone fallow.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21146116@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Without machines, good farms can't get bigger.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21146117@unknown@formal@none@1@S@So the potato crop, once 47 million tons, is down to 35 million.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21146118@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Meat consumption is at 1979's level, pork production at 1973's, milk output at 1960's.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21146119@unknown@formal@none@1@S@If a food crisis undid the Communists, a food revolution will make Solidarity.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21146120@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The potential is displayed along every road into Warsaw: row upon row of greenhouses, stretching out behind modern mansions that trumpet their owners' wealth.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21146121@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Vegetables are abundant and full of flavor in Poland, the pickles and sauerkraut sublime, the state monopolies long broken.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21146122@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Grain, milk and meat come next.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21146123@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A private challenge to the monolithic tractor industry will take more time and money than Poland can spare, although a smokehouse or a local dairy can spring up fast.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21146124@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Poland makes no machinery for a plant on that scale.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21146125@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Solidarity wants it from the West.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21146126@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Maria Stolzman, one of its farm experts, lays it on the line: "The World Bank will be brought in to help us destroy the old system."@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21146127@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Felix Siemienas is destroying it now.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21146128@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He packs pork.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21146129@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A law went on the books in January that let him smoke bacon without breeding pigs.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21146130@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He cashed in.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21146131@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Poland is short on enterprises, not enterprise.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21146132@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"I pay a lot to the farmer and five times the state salary to my employees," he says.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21146133@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He is in Warsaw to open a shop.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21146134@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"I hire transportation, and my customers have fresh cold cuts every day.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21146135@unknown@formal@none@1@S@I don't subsidize anyone.@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21146136@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Everyone around me lives well.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21146137@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Yes, my prices are high.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21146138@unknown@formal@none@1@S@If nobody buys, I bring my prices down.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21146139@unknown@formal@none@1@S@That's the rule.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21146140@unknown@formal@none@1@S@That's the market."@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21146141@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Siemienas is making a fortune -- $10,000 a month, he says.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21146142@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He has bought some trendy Western clothes, and a green Mercedes with an American flag in the window.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21146143@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But the meat-processing machines he picked up are 50 years old.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21146144@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"I don't want expensive machines.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21146145@unknown@formal@none@1@S@If the situation changes, I'll get stuck with them."@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21146146@unknown@formal@none@1@S@That's politics.@@@@1@2@@oe@2-2-2013 21146147@unknown@formal@none@1@S@By taking power in a deal with the Peasant Party's onetime Communist stooges, Solidarity has spooked the rural entrepreneur.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21146148@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Rural Solidarity objected, to no avail, when Solidarity leader Lech Walesa accepted the Peasants' support.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21146149@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It objected again in September when Prime Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki reluctantly named a Peasant Party man as his agriculture minister.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21146150@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Both the Peasants and Rural Solidarity are forming new political parties for farmers.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21146151@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Peasants can make a credible case, against Solidarity, that hell-bent reform will drive millions from the land.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21146152@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Next Spring, the two will battle in local elections.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21146153@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But until then, and probably long afterward, the Communists' apparat of obstruction -- from the head of the dairy co-op to the village bank manager -- will stay planted in the Polish countryside.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21146154@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"We know how to get from capitalism to socialism," Sergiusz Niciporuk is saying one afternoon.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21146155@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"We don't know how to get from socialism to capitalism."@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21146156@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He farms 12 acres in Grabowiec, two miles from the Soviet border in one of Poland's poorest places.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21146157@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Now he is mounting the steps of a stucco building in a nearby village, on a visit to the Communist administrator, the "naczelnik."@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21146158@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Many people in Poland hope this government will break down," says Mr. Niciporuk, who belongs to the local council and to Rural Solidarity.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21146159@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"That's what the naczelnik counts on.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21146160@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He is our most dangerous enemy.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21146161@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Every time he sees me, he gets very nervous."@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21146162@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The farmer barges into the naczelnik's office.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21146163@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A thin man in a gray suit looks up from a newspaper.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21146164@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Niciporuk sits.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21146165@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Anatol Pawlowski's leg begins jiggling beneath his desk.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21146166@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Solidarity doesn't care for the good of this region," he says after a few pleasantries.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21146167@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"They want to turn everything upside down in a week.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21146168@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Niciporuk here wants 60 acres used at the moment by a state farm.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21146169@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He can't guarantee that he can use it any better."@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21146170@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"I am ready at any moment to compete with a state farm."@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21146171@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The naczelnik averts his eyes.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21146172@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"What have you got?@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21146173@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Not even a tractor.@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21146174@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And you want to make wicker baskets, too."@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21146175@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"I can do five things at once -- to be a businessman."@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21146176@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Big business," Mr. Pawlowski snorts in English.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21146177@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The farmer stands to go.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21146178@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The naczelnik stands, too.@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21146179@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"I care very much for this post," he says.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21146180@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Eight years I've had it.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21146181@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A cultural center has been built, shops.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21146182@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Suddenly, I am not a comfortable man for Solidarity.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21146183@unknown@formal@none@1@S@I have accomplished too much.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21146184@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They want to do more.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21146185@unknown@formal@none@1@S@I wish them all the best!"@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21146186@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The farmer leaves.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21146187@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And the naczelnik shuts his door.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21147001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The House approved a short-term spending bill to keep the government operating through Nov. 15 and provide $2.85 billion in emergency funds to assist in the recovery from Hurricane Hugo and the California earthquake.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21147002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The 321-99 roll call vote reflected broad support for the disaster assistance, but the cost to the Treasury is sure to aggravate budget pressures this year and next under the Gramm-Rudman deficit reduction law.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21147003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@By a lopsided 401-18 margin, the chamber rejected an effort to waive Gramm-Rudman for purposes of addressing the two disasters, and budget analysts estimate the increased appropriations will widen the fiscal 1990 deficit by at least $1.44 billion unless offsetting spending cuts or new revenues are found by Congress.@@@@1@49@@oe@2-2-2013 21147004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The budget impact will be greater still in fiscal 1991, and the issue forced a confrontation between the Appropriations Committee leadership and Budget Committee Chairman Leon Panetta, whose California district was at the center of the earthquake last week.@@@@1@39@@oe@2-2-2013 21147005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Going to the well of the chamber, Mr. Panetta demanded the costs be fully counted.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21147006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@His prominent role put him in the awkward position of challenging the very committee members on whom his state will be most dependent in the months ahead.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21147007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"We do not come to this House asking for any handout," said the California Democrat.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21147008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"We do not intend to hide these costs from the American people."@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21147009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The $2.85 billion package incorporates $500 million for low-interest disaster loans, $1 billion in highway construction funds, and $1.35 billion divided between general emergency assistance and a reserve to be available to President Bush to meet unanticipated costs from the two disasters.@@@@1@42@@oe@2-2-2013 21147010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The funds are in addition to $1.1 billion appropriated last month to assist in the recovery from Hugo, bringing the total for the two disasters to nearly $4 billion in unanticipated spending.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21147011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Because of the vagaries of Gramm-Rudman, the immediate impact is relatively small.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21147012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But the appropriations set in motion spending that adds to an already grim budget picture for fiscal 1991.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21147013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Within the appropriations process, the situation is even more difficult since the costs will be counted against the share of funds to be allocated to those subcommittees that recently have had the greatest difficulty in staying within the budget.@@@@1@39@@oe@2-2-2013 21147014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The underlying bill approved yesterday is required to keep the government operating past midnight tonight, and this urgency has contributed to the speed -- and, critics say, mistakes -- that have accompanied the package of disaster assistance.@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 21147015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The hastily drafted measure could hurt California by requiring it to put up more matching funds for emergency highway assistance than otherwise would be required.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21147016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And the state's delegation is fearful that the new funding will be counted against a separate $185 million in federal highway funds it would expect to receive under its normal allocation this year.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21147017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Also, the high price of San Francisco real estate puts the state at odds with federal regulations more attuned to the national average.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21147018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For example, disaster loans, which will go to small businesses and homeowners, offer credit as low as 4% in some cases.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21147019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But the San Francisco delegation finds itself asking that the cap per household be lifted to $500,000 from $100,000 to assist the hard hit but often wealthy Marina district.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21147020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Senate is expected to make some modifications today, but both the White House and Congress appear most anxious to speed final approval before tonight's deadline.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21147021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Administration pressure discourages any effort to add to total funding, and the Senate changes are expected to be largely technical -- dealing with highway aid and lifting the ceiling on total Small Business Administration loans to $1.8 billion to accommodate the increased activity expected.@@@@1@44@@oe@2-2-2013 21147022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Yesterday's floor action came as a House-Senate conference approved a nearly $8.5 billion fiscal 1990 military construction bill, representing a 5% reduction from last year and making severe cuts from Pentagon requests for installations abroad.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21147023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@An estimated $25.8 million is allocated to continue work in Oman.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21147024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But all funding is cut for the Philippines, and projects in South Korea are cut to $13.6 million, or less than a sixth of the administration's request.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21147025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Closer to home, the negotiators were more generous.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21147026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@An estimated $38.9 million was set aside for military installations in the home state of North Carolina Rep. W.G. Hefner, the House chairman.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21147027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And $70.2 million would go to projects in Tennessee represented by his Senate counterpart and fellow Democrat, Sen. James Sasser.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21147028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Texas and California are traditionally powerful within the conference, but equally striking is the dominance of Alaska, Pennsylvania and West Virginia because of their power elsewhere in the appropriations process.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21147029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Robert Byrd (D., W.Va.) even added report language listing $49.4 million in projects he wants in the budget next year.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21147030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@No individual illustrated this mix of power more yesterday than Sen. Daniel Inouye (D., Hawaii), who chairs the Senate defense subcommittee.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21147031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In the final trading, the House was insistent on setting aside $500 million to carry out base closings ordered to begin in fiscal 1990.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21147032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But it gave ground to Mr. Inouye on a number of projects, ranging from a $11 million parking garage here, to a land transfer in Hawaii, to a provision to assist the Makwah Indian Tribe in Washington state.@@@@1@38@@oe@2-2-2013 21147033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The tribe is one of the poorest in the Pacific Northwest.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21147034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Inouye, who chairs the select committee on Indian Affairs, used his power to move $400,000 from the Air Force to the Bureau of Indian Affairs to assist in renovating a decommissoned base to accommodate a drug and alcohol rehabilitation center.@@@@1@41@@oe@2-2-2013 21147035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Meanwhile, House-Senate negotiators have tentatively agreed on a $3.18 billion anti-drug and anti-crime intitiative, cutting other federal spending 0.43% to pay for it.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21147036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A formal House-Senate conference is expected to ratify the accord later this week.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21148001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mobil Corp. is preparing to slash the size of its work force in the U.S., possibly as soon as next month, say individuals familiar with the company's strategy.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21148002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The size of the cuts isn't known, but they'll be centered in the exploration and production division, which is responsible for locating oil reserves, drilling wells and pumping crude oil and natural gas.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21148003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Employees haven't yet been notified.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21148004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sources said that meetings to discuss the staff reductions have been scheduled for Friday at Mobil offices in New Orleans and Denver.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21148005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@This would be a second round of cuts by Mobil, which along with other oil producers and refiners reduced its work force by 15% to 20% during the mid-1980s as part of an industrywide shakeout.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21148006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mobil's latest move could signal the beginning of further reductions by other oil companies in their domestic oil-producing operations.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21148007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In yesterday's third-quarter earnings report, the company alluded to a $40 million provision for restructuring costs involving U.S. exploration and production operations.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21148008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The report says that "the restructuring will take place over a two-year period and will principally involve the transfer and termination of employees in our U.S. operations."@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21148009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A company spokesman, reached at his home last night, would only say that there will be a public announcement of the reduction program by the end of the week.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21148010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Most oil companies, including Mobil, have been reporting lower third-quarter earnings, largely as a result of lower earnings from chemicals as well as refining and marketing businesses.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21148011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Individuals familiar with Mobil's strategy say that Mobil is reducing its U.S. work force because of declining U.S. output.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21148012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Yesterday, Mobil said domestic exploration and production operations had a $16 million loss in the third quarter, while comparable foreign operations earned $234 million.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21148013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Industrywide, oil production in this country fell by 500,000 barrels a day to 7.7 million barrels in the first eight months of this year.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21148014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Daily output is expected to decline by at least another 500,000 barrels next year.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21148015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some Mobil executives were dismayed that a reference to the cutbacks was included in the earnings report before workers were notified.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21148016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@One Mobil executive said that the $40 million charge related to the action indicates "a substantial" number of people will be involved.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21148017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some will likely be offered severance packages while others will be transferred to overseas operations.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21149001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Justice Department is in the process of trying to gain control over a law that federal Judge David Sentelle recently called a "monster."@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21149002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Needless to say, he was talking about RICO.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21149003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@With its recently revised guidelines for RICO, Justice makes it clear that the law currently holds too many incentives for abuse by prosecutors.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21149004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The text of the "new policy" guidelines from the Criminal Division are reprinted nearby.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21149005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They strongly suggest that Justice's prosecutions of Drexel Burnham Lambert, Michael Milken and Princeton/Newport violated notions of fundamental fairness.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21149006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Justice is attempting to avoid a replay of these tactics.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21149007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@This amounts to an extraordinary repudiation of the tenure of New York mayoral candidate and former U.S. Attorney Rudolph Giuliani, who was more inclined to gathering scalps than understanding markets.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21149008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The new guidelines limit the pretrial forfeitures of assets of RICOed defendants and their investors, clients, bankers and others.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21149009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@This follows earlier new guidelines from the Tax Division prohibiting Princeton/Newport-like tax cases from masquerading as RICO cases.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21149010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The forfeiture memo cited "considerable criticism in the press, because of a perception that pre-trial freezing of assets is tantamount to a seizure of property without due process."@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21149011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It told prosecutors not to seek forfeitures if there are "less intrusive" alternatives, such as bonds, and in any case not to seek forfeitures "disproportionate to the defendant's crime."@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21149012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@These changes come a tad late for Princeton/Newport, the first RICOed securities firm.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21149013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It was forced into liquidation before trial when investors yanked their funds after the government demanded a huge pre-trial asset forfeiture.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21149014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Princeton/Newport investors, including McKinsey & Co. and the Harvard endowment, made the rational decision to withdraw their money; for the firm, the liquidation was sentence first, verdict later.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21149015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Prosecutors wanted $23.8 million in forfeiture for alleged tax fraud of some $400,000.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21149016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The experience of Princeton/Newport and initiation of other RICO-forfeiture cases against legitimate businesses taught Drexel that a RICOed investment bank would be an ex-investment bank.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21149017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Drexel therefore agreed instead to an arrangement allowing it to plea to charges "which the company is not in a position to dispute" because of RICO.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21149018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Part of Drexel's plea was to cut Mr. Milken loose.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21149019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@So after all the prosecutorial hoopla no one has established what, if anything, Drexel did wrong.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21149020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@So two cheers for the new rules.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21149021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Justice has finally recognized its employees' abuses, thanks largely to the demands for reform by former U.S. attorney in Washington Joseph diGenova, who wants to salvage RICO for real criminals.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21149022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But prosecutorial guidelines are effective only if someone at Justice is willing and able to supervise hyperactive prosecutors.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21149023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Judge Sentelle, of the appeals court in Washington, made this point at a Cato Institute conference last week in a remarkable speech titled, "RICO: The Monster That Ate Jurisprudence."@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21149024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He said ours is supposed to be "a government of laws not of men," and yet RICO defenders "tell us that we should rely on prosecutorial discretion to protect against overbreadth of RICO."@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21149025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@No prosecutorial guidelines, observed or unobserved, limit civil RICO cases by plaintiffs for damages.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21149026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@What now for Princeton/Newport officials, Drexel and Mr. Milken?@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21149027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Justice should review these cases to see what other prosecutorial abuses may have occurred.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21149028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@We suspect that Justice will some day agree that only the complete repeal of RICO can guarantee an end to injustices in its name.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21150001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"The Famous Teddy Z," which CBS Inc. had hoped would emerge as one of the few bright spots in its otherwise lackluster prime-time schedule, isn't turning out to be the hit the network envisaged.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21150002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Although the half-hour situation comedy seen Mondays at 9:30 p.m. Eastern and Pacific time isn't a candidate for cancellation, it is slated for fine-tuning and by next week the network may announce "Teddy Z" is moving to 8:30 p.m. from its 9:30 time slot, replacing "The People Next Door," which became the first network show to be canceled this season.@@@@1@60@@oe@2-2-2013 21150003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Teddy Z," which centers on a mailroom clerk-turned agent at a Hollywood talent agency, was scheduled in the coveted 9:30 p.m. slot to follow "Murphy Brown," a situation comedy about a television news magazine, starring Candice Bergen.@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 21150004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Teddy Z" was boosted by favorable reviews and a network-wide promotional tie-in contest with K mart Corp.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21150005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It was promoted on cable services, including MTV, Nick at Night and VH-1, and premiered as the No. 22-rated show for the week.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21150006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But five weeks after the premiere, the series has floundered.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21150007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In figures released yesterday by A.C. Nielsen Co. "Teddy Z," produced by the television unit of Columbia Pictures Entertainment Inc., was in 37th place.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21150008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Worse, every week it suffers audience drop-off from "Murphy Brown" and viewership on CBS picks up again once "Teddy Z" is over and is followed by "Designing Women."@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21150009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"There is strong indication that `Teddy Z' is not compatible with the shows it is surrounding," said John Sisk, senior vice president at J. Walter Thompson Co., a unit of WPP Group PLC.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21150010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Last week, "Murphy Brown" was viewed by 14.1% of the available television households, while the number dropped to 12.6% for "Teddy Z" and rose to 14.2% for "Designing Women."@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21150011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@CBS executives said the program is also slated to undergo some plot changes.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21150012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Creator Hugh Wilson, for example, included the lead character's Greek family in the cast, "but that is not the right focus anymore," said one CBS executive.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21150013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Instead, CBS hopes the show will increasingly highlight the talent agency and the business of being an agent.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21150014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"We're making adjustments on the show, yes, but nothing radical," said Craig Nelson, the story consultant on "Teddy Z."@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21150015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"But we hope to keep a balance between the office and the family."@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21150016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The opening credits are being redone, Mr. Nelson said, "to make Teddy's situation clear to viewers who have not been with us since the beginning.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21150017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Those viewers find the show confusing.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21151001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The stock market's woes spooked currency traders but prompted a quiet little party among bond investors.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21151002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Prices of long-term Treasury bonds moved inversely to the stock market as investors sought safety amid growing evidence the economy is weakening.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21151003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But the shaky economic outlook and the volatile stock market forced the dollar lower against major currencies.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21151004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The bond market got an early boost from the opening-hour sell-off in stocks.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21151005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@That rout was triggered by UAL Corp.'s announcement late Monday that the proposed management-labor buy-out had collapsed.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21151006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The 80-point decline in the Dow Jones Industrial Average during the morning trading session touched off a flight to safety that saw investors shifting assets from stocks to Treasury bonds.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21151007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@At its strongest, the Treasury's benchmark 30-year bond rose more than a point, or more than $10 for each $1,000 face amount.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21151008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@As the stock market recovered some of its losses later in the day, bond prices retreated.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21151009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But analysts said the combination of a second consecutive decline in monthly durable-goods orders and lackluster mid-October auto sales helped prop up the Treasury market.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21151010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A slowing economy and the implication of lower inflation and interest rates tend to bolster bond prices.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21151011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@On the surface, the decline in September durable goods -- only 0.1% -- didn't appear very weak.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21151012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But orders for non-defense capital goods, a precursor of future plant and equipment spending, were off 5.6% after falling 10.3% in August.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21151013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Auto makers reported that mid-October sales were running at an annual rate of about 5.8 million units, far less than the 6.6 million units analysts had expected.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21151014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Taken together, the auto-sales and durable-goods reports confirmed perceptions that the economy is bogging down.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21151015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Although analysts don't expect the Federal Reserve to ease credit policy soon, reports like those yesterday help build the case for lower rates.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21151016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Now bond investors are looking toward next week's report from national purchasing managers and the government's October employment report as potentially prompting the Fed to lower rates.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21151017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The stock market's precipitous drop frightened foreign investors, who quickly bid the dollar lower.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21151018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But as stock prices recovered some of the early losses, so did the U.S. currency.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21151019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Although dealers said investors are becoming more bearish toward the dollar in the wake of the stock market's recent troubles and as the U.S. economy weakens, the dollar ended down only modestly.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21151020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In major market activity: Bond prices rose.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21151021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Treasury's benchmark 30-year bond gained nearly half a point, or about $5 for each $1,000 face amount.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21151022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The yield on the issue slipped to 7.89%.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21151023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The dollar retreated.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21151024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In late New York trading the currency was quoted at 1.8355 marks and 141.45 yen, compared with 1.8470 marks and 141.90 yen Monday.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21152001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous" may be visiting some new venues in the near future.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21152002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Judge Robert ("Maximum Bob") Potter sentenced Jim Bakker to 45 years in the big house yesterday, while a Beverly Hills judge tucked away Zsa Zsa Gabor for three days, plus 120 hours of work with homeless women.@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 21152003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Miss Gabor recanted her earlier-expressed fear of jailhouse lesbians.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21152004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Bakker said he was guilty of sin but not fraud.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21152005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@We can only wonder who will be the next lost soul chosen to be America's Celebrity Convict.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21153001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Boeing Co. said Trans European Airways ordered a dozen 737 jetliners valued at a total of about $450 million.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21153002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The 300 and 400 series aircraft will be powered by engines jointly produced by General Electric Co. and Snecma of France.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21153003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Currently, Boeing has a backlog of about $80 billion, but production has been slowed by a strike of 55,000 machinists, which entered its 22nd day today.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21153004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Last week, a mediator failed to rekindle talks between the company and the strikers, who have rejected a pay raise offer of 10% over three years.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21154001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@When the good fairy assigned to Slovakia hovered over the cradle of Edita Gruberova many years ago in Bratislava, she sprinkled her with high E flats, sparkling Ds, clean trills, and coloratura ornaments silvery as magic dust.@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 21154002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Maybe she could drop by at the Metropolitan Opera and bring along what she forgot, a little charm, a few smidgins of thespian skills and a nice wig.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21154003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Cast as Violetta Valery in a new production of Verdi's "La Traviata," Ms. Gruberova last week did many things nicely and others not so well.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21154004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It isn't every day that we hear a Violetta who can sing the first act's high-flying music with all the little notes perfectly pitched and neatly stitched together.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21154005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Never once did she gasp for air or mop her brow.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21154006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@She was as cool as a cucumber.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21154007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But as you may know, things are not going well for Violetta.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21154008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@There are times when she must show a little emotion.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21154009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@She has TB, after all, and a weak-kneed lover; and though a successful courtesan, she is just about overdrawn at the bank.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21154010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Worse, her walls move all the time -- at least in this production.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21154011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Just when Ms. Gruberova sat down away from her guests to cough in private, her salon began sliding around the stage; her country hideaway also has a very active set of drapes.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21154012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Hold on to those funny braids! you wanted to caution her as the sets started to roll around once more.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21154013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@This is the most moving "Traviata" I've ever seen.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21154014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Normally, Violetta can go about her business without wondering whether she is moving as gracefully as the scenery.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21154015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But this is a production designed and directed by Franco Zeffirelli and paid for by Sybil Harrington, who has no need to count her pennies, unlike Violetta, down to 20 louis at the opera's end.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21154016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Seeing all those millions in action, I was just so relieved that Ms. Gruberova, gawky thing that she is, didn't accidentally smother herself in a drape.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21154017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Large and lavish, "Traviata" is another addition to the Met's growing stock of cast-proof productions mostly by Mr. Zeffirelli.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21154018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They have a life of their own and can be counted on to look good and perform whenever a cast isn't up to either.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21154019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@If a strike ever hits the Met, the company can still sell tickets to his "Boheme" and "Turandot" and boom out recordings (of another era).@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21154020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Last week's discerning audience gave a bigger hand to a greenhouse than to the tenor Neil Shicoff, who sang an aria inside it.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21154021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Inexplicably costumed as a rabbinical student, tottering around on lifts, Mr. Shicoff hardly seemed the fellow to catch a fancy cocotte's eye.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21154022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@I wish he could wear lifts in his voice.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21154023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Not nearly in his best form, the tenor made dullish sounds along with his usual clumsy hand gestures.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21154024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Maybe Mr. Z. was too busy taming his set to work with his naturally ungainly Alfredo.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21154025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Or is it that Mr. Z. is getting a little tired of "Traviata"?@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21154026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@This is the same production already seen in Paris and Florence, and its scenic ideas echo the movie he made with Placido Domingo and Teresa Stratas.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21154027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Decades earlier, Maria Callas sang the Dallas staging that introduced the flashback idea.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21154028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In an invention that drives Verdi purists bananas, Violetta lies dying in bed during the prelude, rising deliriously when then she remembers the great parties she used to throw.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21154029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The entire opera is her dream.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21154030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Given the prelude's thematic connections with the music preceding the last act, the idea is more worn than bad, though as luck would have it, for a change there actually was a conductor in the pit whom we wanted to hear, Carlos Kleiber, trying to make memorable music while we all waited for the bed lump to stir into song.@@@@1@60@@oe@2-2-2013 21154031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Once she did so, the big-souled German maestro with the shaky nerves who so often cancels offered a limpid, flowing performance that in its unswagged and unswaggering approach was totally at odds with the staging.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21154032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Of heart-pounding moments there were nearly none, and whether this has to do with Mr. Kleiber or the wooden cast is hard to say.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21154033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In any event, Ms. Gruberova barely ventilated Violetta's anguish in her long meeting with Wolfgang Brendel, who as Germont seemed fairly desperate trying to inject an Italianate lilt into his heavy, teutonic baritone.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21154034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Di Provenza" wasn't much of an advertisement for sunny, southern France.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21154035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Perhaps Mr. Kleiber could let him substitute one of the songs about dead children and dark nights from Mahler's "Kindertotenlieder."@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21154036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Speaking of dark nights, the Met's next-door neighbor, the New York City Opera, has canceled its season after failing to reach a settlement with its musicians, who wanted pay parity with the the Chicago Lyric and San Francisco Opera orchestras.@@@@1@40@@oe@2-2-2013 21154037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Well, they can now go and audition there.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21154038@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Good luck.@@@@1@2@@oe@2-2-2013 21154039@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Common sense suggests that people who play for a company that charges about half what those houses do for a ticket are not in the same market.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21154040@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The cancellation bodes poorly for a company already beset with an identity crisis exacerbated by the retirement of general director Beverly Sills and the amazing appointment of Christopher Keene as her successor after his years of feckless toiling in the pit.@@@@1@41@@oe@2-2-2013 21154041@unknown@formal@none@1@S@As the Met discovered years ago following a belated December opening, it is nearly impossible to recapture subscribers once they have had time to ponder their entertainment choices.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21154042@unknown@formal@none@1@S@I, for instance, was perfectly happy at Avery Fisher Hall the other day listening to Helmuth Rilling conduct the Messa per Rossini, a strange piece written by 13 different Italian composers to honor Rossini after his death in 1868.@@@@1@39@@oe@2-2-2013 21154043@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Each of them contributed a section at the behest of Verdi, who was nearly driven to his own early grave by the troublesome arrangements.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21154044@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For all that, the piece landed unperformed in a dusty archive after Bologna refused to supply a chorus and orchestra.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21154045@unknown@formal@none@1@S@We know Verdi's own contribution was mighty impressive since the operatic "Libera me" was reworked for the Manzoni Requiem, of which he wrote every note himself having learned his lesson.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21154046@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The surprising discovery of the evening at Fisher was the high standard achieved by some of his now-obscure colleagues, notably Raimondo Boucheron.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21154047@unknown@formal@none@1@S@His melodious "Confutatis" was smoothly sung by bass Brian Matthews.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21154048@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Also, Teodulo Mabellini's "Lux aeterna" was intriguingly scored and splendidly put across by Mr. Rilling.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21154049@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He brought along his Stuttgart-based Gaechinger Kantorei chorus, and even better, the Czech soprano Gabriela Benackova.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21154050@unknown@formal@none@1@S@She was in her most radiant, expressive voice.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21154051@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Maybe she could step across the plaza to the Met -- where she has still to make her debut -- and help out her Czech compatriot by singing the slow parts of "Traviata."@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21154052@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Tokyo International Film Festival was no match for the Cannes Film Festival in terms of prestige, but it made its mark: It awarded the largest cash prize of any film festival to young and first-time film makers.@@@@1@38@@oe@2-2-2013 21154053@unknown@formal@none@1@S@At this year's event, the third since the festival got under way in 1985, Idrissa Ouedraogo of Burkina Faso won the Sakura Gold prize of $143,000 for "Yaaba" ("Old Woman").@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21154054@unknown@formal@none@1@S@By comparison, Cannes now gives $39,000 to the winner of its young director's award.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21154055@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Says director George Miller ("Mad Max"): "I think the Tokyo festival may become known as a major attraction for young directors because of the money as well as the recognition."@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21154056@unknown@formal@none@1@S@There are drawbacks.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21154057@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Vincent Tolentino, a correspondent for the French magazine Telerama, says of the recently ended Tokyo festival: "No one makes deals . . . and most of the films have been seen before at other festivals."@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21154058@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Belgium decided that investors who demand the delivery of their securities when they buy shares or domestic bonds will have to pay an additional 100 Belgian francs (about $2.60) for each transaction, bringing the total fee to 200 francs.@@@@1@39@@oe@2-2-2013 21154059@unknown@formal@none@1@S@While no figures exist, it is thought that many small investors in Belgium store securities privately, in some cases to avoid paying high inheritance taxes.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21154060@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The law could redound to the advantage of brokers and banks, who incur high administrative costs to deliver securities to investors.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21154061@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Japan is considering giving aid to Hungary and Poland to support their recent political reforms, a spokesman for the Foreign Ministry said.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21154062@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"This is the first time, if we decide to do so, for Japan to extend aid of this kind to Eastern European countries," the spokesman said.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21154063@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He said Prime Minister Toshiki Kaifu also is studying the possibility of a visit to the two Eastern bloc nations and to Western Europe next January.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21154064@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Drugs were a major issue in two days of talks between French President Francois Mitterrand and Spanish Prime Minister Felipe Gonzalez.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21154065@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"I demand the utmost severity in the fight against drug traffickers," President Mitterrand said after the meeting in Valladolid, Spain.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21154066@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He added: "Banks must open their books."@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21154067@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The leaders' talks coincided with a meeting in Madrid of anti-drug experts from the U.S., France, Italy, Spain, Peru, Bolivia and Colombia.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21154068@unknown@formal@none@1@S@That conference, which began yesterday, was expected to cover such matters as police training and extradition agreements, Spanish officials said.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21154069@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Three Soviet government officials -- the ministers of railroads, of foreign economic relations and of heavy-machine building -- will visit Tehran next month for talks, Iran's official news agency reported.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21154070@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Under an agreement signed last June, the Soviets will help Iran in oil exploration and other areas in return for exports of Iranian natural gas.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21154071@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And in Paris, Mahmoud Vaezi, Iran's vice minister of foreign affairs, began a five-day visit to discuss such matters as compensation to French enterprises for contracts broken by the Khomeini regime.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21154072@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Toto Co., a Japanese ceramics maker, has developed a toilet that can check the user's health.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21154073@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A Toto spokesman said the toilet not only tests blood pressure, pulse and urine, it also stores the data for up to 130 days.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21154074@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Nippon Telegraph & Telephone Corp. and Omron Tateisi Electronics are involved with Toto's new product, which will go on the market in about two years time.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21154075@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"It will be very expensive," the spokesman warned.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21154076@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"The price cannot be less than $7,000."@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21154077@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Since Mexican President Carlos Salinas de Gortari took office last December, special agents have arrested more than 6,000 federal employees on charges ranging from extortion to tax evasion.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21154078@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Hector Castaneda Jimenez, chief prosecutor at the Attorney General's Office, said that an estimated $82.8 million in government property and unpaid taxes have been recovered in the campaign to root out official corruption.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21154079@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Castaneda's office will reportedly issue warrants during the next six months for the arrest of another 10,000 federal employees.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21154080@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Those employees are suspected of illegally gaining an estimated $376.8 million, the prosecutor was quoted as saying by the Excelsior news service.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21154081@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He added that federal agents hope to recover at least half that amount.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21154082@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"The rest will probably not be recoverable either because the statute of limitations expired or because many prefer to spend additional time in jail rather than return the money," the prosecutor said.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21154083@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The United Nations, which is distributing farm tools to returning refugees in Namibia, is rethinking a plan to hand out machetes because of the tense political climate during preparations for independence from South Africa.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21154084@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"The decision to distribute machetes at this time, which could be used as weapons, is under review," said a U.N. spokesman. . . .@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21154085@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sources close to the family of Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto said she is expecting a second child, probably early next year.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21155001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Cray Research Inc. forecast that 1990 will be a no-growth year for its supercomputer line.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21155002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In what has become a series of bad-news announcements, the world's largest maker of supercomputers said that after reviewing its order prospects, "we have concluded it is prudent to plan for next year on the assumption that revenue again will be flat."@@@@1@42@@oe@2-2-2013 21155003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Cray jolted the market in July when it slashed revenue and earnings projections for this year, citing a slowing economy that has delayed orders from government as well as commercial customers.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21155004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company made its 1990 projection -- an unusual event for Cray -- in announcing improved net income for the third quarter.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21155005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Cray said it earned $30.6 million, or $1.04 a share, up 35% from $22.6 million, or 73 cents a share, a year ago.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21155006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Revenue gained 45% to $210.2 million from $145.2 million.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21155007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For the nine months, earnings totaled $36.6 million, or $1.24 a share, down 46% from $68.1 million, or $2.19 a share, a year earlier.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21155008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Revenue was $454.6 million, a 6.9% gain from $425.4 million.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21155009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Cray made its announcement after the stock market closed.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21155010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In New York Stock Exchange composite trading yesterday, Cray closed down $1.125 at $34.25.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21155011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Cray said its order backlog at Sept. 30 was $315 million, down $25 million from June 30.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21155012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Marcello Gumucio, president, said the company "did well in the quarter as far as revenues and earnings are concerned, and not quite as well in terms of signing orders."@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21155013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@As for the current period, Mr. Gumucio said, "We anticipate that fourth-quarter revenue and earnings will be substantially greater than any of the preceding three quarters, but not up to the record levels of last year's fourth quarter" when Cray earned $88.5 million, or $2.80 a share.@@@@1@47@@oe@2-2-2013 21155014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He added that the company expects "strong" operating profit for the year, "but at a level significantly lower than last year."@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21155015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He said 1989's net income could be 11% to 13% of revenue, which, assuming current expectations, would be 40% to 45% below 1988's level.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21155016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Last year, Cray earned $156.6 million, or $4.99 a share, on revenue of $756.3 million.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21155017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Next year "looks dismal," said analyst Paul Luber of Robert Baird & Co., Milwaukee.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21155018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Noting that Cray doesn't have a low-end supercomputer to compete with the likes of Convex Computer Corp. and International Business Machines Corp., Mr. Luber said such a machine would be necessary "to get things back on line here."@@@@1@38@@oe@2-2-2013 21155019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Cray has indicated it will decide on whether to build such a machine before year end.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21156001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Johnson & Johnson reported a 10% rise in third-quarter net income on a 12% sales increase-results that were driven particularly by new products including pharmaceuticals and the company's professional operations.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21156002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Net for the New Brunswick, N.J., maker of health-care products climbed to $265 million, or 80 cents a share, from $240 million, or 71 cents a share, in the year-earlier period.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21156003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sales rose to $2.45 billion from $2.2 billion.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21156004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The year-ago per-share earnings are adjusted to reflect a 2-for-1 stock split last May.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21156005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In a statement, Ralph S. Larsen, chairman and chief executive officer, said the company was pleased with its third-quarter sales performance, "especially in light of the extremely competitive environment in domestic consumer markets and the negative impact of unfavorable exchange rates this quarter."@@@@1@43@@oe@2-2-2013 21156006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@David J. Lothson, an industry analyst for PaineWebber Group Inc., said Johnson & Johnson's results slightly exceeded his expectations for the third quarter.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21156007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In New York Stock Exchange composite trading yesterday, Johnson & Johnson shares fell 37.5 cents to $54.625.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21156008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Larsen noted "substantial sales growth" for the recently introduced Acuvue disposable contact lens and Hismanal, a once-a-day antihistamine.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21156009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Eprex, used by dialysis patients who are anemic, and Prepulsid, a gastro-intestinal drug, did well overseas, he said.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21156010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Despite health-care cost controls and programs to hold down inventory, the professional division, which makes products including sutures and surgical stapling equipment, "achieved solid growth," Johnson & Johnson said.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21156011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But domestic consumer sales slipped 1.2% for the quarter, to $490 million from $496 million.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21156012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company cited softness in the retail health and beauty aids category, "as well as the intense competition in the company's sanitary protection product line."@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21156013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Overseas sales were stronger, principally because of a rebound in Brazil, where economic turmoil had hurt year-earlier results, Johnson & Johnson said.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21156014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Lothson of PaineWebber said the company's sales pace has been picking up largely because the effect of unfavorable exchange rates has been easing -- a pattern continuing this quarter.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21156015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He cautioned, however, that a "tough tax-rate comparison" may slow the company's earnings growth for the current quarter.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21156016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For last year's fourth quarter, the company's tax rate was less than 20%, he said.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21156017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@While the third period contained no major surprises, Mr. Lothson said, the results show how sensitive the multinationals can be to developments in a single country such as Brazil.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21156018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He also questioned whether recent gains in that country can be sustained.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21156019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The following issues were recently filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission:@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21156020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Bergen Brunswig Corp., proposed offering of liquid yield option notes, via Merrill Lynch Capital Markets.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21156021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Columbia Gas System Inc., shelf offering of up to $200 million of debentures.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21156022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Laserscope, initial offering of 1,656,870 common shares, of which 1,455,000 shares are to be sold by the company and 201,870 by holders, via Alex. Brown & Sons Inc. and Volpe, Covington & Welty.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21156023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@TeleVideo Systems Inc., proposed offering of 1,853,735 common shares, to be sold by holders.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21156024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Western Gas System Inc., initial offering of 3,250,000 common shares, of which 3,040,000 shares will be sold by the company and 210,000 by a holder, via Prudential-Bache Capital Funding, Smith Barney, Harris Upham & Co. and Hanifen, Imhoff Inc.@@@@1@39@@oe@2-2-2013 21157001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Insiders have been selling shares in Dun & Bradstreet Corp., the huge credit-information concern.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21157002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Six top executives at the New York-based company sold shares in August and September.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21157003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Four of those insiders sold more than half their holdings.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21157004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The stock, in New York Stock Exchange composite trading yesterday, closed at $51.75, up 62.5 cents, well below the $56.13 to $60 a share the insiders received for their shares.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21157005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Much of the recent slide in Dun & Bradstreet's stock came late last week, after negative comments by analysts at Merrill Lynch & Co. and Goldman, Sachs & Co.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21157006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A company spokesman declined to comment and said that the officials who sold shares wouldn't comment.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21157007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@One of Dun & Bradstreet's chief businesses is compiling reports that rate the credit-worthiness of millions of American companies.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21157008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It also owns Moody's Investors Service, which assigns credit-ratings to bonds and preferred stock; A.C. Nielsen, known for its data on television-viewing patterns, and Yellow-pages publisher Donnelley.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21157009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Last March, this newspaper reported on widespread allegations that the company misled many customers into purchasing more credit-data services than needed.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21157010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In June, the company agreed to settle for $18 million several lawsuits related to its sales practices, without admitting or denying the charges.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21157011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@An investigation by U.S. Postal inspectors is continuing.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21157012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Among the insider sales, Charles Raikes, the firm's general counsel, sold 12,281 shares in August, representing 46% of his holdings in the company.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21157013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He received $724,579 for the shares, according to insider filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21157014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@John C. Holt, an executive vice president and Dun & Bradstreet director, sold 10,000 shares on Aug. 31 for $588,800, filings show.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21157015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He retains 9,232 shares.@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21157016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@William H.J. Buchanan, the firm's secretary and associate general counsel, sold 7,000 shares in two separate sales in September for $406,000.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21157017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The shares represented 66% of his Dun & Bradstreet holdings, according to the company.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21157018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The other insiders, all senior or executive vice presidents, sold between 2,520 and 6,881 shares, representing between 8% and 70% of their holdings, according to SEC filings.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21157019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Dun & Bradstreet's stock price began its recent spiral downward last Wednesday, when the company reported third-quarter results.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21157020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Net income rose to 83 cents a share from 72 cents a share the year-earlier period.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21157021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But analysts focused more on the drop in revenue, to $1.04 billion from $1.07 billion, reflecting in part a continuing drop in sales of the controversial credit-reporting services.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21157022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Last Thursday, Merrill Lynch securities analyst Peter Falco downgraded his investment rating on the firm, according to Dow Jones Professional Investors Report, citing a slowdown in the credit-reporting business.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21157023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He cut his rating to a short-term hold from above-average performer and reduced his 1990 earnings estimate.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21157024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Falco continues to rank the stock a longterm buy.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21157025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The stock slid $1.875 on more than four times average daily volume.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21157026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The stock received another blow on Friday, when Goldman Sachs analyst Eric Philo advised that investors with short-term horizons should avoid Dun & Bradstreet stock because it is unlikely to outperform the market.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21157027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The stock fell 75 cents.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21157028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Insider selling is not unusual at Dun & Bradstreet; in fact, the recent pace of selling is just about average for the company, according to figures compiled by Invest/Net, a North Miami, Fla., firm that specializes in tracking and analyzing SEC insider filings.@@@@1@43@@oe@2-2-2013 21157029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But previous sales have often been sales of shares purchased through the exercise of stock options and sold six months later, as soon as allowed, said Robert Gabele, president of Invest/Net.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21157030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The most recent sales don't appear to be option-related, he said.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21157031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@TASTY PROFITS:@@@@1@2@@oe@2-2-2013 21157032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Michael A. Miles, chief executive officer of Philip Morris Cos.' Kraft General Foods unit, bought 6,000 shares of the company on Sept. 22 for $157 each.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21157033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The $942,000 purchase raised his holdings to 74,000 shares.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21157034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The stock split four-for-one on Oct. 10.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21157035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Miles's newly purchased shares are now worth $1,068,000, based on Philip Morris's closing price of $44.50, up 62.5 cents, in composite trading on the New York Stock Exchange yesterday.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21157036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A spokesman for Mr. Miles said he bought the shares because he felt they were "a good investment."@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21157037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The executive made his purchases shortly before being named to his current chief executive officer's position; formerly he was Kraft General Foods' chief operating officer.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21157038@unknown@formal@none@1@S@SHEDDING GLITTER:@@@@1@2@@oe@2-2-2013 21157039@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Two directors of Pegasus Gold Inc., a Spokane, Wash., precious-metals mining firm, sold most of their holdings in the company Aug. 31.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21157040@unknown@formal@none@1@S@John J. Crabb sold 4,500 shares for $11.13 each, leaving himself with a stake of 500 shares.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21157041@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He received $50,085.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21157042@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Peter Kutney sold 5,000 shares, all of his holdings, for $11.38 a share, or $56,900.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21157043@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Gary Straub, corporate counsel for the company, said the directors sold for "personal financial reasons."@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21157044@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Both insiders declined to comment.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21157045@unknown@formal@none@1@S@On Wall Street, Merrill Lynch & Co. analyst Daniel A. Roling rates the stock "neutral" and Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc. lists it as a "buy."@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21157046@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Pegasus Gold "has been on a lot of recommended lists as a junior growth company stepping into the big leagues," says Marty McNeill, metals analyst at Dominick & Dominick, a New York investment firm.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21157047@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"It's a good company, and growing; there's nothing that would warrant that it be sold."@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21157048@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Yesterday, in composite trading on the American Stock Exchange, Pegasus closed at $10.125, up 12.5 cents.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21158001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Medieval philosophers used to hold the sensible belief that it was more perfect to exist than not to exist, and that to exist as a matter of necessity was most perfect of all.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21158002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Now, only God exists as a matter of absolute necessity; it is built into His nature.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21158003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But since the time of Darwin, we humans could at least claim a sort of natural necessity for the existence of our species.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21158004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Aren't we, after all, the inevitable culmination of that stately pageant called evolution?@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21158005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@If mutation and natural selection slowly but surely give rise to more and more advanced forms of life, then it was only a matter of eons before splendid beings endowed with reason, self-awareness and taste shimmered onto the scene.@@@@1@39@@oe@2-2-2013 21158006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Now along comes Stephen Jay Gould to dash this flattering illusion.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21158007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@His credentials are excellent for the task.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21158008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Star lecturer at Harvard, author of numerous popular books on science, and scourge of the creationist lobby, Mr. Gould is perhaps the world's most eminent evolutionary theorist.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21158009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Yet he puts quite a twist on the old story handed down from Darwin.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21158010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For him, natural history is anything but a gradual, predictable march from primordial slime to human consciousness; it is a careening, chaotic affair in which the emergence of a featherless biped was a one-in-a-million shot.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21158011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In "Wonderful Life: The Burgess Shale and the Nature of History" (Norton, 326 pages, $19.95), Mr. Gould makes his case for "the awesome improbability of human evolution."@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21158012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The argument turns on the discovery in 1909 of an amazing fossil quarry high in the Canadian Rockies called the Burgess Shale.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21158013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Here, in an area smaller than a city block, lay buried traces of countless weird creatures that had frolicked more than 500 million years ago -- creatures whose anatomical variety far exceeded what can be found in all the world's oceans today.@@@@1@42@@oe@2-2-2013 21158014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Such an embarrassment of riches was inconceivable to the man who discovered the Burgess Shale, one Charles Doolittle Walcott.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21158015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The received Darwinian wisdom of the day said that animals living so long ago must be simple in design, limited in scope and ancestral to contemporary species.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21158016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Accordingly, the hidebound traditionalist reconstructed hypothetical organisms from the Burgess fossils in such a way that they could be shoehorned into familiar categories.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21158017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It was not until the early 1970s that Cambridge Prof. Harry Whittington and two sharp graduate students began to publish a reinterpretation of the Burgess Shale.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21158018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@By making clever inferences about how the squashed and distorted fossil remains corresponded to three-dimensional structures, this trio was able to piece together a series of wondrous beasties quite unlike anything currently on the planet.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21158019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@One was so fantastic in appearance, it was dubbed Hallucigenia.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21158020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Would that Mr. Gould's minute descriptions of these creatures was always so colorful.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21158021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A good deal of the book is boring, particularly the endless allusions to high and pop culture and the frequent jokes festooning the text.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21158022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@These turns do not provide sufficient relief from sentences like, "Most modern chelicerates have six uniramous appendages on the prosoma."@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21158023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Interest picks up, though, when Mr. Gould gets around to discussing the meaning of the Burgess oddities for the theory of evolution.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21158024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Not long after the appearance of life, evidently, there was an explosive proliferation in the number of animal designs seen on the earth.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21158025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The vast majority of them, however, were wiped out by a succession of environmental upheavals that were too sudden and catastrophic for the normal rules of natural selection to operate.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21158026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Consequently, the winnowing process was like a lottery "in which each group {held} a ticket unrelated to its anatomical virtues.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21158027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@" So much for survival of the fittest.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21158028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@So much, too, for the notion that we humans triumphed in the Darwinian struggle by evolving big brains.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21158029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Our mammalian forerunners lucked out through the extraterrestrial impact that did in the dinosaurs because they were small, not smart.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21158030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@If anyone has difficulty imagining a world in which history went merrily on without us, Mr. Gould sketches several.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21158031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In one, birds are the dominant carnivores; in another the seas abound with "little penises."@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21158032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Back when the Burgess fauna were flourishing, it seems, human evolutionary hopes hung on the survival of a little worm with a backbone called Pikaia.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21158033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Gould finds this oddly exhilarating; like an existentialist of old, he views our contingency as "a source of both freedom and consequent moral responsibility."@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21158034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@I, by contrast, cannot help feeling that if some other curiosity from the Burgess Shale had survived instead, beings at once wiser and less boorish than Homo sapiens might have eventually gained earthly dominion.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21158035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But even if no conscious life had evolved here at all, the universe is a big place, and given the right conditions, sympathetic to creating some form of life.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21158036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Surely at some other cosmic address a Gouldoid creature would have risen out of the ooze to explain why, paleontologically speaking, "it is, indeed, a wonderful life."@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21158037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Holt is a columnist for the Literary Review in London.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21159001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Justice Department scrambled to play down the significance of its new guidelines concerning prosecutions under the federal racketeering law.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21159002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The guidelines were distributed to U.S. attorneys last summer but were disclosed for the first time by press reports this week.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21159003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They discourage prosecutors, under certain circumstances, from seeking court orders seizing the assets of racketeering defendants prior to trial.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21159004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But David Runkel, chief Justice Department spokesman, said the guidelines "are a codification and a clarification far more than a new direction."@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21159005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Use of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations law against white-collar defendants, as opposed to alleged organized-crime figures, has come under attack from some defense lawyers and legal scholars.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21159006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Critics have complained that the law unfairly strips defendants of assets before a jury determines they have committed a crime and that aggressive use of the forfeiture provisions can ruin corporate defendants or force them into unfavorable plea bargains.@@@@1@39@@oe@2-2-2013 21159007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In the new guidelines, the Justice Department says that in attempting to freeze disputed assets before trial, "the government will not seek to disrupt the normal, legitimate business activities of the defendant" and "will not seek. . .to take from third parties assets legitimately transferred to them."@@@@1@47@@oe@2-2-2013 21159008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The guidelines also state, "The government's policy is not to seek the fullest forfeiture permissible under the law where that forfeiture would be disproportionate to the defendant's crime."@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21159009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Another provision clarifies certain limits on when prosecutors may use tax-fraud charges as a basis for bringing a racketeering case.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21159010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Runkel declined to speculate on whether the guidelines would curb racketeering prosecutions against corporate defendants.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21159011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"The impact, if there is any, will be impossible to judge ahead of time because the decision whether to use {racketeering charges} is made in individual cases" by Justice Department officials in Washington, he said.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21159012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In a memorandum describing the guidelines, Assistant Attorney General Edward Dennis Jr. said that government efforts to freeze defendants' assets pending racketeering prosecutions "have been the subject of considerable criticism in the press."@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21159013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But Mr. Runkel said the government isn't "backing off on these kinds of matters at all.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21160001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@California legislators, searching for ways to pay for the $4 billion to $6 billion in damages from last week's earthquake, are laying the groundwork for a temporary increase in the state's sales tax.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21160002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The talk of a sales tax rise follows a rebuff from Congress on the question of how much the federal government is willing to spend to aid in California's earthquake relief efforts.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21160003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The state had sought as much as $4.1 billion in relief, but yesterday the House approved a more general scaled-back measure calling for $2.85 billion in aid, the bulk of which would go to California, with an unspecified amount going to regions affected by Hurricane Hugo.@@@@1@46@@oe@2-2-2013 21160004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@That leaves the state roughly $2 billion to $4 billion short.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21160005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A sales tax increase appears to be the fastest and easiest to raise funds in a hurry.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21160006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@According to the state department of finance, a one-penny increase in the state's six-cent per dollar sales tax could raise $3 billion.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21160007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Willie Brown, speaker of California's Assembly, said that Gov. George Deukmejian has agreed to schedule a special session of the legislature within two weeks.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21160008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@California's so-called Gann limit effectively prevents the state from spending new tax money and so drastically limits its options in an emergency.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21160009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Both Mr. Brown, the state's most influential legislator, and Gov. Deukmejian favor a temporary sales tax increase -- should more money be needed than the state can raise from existing sources and the federal government.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21160010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@According to a spokesman, the governor is also studying the possibility of raising state gasoline taxes.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21160011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Brown, meanwhile, believes "only one tax will be feasible, and it will be a one-penny sales tax increase," said Chuck Dalldorf, an aide.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21160012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@One immediate source of money is an emergency fund set up by Gov. Deukmejian.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21160013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The fund has about $1 billion and is set up to handle "precisely the kind of emergency" the state faces, said Tom Beermann, the Governor's deputy press secretary.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21160014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But the fund's size is disputed by Mr. Brown's office, which estimates the fund holds from $630 million to $800 million.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21160015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Moreover, an aide to Mr. Brown said Gov. Deukmejian "has expressed a desire not to spend all the reserve on this."@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21160016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@To push through a sales tax increase, however, the state will have to suspend the Gann limit, citing an emergency.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21160017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And then it will be required to lower taxes by a corresponding amount during a three-year period after the temporary tax increase ends, said Cindy Katz, assistant director of the state department of finance.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21160018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A sales tax increase would require two-thirds approval in both houses of the state's legislature.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21160019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But observers expect broad support.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21160020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"If there's an emergency and there aren't sufficient funds from elsewhere, I think the attitude will be supportive," said Kirk West, president of the California Chamber of Commerce.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21160021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But others think property owners ought to pay a higher portion of the state's earthquake relief tab.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21160022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Since the late 1970s, California property owners have benefited from a tax rollback as a result of a state ballot initiative known as Proposition 13.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21160023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The state could also increase gasoline taxes; every one penny increase in the tax would yield $11 million a month.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21160024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But Gov. Deukmejian and others are reluctant to do anything to harm the state's chances of sharply raising gasoline taxes on a permanent basis.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21160025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@To raise more highway funds, a measure to double the state's nine-cent a gallon tax over five years is set to appear on the state's June election ballot.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21160026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But some fear imposing a temporary gasoline tax increase in the meantime could undercut support among voters for the measure.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21160027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Not everyone is convinced the state must raise new revenue to meet its earthquake needs.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21160028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"It's possible, though not probable," that the state could get by with its existing resources and federal help, said Quentin Kopp, chairman of the state senate's transportation committee.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21160029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Separately, two men injured in last week's earthquake-triggered freeway collapse in Oakland began a legal battle against the state over whether officials adequately heeded warnings about the structure's safety.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21160030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The claims, which were filed with the State Board of Control but will probably end up in court, are the first arising out of the collapse of the so-called Cypress structure viaduct.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21160031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The men can defeat immunities that states often assert in court by showing that officials knew or should have known that design of the structure was defective and that they failed to make reasonable changes.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21160032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A Board of Control spokesman said the board had not seen the claim and declined to comment.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21161001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The following were among yesterday's offerings and pricings in the U.S. and non-U.S. capital markets, with terms and syndicate manager, as compiled by Dow Jones Capital Markets Report:@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21161002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Exxon Capital Corp. -- $200 million of 8 1/4% notes due Nov. 1, 1999, priced at 99.60 to yield 8.31%.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21161003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The notes, which are noncallable, were priced at a spread of 45 basis points above the Treasury's 10-year note.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21161004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Rated triple-A by both Moody's Investors Service Inc. and Standard & Poor's Corp., the issue will be sold through Salomon Brothers Inc.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21161005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Citicorp -- $200 million of 8 3/4% notes due Nov. 1, 1996, priced at 99.64 to yield 8.82%.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21161006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The noncallable issue was priced at a spread of 98 basis points above the Treasury's seven-year note.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21161007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Rated single-A-1 by Moody's and double-A by S&P, the issue will be sold through Salomon Brothers.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21161008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Boatmen's Bancshares Inc. -- $150 million of 9 1/4% subordinated notes due Nov. 1, 2001, priced at 99.821 to yield 9.275%.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21161009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The noncallable issue was priced at a spread of 140 basis points above the Treasury's 10-year note.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21161010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Rated single-A-3 by Moody's and single-A-minus by S&P, the issue will be sold through underwriters led by Morgan Stanley & Co.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21161011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Xerox Corp. -- $150 million of 8 3/4% notes due Nov. 1, 1995, priced at 99.555 to yield 8.85%.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21161012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The noncallable issue was priced to yield 105 basis points above the Treasury's fiveyear note.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21161013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Rated single-A-2 by Moody's and single-A-plus by S&P, the issue will be sold through underwriters led by Salomon Brothers.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21161014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@American General Finance Corp. -- $150 million of 8.45% notes due Oct. 15, 2009, through Bear, Stearns & Co., being offered at a price of 99.661 to yield 8.50%.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21161015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The noncallable issue, which has a one-time put Oct. 15, 1999, was priced at a spread of 66 basis points above the Treasury's 10-year note.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21161016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The issue is rated single-A-1 by Moody's and single-A-plus by S&P.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21161017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Baltimore Gas & Electric Co. -- $100 million of first and refunding mortgage bonds, due Oct. 15, 1999, through Shearson Lehman Hutton Inc., offered at par to yield 8.40%.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21161018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The noncallable issue is rated double-A-3 by Moody's and double-A-minus by S&P.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21161019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It was priced at a spread of 55 basis points above the Treasury's 10-year note.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21161020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Massachusetts -- $230 million of general obligation bonds, consolidated loan of 1989, Series D, due 1990-2009, through a Goldman, Sachs & Co. group.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21161021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The insured bonds, rated triple-A by Moody's and S&P, were priced to yield from 6.00% in 1990 to 7.20% in 2009.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21161022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Broward County School District, Fla. -- $185 million of school district general obligation bonds, Series 1989, due 1991-1999 and 2008, tentatively priced by a First Boston Corp. group to yield from 6.20% in 1991 to 7.30% in 2008.@@@@1@38@@oe@2-2-2013 21161023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@There are $120.7 million of 7 1/8% term bonds due 2008, priced to yield 7.30%.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21161024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Serial bonds are priced to yield to 7% in 1999.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21161025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The bonds are rated single-A-1 by Moody's and double-A-minus by S&P.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21161026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Culver City Redevelopment Financing Authority, Calif. -- $145 million of revenue bonds, Series 1989, tentatively priced by a Stone & Youngberg group.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21161027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The issue includes $100 million of insured senior lien bonds.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21161028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@These consist of current interest bonds due 1990-2002, 2010 and 2015, and capital appreciation bonds due 2003 and 2004, tentatively priced to yield from 5.75% in 1990 to 7.14% in 2010.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21161029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Bonds due 2003, 2004 and 2015 aren't being formally reoffered.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21161030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@There are also $40 million of uninsured subordinate lien bonds, due Dec. 1, 2008, and Dec. 1, 2015.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21161031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@There are $15,015,000 of 7 1/2% bonds priced at par and due 2008 and $24,985,000 of 7.6% bonds priced at par and due 2015.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21161032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The insured bonds are rated triple-A by Moody's and S&P.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21161033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The uninsured subordinate lien bonds aren't rated, according to the lead underwriter.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21161034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@West Virginia Parkways, Economic Development and Tourism Authority -- $143 million of parkway revenue bonds, Series 1989, with current interest bonds due 1990-2002 and 2019 and capital appreciation bonds due 2003-2008, tentatively priced by a PaineWebber Inc. group to yield from 6% in 1990 to 7.31% in 2019.@@@@1@48@@oe@2-2-2013 21161035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@There are $86,525,000 of 7 1/8% bonds priced at 97 3/4 to yield 7.31% in 2019.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21161036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Current interest serial bonds are tentatively priced to yield to 7.05% in 2002.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21161037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Capital appreciation bonds are priced to yield to maturity from 7.10% in 2003 to 7.25% in 2007 and 2008.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21161038@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The bonds are insured and rated triple-A by Moody's and S&P.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21161039@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Connecticut Housing Finance Authority -- $132.8 million of housing mortgage revenue bonds priced by a PaineWebber Inc. group.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21161040@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The $82.8 million of Series B bonds, which aren't subject to the alternative minimum tax, were priced at par to yield from 6.85% in 2000 to 7.20% in 2009.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21161041@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Meanwhile, the $50 million of Series C bonds, which are suject to the alternative minimum tax, were priced at par to yield from 6.25% in 1990 to 7.10% to 2000.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21161042@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The issue is expected to receive a double-A rating from Moody's, the underwriter said.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21161043@unknown@formal@none@1@S@An S&P rating of double-A-plus has already been confirmed.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21161044@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Montgomery County, Md. -- $75 million of general obligation, Series B, consolidated public improvement bonds of 1989, through a Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co. group.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21161045@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The bonds, rated triple-A by Moody's and S&P, were priced to yield from 5.75% in 1990 to 6.90% in 2006 to 2009.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21161046@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. -- $500 million of Remic mortgage securities being offered by Prudential-Bache Capital Funding Inc.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21161047@unknown@formal@none@1@S@There were no details available on the pricing of the issue, Freddie Mac's Series 108.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21161048@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The issue is backed by Freddie Mac 8 1/2% securities.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21161049@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Hanwa Co. (Japan) -- Two-part, $800 million issue of bonds due Nov. 9, 1994, with equity-purchase warrants, indicating a 4 3/8% coupon at par.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21161050@unknown@formal@none@1@S@European portion of $700 million via Yamaichi International Europe Ltd.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21161051@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Asian portion of $100 million via Yamatane Securities Europe Ltd.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21161052@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Each $5,000 bond carries one warrant, exercisable from Nov. 28, 1989, through Oct. 26, 1994, to buy shares at an expected premium of 2 1/2% to the closing share price when terms are fixed Oct. 26.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21161053@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Japan Storage Battery Co. -- $100 million of bonds due Nov. 9, 1993, with equity-purchase warrants, indicating a 3 7/8% coupon at par via Nikko Securities Co. (Europe) Ltd.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21161054@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Guaranteed by Mitsubishi Bank Ltd.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21161055@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Each $5,000 bond carries one warrant, exercisable from Nov. 27, 1989, through Oct. 26, 1993, to buy shares at an expected premium of 2 1/2% to the closing share price when terms are fixed Nov. 1.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21161056@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sanraku Inc. (Japan) -- $100 million of bonds due Nov. 9, 1993, with equity-purchase warrants, indicating a 3 7/8% coupon at par, via Nomura International.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21161057@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Guaranteed by Dai-Ichi Kangyo Bank Ltd.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21161058@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Each $5,000 bond carries one warrant, exercisable from Nov. 21, 1989, through Oct. 19, 1993, to buy shares at an expected premium of 2 1/2% to the closing share price when terms are fixed Oct. 31.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21161059@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Nippon Signal Co. (Japan) -- 80 million marks of bonds with equity-purchase warrants, indicating a 1 1/2% coupon, due Nov. 9, 1994, and priced at par, via Commerzbank.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21161060@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Guaranteed by Fuji Bank.@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21161061@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Each 5,000 mark bond carries one warrant and one certificate for four warrants, exercisable from Dec. 18, 1989, to Oct. 26, 1994, to buy shares at an expected premium of 2 1/2% above the closing share price when prices are fixed Oct. 30.@@@@1@43@@oe@2-2-2013 21161062@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Miyoshi Oil & Fat Co. (Japan) -- 120 million Swiss francs of privately placed convertible notes due Dec. 31, 1993, with a fixed 0.25% coupon at par, via Union Bank of Switzerland.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21161063@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Put option on Dec. 31, 1991, at a fixed 107 to yield 3.43%.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21161064@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Each 50,000 Swiss franc bond convertible from Nov. 28, 1989, to Dec. 20, 1993, at a 5% premium over closing share price Oct. 30, when terms are scheduled to be fixed.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21161065@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Fokker N.V. (Netherlands) -- 150 million Swiss francs of convertible bonds due Nov. 15, 1997, with a fixed 4% coupon at par via Union Bank of Switzerland.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21161066@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Each 5,000 Swiss franc bond convertible from Jan. 3, 1989, to Oct. 31, 1997.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21161067@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Fees 2 1/8.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21161068@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sapporo Lion Ltd. (Japan) -- 50 million Swiss francs of privately placed convertible notes due Dec. 31, 1994, with a 0.25% coupon at par, via Yamaichi Bank (Switzerland).@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21161069@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Put option on Dec. 31, 1991, at an indicated 107 7/8 to yield 3.84%.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21161070@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Each 50,000 Swiss franc note convertible from Dec. 1, 1989, to Dec. 16, 1994, at 5% premium over the closing share price Oct. 26, when terms are scheduled to be fixed.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21161071@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Credit Local de France -- 100 million Swiss francs of 6%, privately placed notes due Dec. 1, 1996, priced at 100 1/2 to yield 5.91%, via Swiss Bank Corp.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21162001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@People start their own businesses for many reasons.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21162002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But a chance to fill out sales-tax records is rarely one of them.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21162003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Red tape is the bugaboo of small business.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21162004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Ironically, the person who wants to run his or her own business is probably the active, results-oriented sort most likely to hate meeting the rules and record-keeping demands of federal, state and local regulators.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21162005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Yet every business owner has to face the mound of forms and regulations -- and often is the only one available to tackle it.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21162006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@There is hope of change.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21162007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Last week, Sen. Malcolm Wallop (R., Wyo.) held hearings on a bill to strengthen an existing law designed to reduce regulatory hassles for small businesses.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21162008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"A great many federal regulations are meant for larger entities and don't really apply to small businesses," says Marian Jacob, a legislative aide to Sen. Wallop.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21162009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Other lawmakers are busy trying to revive the recently lapsed Paperwork Reduction Act, which many feel benefited small enterprises.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21162010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Thus, optimistic entrepreneurs await a promised land of less red tape -- just as soon as Uncle Sam gets around to arranging it.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21162011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Meanwhile, they tackle the mounds of paper -- and fantasize about a dream world where bulk-mail postal regulations and government inspectors are banished.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21162012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@To find out what red tape riles entrepreneurs most, the Journal asked a completely unscientific, random sample of business owners to fantasize about the forms and regulations they would most like to get lost in the mail.@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 21162013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some entrepreneurs say the red tape they most love to hate is red tape they would also hate to lose.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21162014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They concede that much of the government meddling that torments them is essential to the public good, and even to their own businesses.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21162015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Rules that set standards for products or govern business behavior, generally the best regarded form of red tape, "create a level playing field and keep unscrupulous competitors away," says Sidney West, president of TechDesign International Inc., a Springfield, Va., business that designs telecommunication and other products.@@@@1@46@@oe@2-2-2013 21162016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. West cites the Federal Communications Commission and its standards for telecommunications equipment: "They monitor product quality and prevent junk from flooding the market."@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21162017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some gripes about red tape are predictable: Architects complain about a host of building regulations, auto leasing companies about car insurance rules.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21162018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Determining when handicapped access is required can be a nightmare for architects, says Mark Dooling, president of Dooling & Co., a Newton, Mass., architectural firm.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21162019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@There is such a maze of federal, state and local codes that "building inspectors are backing away from interpreting them," Mr. Dooling says.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21162020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Taxi, leasing and other companies that maintain fleets of vehicles devote substantial resources to complying with state insurance laws and a host of agencies.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21162021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"It's very costly and time-consuming," says Phil Rosen, a partner in Fleet & Leasing Management Inc., a Boston car-leasing company.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21162022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@One senior executive at his firm spends nearly 20% of his time on insurance, he says.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21162023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Other forms of red tape are more pervasive.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21162024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The most onerous, many entrepreneurs say, is the record-keeping and filing required by tax authorities.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21162025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Complying with environmental and workplace regulations runs a close second.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21162026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But gripes run the gamut.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21162027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Here is the red tape that irks surveyed business owners the most:@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21162028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS:@@@@1@2@@oe@2-2-2013 21162029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Next to medical insurance, "costs of compliance" are the fastest-growing expense at Impco Inc., a Providence, R.I., chemical company.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21162030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Peter Gebhard, the company's owner, says spending on regulatory paper work and the people to do it -- mostly to comply with federal, state and local environmental laws -- will rise almost 30% this year to $100,000.@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 21162031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Gebhard adds that spending on environmental red tape amounts to between 6.5% and 7.5% of Impco's total operating expenses.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21162032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Eastern Reproduction Corp., a Waltham, Mass., maker of thin metal precision parts, must report to five federal and state agencies as well as to local fire, police, hospital and plumbing authorities, says Robert Maguire, president.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21162033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@One state environmental regulator returned a report because "it wasn't heavy enough, it couldn't have been correct," Mr. Maguire says.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21162034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@WITHHOLDING RULES:@@@@1@2@@oe@2-2-2013 21162035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Employers must deposit withholding taxes exceeding $3,000 within three days after payroll -- or pay stiff penalties -- and that's a big problem for small businesses.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21162036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It's especially nettlesome "if you're on the road and you're the one responsible," says Eddie Brown, president of Brown Capital Management Inc., a Baltimore money-management firm.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21162037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@EMPLOYEE MANUALS:@@@@1@2@@oe@2-2-2013 21162038@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Revising employee manuals on pensions, health care and other subjects costs over $25,000 a year for Bert Giguiere, president of Professional Agricultural Management Inc., a Fresno, Calif., provider of business services to farmers.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21162039@unknown@formal@none@1@S@An employer leaves itself open to a great deal of liability if its employee manuals don't reflect the most recent laws, he says.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21162040@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But the ever-changing laws are usually so complicated and confusing that "you need professionals to help you; you can't do it yourself," he adds.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21162041@unknown@formal@none@1@S@PENSION AND PROFIT-SHARING RULES:@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21162042@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Complying with these is enough to make business owners look forward to their own pension days.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21162043@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Yearly changes in federal benefit laws force small businesses to repeatedly re-evaluate and redesign existing plans.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21162044@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Alice Fixx, who runs her own public-relations concern in New York, says she has had to overhaul her pension and profit-sharing plans three times in the past three years.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21162045@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"It doesn't increase benefits, but it's costly and time-consuming," Ms. Fixx says.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21162046@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Compliance added 15% to 20% to her accounting bill last year, she says.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21162047@unknown@formal@none@1@S@SALES TAX RECORDS:@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21162048@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Advertising agencies and other service companies are exempt from city and state sales tax in most locales -- but the exemption comes at a price of exhaustive records and rigorous reviews.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21162049@unknown@formal@none@1@S@To justify their exempt status and avoid penalties, these businesses must show once a year that each and every transaction on which they didn't pay sales tax was a legitimate business expense.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21162050@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"You need one person to just take care of sales tax," says Jennie Tong, executive vice president of Lee Liu & Tong Advertising Inc., New York.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21163001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@When the Trinity Repertory Theater named Anne Bogart its artistic director last spring, the nation's theatrical cognoscenti arched a collective eyebrow.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21163002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Ms. Bogart, an acclaimed creator of deconstructed dramatic collages that tear into such sacred texts as Rodgers and Hammerstein's "South Pacific," is decidedly downtown.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21163003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Trinity Rep meanwhile is one of the nation's oldest and most respected regional theaters, still hosting an annual "A Christmas Carol."@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21163004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@How would this bastion of traditional values fare in Ms. Bogart's iconoclastic hands?@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21163005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@She held her fire with her first production at the Trinity earlier this season.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21163006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It was a predictable revival of her prize-winning off-Broadway anthology of Bertolt Brecht's theoretical writings, called "No Plays, No Poetry."@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21163007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Now, with the opening of Maxim Gorky's bourgeois-bashing "Summerfolk," Ms. Bogart has laid her cards on the table.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21163008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Hers is a hand that will test the mettle of her audiences.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21163009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For Ms. Bogart, who initially studied and directed in Germany (and cites such European directors as Peter Stein, Giorgio Strehler and Ariane Mnouchkine as influences) tends to stage her productions with a Brechtian rigor -- whether the text demands it or not.@@@@1@42@@oe@2-2-2013 21163010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And Gorky, considered the father of Soviet socialist realism, did not write plays that easily lend themselves to deliberately antirealistic distancing techniques.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21163011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Gorky was a loyal if occasionally ambivalent proletarian writer committed to enlightening the masses with plain speaking rooted in a slightly sour version of Chekhovian humanism.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21163012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And "Summerfolk," penned in 1904 as a kind of sequel to Chekhov's "Cherry Orchard," is a lawn party of Russian yuppies engaged in an exhausting ideological fight to the finish between the allrightniks and the reformers.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21163013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Along the way there also are lots of romantic dalliances.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21163014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Wisely Ms. Bogart has kept Gorky's time and place intact.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21163015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Despite the absence of samovars (and a tendency to turn the furniture upside down), the production is rich in Russian ennui voiced by languorous folk sporting beige linen and rumpled cotton, with boaters and fishing poles aplenty.@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 21163016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But beyond this decorative nod to tradition, Ms. Bogart and company head off in a stylistic direction that all but transforms Gorky's naturalistic drama into something akin to, well, farce.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21163017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The director's attempt to force some Brechtian distance between her actors and their characters frequently backfires with performances that are unduly mannered.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21163018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Not only do the actors stand outside their characters and make it clear they are at odds with them, but they often literally stand on their heads.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21163019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Like Peter Sellars, Ms. Bogart manipulates her actors as if they were rag dolls, sprawling them on staircases, dangling them off tables, even hanging them from precipices while having them perform some gymnastic feats of derring-do.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21163020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@There are moments in this "Summerfolk" when the characters populating the vast multilevel country house (which looks like a parody of Frank Lloyd Wright and is designed by Victoria Petrovich) spout philosophic bon mots with the self-conscious rat-a-tat-tat pacing of "Laugh In."@@@@1@42@@oe@2-2-2013 21163021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Talk hurts from where it spurts," one of them says.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21163022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The clash of ideologies survives this treatment, but the nuance and richness of Gorky's individual characters have vanished in the scuffle.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21163023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@As for the humor that Gorky's text provides, when repainted in such broad strokes (particularly by the lesser members of the ensemble) it looks and sounds forced.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21163024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Ms. Bogart does better with music than with words when she wants, as she so often does want, to express herself through Gorky's helpless play.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21163025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Here she has the aid of her longtime associate Jeff Helpern, whom she appointed Trinity's first-ever musical director and whom she equipped with a spanking new $60,000 sound system and recording studio.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21163026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For Gorky, Mr. Helpern provided an aural collage of Debussy and Rachmaninoff, which is less a score than a separate character with a distinct point of view.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21163027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Like Brecht, and indeed Ezra Pound, Ms. Bogart has said that her intent in such manipulative staging of the classics is simply an attempt to "make it new."@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21163028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Indeed, during a recent post-production audience discussion, the director explained that her fondest artistic wish was to find a way to play "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" so that the song's "original beauty comes through," surmounting the cliche.@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 21163029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The danger that Ms. Bogart seems to be courting here is one of obfuscation rather than rejuvenation, a vision so at odds with the playwright's that the two points of view nullify, rather than illuminate, each other.@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 21163030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Ms. Bogart's cast is part and parcel of the problem.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21163031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Ed Shea and Barbara Orson never find a real reason for their love affair as the foolish, idealistic young Vass and the tirelessly humanitarian doctor Maria Lvovna.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21163032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Cynthia Strickland as the long-suffering Varvara is a tiresome whiner, not the inspirational counterrevolutionary Gorky intended.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21163033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Better to look in the corners for performances that inspire or amuse.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21163034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Janice Duclos, in addition to possessing one of the evening's more impressive vocal instruments, brings an unsuspected comedic touch to her role of Olga, everybody's favorite mom.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21163035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Marni Rice plays the maid with so much edge as to steal her two scenes.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21163036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But it is the Trinity Rep newcomer, Jonathan Fried (Zamislov, the paralegal) who is the actor to watch, whether he is hamming it up while conducting the chamber musicians or seducing his neighbor's wife (Becca Lish) by licking her bosom.@@@@1@40@@oe@2-2-2013 21163037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Ms. de Vries writes frequently about theater.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21164001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@(During its centennial year, The Wall Street Journal will report events of the past century that stand as milestones of American business history.)@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21164002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@MORGAN STANLEY, THE ONCE STODGY investment house, in 1974 helped a corporate client complete a hostile takeover.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21164003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It was the start of a boom in unfriendly, even ungentlemanly, mergers.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21164004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@On July 18, 1974, International Nickle of Canada -- advised by Morgan -- offered $28 a share, equal to $157 million, for ESB, a Philadelphia battery maker.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21164005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@ESB said it was given only a three-hour advance warning on a "take it or leave it" basis from Inco, as the Toronto company is called.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21164006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"ESB is aware that a hostile tender offer is being made by a foreign company for all of ESB's shares," said F.J. Port, ESB's president.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21164007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Hostile" thus entered the merger-acquisition lexicon.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21164008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Joseph Flom, of Skadden, Arps, Slote, Meagher & Flom, which became a leading legal firm in merger cases, said the case "made takeovers respectable."@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21164009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@ESB spurned Inco and within five days ESB had a "white knight" as United Aircraft -- headed by Harry Gray, a shrewdly friendly acquirer of companies -- offered $34 a share.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21164010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Gray was advised by Goldman Sachs and Merrill Lynch.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21164011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@ESB directors warmly accepted, but a whirlwind bidding match ensued.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21164012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Within a few days in July, Inco raised its bid to $36 and United matched it.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21164013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@On a single day Inco lifted its offer to $38 and then to $41, equal to $225.5 million.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21164014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@United met the $38 but then withdrew.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21164015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@ESB on July 29 accepted the Inco offer and the brief battle -- unlike the intricate and lengthy big takeovers of 1984-1989 -- was over.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21164016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The new gritty game became a money maker for Wall Street's once austere old-name houses.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21164017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Inco paid Morgan an advisory fee of about $250,000, a paltry figure by today's measures.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21164018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Early this year Morgan and three other investment houses each received $25 million in advisory fees from Kohlberg Kravis & Roberts in its $25 billion friendly buy-out of RJR Nabisco.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21165001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@HomeFed Corp. said third-quarter net income slid 14% to $23.9 million, or $1.10 per fully diluted share, from $27.9 million, or $1.21 a fully diluted share, because of increased bad assets and unexpected trouble in unloading foreclosed property.@@@@1@38@@oe@2-2-2013 21165002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The decline surprised analysts and jolted HomeFed's stock, which lost 8.6% of its value, closing at $38.50 on the New York Stock Exchange, down $3.625.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21165003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@HomeFed had been one of the handful of large West Coast thrifts that in recent quarters had counteracted interest-rate problems dogging the industry by keeping a lid on problem assets and lending heavily into the furious California housing market.@@@@1@39@@oe@2-2-2013 21165004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Analysts had been projecting fully diluted earnings in the third quarter in the range of about $1.30 a share.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21165005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@However, HomeFed's loan originations and purchases plunged 26% in the quarter, to $1.4 billion from $1.9 billion a year earlier.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21165006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Meanwhile, non-performing assets rose to $593 million from $518.7 million.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21165007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some $380 million of the troubled assets is repossessed real estate, a 55.6% surge from the $244.2 million of repossesed property HomeFed held a year ago.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21165008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@HomeFed has $17.9 billion of assets.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21165009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@HomeFed said most of the troubled assets are apartment complexes, shopping malls and other commercial real estate.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21165010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It said about half are in California, with the rest scattered across the country.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21165011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It said sales of such properties were slower than anticipated in the third quarter, but it expects sales to pick up in the rest of the year.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21165012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@HomeFed said the slide in loan originations was more a matter of design than a sign of cooling in the California market.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21165013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Any such downturn in California would be grim news for West Coast thrifts, particularly the less healthy ones, which have performed poorly even with a torrid market.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21165014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But HomeFed said it purposely curbed loan originations in the quarter because of uncertainty over the new capital requirements and regulations that will emerge from negotiations over implementing the government's massive thrift bailout bill.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21165015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It said its real-estate operations earned a record $21.7 million, more than double year-earlier real estate profit of $9 million.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21165016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And analysts said they see no signs of an imminent swoon in California real estate, even with last week's earthquake.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21165017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The thrift said earnings also were nicked in the quarter by a $4 million provision for losses associated with its previously reported plan to liquidate a real-estate franchise network.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21165018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For the nine months, HomeFed earned $82.5 million, or $3.52 a fully diluted share, a 4.3% increase from year-earlier net income of $79.1 million, or $3.43 a fully diluted share.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21166001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Yields on certificates of deposit at major banks were little changed in the latest week.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21166002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The average yield on six-month CDs of $50,000 and less slipped to 7.96% from 8.00%, according to Banxquote Money Markets, an information service based here.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21166003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@On one-year CDs of $50,000 and less, the average slid to 8.02% from 8.06%.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21166004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Both issues are among the most popular with individual investors.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21166005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Because of shrinkage in the economy, rates can be expected to decline over a one-year horizon," said Norberto Mehl, chairman of Banxquote.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21166006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"It's unclear how much rates can fall and how soon."@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21166007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Changes in CD yields in the week ended Tuesday were in line with blips up and down within a fairly narrow range for the last two months.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21166008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Interest rates generally began declining last spring after moving steadily upward for more than a year.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21166009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The average yield on small-denomination three-month CDs moved up two-hundredths of a percentage point in the latest week to 7.85%.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21166010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Long-term CDs declined just a fraction.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21166011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The average yield on both two-year CDs and five-year CDs was 7.98%.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21166012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Only CDs sold by major brokerage firms posted significant increases in average yields in the latest week, reflecting increased yields on Treasury bills sold at Monday's auction.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21166013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The average yield on six-month broker-sold CDs rose to 8.29% from 8.05% and on one-year CDs the average yield rose to 8.30% from 8.09%.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21166014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The brokerage firms, which negotiate rates with the banks and thrifts whose CDs they sell, generally feel they have to offer clients more than they can get on T-bills or from banks and thrifts directly.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21166015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@T-bills sold at Monday's auction yielded 7.90% for six months and 7.77% for three months, up from 7.82% and 7.61%, respectively, the week before.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21166016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@So-called jumbo CDs, typically in denominations of $90,000 and up, also usually follow T-bills and interest rate trends in general more than those aimed at small investors.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21166017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some jumbos posted fractional changes in average yields this week, both up and down.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21166018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The average yield on threemonth jumbos rose to 8.00% from 7.96%, while the two-year average fell by the same amount to 7.89%.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21166019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Six-month and oneyear yields were unchanged, on average.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21166020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"The (CD) market is unsettled right now," said Banxquote's Mr. Mehl.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21166021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"It's very easily influenced by changes in the stock market and the junk bond market."@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21166022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The small changes in averages reflect generally unchanged yields at many major banks.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21166023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some, however, lowered yields significantly.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21166024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@At Chase Manhattan Bank in New York, for example, the yield on a small denomination six-month CD fell about a quarter of a percentage point to 8.06%.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21166025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In California, Bank of America dropped the yield on both six-month and one-year "savings" CDs to 8.33% from 8.61%.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21166026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Yields on money-market deposits were unchanged at an average 6.96% for $50,000 and less and down just a hundredth of a percentage point to 7.41% for jumbo deposits.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21167001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Lion Nathan Ltd. agreed to buy the franchise to bottle, distribute and market Pepsi-Cola soft-drink products in Australia, the company said.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21167002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The New Zealand brewing and retail concern didn't disclose terms.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21167003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The agreement is effective Jan. 1 and is subject to approval from Australia's Foreign Investment Review Board.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21167004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Cadbury Schweppes Australia Ltd. has held the Australian Pepsi franchise for the past four years.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21167005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Lion Nathan and PepsiCola Australia, a unit of PepsiCo Inc. of the U.S., didn't say why Cadbury Schweppes will no longer hold the franchise.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21168001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Wang Laboratories Inc. has sold $25 million of assets and reached agreements in principle to sell an additional $187 million shortly, Richard Miller, president, said at the annual meeting.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21168002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He said Wang had reached an agreement with a "major financial firm" to sell for $150 million its domestic equipment lease portfolio and that of its Wang Credit Corp. subsidiary.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21168003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He said it also agreed to sell a portion of its European real estate unit for $37 million.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21168004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Miller said that Wang has already sold some $12 million of miscellaneous assets and disclosed that it had received $13 million from Compaq Computer Corp., Houston, in the previously announced sale of its Stirling, Scotland, plant.@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 21168005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Miller repeated that in the next six months he plans to sell another $200 million to $300 million of assets to repay debt and reduce interest costs at Wang, a minincomputer maker in Lowell, Mass.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21168006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In response to questions after the annual meeting, Mr. Miller said the company is no longer looking for an equity investor.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21168007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@During the summer, Wang executives had said they might seek outside investment.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21169001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Murata Mfg. Co. said it is establishing a subsidiary in Britain to produce electric parts, including ceramic condensers.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21169002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Tokyo maker of ceramic capacitors said it purchased a plant in Plymouth.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21169003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company didn't disclose a purchase price or capitalization figures.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21169004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Murata said, however, it will invest about 1.4 billion yen ($9.9 million) in the new company.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21169005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Production is slated to begin in April.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21169006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company, which has a European foothold, Murata Europe Management G.m.b.H. in Germany, said the latest venture is designed to meet demand for electric parts in European Community countries ahead of the creation of the unified market by the end of 1992.@@@@1@42@@oe@2-2-2013 21169007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Murata expects sales at the unit of about 1.5 billion yen in the first year.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21170001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Safeway Stores Inc. reported a 69% decline in profit for the fiscal third quarter, but said operating improvements were masked by unusual gains in the year-earlier period.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21170002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Oakland grocery retailer, closely held since a $4.2 billion leveraged buy-out in 1986, said profit for the three months ended Sept. 9 was $7.1 million, compared with $23 million a year earlier.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21170003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But it said the year-earlier results included gains of $23.5 million from divestitures.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21170004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sales rose 4.2% to $3.31 billion from $3.2 billion.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21170005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For the nine months, the company said profit fell 49% to $23.5 million from $46 million in the year-earlier quarter, which included divestiture-related gains of $50.6 million.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21170006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sales increased 5.5% to $9.81 billion from $9.3 billion.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21171001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Benjamin Jacobson & Sons has been the New York Stock Exchange specialist firm in charge of trading stock in UAL Corp. and its predecessors since the early 1930s.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21171002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But the firm has never had a day like yesterday.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21171003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@At first UAL didn't open because of an order imbalance.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21171004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@When it did a half-hour into the session, it was priced at $150 a share, down more than $28 from Monday's close.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21171005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It sank further to as low as $145, but a big rally developed in the last half hour, pushing the stock back up to close at $170, down just $8.375 from Monday.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21171006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In the process, 4.9 million shares traded, making UAL the second most active issue on the Big Board.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21171007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Munching pizza when they could and yelling until their voices gave out, the two Benjamin Jacobson specialists at the Big Board's UAL trading post yesterday presided over what can only be described as a financial free-for-all.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21171008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"It was chaotic.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21171009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But we like to call it 'controlled chaos,'" said 47-year-old Robert J. Jacobson Jr., grandson of the firm's founder.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21171010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He manned the UAL post yesterday with Christopher Bates, 33, an energetic Long Islander who's a dead ringer for actor Nicolas Cage.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21171011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Who was doing all the selling?@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21171012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Options traders, arbitrage traders -- everyone," said Mr. Bates, cooling down with a carton of apple juice after the close yesterday.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21171013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Added Mr. Jacobson, "There were some pretty bad losses in the stock."@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21171014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Big Board traders said a 200,000-share buy order at $150 a share entered by Bear, Stearns & Co., which was active in UAL stock all day, is what set off the UAL crowd in the late afternoon.@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 21171015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A subsequent rally in UAL helped the staggering stock market stage an astonishing recovery from an 80-point deficit to finish only slightly below Monday's close.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21171016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Both Jacobson traders, who had been hoping UAL trading would get back to normal, read the news about the unraveling of UAL takeover plans on the train into work yesterday morning.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21171017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The news told them it would be a while longer before UAL resumed trading like a regular airline stock after months of gyrations.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21171018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@When Mr. Jacobson walked into the office at 7:30 a.m. EDT, he announced: "OK, buckle up."@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21171019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Messrs. Jacobson and Bates walked on the Big Board floor at about 8:45 a.m. yesterday and immediately spotted trouble.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21171020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Already entered in the Big Board's computers and transmitted to their post were sell orders for 65,000 UAL shares.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21171021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The UAL news had already caused a selling furor in the so-called third market, in which firms buy and sell stock away from the exchange floor.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21171022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@UAL, which closed on the Big Board Monday at $178.375 a share, traded in the third market afterward as low as $158 a share.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21171023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@There were rumors of $148-a-share trades.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21171024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In the 45 minutes before the 9:30 opening bell, the Jacobson specialists kept getting sell orders, heavier than they imagined.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21171025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And at 9:15, they posted a $135 to $155 "first indication," or the price range in which the stock would probably open.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21171026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@That range was quickly narrowed to $145 to $155, although traders surrounding the post were told that $148 to $150 would be the likely target.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21171027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@When UAL finally opened a half hour late, some 400,000 shares traded at $150.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21171028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@There was "selling pressure from everyone," said one trader.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21171029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@This month's Friday-the-13th market plunge spurred by UAL news wasn't as bad for the Jacobson specialists as yesterday's action.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21171030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@On that earlier day, the stock's trading was halted at a critical time so the specialists could catch their breath.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21171031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Not yesterday.@@@@1@2@@oe@2-2-2013 21171032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Jacobson, his gray hair flying, didn't wear out his red-white-and-blue sneakers, but he sweat so much he considered sending out for a new shirt.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21171033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Bates usually handles day-to-day UAL trading on his own.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21171034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But yesterday, the heavy trading action eventually consumed not only Messrs. Jacobson and Bates but four other Jacobson partners, all doing their specialist-firm job of tugging buyers and sellers together and adjusting prices to accommodate the market.@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 21171035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@About 30 floor traders crammed near the UAL post most of the day, and probably hundreds more came and went -- a "seething mass," as one trader described it.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21171036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The 4.9 million-share volume flowing through the Jacobson specialist operation was about five times normal for the stock.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21171037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The heavy buying in the last half hour led the specialists to take special steps.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21171038@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Bear Stearns order that marked the late-day turnaround caused a "massive buying effort" as UAL jumped $20 a share to $170 in the last half hour, said Mr. Bates.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21171039@unknown@formal@none@1@S@With 15 seconds of trading to go, Mr. Jacobson, with what voice he had left, announced to the trading mob: "We're going to trade one price on the bell."@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21171040@unknown@formal@none@1@S@That meant no trading would occur in the final seconds, as a way of making sure that last-second orders aren't subjected to a sudden price swing that would upset customers.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21171041@unknown@formal@none@1@S@About 11,000 shares sold at $170 on the bell, representing about eight to 10 late orders, the specialists estimate.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21171042@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Big Board traders praised the Jacobson specialists for getting through yesterday without a trading halt.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21171043@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In Chicago, a UAL spokesman, "by way of policy," declined to comment on the company's stock or the specialists' performance.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21171044@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Leaving the exchange at about 5 p.m., the Jacobson specialists made no predictions about how trading might go today.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21171045@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Said Earl Ellis, a Jacobson partner who got involved in the UAL action, "It all starts all over again" today.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21172001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Britain's current account deficit dropped to #1.6 billion ($2.56 billion) in September from an adjusted #2 billion ($3.21 billion) the previous month, but the improvement comes amid increasing concern that a recession could strike the U.K. economy next year.@@@@1@39@@oe@2-2-2013 21172002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Confederation of British Industry's latest survey shows that business executives expect a pronounced slowdown, largely because of a 16-month series of interest-rate increases that has raised banks' base lending rates to 15%.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21172003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"The outlook has deteriorated since the summer, with orders and employment falling and output at a standstill," said David Wigglesworth, chairman of the industry group's economic committee.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21172004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He also said investment by businesses is falling off.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21172005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Of 1,224 companies surveyed, 31% expect to cut spending on plant equipment and machinery, while only 28% plan to spend more.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21172006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But despite mounting recession fears, government data don't yet show the economy grinding to a halt.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21172007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Unemployment, for example, has continued to decline, and the September trade figures showed increases in both imports and exports.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21172008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@As a result, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's government isn't currently expected to ease interest rates before next spring, if then.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21172009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Chancellor of the Exchequer Nigel Lawson views the high rates as his chief weapon against inflation, which was ignited by tax cuts and loose credit policies in 1986 and 1987.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21172010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Officials fear that any loosening this year could rekindle inflation or further weaken the pound against other major currencies.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21172011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Fending off attacks on his economic policies in a House of Commons debate yesterday, Mr. Lawson said inflation "remains the greatest threat to our economic well-being" and promised to take "whatever steps are needed" to choke it off.@@@@1@38@@oe@2-2-2013 21172012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The latest government figures said retail prices in September were up 7.6% from a year earlier.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21172013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Many economists have started predicting a mild recession next year.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21172014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@David Owen, U.K. economist with Kleinwort Benson Group, reduced his growth forecast for 1990 to 0.7% from 1.2% and termed the risk of recession next year "quite high."@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21172015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But he said the downturn probably won't become a "major contraction" similar to those of 1974 and 1982.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21172016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Still, Britain's current slump is a cause for concern here as the nation joins in the European Community's plan to create a unified market by 1992.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21172017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Compared with the major economies on the Continent, the U.K. faces both higher inflation and lower growth in the next several months.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21172018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@As a result, Mr. Owen warned, investment will be more likely to flow toward the other European economies and "the U.K. will be less prepared for the single market."@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21172019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Britain's latest trade figures contained some positive news for the economy, such as a surge in the volume of exports, which were 8.5% higher than a year earlier.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21172020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But while September exports rose to #8.43 billion, imports shot up to #10.37 billion.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21172021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The resulting #1.9 billion merchandise trade deficit was partly offset by an assumed surplus of #300 million in so-called invisible items, which include income from investments, services and official transfers.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21172022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Despite the narrowing of the monthly trade gap, economists expect the current account deficit for all of 1989 to swell to about #20 billion from #14.6 billion in 1988.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21172023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Increasingly, economists say the big deficit reflects the slipping competitive position of British industry.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21172024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"When the country gets wealthier, we tend to buy high-quality imports," Mr. Owen said.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21173001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Vickers PLC, a British aerospace, defense and automotive conglomerate, said it reached an agreed cash bid of #108.2 million ($173.3 million) for Ross Catherall Group PLC, a maker of specialty alloy and ceramics.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21173002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company said it expects to receive acceptances for its offer of 253 pence ($4.05) per share representing at least 67% of Ross Catherall's issued share capital, or 12.7 million ordinary shares.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21173003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Vickers said its offer also includes an option to receive a redeemable loan note in lieu of cash.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21173004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The notes can be redeemed starting in July 1991.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21173005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company said its acquisition of Ross Catherall will be covered largely by cash raised in its July disposal of Howson-Algraphy for #241.7 million.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21174001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@If bluebloods won't pay high prices for racehorses anymore, who will?@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21174002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Breeders are betting on the common folk.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21174003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association, a Lexington, Ky.-based trade group, has launched "seminars" for "potential investors" at race tracks around the country.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21174004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The group, which has held half a dozen seminars so far, also is considering promotional videos and perhaps a pitch to Wall Street investment bankers.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21174005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"People in this business have been insulated," says Josh Pons, a horse breeder from Bel Air, Md.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21174006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"But the real future of this game is in a number of people owning a few horses."@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21174007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@At the Laurel race track, the breeders are romancing people like Tim Hulings, a beer packaging plant worker.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21174008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Right now, Mr. Hulings is waving his racing program, cheering for Karnak on the Nile, a sleek thoroughbred galloping down the home stretch.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21174009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Hulings gloats that he sold all his stocks a week before the market plummeted 190 points on Oct. 13, and he is using the money to help buy a 45-acre horse farm.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21174010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Just imagine how exciting that would be if that's your horse," he says.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21174011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But experts caution that this isn't a game for anyone with a weak stomach or wallet.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21174012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"It's a big-risk business," warns Charles C. Mihalek, a Lexington attorney and former Kentucky state securities commissioner.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21174013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"You have to go into it firmly believing that it's the kind of investment where you can lose everything."@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21174014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And many have done just that.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21174015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Consider Spendthrift Farm, a prominent Lexington horse farm that went public in 1983 but hit hard times and filed for bankruptcy-court protection last year.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21174016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A group of investors recently bought the remaining assets of Spendthrift, hoping to rebuild it.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21174017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Other investors have lost millions in partnerships that bought thoroughbred racehorses or stallion breeding rights.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21174018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@One big problem has been the thoroughbred racehorse market.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21174019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@From 1974 to 1984, prices for the best yearlings at the summer sales rose 918% to an average of $544,681.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21174020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Since then, prices have slumped, to an average of $395,374 this summer.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21174021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But that's for the best horses, with most selling for much less -- as little as $100 for some pedestrian thoroughbreds.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21174022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Even while they move outside their traditional tony circle, racehorse owners still try to capitalize on the elan of the sport.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21174023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Glossy brochures circulated at racetracks gush about the limelight of the winner's circle and high-society schmoozing.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21174024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@One handout promises: "Pedigrees, parties, post times, parimutuels and pageantry."@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21174025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"It's just a matter of marketing and promoting ourselves," says Headley Bell, a fifth-generation horse breeder from Lexington.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21174026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Maybe it's not that simple.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21174027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For starters, racehorse buyers have to remember the basic problem of such ventures: These beasts don't come with warranties.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21174028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And for every champion, there are plenty of nags.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21174029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Katherine Voss, a veteran trainer at the Laurel, Md., track, offers neophytes a sobering tour of a horse barn, noting that only three of about a dozen horses have won sizable purses.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21174030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@One brown two-year-old filly was wheezing from a cold, while another had splints on its legs, keeping both animals from the racetrack.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21174031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"You can see the highs and lows of the business all under one roof," she tells the group.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21174032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"There aren't too many winners."@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21174033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Perhaps the biggest hurdle owners face is convincing newcomers that this is a reputable business.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21174034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some badly managed partnerships have burned investors, sometimes after they received advice from industry "consultants."@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21174035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@So owners have developed a "code of ethics," outlining rules for consultants and agents, and disclosure of fees and any conflicts of interest.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21174036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But some are skeptical of the code's effectiveness.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21174037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"The industry is based on individual honesty," says Cap Hershey, a Lexington horse farmer and one of the investors who bought Spendthrift.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21174038@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Despite the drop in prices for thoroughbreds, owning one still isn't cheap.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21174039@unknown@formal@none@1@S@At the low end, investors can spend $15,000 or more to own a racehorse in partnership with others.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21174040@unknown@formal@none@1@S@At a yearling sale, a buyer can go solo and get a horse for a few thousand dollars.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21174041@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But that means paying the horse's maintenance; on average, it costs $25,000 a year to raise a horse.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21174042@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For those looking for something between a minority stake and total ownership, the owners' group is considering a special sale where established horse breeders would sell a 50% stake in horses to newcomers.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21175001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@BUELL INDUSTRIES Inc. halved its quarterly dividend to five cents a share, payable Nov. 17 to stock of record Nov. 3.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21175002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company's quarterly dividend had been 10 cents a share since April 30, 1988.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21175003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Buell recently said it would incur an aftertax charge of about $3.6 million in its fourth quarter ending Tuesday, in connection with the sale and discontinuance of several lines at a plant.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21175004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Waterbury, Conn., maker of industrial fasteners and metal stampings has 2.3 million shares outstanding.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21176001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Dunkin' Donuts Inc., battling a takeover proposal by Canada's DD Acquisition Corp., said that its directors will evaluate takeover offers submitted by Nov. 10.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21176002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Dunkin' Donuts, based in Randolph, Mass., previously said it would explore "alternatives," including a leveraged buy-out of the company, but hadn't set a date for submission of proposals.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21176003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Dunkin' Donuts Chairman and Chief Executive Robert M. Rosenberg said "a sale is one alternative being considered," but he added the board hasn't decided whether to sell the doughnut franchiser.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21176004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@DD Acquisition, jointly owned by Unicorp Canada Corp.'s Kingsbridge Capital Group unit and Cara Operations Ltd., has made a $45-a-share tender offer valued at $268 million for Dunkin' Donuts.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21176005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Dunkin' Donuts' announcement followed DD Acquisition's request to the Delaware Court of Chancery Monday to set a trial date for its suit against the company.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21176006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The trial had been postponed to allow Dunkin' Donuts to seek alternatives to DD Acquisition's offer.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21177001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Combustion Engineering Inc. said third-quarter net income of $22.8 million, reversing a $91.7 million year-earlier loss.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21177002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Stamford, Conn., power-generation products and services company said per-share earnings were 56 cents compared with the year-ago loss of $2.39.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21177003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sales fell 1.5% to $884 million from $897.2 million.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21177004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Strong profit in the process industries, including chemical and pulp and paper, were offset by higher interest expense and by lower earnings as the company closed out certain long-term contracts.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21177005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Combustion reported improved profits in its automation and control products businesses, and it narrowed its losses in its public sector and environmental segment.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21177006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Power generation had higher sales but lower earnings; the company cited factors including work on certain low profit-margin contracts from previous years.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21177007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Net in the latest quarter included a pretax gain of $22.4 million from the sale of Combustion's minority interest in Stein Industrie to GEC Alsthom N.V. of the Netherlands.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21177008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Last year's results reflected a gain of $28.2 million on disposition of assets and a $165 million pretax provision mainly from costs of completing certain waste-to-energy and other power plants.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21178001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Claude Bebear, chairman and chief executive officer, of Axa-Midi Assurances, pledged to retain employees and management of Farmers Group Inc., including Leo E. Denlea Jr., chairman and chief executive officer, if Axa succeeds in acquiring Farmers.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21178002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Bebear added that the French insurer would keep Farmers' headquarters in Los Angeles and "will not send French people to run the company."@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21178003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Axa would also maintain Farmers' relationships with the insurance exchanges that it manages.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21178004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Bebear made his remarks at a breakfast meeting with reporters here yesterday as part of a tour in which he is trying to rally support in the U.S. for the proposed acquisition.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21178005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The bid is part of Sir James Goldsmith's unfriendly takeover attempt for B.A.T Industries PLC, the British tobacco, retailing, paper and financial-services giant that acquired Farmers last year for $5.2 billion.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21178006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Axa has agreed to acquire Farmers from Sir James's investment vehicle, Hoylake Investments Ltd., for $4.5 billion plus a $1 billion investment in Hoylake.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21178007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Any acquisition of Farmers needs the approval of insurance commissioners in the nine states where Farmers operates, and Mr. Bebear's trip will take him to Idaho, Arizona and New York after his stay here; he will meet with insurance regulators, legislators, industry excutives and the press.@@@@1@46@@oe@2-2-2013 21178008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Hearings on Axa's acquisition application have been set for Nov. 13 in Idaho; Nov. 20 in Illinois; Nov. 24 and Dec. 4 in Arizona; Dec. 11 in Washington state; and Jan. 8 in Oregon.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21178009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Hearings haven't yet been set in Texas, Ohio and Kansas.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21178010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@California's insurance commissioner doesn't hold hearings on acquisition applications.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21178011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Although Axa has been rebuffed by Farmers and hasn't had any meetings with management, Mr. Bebear nonetheless appears to be trying to woo the company's executives with promises of autonomy and new-found authority under Axa.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21178012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He said Mr. Denlea would be a member of the top management team of the Axa-Midi group of companies, and would "help define policies and strategies of the group."@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21178013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Farmers was quick yesterday to point out the many negative aspects it sees in having Axa as its parent.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21178014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For one, Axa plans to do away with certain tax credits that have resulted in more than $600 million paid to the Farmers exchanges during the past few years to offset underwriting losses.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21178015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Those credits result because of taxes that Farmers, as the management company, has paid, and have "proved to be very important for the exchanges," a Farmers spokesman said.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21178016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Bebear contended that the tax cost to the exchanges under the revised structure would be about $8 million a year, which he described as "peanuts.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21179001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Honeywell Inc., Minneapolis, said it completed its previously announced sale of 16% of the shares outstanding in its Japanese joint venture, Yamatake-Honeywell, for $280 million.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21179002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The stake was acquired by a group of 10 Japanese financial institutions and industrial corporations, primarily insurance companies, Honeywell said.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21179003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Proceeds will be used to repurchase as many as 10 million shares of Honeywell stock, as previously announced.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21179004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Honeywell said a second sale of Yamatake-Honeywell is still being negotiated.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21179005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company, which now holds a 34% stake in the venture, has indicated that it intends to retain at least a 20% stake long term.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21179006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A 20% stake would allow Honeywell to include Yamatake earnings in its results.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21179007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A company spokesman said the gain on the sale couldn't be estimated until the "tax treatment has been determined.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21180001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL LIMITED PARTNERSHIP increased the quarterly distribution to 40 cents a limited partnership unit from 36.25 cents.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21180002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The distribution represents available cash flow from the partnership between Aug. 1 and Oct. 31.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21180003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It is payable Nov. 30 to units of record Oct. 31.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21180004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The money manager is controlled 67.7% by its top officers and top officers of Oppenheimer & Co., a securities firm.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21180005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Both firms are in New York.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21180006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Oppenheimer Capital has about 7.9 million limited partnership units outstanding.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21180007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In New York Stock Exchange composite trading yesterday, the units closed at $15.125, up 12.5 cents.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21181001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Bank of Montreal said it added 850 million Canadian dollars (US$725.8 million) to its reserves against losses on Third World loans, bringing the total it has set aside this year to C$1 billion.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21181002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The bank said the C$1 billion in reserves will result in a charge of C$595 million against earnings but said it still expects to report a profit for the year ending Tuesday.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21181003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The bank reported net income of C$389 million for the nine months ended July 31.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21181004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The bank said the increase in loan-loss provisions won't affect the payment of dividends.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21181005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The bank said reserves now amount to 61% of its total less-developed-country exposure.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21181006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Excluding Mexico, reserves equal 95% of LDC exposure.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21181007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In Toronto Stock Exchange trading, Bank of Montreal closed at C$33.25, up 87.5 Canadian cents.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21182001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Knight-Ridder Inc. said third-quarter earnings jumped 18%, partly because of the sale of two of its media properties.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21182002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The media concern said net income rose to $37.8 million, or 72 cents a share, from $32 million, or 57 cents a share, in the year-earlier period.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21182003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The latest results include a gain of $4.2 million, or eight cents a share, on the sale of television stations in Oklahoma City and Flint, Mich.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21182004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Revenue increased 7.5% to $540.9 million from $503.1 million.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21182005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Robert F. Singleton, Knight-Ridder's chief financial officer, said the company was "pleased" with its overall performance, despite only single-digit growth in newspaper revenue.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21182006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@That division's revenue rose 2.3% to $472.5 million from $461.9 million in the year-ago period.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21182007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Gains in advertising revenue, however, resulted in operating profit of $78.4 million -- up 20% from $65.6 million.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21182008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In New York Stock Exchange composite trading, Knight Ridder closed at $51.50 a share, down 12.5 cents.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21183001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@ALBERTA ENERGY Co., Calgary, said it filed a preliminary prospectus for an offering of common shares.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21183002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The natural resources development concern said proceeds will be used to repay long-term debt, which stood at 598 million Canadian dollars (US$510.6 million) at the end of 1988.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21183003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company plans to raise between C$75 million and C$100 million from the offering, according to a spokeswoman at Richardson Greenshields of Canada Ltd., lead underwriter.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21183004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The shares will be priced in early November, she said.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21184001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@General Electric Co. executives and lawyers provided "misleading and false" information to the Pentagon in 1985 in an effort to cover up "longstanding fraudulent" billing practices, federal prosecutors alleged in legal briefs.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21184002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The government's startling allegations, filed only days before the scheduled start of a criminal overcharge trial against GE in Philadelphia federal district court, challenge the motives and veracity of the nation's third-largest defense contractor.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21184003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In a strongly worded response summarizing a filing made in the same court yesterday, GE asserted that "prosecutors have misstated the testimony of witnesses, distorted documents and ignored important facts."@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21184004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company attacked the government's allegations as "reckless and baseless mudslinging," and said its management "promptly and accurately reported" to the Pentagon all relevant information about billing practices.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21184005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The case strikes at the corporate image of GE, which provides the military with everything from jet engines and electronic warfare equipment to highly classified design work on the Strategic Defense Initiative, and could cause a loss of future defense contracts if Pentagon and Justice Department officials take a tough stance.@@@@1@51@@oe@2-2-2013 21184006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company has been considered an industry leader in advocating cooperation and voluntary disclosures of improper or inflated billing practices.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21184007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But the government now claims that a group of company managers and lawyers engaged in an elaborate strategy over five years to obscure from federal authorities the extent and details of "widespread" fraudulent billing practices.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21184008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The problems were uncovered during a series of internal investigations of the company's Space Systems division, which has been the focus of two separate overcharge prosecutions by the government since 1985.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21184009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The dispute stems from pretrial maneuvering in the pending court case, in which prosecutors have been demanding access to a host of internal company memos, reports and documents.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21184010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Last November, a federal grand jury indicted GE on charges of fraud and false claims in connection with an alleged scheme to defraud the Army of $21 million on a logistics computer contract.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21184011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company, for its part, maintains that many of the disputed documents are privileged attorney-client communications that shouldn't be turned over to prosecutors.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21184012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A hearing is scheduled on the issue today.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21184013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The government's 136-page filing covers events leading up to the current case and an earlier indictment in March 1985, when GE was accused of defrauding the Pentagon by illegally claiming cost overruns on Minuteman missile contracts.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21184014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@GE pleaded guilty and paid a fine of more than $1 million in the Minuteman case, which involved some of the same individuals and operations that are at the center of the dispute in the Philadelphia court.@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 21184015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In order to show that all of its units had corrected billing problems and therefore should become eligible again for new contracts, prosecutors contend that "high-level GE executives" and company lawyers provided "misleading statements" to then-Air Force Secretary Verne Orr and other Pentagon officials during a series of meetings in 1985.@@@@1@51@@oe@2-2-2013 21184016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Overall, the government contends that GE's disclosure efforts largely were intended to "curry favor" with Pentagon officials without detailing the extent of the management lapses and allegedly pervasive billing irregularities uncovered by company investigations.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21184017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Prosecutors depict a company that allegedly sat on damaging evidence of overcharges from 1983 to 1985, despite warnings from an internal auditor.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21184018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@When GE finally disclosed the problems, prosecutors contend that Mr. Orr "was erroneously informed that the {suspected} practices had only just been discovered" by GE management.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21184019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In its brief, the government asserted that it needs the internal GE documents to rebut anticipated efforts by GE during the trial to demonstrate "its good corporate character."@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21184020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@GE, which was surprised by the last-minute subpoena for more than 100 boxes and file cabinets of documents, countered that senior GE managers didn't find out about questionable billing practices until 1985, and that the information was passed on quickly to Mr. Orr at his first meeting with company representatives.@@@@1@50@@oe@2-2-2013 21184021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Subsequent meetings, initiated after the company and two of its units were briefly suspended from federal contracts, were held to familiarize Mr. Orr with the company's self-policing procedures and to disclose additional information, according to GE.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21184022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@GE's filing contends that the billing practices at the heart of the current controversy involved technical disputes rather than criminal activity.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21184023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company's conduct "does not even raise a question of wrongful corporate intent, ratification or cover-up," GE's brief asserts.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21184024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"On the contrary, it shows a corporation reacting swiftly and aggressively to very difficult issues in largely uncharted waters."@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21184025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Orr couldn't be reached for comment yesterday.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21185001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Applied Solar Energy Corp. of City of Industry, Calif., said it and its majority shareholder, American Cyanamid Co., signed a non-binding letter of intent for the acquisition of Applied Solar by McDonnell Douglas Corp. for about $38 million.@@@@1@38@@oe@2-2-2013 21185002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The proposed acquisition provides for a cash payment of $10 a share at closing and a contingent payment of as much as 80 cents a share placed in escrow.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21185003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Details of the escrow agreement haven't been completed, the companies said.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21185004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@There are 3.5 million shares of Applied Solar, of which American Cyanamid owns 2.7 million.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21185005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@American Cyanamid is a Wayne, N.J., chemicals, drugs and fertilizer concern.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21185006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Completion of the acquisition is subject to execution of a definitive agreement, approval by all three companies' boards and the approval of Applied Solar's shareholders.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21185007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@An Applied Solar spokesman said completion is expected at the end of the year or early next year.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21185008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A spokeswoman for the St. Louis aerospace and defense concern said it wanted the acquistion because Applied Solar is involved in solar cells and solid-state laser components, and this fits with McDonnell's business of laser applications for military space.@@@@1@39@@oe@2-2-2013 21186001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Trading in Cineplex Odeon Corp. shares was halted on the New York and Toronto stock exchanges late yesterday afternoon at the company's request, Toronto Stock Exchange officials said.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21186002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Brian Hemming, a spokesman for the company's committee of independent directors, established in May to solicit and evaluate offers for the company, said it was expected to make an announcement early this morning.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21186003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But Mr. Hemming said he wasn't aware of the nature of the talks under way between committee members and their advisers.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21186004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Cineplex traded on the New York Stock Exchange at $11.25 a share, up $1.125, before trading was halted.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21186005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Analysts have speculated in recent days that the value of offers received by the committee fell well short of what they had hoped, or even that the company's chairman, president and chief executive officer, Garth Drabinsky, is the only bidder for the company as a whole.@@@@1@46@@oe@2-2-2013 21186006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The current effort to auction off the company was triggered by a dispute between Mr. Drabinsky and the Toronto-based movie chain's major shareholder, MCA Inc.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21187001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@London share prices closed sharply lower Tuesday on the back of Wall Street's steep drop and renewed fears over U.K. economic fundamentals.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21187002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Tokyo's winning streak came to an end, and stocks fell in Frankfurt and across Europe as well.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21187003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@London's Financial Times 100-share index shed 40.4 points to finish at 2149.3.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21187004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@At London's close, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was 51.23 points lower at 2611.68.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21187005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Dealers said the initial pressure came from mildly disappointing U.K. trade figures for September and a worrisome report by the Confederation of British Industry that a decline in orders for manufactured goods is depressing both business optimism and investment plans for the coming year.@@@@1@44@@oe@2-2-2013 21187006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The trade and CBI reports refocused attention on high interest rates and corporate profitability and helped rekindle underlying concerns over prospects for a recession in the U.K., dealers said.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21187007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The 30-share index fell 33.3 points to 1739.3.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21187008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Volume was a modest 405.4 million shares traded, but better than the year's lowest turnover of 276.8 million Monday.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21187009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Market watchers also noted an absence of institutional interest later in the session helped pave the way for broader declines when Wall Street opened weaker.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21187010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They added that market-makers were knocking share prices down in midafternoon in a bid to attract some interest, but the action largely helped open the way for London's late declines.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21187011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Insurance stocks provided some early support to the market, partly on favorable brokerage recommendatons and talk of continental European interest in British life and composite insurers.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21187012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@British life insurer London & General, which firmed 2 pence to 356 pence ($5.70), and composite insurer Royal Insurance, which finished 13 lower at 475, were featured in the talk.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21187013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@On the life insurance side, Pearl Group finished 5 lower at 640, and Sun Life dropped 15 to #11.53.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21187014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Jaguar finished 4 lower at 694.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21187015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Dealers said the market didn't react substantially to Ford Motor Co.'s disclosure to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that it will seek 100% of Jaguar's shares outstanding when U.K. government share regulations are lifted at the end of next year.@@@@1@41@@oe@2-2-2013 21187016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Tokyo stocks closed easier, posting their first loss in six trading days, partly because of programmed index-linked selling by trust investment funds in the afternoon session.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21187017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Nikkei index fell 58.97 points to 35526.55.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21187018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The index gained 99.14 points Monday.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21187019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In early trading in Tokyo Wednesday, the Nikkei index rose 17.92 points to 35544.47.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21187020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@On Tuesday, the Tokyo stock price index of all first section issues was down 6.31 at 2681.22.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21187021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@First section volume was estimated at 900 million shares, up from 605 million Monday.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21187022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Observers said the market again failed to find a trading focus, discouraging much participation by investors.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21187023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The market, however, is expected to remain stable and expectations for future gains are high, traders said.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21187024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Such sentiment is being supported by word that a large amount of cash from investment trust funds is scheduled to enter the market later this week and in early November.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21187025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The expected amount is said to be 700 billion yen ($4.93 billion) to 1.05 trillion yen -- the second largest amount this year in a given period, following the record high set at the end of July, according to market observers.@@@@1@41@@oe@2-2-2013 21187026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In addition to a large amount of investment trust fund cash, analysts generally see the market environment improving compared with the past couple of weeks.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21187027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Toshiyuki Nishimura, an analyst at Yamaichi Securities, said, "The market sentiment is bullish, simply because there are few bad factors."@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21187028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Buying activity Tuesday centered on a wide range of midcapitalization, domestic demand-related shares whose prices range from 1,000 to 2,000 yen.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21187029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Investors expect these shares will be targets of investment trust funds, which often buy small amounts spread across a wide range of issues.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21187030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@On the other hand, high-priced shares such as Pioneer Electronic and Sony failed to spark investor interest because these issues are unlikely to be bought by investment trust funds, observers said.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21187031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Tuesday's notable losers were highpriced shares such as Pioneer, which shed 210 yen to 5,900 yen.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21187032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sony was down 130 to 8,590.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21187033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@TDK fell 120 to 5,960, Fuji Photo Film declined 160 to 4,830, and Fanuc dropped 160 to 7,440.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21187034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Share prices on the Frankfurt stock exchange closed sharply lower in thin dealings as worried investors remained idle as the result of two potentially destabilizing domestic developments.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21187035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The DAX index fell 15.85 to end at 1507.37.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21187036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Cutting against the downward trend was Continental, which jumped 4 marks to 346 marks ($187) in heavy trading on rumors that the tire maker is about to be taken over.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21187037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It jumped 7.5 Monday.@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21187038@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Traders said the market was exceptionally thin, as small investors remain on the sidelines.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21187039@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Market participants say investors are not only licking their wounds following the turbulence last week, but they have also been made nervous by two events in West Germany.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21187040@unknown@formal@none@1@S@On Sunday, the governing Christian Democratic Union suffered a series of setbacks, the extent of which became fully known only late Monday, in municipal elections in Baden-Wuerttemberg.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21187041@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Traders say investors are worried that the CDU won't be able to hold office in federal elections at the end of 1990.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21187042@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And statements by the chairman of the IG Metall labor union, Franz Steinkuehler, also cast a cloud over trading, dealers said.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21187043@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Steinkuehler said at a convention in West Berlin that the union has to prepare for "a big fight" to achieve its main goal of a 35-hour workweek, down from current 37-hour workweek.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21187044@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The decline in prices cut broadly through the blue-chip issues, as Siemens tumbled 7.5 to 544, Deutsche Bank plunged 7 to 657, and the auto makers fell sharply as well.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21187045@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Daimler-Benz dropped 12.5 to 710.5, Bayerische Motoren Werke dropped 10.5 to 543.5, and Volkswagen lost 7.1.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21187046@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Elsewhere, share prices closed lower in Zurich, Amsterdam, Milan and Stockholm.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21187047@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Uneasiness about Wall Street was cited in several markets.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21187048@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Prices closed lower in Sydney, Singapore and Wellington, were mixed in Hong Kong and higher in Taipei, Manila, Paris, Brussels and Seoul.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21187049@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Here are price trends on the world's major stock markets, as calculated by Morgan Stanley Capital International Perspective, Geneva.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21187050@unknown@formal@none@1@S@To make them directly comparable, each index is based on the close of 1969 equaling 100.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21187051@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The percentage change is since year-end.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21188001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Directors of Bergen Bank and Den Norske Creditbank, two of Norway's leading banks, announced they had agreed to the formal merger of the banks.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21188002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The merger would create Scandinavia's seventh largest bank, with combined assets of 210 billion Norwegian kroner ($30.3 billion).@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21188003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The banks said an application for a concession to merge into one entity to be called Den Norske Bank AS was sent Monday to the Finance Ministry.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21188004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The two boards said in a joint statement that the proposed merger agreement was considered in separate board meetings in Oslo Monday.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21188005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They said the agreement will be submitted to their respective supervisory boards next Wednesday.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21188006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Extraordinary general meetings, to be held Nov. 28, will decide the share exchange ratio.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21188007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The merger requires the approval of Norwegian authorities.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21189001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Savings and loans reject blacks for mortgage loans twice as often as they reject whites, the Office of Thrift Supervision said.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21189002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But that doesn't necessarily mean thrifts are discriminating against blacks, the agency said.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21189003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The office, an arm of the Treasury, said it doesn't have data on the financial position of applicants and thus can't determine why blacks are rejected more often.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21189004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Nevertheless, on Capitol Hill, where the information was released yesterday at a Senate banking subcommittee hearing, lawmakers said they are worried that financial institutions are routinely discriminating against minorities.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21189005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They asked regulators to suggest new ways to force banks and thrifts to comply with anti-discrimination laws.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21189006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sen. Alan Dixon (D, Ill.), chairman of the subcommittee on consumer and regulatory affairs, said, "I'm not a statistician.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21189007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But when blacks are getting their loan applications rejected twice as often as whites -- and in some cities, it is three and four times as often -- I conclude that discrimination is part of the problem."@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 21189008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@James Grohl, a spokesman for the U.S. League of Savings Institutions, said, "The data is a red flag, but lacking the financial data you can't make a case that discrimination is widespread."@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 21189009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The trade group official added: "Certainly the federal government should take a hard look at it."@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21189010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sen. Dixon held the hearing to follow up on a provision in the savings and loan bailout bill that required regulators to report on evidence of discimination in mortgage lending.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21189011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The legislation also requires broad new disclosures of the race, sex and income level of borrowers, but that information won't be gathered in new studies for several months at least.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21189012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Federal Reserve said its studies in recent years, which adjust for income differences and other variables, showed that blacks received fewer home mortgages from banks and thrifts than whites.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21189013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But John LaWare, a Fed governor, told the subcommittee the evidence is mixed and that the Fed's believes the vast majority of banks aren't discriminating.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21189014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For instance, he noted, the Fed studies have shown that blacks receive more home improvement loans than whites.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21189015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Several lawmakers were angered that the bank and thrift regulators generally said they have been too busy handling the record number of bank and thrift failures in the past few years to put much energy into investigating possible discrimination.@@@@1@39@@oe@2-2-2013 21189016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"We would be the first to admit that we have not devoted the necessary amount of emphasis over the past several years" to developing examinations for discrimination, said Jonathan Fiechter, a top official of the Office of Thrift Supervision.@@@@1@39@@oe@2-2-2013 21189017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"If we've got folks out there who are being turned away in the mortgage market improperly and unfairly," said Sen. Donald Riegle (D., Mich.), chairman of the banking committee, "then that is a matter that needs remedy now, not six months from now, or six years from now, or 26 years from now."@@@@1@53@@oe@2-2-2013 21189018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Officials of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency said they have punished only a few banks for violations of anti-discrimination laws.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21189019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The FDIC said it has issued five citations to banks over the past three years for discriminatory practices.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21189020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The comptroller's office said it found no indications of illegal discrimination in 3,437 examinations of banks since April 1987.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21189021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The comptroller's office also said that of 37,000 complaints it received since January 1987, only 16 alleged racial discrimination in real estate lending.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21189022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The agency investigated the complaints but no violations were cited.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21189023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Thrift regulators didn't give any figures on their enforcement actions.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21189024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Fiechter said that among the possibilities being considered by regulators to fight discrimination is the use of "testers" -- government investigators who would pose as home buyers.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21189025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Department of Housing and Urban Development has used testers to investigate discrimination in rental housing.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21189026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Using testers could be controversial with financial institutions, but Mr. Grohl said the U.S. League of Savings Institutions hadn't yet taken any position on the matter.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21190001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Time Warner Inc. is considering a legal challenge to Tele-Communications Inc.'s plan to buy half of Showtime Networks Inc., a move that could lead to all-out war between the cable industry's two most powerful players.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 21190002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Time is also fighting the transaction on other fronts, by attempting to discourage other cable operators from joining Tele-Communications as investors in Showtime, cable-TV industry executives say.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21190003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Time officials declined to comment.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21190004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Last week, Tele-Communications agreed to pay Viacom Inc. $225 million for a 50% stake in its Showtime subsidiary, which is a distant second to Time's Home Box Office in the delivery of pay-TV networks to cable subscribers.@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 21190005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Tele-Communications, the U.S.'s largest cable company, said it may seek other cable partners to join in its investment.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21190006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Tele-Communications is HBO's largest customer, and the two have a number of other business relationships.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21190007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Earlier this year, Time even discussed bringing Tele-Communications in as an investor in HBO, executives at both companies said.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21190008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The purchase of the Showtime stake is "a direct slap in our face," said one senior Time executive.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21190009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Time is expected to mount a legal challenge in U.S. District Court in New York, where Viacom in May filed a $2.5 billion antitrust suit charging Time and HBO with monopolizing the pay-TV business and trying to crush competition from Showtime.@@@@1@41@@oe@2-2-2013 21190010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Executives involved in plotting Time's defense say it is now preparing a countersuit naming both Viacom and Tele-Communications as defendants.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21190011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The executives say Time may seek to break up the transaction after it is consummated, or may seek constraints that would prevent Tele-Communications from dropping HBO in any of its cable systems in favor of Showtime.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21190012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Viacom officials declined to comment.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21190013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Jerome Kern, Tele-Communications' chief outside counsel, said he wasn't aware of Time's legal plans.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21190014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But he said that any effort by Time to characterize the Tele-Communications investment in Showtime as anti-competitive would be "the pot calling the kettle black."@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21190015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"It's hard to see how an investment by the largest {cable operator} in the weaker of the two networks is anti-competitive, when the stronger of the two networks is owned by the second largest" cable operator, Mr. Kern said.@@@@1@39@@oe@2-2-2013 21190016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In addition to owning HBO, with 22 million subscribers, Time Warner separately operates cable-TV system serving about 5.6 million cable-TV subscribers.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21190017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Tele-Communications controls close to 12 million cable subscribers, and Viacom has about one million.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21190018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In its suit against Time, Viacom says the ownership of both cable systems and cable-programming networks gives the company too much market power.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21190019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Time argues that in joining up with Tele-Communications, Viacom has potentially more power, particularly since Viacom also owns cable networks MTV, VH-1 and Nick at Nite.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21190020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Ironically, Tele-Communications and Time have often worked closely in the cable business.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21190021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Together, they control nearly 40% of Turner Broadcasting Systems Inc.; Tele-Communications has a 21.8% stake, while Time Warner has a 17.8% stake.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21190022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But since Time's merger with Warner Communications Inc., relations between the two have become strained.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 21190023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Each company worries that the other is becoming too powerful and too vertically integrated.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21190024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Meanwhile, some legal observers say the Tele-Communications investment and other developments are weakening Viacom's antitrust suit against Time.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21190025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Viacom accuses Time in its suit of refusing to carry Showtime or a sister service, The Movie Channel, on Time's Manhattan Cable TV system, one of the nation's largest urban systems.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21190026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But yesterday, Manhattan Cable announced it will launch Showtime on Nov. 1 to over 230,000 subscribers.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21190027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Showtime has also accused HBO of locking up the lion's share of Hollywood's movies by signing exclusive contracts with all the major studios.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21190028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But Showtime has continued to sign new contracts with Hollywood studios, and yesterday announced it will buy movies from Columbia Pictures Entertainment Inc., which currently has a non-exclusive arrangement with HBO.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21191001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Federal Trade Commission said it authorized its staff to seek a preliminary injunction barring Imo Industries Inc. from acquiring the shares outstanding of the U.S. unit of the British company, United Scientific Holdings PLC, for $69 million.@@@@1@38@@oe@2-2-2013 21191002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The FTC said it "had reason to believe that the proposed acquisition could substantially reduce competition" in the production of certain image intensifier tubes, which are important components of night-vision devices sold primarily to the defense industry.@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 21191003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The FTC said it would seek to enjoin the proposed acquisition in a federal trial court, but declined to specify which one.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21191004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Under federal law, if the court grants a preliminary injunction, the FTC must begin administrative proceedings to determine the legality of the proposed stock purchase within 20 days.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21191005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Officials at the United Scientific unit, Optic-Electronic Corp. of Garland, Texas, and at Imo Industries of Lawrenceville, N.J., couldn't be reached for comment.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21192001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The airline industry's fortunes, in dazzling shape for most of the year, have taken a sudden turn for the worse in the past few weeks.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21192002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Citing rising fuel costs, promotional fare cuts and a general slowdown in travel, several major carriers have posted or are expected to post relatively poor third-quarter results.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21192003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Yesterday, USAir Group Inc., recently one of the industry's stellar performers, posted a worse-than-expected $77.7 million net loss for the period.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21192004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@So far, the industry's fourth quarter isn't looking too strong either, prompting many analysts to slash earning projections for the rest of the year by as much as one-fourth.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21192005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And they say the outlook for 1990 is nearly as bad.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21192006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Airlines in 1989 "came in like a bang and are going out like a whimper," said Kevin Murphy, an airline analyst at Morgan Stanley & Co.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21192007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@This turn of events has put a big damper on an industry that seemed almost invincible last spring, when fares were rising at double-digit rates and many carriers seemed to be growing fat on near-monopolies in certain markets.@@@@1@38@@oe@2-2-2013 21192008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Now, many airline companies might become a lot less attractive as takeover targets on Wall Street.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21192009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The downturn also raises questions about the carriers' ambitious orders for new airplanes, which currently total $32.5 billion over the next three years.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21192010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For travelers, though, the industry's problems have had some positive effects.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21192011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In recent weeks, airlines have cut numerous fares in leisure markets to try to win back customers.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21192012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Others have tried to spruce up frequent-flier programs.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 21192013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Previously, airlines were limiting the programs because they were becoming too expensive.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21192014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Just last week, for example, Trans World Airlines and Pan Am Corp.'s Pan American World Airways went so far as to offer cash rebates or gift checks of $200 to $1,000 to certain frequent-flier members making trans-Atlantic flights in business class or first class.@@@@1@44@@oe@2-2-2013 21192015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The industry's slowdown became apparent this month when AMR Corp., parent of American Airlines, reported an 8.8% drop in third-quarter net income and said its fourth quarter would be "disappointing."@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21192016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Shortly before that, USAir had said its third-quarter results would be "significantly lower" than a year earlier.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21192017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Yesterday, it provided the details:@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21192018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Its loss of $77.7 million, or $1.86 a share, contrasted with net of $68.5 million, or $1.58 a share, in the 1988 third quarter.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21192019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Revenue rose only 3.3% in the latest period, to $1.53 billion from $1.48 billion.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21192020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For the nine months, the Arlington, Va., company's net plunged 73% to $38.5 million, or 76 cents a share, from $142.2 million, or $3.28 a share.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21192021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Revenue rose 12% to $4.75 billion from $4.22 billion.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21192022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The results surprised many analysts, because USAir has almost no competition in its Pittsburgh hub and has expanded operations by completing its acquisition of Piedmont Airlines.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21192023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Shortly after announcing its quarterly loss, USAir's stock tumbled $3 a share.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21192024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It ended at $40.125, down $2.375, in New York Stock Exchange composite trading.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21192025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Nobody was expecting this size of a loss," said Paul Karos, an analyst with First Boston Corp.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21192026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@One airline executive, who declined to be identified, called the loss "amazing."@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21192027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In announcing the results, USAir cited many of the same problems that several other industry officials have named recently.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21192028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It said the industry's domestic traffic was flat in the third quarter; analysts say this was because hefty fare increases earlier in the year scared off many leisure travelers this summer.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21192029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@To try to combat the traffic slowdown, airlines started reducing fares; average fares rose only 1.7% in August, in contrast to increases of 16% each in February and March.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21192030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But so far, the effort has failed, and traffic is still slow.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21192031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some other fare promotions have backfired.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21192032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@This summer, the industry introduced a "kids fly free" program, in which children were allowed to fly free if they were traveling with an adult.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21192033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Airlines tried to restrict the program substantially by limiting the offer to certain days of the week, but it still was apparently used far more heavily than the airlines expected.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21192034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Airlines also say their frequent-flier programs are squeezing profits because awards are being redeemed at a heavier-than-normal rate.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21192035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@One airline official said about three times as many free-travel coupons are being turned in as in previous years -- not surprisingly, as the airlines last year allowed many travelers to build up mileage at triple the normal rate.@@@@1@39@@oe@2-2-2013 21192036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Rising operating expenses are another problem.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21192037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Fuel costs were up 10% in the third quarter.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21192038@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Labor costs, which leveled off in the past few years because of lower pay scales for newer employees, are on the upswing again at many carriers.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21192039@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And some carriers are facing other unexpected headaches: USAir, for example, blamed some of its loss on merger expenses and on disruptions caused by Hurricane Hugo last month.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21192040@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"We cannot quantify the total adverse effects of Hugo," said Edwin Colodny, chairman and president of USAir Group.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21192041@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Whatever the cause for the downturn, few people are predicting any sudden improvement.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21192042@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Airline Economics Inc., an aviation consulting firm, is projecting an industrywide operating profit of $2.5 billion for 1989, compared with earlier forecasts of $3 billion to $3.5 billion.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21192043@unknown@formal@none@1@S@As for 1990, the firm predicts that profit will slip to between $1 billion and $1.5 billion.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21193001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Good grief!@@@@1@2@@oe@2-2-2013 21193002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Charlie Brown is selling out.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21193003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Those Metropolitan Life ads were bad enough.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 21193004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But now, Charlie Brown is about to start pitching everything from Chex Party Mix to light bulbs.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21193005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Why is he cashing in now?@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21193006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Turns out that next year, Charlie Brown, Snoopy and the gang turn 40 -- and Scripps Howard's United Media unit, the syndicator and licensing agent for Charles Schulz's comic strip, sees a bonanza in licensing the cartoon characters to a bevy of advertisers for ads, tie-ins and promotions.@@@@1@48@@oe@2-2-2013 21193007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"Peanuts has become a major part of American culture," says Peter Shore, United Media's vice president of marketing and licensing.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21193008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The comic strip "has a magical, everlasting quality about it.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21193009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Our plan is to honor Charles Schulz and the strip all year long."@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21193010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The effort will make the Peanuts gang very familiar pitchmen in 1990.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21193011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@General Electric plans to use the characters to plug its Miser light bulb.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21193012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Teleflora will run TV ads at Valentine's Day promoting its "Snoopy's Love Bouquet."@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21193013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Ralston Purina will promote its Chex Party Mix's three new flavor packets named for Charlie Brown, Lucy and Linus.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21193014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The characters will also be featured in a new public service effort for the United Way.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21193015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Beyond the advertisements, the syndicator is planning a traveling arena show, new TV specials for CBS and even an exhibit at the Smithsonian Institute.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21193016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The yearlong schedule of festivities will be kicked off officially with a combination live and animation half-time special at the Super Bowl in January.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21193017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@All the tie-ins, though, have some marketing experts questioning whether the party may go too far.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21193018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"There are too many people participating," says Al Ries, of Trout & Ries, a Greenwich, Conn., marketing consulting firm.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21193019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"If you want to cut through the clutter, you have to make your message as distinct, sharp and individual as possible.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21193020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Sharing a character with other advertisers isn't a way to do that."@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21193021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But United Media says it's very scrupulous with the contracts it hands out.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 21193022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"We're not interested in promoting every single product that comes along," Mr. Shore says.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21193023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Metropolitan Life ad executives couldn't be reached about the use of the Peanuts characters by others.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21193024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But Mr. Shore says that company's exclusive advertising rights extend only to the insurance and financial services category.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21193025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Berry Rejoins WPP Group@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 21193026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Norman Berry, the creative executive who was apparently squeezed out of Ogilvy & Mather in June, is returning to Ogilvy's parent company, WPP Group PLC.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21193027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Berry, 58, had resigned after being asked by Ogilvy's chairman and chief executive officer, Kenneth Roman, to give up his title as creative head of the New York office and to take a fuzzier international role.@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 21193028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Yesterday, just a day after Mr. Roman announced he would leave to take a top post at American Express, WPP said Mr. Berry would return to take an international role at the parent company.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 21193029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Berry said the timing was a coincidence and that his decision was unrelated to Mr. Roman's departure.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21193030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@RJR Taps FCB/Leber@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 21193031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@RJR Nabisco Inc. awarded its national broadcast media-buying assignment to FCB/Leber Katz Partners, the New York outpost of Chicago-based Foote, Cone & Belding.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21193032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The naming of FCB/Leber Katz Partners as agency of record for Nabisco Brands Inc. and Planters LifeSavers Co. follows RJR Nabisco's announcement last week that it will disband its RJR Nabisco Broadcast division and dismiss its 14 employees Dec. 1. to cut costs.@@@@1@43@@oe@2-2-2013 21193033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@New York-based RJR Nabisco wouldn't say what it spends annually, but industry executives say it will spend more than $140 million this year, down from about $200 million last year.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21193034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Ad Notes. . . .@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 21193035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@EARNINGS:@@@@1@1@@oe@2-2-2013 21193036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Interpublic Group of Cos. said third-quarter net rose 15% to $6.9 million, or 21 cents a share, from $6 million, or 18 cents a share, in the year-earlier period.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21193037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Revenue increased more than 5% to $283.2 million from $268.6 million.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 21193038@unknown@formal@none@1@S@HOLIDAY PROMOTION:@@@@1@2@@oe@2-2-2013 21193039@unknown@formal@none@1@S@PepsiCo Inc. will give away 4,000 sets of "Game Boy," Nintendo's new hand-held video game in a two-month promotion scheduled to begin Nov. 1.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21193040@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Pepsi said it will spend $10 million advertising the promotion.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 21194001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@International Business Machines Corp. agreed to acquire a 15% stake in Paxus Corp., an Australian computer-software and information-services concern, for 20 million Australian dollars (US$17 million).@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21194002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The investment will be made through IBM Australia Ltd., a unit of IBM, the two companies said yesterday.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21194003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@IBM can raise its stake in Paxus to 20% over three years, but agreed to not go beyond 20% in that time.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 21194004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Paxus said in a statement it has several "well developed product and services relationships" with the U.S. computer company, and plans to expand these links.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 21194005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company earns about half its revenue overseas and plans further expansion.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 21194006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A majority stake in Paxus currently held by NZI Corp. will be diluted to slightly less than 50% after IBM acquires its interest.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 21194007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The agreement requires approval from Australia's Foreign Investment Review Board and National Companies and Securities Commission, and from shareholders of Paxus.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21195001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Bond Corp. Holdings Ltd.'s consolidated debt totals 6.9 billion Australian dollars (US$5.32 billion), including A$1.6 billion of bonds convertible into shares.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21195002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Alan Bond, chairman and controlling shareholder of the cash-strapped Australian media, brewing, resources and property concern, disclosed the debt figures yesterday.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21195003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The disclosure follows last Friday's news that Bond Corp. incurred an overall loss of A$980.2 million for the fiscal year ended June 30, the largest loss in Australian corporate history.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21195004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The debt load would have been higher but for a reduction of A$5 billion over the past year from asset sales, Mr. Bond said at a business gathering.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21195005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Bond indicated the consolidated debt figures, which include debt of units such as Bell Group Ltd., will be published soon in Bond Corp.'s 1989 annual accounts.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21195006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He predicted the debt will be reduced by another A$3.8 billion this fiscal year ending June 30, 1990, but didn't explain how this will be achieved.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21195007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Bond blamed rising Australian interest rates and the acquisition of Bell Group "with its very high levels of shortterm debt" for producing a condition "that was no longer sustainable.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 21195008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"In order to restore confidence and ensure the support of our principal lenders," Mr. Bond said, "we embarked on fundamantal changes in the structure and direction of the group."@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 21195009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@That reassessment resulted in continuing asset sales, as well as write-offs exceeding A$1.1 billion last fiscal year.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 21195010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"In essence we have made a decision to clear the decks," Mr. Bond told the meeting.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21195011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@While some assets have been written down, others are undervalued in the accounts, Mr. Bond maintained.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 21195012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Among these are the company's Australian brewing assets, in the books at A$950 million but actually worth A$2.5 billion, he said.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21195013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@An investment in Chile's telephone company is carried at US$300 million but really worth US$500 million, and the company's property portfolio is undervalued by at least A$250 million, Mr. Bond said.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 21195014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Bond forecast that by next June, "what will emerge will be a company with a honed sense of purpose . . . a stable balance sheet, with good-quality assets in brewing, telecommunications, media and property."@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21195015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He didn't name energy resources in that list, signaling that all the company's coal and oil interests might be for sale in total or in part.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 21195016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some of the oil interests already have been sold.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21196001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mercedes-Benz of North America Inc., Grosse Pointe Shores, Mich., estimated it will sell about as many cars in 1990 as the 75,000 it expects to deliver this year.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21196002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mercedes officials said they expect flat sales next year even though they see the U.S. luxury-car market expanding slightly.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 21196003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Erich Krampe, president of the U.S. sales arm of West German auto maker Daimler Benz AG, predicted luxury-car sales will rise to 840,000 in 1990 from 830,000 this year primarily because of the new Japanese makes.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21196004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Most of the growth, he said, will come in the $35,000-to-$50,000 price range, where Mercedes has a 35% U.S. market share.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 21196005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mercedes sold 82,348 cars in 1988.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 21196006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Krampe also said that Mercedes plans to bring out new models every year through the mid-1990s and it will shorten its product development cycle to eight years from 10 or 12 years to compete more effectively with Toyota Motor Corp.'s Lexus, Nissan Motor Co.'s Infiniti and Honda Motor Co.'s Acura luxury-car divisions.@@@@1@53@@oe@2-2-2013 21197001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Homestake Mining Co., San Francisco, blamed the continued slump in gold prices for an 83% plunge in third-quarter net income to $2 million, or two cents a share, from $11.2 million, or 12 cents a share, a year earlier.@@@@1@39@@oe@2-2-2013 21197002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Revenue rose 5% to $110.4 million from $105.4 million.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 21197003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In New York Stock Exchange composite trading, Homestake closed at $15.25, down 25 cents.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 21197004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"A significant increase in gold sales to 248,279 ounces for the quarter from 188,726 in the third quarter of 1988 was more than offset by the continued decline in average gold price realization to $367 from $429 per ounce," the company said.@@@@1@42@@oe@2-2-2013 21197005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For the nine months, the mining company posted a 40% drop in profit to $30.1 million, or 31 cents a share, from $50.6 million, or 52 cents a share, on a 6% rise in revenue to $323.2 million from $305.7 million.@@@@1@41@@oe@2-2-2013 21198001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Treasury plans to raise $1.8 billion in new cash with the sale Monday of about $15.6 billion in short-term bills to redeem $13.81 billion in maturing bills.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 21198002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The offering will be divided evenly between 13-week and 26-week bills maturing Feb. 1, 1990, and May 3, 1990, respectively.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 21198003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Tenders for the bills, available in minimum $10,000 denominations, must be received by 1 p.m. EST Monday at the Treasury or at Federal Reserve banks or branches.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21198004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Treasury said it will alter the auctions unless it has assurance of enactment of legislation to raise the statutory debt limit before the scheduled auctions Monday.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 21199001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Apogee Enterprises Inc. said profit for the third quarter ending Dec. 2 will fall below the year-earlier results because of an after-tax charge of $1.9 million related to a project that was guaranteed by the company.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 21199002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A year ago, the Minneapolis glass products and aluminum window maker earned $4 million, or 30 cents a share, on revenue of $114 million.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 21199003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Apogee said the charge stems from a building supply contract in which the company guaranteed a contractor's performance.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 21199004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Apogee said a subcontractor had severe cost overruns and was unable to fulfill the contract terms on its own, making it necessary for Apogee to advance cash to ensure completion of the project.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 21199005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The company said its core businesses have performed well and it expects them to continue to do so in the remainder of the fiscal year.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013