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1. The report does not include a section on rights observance in the United States itself. 2. The issues confronting Europe go to the heart of its great construction. 3. It would be progress to get away with the notion that oil is scarce – an assumption that led to two decades of energy policy mistakes, such as subsidising coal and nuclear power. 4. Even as prices fall, governments of oil consuming countries should be guarded against the dangers of oil dependence. 5. Unless Europe and Asia are able to keep the US committed to open multilateralism, the Asian crisis may yet produce nasty results. 6. The debate over the House of Lords reform has so far missed the main point. [Britain] 7. The decision set off a furor in the publishing industry on both sides of the Atlantic. 8. “Nestle” confirmed its earlier warnings that the coming year sales-volume growth fell below the company's 4% growth target. The Swiss company blamed the results on economic turmoil in emerging markets. 9. The poll echoes a warning from the Trade and Industry Secretary, that Britain may be vulnerable to charges by fellow EU countries that it is turning its back on Monetary Union and therefore Europe. 10. Initially I thought she was copying pictures out of books. Then the penny dropped: it was not a copy, but the original. 11. Official figures showed yesterday that the economy, despite slowing under the weight of higher rates, the strong pound and the economic crisis in Asia, is still creating jobs. 12. As the country's deepest postwar recession continues, with industrial production plummeting and unemployment soaring at rates last seen during the Depression, fears are growing that Prime Minister's medicine may be permanently disabling rather than curing. 13. Doomsayers predict a decade of lost growth in East Asia, like the one that Latin America went through after its debt crisis in the early 1980s 14. “Which candidate are you against?”... “All the candidates have given me a reason to vote against them.” 15. Democratic economists believe that at a time when business is operating with considerable slack, the nation could stand even larger deficits without much risk of accelerating inflation. 16. After a treaty intended to establish a permanent International! Criminal Court was negotiated in 1998 in Rome, the British Foreign Office said “ the institution would help to tackle the grotesque paradox whereby the killer of one person is more likely to be brought to justice than the killer of thousands.” 17. His aides made clear that the ideas, disclosed in an interview, were not fixed in stone and were simply the start of a “free-thinking” exercise on possible EU reforms. 18. Legal advice will be available from booths in Community centres, doctors' surgeries and public libraries under plans outlined by the Lord Chancellor yesterday. 19. Diplomats fear an influx into Western Europe this summer of illegal immigrants being released from Italian detention centres under loop holes in new immigration laws.
20. The Government, besieged by criticism of its handling of the economy, yesterday gratefully pounced on news of a fall in unemployment to its lowest level for 18 years, combined with an easing in wage pressure which had been responsible for interest rate rises. 21. The new doctrine, approved by President Clinton last month, marks an important step forward a world in which the United States relies on fewer nuclear weapons for its defense. 22. A president who spends most of his working hours figuring out how to buy votes with public money is not likely to be very critical of a multilateral agency (the IMF) that does pretty much the same thing. 23. The new administration has decided to propose a relaxation of air pollution regulations to make it easier for oil refiners, steel producers and other basic industries to expand and modernize their plants, Vice President announced. 24. UN officials report that seven Arab oil-producing countries in the Gulf are about to announce a $250-million annual fund for UN aid agencies. 25. The Korean Confederation of Trade Unions plans a national rally on May 1st, a traditional day for workers' agitation. 26. The European Union's industry ministers Friday called for a link between all state subsidies to the steel industry and cuts in capacity. But they were unable to agree on a deadline for phasing out subsidies. 27. The Labour Party leader called the figures “tragic and terrible” and called for a debate in Parliament. 28. EU finance ministers agreed Monday to seek a common policy on the stabilizing of interest rates before the economic summit conference scheduled for July in Ottawa. 29. Some Planning Ministry official favor an income tax not because the government needs the money, but because they believe Kuwaitis should understand the relationship between effort and reward. 30. Under mounting political pressure to do something to stimulate Germany's economy, the Berlin government Wednesday announced a series of incentives to boost business investment, particularly in energy and new technology fields. 31 The Federal government can borrow from the Federal Reserve to finance immense deficits, has done so, and surely will again when economic downturn calls for fiscal stimulus. 32. Government cutbacks in state spending have badly hit local authorities, and most have started _ big cutbacks, including layoffs that have worsened unemployment, currently at 2.06 million, or 8.5 per cent of the work force. 33. The Bundesbank said Thursday that it does not see any room for a retreat from its tight credits policies despite an economic downturn, which has spurred repeated calls for _ lower interest rates to stimulate the economy and fight unemployment. 34. There are legitimate questions about the stability of Monetary Union and the drive for a federal Europe that will not be resolved by the instinct to embrace the “ modern” option. 35. A research officer at the department of economics at Birkbeek College, looked forward to forging links with groups in Eastern Europe in preparation for a European convention to be held possibly a year from now. 36. The ambitious plan of the Bolivian government calls not only for an end to new planting of coca plants, but for unprecedented eradication of existing crops. Compensation to individual farmers who voluntarily eradicate their plants is to stop by the end of this year. An alternative “community” scheme will be phased out by 2011.
37. All this boiled down to a demand, not yet explicitly stated, for a program of aid and reconstruction on the scale being planned for Europe at that time by the incipient Organization for European Economic Cooperation (OEEC). 38. The coalition began campaigning for a tax to get at excessive oil profits early last fall. 39. It is time for a decision: without it, in the end, there will be no possible solution. 40. Twenty-four American political figures, most of them of Irish ancestry, Tuesday urged an end to “the fear and the terrorism and the bigotry” in Northern Ireland and proposed that the administration find a way to promote a peaceful settlement of the conflict. 41. The conference produced what's been described as the most probing discussions on plant closings that have yet been conducted in the USA. There was 100% support for a new federal agency to handle the shutdowns epidemic, and the conference adopted a plan outlining the need for a new Job Preservation Act in Congress to set up such an agency. 42. This is indeed a new world. But not one that needs a new Columbus to claim it or reshape it. 43. The disclosure that a Pulitzer Prize-winning account had been fabricated has focused attention on the steps a newspaper or a broadcast station takes to verify a story when a reporter says the main participants cannot be identified. 44. Justice Department officials are developing a package of legislative proposals to increase the federal government's ability to fight violent crime. 45. A German Jewish leader stepped into the nationality dispute, warning in an interview Friday that it had given a dangerous boost to far- right groups, Agency France-Press reported from Bonn. 46. A bacterial outbreak linked to a Michigan meat processing plant has claimed eight lives, federal officials reported. 47. Taiwan's central bank has been considering lending to the central banks of Indonesia and Thailand. A negotiating team from Indonesia is expected in Taipei soon. 48. While the break-up of old fixed-wire monopolies preoccupied most consumers and investors, a quiet revolution was happening in wire less service. 49. The immediate cause [of the violent riots in Harare] was a steep rise in the price of Zimbabwe's staple food, maize meal. A committee has now been appointed to review all recent price rises. 50. An array of cheap government loans and services was made avail able to encourage investment in industry. 51. An IMF team will visit Brazil “promptly” to set new economic targets in light of the new currency regime and will soon open a permanent office in Brazilia. 52. Although few expect a quick upturn for the Chinese economy, the long-term optimists about China continue to rely on rosy economic forecasts. 53. The merger trend is roaring full steam ahead in the world auto industry, on a scale not seen since the 1920s. Back in 1921, there were 88 auto manufacturers in the U.S. By 1928, only 32 remained. Today there are only 25 auto manufacturers in the world! And by all indications, only a few of these will survive the next few years. 54. Few diseases have been as politicised as AIDS. And in few other cases is political correctness such a danger to the disease's victims. 55. To the average housewife, who can see for herself that the prices in the supermarket are edging up, the Labor Department's bulletin last week was hardly a surprise. But few housewives or their husbands either, were aware of another, “invisible” form of inflation – namely, reductions in the size of pack ages that are not accompanied by reduction in price. 56. Few industries can boast such rapid growth as this one. 57. Few other international problems have such a complex structure or such wide repercussions.
58. That in turn has left him with little immediate choice but to become more repressive still: to re-establish his authority by force of loyal soldiery. 59. The Labour leaders never faced up to what was involved in breaking the grip of the giant monopolies on the British economy. They showed little understanding of the nature of the state, or of the kind of battle needed to transform it. 60. Yesterday's proceedings were an antiquated farce, enjoyed by no one, and serving little purpose. The sensible way to wrap up a parliamentary session would surely be to vote a closure on the last day of the summer term. 61. Certainly there was little evidence that he would be able to shift the State Secretary from his fundamental lack of enthusiasm for the project. 62. In his address on the House floor Mr. Levigston said Thursday: “To my friends on the left: ...Government left unwatched can lead to in justice. To my friends on the right: ...Government is not inherently evil”. 63. After the sense of drift during John Major's years in power, it is a refreshing change for Britain to have a government which inspires wide spread public confidence. 64. The government has begun a program in which people aged 18 to 24 who have been unemployed for at least six months face losing their dole money unless they get a job or enter a training program, although the jobless rate among the group is 13.5 per cent. 65. The rise of East Asia in the late twentieth century may ultimately prove to be a more important world-historical event than the collapse of communism.
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