Does Ms. Haag play Elianti ? Did Rolls-Royce Motor Cars Inc. say it expects its U.S. sales to remain steady at about 1,200 cars in 1990 ? Did the luxury auto maker last year sell 1,214 cars in the U.S. ? Did BELL INDUSTRIES Inc. increase its quarterly to 10 cents from seven cents a share ? Will the new rate be payable Feb. 15 ? Has n't a record date been set ? Does Bell , based in Los Angeles , make and distribute electronic , computer and building products ? Would the proposed changes also allow executives to r?port exercises of options later and less often ? `` Did the commission apparently not really believe in this ideal ? '' But do about 25 % of the insiders , according to SEC figures , file their reports late ? Do not all those who wrote oppose the changes ? Would , according to some estimates , the rule changes cut insider filings by more than a third ? Did the SEC 's Mr. Lane vehemently dispute those estimates ? Did he add investors who want to change the required timing should write their representatives in Congress ? Are both funds expected to begin operation around March 1 , subject to Securities and Exchange Commission approval ? For its employees to sign up for the options , must a college also approve the plan ? Are some 4,300 institutions part of the pension fund ? Has Richard Stoltzman taken a gentler , more audience-friendly approach ? But ca n't you dismiss Mr. Stoltzman 's music or his motives as merely commercial and lightweight ? Does he believe in what he plays , and does he play superbly ? Did Bach 's `` Air '' follow ? Did that go over the permissible line for warm and fuzzy feelings ? -LRB- Does Mr. Reich 's new `` Different Trains '' for string quartet use the technique magisterially ? -RRB- But was it neither deep nor lasting : light entertainment that was no substitute for an evening of Brahms ? Is Ms. Waleson a free-lance writer based in New York ? Did he in fact liberate the U.S. from one of the world 's most corrupt organizations -- UNESCO ? Is this is the U.N. group that managed to traduce its own charter of promoting education , science and culture ? Have the remaining members ever since been desperate for the United States to rejoin this dreadful group ? Are UNESCO apologists now lobbying President Bush to renege on President Reagan 's decision to depart ? But can we think of many reasons to stay out for the foreseeable future and well beyond ? Did UNESCO somehow convert the founding U.N. ideals of individual rights and liberty into `` peoples ' rights ? '' Is UNESCO now holding its biennial meetings in Paris to devise its next projects ? Has n't he been able to replace the M'Bow cabal ? May other countries , including West Germany , have a hard time justifying continued membership ? Do we see an even stronger argument against UNESCO than its unsurprising failure to reform ? Are the Babelists of the United Nations experts at obfuscation ? Can we see plenty of reasons to stay out , and none to rejoin UNESCO ? Did the researchers say they have isolated a plant gene that prevents the production of pollen ? Can the gene thus prevent a plant from fertilizing itself ? Do they sow a row of male-fertile plants nearby , which then pollinate the male-sterile plants ? Is the vast majority of the U.S. corn crop now grown from hybrid seeds produced by seed companies ? Is a similar technique almost impossible to apply to other crops , such as cotton , soybeans and rice ? Are the anthers in these plants difficult to clip off ? Did Mr. Leemans say this genetic manipulation does n't hurt the growth of that plant ? Did they attach a second gene , for herbicide resistance , to the pollen-inhibiting gene ? Is the clash a sign of a new toughness and divisiveness in Japan 's once-cozy financial circles ? Are the consequences already being felt by other players in the financial markets -- even governments ? Was what triggered the latest clash a skirmish over the timing of a New Zealand government bond issue ? Does the dispute show clearly the global power of Japan 's financial titans ? Aside from Nomura 's injured pride , has the biggest victim so far been the New Zealand government ? With Japan 's cash-flush banks aligned against it , though , might raising money be difficult ? Did New Zealand 's finance minister , David Caygill , lash out at such suggestions ? Did he tell Radio New Zealand `` It may very well be what the Japanese banks want , '' ? Are both sides jealously guarding their turf , and have relations been at a flashpoint for months ? Do the banks badly want to break into all aspects of the securities business ? And do their suspicions of each other run deep ? In the past year , have both tried to stretch the limits of their businesses ? Has the New Zealand bond issue simply brought the two institutions face-to-face ? Was John A. Conlon Jr. , 45 , named a managing director at this investment-banking company ? Will he be in charge of research , equity sales and trading , and the syndicate operation of Rothschild ? As Yogi Berra might say , is it deja vu all over again ? Does Paul Blair , the Orioles ' eight-time Gold Glove winner , elegantly shag a fly in the outfield ? Does he say `` Old-time kiddies , '' ? For everyone involved , is it one more swig of that elixir of youth , baseball ? Until the baby-faced heroes of today reclaim these ballparks for spring training , is there one more ? Does Mr. Sider , an estate lawyer , pore over last wills and testaments , early in the morning ? Does he don an orange-and-blue uniform midmorning , and , for fun , may field a bunt from Dave Kingman ? Is it one more , too , for the fans who dream of a season that never ends ? When he sent letters offering 1,250 retired major leaguers the chance of another season , did 730 respond ? Eventually , did about 250 make the trip to Florida to compete for the available slots ? For some players , is the lure money -- up to $ 15,000 a month ? `` Is my fastball good ? Real good , '' does 39-year-old Pete Broberg say , working in the midday heat of the Tropics camp ? For a long time , did he ignore baseball altogether , even the sports pages ? Does Mr. Broberg , a lawyer , now claim he 'd play for free ? Does he say `` You ca n't give it up that easily , '' ? `` Did I try ? '' Did he give up seven hits , did he walk five and did n't he get a decision ? Did arm troubles force him back to the minors the next year ? Does he mean the rule that a player ca n't cut it after a certain age ? Does he hustle these days to house-painting jobs in his Chevy pickup before and after training with the Tropics ? Do some of the game 's reigning philosophers dislike the idea of middle-aged men attempting a young man 's sport ? `` Do I feel people should be allowed to remember players as they were ? '' But do the ballplayers disagree ? Are most trim ? Have some been training for months ? Did others only recently leave active status ? And is there pride ? Does the 47-year-old Mr. Campaneris promise `` It 's going to be a tough league , '' ? `` Will there be a lot of malice ? '' Are men who have played hard all their lives not about to change their habits ?