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wsj_0786_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t92>10/27/89</t92> AMI Z.CSU WNEWS TENDER OFFERS, MERGERS, ACQUISITIONS (TNM) HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS, MEDICINE, DENTISTRY (HEA) LOS ANGELES IMA Holdings Corp. <ei386>completed</ei386> its $3 billion <ei387>acquisition</ei387> of American Medical International Inc., <ei388>purchasing</ei388> 63 million shares, or 86%, of the Los Angeles-based health-care services concern for $26.50 a share. The price also includes assumption of about $1.4 billion in debt. IMA is a group that includes First Boston Corp. and the Pritzker family of Chicago through the leveraged buy-out fund Harry Gray Melvyn Klein amp Partners. Harry J. Gray and Melvyn N. Klein, along with five other IMA designees, were <ei389>named</ei389> to <ei390>join</ei390> American Medical's 10-member board. | [
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wsj_0786_1 | Documents Creation Time: <t92>10/27/89</t92> Gray and Melvyn N. Klein, along with five other IMA designees, were <ei389>named</ei389> to <ei390>join</ei390> American Medical's 10-member board. The <ei391>completion</ei391> of the <ei392>merger</ei392> <ei393>agreement</ei393> follows <t91>months</t91> of <ei394>twists</ei394> and <ei395>turns</ei395>. In <t93>January</t93>, American Medical <ei396>brought</ei396> in a new chief executive officer, Richard A. Gilleland, 45, who will <ei397>remain</ei397> as chairman, president and chief executive. <t96>A few days</t96> later, American Medical <ei398>announced</ei398> sharply lower <ei399>earnings</ei399>, <ei400>taking</ei400> charges of $24 million for insurance reserves and <ei401>canceled</ei401> real estate <ei402>leases</ei402>. In <t97>March</t97>, American Medical <ei403>received</ei403> a $24-a-share <ei404>offer</ei404> to <ei405>take</ei405> the company private from an investor group including large holder M. Lee Pearce. | [
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wsj_0786_2 | Documents Creation Time: <t92>10/27/89</t92> In <t97>March</t97>, American Medical <ei403>received</ei403> a $24-a-share <ei404>offer</ei404> to <ei405>take</ei405> the company private from an investor group including large holder M. Lee Pearce. It also was <ei406>considering</ei406> a <ei407>restructuring</ei407> to <ei408>help</ei408> <ei409>boost</ei409> the stock price. A group including several members of the the Bass family of Texas <ei410>urged</ei410> the company to <ei411>take</ei411> some steps to <ei412>maximize</ei412> shareholder value. <t98>The following month</t98>, the company <ei413>put</ei413> itself up for <ei414>sale</ei414>. It <ei415>received</ei415> more <ei416>offers</ei416>, but the <ei417>auction</ei417> was surprisingly <ei418>won</ei418> by IMA, which <ei419>bid</ei419> $28 a share and <ei420>asked</ei420> Mr. Gilleland to <ei421>stay</ei421> on as an equity participant. | [
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wsj_0786_3 | Documents Creation Time: <t92>10/27/89</t92> It <ei415>received</ei415> more <ei416>offers</ei416>, but the <ei417>auction</ei417> was surprisingly <ei418>won</ei418> by IMA, which <ei419>bid</ei419> $28 a share and <ei420>asked</ei420> Mr. Gilleland to <ei421>stay</ei421> on as an equity participant. He <ei422>indicated</ei422> that some assets might be <ei423>sold</ei423> off to <ei424>service</ei424> the debt. Then, after <ei425>extending</ei425> its offer four times <ei426>waiting</ei426> for a congressional tax <ei427>ruling</ei427>, IMA <t99>early this month</t99> <ei428>lowered</ei428> its offer to $26.50 a share amid turbulence in the junk bond market. American Medical <ei429>accepted</ei429> the <ei430>offer</ei430>, meanwhile <ei431>indicating</ei431> it had <ei432>heard</ei432> from two other suitors. But they never <ei433>materialized</ei433> and IMA <ei434>completed</ei434> the <ei435>purchase</ei435> <t100>yesterday</t100>. | [
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wsj_0751_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t23>10/27/89</t23> DME STPT TENDER OFFERS, MERGERS, ACQUISITIONS (TNM) SAVINGS AND LOANS, THRIFTS, CREDIT UNIONS (SAL) GARDEN CITY, N.Y. Dime Savings Bank of New York was <ei138>cleared</ei138> by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. to <ei139>acquire</ei139> Starpointe Savings Bank of Somerset, N.J., the banks <ei140>said</ei140>. Starpointe holders, who <ei141>approved</ei141> the <ei142>plan</ei142> <t24>last April</t24>, will <ei143>receive</ei143> $21 in cash a share, or a total $63 million. The FDIC <ei144>cleared</ei144> the <ei145>move</ei145> <t25>yesterday</t25>, and the banks must <ei146>wait</ei146> <t26>at least 30 days</t26> before <ei147>closing</ei147> the <ei148>purchase</ei148>. A closing date has n't been <ei149>set</ei149>. The thrifts <ei150>agreed</ei150> to the <ei151>transaction</ei151> in <t27>August 1988</t27>. | [
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wsj_0745_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t157>10/27/89</t157> GM JAGRY F EUROP TENDER OFFERS, MERGERS, ACQUISITIONS (TNM) AUTOMOBILES (AUT) LONDON General Motors Corp. <ei2451>wants</ei2451> to <ei2452>buy</ei2452> as much as 15% of Jaguar PLC, <ei2453>marking</ei2453> its first <ei2454>salvo</ei2454> in a possible full-scale <ei2455>battle</ei2455> against Ford Motor Co. for <ei2456>control</ei2456> of the British car maker. GM <ei2457>sought</ei2457> U.S. antitrust <ei2458>clearance</ei2458> <t158>last week</t158> to <ei2459>purchase</ei2459> more than $15 million worth of Jaguar shares but does n't <ei2460>own</ei2460> any <t161>yet</t161>, <ei2461>according</ei2461> to GM officials here and at the company's Detroit headquarters. The No. 1 U.S. auto maker then <ei2462>wrote</ei2462> Jaguar that it <ei2463>intends</ei2463> "to <ei2464>go</ei2464> to that <ei2465>15%" level</ei2465> once it <ei2466>wins</ei2466> the U.S. <ei2467>clearance</ei2467> to <ei2468>go</ei2468> beyond $15 million, a Jaguar spokesman <ei2470>said</ei2470> <t163>yesterday</t163>. The GM <ei2471>move</ei2471> follows <t164>Tuesday</t164>'s <ei2472>declaration</ei2472> by Ford, which holds an unwelcome 12.45% stake in Jaguar, that it is <ei2473>prepared</ei2473> to <ei2474>bid</ei2474> for the entire company. | [
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wsj_0745_1 | Documents Creation Time: <t157>10/27/89</t157> The GM <ei2471>move</ei2471> follows <t164>Tuesday</t164>'s <ei2472>declaration</ei2472> by Ford, which holds an unwelcome 12.45% stake in Jaguar, that it is <ei2473>prepared</ei2473> to <ei2474>bid</ei2474> for the entire company. GM is close to <ei2475>completing</ei2475> a friendly <ei2476>deal</ei2476> with Jaguar that is likely to <ei2477>involve</ei2477> an eventual 30% stake and joint manufacturing <ei2478>ventures</ei2478>. Speculative investors, <ei2479>betting</ei2479> on an imminent <ei2480>clash</ei2480> between Ford and GM, <ei2481>pushed</ei2481> up Jaguar's share price five pence (eight U.S. cents) to a near-record <ei2546>720</ei2546> pence ($11.60) in late <ei2484>trading</ei2484> on London's stock exchange <t313>yesterday</t313>. Since <t314>Tuesday</t314>, the shares have <ei2485>gained</ei2485> nearly 4%. But an all-out bidding <ei2486>war</ei2486> between the world's top auto giants for Britain's leading luxury-car maker seems unlikely. | [
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wsj_0745_2 | Documents Creation Time: <t157>10/27/89</t157> But an all-out bidding <ei2486>war</ei2486> between the world's top auto giants for Britain's leading luxury-car maker seems unlikely. "We will not <ei2487>go</ei2487> over a certain level," <ei2488>said</ei2488> David N. McCammon, Ford's vice president for finance, at a news <ei2489>conference</ei2489> <t315>yesterday</t315> in Dearborn, Mich. "There's some price at which we'd <ei2490>stop</ei2490> <ei2491>bidding</ei2491>." He would n't <ei2492>specify</ei2492> what it was. And powerful political <ei2493>pressures</ei2493> may <ei2494>convince</ei2494> the Conservative government to <ei2495>keep</ei2495> its so-called golden share, which limits any individual holding to 15%, until the <ei2496>restriction</ei2496> <ei2497>expires</ei2497> on <t325>Dec. 31, 1990</t325>. "I really do n't <ei2498>see</ei2498> the government <ei2499>doing</ei2499> something that Jaguar does n't <ei2500>want</ei2500> over <t327>the next 14 months</t327>," <ei2501>said</ei2501> Kenneth Warren, a Conservative member of Parliament and chairman of the Select Committee on Trade and Industry in Britain's House of Commons. | [
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wsj_0745_3 | Documents Creation Time: <t157>10/27/89</t157> "I really do n't <ei2498>see</ei2498> the government <ei2499>doing</ei2499> something that Jaguar does n't <ei2500>want</ei2500> over <t327>the next 14 months</t327>," <ei2501>said</ei2501> Kenneth Warren, a Conservative member of Parliament and chairman of the Select Committee on Trade and Industry in Britain's House of Commons. "The golden share is a single share, but it is the magic share." The government <ei2502>retained</ei2502> the single share after <ei2503>selling</ei2503> its stake in Jaguar in <t330>1984</t330> -- part of a nationalistic practice of protecting former government-owned enterprises to deflect criticism of privatization. The 15% restriction covers any would-be suitor, British or foreign. Ford is <ei2504>willing</ei2504> to <ei2505>bid</ei2505> for 100% of Jaguar's shares if both the government and Jaguar shareholders <ei2506>agree</ei2506> to <ei2507>relax</ei2507> the anti-takeover barrier prematurely. | [
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wsj_0745_4 | Documents Creation Time: <t157>10/27/89</t157> Ford is <ei2504>willing</ei2504> to <ei2505>bid</ei2505> for 100% of Jaguar's shares if both the government and Jaguar shareholders <ei2506>agree</ei2506> to <ei2507>relax</ei2507> the anti-takeover barrier prematurely. As Jaguar's biggest holder and Britain's biggest car maker, Ford could <ei2508>turn</ei2508> up the heat by <ei2509>convening</ei2509> a special shareholders' <ei2510>meeting</ei2510> and <ei2511>urging</ei2511> holders to <ei2512>drop</ei2512> the limits early. Ford might <ei2513>succeed</ei2513> because many shareholders are speculators <ei2514>keen</ei2514> for a full <ei2515>bid</ei2515> or institutional investors <ei2516>unhappy</ei2516> over Jaguar management's <ei2517>handling</ei2517> of its <t1992>current</t1992> financial <ei2518>difficulties</ei2518>. The government probably would n't <ei2519>give</ei2519> in readily to a hostile foray by Ford, however. It has <ei2520>relinquished</ei2520> a golden share only once before -- during British Petroleum Co.'s #2.5 billion ($4 billion) <ei2521>takeover</ei2521> of Britoil PLC in <t1998>1988</t1998>. | [
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wsj_0745_5 | Documents Creation Time: <t157>10/27/89</t157> It has <ei2520>relinquished</ei2520> a golden share only once before -- during British Petroleum Co.'s #2.5 billion ($4 billion) <ei2521>takeover</ei2521> of Britoil PLC in <t1998>1988</t1998>. In <ei2522>wooing</ei2522> British lawmakers, GM has <ei2523>pointed</ei2523> out that its <ei2524>willingness</ei2524> to <ei2525>settle</ei2525> for a minority stake would <ei2526>keep</ei2526> Jaguar <ei2527>British-owned</ei2527> and <ei2528>independent</ei2528>. <t2007>This week</t2007>, the U.S. auto giant <ei2529>paid</ei2529> for 10 House of Commons members and two House of Lords members to <ei2530>fly</ei2530> to Detroit and <ei2531>tour</ei2531> its operations there. While the <ei2532>visit</ei2532> was unrelated to Jaguar, GM Chairman Roger Smith <ei2533>answered</ei2533> the legislators' <ei2534>questions</ei2534> about it over <ei2535>lunch</ei2535> <t2386>Tuesday</t2386>. He <ei2536>said</ei2536> Jaguar "should n't be <ei2537>smothered</ei2537> by anyone else , " <ei2538>recalled</ei2538> one participant. | [
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wsj_0745_6 | Documents Creation Time: <t157>10/27/89</t157> He <ei2536>said</ei2536> Jaguar "should n't be <ei2537>smothered</ei2537> by anyone else , " <ei2538>recalled</ei2538> one participant. Politics also influences the government's thinking on the anti-takeover restriction. The Conservatives do n't dare jeopardize marginal Tory seats in Coventry, where Jaguar has headquarters, nor can the government easily back down on promised protection for a privatized company while it proceeds with controversial plans to privatize most of Britain's water and electricity industries. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher might , however , be <ei2539>receptive</ei2539> to any <ei2540>request</ei2540> by Jaguar Chairman Sir John Egan for the restriction's early <ei2541>removal</ei2541> to <ei2542>let</ei2542> GM <ei2543>amass</ei2543> more than 15% or <ei2544>mount</ei2544> a friendly suitor <ei2545>bid</ei2545> against Ford. In the end, Sir John -- rather than the government or Jaguar shareholders -- may hold the key that unlocks the golden share. | [
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wsj_0584_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t286>10/30/89</t286> BLS LINB MCAWA TENDER OFFERS, MERGERS, ACQUISITIONS (TNM) TELEPHONE SYSTEMS (TLS) MEDIA, PUBLISHING, BROADCASTING, ELECTRONIC PUBLISHING (MED) The bolstered cellular <ei2573>agreement</ei2573> between BellSouth Corp. and LIN Broadcasting Corp. carries heightened <ei2574>risks</ei2574> and could <ei2575>fail</ei2575> to <ei2576>fend</ei2576> off McCaw Cellular Communications Inc., the rival suitor for LIN. Moreover, the amended <ei2577>pact</ei2577> shows how McCaw's persistence has <ei2578>pushed</ei2578> LIN and BellSouth into a corner, <ei2579>forcing</ei2579> huge debt on the proposed new company. The debt, <ei2580>estimated</ei2580> at $4.7 billion, could <ei2582>mortgage</ei2582> the cellular company's future earning power in order to <ei2583>placate</ei2583> some LIN holders in <t287>the short term</t287>. The plan still <ei2584>calls</ei2584> for LIN to <ei2585>combine</ei2585> its cellular telephone properties with BellSouth's and to <ei2586>spin</ei2586> off its broadcasting operations. But under new terms of the <ei2587>agreement</ei2587>, <ei2588>announced</ei2588> <t288>Friday</t288>, LIN holders would <ei2589>receive</ei2589> a special cash dividend of $42 a share, representing a payout of about $2.23 billion, shortly before the <ei2590>proposed</ei2590> <ei2591>merger</ei2591>. | [
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wsj_0584_1 | Documents Creation Time: <t286>10/30/89</t286> But under new terms of the <ei2587>agreement</ei2587>, <ei2588>announced</ei2588> <t288>Friday</t288>, LIN holders would <ei2589>receive</ei2589> a special cash dividend of $42 a share, representing a payout of about $2.23 billion, shortly before the <ei2590>proposed</ei2590> <ei2591>merger</ei2591>. LIN <ei2592>said</ei2592> it <ei2593>expects</ei2593> to <ei2594>borrow</ei2594> the money to <ei2595>pay</ei2595> the dividend, but <ei2596>commitments</ei2596> from banks still have n't been <ei2597>obtained</ei2597>. Under previous terms, holders would have <ei2598>received</ei2598> a dividend of only $20 a share. In addition, New York-based LIN would <ei2599>exercise</ei2599> its right to <ei2600>buy</ei2600> out for $1.9 billion the 55% equity interest of its partner, Metromedia Co., in a New York cellular franchise. That money also would have to be <ei2602>borrowed</ei2602>. | [
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wsj_0584_2 | Documents Creation Time: <t286>10/30/89</t286> That money also would have to be <ei2602>borrowed</ei2602>. In effect, McCaw has <ei2603>forced</ei2603> LIN's hand by <ei2604>bidding</ei2604> $1.9 billion for the stake <t292>earlier this month</t292>. "We're <ei2605>taking</ei2605> on more debt than we would have <ei2606>liked</ei2606> to," <ei2607>acknowledged</ei2607> Michael Plouf, LIN's vice president and treasurer. Although he <ei2608>expressed</ei2608> <ei2609>confidence</ei2609> that the proposed new company's cash flow would be <ei2610>sufficient</ei2610> to <ei2611>cover</ei2611> interest payments on the debt, he <ei2612>estimated</ei2612> that the company would n't be <ei2613>profitable</ei2613> until <t299>1994 or later</t299>. Analyst <ei2614>estimate</ei2614> the <ei2615>value</ei2615> of the BellSouth proposal at about $115 to $125 a share. | [
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wsj_0584_3 | Documents Creation Time: <t286>10/30/89</t286> Analyst <ei2614>estimate</ei2614> the <ei2615>value</ei2615> of the BellSouth proposal at about $115 to $125 a share. They <ei2616>value</ei2616> McCaw's <ei2617>bid</ei2617> at $112 to $118 a share. The previous BellSouth <ei2618>pact</ei2618> was <ei2619>valued</ei2619> at about $98 to $110 a share. McCaw, the largest provider of cellular telephone service in the U.S., already owns about 9.4% of LIN's stock. In response to BellSouth's amended <ei2620>pact</ei2620>, the Kirkland, Wash., company <ei2621>extended</ei2621> its own <ei2622>offer</ei2622> to <ei2623>buy</ei2623> 22 million LIN shares for $125 apiece, which would <ei2624>give</ei2624> McCaw a 50.3% controlling interest. | [
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wsj_0584_4 | Documents Creation Time: <t286>10/30/89</t286> In response to BellSouth's amended <ei2620>pact</ei2620>, the Kirkland, Wash., company <ei2621>extended</ei2621> its own <ei2622>offer</ei2622> to <ei2623>buy</ei2623> 22 million LIN shares for $125 apiece, which would <ei2624>give</ei2624> McCaw a 50.3% controlling interest. Over <t307>the weekend</t307>, McCaw <ei2625>continued</ei2625> to <ei2626>call</ei2626> for an auction of LIN. Analysts <ei2627>said</ei2627> they <ei2628>expect</ei2628> McCaw to <ei2629>escalate</ei2629> the bidding again. "This game is n't <ei2630>over</ei2630> yet , " <ei2631>said</ei2631> Joel D. Gross, a vice president at Donaldson, Lufkin amp Jenrette Securities Corp. "At some point, it will <ei2632>become</ei2632> non-economical for one company. But I do n't <ei2634>think</ei2634> we're <ei2704>at</ei2704> that point yet." | [
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wsj_0584_5 | Documents Creation Time: <t286>10/30/89</t286> But I do n't <ei2634>think</ei2634> we're <ei2704>at</ei2704> that point yet." Under its <ei2636>revised</ei2636> <ei2637>proposal</ei2637>, Atlanta-based BellSouth would <ei2638>have</ei2638> a 50% interest in the new cellular company and would be <ei2639>responsible</ei2639> for half of its debt. To <ei2640>sweeten</ei2640> the pact further -- and to <ei2641>ease</ei2641> <ei2642>concerns</ei2642> of institutional investors -- BellSouth <ei2643>added</ei2643> a provision designed to <ei2644>give</ei2644> extra <ei2645>protection</ei2645> to holders if the regional Bell company ever <ei2646>decides</ei2646> to <ei2647>buy</ei2647> the rest of the new cellular company. The provision, described as "back-end" protection, would <ei2648>require</ei2648> BellSouth to <ei2649>pay</ei2649> a price equivalent to what an outside party might have to pay. McCaw's bid also has a similar clause. | [
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wsj_0584_6 | Documents Creation Time: <t286>10/30/89</t286> McCaw's bid also has a similar clause. Only McCaw's proposal <ei2650>requires</ei2650> the company to <ei2651>begin</ei2651> an auction <ei2652>process</ei2652> in <t322>June 1994</t322> for remaining shares at third-party prices. To <ei2653>mollify</ei2653> shareholders <ei2654>concerned</ei2654> about the long-term <ei2655>value</ei2655> of the company under the BellSouth-LIN <ei2656>agreement</ei2656>, BellSouth also <ei2657>agreed</ei2657> to <ei2658>pay</ei2658> as much as $10 a share, or $540 million, if, after <t326>five years</t326>, the trading value of the new cellular company isn't as <ei2659>high</ei2659> as the value that shareholders would have realized from the McCaw offer. "We're very <ei2660>pleased</ei2660> with the new <ei2661>deal</ei2661>. We did n't <ei2662>expect</ei2662> BellSouth to be so <ei2663>responsive</ei2663>," <ei2664>said</ei2664> Frederick A. Moran, president of Moran Asset Management Inc., which holds 500,000 LIN shares. | [
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wsj_0584_7 | Documents Creation Time: <t286>10/30/89</t286> We did n't <ei2662>expect</ei2662> BellSouth to be so <ei2663>responsive</ei2663>," <ei2664>said</ei2664> Frederick A. Moran, president of Moran Asset Management Inc., which holds 500,000 LIN shares. BellSouth's "back-end protection was flawed previously. We <ei2665>think</ei2665> this is a superior <ei2666>deal</ei2666> to McCaw's. We're surprised. We did n't <ei2667>think</ei2667> a sleeping {Bell} mentality would be <ei2668>willing</ei2668> to <ei2669>take</ei2669> on dilution." | [
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wsj_0584_8 | Documents Creation Time: <t286>10/30/89</t286> We did n't <ei2667>think</ei2667> a sleeping {Bell} mentality would be <ei2668>willing</ei2668> to <ei2669>take</ei2669> on dilution." But Kenneth Leon, a telecommunications analyst with Bear, Stearns amp Co., <ei2670>finds</ei2670> the BellSouth proposal still <ei2671>flawed</ei2671> because the company does n't have to <ei2703>wait</ei2703> five years to begin buying more LIN shares. "How many shares will be around in 1995?" he asked. "There's nothing preventing BellSouth from buying up shares in the meanwhile." | [
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wsj_0584_9 | Documents Creation Time: <t286>10/30/89</t286> "There's nothing preventing BellSouth from buying up shares in the meanwhile." BellSouth's revised <ei2672>proposal</ei2672> <ei2673>surprised</ei2673> many industry analysts, especially because of the company's <ei2674>willingness</ei2674> to <ei2675>accept</ei2675> some <ei2676>dilution</ei2676> of future earnings. William O. McCoy, president of the company's BellSouth Enterprises Inc. unit, <ei2677>said</ei2677> the revised <ei2678>agreement</ei2678> with LIN would <ei2679>dilute</ei2679> BellSouth earnings by about 9% in both <t351>1990</t351> and <t352>1991</t352> and by significantly less thereafter. Indeed, BellSouth's cellular operations were among the first in the country to become profitable. For <t358>1988</t358>, BellSouth <ei2680>earned</ei2680> $1.7 billion, or $3.51 a share, on revenue of $13.6 billion. | [
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wsj_0584_10 | Documents Creation Time: <t286>10/30/89</t286> For <t358>1988</t358>, BellSouth <ei2680>earned</ei2680> $1.7 billion, or $3.51 a share, on revenue of $13.6 billion. Analysts were <ei2681>predicting</ei2681> <t359>1990</t359> BellSouth <ei2682>earnings</ei2682> in the range of $3.90 a share, or $1.9 billion, but <t361>now</t361> those <ei2683>estimates</ei2683> are being <ei2684>scaled</ei2684> back. In composite <ei2685>trading</ei2685> <t364>Friday</t364> on the New York Stock Exchange, BellSouth shares <ei2686>fell</ei2686> 87.5 cents to <ei2687>$52.125</ei2687>. In national over-the-counter <ei2688>trading</ei2688>, LIN shares <ei2689>soared</ei2689> $4.625 to closed at $112.625, while McCaw <ei2690>fell</ei2690> $2.50 a share to <ei2691>$37.75</ei2691>. The proposed BellSouth-LIN cellular company, including the newly acquired Metromedia stake, would <ei2692>give</ei2692> the new entity 55 million potential customers, including about 35 million in the nation's top 10 markets. | [
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wsj_0584_11 | Documents Creation Time: <t286>10/30/89</t286> The proposed BellSouth-LIN cellular company, including the newly acquired Metromedia stake, would <ei2692>give</ei2692> the new entity 55 million potential customers, including about 35 million in the nation's top 10 markets. Mr. Leon of Bear Stearns <ei2693>speculated</ei2693> that McCaw, in an <ei2694>attempt</ei2694> to <ei2695>buy</ei2695> time, might <ei2696>consider</ei2696> <ei2697>filing</ei2697> an antitrust suit against BellSouth with the Justice Department and U.S. District Judge Harold Greene, who oversees enforcement of the consent decree that <ei2698>broke</ei2698> up the Bell system in <t370>1984</t370>. Indeed, McCaw <ei2699>seemed</ei2699> to <ei2700>hint</ei2700> at that option in a brief <ei2701>statement</ei2701>. Urging LIN directors to conduct "a fair auction on a level playing field," McCaw asked how well the public interest would be served "with the Bell operating companies controlling over 94% of all cellular {potential customers} in the nation's top 10 markets." | [
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APW19980322.0749_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t125>03/22/1998 14:57:00</t125> Police <ei2026>seized</ei2026> a car bomb under construction <t126>Sunday</t126> in a town bordering Northern Ireland on the eve of the <ei2027>return</ei2027> to peace <ei2028>talks</ei2028> by the IRA-allied Sinn Fein party. Chief Superintendent Al McHugh <ei2029>said</ei2029> the <ei2030>bomb</ei2030> <ei2031>discovered</ei2031> in the Irish Republic was destined for an unknown target in Northern Ireland and ``would have <ei2032>caused</ei2032> massive <ei2033>destruction</ei2033>.'' The <ei2034>discovery</ei2034> <ei2035>appeared</ei2035> to be the latest <ei2036>attempt</ei2036> by extremists opposed to the IRA's <t127>8-month-old</t127> <ei2037>truce</ei2037> to <ei2038>undermine</ei2038> the peace process, <ei2039>set</ei2039> to <ei2040>resume</ei2040> <t128>Monday</t128> in Belfast. Extremists have <ei2041>bombed</ei2041> two predominantly pro-British Protestant towns and fired mortar shells at a police station since Sinn Fein was <ei2042>expelled</ei2042> from peace talks on <t129>Feb. 20</t129> in <ei2043>punishment</ei2043> for two <ei2044>killings</ei2044> blamed on the Irish Republican Army. Police <ei2045>found</ei2045> more than 1,300 pounds (600 kgs) of fertilizer-based explosives <t130>Sunday</t130> in a shed in Dundalk, 50 miles (80 kms) south of Belfast. | [
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APW19980322.0749_1 | Documents Creation Time: <t125>03/22/1998 14:57:00</t125> Police <ei2045>found</ei2045> more than 1,300 pounds (600 kgs) of fertilizer-based explosives <t130>Sunday</t130> in a shed in Dundalk, 50 miles (80 kms) south of Belfast. They <ei2046>arrested</ei2046> two men in connection with the bomb factory, which also contained circuitry, detonating cord and the Mitsubishi truck that would have <ei2047>carried</ei2047> the bomb. The British and Irish governments, which <ei2048>cosponsor</ei2048> the multi-party talks that are <ei2049>supposed</ei2049> to <ei2050>conclude</ei2050> by <t131>May</t131>, <ei2051>invited</ei2051> Sinn Fein to <ei2052>rejoin</ei2052> <t2023>two weeks ago</t2023>. But Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams <ei2053>kept</ei2053> his party out pending <ei2054>meetings</ei2054> with British Prime Minister Tony Blair <t132>10 days ago</t132> and President Clinton <t134>last week</t134>. ``We were unjustly <ei2055>pushed</ei2055> out of the <ei2056>talks</ei2056> in <t135>February</t135> but we are back,'' Adams <ei2057>said</ei2057> <t136>Sunday</t136>. | [
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APW19980322.0749_2 | Documents Creation Time: <t125>03/22/1998 14:57:00</t125> ``We were unjustly <ei2055>pushed</ei2055> out of the <ei2056>talks</ei2056> in <t135>February</t135> but we are back,'' Adams <ei2057>said</ei2057> <t136>Sunday</t136>. He <ei2058>said</ei2058> the north's substantial Catholic minority <ei2059>demanded</ei2059> a <ei2060>settlement</ei2060> that would <ei2061>promote</ei2061> Northern Ireland's eventual <ei2062>unification</ei2062> with the Irish Republic. ``Nationalists in the north are not a minority in someone else's country. We are Irish citizens, <ei2063>living</ei2063> in our own country,'' Adams <ei2064>said</ei2064>, <ei2065>adding</ei2065>: ``Nationalists <ei2066>want</ei2066> to <ei2067>move</ei2067> towards Irish unity and see this process as a bridge in that direction.'' But the north's pro-British Protestant majority is bitterly <ei2068>opposed</ei2068> to <ei2069>uniting</ei2069> Ireland and instead <ei2070>wants</ei2070> a strong <ei2071>government</ei2071> for Northern Ireland, which has been <ei2072>ruled</ei2072> directly by London since <t137>1972</t137>. | [
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APW19980322.0749_3 | Documents Creation Time: <t125>03/22/1998 14:57:00</t125> But the north's pro-British Protestant majority is bitterly <ei2068>opposed</ei2068> to <ei2069>uniting</ei2069> Ireland and instead <ei2070>wants</ei2070> a strong <ei2071>government</ei2071> for Northern Ireland, which has been <ei2072>ruled</ei2072> directly by London since <t137>1972</t137>. Northern Ireland's biggest Protestant party, the Ulster Unionists, is <ei2073>threatening</ei2073> to <ei2074>push</ei2074> for Sinn Fein's <ei2075>expulsion</ei2075> once again. They <ei2076>say</ei2076> IRA commanders are <ei2077>responsible</ei2077> for the recent bomb <ei2078>attacks</ei2078>. Also <t138>Sunday</t138>, more than 2,000 Catholic protesters <ei2079>rallied</ei2079> in Portadown against the annual parades by the Orange Order, Northern Ireland's dominant Protestant fraternal group. <ei2080>Confrontations</ei2080> among Catholic protesters, Protestant marchers and the police have <ei2081>provoked</ei2081> widespread <ei2082>violence</ei2082> in Northern Ireland for <t154>the past three summers</t154>. | [
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APW19980322.0749_4 | Documents Creation Time: <t125>03/22/1998 14:57:00</t125> <ei2080>Confrontations</ei2080> among Catholic protesters, Protestant marchers and the police have <ei2081>provoked</ei2081> widespread <ei2082>violence</ei2082> in Northern Ireland for <t154>the past three summers</t154>. The crucible is Portadown, 30 miles (50 kms) southwest of Belfast, where Orangemen march each July from their rural church back downtown _ through the town's main Catholic area. Protesters from several Catholic communities <ei2083>crowded</ei2083> into Portadown's Catholic Garvaghy Road to <ei2084>hear</ei2084> speakers <ei2085>demand</ei2085> <ei2086>negotiations</ei2086> with Orange Order leaders, and <ei2087>pledge</ei2087> to <ei2088>participate</ei2088> in each others' road-blocking <ei2089>protests</ei2089> <t144>this summer</t144>. ``Small nationalist communities are not going to be <ei2090>left</ei2090> on their own <t145>this summer</t145>,'' <ei2091>said</ei2091> Gerard Rice, a former IRA prisoner who leads anti-Orange protests in a Catholic neighborhood of south Belfast. Riot police in armored cars, shields and helmets <ei2092>prevented</ei2092> a few hundred Protestants, many <ei2093>waving</ei2093> British and Ulster flags, from <ei2094>interfering</ei2094> with the Catholics as they <ei2095>marched</ei2095> within Portadown's few Catholic streets. | [
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APW19980322.0749_5 | Documents Creation Time: <t125>03/22/1998 14:57:00</t125> Riot police in armored cars, shields and helmets <ei2092>prevented</ei2092> a few hundred Protestants, many <ei2093>waving</ei2093> British and Ulster flags, from <ei2094>interfering</ei2094> with the Catholics as they <ei2095>marched</ei2095> within Portadown's few Catholic streets. <t146>Earlier Sunday</t146>, police and militant Protestants <ei2096>clashed</ei2096> in a religiously polarized part of north Belfast. Police <ei2097>said</ei2097> an unmarked police car was <ei2098>hit</ei2098> with gasoline bombs from the Protestant side. Riot police <ei2099>responded</ei2099> with a volley of plastic bullets that <ei2100>scattered</ei2100> a 50-strong mob. An elderly Catholic man was <ei2101>hospitalized</ei2101> from <ei2102>cuts</ei2102> after a Protestant gasoline bomb <ei2103>landed</ei2103> in his back yard. | [
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wsj_0816_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t94>10/27/89</t94> MONETARY NEWS, FOREIGN EXCHANGE, TRADE (MON) STOCK INDEXES (NDX) STOCK MARKET, OFFERINGS (STK) FINANCIAL, ACCOUNTING, LEASING (FIN) BOND MARKET NEWS (BON) FOREIGN-EXCHANGE MARKETS (FRX) TREASURY DEPARTMENT (TRE) Some lousy earnings reports <ei481>whacked</ei481> the stock market, but bond prices <ei482>fell</ei482> only slightly and the dollar <ei483>rose</ei483> a little against most major currencies. The Dow Jones Industrial Average <ei484>tumbled</ei484> 39.55 points, to <ei485>2613.73</ei485>, in active trading. Long-term Treasury bonds <ei486>ended</ei486> slightly higher. The dollar <ei487>rose</ei487> modestly against the mark and the yen, but <ei488>soared</ei488> against the pound following the <ei489>resignation</ei489> of Britain's chancellor of the Exchequer, Nigel Lawson. Analysts have <ei490>complained</ei490> that <t176>third-quarter</t176> corporate earnings have n't been very <ei542>good</ei542>, but the effect <ei492>hit</ei492> home particularly hard <t95>yesterday</t95>. | [
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wsj_0816_1 | Documents Creation Time: <t94>10/27/89</t94> Analysts have <ei490>complained</ei490> that <t176>third-quarter</t176> corporate earnings have n't been very <ei542>good</ei542>, but the effect <ei492>hit</ei492> home particularly hard <t95>yesterday</t95>. Compaq Computer <ei493>nose-dived</ei493> $8.625 a share, to <ei494>$100</ei494>, and <ei495>pulled</ei495> other technology issues lower after <ei496>reporting</ei496> lower-than-expected <ei497>earnings</ei497> after the stock market <ei498>closed</ei498> <t99>Wednesday</t99>. <t100>Later yesterday</t100> the nation's major auto makers <ei499>added</ei499> to the gloom when they each <ei500>reported</ei500> their core auto operations were net <ei501>losers</ei501> in <t103>the third quarter</t103>. The less-than-robust <t104>third-quarter</t104> <ei502>results</ei502> came amid renewed <ei503>concern</ei503> about the <ei504>volatility</ei504> of stock prices and the <ei505>role</ei505> of computer-aided program trading. Taken together, the <ei506>worries</ei506> <ei507>prompted</ei507> a broad <ei508>sell-off</ei508> of stocks. | [
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wsj_0816_2 | Documents Creation Time: <t94>10/27/89</t94> Taken together, the <ei506>worries</ei506> <ei507>prompted</ei507> a broad <ei508>sell-off</ei508> of stocks. The number of stocks on the New York Stock Exchange that <ei509>fell</ei509> in price <t110>yesterday</t110> exceeded 1,000, a key measure of underlying sentiment among technical analysts. Although the government <ei510>said</ei510> the economy <ei511>grew</ei511> an estimated 2.5% in <t112>the third quarter</t112>, in line with <ei512>expectations</ei512>, analysts are increasingly <ei513>predicting</ei513> much more sluggish <ei514>growth</ei514> -- and therefore more corporate earnings <ei515>disappointments</ei515> -- for <t116>the fourth quarter</t116>. "There are a lot more downward <ei516>revisions</ei516> of earnings <ei517>forecasts</ei517> than upward <ei518>revisions</ei518>," <ei519>said</ei519> Abby Joseph Cohen, a market strategist at Drexel Burnham Lambert. "People are <ei520>questioning</ei520> corporate profits as a pillar of support for the equity market." | [
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wsj_0816_3 | Documents Creation Time: <t94>10/27/89</t94> "People are <ei520>questioning</ei520> corporate profits as a pillar of support for the equity market." The bond market was <ei521>unmoved</ei521> by the economic statistics. While bond investors would have <ei522>preferred</ei522> <ei523>growth</ei523> to <ei541>be</ei541> a little slower, they were <ei524>cheered</ei524> by inflation measures in the data that showed prices <ei525>rising</ei525> at a modest annual rate of 2.9%. That is another small <ei526>encouragement</ei526> for the Federal Reserve to <ei527>lower</ei527> interest rates in <t121>coming weeks</t121>, they <ei528>reasoned</ei528>. In major market <ei529>activity</ei529>: Stock prices <ei530>fell</ei530> sharply in active trading. | [
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wsj_0816_4 | Documents Creation Time: <t94>10/27/89</t94> In major market <ei529>activity</ei529>: Stock prices <ei530>fell</ei530> sharply in active trading. Volume on the New York Stock Exchange <ei531>totaled</ei531> 175.2 million shares. Declining issues on the Big Board <ei532>outstripped</ei532> gainers 1,141 to 406. Bond prices were barely <ei533>higher</ei533>. The Treasury's benchmark 30-year <ei534>rose</ei534> fractionally. | [
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wsj_0816_5 | Documents Creation Time: <t94>10/27/89</t94> The Treasury's benchmark 30-year <ei534>rose</ei534> fractionally. Yield on the issue was 7.88%. The dollar <ei535>rose</ei535> modestly against most major currencies. In late New York trading the dollar was <ei543>at</ei543> 1.8400 marks and 142.10 yen compared with 1.8353 marks and 141.52 yen <t130>Wednesday</t130>. The dollar <ei538>soared</ei538> against the pound, which was at <ei539>$1.5765</ei539> compared with <ei540>$1.6145</ei540> <t131>Wednesday</t131>. | [
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wsj_0157_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t26>11/02/89</t26> TLAM TENDER OFFERS, MERGERS, ACQUISITIONS (TNM) Tony Lama Co. <ei2195>said</ei2195> that Equus Investment II Limited Partnership has <ei2196>proposed</ei2196> <ei2197>changing</ei2197> the <ei2198>offer</ei2198> for the company to $13.65 in cash and stock from an all-cash <ei2199>transaction</ei2199>. Under terms of the new <ei2200>proposal</ei2200>, Equus, managed by Equus Capital Corp., Houston, would <ei2201>pay</ei2201> $12 cash and one new preferred share with a liquidation preference of $1.65 a share for each of Tony Lama's 2.1 million shares outstanding. <t1999>Previously</t1999>, it <ei2202>offered</ei2202> $13.65 a share in cash, or $29 million. The El Paso, Texas, maker of Western boots and leather accessories <ei2203>said</ei2203> the preferred stock would <ei2204>accrue</ei2204> dividends at a 12% rate, but would n't be <ei2205>paid</ei2205> for <t28>the first two years</t28>. The stock would be <ei2206>redeemed</ei2206> in <t29>five years</t29>, subject to terms of the surviving company's debt. | [
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wsj_0157_1 | Documents Creation Time: <t26>11/02/89</t26> The stock would be <ei2206>redeemed</ei2206> in <t29>five years</t29>, subject to terms of the surviving company's debt. Neither Equus nor Tony Lama <ei2207>gave</ei2207> a reason for the <ei2208>changed</ei2208> <ei2209>offer</ei2209> and Tony Lama could n't be reached for <ei2210>comment</ei2210>. However, Tony Lama <ei2211>said</ei2211> it would promptly <ei2212>submit</ei2212> the <ei2213>offer</ei2213> to a special committee of the company's board. | [
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wsj_0340_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t22>11/01/89</t22> F.CNM F.CLC F.CFP TENDER OFFERS, MERGERS, ACQUISITIONS (TNM) INSURANCE (INS) FOOD PRODUCTS (FOD) The portfolio unit of the French bank group Credit Lyonnais <ei99>told</ei99> stock market regulators that it <ei100>bought</ei100> 43,000 shares of Cie. de Navigation Mixte, apparently to <ei101>help</ei101> <ei102>fend</ei102> off an unwelcome takeover bid for the company. <t23>Earlier yesterday</t23>, the Societe de Bourses Francaises was <ei103>told</ei103> that a unit of Framatome S.A. also <ei104>bought</ei104> Navigation Mixte shares, this <ei105>purchase</ei105> covering more than 160,000 shares. Both companies are allies of Navigation Mixte in its <ei106>fight</ei106> against a hostile takeover bid <ei107>launched</ei107> <t61>last week</t61> by Cie. Financiere de Paribas at 1,850 French francs ($297) a share. Navigation Mixte's chairman had <ei108>suggested</ei108> that friendly institutions were likely to <ei109>buy</ei109> its stock as soon as <ei110>trading</ei110> <ei111>opened</ei111> <t26>Monday</t26>. The Credit Lyonnais purchase, for 33,000 regular common shares and 10,000 newly created shares, is valued at about slightly more than 80 million French francs. | [
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wsj_0585_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t294>10/30/89</t294> STOCK MARKET, OFFERINGS (STK) STOCK INDEXES (NDX) SECURITIES INDUSTRY (SCR) NEW YORK Market makers in Nasdaq over-the-counter stocks are <ei1989>adding</ei1989> their voices to the swelling chorus of complaints about program trading. Their motivation, however , has a strong practical aspect: Program trading is <ei1990>hazardous</ei1990> to their paychecks. The most controversial form of program trading, stock-index arbitrage, is " <ei1991>making</ei1991> it tough for traders to make money," <ei1992>declares</ei1992> Robert Antolini, head of OTC trading at Donaldson, Lufkin amp Jenrette. Stock-index <ei1993>arbitrage</ei1993> -- the computer-guided buying and selling of stocks with offsetting trades in stock-index futures to profit from fleeting price discrepancies -- <ei1994>affects</ei1994> the OTC market directly through the 31 stocks included in Standard amp Poor's 500-stock index. The SampP 500 is often used in arbitrage strategies. | [
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wsj_0585_1 | Documents Creation Time: <t294>10/30/89</t294> The SampP 500 is often used in arbitrage strategies. The portion of OTC volume attributable to program trading isn't <ei1995>known</ei1995>, as it is on the New York Stock Exchange, where it <ei1996>amounted</ei1996> to more than 13% in <t295>September</t295>. <ei1997>Estimates</ei1997> from traders put it <ei2137>at</ei2137> less than 5% of Nasdaq's average daily volume of roughly 133 million shares. Other market-maker <ei1999>gripes</ei1999>: Program <ei2000>trading</ei2000> also <ei2001>causes</ei2001> the Nasdaq Composite Index to <ei2002>lose</ei2002> ground against other segments of the stock market. Because of program <ei2003>trading</ei2003> it is more <ei2004>difficult</ei2004> to <ei2005>trade</ei2005> many OTC stocks without sharp price <ei2006>moves</ei2006>, a condition known as illiquidity. | [
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wsj_0585_2 | Documents Creation Time: <t294>10/30/89</t294> Because of program <ei2003>trading</ei2003> it is more <ei2004>difficult</ei2004> to <ei2005>trade</ei2005> many OTC stocks without sharp price <ei2006>moves</ei2006>, a condition known as illiquidity. Moreover, the price <ei2007>volatility</ei2007> that is <ei2008>amplified</ei2008> by program <ei2009>trading</ei2009> is <ei2010>undercutting</ei2010> <ei2011>efforts</ei2011> to <ei2012>woo</ei2012> individual investors back to an OTC market that sorely <ei2013>misses</ei2013> them. Some of these <ei2014>problems</ei2014> are neither new nor unique to the OTC market. But the big, often tumultuous <ei2015>slide</ei2015> in stock prices <t303>this month</t303> has <ei2016>turned</ei2016> some of those who have been <ei2017>profiting</ei2017> from the practice <ei2018>against</ei2018> it. Peter DaPuzzo, head of retail equity trading at Shearson Lehman Hutton, <ei2019>acknowledges</ei2019> that he wasn't <ei2020>troubled</ei2020> by program <ei2021>trading</ei2021> when it <ei2022>began</ei2022> in the pre-crash bull market because it <ei2024>added</ei2024> liquidity and people were <ei2025>pleased</ei2025> to <ei2026>see</ei2026> stock prices <ei2027>rising</ei2027>. | [
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wsj_0585_3 | Documents Creation Time: <t294>10/30/89</t294> Peter DaPuzzo, head of retail equity trading at Shearson Lehman Hutton, <ei2019>acknowledges</ei2019> that he wasn't <ei2020>troubled</ei2020> by program <ei2021>trading</ei2021> when it <ei2022>began</ei2022> in the pre-crash bull market because it <ei2024>added</ei2024> liquidity and people were <ei2025>pleased</ei2025> to <ei2026>see</ei2026> stock prices <ei2027>rising</ei2027>. "We were n't as <ei2028>concerned</ei2028> until they <ei2029>became</ei2029> sell programs," <ei2030>says</ei2030> Mr. DaPuzzo, who <t311>now</t311> <ei2031>thinks</ei2031> it <ei2032>adds</ei2032> unnecessary volatility. Shearson Lehman, however , executes program trades for clients. Merrill Lynch, Goldman Sachs and Kidder Peabody, in addition to Shearson, do program-trade OTC stocks. Shearson, Merrill Lynch and Goldman Sachs say they do so only for customers, however. | [
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wsj_0585_4 | Documents Creation Time: <t294>10/30/89</t294> Shearson, Merrill Lynch and Goldman Sachs say they do so only for customers, however. Kidder Peabody does program trading for its own as well as clients' accounts. Of course, there were sell <ei2033>programs</ei2033> in <t320>past years</t320>, too, but they <ei2034>seem</ei2034> to <ei2035>hurt</ei2035> market makers more painfully <t321>these days</t321>. That's largely because of defensive measures they <ei2036>adopted</ei2036> after the <t323>1987</t323> <ei2037>crash</ei2037>, when individual investors <ei2038>fled</ei2038> the market and trading activity <ei2039>dwindled</ei2039>. Market makers, to <ei2040>cut</ei2040> costs, <ei2041>slashed</ei2041> inventories of stocks they keep on hand to sell investors when other holders are n't selling. | [
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wsj_0585_5 | Documents Creation Time: <t294>10/30/89</t294> Market makers, to <ei2040>cut</ei2040> costs, <ei2041>slashed</ei2041> inventories of stocks they keep on hand to sell investors when other holders are n't selling. And to <ei2042>protect</ei2042> their reduced capital investment from <ei2043>eroding</ei2043> further, market makers became quicker to <ei2044>lower</ei2044> price quotes when sell programs are <ei2138>in</ei2138> progress. On days when prices are tumbling, they must be <ei2046>willing</ei2046> to <ei2047>buy</ei2047> shares from sellers when no one else will. In such an environment, market makers can <ei2048>suffer</ei2048> huge <ei2049>losses</ei2049> both on trades made that day at steadily dropping prices and in the value of their inventories of shares. "It <ei2050>makes</ei2050> no <ei2051>sense</ei2051> for us to <ei2052>put</ei2052> money at risk when you <ei2053>know</ei2053> you're going to lose," <ei2055>says</ei2055> Mr. Antolini, of Donaldson Lufkin. | [
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wsj_0585_6 | Documents Creation Time: <t294>10/30/89</t294> "It <ei2050>makes</ei2050> no <ei2051>sense</ei2051> for us to <ei2052>put</ei2052> money at risk when you <ei2053>know</ei2053> you're going to lose," <ei2055>says</ei2055> Mr. Antolini, of Donaldson Lufkin. But this <ei2056>skittishness</ei2056>, Mr. Antolini <ei2057>says</ei2057>, is <ei2058>creating</ei2058> liquidity <ei2059>problems</ei2059> in certain OTC stocks. "It's harder to sell stocks when the sell programs come in because some market makers do n't want to { take the orders}. No one has big positions and no one wants to take big risks." Joseph Hardiman, president of the National Association of Securities Dealers, which oversees trading on Nasdaq, <ei2060>agrees</ei2060> that program trading is <ei2061>hurting</ei2061> the market's <ei2062>efforts</ei2062> to <ei2063>bring</ei2063> back small investors. | [
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wsj_0585_7 | Documents Creation Time: <t294>10/30/89</t294> Joseph Hardiman, president of the National Association of Securities Dealers, which oversees trading on Nasdaq, <ei2060>agrees</ei2060> that program trading is <ei2061>hurting</ei2061> the market's <ei2062>efforts</ei2062> to <ei2063>bring</ei2063> back small investors. But, he <ei2064>observes</ei2064>, while makers <ei2065>suffer</ei2065> <ei2066>losses</ei2066> when program trading <ei2067>drags</ei2067> the market down, they also <ei2068>make</ei2068> money when program trading <ei2069>pushes</ei2069> the prices higher. "Sometimes {traders} <ei2070>lose</ei2070> sight of that," he <ei2071>says</ei2071>. The OTC stocks in the SampP 500 include Nasdaq's biggest, such as Apple Computer, MCI Communications, Tele-Communications and Liz Claiborne. These big stocks greatly influence the Nasdaq Composite Index. | [
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wsj_0585_8 | Documents Creation Time: <t294>10/30/89</t294> These big stocks greatly influence the Nasdaq Composite Index. When the computers say "sell," the composite tumbles as well as the Dow Jones Industrial Average. The problem, market makers say, is that while the industrial average and the SampP 500 usually recover as buy programs kick in, the Nasdaq Composite frequently is left behind. <t336>Eight trading days</t336> after <t335>Oct. 12</t335>, <t338>the day</t338> before the stock market <ei2072>plunge</ei2072>, for instance, the Nasdaq Composite had <ei2073>fallen</ei2073> 4.3%, compared with 3.3% for the SampP 500, 3.5% for the New York Stock Exchange Composite Index and 3.6% for the industrial average. This gap eventually <ei2074>closes</ei2074>, but slowly. | [
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wsj_0585_9 | Documents Creation Time: <t294>10/30/89</t294> This gap eventually <ei2074>closes</ei2074>, but slowly. <t341>Three days</t341> later, as of <t340>Friday</t340>'s <ei2075>close</ei2075>, the Nasdaq Composite was <ei2076>down</ei2076> 6%, compared with 5.9% for the industrial average, 5.7% for the SampP 500 and 5.8% for the Big Board Composite. The main reason for this <ei2077>lag</ei2077> is that individual investors <ei2078>own</ei2078> 65% of the OTC market's capitalization, <ei2079>according</ei2079> to Mr. Hardiman, much more than on the Big Board. Such investors tend to be more cautious than institutional investors are about re-entering the market after massive selloffs, market makers say. --- Friday's Market Activity The Nasdaq Composite Index <ei2080>tumbled</ei2080> 5.39, or 1.2% to <ei2081>452.76</ei2081> on <t356>Friday</t356>. | [
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wsj_0585_10 | Documents Creation Time: <t294>10/30/89</t294> --- Friday's Market Activity The Nasdaq Composite Index <ei2080>tumbled</ei2080> 5.39, or 1.2% to <ei2081>452.76</ei2081> on <t356>Friday</t356>. For <t357>the week</t357>, the index <ei2082>dropped</ei2082> 3.8%. <ei2083>Weakness</ei2083> in big technology stocks <ei2084>hurt</ei2084> the composite as well as the Nasdaq 100 Index, which <ei2085>fell</ei2085> 1.4%, or 6.43, on <t362>Friday</t362>, to <ei2086>437.68</ei2086>. The Nasdaq Financial Index <ei2087>lost</ei2087> about 1%, or 3.95, to <ei2088>448.80</ei2088>. <t365>Friday</t365>'s trading volume <ei2089>totaled</ei2089> 132.8 million shares. | [
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wsj_0585_11 | Documents Creation Time: <t294>10/30/89</t294> <t365>Friday</t365>'s trading volume <ei2089>totaled</ei2089> 132.8 million shares. The average daily share turnover for <t366>October</t366> is almost <ei2139>148</ei2139> million shares. LIN Broadcasting <ei2091>surged</ei2091> 4 5/8 to 112 5/8; LIN and BellSouth <ei2092>sweetened</ei2092> their merger agreement in an <ei2093>attempt</ei2093> to <ei2094>keep</ei2094> shareholders from <ei2095>tendering</ei2095> their shares to McCaw Cellular Communications. McCaw, which <ei2096>dropped</ei2096> 2 1/2 to 37 3/4, has <ei2097>offered</ei2097> $125 a share for a majority of LIN's shares. The revised LIN-BellSouth <ei2098>agreement</ei2098> <ei2099>boosts</ei2099> the dollar amount of the special dividend LIN promises to pay shareholders. | [
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wsj_0585_12 | Documents Creation Time: <t294>10/30/89</t294> The revised LIN-BellSouth <ei2098>agreement</ei2098> <ei2099>boosts</ei2099> the dollar amount of the special dividend LIN promises to pay shareholders. LIN <t368>now</t368> <ei2100>plans</ei2100> to <ei2101>dole</ei2101> out $42 a share in cash, up from the earlier <ei2140>$20</ei2140> amount. Intel <ei2103>eased</ei2103> 1/8 to 31 7/8. The semiconductor concern <ei2104>said</ei2104> the <ei2105>interruption</ei2105> in <ei2106>shipment</ei2106> of its 80486 computer chip will be <ei2107>brief</ei2107> and <ei2108>have</ei2108> little <ei2109>impact</ei2109> on the company's earnings. The stock <ei2110>fell</ei2110> 7/8 <t1082>Thursday</t1082> amid <ei2111>concerns</ei2111> over <ei2112>problems</ei2112> discovered with the chip. | [
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wsj_0585_13 | Documents Creation Time: <t294>10/30/89</t294> The stock <ei2110>fell</ei2110> 7/8 <t1082>Thursday</t1082> amid <ei2111>concerns</ei2111> over <ei2112>problems</ei2112> discovered with the chip. Intel <ei2113>told</ei2113> analysts that the company will <ei2114>resume</ei2114> <ei2115>shipments</ei2115> of the chips within <t1111>two to three weeks</t1111>. Weisfield's <ei2116>rocketed</ei2116> 9 1/2 to 39 after the jewelry store operator <ei2117>said</ei2117> it is in preliminary <ei2136>discussions</ei2136>, with a party it would n't <ei2119>identify</ei2119>, regarding the possible <ei2120>acquisition</ei2120> of the company. Starpointe Savings Bank <ei2121>rose</ei2121> 3 to 20 after the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. <ei2122>approved</ei2122> Dime Savings Bank of New York's $21-a-share <ei2123>acquisition</ei2123> of Starpointe. Kirschner Medical <ei2124>fell</ei2124> 4 to <ei2125>15</ei2125>. | [
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wsj_0585_14 | Documents Creation Time: <t294>10/30/89</t294> Kirschner Medical <ei2124>fell</ei2124> 4 to <ei2125>15</ei2125>. The company <ei2126>said</ei2126> its <t380>third-quarter</t380> earnings will probably be <ei2127>lower</ei2127> than the <ei2141>16</ei2141> cents a share it <ei2129>reported</ei2129> <t387>last year</t387>, despite a <ei2130>rise</ei2130> in the company's revenue. Kirschner <ei2131>earned</ei2131> $376,000 on revenue of $14.5 million in <t386>the 1988 quarter</t386>. The company <ei2132>blamed</ei2132> a number of <ei2133>factors</ei2133> for the earnings <ei2134>decline</ei2134>, including softer <ei2135>sales</ei2135> of joint-implants. | [
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wsj_0778_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t232>10/27/89</t232> CRZYQ LAW AND LEGAL AFFAIRS (LAW) BANKRUPTCIES (BCY) JUSTICE DEPARTMENT (JUS) SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION (SEC) The government is <ei1988>sharpening</ei1988> its newest weapon against white-collar defendants: the <ei1989>power</ei1989> to <ei1990>prevent</ei1990> them from <ei1991>paying</ei1991> their legal bills. And defense lawyers are <ei1992>warning</ei1992> that they wo n't <ei1993>stick</ei1993> around if they do n't get <ei1994>paid</ei1994>. The issue has come to a boil in Newark, N.J., where federal prosecutors have <ei1995>warned</ei1995> lawyers for Eddie Antar that if the founder and former chairman of Crazy Eddie Inc. is <ei1996>indicted</ei1996>, the government may <ei1997>move</ei1997> to <ei1998>seize</ei1998> the money that Mr. Antar is <ei1999>using</ei1999> to <ei2000>pay</ei2000> legal fees. The <ei2001>warning</ei2001> by the U.S. attorney's office follows two <ei2002>decisions</ei2002> by the U.S. Supreme Court <t233>last June</t233>. In those cases, the high court <ei2003>ruled</ei2003> that federal law <ei2004>gives</ei2004> prosecutors broad <ei2005>authority</ei2005> to <ei2006>seize</ei2006> assets of people accused of racketeering and drug-related crimes, including fees paid to lawyers before an indictment. | [
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wsj_0778_1 | Documents Creation Time: <t232>10/27/89</t232> In those cases, the high court <ei2003>ruled</ei2003> that federal law <ei2004>gives</ei2004> prosecutors broad <ei2005>authority</ei2005> to <ei2006>seize</ei2006> assets of people accused of racketeering and drug-related crimes, including fees paid to lawyers before an indictment. If the government <ei2007>succeeds</ei2007> in <ei2008>seizing</ei2008> Mr. Antar's assets, he could be <ei2009>left</ei2009> without top-flight legal representation, because his attorneys are likely to <ei2010>quit</ei2010>, <ei2011>according</ei2011> to individuals familiar with the case. A <ei2012>seizure</ei2012> also would <ei2013>make</ei2013> the case the <ei2014>largest</ei2014> -- and one of the first -- in which lawyers' fees have been confiscated in a prosecution unrelated to drugs. "The people who suffer in the short run are defendants, but the people who suffer in the long run are all of the people, because there wo n't be a vigorous private bar to defend the Bill of Rights," <ei2015>says</ei2015> Gerald Lefcourt, a criminal defense attorney who <ei2016>says</ei2016> he has <ei2017>turned</ei2017> down a number of cases to <ei2018>avoid</ei2018> possible fee <ei2019>seizures</ei2019>. Mr. Antar is being <ei2020>investigated</ei2020> by a federal grand jury in Newark, where prosecutors have <ei2021>told</ei2021> him that they may <t234>soon</t234> <ei2022>seek</ei2022> an <ei2023>indictment</ei2023> on racketeering and securities fraud charges. | [
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wsj_0778_2 | Documents Creation Time: <t232>10/27/89</t232> Mr. Antar is being <ei2020>investigated</ei2020> by a federal grand jury in Newark, where prosecutors have <ei2021>told</ei2021> him that they may <t234>soon</t234> <ei2022>seek</ei2022> an <ei2023>indictment</ei2023> on racketeering and securities fraud charges. Under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations law, or RICO, the government <ei2024>has</ei2024> the authority to <ei2025>seek</ei2025> to <ei2026>freeze</ei2026> or <ei2027>seize</ei2027> a defendant's assets before <ei2028>trial</ei2028>. <ei2029>According</ei2029> to individuals familiar with Mr. Antar's case, prosecutors <ei2030>issued</ei2030> their warning <t235>this week</t235> after one of Mr. Antar's attorneys <ei2031>asked</ei2031> whether legal fees might be <ei2032>subject</ei2032> to <ei2033>seizure</ei2033>. In a letter, prosecutors <ei2034>told</ei2034> Mr. Antar's lawyers that because of the <t236>recent</t236> Supreme Court <ei2035>rulings</ei2035>, they could <ei2036>expect</ei2036> that any fees collected from Mr. Antar may be <ei2037>seized</ei2037>. Prosecutors have <ei2038>told</ei2038> Mr. Antar's attorneys that they <ei2039>believe</ei2039> Mr. Antar's allegedly ill-gotten gains are so great that any money he has used to pay attorneys <ei2040>derives</ei2040> from illegal <ei2041>activities</ei2041>. | [
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wsj_0778_3 | Documents Creation Time: <t232>10/27/89</t232> Prosecutors have <ei2038>told</ei2038> Mr. Antar's attorneys that they <ei2039>believe</ei2039> Mr. Antar's allegedly ill-gotten gains are so great that any money he has used to pay attorneys <ei2040>derives</ei2040> from illegal <ei2041>activities</ei2041>. Therefore, they <ei2042>said</ei2042>, the money can be <ei2043>taken</ei2043> from the lawyers even after they are <ei2044>paid</ei2044>. Justin Feldman and Jack Arseneault, attorneys for Mr. Antar, both <ei2045>declined</ei2045> to <ei2046>comment</ei2046> on the matter. In Newark, U.S. Attorney Samuel A. Alito <ei2047>said</ei2047>, "I do n't <ei2048>think</ei2048> there's any legal <ei2049>reason</ei2049> to <ei2050>limit</ei2050> <ei2051>forfeiture</ei2051> of attorney's fees to drug cases." Mr. Alito <ei2052>said</ei2052> his office "just <ei2053>responded</ei2053> to an attorney's <ei2054>question</ei2054> about whether we would <ei2055>go</ei2055> after attorney's fees, and that is different from actually doing it, although we <ei2056>reserve</ei2056> that <ei2057>right</ei2057>." | [
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wsj_0778_4 | Documents Creation Time: <t232>10/27/89</t232> Mr. Alito <ei2052>said</ei2052> his office "just <ei2053>responded</ei2053> to an attorney's <ei2054>question</ei2054> about whether we would <ei2055>go</ei2055> after attorney's fees, and that is different from actually doing it, although we <ei2056>reserve</ei2056> that <ei2057>right</ei2057>." Mr. Antar was <ei2058>charged</ei2058> <t237>last month</t237> in a civil <ei2059>suit</ei2059> <ei2060>filed</ei2060> in federal court in Newark by the Securities and Exchange Commission. In that <ei2061>suit</ei2061>, the SEC <ei2062>accused</ei2062> Mr. Antar of <ei2063>engaging</ei2063> in a "massive financial <ei2064>fraud</ei2064>" to <ei2065>overstate</ei2065> the earnings of Crazy Eddie, Edison, N.J., over <t238>a three-year period</t238>. Through his lawyers, Mr. Antar has <ei2066>denied</ei2066> <ei2067>allegations</ei2067> in the SEC <ei2068>suit</ei2068> and in civil <ei2069>suits</ei2069> previously <ei2070>filed</ei2070> by shareholders against Mr. Antar and others. The SEC has <ei2071>alleged</ei2071> that Mr. Antar <ei2072>aimed</ei2072> to <ei2073>pump</ei2073> up the company's stock price through false financial <ei2074>statements</ei2074> in order to <ei2075>sell</ei2075> his stake and <ei2076>reap</ei2076> huge profits. | [
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wsj_0778_5 | Documents Creation Time: <t232>10/27/89</t232> The SEC has <ei2071>alleged</ei2071> that Mr. Antar <ei2072>aimed</ei2072> to <ei2073>pump</ei2073> up the company's stock price through false financial <ei2074>statements</ei2074> in order to <ei2075>sell</ei2075> his stake and <ei2076>reap</ei2076> huge profits. Mr. Antar, the SEC <ei2077>said</ei2077>, <ei2078>made</ei2078> more than $60 million from the <ei2079>sale</ei2079> of his shares between <t240>1985</t240> and <t241>1987</t241>. The Justice Department has <ei2080>emphasized</ei2080> that the government's fee-forfeiture power is to be <ei2081>used</ei2081> sparingly. <ei2082>According</ei2082> to department policy, prosecutors must make a strong <ei2083>showing</ei2083> that lawyers' fees <ei2084>came</ei2084> from assets tainted by illegal profits before any <ei2085>attempts</ei2085> at <ei2086>seizure</ei2086> are <ei2087>made</ei2087>. Still, criminal defense lawyers <ei2088>worry</ei2088> that defendants are being <ei2089>deprived</ei2089> of their Sixth Amendment <ei2090>right</ei2090> to counsel and a fair <ei2091>trial</ei2091> if the government can <ei2092>seize</ei2092> lawyers' fees. | [
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wsj_0778_6 | Documents Creation Time: <t232>10/27/89</t232> Still, criminal defense lawyers <ei2088>worry</ei2088> that defendants are being <ei2089>deprived</ei2089> of their Sixth Amendment <ei2090>right</ei2090> to counsel and a fair <ei2091>trial</ei2091> if the government can <ei2092>seize</ei2092> lawyers' fees. They also <ei2093>worry</ei2093> that if the government <ei2094>applies</ei2094> asset-forfeiture laws broadly, the best defense lawyers will be <ei2095>unwilling</ei2095> to <ei2096>take</ei2096> criminal cases unless they are <ei2097>assured</ei2097> of being <ei2098>paid</ei2098>. | [
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wsj_0791_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t44>10/27/89</t44> PTEC TENDER OFFERS, MERGERS, ACQUISITIONS (TNM) WASHINGTON Norwood Partners Limited Partnership of Boston <ei179>said</ei179> it may <ei180>make</ei180> a tender <ei181>offer</ei181> for some or all of Phoenix Technologies Ltd.'s common shares. Norwood, Mass.-based Phoenix, a once-high-flying maker of software for personal computers, has <ei182>had</ei182> substantial <ei183>losses</ei183> in <t46>the past two quarters</t46>. Its stock, which was as high as <ei184>$18.75 a share</ei184>, has been <ei185>trading</ei185> under <ei186>$4 a share</ei186> <t47>recently</t47>. <t48>Yesterday</t48> it <ei187>closed</ei187> at <ei188>$4.375 a share</ei188>, up $1.125, in national over-the-counter <ei189>trading</ei189>. In a Securities and Exchange Commission filing, Norwood <ei190>said</ei190> it's part of a group that <ei191>holds</ei191> 525,546 Phoenix Technologies common shares, or a 5.3% stake. | [
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wsj_0791_1 | Documents Creation Time: <t44>10/27/89</t44> In a Securities and Exchange Commission filing, Norwood <ei190>said</ei190> it's part of a group that <ei191>holds</ei191> 525,546 Phoenix Technologies common shares, or a 5.3% stake. Norwood has <ei192>made</ei192> "no detailed <ei193>plans</ei193>," but it has <ei194>engaged</ei194> in <ei195>talks</ei195> with other shareholders, the filing <ei196>said</ei196>. Phoenix <ei197>declined</ei197> to <ei198>comment</ei198>. Norwood is <ei199>controlled</ei199> by Daniel L. Barnett and Paul A. Reese, both officers of Boston-based Oasis Capital Management Inc., a small Boston money management firm. Also <ei200>involved</ei200> in the group is Robert F. Angelo, formerly Phoenix's senior vice president, field operations, who <ei201>left</ei201> Phoenix at <t49>the beginning of October</t49>. | [
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wsj_0791_2 | Documents Creation Time: <t44>10/27/89</t44> Also <ei200>involved</ei200> in the group is Robert F. Angelo, formerly Phoenix's senior vice president, field operations, who <ei201>left</ei201> Phoenix at <t49>the beginning of October</t49>. Mr. Angelo was <ei202>described</ei202> in the filing as a <ei203>consultant</ei203> to Oasis. | [
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wsj_0752_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t17>10/27/89</t17> AEPI DIVIDENDS (DIV) AEP INDUSTRIES Inc. directors <ei95>authorized</ei95> a 3-for-2 <ei96>split</ei96> of the common, <ei97>payable</ei97> <t18>Dec. 7</t18> to stock of <ei98>record</ei98> <t19>Nov. 22</t19>. The <ei99>split</ei99> was <ei100>aimed</ei100> at <ei101>boosting</ei101> the stock's <ei102>liquidity</ei102>, <ei103>said</ei103> Brendan Barba, chairman of the Moonachie, N.J., maker of plastic film products. After the <ei104>split</ei104>, the company will <ei105>have</ei105> more than 4.7 million shares outstanding. In national over-the-counter <ei106>trading</ei106> <t20>yesterday</t20>, AEP shares <ei107>closed</ei107> <ei108>at $21.25</ei108>, down 50 cents. | [
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wsj_0356_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t22>11/01/89</t22> RLLY Rally's Inc. <ei90>said</ei90> it <ei91>adopted</ei91> a shareholders rights plan to <ei92>protect</ei92> shareholders from an inadequately priced takeover offer. The plan provides for the distribution of one common stock-purchase right as a dividend for each share of common outstanding. Each right entitles shareholders to buy one-half share of common for $30. <t23>Earlier this month</t23>, a group led by three of the company's directors, Burt Sugarman, James M. Trotter III and Willam E. Trotter II, <ei93>indicated</ei93> it <ei94>had</ei94> a 45.2% <ei95>stake</ei95> in the Louisville, Ky., fast-food company and that it <ei96>planned</ei96> to <ei97>seek</ei97> a <ei98>majority</ei98> of seats on Rally's nine-member board. The company <ei99>said</ei99> it was " <ei100>concerned</ei100> about the announced <ei101>intent</ei101> to <ei102>acquire</ei102> <ei103>control</ei103> of the company" by a Sugarman-led group. | [
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wsj_0815_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t26>10/27/89</t26> DIG TENDER OFFERS, MERGERS, ACQUISITIONS (TNM) SAN FRANCISCO Di Giorgio Corp. <ei132>said</ei132> it's <ei133>continuing</ei133> <ei134>talks</ei134> with potential buyers of certain units, but has <ei135>reached</ei135> no <ei136>agreement</ei136> on any <ei137>deals</ei137>. Di Giorgio, a food wholesaler and building products maker, is <ei138>seeking</ei138> <ei139>alternatives</ei139> to an <ei140>unsolicited</ei140> $32-a-share tender <ei141>offer</ei141> of DIG Acquisition Corp., a unit of Rose Partners Limited Partnership. DIG is the vehicle being <ei142>used</ei142> to <ei143>pursue</ei143> to <ei144>acquisition</ei144>. Robert Mellor, Di Giorgio's executive vice president, <ei145>said</ei145> the company <ei146>stands</ei146> to <ei147>reap</ei147> more money through the <ei148>sale</ei148> of individual units to others than by <ei149>accepting</ei149> DIG's <ei150>offer</ei150>. | [
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wsj_0168_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t21>11/02/89</t21> MRCO TENDER OFFERS, MERGERS, ACQUISITIONS (TNM) Meridian National Corp. <ei126>said</ei126> it <ei127>sold</ei127> 750,000 shares of its common stock to the McAlpine family interests, for $1 million, or $1.35 a share. The <ei128>sale</ei128> <ei129>represents</ei129> 10.2% of Meridian's shares outstanding. The McAlpine family, which <ei130>operates</ei130> a number of multinational companies, including a London-based engineering and construction company, also <ei131>lent</ei131> to Meridian National $500,000. That amount is <ei132>convertible</ei132> into shares of Meridian common stock at $2 a share during its <t23>one-year term</t23>. The loan may be <ei133>extended</ei133> by the McAlpine group for <t25>an additional year</t25> with an <ei134>increase</ei134> in the <ei135>conversion</ei135> price to $2.50 a share. | [
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wsj_0168_1 | Documents Creation Time: <t21>11/02/89</t21> The loan may be <ei133>extended</ei133> by the McAlpine group for <t25>an additional year</t25> with an <ei134>increase</ei134> in the <ei135>conversion</ei135> price to $2.50 a share. The <ei136>sale</ei136> of shares to the McAlpine family along with the recent <ei137>sale</ei137> of 750,000 shares of Meridian stock to Haden MacLellan Holding PLC of Surrey, England and a recent public <ei138>offering</ei138> have <ei139>increased</ei139> Meridian's net worth to $8.5 million, <ei140>said</ei140> William Feniger, chief executive officer of Toledo, Ohio-based Meridian. | [
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wsj_0169_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t27>11/02/89</t27> RATNY WEIS TENDER OFFERS, MERGERS, ACQUISITIONS (TNM) Ratners Group PLC, a fast-growing, acquisition-minded London-based jeweler, <ei150>raised</ei150> its price for Seattle-based specialty jeweler Weisfield's Inc. to <ei151>$57.50</ei151> a share, or $62.1 million, from <ei152>$50</ei152> a share, or $55 million, after another concern <ei153>said</ei153> it would be prepared to <ei154>outbid</ei154> Ratners's initial <ei155>offer</ei155>. The other concern was n't identified. Ratners's chairman, Gerald Ratner, <ei156>said</ei156> the deal remains of "substantial <ei157>benefit</ei157> to Ratners." In London at <t28>mid-afternoon yesterday</t28>, Ratners's shares were <ei158>up</ei158> 2 pence (1.26 cents), at 260 pence ($1.64). The <ei159>sweetened</ei159> <ei160>offer</ei160> <ei161>has</ei161> <ei162>acceptances</ei162> from more than 50% of Weisfield's shareholders, and it is <ei163>scheduled</ei163> for <ei164>completion</ei164> by <t36>Dec. 10</t36>. | [
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wsj_0169_1 | Documents Creation Time: <t27>11/02/89</t27> The <ei159>sweetened</ei159> <ei160>offer</ei160> <ei161>has</ei161> <ei162>acceptances</ei162> from more than 50% of Weisfield's shareholders, and it is <ei163>scheduled</ei163> for <ei164>completion</ei164> by <t36>Dec. 10</t36>. The <ei165>acquisition</ei165> of 87-store Weisfield's <ei166>raises</ei166> Ratners's U.S. presence to 450 stores. About 30% of Ratners's profit <t101>already</t101> is <ei167>derived</ei167> from the U.S. | [
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ABC19980120.1830.0957_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t93>19980120</t93> For his part, Fidel Castro is the ultimate political survivor. People have <ei415>predicted</ei415> his <ei416>demise</ei416> so many times, and the US has <ei417>tried</ei417> to <ei418>hasten</ei418> it on several occasions. Time and again, he <ei419>endures</ei419>. He has <ei420>outlasted</ei420> and sometimes <ei421>outsmarted</ei421> eight American presidents. Fidel Castro <ei422>invited</ei422> John Paul to <ei423>come</ei423> for a reason. | [
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ABC19980120.1830.0957_1 | Documents Creation Time: <t93>19980120</t93> Fidel Castro <ei422>invited</ei422> John Paul to <ei423>come</ei423> for a reason. This is clearly an opportunity for Cuba to look good internationally. The entire world will <ei424>see</ei424> images of the Pope in Cuba. They'll <ei425>see</ei425> images of the Pope with Fidel Castro. It will <ei426>give</ei426> the rest of the world the <ei427>view</ei427> that Cuba is <ei470>like</ei470> any other nation, something the US has, of course, <ei429>tried</ei429> to <ei430>persuade</ei430> the world that it is not . | [
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ABC19980120.1830.0957_2 | Documents Creation Time: <t93>19980120</t93> It will <ei426>give</ei426> the rest of the world the <ei427>view</ei427> that Cuba is <ei470>like</ei470> any other nation, something the US has, of course, <ei429>tried</ei429> to <ei430>persuade</ei430> the world that it is not . For <t94>nearly forty years</t94>, the United States has <ei431>said</ei431> categorically it would not <ei432>tolerate</ei432> totalitarian <ei433>rule</ei433> in its own backyard. It is the US economic and political <ei434>embargo</ei434> which has <ei435>kept</ei435> Cuba <ei466>in</ei466> a box. The main positive for Castro to <ei437>invite</ei437> the Pope is international, to be <ei438>able</ei438> to <ei439>say</ei439> to the rest of the world, this government is not as <ei467>closed</ei467>, as <ei468>intolerant</ei468>, uh as <ei469>totalitarian</ei469> as some <ei441>make</ei441> it out to be. One of the scenarios widely <ei442>advanced</ei442> before the <ei443>visit</ei443> is that through the Pope, Cuba, still <ei444>led</ei444> by Castro, can <ei445>begin</ei445> a more productive <ei446>relationship</ei446> with the world. | [
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ABC19980120.1830.0957_3 | Documents Creation Time: <t93>19980120</t93> One of the scenarios widely <ei442>advanced</ei442> before the <ei443>visit</ei443> is that through the Pope, Cuba, still <ei444>led</ei444> by Castro, can <ei445>begin</ei445> a more productive <ei446>relationship</ei446> with the world. That will, in turn, <ei447>bring</ei447> pressure on Washington to <ei448>change</ei448>. Those observers <ei449>looking</ei449> for a <ei450>battle</ei450> between uncompromising representatives and very different ideologies will, in all likelihood, be <ei451>disappointed</ei451>. Castro has said that you can be a Communist and still be a Christian. He <ei452>says</ei452> he and the Pope both <ei453>want</ei453> to <ei454>end</ei454> the <ei455>exploitation</ei455> of man by man. | [
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ABC19980120.1830.0957_4 | Documents Creation Time: <t93>19980120</t93> He <ei452>says</ei452> he and the Pope both <ei453>want</ei453> to <ei454>end</ei454> the <ei455>exploitation</ei455> of man by man. The question is who will Cubans <ei456>believe</ei456>? The main negative is the <ei457>risk</ei457> that the Pope's <ei458>visit</ei458> will <ei459>persuade</ei459> a great many more Cubans to <ei460>break</ei460> loose of the Cuban government. If so, then the Pope's <ei461>visit</ei461> would really <ei462>open</ei462> up a new chapter in the government's <ei463>relations</ei463> with its own society. For the Cuban government, that is the risk. | [
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wsj_0551_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t14>10/30/89</t14> TTCO SOCI TENDER OFFERS, MERGERS, ACQUISITIONS (TNM) BANKS (BNK) TOLEDO, Ohio Trustcorp Inc. will <ei82>become</ei82> Society Bank amp Trust when its <ei83>merger</ei83> is <ei84>completed</ei84> with Society Corp. of Cleveland, the bank <ei85>said</ei85>. Society Corp., which is also a bank, <ei86>agreed</ei86> in <t15>June</t15> to <ei87>buy</ei87> Trustcorp for 12.4 million shares of stock with a market value of about $450 million. The <ei88>transaction</ei88> is <ei89>expected</ei89> to <ei90>close</ei90> <t17>around year end</t17>. | [
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APW19980213.1380_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t30>02/13/1998 15:44:00</t30> Police <ei302>discover</ei302> <ei303>dismembered</ei303> body of man <ei304>kidnapped</ei304> Wednesday Kidnappers <ei305>kept</ei305> their <ei306>promise</ei306> to <ei307>kill</ei307> a store owner they <ei308>took</ei308> <ei309>hostage</ei309> and police <ei310>found</ei310> the man's <ei311>dismembered</ei311> and <ei312>decapitated</ei312> body <t33>Friday</t33> <ei313>wrapped</ei313> in plastic garbage bags. Police <ei314>confirmed</ei314> <t39>Friday</t39> that the body <ei315>found</ei315> along a highway in this municipality 15 miles south of San Juan <ei316>belonged</ei316> to Jorge Hernandez, 49. Hernandez was <ei317>kidnapped</ei317> from his small, neighborhood store in the town of Trujillo Alto at <t35>10 p.m. Wednesday</t35>, police <ei318>said</ei318>. His kidnappers <ei319>demanded</ei319> a <ei320>ransom</ei320> of dlrs 1 million, but <ei321>negotiations</ei321> <ei322>broke</ei322> off at <t36>noon Thursday</t36>. Police <ei323>gave</ei323> no details about the <ei324>negotiations</ei324> with the kidnappers for the <ei325>return</ei325> of Hernandez. | [
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APW19980213.1380_1 | Documents Creation Time: <t30>02/13/1998 15:44:00</t30> Police <ei323>gave</ei323> no details about the <ei324>negotiations</ei324> with the kidnappers for the <ei325>return</ei325> of Hernandez. The store owner's body was <ei326>found</ei326> with the arms and head <ei327>cut</ei327> off and the parts <ei328>stuffed</ei328> in separate garbage bags. A passerby <ei329>called</ei329> police to <ei330>report</ei330> the body alongside the road. Puerto Rico Police Superintendent Pedro Toledo <ei331>urged</ei331> people who might be <ei332>targeted</ei332> by kidnappers to be <ei333>alert</ei333>. ``There has been an <ei334>increase</ei334> in Puerto Rico in this kind of thing and some of these bands of kidnappers are <ei335>made</ei335> up of foreigners,'' Toledo <ei336>said</ei336>. | [
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APW19980213.1380_2 | Documents Creation Time: <t30>02/13/1998 15:44:00</t30> ``There has been an <ei334>increase</ei334> in Puerto Rico in this kind of thing and some of these bands of kidnappers are <ei335>made</ei335> up of foreigners,'' Toledo <ei336>said</ei336>. While some Latin American countries such as Mexico and Colombia have <ei337>suffered</ei337> from a rash of <ei338>kidnappings</ei338> in <t37>recent years</t37>, the <ei339>crime</ei339> has not been <ei340>common</ei340> in this U.S. commonwealth. (PROFILE (WS SL:BC-Puerto Rico-Hostage Killed; CT:i; (REG:CRB;) (REG:ENGL;) (LANG:ENGLISH;)) ) AP-NY-02-13-98 1544EST | [
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wsj_0586_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t198>10/30/89</t198> FREST CANDA EUROP JAPAN COMMODITY NEWS, FARM PRODUCTS (CMD) STOCK MARKET, OFFERINGS (STK) PRECIOUS METALS, STONES, GOLD, SILVER (PCS) London share prices <ei1363>closed</ei1363> sharply lower <t199>Friday</t199> in active trading after Chancellor of the Exchequer Nigel Lawson's <ei1365>resignation</ei1365> <ei1366>slapped</ei1366> the market and Wall Street's rapid initial sell-off <ei1367>knocked</ei1367> it down. London shares were <ei1368>depressed</ei1368> initially by over<t207>night</t207> <ei1369>losses</ei1369> in New York and by the <ei1370>drop</ei1370> in sterling after Mr. Lawson's <ei1371>resignation</ei1371>. It showed some early <ei1372>resilience</ei1372> after central bank <ei1373>support</ei1373> <ei1374>firmed</ei1374> sterling, but the <ei1375>weight</ei1375> of Wall Street late in London trading, and signs of further <ei1376>weakness</ei1376> in the British pound, proved a hefty load to <ei1377>bear</ei1377>. New York stocks <ei1378>recovered</ei1378> some of their losses after the London market <ei1379>closed</ei1379>. The Financial Times 100-share index <ei1380>shed</ei1380> 47.3 points to <ei1381>close</ei1381> at 2082.1, down 4.5% from <t215>the previous Friday</t215> and 6.8% from <t217>Oct. 13</t217>, when Wall Street's <ei1382>plunge</ei1382> <ei1383>helped</ei1383> <ei1384>spark</ei1384> the <t218>current</t218> <ei1385>weakness</ei1385> in London. | [
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wsj_0586_1 | Documents Creation Time: <t198>10/30/89</t198> The Financial Times 100-share index <ei1380>shed</ei1380> 47.3 points to <ei1381>close</ei1381> at 2082.1, down 4.5% from <t215>the previous Friday</t215> and 6.8% from <t217>Oct. 13</t217>, when Wall Street's <ei1382>plunge</ei1382> <ei1383>helped</ei1383> <ei1384>spark</ei1384> the <t218>current</t218> <ei1385>weakness</ei1385> in London. The 30-share index <ei1386>settled</ei1386> 42.0 points lower at <ei1387>1678.5</ei1387>. Volume was <ei1526>840.8</ei1526> million shares, up from <ei1527>443.6</ei1527> million <t225>Thursday</t225> and <t226>the week</t226>'s most active <ei1390>session</ei1390>. Dealers <ei1391>said</ei1391> the turnover, largely confined to the 100-share index stocks, partly <ei1392>reflected</ei1392> the <ei1393>flurry</ei1393> of activity typical at the <ei1394>close</ei1394> of a <t230>two-week</t230> trading <ei1395>account</ei1395> and the <ei1396>start</ei1396> of a new <ei1397>account</ei1397>. But they <ei1398>said</ei1398> <t231>Friday</t231>'s focus on the top-tier stocks <ei1399>telegraphed</ei1399> active overseas <ei1400>selling</ei1400> and <ei1401>showed</ei1401> the broad-based <ei1402>fears</ei1402> over the status of the U.K. economy and Britain's currency in the <ei1403>wake</ei1403> of the <ei1404>upheaval</ei1404> in Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's cabinet. | [
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wsj_0586_2 | Documents Creation Time: <t198>10/30/89</t198> But they <ei1398>said</ei1398> <t231>Friday</t231>'s focus on the top-tier stocks <ei1399>telegraphed</ei1399> active overseas <ei1400>selling</ei1400> and <ei1401>showed</ei1401> the broad-based <ei1402>fears</ei1402> over the status of the U.K. economy and Britain's currency in the <ei1403>wake</ei1403> of the <ei1404>upheaval</ei1404> in Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's cabinet. A senior dealer with Warburg Securities <ei1405>noted</ei1405> British Gas, the most active blue-chip stock at 20 million shares traded, was <ei1406>affected</ei1406> by the political implications of Mr. Lawson's <ei1407>departure</ei1407> and Mrs. Thatcher's cabinet <ei1408>shuffle</ei1408>. He <ei1409>attributed</ei1409> the unusually high <ei1410>volume</ei1410> to broad-based <ei1411>selling</ei1411> on <ei1412>fears</ei1412> that the Thatcher government may be <ei1528>in</ei1528> turmoil and Britain's Labor Party <ei1414>positioned</ei1414> to <ei1415>regain</ei1415> <ei1416>control</ei1416> of the government and <ei1417>renew</ei1417> <ei1418>efforts</ei1418> at <ei1419>nationalization</ei1419>. British Gas <ei1420>shed</ei1420> 8.5 pence a share to <ei1421>close</ei1421> at <ei1529>185</ei1529> pence ($2.90). Other dealers <ei1423>added</ei1423> that the blue-chip stocks in general were <ei1424>hit</ei1424> by profit-taking over <ei1425>concerns</ei1425> that London shares will <ei1426>continue</ei1426> <ei1427>posting</ei1427> <ei1428>declines</ei1428> and the <ei1429>uncertainty</ei1429> over sterling given that Mr. Lawson's successor, John Major, had only been <ei1530>in</ei1530> the job <t247>one day</t247>. | [
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wsj_0586_3 | Documents Creation Time: <t198>10/30/89</t198> Other dealers <ei1423>added</ei1423> that the blue-chip stocks in general were <ei1424>hit</ei1424> by profit-taking over <ei1425>concerns</ei1425> that London shares will <ei1426>continue</ei1426> <ei1427>posting</ei1427> <ei1428>declines</ei1428> and the <ei1429>uncertainty</ei1429> over sterling given that Mr. Lawson's successor, John Major, had only been <ei1530>in</ei1530> the job <t247>one day</t247>. Besides British Gas, British Steel <ei1431>skidded</ei1431> 1.74 to <ei1432>123.5</ei1432> on turnover of 11 million shares. British Petroleum <ei1433>fell</ei1433> 5 to <ei1434>286</ei1434> on 14 million shares traded. Dealers <ei1435>said</ei1435> the multinational oil company was <ei1436>pressured</ei1436> by recent brokerage recommendations <ei1437>urging</ei1437> investors to <ei1438>switch</ei1438> into Shell Trading amp Transport. Shell <ei1439>eased</ei1439> 1 to <ei1440>416</ei1440> on turnover of 4.8 million shares. | [
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wsj_0586_4 | Documents Creation Time: <t198>10/30/89</t198> Shell <ei1439>eased</ei1439> 1 to <ei1440>416</ei1440> on turnover of 4.8 million shares. Among the other actively traded blue-chip issues, Imperial Chemical Industries <ei1441>dropped</ei1441> 11 to <ei1442>#10.86</ei1442>, Hanson <ei1443>skidded</ei1443> 9.5 to <ei1444>200.5</ei1444>, and British Telecom <ei1445>fell</ei1445> 10 to <ei1446>250</ei1446>. In Tokyo, stocks <ei1447>closed</ei1447> <ei1448>lower</ei1448> but above intraday lows in active trading. The Nikkei index was <ei1449>pressured</ei1449> down by <ei1451>profit-taking</ei1451> <ei1452>triggered</ei1452> by sharp <ei1453>advances</ei1453> made through <t264>this week</t264> and <ei1454>fell</ei1454> 151.20 points to <ei1455>35527.29</ei1455>. In early <ei1456>trading</ei1456> in Tokyo <t269>Monday</t269>, the Nikkei index <ei1457>fell</ei1457> 148.85 points to <ei1458>35378.44</ei1458>. | [
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wsj_0586_5 | Documents Creation Time: <t198>10/30/89</t198> In early <ei1456>trading</ei1456> in Tokyo <t269>Monday</t269>, the Nikkei index <ei1457>fell</ei1457> 148.85 points to <ei1458>35378.44</ei1458>. On <t274>Friday</t274>, the Tokyo stock price index of first section issues was down 15.82 at <ei1459>2681.76</ei1459>. First-section volume was <ei1460>estimated</ei1460> at <ei1531>1.3</ei1531> billion shares, up from <ei1532>886</ei1532> million shares <t275>Thursday</t275>. An official at Wako Securities <ei1463>said</ei1463> brokerages' excessive <ei1464>expectations</ei1464> about <t280>recent</t280> <ei1465>advances</ei1465> in Tokyu Group shares and real estate issues were <ei1466>dashed</ei1466> <t281>Friday</t281>. Dealers <ei1467>placed</ei1467> heavy buy <ei1468>orders</ei1468> in <t282>the morning</t282> to <ei1469>start</ei1469> the first <ei1470>trading</ei1470> <t941>day</t941> for <t283>November</t283> <ei1471>transactions</ei1471>. | [
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wsj_0586_6 | Documents Creation Time: <t198>10/30/89</t198> Dealers <ei1467>placed</ei1467> heavy buy <ei1468>orders</ei1468> in <t282>the morning</t282> to <ei1469>start</ei1469> the first <ei1470>trading</ei1470> <t941>day</t941> for <t283>November</t283> <ei1471>transactions</ei1471>. But they <ei1472>failed</ei1472> to <ei1473>sell</ei1473> these stocks to client investors, who were <ei1474>cautious</ei1474> about the sharp <ei1475>gains</ei1475> these issues <ei1476>made</ei1476> <t287>this week</t287>, the Wako official <ei1477>said</ei1477>. Fund managers <ei1478>said</ei1478> <t288>Friday</t288>'s <ei1479>profittaking</ei1479> was a natural <ei1480>result</ei1480> of <t293>the week</t293>'s "abnormal <ei1533>fever</ei1533>" in <ei1482>buying</ei1482> real estate, shipbuilding, steel and construction shares. Frankfurt prices <ei1483>closed</ei1483> lower again <t294>Friday</t294>, the fourth <ei1485>decline</ei1485> in <t298>the past five days</t298> and the <ei1486>culmination</ei1486> of <t301>a week</t301> that saw the DAX index <ei1487>lose</ei1487> 4%. The DAX <ei1488>dropped</ei1488> 19.69 points <t302>Friday</t302> to <ei1489>1462.93</ei1489>. | [
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wsj_0586_7 | Documents Creation Time: <t198>10/30/89</t198> The DAX <ei1488>dropped</ei1488> 19.69 points <t302>Friday</t302> to <ei1489>1462.93</ei1489>. Traders <ei1490>said</ei1490> the continued <ei1491>turbulence</ei1491> in other markets, coupled with the <ei1492>drop</ei1492> in London following the Lawson <ei1493>resignation</ei1493>, were <ei1494>responsible</ei1494>. Traders <ei1495>said</ei1495> that selling pressure wasn't enormous and that the DAX <ei1496>dropped</ei1496> <t316>Friday</t316> more on a lack of any substantial buying <ei1497>interest</ei1497>. They <ei1498>said</ei1498> contributing to the downward <ei1499>drift</ei1499> was the fact that many professional traders had <ei1500>chosen</ei1500> to <ei1501>square</ei1501> positions ahead of <t322>the weekend</t322>. "It's the whole uncertainty about what's happening around us," said Valentin Von Korff, a trader at Credit Suisse First Boston in Frankfurt. | [
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wsj_0586_8 | Documents Creation Time: <t198>10/30/89</t198> "It's the whole uncertainty about what's happening around us," said Valentin Von Korff, a trader at Credit Suisse First Boston in Frankfurt. "If you take away the outside influences, the market itself looks very cheap. What's happening here is n't justified by the fundamentals." Traders <ei1502>said</ei1502> the market remains extremely <ei1503>nervous</ei1503> because of the wild <ei1504>swings</ei1504> <ei1505>seen</ei1505> on the New York Stock Exchange <t326>last week</t326>. That's <ei1506>leaving</ei1506> small investors with cold feet, they <ei1507>said</ei1507>, and <ei1508>prompting</ei1508> institutions to <ei1509>take</ei1509> a reserved stance on the sidelines as well, at least until the market in New York <ei1510>settles</ei1510> down somewhat. | [
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wsj_0586_9 | Documents Creation Time: <t198>10/30/89</t198> That's <ei1506>leaving</ei1506> small investors with cold feet, they <ei1507>said</ei1507>, and <ei1508>prompting</ei1508> institutions to <ei1509>take</ei1509> a reserved stance on the sidelines as well, at least until the market in New York <ei1510>settles</ei1510> down somewhat. Elsewhere, share prices <ei1511>closed</ei1511> lower in Paris, Zurich, Amsterdam, Brussels and Stockholm, and were <ei1513>mixed</ei1513> in Milan. The British <ei1514>shakeup</ei1514> was widely <ei1515>cited</ei1515> for the <ei1516>declines</ei1516>. Share prices also <ei1517>closed</ei1517> lower in Sydney, Hong Kong, Singapore, Taipei, Manila, Wellington and Seoul. <ei1519>Concern</ei1519> about <ei1520>declines</ei1520> in other markets, especially New York, <ei1521>caused</ei1521> <ei1522>selling</ei1522> <ei1523>pressure</ei1523>. | [
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wsj_0586_10 | Documents Creation Time: <t198>10/30/89</t198> <ei1519>Concern</ei1519> about <ei1520>declines</ei1520> in other markets, especially New York, <ei1521>caused</ei1521> <ei1522>selling</ei1522> <ei1523>pressure</ei1523>. Here are price trends on the world's major stock markets, as <ei1524>calculated</ei1524> by Morgan Stanley Capital International Perspective, Geneva. To make them directly comparable, each index is based on the close of 1969 equaling 100. The percentage <ei1525>change</ei1525> is since <t341>year-end</t341>. @ % This @ Oct 25 Oct 24 Year @ U.S. ................... 315.2 316.4 +23.1 @ Britain ................ 646.4 643.1 +18.4 @ Canada ................. 426.9 426.4 +16.3 @ Japan .................. 1547.1 1550.9 + 8.9 @ France ................. 518.6 521.2 +17.1 @ Germany ................ 236.7 241.0 +13.8 @ Hong Kong .............. 2049.2 2068.9 + 1.0 @ Switzerland ............ 212.6 216.5 +23.0 @ Australia .............. 326.0 329.4 +12.3 @ World index ............ 532.4 533.4 + 7.7 @ Weekly Percentage Leaders Last week's best and worst performing stocks among those issues that make up 80% of the world's stock market capitalization (in local currency) @ ISSUE (COUNTRY) CLOSE % CHG @ WINNING ISSUES @ Bell Resources (Australia) ....... 1.02 +32.5 @Bond Media (Australia) ........... 0.31 +24.0 @Godo Shusei (Japan) .............. 2380.0 +19.0 @Fonciere Lvonnaise (France) ...... 858.0 +18.8 @Pegasus Gold (Canada) ............ 14.0 +16.7 @Tokyu Corp. (Japan) .............. 2740.0 +15.6 @SAT Telecom (France) ............. 1605.0 +15.5 @Echo Bay Mines (Canada) .......... 18.625 +13.7 @Nippon Express (Japan) ........... 1770.0 +13.5 @UAC (Singapore) .................. 2380.0 +19.0 @ LOSING ISSUES @MacCarthy amp Stone (England) ...... 0.74 -29.5 @Campeau (Canada) ................. 7.375 -24.4 @Interchase Corp. (Australia) ..... 0.72 -20.0 @LTV (U.S.) ....................... 1.5 -20.0 @Norske Credibank (Norway) ........ 81.0 -18.6 @Laing (John) (England) ........... 1.96 -18.0 @Computer Assoc Intl (U.S.) ....... 12.0 -17.9 @Beverly Enterprises ( U.S.) ...... 5.625 -16.7 @McDermott Intl (U.S.) ............ 19.0 -16.5 @Lex Services (England) ........... 2.41 -16.3 Source: Morgan Stanley Capital Intl. | [
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APW19980219.0476_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t129>02/19/1998 08:02:00</t129> The top commander of a Cambodian resistance force <ei2455>said</ei2455> <t2443>Thursday</t2443> he has <ei2456>sent</ei2456> a team to <ei2457>recover</ei2457> the remains of a British mine removal expert <ei2458>kidnapped</ei2458> and <ei2459>presumed</ei2459> <ei2460>killed</ei2460> by Khmer Rouge guerrillas <t130>almost two years ago</t130>. Gen. Nhek Bunchhay, a loyalist of ousted Cambodian Prime Minister Prince Norodom Ranariddh, <ei2461>said</ei2461> in an <ei2462>interview</ei2462> with The Associated Press at his hilltop headquarters that he <ei2463>hopes</ei2463> to <ei2464>recover</ei2464> the remains of Christopher Howes within <t133>the next two weeks</t133>. Howes had been <ei2465>working</ei2465> for the Britain-based Mines Advisory Group when he was <ei2466>abducted</ei2466> with his Cambodian interpreter Houn Hourth in <t134>March 1996</t134>. There were many conflicting <ei2467>accounts</ei2467> of his <ei2468>fate</ei2468>. Howes' team was <ei2469>clearing</ei2469> mines 17 kilometers (10 miles) from Angkor Wat, the fabled 11th century temple that is Cambodia's main tourist attraction, when it was <ei2470>attacked</ei2470>. | [
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APW19980219.0476_1 | Documents Creation Time: <t129>02/19/1998 08:02:00</t129> Howes' team was <ei2469>clearing</ei2469> mines 17 kilometers (10 miles) from Angkor Wat, the fabled 11th century temple that is Cambodia's main tourist attraction, when it was <ei2470>attacked</ei2470>. In <t135>January this year</t135>, British police officers who had been <ei2471>searching</ei2471> for Howes <ei2472>concluded</ei2472> he had probably been <ei2473>killed</ei2473> soon after being <ei2474>captured</ei2474>. The Foreign Office <ei2475>said</ei2475> it had <ei2476>informed</ei2476> the family of Howes, 37 years old when he was <ei2477>kidnapped</ei2477>, that he probably <ei2478>died</ei2478> within <t137>weeks or months</t137> of his <ei2479>capture</ei2479> on <t136>March 26, 1996</t136>. ``Obviously, it is deeply <ei2480>discouraging</ei2480> for the family after <t138>22 months</t138>, but there is no <ei2481>proof</ei2481> of <ei2482>life</ei2482>. But there is no <ei2483>evidence</ei2483> in either direction _ that there is <ei2484>proof</ei2484> of <ei2485>life</ei2485> or <ei2486>death</ei2486>,'' <ei2487>said</ei2487> a Foreign Office spokesman, <ei2488>speaking</ei2488> with customary anonymity. | [
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APW19980219.0476_2 | Documents Creation Time: <t129>02/19/1998 08:02:00</t129> But there is no <ei2483>evidence</ei2483> in either direction _ that there is <ei2484>proof</ei2484> of <ei2485>life</ei2485> or <ei2486>death</ei2486>,'' <ei2487>said</ei2487> a Foreign Office spokesman, <ei2488>speaking</ei2488> with customary anonymity. ``We will <ei2489>continue</ei2489> to <ei2490>do</ei2490> everything we can to <ei2491>establish</ei2491> what has <ei2492>happened</ei2492>.'' Thai military officials who monitor Cambodian affairs <ei2493>said</ei2493> privately <t2449>Thursday</t2449> that Britain, through its embassies in Thailand and Cambodia, has been <ei2494>pushing</ei2494> hard to <ei2495>resolve</ei2495> the Howes case as the second <ei2543>anniversary</ei2543> of his <ei2497>abduction</ei2497> nears. Nhek Bunchhay, who had been closely <ei2498>involved</ei2498> in the <ei2499>search</ei2499> for Howes before having to <ei2500>flee</ei2500> the Cambodian capital after a <ei2501>coup d'etat</ei2501> <t131>last year</t131>, <ei2502>appeared</ei2502> confident he would <ei2503>find</ei2503> Howes' remains. He <ei2504>said</ei2504> he <ei2505>received</ei2505> information from Khmer Rouge guerrillas on where the body had been <ei2506>buried</ei2506>, and recently <ei2507>ordered</ei2507> 10 of his men from a force of 500 near Khmer Rouge headquarters in Anlong Veng to <ei2508>conduct</ei2508> the <ei2509>search</ei2509>. | [
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APW19980219.0476_3 | Documents Creation Time: <t129>02/19/1998 08:02:00</t129> He <ei2504>said</ei2504> he <ei2505>received</ei2505> information from Khmer Rouge guerrillas on where the body had been <ei2506>buried</ei2506>, and recently <ei2507>ordered</ei2507> 10 of his men from a force of 500 near Khmer Rouge headquarters in Anlong Veng to <ei2508>conduct</ei2508> the <ei2509>search</ei2509>. If and when the remains are <ei2510>found</ei2510>, he <ei2511>said</ei2511>, they would be <ei2512>turned</ei2512> over to the British Embassy, apparently meaning they would be <ei2513>sent</ei2513> across the border into Thailand and onward to Bangkok. Nhek Bunchhay <ei2514>said</ei2514> he <t2452>now</t2452> <ei2515>believed</ei2515> Howes had been <ei2516>killed</ei2516> within <t140>a week</t140> of his <ei2517>capture</ei2517> by a Khmer Rouge faction loyal to Pol Pot, then the guerrilla group's leader. Pol Pot is <ei2518>considered</ei2518> <ei2519>responsible</ei2519> for the radical <ei2520>policies</ei2520> that <ei2521>led</ei2521> to the <ei2522>deaths</ei2522> of as many as 1.7 million Cambodians when the communist group <ei2523>held</ei2523> power in <t142>the late 1970s</t142>. At the time Howes was <ei2524>captured</ei2524>, the Khmer Rouge were a more or less united guerrilla force with more than 10,000 men under arms. | [
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APW19980219.0476_4 | Documents Creation Time: <t129>02/19/1998 08:02:00</t129> At the time Howes was <ei2524>captured</ei2524>, the Khmer Rouge were a more or less united guerrilla force with more than 10,000 men under arms. But the group <ei2525>began</ei2525> to <ei2526>fall</ei2526> apart in <t143>mid-1996</t143> after the <ei2527>defection</ei2527> of one of its top leaders, Ieng Sary. Other commanders, and thousands of guerrillas, <ei2528>followed</ei2528> him. A small hardcore group under Pol Pot <ei2529>continued</ei2529> to <ei2530>hold</ei2530> out at their headquarters at Anlong Veng in northern Cambodia near the Thai border. But in <t2228>June last year</t2228>, the remaining leadership had a <ei2531>falling</ei2531> out, and Pol Pot was <ei2532>arrested</ei2532>. | [
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APW19980219.0476_5 | Documents Creation Time: <t129>02/19/1998 08:02:00</t129> But in <t2228>June last year</t2228>, the remaining leadership had a <ei2531>falling</ei2531> out, and Pol Pot was <ei2532>arrested</ei2532>. In <t169>July last year</t169> in Phnom Penh, Cambodia's capital, Second Prime Minister Hun Sen <ei2533>staged</ei2533> a successful <ei2544>coup</ei2544> d'etat against First Prime Minister Prince Norodom Ranariddh. Ranariddh's loyalists, including Nhek Bunchhay, his top military commander, <ei2535>went</ei2535> into hiding or <ei2536>fled</ei2536> the capital. Nhek Bunchhay, <ei2537>evading</ei2537> an intensive <ei2538>manhunt</ei2538>, <ei2539>made</ei2539> his way to O'Smach, the last major outpost held by Ranariddh's forces. His men have held the stronghold _ which is on the border just opposite the Thai province of Surin _ against repeated intense <ei2540>attacks</ei2540> by Hun Sen's troops. | [
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APW19980219.0476_6 | Documents Creation Time: <t129>02/19/1998 08:02:00</t129> His men have held the stronghold _ which is on the border just opposite the Thai province of Surin _ against repeated intense <ei2540>attacks</ei2540> by Hun Sen's troops. They have been <ei2541>aided</ei2541> by Khmer Rouge guerrillas from Anlong Veng, who have <ei2542>formed</ei2542> an alliance with Ranariddh's resistance forces to oppose Hun Sen. (PROFILE (WS SL:BC-Cambodia-Britain-Hostage; CT:i; (REG:ASIA;) (REG:ENGL;) (REG:EURO;) (REG:BRIT;) (REG:SCAN;) (REG:MEST;) (REG:AFRI;) (REG:INDI;) (LANG:ENGLISH;)) ) AP-NY-02-19-98 0802EST | [
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ea980120.1830.0456_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t13>980120</t13> The Pentagon <ei99>said</ei99> <t14>today</t14> it will <ei100>re-examine</ei100> the <ei101>question</ei101> are the remains inside the Tomb of the Unknown from the Vietnam War, in fact, <ei102>known</ei102>? CBS News first <ei103>reported</ei103> <t15>last night</t15> that the tomb may <ei104>contain</ei104> the remains of Air Force pilot Michael Blassie. There was a <ei105>suspicion</ei105> the body <ei111>was</ei111> Blassie because his uniform and ID card were <ei107>found</ei107> near the body in Vietnam. But subsequently, they were <ei108>lost</ei108>. Blassie's mother <t16>now</t16> <ei109>wants</ei109> the remains in the tomb <ei110>tested</ei110> for DNA. | [
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wsj_0541_0 | Documents Creation Time: <t17>10/30/89</t17> AUD BUYBACKS, REDEMPTIONS, SWAP OFFERS (BBK) ROSELAND, N.J. Automatic Data Processing Inc. <ei86>plans</ei86> to <ei87>redeem</ei87> on <t18>Nov. 16</t18> its $150 million of 6.5% convertible subordinated debentures <ei88>due</ei88> <t20>March 1, 2011</t20>. The computing-services concern will <ei89>pay</ei89> $1,059.04 for each $1,000 face amount of debt. The conversion price for the debentures is $41.725 a share. In New York Stock Exchange composite trading <t21>Friday</t21>, Automatic Data <ei90>closed</ei90> at <ei91>$46.50 a share</ei91>, down $2.25. If all the debt is <ei92>converted</ei92> to common, Automatic Data will <ei93>issue</ei93> about 3.6 million shares; <t24>last Monday</t24>, the company <ei94>had</ei94> nearly 73 million shares outstanding. | [
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