diff --git "a/data/processed/nyt.test00.jsonl" "b/data/processed/nyt.test00.jsonl" --- "a/data/processed/nyt.test00.jsonl" +++ "b/data/processed/nyt.test00.jsonl" @@ -1498,575 +1498,3 @@ {"question": "What are the first few digits of pi?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe first digits are actually 3.1415,\u201d said Cindy Lawrence, the museum\u2019s executive director and co-founder. (Pi\u2019s decimal places extend indefinitely.) \u201cSo Saturday\u2019s date is the first five digits of pi.\u201d Thus on Saturday, the museum has planned a grand celebration, starting at 9 a.m. in Madison Square Park, where even small children can help form circles. \u201cWe\u2019ll get people to line up and count out the distance around the circles, and others to do the distance across them,\u201d Ms. Lawrence said. This pacing will illustrate that the circumference is about three times greater. Staff members will also pass out a graphic and lead a brief countdown to 9:26:53 a.m. because, yes, those are the next digits in pi.", "answer": "3.1415", "sentence": "\u201cThe first digits are actually 3.1415 ,\u201d said Cindy Lawrence, the museum\u2019s executive director and co-founder.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe first digits are actually 3.1415 ,\u201d said Cindy Lawrence, the museum\u2019s executive director and co-founder. (Pi\u2019s decimal places extend indefinitely.) \u201cSo Saturday\u2019s date is the first five digits of pi.\u201d Thus on Saturday, the museum has planned a grand celebration, starting at 9 a.m. in Madison Square Park, where even small children can help form circles. \u201cWe\u2019ll get people to line up and count out the distance around the circles, and others to do the distance across them,\u201d Ms. Lawrence said. This pacing will illustrate that the circumference is about three times greater. Staff members will also pass out a graphic and lead a brief countdown to 9:26:53 a.m. because, yes, those are the next digits in pi.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe first digits are actually 3.1415 ,\u201d said Cindy Lawrence, the museum\u2019s executive director and co-founder. (Pi\u2019s decimal places extend indefinitely.) \u201cSo Saturday\u2019s date is the first five digits of pi.\u201d Thus on Saturday, the museum has planned a grand celebration, starting at 9 a.m. in Madison Square Park, where even small children can help form circles. \u201cWe\u2019ll get people to line up and count out the distance around the circles, and others to do the distance across them,\u201d Ms. Lawrence said. This pacing will illustrate that the circumference is about three times greater. Staff members will also pass out a graphic and lead a brief countdown to 9:26:53 a.m. because, yes, those are the next digits in pi.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe first digits are actually 3.1415 ,\u201d said Cindy Lawrence, the museum\u2019s executive director and co-founder."} {"question": "Who is the museum's executive director and co-founder?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe first digits are actually 3.1415,\u201d said Cindy Lawrence, the museum\u2019s executive director and co-founder. (Pi\u2019s decimal places extend indefinitely.) \u201cSo Saturday\u2019s date is the first five digits of pi.\u201d Thus on Saturday, the museum has planned a grand celebration, starting at 9 a.m. in Madison Square Park, where even small children can help form circles. \u201cWe\u2019ll get people to line up and count out the distance around the circles, and others to do the distance across them,\u201d Ms. Lawrence said. This pacing will illustrate that the circumference is about three times greater. Staff members will also pass out a graphic and lead a brief countdown to 9:26:53 a.m. because, yes, those are the next digits in pi.", "answer": "Cindy Lawrence", "sentence": "\u201cThe first digits are actually 3.1415,\u201d said Cindy Lawrence , the museum\u2019s executive director and co-founder.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe first digits are actually 3.1415,\u201d said Cindy Lawrence , the museum\u2019s executive director and co-founder. (Pi\u2019s decimal places extend indefinitely.) \u201cSo Saturday\u2019s date is the first five digits of pi.\u201d Thus on Saturday, the museum has planned a grand celebration, starting at 9 a.m. in Madison Square Park, where even small children can help form circles. \u201cWe\u2019ll get people to line up and count out the distance around the circles, and others to do the distance across them,\u201d Ms. Lawrence said. This pacing will illustrate that the circumference is about three times greater. Staff members will also pass out a graphic and lead a brief countdown to 9:26:53 a.m. because, yes, those are the next digits in pi.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe first digits are actually 3.1415,\u201d said Cindy Lawrence , the museum\u2019s executive director and co-founder. (Pi\u2019s decimal places extend indefinitely.) \u201cSo Saturday\u2019s date is the first five digits of pi.\u201d Thus on Saturday, the museum has planned a grand celebration, starting at 9 a.m. in Madison Square Park, where even small children can help form circles. \u201cWe\u2019ll get people to line up and count out the distance around the circles, and others to do the distance across them,\u201d Ms. Lawrence said. This pacing will illustrate that the circumference is about three times greater. Staff members will also pass out a graphic and lead a brief countdown to 9:26:53 a.m. because, yes, those are the next digits in pi.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe first digits are actually 3.1415,\u201d said Cindy Lawrence , the museum\u2019s executive director and co-founder."} {"question": "How many decimal places does pi extend?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe first digits are actually 3.1415,\u201d said Cindy Lawrence, the museum\u2019s executive director and co-founder. (Pi\u2019s decimal places extend indefinitely.) \u201cSo Saturday\u2019s date is the first five digits of pi.\u201d Thus on Saturday, the museum has planned a grand celebration, starting at 9 a.m. in Madison Square Park, where even small children can help form circles. \u201cWe\u2019ll get people to line up and count out the distance around the circles, and others to do the distance across them,\u201d Ms. Lawrence said. This pacing will illustrate that the circumference is about three times greater. Staff members will also pass out a graphic and lead a brief countdown to 9:26:53 a.m. because, yes, those are the next digits in pi.", "answer": "indefinitely", "sentence": "(Pi\u2019s decimal places extend indefinitely .)", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe first digits are actually 3.1415,\u201d said Cindy Lawrence, the museum\u2019s executive director and co-founder. (Pi\u2019s decimal places extend indefinitely .) \u201cSo Saturday\u2019s date is the first five digits of pi.\u201d Thus on Saturday, the museum has planned a grand celebration, starting at 9 a.m. in Madison Square Park, where even small children can help form circles. \u201cWe\u2019ll get people to line up and count out the distance around the circles, and others to do the distance across them,\u201d Ms. Lawrence said. This pacing will illustrate that the circumference is about three times greater. Staff members will also pass out a graphic and lead a brief countdown to 9:26:53 a.m. because, yes, those are the next digits in pi.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe first digits are actually 3.1415,\u201d said Cindy Lawrence, the museum\u2019s executive director and co-founder. (Pi\u2019s decimal places extend indefinitely .) \u201cSo Saturday\u2019s date is the first five digits of pi.\u201d Thus on Saturday, the museum has planned a grand celebration, starting at 9 a.m. in Madison Square Park, where even small children can help form circles. \u201cWe\u2019ll get people to line up and count out the distance around the circles, and others to do the distance across them,\u201d Ms. Lawrence said. This pacing will illustrate that the circumference is about three times greater. Staff members will also pass out a graphic and lead a brief countdown to 9:26:53 a.m. because, yes, those are the next digits in pi.", "sentence_answer": "(Pi\u2019s decimal places extend indefinitely .)"} -{"question": "Where is the celebration taking place?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe first digits are actually 3.1415,\u201d said Cindy Lawrence, the museum\u2019s executive director and co-founder. (Pi\u2019s decimal places extend indefinitely.) \u201cSo Saturday\u2019s date is the first five digits of pi.\u201d Thus on Saturday, the museum has planned a grand celebration, starting at 9 a.m. in Madison Square Park, where even small children can help form circles. \u201cWe\u2019ll get people to line up and count out the distance around the circles, and others to do the distance across them,\u201d Ms. Lawrence said. This pacing will illustrate that the circumference is about three times greater. Staff members will also pass out a graphic and lead a brief countdown to 9:26:53 a.m. because, yes, those are the next digits in pi.", "answer": "Madison Square Park", "sentence": "Thus on Saturday, the museum has planned a grand celebration, starting at 9 a.m. in Madison Square Park , where even small children can help form circles.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe first digits are actually 3.1415,\u201d said Cindy Lawrence, the museum\u2019s executive director and co-founder. (Pi\u2019s decimal places extend indefinitely.) \u201cSo Saturday\u2019s date is the first five digits of pi.\u201d Thus on Saturday, the museum has planned a grand celebration, starting at 9 a.m. in Madison Square Park , where even small children can help form circles. \u201cWe\u2019ll get people to line up and count out the distance around the circles, and others to do the distance across them,\u201d Ms. Lawrence said. This pacing will illustrate that the circumference is about three times greater. Staff members will also pass out a graphic and lead a brief countdown to 9:26:53 a.m. because, yes, those are the next digits in pi.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe first digits are actually 3.1415,\u201d said Cindy Lawrence, the museum\u2019s executive director and co-founder. (Pi\u2019s decimal places extend indefinitely.) \u201cSo Saturday\u2019s date is the first five digits of pi.\u201d Thus on Saturday, the museum has planned a grand celebration, starting at 9 a.m. in Madison Square Park , where even small children can help form circles. \u201cWe\u2019ll get people to line up and count out the distance around the circles, and others to do the distance across them,\u201d Ms. Lawrence said. This pacing will illustrate that the circumference is about three times greater. Staff members will also pass out a graphic and lead a brief countdown to 9:26:53 a.m. because, yes, those are the next digits in pi.", "sentence_answer": "Thus on Saturday, the museum has planned a grand celebration, starting at 9 a.m. in Madison Square Park , where even small children can help form circles."} -{"question": "At what time will the countdown end?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe first digits are actually 3.1415,\u201d said Cindy Lawrence, the museum\u2019s executive director and co-founder. (Pi\u2019s decimal places extend indefinitely.) \u201cSo Saturday\u2019s date is the first five digits of pi.\u201d Thus on Saturday, the museum has planned a grand celebration, starting at 9 a.m. in Madison Square Park, where even small children can help form circles. \u201cWe\u2019ll get people to line up and count out the distance around the circles, and others to do the distance across them,\u201d Ms. Lawrence said. This pacing will illustrate that the circumference is about three times greater. Staff members will also pass out a graphic and lead a brief countdown to 9:26:53 a.m. because, yes, those are the next digits in pi.", "answer": "9:26:53", "sentence": "Staff members will also pass out a graphic and lead a brief countdown to 9:26:53 a.m.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe first digits are actually 3.1415,\u201d said Cindy Lawrence, the museum\u2019s executive director and co-founder. (Pi\u2019s decimal places extend indefinitely.) \u201cSo Saturday\u2019s date is the first five digits of pi.\u201d Thus on Saturday, the museum has planned a grand celebration, starting at 9 a.m. in Madison Square Park, where even small children can help form circles. \u201cWe\u2019ll get people to line up and count out the distance around the circles, and others to do the distance across them,\u201d Ms. Lawrence said. This pacing will illustrate that the circumference is about three times greater. Staff members will also pass out a graphic and lead a brief countdown to 9:26:53 a.m. because, yes, those are the next digits in pi.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe first digits are actually 3.1415,\u201d said Cindy Lawrence, the museum\u2019s executive director and co-founder. (Pi\u2019s decimal places extend indefinitely.) \u201cSo Saturday\u2019s date is the first five digits of pi.\u201d Thus on Saturday, the museum has planned a grand celebration, starting at 9 a.m. in Madison Square Park, where even small children can help form circles. \u201cWe\u2019ll get people to line up and count out the distance around the circles, and others to do the distance across them,\u201d Ms. Lawrence said. This pacing will illustrate that the circumference is about three times greater. Staff members will also pass out a graphic and lead a brief countdown to 9:26:53 a.m. because, yes, those are the next digits in pi.", "sentence_answer": "Staff members will also pass out a graphic and lead a brief countdown to 9:26:53 a.m."} -{"question": "When does the museum close?", "paragraph": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "answer": "5 p.m.", "sentence": "(It closes at 5 p.m. ) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board.", "paragraph_sentence": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m. ) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "paragraph_answer": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m. ) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "sentence_answer": "(It closes at 5 p.m. ) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board."} -{"question": "Who is co-founder of the museum?", "paragraph": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "answer": "Glen Whitney", "sentence": "\u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney , co-founder of the museum and president of its board.", "paragraph_sentence": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney , co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "paragraph_answer": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney , co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney , co-founder of the museum and president of its board."} -{"question": "When will the scavenger hunt begin?", "paragraph": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "answer": "9:30", "sentence": "The museum will open early, at 9:30 , with a daylong pi scavenger hunt.", "paragraph_sentence": " The museum will open early, at 9:30 , with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "paragraph_answer": "The museum will open early, at 9:30 , with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "sentence_answer": "The museum will open early, at 9:30 , with a daylong pi scavenger hunt."} -{"question": "What daylong event is being held at the museum?", "paragraph": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "answer": "pi scavenger hunt", "sentence": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt .", "paragraph_sentence": " The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt . (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "paragraph_answer": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt . (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "sentence_answer": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt ."} -{"question": "Who is president of the museum's board?", "paragraph": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "answer": "Glen Whitney", "sentence": "\u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney , co-founder of the museum and president of its board.", "paragraph_sentence": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney , co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "paragraph_answer": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney , co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney , co-founder of the museum and president of its board."} -{"question": "At what time will the museum open?", "paragraph": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "answer": "9:30", "sentence": "The museum will open early, at 9:30 , with a daylong pi scavenger hunt.", "paragraph_sentence": " The museum will open early, at 9:30 , with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "paragraph_answer": "The museum will open early, at 9:30 , with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "sentence_answer": "The museum will open early, at 9:30 , with a daylong pi scavenger hunt."} -{"question": "What event will start as the museum open?", "paragraph": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "answer": "pi scavenger hunt", "sentence": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt .", "paragraph_sentence": " The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt . (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "paragraph_answer": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt . (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "sentence_answer": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt ."} -{"question": "What is the name of the game that is a circle version of the original game that children will play?", "paragraph": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "answer": "tick-tack-toe", "sentence": "Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges.", "paragraph_sentence": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "paragraph_answer": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "sentence_answer": "Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges."} -{"question": "Visitors can fill spaces on a circular grid with what?", "paragraph": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy, and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "answer": "candy", "sentence": "Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy , and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "paragraph_sentence": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy , and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi. ", "paragraph_answer": "The museum will open early, at 9:30, with a daylong pi scavenger hunt. (It closes at 5 p.m.) \u201cThe idea is to find places where aspects of pi come up in the exhibits,\u201d said Glen Whitney, co-founder of the museum and president of its board. Children can also do pi puzzles there and play a circular version of tick-tack-toe involving four concentric loops divided into wedges. Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy , and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi.", "sentence_answer": "Visitors can explore pi further by filling the spaces on a circular grid with candy , and feeding a chosen set of digits (a birthday, a phone number) into a computer and learning where that sequence appears in pi."} -{"question": "What is the name of the 5K?", "paragraph": "A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K, a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools, charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island, with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30. (Registration is at publicprep.org/ultimatepiday.) And at 8:30 p.m., the museum will repeat the morning\u2019s free demonstration of pi (location to be announced), with visitors standing in huge circles and holding glow sticks as measuring tools. After a countdown to 9:26:53, the event will conclude with hot chocolate and something even the math-averse can usually digest: pie.", "answer": "Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K", "sentence": "A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K , a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools, charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island, with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30.", "paragraph_sentence": " A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K , a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools, charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island, with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30. (Registration is at publicprep.org/ultimatepiday.) And at 8:30 p.m., the museum will repeat the morning\u2019s free demonstration of pi (location to be announced), with visitors standing in huge circles and holding glow sticks as measuring tools. After a countdown to 9:26:53, the event will conclude with hot chocolate and something even the math-averse can usually digest: pie.", "paragraph_answer": "A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K , a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools, charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island, with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30. (Registration is at publicprep.org/ultimatepiday.) And at 8:30 p.m., the museum will repeat the morning\u2019s free demonstration of pi (location to be announced), with visitors standing in huge circles and holding glow sticks as measuring tools. After a countdown to 9:26:53, the event will conclude with hot chocolate and something even the math-averse can usually digest: pie.", "sentence_answer": "A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K , a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools, charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island, with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30."} -{"question": "How long is the 5K?", "paragraph": "A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K, a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools, charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island, with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30. (Registration is at publicprep.org/ultimatepiday.) And at 8:30 p.m., the museum will repeat the morning\u2019s free demonstration of pi (location to be announced), with visitors standing in huge circles and holding glow sticks as measuring tools. After a countdown to 9:26:53, the event will conclude with hot chocolate and something even the math-averse can usually digest: pie.", "answer": "3.14-mile", "sentence": "A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K, a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools, charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island, with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30.", "paragraph_sentence": " A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K, a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools, charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island, with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30. (Registration is at publicprep.org/ultimatepiday.) And at 8:30 p.m., the museum will repeat the morning\u2019s free demonstration of pi (location to be announced), with visitors standing in huge circles and holding glow sticks as measuring tools. After a countdown to 9:26:53, the event will conclude with hot chocolate and something even the math-averse can usually digest: pie.", "paragraph_answer": "A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K, a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools, charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island, with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30. (Registration is at publicprep.org/ultimatepiday.) And at 8:30 p.m., the museum will repeat the morning\u2019s free demonstration of pi (location to be announced), with visitors standing in huge circles and holding glow sticks as measuring tools. After a countdown to 9:26:53, the event will conclude with hot chocolate and something even the math-averse can usually digest: pie.", "sentence_answer": "A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K, a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools, charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island, with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30."} -{"question": "What is the purpose of the 5K?", "paragraph": "A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K, a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools, charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island, with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30. (Registration is at publicprep.org/ultimatepiday.) And at 8:30 p.m., the museum will repeat the morning\u2019s free demonstration of pi (location to be announced), with visitors standing in huge circles and holding glow sticks as measuring tools. After a countdown to 9:26:53, the event will conclude with hot chocolate and something even the math-averse can usually digest: pie.", "answer": "raise funds for Girls Prep Schools", "sentence": "A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K, a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools , charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island, with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30.", "paragraph_sentence": " A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K, a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools , charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island, with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30. (Registration is at publicprep.org/ultimatepiday.) And at 8:30 p.m., the museum will repeat the morning\u2019s free demonstration of pi (location to be announced), with visitors standing in huge circles and holding glow sticks as measuring tools. After a countdown to 9:26:53, the event will conclude with hot chocolate and something even the math-averse can usually digest: pie.", "paragraph_answer": "A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K, a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools , charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island, with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30. (Registration is at publicprep.org/ultimatepiday.) And at 8:30 p.m., the museum will repeat the morning\u2019s free demonstration of pi (location to be announced), with visitors standing in huge circles and holding glow sticks as measuring tools. After a countdown to 9:26:53, the event will conclude with hot chocolate and something even the math-averse can usually digest: pie.", "sentence_answer": "A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K, a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools , charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island, with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30."} -{"question": "Where will the 5K take place?", "paragraph": "A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K, a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools, charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island, with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30. (Registration is at publicprep.org/ultimatepiday.) And at 8:30 p.m., the museum will repeat the morning\u2019s free demonstration of pi (location to be announced), with visitors standing in huge circles and holding glow sticks as measuring tools. After a countdown to 9:26:53, the event will conclude with hot chocolate and something even the math-averse can usually digest: pie.", "answer": "Roosevelt Island", "sentence": "A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K, a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools, charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island , with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30.", "paragraph_sentence": " A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K, a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools, charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island , with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30. (Registration is at publicprep.org/ultimatepiday.) And at 8:30 p.m., the museum will repeat the morning\u2019s free demonstration of pi (location to be announced), with visitors standing in huge circles and holding glow sticks as measuring tools. After a countdown to 9:26:53, the event will conclude with hot chocolate and something even the math-averse can usually digest: pie.", "paragraph_answer": "A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K, a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools, charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island , with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30. (Registration is at publicprep.org/ultimatepiday.) And at 8:30 p.m., the museum will repeat the morning\u2019s free demonstration of pi (location to be announced), with visitors standing in huge circles and holding glow sticks as measuring tools. After a countdown to 9:26:53, the event will conclude with hot chocolate and something even the math-averse can usually digest: pie.", "sentence_answer": "A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K, a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools, charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island , with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30."} -{"question": "What will the visitors hold as they are counting down?", "paragraph": "A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K, a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools, charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island, with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30. (Registration is at publicprep.org/ultimatepiday.) And at 8:30 p.m., the museum will repeat the morning\u2019s free demonstration of pi (location to be announced), with visitors standing in huge circles and holding glow sticks as measuring tools. After a countdown to 9:26:53, the event will conclude with hot chocolate and something even the math-averse can usually digest: pie.", "answer": "glow sticks", "sentence": "And at 8:30 p.m., the museum will repeat the morning\u2019s free demonstration of pi (location to be announced), with visitors standing in huge circles and holding glow sticks as measuring tools.", "paragraph_sentence": "A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K, a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools, charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island, with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30. (Registration is at publicprep.org/ultimatepiday.) And at 8:30 p.m., the museum will repeat the morning\u2019s free demonstration of pi (location to be announced), with visitors standing in huge circles and holding glow sticks as measuring tools. After a countdown to 9:26:53, the event will conclude with hot chocolate and something even the math-averse can usually digest: pie.", "paragraph_answer": "A separate event, the Girls Prep Ultimate Pi Day 5K, a 3.14-mile run to raise funds for Girls Prep Schools, charter institutions in New York, is at 9:26:53 a.m. on Roosevelt Island, with a race for runners 9 and under at 10:30. (Registration is at publicprep.org/ultimatepiday.) And at 8:30 p.m., the museum will repeat the morning\u2019s free demonstration of pi (location to be announced), with visitors standing in huge circles and holding glow sticks as measuring tools. After a countdown to 9:26:53, the event will conclude with hot chocolate and something even the math-averse can usually digest: pie.", "sentence_answer": "And at 8:30 p.m., the museum will repeat the morning\u2019s free demonstration of pi (location to be announced), with visitors standing in huge circles and holding glow sticks as measuring tools."} -{"question": "What is Nowruz?", "paragraph": "Family Day: \u2018Spring Into Nowruz!\u2019 (Saturday) We\u2019ve had the Western New Year, the Chinese New Year and the Tibetan New Year; now here comes Nowruz, the Persian New Year, which also heralds the arrival of spring. Asia Society will celebrate with this Family Day, which includes song and dance from the J-Hoon Musical Ensemble, a Kurdish youth company; Nowruz folk song performances and a singalong; and storytelling that illuminates the holiday\u2019s origins. Children can also take part in Persian crafts, including mosaics and collages. From 1 to 4 p.m., 725 Park Avenue, at 70th Street, 212-517-2742, asiasociety.org/new-york.", "answer": "the Persian New Year", "sentence": "We\u2019ve had the Western New Year, the Chinese New Year and the Tibetan New Year; now here comes Nowruz, the Persian New Year , which also heralds the arrival of spring.", "paragraph_sentence": "Family Day: \u2018Spring Into Nowruz!\u2019 (Saturday) We\u2019ve had the Western New Year, the Chinese New Year and the Tibetan New Year; now here comes Nowruz, the Persian New Year , which also heralds the arrival of spring. Asia Society will celebrate with this Family Day, which includes song and dance from the J-Hoon Musical Ensemble, a Kurdish youth company; Nowruz folk song performances and a singalong; and storytelling that illuminates the holiday\u2019s origins. Children can also take part in Persian crafts, including mosaics and collages. From 1 to 4 p.m., 725 Park Avenue, at 70th Street, 212-517-2742, asiasociety.org/new-york.", "paragraph_answer": "Family Day: \u2018Spring Into Nowruz!\u2019 (Saturday) We\u2019ve had the Western New Year, the Chinese New Year and the Tibetan New Year; now here comes Nowruz, the Persian New Year , which also heralds the arrival of spring. Asia Society will celebrate with this Family Day, which includes song and dance from the J-Hoon Musical Ensemble, a Kurdish youth company; Nowruz folk song performances and a singalong; and storytelling that illuminates the holiday\u2019s origins. Children can also take part in Persian crafts, including mosaics and collages. From 1 to 4 p.m., 725 Park Avenue, at 70th Street, 212-517-2742, asiasociety.org/new-york.", "sentence_answer": "We\u2019ve had the Western New Year, the Chinese New Year and the Tibetan New Year; now here comes Nowruz, the Persian New Year , which also heralds the arrival of spring."} -{"question": "What other event will Asia Society celebrate with Persian New Year?", "paragraph": "Family Day: \u2018Spring Into Nowruz!\u2019 (Saturday) We\u2019ve had the Western New Year, the Chinese New Year and the Tibetan New Year; now here comes Nowruz, the Persian New Year, which also heralds the arrival of spring. Asia Society will celebrate with this Family Day, which includes song and dance from the J-Hoon Musical Ensemble, a Kurdish youth company; Nowruz folk song performances and a singalong; and storytelling that illuminates the holiday\u2019s origins. Children can also take part in Persian crafts, including mosaics and collages. From 1 to 4 p.m., 725 Park Avenue, at 70th Street, 212-517-2742, asiasociety.org/new-york.", "answer": "Family Day", "sentence": "Family Day : \u2018Spring Into Nowruz!\u2019", "paragraph_sentence": " Family Day : \u2018Spring Into Nowruz!\u2019 (Saturday) We\u2019ve had the Western New Year, the Chinese New Year and the Tibetan New Year; now here comes Nowruz, the Persian New Year, which also heralds the arrival of spring. Asia Society will celebrate with this Family Day, which includes song and dance from the J-Hoon Musical Ensemble, a Kurdish youth company; Nowruz folk song performances and a singalong; and storytelling that illuminates the holiday\u2019s origins. Children can also take part in Persian crafts, including mosaics and collages. From 1 to 4 p.m., 725 Park Avenue, at 70th Street, 212-517-2742, asiasociety.org/new-york.", "paragraph_answer": " Family Day : \u2018Spring Into Nowruz!\u2019 (Saturday) We\u2019ve had the Western New Year, the Chinese New Year and the Tibetan New Year; now here comes Nowruz, the Persian New Year, which also heralds the arrival of spring. Asia Society will celebrate with this Family Day, which includes song and dance from the J-Hoon Musical Ensemble, a Kurdish youth company; Nowruz folk song performances and a singalong; and storytelling that illuminates the holiday\u2019s origins. Children can also take part in Persian crafts, including mosaics and collages. From 1 to 4 p.m., 725 Park Avenue, at 70th Street, 212-517-2742, asiasociety.org/new-york.", "sentence_answer": " Family Day : \u2018Spring Into Nowruz!\u2019"} -{"question": "What is the purpose of the Persian New Year?", "paragraph": "Family Day: \u2018Spring Into Nowruz!\u2019 (Saturday) We\u2019ve had the Western New Year, the Chinese New Year and the Tibetan New Year; now here comes Nowruz, the Persian New Year, which also heralds the arrival of spring. Asia Society will celebrate with this Family Day, which includes song and dance from the J-Hoon Musical Ensemble, a Kurdish youth company; Nowruz folk song performances and a singalong; and storytelling that illuminates the holiday\u2019s origins. Children can also take part in Persian crafts, including mosaics and collages. From 1 to 4 p.m., 725 Park Avenue, at 70th Street, 212-517-2742, asiasociety.org/new-york.", "answer": "heralds the arrival of spring", "sentence": "We\u2019ve had the Western New Year, the Chinese New Year and the Tibetan New Year; now here comes Nowruz, the Persian New Year, which also heralds the arrival of spring .", "paragraph_sentence": "Family Day: \u2018Spring Into Nowruz!\u2019 (Saturday) We\u2019ve had the Western New Year, the Chinese New Year and the Tibetan New Year; now here comes Nowruz, the Persian New Year, which also heralds the arrival of spring . Asia Society will celebrate with this Family Day, which includes song and dance from the J-Hoon Musical Ensemble, a Kurdish youth company; Nowruz folk song performances and a singalong; and storytelling that illuminates the holiday\u2019s origins. Children can also take part in Persian crafts, including mosaics and collages. From 1 to 4 p.m., 725 Park Avenue, at 70th Street, 212-517-2742, asiasociety.org/new-york.", "paragraph_answer": "Family Day: \u2018Spring Into Nowruz!\u2019 (Saturday) We\u2019ve had the Western New Year, the Chinese New Year and the Tibetan New Year; now here comes Nowruz, the Persian New Year, which also heralds the arrival of spring . Asia Society will celebrate with this Family Day, which includes song and dance from the J-Hoon Musical Ensemble, a Kurdish youth company; Nowruz folk song performances and a singalong; and storytelling that illuminates the holiday\u2019s origins. Children can also take part in Persian crafts, including mosaics and collages. From 1 to 4 p.m., 725 Park Avenue, at 70th Street, 212-517-2742, asiasociety.org/new-york.", "sentence_answer": "We\u2019ve had the Western New Year, the Chinese New Year and the Tibetan New Year; now here comes Nowruz, the Persian New Year, which also heralds the arrival of spring ."} -{"question": "What are the hours of the event taking place?", "paragraph": "Family Day: \u2018Spring Into Nowruz!\u2019 (Saturday) We\u2019ve had the Western New Year, the Chinese New Year and the Tibetan New Year; now here comes Nowruz, the Persian New Year, which also heralds the arrival of spring. Asia Society will celebrate with this Family Day, which includes song and dance from the J-Hoon Musical Ensemble, a Kurdish youth company; Nowruz folk song performances and a singalong; and storytelling that illuminates the holiday\u2019s origins. Children can also take part in Persian crafts, including mosaics and collages. From 1 to 4 p.m., 725 Park Avenue, at 70th Street, 212-517-2742, asiasociety.org/new-york.", "answer": "From 1 to 4 p.m.", "sentence": "From 1 to 4 p.m. , 725 Park Avenue, at 70th Street, 212-517-2742, asiasociety.org/new-york.", "paragraph_sentence": "Family Day: \u2018Spring Into Nowruz!\u2019 (Saturday) We\u2019ve had the Western New Year, the Chinese New Year and the Tibetan New Year; now here comes Nowruz, the Persian New Year, which also heralds the arrival of spring. Asia Society will celebrate with this Family Day, which includes song and dance from the J-Hoon Musical Ensemble, a Kurdish youth company; Nowruz folk song performances and a singalong; and storytelling that illuminates the holiday\u2019s origins. Children can also take part in Persian crafts, including mosaics and collages. From 1 to 4 p.m. , 725 Park Avenue, at 70th Street, 212-517-2742, asiasociety.org/new-york. ", "paragraph_answer": "Family Day: \u2018Spring Into Nowruz!\u2019 (Saturday) We\u2019ve had the Western New Year, the Chinese New Year and the Tibetan New Year; now here comes Nowruz, the Persian New Year, which also heralds the arrival of spring. Asia Society will celebrate with this Family Day, which includes song and dance from the J-Hoon Musical Ensemble, a Kurdish youth company; Nowruz folk song performances and a singalong; and storytelling that illuminates the holiday\u2019s origins. Children can also take part in Persian crafts, including mosaics and collages. From 1 to 4 p.m. , 725 Park Avenue, at 70th Street, 212-517-2742, asiasociety.org/new-york.", "sentence_answer": " From 1 to 4 p.m. , 725 Park Avenue, at 70th Street, 212-517-2742, asiasociety.org/new-york."} -{"question": "Who is one of the arts' youngest divas?", "paragraph": "\u2018Fancy Nancy the Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) One of the arts\u2019 youngest divas has returned to the McGinn/Cazale Theater. This musical from Vital Theater Company focuses on a little girl who wants everything to be fancy \u2014 especially herself. Based on the book series written by Jane O\u2019Connor and illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser, the production explores the predicament that ensues when Nancy finds out that she hasn\u2019t been cast as the glamorous mermaid she\u2019d hoped to be in the coming dance show. With a book by Susan DiLallo, a score by Danny Abosch, and lyrics by both, the musical humorously follows Nancy\u2019s attempts to cope with a most unfancy role: that of a tree. (Through April 5.) At 1:30 p.m., 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "answer": "\u2018Fancy Nancy the Musical", "sentence": "\u2018Fancy Nancy the Musical \u2019 (Saturday and Sunday)", "paragraph_sentence": " \u2018Fancy Nancy the Musical \u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) One of the arts\u2019 youngest divas has returned to the McGinn/Cazale Theater. This musical from Vital Theater Company focuses on a little girl who wants everything to be fancy \u2014 especially herself. Based on the book series written by Jane O\u2019Connor and illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser, the production explores the predicament that ensues when Nancy finds out that she hasn\u2019t been cast as the glamorous mermaid she\u2019d hoped to be in the coming dance show. With a book by Susan DiLallo, a score by Danny Abosch, and lyrics by both, the musical humorously follows Nancy\u2019s attempts to cope with a most unfancy role: that of a tree. (Through April 5.) At 1:30 p.m., 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "paragraph_answer": " \u2018Fancy Nancy the Musical \u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) One of the arts\u2019 youngest divas has returned to the McGinn/Cazale Theater. This musical from Vital Theater Company focuses on a little girl who wants everything to be fancy \u2014 especially herself. Based on the book series written by Jane O\u2019Connor and illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser, the production explores the predicament that ensues when Nancy finds out that she hasn\u2019t been cast as the glamorous mermaid she\u2019d hoped to be in the coming dance show. With a book by Susan DiLallo, a score by Danny Abosch, and lyrics by both, the musical humorously follows Nancy\u2019s attempts to cope with a most unfancy role: that of a tree. (Through April 5.) At 1:30 p.m., 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "sentence_answer": " \u2018Fancy Nancy the Musical \u2019 (Saturday and Sunday)"} -{"question": "Where has the diva returned to?", "paragraph": "\u2018Fancy Nancy the Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) One of the arts\u2019 youngest divas has returned to the McGinn/Cazale Theater. This musical from Vital Theater Company focuses on a little girl who wants everything to be fancy \u2014 especially herself. Based on the book series written by Jane O\u2019Connor and illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser, the production explores the predicament that ensues when Nancy finds out that she hasn\u2019t been cast as the glamorous mermaid she\u2019d hoped to be in the coming dance show. With a book by Susan DiLallo, a score by Danny Abosch, and lyrics by both, the musical humorously follows Nancy\u2019s attempts to cope with a most unfancy role: that of a tree. (Through April 5.) At 1:30 p.m., 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "answer": "McGinn/Cazale Theater", "sentence": "\u2018Fancy Nancy the Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) One of the arts\u2019 youngest divas has returned to the McGinn/Cazale Theater .", "paragraph_sentence": " \u2018Fancy Nancy the Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) One of the arts\u2019 youngest divas has returned to the McGinn/Cazale Theater . This musical from Vital Theater Company focuses on a little girl who wants everything to be fancy \u2014 especially herself. Based on the book series written by Jane O\u2019Connor and illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser, the production explores the predicament that ensues when Nancy finds out that she hasn\u2019t been cast as the glamorous mermaid she\u2019d hoped to be in the coming dance show. With a book by Susan DiLallo, a score by Danny Abosch, and lyrics by both, the musical humorously follows Nancy\u2019s attempts to cope with a most unfancy role: that of a tree. (Through April 5.) At 1:30 p.m., 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Fancy Nancy the Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) One of the arts\u2019 youngest divas has returned to the McGinn/Cazale Theater . This musical from Vital Theater Company focuses on a little girl who wants everything to be fancy \u2014 especially herself. Based on the book series written by Jane O\u2019Connor and illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser, the production explores the predicament that ensues when Nancy finds out that she hasn\u2019t been cast as the glamorous mermaid she\u2019d hoped to be in the coming dance show. With a book by Susan DiLallo, a score by Danny Abosch, and lyrics by both, the musical humorously follows Nancy\u2019s attempts to cope with a most unfancy role: that of a tree. (Through April 5.) At 1:30 p.m., 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "sentence_answer": "\u2018Fancy Nancy the Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) One of the arts\u2019 youngest divas has returned to the McGinn/Cazale Theater ."} -{"question": "Who wrote the book series that the musical is based on?", "paragraph": "\u2018Fancy Nancy the Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) One of the arts\u2019 youngest divas has returned to the McGinn/Cazale Theater. This musical from Vital Theater Company focuses on a little girl who wants everything to be fancy \u2014 especially herself. Based on the book series written by Jane O\u2019Connor and illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser, the production explores the predicament that ensues when Nancy finds out that she hasn\u2019t been cast as the glamorous mermaid she\u2019d hoped to be in the coming dance show. With a book by Susan DiLallo, a score by Danny Abosch, and lyrics by both, the musical humorously follows Nancy\u2019s attempts to cope with a most unfancy role: that of a tree. (Through April 5.) At 1:30 p.m., 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "answer": "Jane O\u2019Connor", "sentence": "Based on the book series written by Jane O\u2019Connor and illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser, the production explores the predicament that ensues when Nancy finds out that she hasn\u2019t been cast as the glamorous mermaid she\u2019d hoped to be in the coming dance show.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Fancy Nancy the Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) One of the arts\u2019 youngest divas has returned to the McGinn/Cazale Theater. This musical from Vital Theater Company focuses on a little girl who wants everything to be fancy \u2014 especially herself. Based on the book series written by Jane O\u2019Connor and illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser, the production explores the predicament that ensues when Nancy finds out that she hasn\u2019t been cast as the glamorous mermaid she\u2019d hoped to be in the coming dance show. With a book by Susan DiLallo, a score by Danny Abosch, and lyrics by both, the musical humorously follows Nancy\u2019s attempts to cope with a most unfancy role: that of a tree. (Through April 5.) At 1:30 p.m., 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Fancy Nancy the Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) One of the arts\u2019 youngest divas has returned to the McGinn/Cazale Theater. This musical from Vital Theater Company focuses on a little girl who wants everything to be fancy \u2014 especially herself. Based on the book series written by Jane O\u2019Connor and illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser, the production explores the predicament that ensues when Nancy finds out that she hasn\u2019t been cast as the glamorous mermaid she\u2019d hoped to be in the coming dance show. With a book by Susan DiLallo, a score by Danny Abosch, and lyrics by both, the musical humorously follows Nancy\u2019s attempts to cope with a most unfancy role: that of a tree. (Through April 5.) At 1:30 p.m., 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "sentence_answer": "Based on the book series written by Jane O\u2019Connor and illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser, the production explores the predicament that ensues when Nancy finds out that she hasn\u2019t been cast as the glamorous mermaid she\u2019d hoped to be in the coming dance show."} -{"question": "The person who illustrated the book series, which the musical is based on, what was their name?", "paragraph": "\u2018Fancy Nancy the Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) One of the arts\u2019 youngest divas has returned to the McGinn/Cazale Theater. This musical from Vital Theater Company focuses on a little girl who wants everything to be fancy \u2014 especially herself. Based on the book series written by Jane O\u2019Connor and illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser, the production explores the predicament that ensues when Nancy finds out that she hasn\u2019t been cast as the glamorous mermaid she\u2019d hoped to be in the coming dance show. With a book by Susan DiLallo, a score by Danny Abosch, and lyrics by both, the musical humorously follows Nancy\u2019s attempts to cope with a most unfancy role: that of a tree. (Through April 5.) At 1:30 p.m., 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "answer": "Robin Preiss Glasser", "sentence": "Based on the book series written by Jane O\u2019Connor and illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser , the production explores the predicament that ensues when Nancy finds out that she hasn\u2019t been cast as the glamorous mermaid she\u2019d hoped to be in the coming dance show.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Fancy Nancy the Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) One of the arts\u2019 youngest divas has returned to the McGinn/Cazale Theater. This musical from Vital Theater Company focuses on a little girl who wants everything to be fancy \u2014 especially herself. Based on the book series written by Jane O\u2019Connor and illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser , the production explores the predicament that ensues when Nancy finds out that she hasn\u2019t been cast as the glamorous mermaid she\u2019d hoped to be in the coming dance show. With a book by Susan DiLallo, a score by Danny Abosch, and lyrics by both, the musical humorously follows Nancy\u2019s attempts to cope with a most unfancy role: that of a tree. (Through April 5.) At 1:30 p.m., 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Fancy Nancy the Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) One of the arts\u2019 youngest divas has returned to the McGinn/Cazale Theater. This musical from Vital Theater Company focuses on a little girl who wants everything to be fancy \u2014 especially herself. Based on the book series written by Jane O\u2019Connor and illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser , the production explores the predicament that ensues when Nancy finds out that she hasn\u2019t been cast as the glamorous mermaid she\u2019d hoped to be in the coming dance show. With a book by Susan DiLallo, a score by Danny Abosch, and lyrics by both, the musical humorously follows Nancy\u2019s attempts to cope with a most unfancy role: that of a tree. (Through April 5.) At 1:30 p.m., 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "sentence_answer": "Based on the book series written by Jane O\u2019Connor and illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser , the production explores the predicament that ensues when Nancy finds out that she hasn\u2019t been cast as the glamorous mermaid she\u2019d hoped to be in the coming dance show."} -{"question": "What time does the musical start?", "paragraph": "\u2018Fancy Nancy the Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) One of the arts\u2019 youngest divas has returned to the McGinn/Cazale Theater. This musical from Vital Theater Company focuses on a little girl who wants everything to be fancy \u2014 especially herself. Based on the book series written by Jane O\u2019Connor and illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser, the production explores the predicament that ensues when Nancy finds out that she hasn\u2019t been cast as the glamorous mermaid she\u2019d hoped to be in the coming dance show. With a book by Susan DiLallo, a score by Danny Abosch, and lyrics by both, the musical humorously follows Nancy\u2019s attempts to cope with a most unfancy role: that of a tree. (Through April 5.) At 1:30 p.m., 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "answer": "1:30 p.m.", "sentence": "At 1:30 p.m. , 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Fancy Nancy the Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) One of the arts\u2019 youngest divas has returned to the McGinn/Cazale Theater. This musical from Vital Theater Company focuses on a little girl who wants everything to be fancy \u2014 especially herself. Based on the book series written by Jane O\u2019Connor and illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser, the production explores the predicament that ensues when Nancy finds out that she hasn\u2019t been cast as the glamorous mermaid she\u2019d hoped to be in the coming dance show. With a book by Susan DiLallo, a score by Danny Abosch, and lyrics by both, the musical humorously follows Nancy\u2019s attempts to cope with a most unfancy role: that of a tree. (Through April 5.) At 1:30 p.m. , 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Fancy Nancy the Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) One of the arts\u2019 youngest divas has returned to the McGinn/Cazale Theater. This musical from Vital Theater Company focuses on a little girl who wants everything to be fancy \u2014 especially herself. Based on the book series written by Jane O\u2019Connor and illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser, the production explores the predicament that ensues when Nancy finds out that she hasn\u2019t been cast as the glamorous mermaid she\u2019d hoped to be in the coming dance show. With a book by Susan DiLallo, a score by Danny Abosch, and lyrics by both, the musical humorously follows Nancy\u2019s attempts to cope with a most unfancy role: that of a tree. (Through April 5.) At 1:30 p.m. , 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "sentence_answer": "At 1:30 p.m. , 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org."} -{"question": "At what time will the Golden Dragon Acrobats perform?", "paragraph": "The Golden Dragon Acrobats (Saturday) Don\u2019t expect ordinary handsprings and somersaults. This troupe from China specializes in the extreme, like balancing on one hand on a stack of chairs or doing ballet moves while perched on another person\u2019s shoulders. The show also offers music, dance and traditional costumes. At 2 p.m., Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts, Brooklyn College, Flatbush and Nostrand Avenues, Flatbush, Brooklyn, 718-951-4500, brooklyncenter.org.", "answer": "2 p.m.", "sentence": "At 2 p.m. , Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts, Brooklyn College, Flatbush and Nostrand Avenues, Flatbush, Brooklyn, 718-951-4500, brooklyncenter.org.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Golden Dragon Acrobats (Saturday) Don\u2019t expect ordinary handsprings and somersaults. This troupe from China specializes in the extreme, like balancing on one hand on a stack of chairs or doing ballet moves while perched on another person\u2019s shoulders. The show also offers music, dance and traditional costumes. At 2 p.m. , Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts, Brooklyn College, Flatbush and Nostrand Avenues, Flatbush, Brooklyn, 718-951-4500, brooklyncenter.org. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Golden Dragon Acrobats (Saturday) Don\u2019t expect ordinary handsprings and somersaults. This troupe from China specializes in the extreme, like balancing on one hand on a stack of chairs or doing ballet moves while perched on another person\u2019s shoulders. The show also offers music, dance and traditional costumes. At 2 p.m. , Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts, Brooklyn College, Flatbush and Nostrand Avenues, Flatbush, Brooklyn, 718-951-4500, brooklyncenter.org.", "sentence_answer": "At 2 p.m. , Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts, Brooklyn College, Flatbush and Nostrand Avenues, Flatbush, Brooklyn, 718-951-4500, brooklyncenter.org."} -{"question": "What is the name of the troupe that specializes in the extreme?", "paragraph": "The Golden Dragon Acrobats (Saturday) Don\u2019t expect ordinary handsprings and somersaults. This troupe from China specializes in the extreme, like balancing on one hand on a stack of chairs or doing ballet moves while perched on another person\u2019s shoulders. The show also offers music, dance and traditional costumes. At 2 p.m., Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts, Brooklyn College, Flatbush and Nostrand Avenues, Flatbush, Brooklyn, 718-951-4500, brooklyncenter.org.", "answer": "Golden Dragon Acrobats", "sentence": "The Golden Dragon Acrobats (Saturday) Don\u2019t expect ordinary handsprings and somersaults.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Golden Dragon Acrobats (Saturday) Don\u2019t expect ordinary handsprings and somersaults. This troupe from China specializes in the extreme, like balancing on one hand on a stack of chairs or doing ballet moves while perched on another person\u2019s shoulders. The show also offers music, dance and traditional costumes. At 2 p.m., Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts, Brooklyn College, Flatbush and Nostrand Avenues, Flatbush, Brooklyn, 718-951-4500, brooklyncenter.org.", "paragraph_answer": "The Golden Dragon Acrobats (Saturday) Don\u2019t expect ordinary handsprings and somersaults. This troupe from China specializes in the extreme, like balancing on one hand on a stack of chairs or doing ballet moves while perched on another person\u2019s shoulders. The show also offers music, dance and traditional costumes. At 2 p.m., Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts, Brooklyn College, Flatbush and Nostrand Avenues, Flatbush, Brooklyn, 718-951-4500, brooklyncenter.org.", "sentence_answer": "The Golden Dragon Acrobats (Saturday) Don\u2019t expect ordinary handsprings and somersaults."} -{"question": "Where will the Golden Dragon Acrobats perform?", "paragraph": "The Golden Dragon Acrobats (Saturday) Don\u2019t expect ordinary handsprings and somersaults. This troupe from China specializes in the extreme, like balancing on one hand on a stack of chairs or doing ballet moves while perched on another person\u2019s shoulders. The show also offers music, dance and traditional costumes. At 2 p.m., Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts, Brooklyn College, Flatbush and Nostrand Avenues, Flatbush, Brooklyn, 718-951-4500, brooklyncenter.org.", "answer": "Brooklyn Center", "sentence": "At 2 p.m., Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts, Brooklyn College, Flatbush and Nostrand Avenues, Flatbush, Brooklyn, 718-951-4500, brooklyncenter.org.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Golden Dragon Acrobats (Saturday) Don\u2019t expect ordinary handsprings and somersaults. This troupe from China specializes in the extreme, like balancing on one hand on a stack of chairs or doing ballet moves while perched on another person\u2019s shoulders. The show also offers music, dance and traditional costumes. At 2 p.m., Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts, Brooklyn College, Flatbush and Nostrand Avenues, Flatbush, Brooklyn, 718-951-4500, brooklyncenter.org. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Golden Dragon Acrobats (Saturday) Don\u2019t expect ordinary handsprings and somersaults. This troupe from China specializes in the extreme, like balancing on one hand on a stack of chairs or doing ballet moves while perched on another person\u2019s shoulders. The show also offers music, dance and traditional costumes. At 2 p.m., Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts, Brooklyn College, Flatbush and Nostrand Avenues, Flatbush, Brooklyn, 718-951-4500, brooklyncenter.org.", "sentence_answer": "At 2 p.m., Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts, Brooklyn College, Flatbush and Nostrand Avenues, Flatbush, Brooklyn, 718-951-4500, brooklyncenter.org."} -{"question": "What day will the troupe perform?", "paragraph": "The Golden Dragon Acrobats (Saturday) Don\u2019t expect ordinary handsprings and somersaults. This troupe from China specializes in the extreme, like balancing on one hand on a stack of chairs or doing ballet moves while perched on another person\u2019s shoulders. The show also offers music, dance and traditional costumes. At 2 p.m., Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts, Brooklyn College, Flatbush and Nostrand Avenues, Flatbush, Brooklyn, 718-951-4500, brooklyncenter.org.", "answer": "Saturday", "sentence": "The Golden Dragon Acrobats ( Saturday ) Don\u2019t expect ordinary handsprings and somersaults.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Golden Dragon Acrobats ( Saturday ) Don\u2019t expect ordinary handsprings and somersaults. This troupe from China specializes in the extreme, like balancing on one hand on a stack of chairs or doing ballet moves while perched on another person\u2019s shoulders. The show also offers music, dance and traditional costumes. At 2 p.m., Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts, Brooklyn College, Flatbush and Nostrand Avenues, Flatbush, Brooklyn, 718-951-4500, brooklyncenter.org.", "paragraph_answer": "The Golden Dragon Acrobats ( Saturday ) Don\u2019t expect ordinary handsprings and somersaults. This troupe from China specializes in the extreme, like balancing on one hand on a stack of chairs or doing ballet moves while perched on another person\u2019s shoulders. The show also offers music, dance and traditional costumes. At 2 p.m., Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts, Brooklyn College, Flatbush and Nostrand Avenues, Flatbush, Brooklyn, 718-951-4500, brooklyncenter.org.", "sentence_answer": "The Golden Dragon Acrobats ( Saturday ) Don\u2019t expect ordinary handsprings and somersaults."} -{"question": "What happens to Pinocchio's nose before the audience's eyes?", "paragraph": "\u2018Pinocchio\u2019 (Friday through Sunday) In this stage version of Carlo Collodi\u2019s classic tale, the title character doesn\u2019t just want to be a boy; he also wants to be a star. Presented at the New Victory Theater by the acclaimed Windmill Theater of Australia, this two-hour rock musical, with a score by Jethro Woodward, portrays Pinocchio as a youth \u2014 his nose grows before the audience\u2019s eyes \u2014 who\u2019s easily seduced by contemporary glamour. Written by Rosemary Myers and Julianne O\u2019Brien, the show includes puppetry and animated projections. (Through March 22.) Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 2 and 7 p.m.; Sunday at 3 p.m.; 209 West 42nd Street, Manhattan; 646-223-3010, newvictory.org.", "answer": "grows", "sentence": "Presented at the New Victory Theater by the acclaimed Windmill Theater of Australia, this two-hour rock musical, with a score by Jethro Woodward, portrays Pinocchio as a youth \u2014 his nose grows before the audience\u2019s eyes \u2014 who\u2019s easily seduced by contemporary glamour.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Pinocchio\u2019 (Friday through Sunday) In this stage version of Carlo Collodi\u2019s classic tale, the title character doesn\u2019t just want to be a boy; he also wants to be a star. Presented at the New Victory Theater by the acclaimed Windmill Theater of Australia, this two-hour rock musical, with a score by Jethro Woodward, portrays Pinocchio as a youth \u2014 his nose grows before the audience\u2019s eyes \u2014 who\u2019s easily seduced by contemporary glamour. Written by Rosemary Myers and Julianne O\u2019Brien, the show includes puppetry and animated projections. (Through March 22.) Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 2 and 7 p.m.; Sunday at 3 p.m.; 209 West 42nd Street, Manhattan; 646-223-3010, newvictory.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Pinocchio\u2019 (Friday through Sunday) In this stage version of Carlo Collodi\u2019s classic tale, the title character doesn\u2019t just want to be a boy; he also wants to be a star. Presented at the New Victory Theater by the acclaimed Windmill Theater of Australia, this two-hour rock musical, with a score by Jethro Woodward, portrays Pinocchio as a youth \u2014 his nose grows before the audience\u2019s eyes \u2014 who\u2019s easily seduced by contemporary glamour. Written by Rosemary Myers and Julianne O\u2019Brien, the show includes puppetry and animated projections. (Through March 22.) Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 2 and 7 p.m.; Sunday at 3 p.m.; 209 West 42nd Street, Manhattan; 646-223-3010, newvictory.org.", "sentence_answer": "Presented at the New Victory Theater by the acclaimed Windmill Theater of Australia, this two-hour rock musical, with a score by Jethro Woodward, portrays Pinocchio as a youth \u2014 his nose grows before the audience\u2019s eyes \u2014 who\u2019s easily seduced by contemporary glamour."} -{"question": "What is the name of the classic written by Carlo Collodi?", "paragraph": "\u2018Pinocchio\u2019 (Friday through Sunday) In this stage version of Carlo Collodi\u2019s classic tale, the title character doesn\u2019t just want to be a boy; he also wants to be a star. Presented at the New Victory Theater by the acclaimed Windmill Theater of Australia, this two-hour rock musical, with a score by Jethro Woodward, portrays Pinocchio as a youth \u2014 his nose grows before the audience\u2019s eyes \u2014 who\u2019s easily seduced by contemporary glamour. Written by Rosemary Myers and Julianne O\u2019Brien, the show includes puppetry and animated projections. (Through March 22.) Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 2 and 7 p.m.; Sunday at 3 p.m.; 209 West 42nd Street, Manhattan; 646-223-3010, newvictory.org.", "answer": "Pinocchio", "sentence": "\u2018 Pinocchio \u2019 (Friday through Sunday)", "paragraph_sentence": " \u2018 Pinocchio \u2019 (Friday through Sunday) In this stage version of Carlo Collodi\u2019s classic tale, the title character doesn\u2019t just want to be a boy; he also wants to be a star. Presented at the New Victory Theater by the acclaimed Windmill Theater of Australia, this two-hour rock musical, with a score by Jethro Woodward, portrays Pinocchio as a youth \u2014 his nose grows before the audience\u2019s eyes \u2014 who\u2019s easily seduced by contemporary glamour. Written by Rosemary Myers and Julianne O\u2019Brien, the show includes puppetry and animated projections. (Through March 22.) Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 2 and 7 p.m.; Sunday at 3 p.m.; 209 West 42nd Street, Manhattan; 646-223-3010, newvictory.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018 Pinocchio \u2019 (Friday through Sunday) In this stage version of Carlo Collodi\u2019s classic tale, the title character doesn\u2019t just want to be a boy; he also wants to be a star. Presented at the New Victory Theater by the acclaimed Windmill Theater of Australia, this two-hour rock musical, with a score by Jethro Woodward, portrays Pinocchio as a youth \u2014 his nose grows before the audience\u2019s eyes \u2014 who\u2019s easily seduced by contemporary glamour. Written by Rosemary Myers and Julianne O\u2019Brien, the show includes puppetry and animated projections. (Through March 22.) Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 2 and 7 p.m.; Sunday at 3 p.m.; 209 West 42nd Street, Manhattan; 646-223-3010, newvictory.org.", "sentence_answer": "\u2018 Pinocchio \u2019 (Friday through Sunday)"} -{"question": "What type of projections does the show include?", "paragraph": "\u2018Pinocchio\u2019 (Friday through Sunday) In this stage version of Carlo Collodi\u2019s classic tale, the title character doesn\u2019t just want to be a boy; he also wants to be a star. Presented at the New Victory Theater by the acclaimed Windmill Theater of Australia, this two-hour rock musical, with a score by Jethro Woodward, portrays Pinocchio as a youth \u2014 his nose grows before the audience\u2019s eyes \u2014 who\u2019s easily seduced by contemporary glamour. Written by Rosemary Myers and Julianne O\u2019Brien, the show includes puppetry and animated projections. (Through March 22.) Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 2 and 7 p.m.; Sunday at 3 p.m.; 209 West 42nd Street, Manhattan; 646-223-3010, newvictory.org.", "answer": "animated", "sentence": "Written by Rosemary Myers and Julianne O\u2019Brien, the show includes puppetry and animated projections.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Pinocchio\u2019 (Friday through Sunday) In this stage version of Carlo Collodi\u2019s classic tale, the title character doesn\u2019t just want to be a boy; he also wants to be a star. Presented at the New Victory Theater by the acclaimed Windmill Theater of Australia, this two-hour rock musical, with a score by Jethro Woodward, portrays Pinocchio as a youth \u2014 his nose grows before the audience\u2019s eyes \u2014 who\u2019s easily seduced by contemporary glamour. Written by Rosemary Myers and Julianne O\u2019Brien, the show includes puppetry and animated projections. (Through March 22.) Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 2 and 7 p.m.; Sunday at 3 p.m.; 209 West 42nd Street, Manhattan; 646-223-3010, newvictory.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Pinocchio\u2019 (Friday through Sunday) In this stage version of Carlo Collodi\u2019s classic tale, the title character doesn\u2019t just want to be a boy; he also wants to be a star. Presented at the New Victory Theater by the acclaimed Windmill Theater of Australia, this two-hour rock musical, with a score by Jethro Woodward, portrays Pinocchio as a youth \u2014 his nose grows before the audience\u2019s eyes \u2014 who\u2019s easily seduced by contemporary glamour. Written by Rosemary Myers and Julianne O\u2019Brien, the show includes puppetry and animated projections. (Through March 22.) Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 2 and 7 p.m.; Sunday at 3 p.m.; 209 West 42nd Street, Manhattan; 646-223-3010, newvictory.org.", "sentence_answer": "Written by Rosemary Myers and Julianne O\u2019Brien, the show includes puppetry and animated projections."} -{"question": "What is the address of the theater that the play is taking place?", "paragraph": "\u2018Pinocchio\u2019 (Friday through Sunday) In this stage version of Carlo Collodi\u2019s classic tale, the title character doesn\u2019t just want to be a boy; he also wants to be a star. Presented at the New Victory Theater by the acclaimed Windmill Theater of Australia, this two-hour rock musical, with a score by Jethro Woodward, portrays Pinocchio as a youth \u2014 his nose grows before the audience\u2019s eyes \u2014 who\u2019s easily seduced by contemporary glamour. Written by Rosemary Myers and Julianne O\u2019Brien, the show includes puppetry and animated projections. (Through March 22.) Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 2 and 7 p.m.; Sunday at 3 p.m.; 209 West 42nd Street, Manhattan; 646-223-3010, newvictory.org.", "answer": "209 West 42nd Street, Manhattan", "sentence": "Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 2 and 7 p.m.; Sunday at 3 p.m.; 209 West 42nd Street, Manhattan ; 646-223-3010, newvictory.org.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Pinocchio\u2019 (Friday through Sunday) In this stage version of Carlo Collodi\u2019s classic tale, the title character doesn\u2019t just want to be a boy; he also wants to be a star. Presented at the New Victory Theater by the acclaimed Windmill Theater of Australia, this two-hour rock musical, with a score by Jethro Woodward, portrays Pinocchio as a youth \u2014 his nose grows before the audience\u2019s eyes \u2014 who\u2019s easily seduced by contemporary glamour. Written by Rosemary Myers and Julianne O\u2019Brien, the show includes puppetry and animated projections. (Through March 22.) Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 2 and 7 p.m.; Sunday at 3 p.m.; 209 West 42nd Street, Manhattan ; 646-223-3010, newvictory.org. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Pinocchio\u2019 (Friday through Sunday) In this stage version of Carlo Collodi\u2019s classic tale, the title character doesn\u2019t just want to be a boy; he also wants to be a star. Presented at the New Victory Theater by the acclaimed Windmill Theater of Australia, this two-hour rock musical, with a score by Jethro Woodward, portrays Pinocchio as a youth \u2014 his nose grows before the audience\u2019s eyes \u2014 who\u2019s easily seduced by contemporary glamour. Written by Rosemary Myers and Julianne O\u2019Brien, the show includes puppetry and animated projections. (Through March 22.) Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 2 and 7 p.m.; Sunday at 3 p.m.; 209 West 42nd Street, Manhattan ; 646-223-3010, newvictory.org.", "sentence_answer": "Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 2 and 7 p.m.; Sunday at 3 p.m.; 209 West 42nd Street, Manhattan ; 646-223-3010, newvictory.org."} -{"question": "What are the two authors that wrote the stage version of the classic Pinocchio?", "paragraph": "\u2018Pinocchio\u2019 (Friday through Sunday) In this stage version of Carlo Collodi\u2019s classic tale, the title character doesn\u2019t just want to be a boy; he also wants to be a star. Presented at the New Victory Theater by the acclaimed Windmill Theater of Australia, this two-hour rock musical, with a score by Jethro Woodward, portrays Pinocchio as a youth \u2014 his nose grows before the audience\u2019s eyes \u2014 who\u2019s easily seduced by contemporary glamour. Written by Rosemary Myers and Julianne O\u2019Brien, the show includes puppetry and animated projections. (Through March 22.) Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 2 and 7 p.m.; Sunday at 3 p.m.; 209 West 42nd Street, Manhattan; 646-223-3010, newvictory.org.", "answer": "Rosemary Myers and Julianne O\u2019Brien", "sentence": "Written by Rosemary Myers and Julianne O\u2019Brien , the show includes puppetry and animated projections.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Pinocchio\u2019 (Friday through Sunday) In this stage version of Carlo Collodi\u2019s classic tale, the title character doesn\u2019t just want to be a boy; he also wants to be a star. Presented at the New Victory Theater by the acclaimed Windmill Theater of Australia, this two-hour rock musical, with a score by Jethro Woodward, portrays Pinocchio as a youth \u2014 his nose grows before the audience\u2019s eyes \u2014 who\u2019s easily seduced by contemporary glamour. Written by Rosemary Myers and Julianne O\u2019Brien , the show includes puppetry and animated projections. (Through March 22.) Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 2 and 7 p.m.; Sunday at 3 p.m.; 209 West 42nd Street, Manhattan; 646-223-3010, newvictory.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Pinocchio\u2019 (Friday through Sunday) In this stage version of Carlo Collodi\u2019s classic tale, the title character doesn\u2019t just want to be a boy; he also wants to be a star. Presented at the New Victory Theater by the acclaimed Windmill Theater of Australia, this two-hour rock musical, with a score by Jethro Woodward, portrays Pinocchio as a youth \u2014 his nose grows before the audience\u2019s eyes \u2014 who\u2019s easily seduced by contemporary glamour. Written by Rosemary Myers and Julianne O\u2019Brien , the show includes puppetry and animated projections. (Through March 22.) Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 2 and 7 p.m.; Sunday at 3 p.m.; 209 West 42nd Street, Manhattan; 646-223-3010, newvictory.org.", "sentence_answer": "Written by Rosemary Myers and Julianne O\u2019Brien , the show includes puppetry and animated projections."} -{"question": "Who wrote the musical retelling, Rapunzarella White: A Fairly Fractured Tale?", "paragraph": "\u2018Rapunzarella White: A Fairly Fractured Tale\u2019 (Saturday) Yes, it\u2019s fractured, but it\u2019s also blended: In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden, Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch. These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming. (Through May 9.) At 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org.", "answer": "June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden", "sentence": "In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden , Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Rapunzarella White: A Fairly Fractured Tale\u2019 (Saturday) Yes, it\u2019s fractured, but it\u2019s also blended: In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden , Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch. These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming. (Through May 9.) At 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Rapunzarella White: A Fairly Fractured Tale\u2019 (Saturday) Yes, it\u2019s fractured, but it\u2019s also blended: In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden , Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch. These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming. (Through May 9.) At 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org.", "sentence_answer": "In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden , Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch."} -{"question": "Who abducted the triplets?", "paragraph": "\u2018Rapunzarella White: A Fairly Fractured Tale\u2019 (Saturday) Yes, it\u2019s fractured, but it\u2019s also blended: In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden, Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch. These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming. (Through May 9.) At 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org.", "answer": "an ill-tempered witch", "sentence": "In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden, Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Rapunzarella White: A Fairly Fractured Tale\u2019 (Saturday) Yes, it\u2019s fractured, but it\u2019s also blended: In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden, Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch . These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming. (Through May 9.) At 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Rapunzarella White: A Fairly Fractured Tale\u2019 (Saturday) Yes, it\u2019s fractured, but it\u2019s also blended: In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden, Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch . These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming. (Through May 9.) At 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org.", "sentence_answer": "In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden, Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch ."} -{"question": "What are the names of the infant triplets?", "paragraph": "\u2018Rapunzarella White: A Fairly Fractured Tale\u2019 (Saturday) Yes, it\u2019s fractured, but it\u2019s also blended: In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden, Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch. These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming. (Through May 9.) At 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org.", "answer": "Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White", "sentence": "In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden, Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Rapunzarella White: A Fairly Fractured Tale\u2019 (Saturday) Yes, it\u2019s fractured, but it\u2019s also blended: In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden, Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch. These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming. (Through May 9.) At 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Rapunzarella White: A Fairly Fractured Tale\u2019 (Saturday) Yes, it\u2019s fractured, but it\u2019s also blended: In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden, Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch. These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming. (Through May 9.) At 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org.", "sentence_answer": "In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden, Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch."} -{"question": "What is Snow White allergic to?", "paragraph": "\u2018Rapunzarella White: A Fairly Fractured Tale\u2019 (Saturday) Yes, it\u2019s fractured, but it\u2019s also blended: In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden, Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch. These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming. (Through May 9.) At 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org.", "answer": "apples", "sentence": "These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Rapunzarella White: A Fairly Fractured Tale\u2019 (Saturday) Yes, it\u2019s fractured, but it\u2019s also blended: In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden, Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch. These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming. (Through May 9.) At 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Rapunzarella White: A Fairly Fractured Tale\u2019 (Saturday) Yes, it\u2019s fractured, but it\u2019s also blended: In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden, Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch. These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming. (Through May 9.) At 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org.", "sentence_answer": "These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming."} -{"question": "When did Willis Carto die?", "paragraph": "Willis Carto, a reclusive behind-the-scenes wizard of the far-right fringe of American politics who used lobbying and publishing to denigrate Jews and other minorities and galvanize the movement to deny the Holocaust, died last Monday at his home in Virginia. He was 89. His death was announced by The American Free Press, a newspaper he helped found. Mr. Carto raised funds to finance a right-wing military dictatorship in the United States, campaigned to persuade blacks to voluntarily return to Africa and, most influentially, started newsletters, a journal and conferences of academics and others to deny the scale, and even the existence, of the Holocaust. The Anti-Defamation League called him \u201cone of the most influential American anti-Semitic propagandists\u201d and \u201cthe mastermind of the hate network.\u201d", "answer": "last Monday", "sentence": "Willis Carto, a reclusive behind-the-scenes wizard of the far-right fringe of American politics who used lobbying and publishing to denigrate Jews and other minorities and galvanize the movement to deny the Holocaust, died last Monday at his home in Virginia.", "paragraph_sentence": " Willis Carto, a reclusive behind-the-scenes wizard of the far-right fringe of American politics who used lobbying and publishing to denigrate Jews and other minorities and galvanize the movement to deny the Holocaust, died last Monday at his home in Virginia. He was 89. His death was announced by The American Free Press, a newspaper he helped found. Mr. Carto raised funds to finance a right-wing military dictatorship in the United States, campaigned to persuade blacks to voluntarily return to Africa and, most influentially, started newsletters, a journal and conferences of academics and others to deny the scale, and even the existence, of the Holocaust. The Anti-Defamation League called him \u201cone of the most influential American anti-Semitic propagandists\u201d and \u201cthe mastermind of the hate network.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Willis Carto, a reclusive behind-the-scenes wizard of the far-right fringe of American politics who used lobbying and publishing to denigrate Jews and other minorities and galvanize the movement to deny the Holocaust, died last Monday at his home in Virginia. He was 89. His death was announced by The American Free Press, a newspaper he helped found. Mr. Carto raised funds to finance a right-wing military dictatorship in the United States, campaigned to persuade blacks to voluntarily return to Africa and, most influentially, started newsletters, a journal and conferences of academics and others to deny the scale, and even the existence, of the Holocaust. The Anti-Defamation League called him \u201cone of the most influential American anti-Semitic propagandists\u201d and \u201cthe mastermind of the hate network.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Willis Carto, a reclusive behind-the-scenes wizard of the far-right fringe of American politics who used lobbying and publishing to denigrate Jews and other minorities and galvanize the movement to deny the Holocaust, died last Monday at his home in Virginia."} -{"question": "How old was Willis Carto?", "paragraph": "Willis Carto, a reclusive behind-the-scenes wizard of the far-right fringe of American politics who used lobbying and publishing to denigrate Jews and other minorities and galvanize the movement to deny the Holocaust, died last Monday at his home in Virginia. He was 89. His death was announced by The American Free Press, a newspaper he helped found. Mr. Carto raised funds to finance a right-wing military dictatorship in the United States, campaigned to persuade blacks to voluntarily return to Africa and, most influentially, started newsletters, a journal and conferences of academics and others to deny the scale, and even the existence, of the Holocaust. The Anti-Defamation League called him \u201cone of the most influential American anti-Semitic propagandists\u201d and \u201cthe mastermind of the hate network.\u201d", "answer": "89", "sentence": "He was 89 .", "paragraph_sentence": "Willis Carto, a reclusive behind-the-scenes wizard of the far-right fringe of American politics who used lobbying and publishing to denigrate Jews and other minorities and galvanize the movement to deny the Holocaust, died last Monday at his home in Virginia. He was 89 . His death was announced by The American Free Press, a newspaper he helped found. Mr. Carto raised funds to finance a right-wing military dictatorship in the United States, campaigned to persuade blacks to voluntarily return to Africa and, most influentially, started newsletters, a journal and conferences of academics and others to deny the scale, and even the existence, of the Holocaust. The Anti-Defamation League called him \u201cone of the most influential American anti-Semitic propagandists\u201d and \u201cthe mastermind of the hate network.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Willis Carto, a reclusive behind-the-scenes wizard of the far-right fringe of American politics who used lobbying and publishing to denigrate Jews and other minorities and galvanize the movement to deny the Holocaust, died last Monday at his home in Virginia. He was 89 . His death was announced by The American Free Press, a newspaper he helped found. Mr. Carto raised funds to finance a right-wing military dictatorship in the United States, campaigned to persuade blacks to voluntarily return to Africa and, most influentially, started newsletters, a journal and conferences of academics and others to deny the scale, and even the existence, of the Holocaust. The Anti-Defamation League called him \u201cone of the most influential American anti-Semitic propagandists\u201d and \u201cthe mastermind of the hate network.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "He was 89 ."} -{"question": "Who announced Willis Carto's death?", "paragraph": "Willis Carto, a reclusive behind-the-scenes wizard of the far-right fringe of American politics who used lobbying and publishing to denigrate Jews and other minorities and galvanize the movement to deny the Holocaust, died last Monday at his home in Virginia. He was 89. His death was announced by The American Free Press, a newspaper he helped found. Mr. Carto raised funds to finance a right-wing military dictatorship in the United States, campaigned to persuade blacks to voluntarily return to Africa and, most influentially, started newsletters, a journal and conferences of academics and others to deny the scale, and even the existence, of the Holocaust. The Anti-Defamation League called him \u201cone of the most influential American anti-Semitic propagandists\u201d and \u201cthe mastermind of the hate network.\u201d", "answer": "The American Free Press", "sentence": "His death was announced by The American Free Press , a newspaper he helped found.", "paragraph_sentence": "Willis Carto, a reclusive behind-the-scenes wizard of the far-right fringe of American politics who used lobbying and publishing to denigrate Jews and other minorities and galvanize the movement to deny the Holocaust, died last Monday at his home in Virginia. He was 89. His death was announced by The American Free Press , a newspaper he helped found. Mr. Carto raised funds to finance a right-wing military dictatorship in the United States, campaigned to persuade blacks to voluntarily return to Africa and, most influentially, started newsletters, a journal and conferences of academics and others to deny the scale, and even the existence, of the Holocaust. The Anti-Defamation League called him \u201cone of the most influential American anti-Semitic propagandists\u201d and \u201cthe mastermind of the hate network.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Willis Carto, a reclusive behind-the-scenes wizard of the far-right fringe of American politics who used lobbying and publishing to denigrate Jews and other minorities and galvanize the movement to deny the Holocaust, died last Monday at his home in Virginia. He was 89. His death was announced by The American Free Press , a newspaper he helped found. Mr. Carto raised funds to finance a right-wing military dictatorship in the United States, campaigned to persuade blacks to voluntarily return to Africa and, most influentially, started newsletters, a journal and conferences of academics and others to deny the scale, and even the existence, of the Holocaust. The Anti-Defamation League called him \u201cone of the most influential American anti-Semitic propagandists\u201d and \u201cthe mastermind of the hate network.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "His death was announced by The American Free Press , a newspaper he helped found."} -{"question": "Which event did Willis Carto's group deny happened?", "paragraph": "Willis Carto, a reclusive behind-the-scenes wizard of the far-right fringe of American politics who used lobbying and publishing to denigrate Jews and other minorities and galvanize the movement to deny the Holocaust, died last Monday at his home in Virginia. He was 89. His death was announced by The American Free Press, a newspaper he helped found. Mr. Carto raised funds to finance a right-wing military dictatorship in the United States, campaigned to persuade blacks to voluntarily return to Africa and, most influentially, started newsletters, a journal and conferences of academics and others to deny the scale, and even the existence, of the Holocaust. The Anti-Defamation League called him \u201cone of the most influential American anti-Semitic propagandists\u201d and \u201cthe mastermind of the hate network.\u201d", "answer": "the Holocaust", "sentence": "Willis Carto, a reclusive behind-the-scenes wizard of the far-right fringe of American politics who used lobbying and publishing to denigrate Jews and other minorities and galvanize the movement to deny the Holocaust , died last Monday at his home in Virginia.", "paragraph_sentence": " Willis Carto, a reclusive behind-the-scenes wizard of the far-right fringe of American politics who used lobbying and publishing to denigrate Jews and other minorities and galvanize the movement to deny the Holocaust , died last Monday at his home in Virginia. He was 89. His death was announced by The American Free Press, a newspaper he helped found. Mr. Carto raised funds to finance a right-wing military dictatorship in the United States, campaigned to persuade blacks to voluntarily return to Africa and, most influentially, started newsletters, a journal and conferences of academics and others to deny the scale, and even the existence, of the Holocaust. The Anti-Defamation League called him \u201cone of the most influential American anti-Semitic propagandists\u201d and \u201cthe mastermind of the hate network.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Willis Carto, a reclusive behind-the-scenes wizard of the far-right fringe of American politics who used lobbying and publishing to denigrate Jews and other minorities and galvanize the movement to deny the Holocaust , died last Monday at his home in Virginia. He was 89. His death was announced by The American Free Press, a newspaper he helped found. Mr. Carto raised funds to finance a right-wing military dictatorship in the United States, campaigned to persuade blacks to voluntarily return to Africa and, most influentially, started newsletters, a journal and conferences of academics and others to deny the scale, and even the existence, of the Holocaust. The Anti-Defamation League called him \u201cone of the most influential American anti-Semitic propagandists\u201d and \u201cthe mastermind of the hate network.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Willis Carto, a reclusive behind-the-scenes wizard of the far-right fringe of American politics who used lobbying and publishing to denigrate Jews and other minorities and galvanize the movement to deny the Holocaust , died last Monday at his home in Virginia."} -{"question": "What did Willis Carto raise funds to finance?", "paragraph": "Willis Carto, a reclusive behind-the-scenes wizard of the far-right fringe of American politics who used lobbying and publishing to denigrate Jews and other minorities and galvanize the movement to deny the Holocaust, died last Monday at his home in Virginia. He was 89. His death was announced by The American Free Press, a newspaper he helped found. Mr. Carto raised funds to finance a right-wing military dictatorship in the United States, campaigned to persuade blacks to voluntarily return to Africa and, most influentially, started newsletters, a journal and conferences of academics and others to deny the scale, and even the existence, of the Holocaust. The Anti-Defamation League called him \u201cone of the most influential American anti-Semitic propagandists\u201d and \u201cthe mastermind of the hate network.\u201d", "answer": "a right-wing military dictatorship", "sentence": "Mr. Carto raised funds to finance a right-wing military dictatorship in the United States, campaigned to persuade blacks to voluntarily return to Africa and, most influentially, started newsletters, a journal and conferences of academics and others to deny the scale, and even the existence, of the Holocaust.", "paragraph_sentence": "Willis Carto, a reclusive behind-the-scenes wizard of the far-right fringe of American politics who used lobbying and publishing to denigrate Jews and other minorities and galvanize the movement to deny the Holocaust, died last Monday at his home in Virginia. He was 89. His death was announced by The American Free Press, a newspaper he helped found. Mr. Carto raised funds to finance a right-wing military dictatorship in the United States, campaigned to persuade blacks to voluntarily return to Africa and, most influentially, started newsletters, a journal and conferences of academics and others to deny the scale, and even the existence, of the Holocaust. The Anti-Defamation League called him \u201cone of the most influential American anti-Semitic propagandists\u201d and \u201cthe mastermind of the hate network.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Willis Carto, a reclusive behind-the-scenes wizard of the far-right fringe of American politics who used lobbying and publishing to denigrate Jews and other minorities and galvanize the movement to deny the Holocaust, died last Monday at his home in Virginia. He was 89. His death was announced by The American Free Press, a newspaper he helped found. Mr. Carto raised funds to finance a right-wing military dictatorship in the United States, campaigned to persuade blacks to voluntarily return to Africa and, most influentially, started newsletters, a journal and conferences of academics and others to deny the scale, and even the existence, of the Holocaust. The Anti-Defamation League called him \u201cone of the most influential American anti-Semitic propagandists\u201d and \u201cthe mastermind of the hate network.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Carto raised funds to finance a right-wing military dictatorship in the United States, campaigned to persuade blacks to voluntarily return to Africa and, most influentially, started newsletters, a journal and conferences of academics and others to deny the scale, and even the existence, of the Holocaust."} -{"question": "How many people died at Auschwitz, according to historians?", "paragraph": "It explicitly dismissed statements by Rudolf H\u00f6ss, one of the commanders at Auschwitz, that a cyanide gas, Zyklon B, had been used to commit mass murder. It said those confessions were made \u201cunder duress.\u201d Most historians estimate that 1.1 million died at the camp. Mel Mermelstein, a businessman from Long Beach, Calif., who survived Auschwitz, provided documents, eyewitness testimonies, histories, photographs and even a can that had contained Zyklon B to the institute. He told of seeing his mother and sister driven into the gas chambers in 1944.", "answer": "1.1 million", "sentence": "Most historians estimate that 1.1 million died at the camp.", "paragraph_sentence": "It explicitly dismissed statements by Rudolf H\u00f6ss, one of the commanders at Auschwitz, that a cyanide gas, Zyklon B, had been used to commit mass murder. It said those confessions were made \u201cunder duress.\u201d Most historians estimate that 1.1 million died at the camp. Mel Mermelstein, a businessman from Long Beach, Calif., who survived Auschwitz, provided documents, eyewitness testimonies, histories, photographs and even a can that had contained Zyklon B to the institute. He told of seeing his mother and sister driven into the gas chambers in 1944.", "paragraph_answer": "It explicitly dismissed statements by Rudolf H\u00f6ss, one of the commanders at Auschwitz, that a cyanide gas, Zyklon B, had been used to commit mass murder. It said those confessions were made \u201cunder duress.\u201d Most historians estimate that 1.1 million died at the camp. Mel Mermelstein, a businessman from Long Beach, Calif., who survived Auschwitz, provided documents, eyewitness testimonies, histories, photographs and even a can that had contained Zyklon B to the institute. He told of seeing his mother and sister driven into the gas chambers in 1944.", "sentence_answer": "Most historians estimate that 1.1 million died at the camp."} -{"question": "Where was Rudolf Hoss a commander?", "paragraph": "It explicitly dismissed statements by Rudolf H\u00f6ss, one of the commanders at Auschwitz, that a cyanide gas, Zyklon B, had been used to commit mass murder. It said those confessions were made \u201cunder duress.\u201d Most historians estimate that 1.1 million died at the camp. Mel Mermelstein, a businessman from Long Beach, Calif., who survived Auschwitz, provided documents, eyewitness testimonies, histories, photographs and even a can that had contained Zyklon B to the institute. He told of seeing his mother and sister driven into the gas chambers in 1944.", "answer": "Auschwitz", "sentence": "It explicitly dismissed statements by Rudolf H\u00f6ss, one of the commanders at Auschwitz , that a cyanide gas, Zyklon B, had been used to commit mass murder.", "paragraph_sentence": " It explicitly dismissed statements by Rudolf H\u00f6ss, one of the commanders at Auschwitz , that a cyanide gas, Zyklon B, had been used to commit mass murder. It said those confessions were made \u201cunder duress.\u201d Most historians estimate that 1.1 million died at the camp. Mel Mermelstein, a businessman from Long Beach, Calif., who survived Auschwitz, provided documents, eyewitness testimonies, histories, photographs and even a can that had contained Zyklon B to the institute. He told of seeing his mother and sister driven into the gas chambers in 1944.", "paragraph_answer": "It explicitly dismissed statements by Rudolf H\u00f6ss, one of the commanders at Auschwitz , that a cyanide gas, Zyklon B, had been used to commit mass murder. It said those confessions were made \u201cunder duress.\u201d Most historians estimate that 1.1 million died at the camp. Mel Mermelstein, a businessman from Long Beach, Calif., who survived Auschwitz, provided documents, eyewitness testimonies, histories, photographs and even a can that had contained Zyklon B to the institute. He told of seeing his mother and sister driven into the gas chambers in 1944.", "sentence_answer": "It explicitly dismissed statements by Rudolf H\u00f6ss, one of the commanders at Auschwitz , that a cyanide gas, Zyklon B, had been used to commit mass murder."} -{"question": "What was the exact name of the cyanide gas?", "paragraph": "It explicitly dismissed statements by Rudolf H\u00f6ss, one of the commanders at Auschwitz, that a cyanide gas, Zyklon B, had been used to commit mass murder. It said those confessions were made \u201cunder duress.\u201d Most historians estimate that 1.1 million died at the camp. Mel Mermelstein, a businessman from Long Beach, Calif., who survived Auschwitz, provided documents, eyewitness testimonies, histories, photographs and even a can that had contained Zyklon B to the institute. He told of seeing his mother and sister driven into the gas chambers in 1944.", "answer": "Zyklon B", "sentence": "It explicitly dismissed statements by Rudolf H\u00f6ss, one of the commanders at Auschwitz, that a cyanide gas, Zyklon B , had been used to commit mass murder.", "paragraph_sentence": " It explicitly dismissed statements by Rudolf H\u00f6ss, one of the commanders at Auschwitz, that a cyanide gas, Zyklon B , had been used to commit mass murder. It said those confessions were made \u201cunder duress.\u201d Most historians estimate that 1.1 million died at the camp. Mel Mermelstein, a businessman from Long Beach, Calif., who survived Auschwitz, provided documents, eyewitness testimonies, histories, photographs and even a can that had contained Zyklon B to the institute. He told of seeing his mother and sister driven into the gas chambers in 1944.", "paragraph_answer": "It explicitly dismissed statements by Rudolf H\u00f6ss, one of the commanders at Auschwitz, that a cyanide gas, Zyklon B , had been used to commit mass murder. It said those confessions were made \u201cunder duress.\u201d Most historians estimate that 1.1 million died at the camp. Mel Mermelstein, a businessman from Long Beach, Calif., who survived Auschwitz, provided documents, eyewitness testimonies, histories, photographs and even a can that had contained Zyklon B to the institute. He told of seeing his mother and sister driven into the gas chambers in 1944.", "sentence_answer": "It explicitly dismissed statements by Rudolf H\u00f6ss, one of the commanders at Auschwitz, that a cyanide gas, Zyklon B , had been used to commit mass murder."} -{"question": "Which camp did Mel Mermelstein survive?", "paragraph": "It explicitly dismissed statements by Rudolf H\u00f6ss, one of the commanders at Auschwitz, that a cyanide gas, Zyklon B, had been used to commit mass murder. It said those confessions were made \u201cunder duress.\u201d Most historians estimate that 1.1 million died at the camp. Mel Mermelstein, a businessman from Long Beach, Calif., who survived Auschwitz, provided documents, eyewitness testimonies, histories, photographs and even a can that had contained Zyklon B to the institute. He told of seeing his mother and sister driven into the gas chambers in 1944.", "answer": "Auschwitz", "sentence": "It explicitly dismissed statements by Rudolf H\u00f6ss, one of the commanders at Auschwitz , that a cyanide gas, Zyklon B, had been used to commit mass murder.", "paragraph_sentence": " It explicitly dismissed statements by Rudolf H\u00f6ss, one of the commanders at Auschwitz , that a cyanide gas, Zyklon B, had been used to commit mass murder. It said those confessions were made \u201cunder duress.\u201d Most historians estimate that 1.1 million died at the camp. Mel Mermelstein, a businessman from Long Beach, Calif., who survived Auschwitz, provided documents, eyewitness testimonies, histories, photographs and even a can that had contained Zyklon B to the institute. He told of seeing his mother and sister driven into the gas chambers in 1944.", "paragraph_answer": "It explicitly dismissed statements by Rudolf H\u00f6ss, one of the commanders at Auschwitz , that a cyanide gas, Zyklon B, had been used to commit mass murder. It said those confessions were made \u201cunder duress.\u201d Most historians estimate that 1.1 million died at the camp. Mel Mermelstein, a businessman from Long Beach, Calif., who survived Auschwitz, provided documents, eyewitness testimonies, histories, photographs and even a can that had contained Zyklon B to the institute. He told of seeing his mother and sister driven into the gas chambers in 1944.", "sentence_answer": "It explicitly dismissed statements by Rudolf H\u00f6ss, one of the commanders at Auschwitz , that a cyanide gas, Zyklon B, had been used to commit mass murder."} -{"question": "Who did Mel Mermelstein see driven into the gas chambers in 1944?", "paragraph": "It explicitly dismissed statements by Rudolf H\u00f6ss, one of the commanders at Auschwitz, that a cyanide gas, Zyklon B, had been used to commit mass murder. It said those confessions were made \u201cunder duress.\u201d Most historians estimate that 1.1 million died at the camp. Mel Mermelstein, a businessman from Long Beach, Calif., who survived Auschwitz, provided documents, eyewitness testimonies, histories, photographs and even a can that had contained Zyklon B to the institute. He told of seeing his mother and sister driven into the gas chambers in 1944.", "answer": "his mother and sister", "sentence": "He told of seeing his mother and sister driven into the gas chambers in 1944.", "paragraph_sentence": "It explicitly dismissed statements by Rudolf H\u00f6ss, one of the commanders at Auschwitz, that a cyanide gas, Zyklon B, had been used to commit mass murder. It said those confessions were made \u201cunder duress.\u201d Most historians estimate that 1.1 million died at the camp. Mel Mermelstein, a businessman from Long Beach, Calif., who survived Auschwitz, provided documents, eyewitness testimonies, histories, photographs and even a can that had contained Zyklon B to the institute. He told of seeing his mother and sister driven into the gas chambers in 1944. ", "paragraph_answer": "It explicitly dismissed statements by Rudolf H\u00f6ss, one of the commanders at Auschwitz, that a cyanide gas, Zyklon B, had been used to commit mass murder. It said those confessions were made \u201cunder duress.\u201d Most historians estimate that 1.1 million died at the camp. Mel Mermelstein, a businessman from Long Beach, Calif., who survived Auschwitz, provided documents, eyewitness testimonies, histories, photographs and even a can that had contained Zyklon B to the institute. He told of seeing his mother and sister driven into the gas chambers in 1944.", "sentence_answer": "He told of seeing his mother and sister driven into the gas chambers in 1944."} -{"question": "How long did Tiant live in Boston?", "paragraph": "\u201cI told him Boston is a good place to play,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cI lived there for 43 years. I live in Maine now, but I lived in Boston for years, and for me, it is my second country. People were great to me, and they are still great to me. They show me respect, admiration and love. They don\u2019t have that anywhere else I\u2019ve been, just in Boston.\u201d Tiant was a larger-than-life figure in Boston: a portly, cigar-smoking character whose starts were big events. He was also known as an exceptional clutch performer. In the memorable 1975 World Series, Tiant won two games against the Cincinnati Reds, including a shutout in Game 1. He also won the final regularly scheduled game of the 1978 season with a two-hit shutout against the Blue Jays that forced the famous one-game playoff with the Yankees. But Tiant\u2019s status as Boston sports royalty was solidified as far back as 1972, when he went 15-6 with a 1.91 E.R.A., the best in baseball that season. Tiant was unable to return to Cuba for 46 years. After leaving Cuba, he did not see his father for 14 years until Luis Tiant Sr. was allowed to come to Boston to watch the 1975 World Series. \u201cIt\u2019s sad,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cIt was 46 years before I go back to my country, and a lot of my friends and people I played with and went to school with, they died. It\u2019s not a comfortable situation. I didn\u2019t see my father for 14 years. I thought I would never see him again.\u201d Moncada grew teary-eyed when he spoke of his own family. He said that until he left Cuba nine months ago, he had not gone more than a week without seeing his family. But the future might not be as difficult for him as the past was for Tiant. The governments of Cuba and the United States have initiated a process that could lead to a normalization of relations. If that is achieved, it may not be as difficult for the current group of Cuban players to travel home and then return to the United States to play.", "answer": "43 years", "sentence": "\u201cI lived there for 43 years .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI told him Boston is a good place to play,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cI lived there for 43 years . I live in Maine now, but I lived in Boston for years, and for me, it is my second country. People were great to me, and they are still great to me. They show me respect, admiration and love. They don\u2019t have that anywhere else I\u2019ve been, just in Boston.\u201d Tiant was a larger-than-life figure in Boston: a portly, cigar-smoking character whose starts were big events. He was also known as an exceptional clutch performer. In the memorable 1975 World Series, Tiant won two games against the Cincinnati Reds, including a shutout in Game 1. He also won the final regularly scheduled game of the 1978 season with a two-hit shutout against the Blue Jays that forced the famous one-game playoff with the Yankees. But Tiant\u2019s status as Boston sports royalty was solidified as far back as 1972, when he went 15-6 with a 1.91 E.R.A., the best in baseball that season. Tiant was unable to return to Cuba for 46 years. After leaving Cuba, he did not see his father for 14 years until Luis Tiant Sr. was allowed to come to Boston to watch the 1975 World Series. \u201cIt\u2019s sad,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cIt was 46 years before I go back to my country, and a lot of my friends and people I played with and went to school with, they died. It\u2019s not a comfortable situation. I didn\u2019t see my father for 14 years. I thought I would never see him again.\u201d Moncada grew teary-eyed when he spoke of his own family. He said that until he left Cuba nine months ago, he had not gone more than a week without seeing his family. But the future might not be as difficult for him as the past was for Tiant. The governments of Cuba and the United States have initiated a process that could lead to a normalization of relations. If that is achieved, it may not be as difficult for the current group of Cuban players to travel home and then return to the United States to play.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI told him Boston is a good place to play,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cI lived there for 43 years . I live in Maine now, but I lived in Boston for years, and for me, it is my second country. People were great to me, and they are still great to me. They show me respect, admiration and love. They don\u2019t have that anywhere else I\u2019ve been, just in Boston.\u201d Tiant was a larger-than-life figure in Boston: a portly, cigar-smoking character whose starts were big events. He was also known as an exceptional clutch performer. In the memorable 1975 World Series, Tiant won two games against the Cincinnati Reds, including a shutout in Game 1. He also won the final regularly scheduled game of the 1978 season with a two-hit shutout against the Blue Jays that forced the famous one-game playoff with the Yankees. But Tiant\u2019s status as Boston sports royalty was solidified as far back as 1972, when he went 15-6 with a 1.91 E.R.A., the best in baseball that season. Tiant was unable to return to Cuba for 46 years. After leaving Cuba, he did not see his father for 14 years until Luis Tiant Sr. was allowed to come to Boston to watch the 1975 World Series. \u201cIt\u2019s sad,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cIt was 46 years before I go back to my country, and a lot of my friends and people I played with and went to school with, they died. It\u2019s not a comfortable situation. I didn\u2019t see my father for 14 years. I thought I would never see him again.\u201d Moncada grew teary-eyed when he spoke of his own family. He said that until he left Cuba nine months ago, he had not gone more than a week without seeing his family. But the future might not be as difficult for him as the past was for Tiant. The governments of Cuba and the United States have initiated a process that could lead to a normalization of relations. If that is achieved, it may not be as difficult for the current group of Cuban players to travel home and then return to the United States to play.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI lived there for 43 years ."} -{"question": "What year did Tiant win two games against Cincinnati Reds in the World Series?", "paragraph": "\u201cI told him Boston is a good place to play,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cI lived there for 43 years. I live in Maine now, but I lived in Boston for years, and for me, it is my second country. People were great to me, and they are still great to me. They show me respect, admiration and love. They don\u2019t have that anywhere else I\u2019ve been, just in Boston.\u201d Tiant was a larger-than-life figure in Boston: a portly, cigar-smoking character whose starts were big events. He was also known as an exceptional clutch performer. In the memorable 1975 World Series, Tiant won two games against the Cincinnati Reds, including a shutout in Game 1. He also won the final regularly scheduled game of the 1978 season with a two-hit shutout against the Blue Jays that forced the famous one-game playoff with the Yankees. But Tiant\u2019s status as Boston sports royalty was solidified as far back as 1972, when he went 15-6 with a 1.91 E.R.A., the best in baseball that season. Tiant was unable to return to Cuba for 46 years. After leaving Cuba, he did not see his father for 14 years until Luis Tiant Sr. was allowed to come to Boston to watch the 1975 World Series. \u201cIt\u2019s sad,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cIt was 46 years before I go back to my country, and a lot of my friends and people I played with and went to school with, they died. It\u2019s not a comfortable situation. I didn\u2019t see my father for 14 years. I thought I would never see him again.\u201d Moncada grew teary-eyed when he spoke of his own family. He said that until he left Cuba nine months ago, he had not gone more than a week without seeing his family. But the future might not be as difficult for him as the past was for Tiant. The governments of Cuba and the United States have initiated a process that could lead to a normalization of relations. If that is achieved, it may not be as difficult for the current group of Cuban players to travel home and then return to the United States to play.", "answer": "1975", "sentence": "In the memorable 1975 World Series, Tiant won two games against the Cincinnati Reds, including a shutout in Game 1.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI told him Boston is a good place to play,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cI lived there for 43 years. I live in Maine now, but I lived in Boston for years, and for me, it is my second country. People were great to me, and they are still great to me. They show me respect, admiration and love. They don\u2019t have that anywhere else I\u2019ve been, just in Boston.\u201d Tiant was a larger-than-life figure in Boston: a portly, cigar-smoking character whose starts were big events. He was also known as an exceptional clutch performer. In the memorable 1975 World Series, Tiant won two games against the Cincinnati Reds, including a shutout in Game 1. He also won the final regularly scheduled game of the 1978 season with a two-hit shutout against the Blue Jays that forced the famous one-game playoff with the Yankees. But Tiant\u2019s status as Boston sports royalty was solidified as far back as 1972, when he went 15-6 with a 1.91 E.R.A., the best in baseball that season. Tiant was unable to return to Cuba for 46 years. After leaving Cuba, he did not see his father for 14 years until Luis Tiant Sr. was allowed to come to Boston to watch the 1975 World Series. \u201cIt\u2019s sad,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cIt was 46 years before I go back to my country, and a lot of my friends and people I played with and went to school with, they died. It\u2019s not a comfortable situation. I didn\u2019t see my father for 14 years. I thought I would never see him again.\u201d Moncada grew teary-eyed when he spoke of his own family. He said that until he left Cuba nine months ago, he had not gone more than a week without seeing his family. But the future might not be as difficult for him as the past was for Tiant. The governments of Cuba and the United States have initiated a process that could lead to a normalization of relations. If that is achieved, it may not be as difficult for the current group of Cuban players to travel home and then return to the United States to play.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI told him Boston is a good place to play,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cI lived there for 43 years. I live in Maine now, but I lived in Boston for years, and for me, it is my second country. People were great to me, and they are still great to me. They show me respect, admiration and love. They don\u2019t have that anywhere else I\u2019ve been, just in Boston.\u201d Tiant was a larger-than-life figure in Boston: a portly, cigar-smoking character whose starts were big events. He was also known as an exceptional clutch performer. In the memorable 1975 World Series, Tiant won two games against the Cincinnati Reds, including a shutout in Game 1. He also won the final regularly scheduled game of the 1978 season with a two-hit shutout against the Blue Jays that forced the famous one-game playoff with the Yankees. But Tiant\u2019s status as Boston sports royalty was solidified as far back as 1972, when he went 15-6 with a 1.91 E.R.A., the best in baseball that season. Tiant was unable to return to Cuba for 46 years. After leaving Cuba, he did not see his father for 14 years until Luis Tiant Sr. was allowed to come to Boston to watch the 1975 World Series. \u201cIt\u2019s sad,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cIt was 46 years before I go back to my country, and a lot of my friends and people I played with and went to school with, they died. It\u2019s not a comfortable situation. I didn\u2019t see my father for 14 years. I thought I would never see him again.\u201d Moncada grew teary-eyed when he spoke of his own family. He said that until he left Cuba nine months ago, he had not gone more than a week without seeing his family. But the future might not be as difficult for him as the past was for Tiant. The governments of Cuba and the United States have initiated a process that could lead to a normalization of relations. If that is achieved, it may not be as difficult for the current group of Cuban players to travel home and then return to the United States to play.", "sentence_answer": "In the memorable 1975 World Series, Tiant won two games against the Cincinnati Reds, including a shutout in Game 1."} -{"question": "When was Tiant's status as Boston's sports royalty solidified?", "paragraph": "\u201cI told him Boston is a good place to play,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cI lived there for 43 years. I live in Maine now, but I lived in Boston for years, and for me, it is my second country. People were great to me, and they are still great to me. They show me respect, admiration and love. They don\u2019t have that anywhere else I\u2019ve been, just in Boston.\u201d Tiant was a larger-than-life figure in Boston: a portly, cigar-smoking character whose starts were big events. He was also known as an exceptional clutch performer. In the memorable 1975 World Series, Tiant won two games against the Cincinnati Reds, including a shutout in Game 1. He also won the final regularly scheduled game of the 1978 season with a two-hit shutout against the Blue Jays that forced the famous one-game playoff with the Yankees. But Tiant\u2019s status as Boston sports royalty was solidified as far back as 1972, when he went 15-6 with a 1.91 E.R.A., the best in baseball that season. Tiant was unable to return to Cuba for 46 years. After leaving Cuba, he did not see his father for 14 years until Luis Tiant Sr. was allowed to come to Boston to watch the 1975 World Series. \u201cIt\u2019s sad,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cIt was 46 years before I go back to my country, and a lot of my friends and people I played with and went to school with, they died. It\u2019s not a comfortable situation. I didn\u2019t see my father for 14 years. I thought I would never see him again.\u201d Moncada grew teary-eyed when he spoke of his own family. He said that until he left Cuba nine months ago, he had not gone more than a week without seeing his family. But the future might not be as difficult for him as the past was for Tiant. The governments of Cuba and the United States have initiated a process that could lead to a normalization of relations. If that is achieved, it may not be as difficult for the current group of Cuban players to travel home and then return to the United States to play.", "answer": "1972", "sentence": "But Tiant\u2019s status as Boston sports royalty was solidified as far back as 1972 , when he went 15-6 with a 1.91 E.R.A., the best in baseball that season.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI told him Boston is a good place to play,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cI lived there for 43 years. I live in Maine now, but I lived in Boston for years, and for me, it is my second country. People were great to me, and they are still great to me. They show me respect, admiration and love. They don\u2019t have that anywhere else I\u2019ve been, just in Boston.\u201d Tiant was a larger-than-life figure in Boston: a portly, cigar-smoking character whose starts were big events. He was also known as an exceptional clutch performer. In the memorable 1975 World Series, Tiant won two games against the Cincinnati Reds, including a shutout in Game 1. He also won the final regularly scheduled game of the 1978 season with a two-hit shutout against the Blue Jays that forced the famous one-game playoff with the Yankees. But Tiant\u2019s status as Boston sports royalty was solidified as far back as 1972 , when he went 15-6 with a 1.91 E.R.A., the best in baseball that season. Tiant was unable to return to Cuba for 46 years. After leaving Cuba, he did not see his father for 14 years until Luis Tiant Sr. was allowed to come to Boston to watch the 1975 World Series. \u201cIt\u2019s sad,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cIt was 46 years before I go back to my country, and a lot of my friends and people I played with and went to school with, they died. It\u2019s not a comfortable situation. I didn\u2019t see my father for 14 years. I thought I would never see him again.\u201d Moncada grew teary-eyed when he spoke of his own family. He said that until he left Cuba nine months ago, he had not gone more than a week without seeing his family. But the future might not be as difficult for him as the past was for Tiant. The governments of Cuba and the United States have initiated a process that could lead to a normalization of relations. If that is achieved, it may not be as difficult for the current group of Cuban players to travel home and then return to the United States to play.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI told him Boston is a good place to play,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cI lived there for 43 years. I live in Maine now, but I lived in Boston for years, and for me, it is my second country. People were great to me, and they are still great to me. They show me respect, admiration and love. They don\u2019t have that anywhere else I\u2019ve been, just in Boston.\u201d Tiant was a larger-than-life figure in Boston: a portly, cigar-smoking character whose starts were big events. He was also known as an exceptional clutch performer. In the memorable 1975 World Series, Tiant won two games against the Cincinnati Reds, including a shutout in Game 1. He also won the final regularly scheduled game of the 1978 season with a two-hit shutout against the Blue Jays that forced the famous one-game playoff with the Yankees. But Tiant\u2019s status as Boston sports royalty was solidified as far back as 1972 , when he went 15-6 with a 1.91 E.R.A., the best in baseball that season. Tiant was unable to return to Cuba for 46 years. After leaving Cuba, he did not see his father for 14 years until Luis Tiant Sr. was allowed to come to Boston to watch the 1975 World Series. \u201cIt\u2019s sad,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cIt was 46 years before I go back to my country, and a lot of my friends and people I played with and went to school with, they died. It\u2019s not a comfortable situation. I didn\u2019t see my father for 14 years. I thought I would never see him again.\u201d Moncada grew teary-eyed when he spoke of his own family. He said that until he left Cuba nine months ago, he had not gone more than a week without seeing his family. But the future might not be as difficult for him as the past was for Tiant. The governments of Cuba and the United States have initiated a process that could lead to a normalization of relations. If that is achieved, it may not be as difficult for the current group of Cuban players to travel home and then return to the United States to play.", "sentence_answer": "But Tiant\u2019s status as Boston sports royalty was solidified as far back as 1972 , when he went 15-6 with a 1.91 E.R.A., the best in baseball that season."} -{"question": "Where does Tiant live now?", "paragraph": "\u201cI told him Boston is a good place to play,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cI lived there for 43 years. I live in Maine now, but I lived in Boston for years, and for me, it is my second country. People were great to me, and they are still great to me. They show me respect, admiration and love. They don\u2019t have that anywhere else I\u2019ve been, just in Boston.\u201d Tiant was a larger-than-life figure in Boston: a portly, cigar-smoking character whose starts were big events. He was also known as an exceptional clutch performer. In the memorable 1975 World Series, Tiant won two games against the Cincinnati Reds, including a shutout in Game 1. He also won the final regularly scheduled game of the 1978 season with a two-hit shutout against the Blue Jays that forced the famous one-game playoff with the Yankees. But Tiant\u2019s status as Boston sports royalty was solidified as far back as 1972, when he went 15-6 with a 1.91 E.R.A., the best in baseball that season. Tiant was unable to return to Cuba for 46 years. After leaving Cuba, he did not see his father for 14 years until Luis Tiant Sr. was allowed to come to Boston to watch the 1975 World Series. \u201cIt\u2019s sad,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cIt was 46 years before I go back to my country, and a lot of my friends and people I played with and went to school with, they died. It\u2019s not a comfortable situation. I didn\u2019t see my father for 14 years. I thought I would never see him again.\u201d Moncada grew teary-eyed when he spoke of his own family. He said that until he left Cuba nine months ago, he had not gone more than a week without seeing his family. But the future might not be as difficult for him as the past was for Tiant. The governments of Cuba and the United States have initiated a process that could lead to a normalization of relations. If that is achieved, it may not be as difficult for the current group of Cuban players to travel home and then return to the United States to play.", "answer": "Maine", "sentence": "I live in Maine now, but I lived in Boston for years, and for me, it is my second country.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI told him Boston is a good place to play,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cI lived there for 43 years. I live in Maine now, but I lived in Boston for years, and for me, it is my second country. People were great to me, and they are still great to me. They show me respect, admiration and love. They don\u2019t have that anywhere else I\u2019ve been, just in Boston.\u201d Tiant was a larger-than-life figure in Boston: a portly, cigar-smoking character whose starts were big events. He was also known as an exceptional clutch performer. In the memorable 1975 World Series, Tiant won two games against the Cincinnati Reds, including a shutout in Game 1. He also won the final regularly scheduled game of the 1978 season with a two-hit shutout against the Blue Jays that forced the famous one-game playoff with the Yankees. But Tiant\u2019s status as Boston sports royalty was solidified as far back as 1972, when he went 15-6 with a 1.91 E.R.A., the best in baseball that season. Tiant was unable to return to Cuba for 46 years. After leaving Cuba, he did not see his father for 14 years until Luis Tiant Sr. was allowed to come to Boston to watch the 1975 World Series. \u201cIt\u2019s sad,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cIt was 46 years before I go back to my country, and a lot of my friends and people I played with and went to school with, they died. It\u2019s not a comfortable situation. I didn\u2019t see my father for 14 years. I thought I would never see him again.\u201d Moncada grew teary-eyed when he spoke of his own family. He said that until he left Cuba nine months ago, he had not gone more than a week without seeing his family. But the future might not be as difficult for him as the past was for Tiant. The governments of Cuba and the United States have initiated a process that could lead to a normalization of relations. If that is achieved, it may not be as difficult for the current group of Cuban players to travel home and then return to the United States to play.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI told him Boston is a good place to play,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cI lived there for 43 years. I live in Maine now, but I lived in Boston for years, and for me, it is my second country. People were great to me, and they are still great to me. They show me respect, admiration and love. They don\u2019t have that anywhere else I\u2019ve been, just in Boston.\u201d Tiant was a larger-than-life figure in Boston: a portly, cigar-smoking character whose starts were big events. He was also known as an exceptional clutch performer. In the memorable 1975 World Series, Tiant won two games against the Cincinnati Reds, including a shutout in Game 1. He also won the final regularly scheduled game of the 1978 season with a two-hit shutout against the Blue Jays that forced the famous one-game playoff with the Yankees. But Tiant\u2019s status as Boston sports royalty was solidified as far back as 1972, when he went 15-6 with a 1.91 E.R.A., the best in baseball that season. Tiant was unable to return to Cuba for 46 years. After leaving Cuba, he did not see his father for 14 years until Luis Tiant Sr. was allowed to come to Boston to watch the 1975 World Series. \u201cIt\u2019s sad,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cIt was 46 years before I go back to my country, and a lot of my friends and people I played with and went to school with, they died. It\u2019s not a comfortable situation. I didn\u2019t see my father for 14 years. I thought I would never see him again.\u201d Moncada grew teary-eyed when he spoke of his own family. He said that until he left Cuba nine months ago, he had not gone more than a week without seeing his family. But the future might not be as difficult for him as the past was for Tiant. The governments of Cuba and the United States have initiated a process that could lead to a normalization of relations. If that is achieved, it may not be as difficult for the current group of Cuban players to travel home and then return to the United States to play.", "sentence_answer": "I live in Maine now, but I lived in Boston for years, and for me, it is my second country."} -{"question": "How long was Tiant away from Cuba?", "paragraph": "\u201cI told him Boston is a good place to play,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cI lived there for 43 years. I live in Maine now, but I lived in Boston for years, and for me, it is my second country. People were great to me, and they are still great to me. They show me respect, admiration and love. They don\u2019t have that anywhere else I\u2019ve been, just in Boston.\u201d Tiant was a larger-than-life figure in Boston: a portly, cigar-smoking character whose starts were big events. He was also known as an exceptional clutch performer. In the memorable 1975 World Series, Tiant won two games against the Cincinnati Reds, including a shutout in Game 1. He also won the final regularly scheduled game of the 1978 season with a two-hit shutout against the Blue Jays that forced the famous one-game playoff with the Yankees. But Tiant\u2019s status as Boston sports royalty was solidified as far back as 1972, when he went 15-6 with a 1.91 E.R.A., the best in baseball that season. Tiant was unable to return to Cuba for 46 years. After leaving Cuba, he did not see his father for 14 years until Luis Tiant Sr. was allowed to come to Boston to watch the 1975 World Series. \u201cIt\u2019s sad,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cIt was 46 years before I go back to my country, and a lot of my friends and people I played with and went to school with, they died. It\u2019s not a comfortable situation. I didn\u2019t see my father for 14 years. I thought I would never see him again.\u201d Moncada grew teary-eyed when he spoke of his own family. He said that until he left Cuba nine months ago, he had not gone more than a week without seeing his family. But the future might not be as difficult for him as the past was for Tiant. The governments of Cuba and the United States have initiated a process that could lead to a normalization of relations. If that is achieved, it may not be as difficult for the current group of Cuban players to travel home and then return to the United States to play.", "answer": "46 years", "sentence": "Tiant was unable to return to Cuba for 46 years .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI told him Boston is a good place to play,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cI lived there for 43 years. I live in Maine now, but I lived in Boston for years, and for me, it is my second country. People were great to me, and they are still great to me. They show me respect, admiration and love. They don\u2019t have that anywhere else I\u2019ve been, just in Boston.\u201d Tiant was a larger-than-life figure in Boston: a portly, cigar-smoking character whose starts were big events. He was also known as an exceptional clutch performer. In the memorable 1975 World Series, Tiant won two games against the Cincinnati Reds, including a shutout in Game 1. He also won the final regularly scheduled game of the 1978 season with a two-hit shutout against the Blue Jays that forced the famous one-game playoff with the Yankees. But Tiant\u2019s status as Boston sports royalty was solidified as far back as 1972, when he went 15-6 with a 1.91 E.R.A., the best in baseball that season. Tiant was unable to return to Cuba for 46 years . After leaving Cuba, he did not see his father for 14 years until Luis Tiant Sr. was allowed to come to Boston to watch the 1975 World Series. \u201cIt\u2019s sad,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cIt was 46 years before I go back to my country, and a lot of my friends and people I played with and went to school with, they died. It\u2019s not a comfortable situation. I didn\u2019t see my father for 14 years. I thought I would never see him again.\u201d Moncada grew teary-eyed when he spoke of his own family. He said that until he left Cuba nine months ago, he had not gone more than a week without seeing his family. But the future might not be as difficult for him as the past was for Tiant. The governments of Cuba and the United States have initiated a process that could lead to a normalization of relations. If that is achieved, it may not be as difficult for the current group of Cuban players to travel home and then return to the United States to play.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI told him Boston is a good place to play,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cI lived there for 43 years. I live in Maine now, but I lived in Boston for years, and for me, it is my second country. People were great to me, and they are still great to me. They show me respect, admiration and love. They don\u2019t have that anywhere else I\u2019ve been, just in Boston.\u201d Tiant was a larger-than-life figure in Boston: a portly, cigar-smoking character whose starts were big events. He was also known as an exceptional clutch performer. In the memorable 1975 World Series, Tiant won two games against the Cincinnati Reds, including a shutout in Game 1. He also won the final regularly scheduled game of the 1978 season with a two-hit shutout against the Blue Jays that forced the famous one-game playoff with the Yankees. But Tiant\u2019s status as Boston sports royalty was solidified as far back as 1972, when he went 15-6 with a 1.91 E.R.A., the best in baseball that season. Tiant was unable to return to Cuba for 46 years . After leaving Cuba, he did not see his father for 14 years until Luis Tiant Sr. was allowed to come to Boston to watch the 1975 World Series. \u201cIt\u2019s sad,\u201d Tiant said. \u201cIt was 46 years before I go back to my country, and a lot of my friends and people I played with and went to school with, they died. It\u2019s not a comfortable situation. I didn\u2019t see my father for 14 years. I thought I would never see him again.\u201d Moncada grew teary-eyed when he spoke of his own family. He said that until he left Cuba nine months ago, he had not gone more than a week without seeing his family. But the future might not be as difficult for him as the past was for Tiant. The governments of Cuba and the United States have initiated a process that could lead to a normalization of relations. If that is achieved, it may not be as difficult for the current group of Cuban players to travel home and then return to the United States to play.", "sentence_answer": "Tiant was unable to return to Cuba for 46 years ."} -{"question": "Who is studying thier masters degree in social work in New York University?", "paragraph": "Mrs. Gant, 29, is studying for a master's degree in social work at New York University. She graduated from Wellesley and received a professional certificate in culinary arts from the French Culinary Institute in New York. She is a daughter of Sarah Finney Johnston and Mark H. Johnston Sr. of Pelham Manor, N.Y. The bride\u2019s father retired as the president of Van Wagner Communications, an outdoor advertising company in New York. Mr. Gant, 36, is a partner in the New York law firm White & Case. He graduated from Winthrop University and received a law degree from the University of Chicago. He is a son of Norma Ray Gant and James E. Gant Sr. of Cleveland, Ga. The groom\u2019s mother, who is retired, was a school crossing guard for the Clayton County Public Schools in Georgia. His father, also retired, was a senior benefits analyst in Atlanta with the Dutch bank ING.", "answer": "Mrs. Gant", "sentence": "Mrs. Gant , 29, is studying for a master's degree in social work at New York University.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mrs. Gant , 29, is studying for a master's degree in social work at New York University. She graduated from Wellesley and received a professional certificate in culinary arts from the French Culinary Institute in New York. She is a daughter of Sarah Finney Johnston and Mark H. Johnston Sr. of Pelham Manor, N.Y. The bride\u2019s father retired as the president of Van Wagner Communications, an outdoor advertising company in New York. Mr. Gant, 36, is a partner in the New York law firm White & Case. He graduated from Winthrop University and received a law degree from the University of Chicago. He is a son of Norma Ray Gant and James E. Gant Sr. of Cleveland, Ga. The groom\u2019s mother, who is retired, was a school crossing guard for the Clayton County Public Schools in Georgia. His father, also retired, was a senior benefits analyst in Atlanta with the Dutch bank ING.", "paragraph_answer": " Mrs. Gant , 29, is studying for a master's degree in social work at New York University. She graduated from Wellesley and received a professional certificate in culinary arts from the French Culinary Institute in New York. She is a daughter of Sarah Finney Johnston and Mark H. Johnston Sr. of Pelham Manor, N.Y. The bride\u2019s father retired as the president of Van Wagner Communications, an outdoor advertising company in New York. Mr. Gant, 36, is a partner in the New York law firm White & Case. He graduated from Winthrop University and received a law degree from the University of Chicago. He is a son of Norma Ray Gant and James E. Gant Sr. of Cleveland, Ga. The groom\u2019s mother, who is retired, was a school crossing guard for the Clayton County Public Schools in Georgia. His father, also retired, was a senior benefits analyst in Atlanta with the Dutch bank ING.", "sentence_answer": " Mrs. Gant , 29, is studying for a master's degree in social work at New York University."} -{"question": "Where did Gant graduate from?", "paragraph": "Mrs. Gant, 29, is studying for a master's degree in social work at New York University. She graduated from Wellesley and received a professional certificate in culinary arts from the French Culinary Institute in New York. She is a daughter of Sarah Finney Johnston and Mark H. Johnston Sr. of Pelham Manor, N.Y. The bride\u2019s father retired as the president of Van Wagner Communications, an outdoor advertising company in New York. Mr. Gant, 36, is a partner in the New York law firm White & Case. He graduated from Winthrop University and received a law degree from the University of Chicago. He is a son of Norma Ray Gant and James E. Gant Sr. of Cleveland, Ga. The groom\u2019s mother, who is retired, was a school crossing guard for the Clayton County Public Schools in Georgia. His father, also retired, was a senior benefits analyst in Atlanta with the Dutch bank ING.", "answer": "Wellesley", "sentence": "She graduated from Wellesley and received a professional certificate in culinary arts from the French Culinary Institute in New York.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mrs. Gant, 29, is studying for a master's degree in social work at New York University. She graduated from Wellesley and received a professional certificate in culinary arts from the French Culinary Institute in New York. She is a daughter of Sarah Finney Johnston and Mark H. Johnston Sr. of Pelham Manor, N.Y. The bride\u2019s father retired as the president of Van Wagner Communications, an outdoor advertising company in New York. Mr. Gant, 36, is a partner in the New York law firm White & Case. He graduated from Winthrop University and received a law degree from the University of Chicago. He is a son of Norma Ray Gant and James E. Gant Sr. of Cleveland, Ga. The groom\u2019s mother, who is retired, was a school crossing guard for the Clayton County Public Schools in Georgia. His father, also retired, was a senior benefits analyst in Atlanta with the Dutch bank ING.", "paragraph_answer": "Mrs. Gant, 29, is studying for a master's degree in social work at New York University. She graduated from Wellesley and received a professional certificate in culinary arts from the French Culinary Institute in New York. She is a daughter of Sarah Finney Johnston and Mark H. Johnston Sr. of Pelham Manor, N.Y. The bride\u2019s father retired as the president of Van Wagner Communications, an outdoor advertising company in New York. Mr. Gant, 36, is a partner in the New York law firm White & Case. He graduated from Winthrop University and received a law degree from the University of Chicago. He is a son of Norma Ray Gant and James E. Gant Sr. of Cleveland, Ga. The groom\u2019s mother, who is retired, was a school crossing guard for the Clayton County Public Schools in Georgia. His father, also retired, was a senior benefits analyst in Atlanta with the Dutch bank ING.", "sentence_answer": "She graduated from Wellesley and received a professional certificate in culinary arts from the French Culinary Institute in New York."} -{"question": "The bride's father retired as president of what company?", "paragraph": "Mrs. Gant, 29, is studying for a master's degree in social work at New York University. She graduated from Wellesley and received a professional certificate in culinary arts from the French Culinary Institute in New York. She is a daughter of Sarah Finney Johnston and Mark H. Johnston Sr. of Pelham Manor, N.Y. The bride\u2019s father retired as the president of Van Wagner Communications, an outdoor advertising company in New York. Mr. Gant, 36, is a partner in the New York law firm White & Case. He graduated from Winthrop University and received a law degree from the University of Chicago. He is a son of Norma Ray Gant and James E. Gant Sr. of Cleveland, Ga. The groom\u2019s mother, who is retired, was a school crossing guard for the Clayton County Public Schools in Georgia. His father, also retired, was a senior benefits analyst in Atlanta with the Dutch bank ING.", "answer": "Van Wagner Communications", "sentence": "The bride\u2019s father retired as the president of Van Wagner Communications , an outdoor advertising company in New York.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mrs. Gant, 29, is studying for a master's degree in social work at New York University. She graduated from Wellesley and received a professional certificate in culinary arts from the French Culinary Institute in New York. She is a daughter of Sarah Finney Johnston and Mark H. Johnston Sr. of Pelham Manor, N.Y. The bride\u2019s father retired as the president of Van Wagner Communications , an outdoor advertising company in New York. Mr. Gant, 36, is a partner in the New York law firm White & Case. He graduated from Winthrop University and received a law degree from the University of Chicago. He is a son of Norma Ray Gant and James E. Gant Sr. of Cleveland, Ga. The groom\u2019s mother, who is retired, was a school crossing guard for the Clayton County Public Schools in Georgia. His father, also retired, was a senior benefits analyst in Atlanta with the Dutch bank ING.", "paragraph_answer": "Mrs. Gant, 29, is studying for a master's degree in social work at New York University. She graduated from Wellesley and received a professional certificate in culinary arts from the French Culinary Institute in New York. She is a daughter of Sarah Finney Johnston and Mark H. Johnston Sr. of Pelham Manor, N.Y. The bride\u2019s father retired as the president of Van Wagner Communications , an outdoor advertising company in New York. Mr. Gant, 36, is a partner in the New York law firm White & Case. He graduated from Winthrop University and received a law degree from the University of Chicago. He is a son of Norma Ray Gant and James E. Gant Sr. of Cleveland, Ga. The groom\u2019s mother, who is retired, was a school crossing guard for the Clayton County Public Schools in Georgia. His father, also retired, was a senior benefits analyst in Atlanta with the Dutch bank ING.", "sentence_answer": "The bride\u2019s father retired as the president of Van Wagner Communications , an outdoor advertising company in New York."} -{"question": "Mr. Gant is a partner in what law firm?", "paragraph": "Mrs. Gant, 29, is studying for a master's degree in social work at New York University. She graduated from Wellesley and received a professional certificate in culinary arts from the French Culinary Institute in New York. She is a daughter of Sarah Finney Johnston and Mark H. Johnston Sr. of Pelham Manor, N.Y. The bride\u2019s father retired as the president of Van Wagner Communications, an outdoor advertising company in New York. Mr. Gant, 36, is a partner in the New York law firm White & Case. He graduated from Winthrop University and received a law degree from the University of Chicago. He is a son of Norma Ray Gant and James E. Gant Sr. of Cleveland, Ga. The groom\u2019s mother, who is retired, was a school crossing guard for the Clayton County Public Schools in Georgia. His father, also retired, was a senior benefits analyst in Atlanta with the Dutch bank ING.", "answer": "White & Case", "sentence": "Mr. Gant, 36, is a partner in the New York law firm White & Case .", "paragraph_sentence": "Mrs. Gant, 29, is studying for a master's degree in social work at New York University. She graduated from Wellesley and received a professional certificate in culinary arts from the French Culinary Institute in New York. She is a daughter of Sarah Finney Johnston and Mark H. Johnston Sr. of Pelham Manor, N.Y. The bride\u2019s father retired as the president of Van Wagner Communications, an outdoor advertising company in New York. Mr. Gant, 36, is a partner in the New York law firm White & Case . He graduated from Winthrop University and received a law degree from the University of Chicago. He is a son of Norma Ray Gant and James E. Gant Sr. of Cleveland, Ga. The groom\u2019s mother, who is retired, was a school crossing guard for the Clayton County Public Schools in Georgia. His father, also retired, was a senior benefits analyst in Atlanta with the Dutch bank ING.", "paragraph_answer": "Mrs. Gant, 29, is studying for a master's degree in social work at New York University. She graduated from Wellesley and received a professional certificate in culinary arts from the French Culinary Institute in New York. She is a daughter of Sarah Finney Johnston and Mark H. Johnston Sr. of Pelham Manor, N.Y. The bride\u2019s father retired as the president of Van Wagner Communications, an outdoor advertising company in New York. Mr. Gant, 36, is a partner in the New York law firm White & Case . He graduated from Winthrop University and received a law degree from the University of Chicago. He is a son of Norma Ray Gant and James E. Gant Sr. of Cleveland, Ga. The groom\u2019s mother, who is retired, was a school crossing guard for the Clayton County Public Schools in Georgia. His father, also retired, was a senior benefits analyst in Atlanta with the Dutch bank ING.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Gant, 36, is a partner in the New York law firm White & Case ."} -{"question": "Mr. Gant obtained a law degree from which college?", "paragraph": "Mrs. Gant, 29, is studying for a master's degree in social work at New York University. She graduated from Wellesley and received a professional certificate in culinary arts from the French Culinary Institute in New York. She is a daughter of Sarah Finney Johnston and Mark H. Johnston Sr. of Pelham Manor, N.Y. The bride\u2019s father retired as the president of Van Wagner Communications, an outdoor advertising company in New York. Mr. Gant, 36, is a partner in the New York law firm White & Case. He graduated from Winthrop University and received a law degree from the University of Chicago. He is a son of Norma Ray Gant and James E. Gant Sr. of Cleveland, Ga. The groom\u2019s mother, who is retired, was a school crossing guard for the Clayton County Public Schools in Georgia. His father, also retired, was a senior benefits analyst in Atlanta with the Dutch bank ING.", "answer": "University of Chicago", "sentence": "He graduated from Winthrop University and received a law degree from the University of Chicago .", "paragraph_sentence": "Mrs. Gant, 29, is studying for a master's degree in social work at New York University. She graduated from Wellesley and received a professional certificate in culinary arts from the French Culinary Institute in New York. She is a daughter of Sarah Finney Johnston and Mark H. Johnston Sr. of Pelham Manor, N.Y. The bride\u2019s father retired as the president of Van Wagner Communications, an outdoor advertising company in New York. Mr. Gant, 36, is a partner in the New York law firm White & Case. He graduated from Winthrop University and received a law degree from the University of Chicago . He is a son of Norma Ray Gant and James E. Gant Sr. of Cleveland, Ga. The groom\u2019s mother, who is retired, was a school crossing guard for the Clayton County Public Schools in Georgia. His father, also retired, was a senior benefits analyst in Atlanta with the Dutch bank ING.", "paragraph_answer": "Mrs. Gant, 29, is studying for a master's degree in social work at New York University. She graduated from Wellesley and received a professional certificate in culinary arts from the French Culinary Institute in New York. She is a daughter of Sarah Finney Johnston and Mark H. Johnston Sr. of Pelham Manor, N.Y. The bride\u2019s father retired as the president of Van Wagner Communications, an outdoor advertising company in New York. Mr. Gant, 36, is a partner in the New York law firm White & Case. He graduated from Winthrop University and received a law degree from the University of Chicago . He is a son of Norma Ray Gant and James E. Gant Sr. of Cleveland, Ga. The groom\u2019s mother, who is retired, was a school crossing guard for the Clayton County Public Schools in Georgia. His father, also retired, was a senior benefits analyst in Atlanta with the Dutch bank ING.", "sentence_answer": "He graduated from Winthrop University and received a law degree from the University of Chicago ."} -{"question": "How much has the Shanghai Composite index risen this year?", "paragraph": "Although the Shanghai composite index has risen less than 3 percent so far this year, the Zexi No. 1 Fund, which works with a subsidiary of the state-owned conglomerate China Resources, gained 323 percent through Friday; it has risen 3,270 percent since its inception in 2010. The Zexi No. 3 Fund has gained 382 percent this year and 3,945 percent since 2010, according to figures on the company\u2019s website, which were obtained before it was taken down late Monday morning. The firm\u2019s performance was the subject of intense market speculation in September, when a post on social media accused the company of manipulation. It focused on an unprofitable clothing retailer that reached a market high this summer despite the market volatility.", "answer": "3 percent", "sentence": "Although the Shanghai composite index has risen less than 3 percent so far this year, the Zexi No. 1 Fund, which works with a subsidiary of the state-owned conglomerate China Resources, gained 323 percent through Friday; it has risen 3,270 percent since its inception in 2010.", "paragraph_sentence": " Although the Shanghai composite index has risen less than 3 percent so far this year, the Zexi No. 1 Fund, which works with a subsidiary of the state-owned conglomerate China Resources, gained 323 percent through Friday; it has risen 3,270 percent since its inception in 2010. The Zexi No. 3 Fund has gained 382 percent this year and 3,945 percent since 2010, according to figures on the company\u2019s website, which were obtained before it was taken down late Monday morning. The firm\u2019s performance was the subject of intense market speculation in September, when a post on social media accused the company of manipulation. It focused on an unprofitable clothing retailer that reached a market high this summer despite the market volatility.", "paragraph_answer": "Although the Shanghai composite index has risen less than 3 percent so far this year, the Zexi No. 1 Fund, which works with a subsidiary of the state-owned conglomerate China Resources, gained 323 percent through Friday; it has risen 3,270 percent since its inception in 2010. The Zexi No. 3 Fund has gained 382 percent this year and 3,945 percent since 2010, according to figures on the company\u2019s website, which were obtained before it was taken down late Monday morning. The firm\u2019s performance was the subject of intense market speculation in September, when a post on social media accused the company of manipulation. It focused on an unprofitable clothing retailer that reached a market high this summer despite the market volatility.", "sentence_answer": "Although the Shanghai composite index has risen less than 3 percent so far this year, the Zexi No. 1 Fund, which works with a subsidiary of the state-owned conglomerate China Resources, gained 323 percent through Friday; it has risen 3,270 percent since its inception in 2010."} -{"question": "What is the subsidiary Zexi No.1 fund works with?", "paragraph": "Although the Shanghai composite index has risen less than 3 percent so far this year, the Zexi No. 1 Fund, which works with a subsidiary of the state-owned conglomerate China Resources, gained 323 percent through Friday; it has risen 3,270 percent since its inception in 2010. The Zexi No. 3 Fund has gained 382 percent this year and 3,945 percent since 2010, according to figures on the company\u2019s website, which were obtained before it was taken down late Monday morning. The firm\u2019s performance was the subject of intense market speculation in September, when a post on social media accused the company of manipulation. It focused on an unprofitable clothing retailer that reached a market high this summer despite the market volatility.", "answer": "China Resources,", "sentence": "Although the Shanghai composite index has risen less than 3 percent so far this year, the Zexi No. 1 Fund, which works with a subsidiary of the state-owned conglomerate China Resources, gained 323 percent through Friday; it has risen 3,270 percent since its inception in 2010.", "paragraph_sentence": " Although the Shanghai composite index has risen less than 3 percent so far this year, the Zexi No. 1 Fund, which works with a subsidiary of the state-owned conglomerate China Resources, gained 323 percent through Friday; it has risen 3,270 percent since its inception in 2010. The Zexi No. 3 Fund has gained 382 percent this year and 3,945 percent since 2010, according to figures on the company\u2019s website, which were obtained before it was taken down late Monday morning. The firm\u2019s performance was the subject of intense market speculation in September, when a post on social media accused the company of manipulation. It focused on an unprofitable clothing retailer that reached a market high this summer despite the market volatility.", "paragraph_answer": "Although the Shanghai composite index has risen less than 3 percent so far this year, the Zexi No. 1 Fund, which works with a subsidiary of the state-owned conglomerate China Resources, gained 323 percent through Friday; it has risen 3,270 percent since its inception in 2010. The Zexi No. 3 Fund has gained 382 percent this year and 3,945 percent since 2010, according to figures on the company\u2019s website, which were obtained before it was taken down late Monday morning. The firm\u2019s performance was the subject of intense market speculation in September, when a post on social media accused the company of manipulation. It focused on an unprofitable clothing retailer that reached a market high this summer despite the market volatility.", "sentence_answer": "Although the Shanghai composite index has risen less than 3 percent so far this year, the Zexi No. 1 Fund, which works with a subsidiary of the state-owned conglomerate China Resources, gained 323 percent through Friday; it has risen 3,270 percent since its inception in 2010."} -{"question": "How much has China Resources index rose since 2010?", "paragraph": "Although the Shanghai composite index has risen less than 3 percent so far this year, the Zexi No. 1 Fund, which works with a subsidiary of the state-owned conglomerate China Resources, gained 323 percent through Friday; it has risen 3,270 percent since its inception in 2010. The Zexi No. 3 Fund has gained 382 percent this year and 3,945 percent since 2010, according to figures on the company\u2019s website, which were obtained before it was taken down late Monday morning. The firm\u2019s performance was the subject of intense market speculation in September, when a post on social media accused the company of manipulation. It focused on an unprofitable clothing retailer that reached a market high this summer despite the market volatility.", "answer": "3,270 percent", "sentence": "Although the Shanghai composite index has risen less than 3 percent so far this year, the Zexi No. 1 Fund, which works with a subsidiary of the state-owned conglomerate China Resources, gained 323 percent through Friday; it has risen 3,270 percent since its inception in 2010.", "paragraph_sentence": " Although the Shanghai composite index has risen less than 3 percent so far this year, the Zexi No. 1 Fund, which works with a subsidiary of the state-owned conglomerate China Resources, gained 323 percent through Friday; it has risen 3,270 percent since its inception in 2010. The Zexi No. 3 Fund has gained 382 percent this year and 3,945 percent since 2010, according to figures on the company\u2019s website, which were obtained before it was taken down late Monday morning. The firm\u2019s performance was the subject of intense market speculation in September, when a post on social media accused the company of manipulation. It focused on an unprofitable clothing retailer that reached a market high this summer despite the market volatility.", "paragraph_answer": "Although the Shanghai composite index has risen less than 3 percent so far this year, the Zexi No. 1 Fund, which works with a subsidiary of the state-owned conglomerate China Resources, gained 323 percent through Friday; it has risen 3,270 percent since its inception in 2010. The Zexi No. 3 Fund has gained 382 percent this year and 3,945 percent since 2010, according to figures on the company\u2019s website, which were obtained before it was taken down late Monday morning. The firm\u2019s performance was the subject of intense market speculation in September, when a post on social media accused the company of manipulation. It focused on an unprofitable clothing retailer that reached a market high this summer despite the market volatility.", "sentence_answer": "Although the Shanghai composite index has risen less than 3 percent so far this year, the Zexi No. 1 Fund, which works with a subsidiary of the state-owned conglomerate China Resources, gained 323 percent through Friday; it has risen 3,270 percent since its inception in 2010."} -{"question": "What was the firm accused of on social media?", "paragraph": "Although the Shanghai composite index has risen less than 3 percent so far this year, the Zexi No. 1 Fund, which works with a subsidiary of the state-owned conglomerate China Resources, gained 323 percent through Friday; it has risen 3,270 percent since its inception in 2010. The Zexi No. 3 Fund has gained 382 percent this year and 3,945 percent since 2010, according to figures on the company\u2019s website, which were obtained before it was taken down late Monday morning. The firm\u2019s performance was the subject of intense market speculation in September, when a post on social media accused the company of manipulation. It focused on an unprofitable clothing retailer that reached a market high this summer despite the market volatility.", "answer": "manipulation", "sentence": "The firm\u2019s performance was the subject of intense market speculation in September, when a post on social media accused the company of manipulation .", "paragraph_sentence": "Although the Shanghai composite index has risen less than 3 percent so far this year, the Zexi No. 1 Fund, which works with a subsidiary of the state-owned conglomerate China Resources, gained 323 percent through Friday; it has risen 3,270 percent since its inception in 2010. The Zexi No. 3 Fund has gained 382 percent this year and 3,945 percent since 2010, according to figures on the company\u2019s website, which were obtained before it was taken down late Monday morning. The firm\u2019s performance was the subject of intense market speculation in September, when a post on social media accused the company of manipulation . It focused on an unprofitable clothing retailer that reached a market high this summer despite the market volatility.", "paragraph_answer": "Although the Shanghai composite index has risen less than 3 percent so far this year, the Zexi No. 1 Fund, which works with a subsidiary of the state-owned conglomerate China Resources, gained 323 percent through Friday; it has risen 3,270 percent since its inception in 2010. The Zexi No. 3 Fund has gained 382 percent this year and 3,945 percent since 2010, according to figures on the company\u2019s website, which were obtained before it was taken down late Monday morning. The firm\u2019s performance was the subject of intense market speculation in September, when a post on social media accused the company of manipulation . It focused on an unprofitable clothing retailer that reached a market high this summer despite the market volatility.", "sentence_answer": "The firm\u2019s performance was the subject of intense market speculation in September, when a post on social media accused the company of manipulation ."} -{"question": "How much has the Zexi No. 3 fund index gained this year?", "paragraph": "Although the Shanghai composite index has risen less than 3 percent so far this year, the Zexi No. 1 Fund, which works with a subsidiary of the state-owned conglomerate China Resources, gained 323 percent through Friday; it has risen 3,270 percent since its inception in 2010. The Zexi No. 3 Fund has gained 382 percent this year and 3,945 percent since 2010, according to figures on the company\u2019s website, which were obtained before it was taken down late Monday morning. The firm\u2019s performance was the subject of intense market speculation in September, when a post on social media accused the company of manipulation. It focused on an unprofitable clothing retailer that reached a market high this summer despite the market volatility.", "answer": "382", "sentence": "The Zexi No. 3 Fund has gained 382 percent this year and 3,945 percent since 2010, according to figures on the company\u2019s website, which were obtained before it was taken down late Monday morning.", "paragraph_sentence": "Although the Shanghai composite index has risen less than 3 percent so far this year, the Zexi No. 1 Fund, which works with a subsidiary of the state-owned conglomerate China Resources, gained 323 percent through Friday; it has risen 3,270 percent since its inception in 2010. The Zexi No. 3 Fund has gained 382 percent this year and 3,945 percent since 2010, according to figures on the company\u2019s website, which were obtained before it was taken down late Monday morning. The firm\u2019s performance was the subject of intense market speculation in September, when a post on social media accused the company of manipulation. It focused on an unprofitable clothing retailer that reached a market high this summer despite the market volatility.", "paragraph_answer": "Although the Shanghai composite index has risen less than 3 percent so far this year, the Zexi No. 1 Fund, which works with a subsidiary of the state-owned conglomerate China Resources, gained 323 percent through Friday; it has risen 3,270 percent since its inception in 2010. The Zexi No. 3 Fund has gained 382 percent this year and 3,945 percent since 2010, according to figures on the company\u2019s website, which were obtained before it was taken down late Monday morning. The firm\u2019s performance was the subject of intense market speculation in September, when a post on social media accused the company of manipulation. It focused on an unprofitable clothing retailer that reached a market high this summer despite the market volatility.", "sentence_answer": "The Zexi No. 3 Fund has gained 382 percent this year and 3,945 percent since 2010, according to figures on the company\u2019s website, which were obtained before it was taken down late Monday morning."} -{"question": "Where was the article by Xinhua published?", "paragraph": "With a dearth of information from the government, the market mayhem \u2014 and the crackdown that has followed \u2014 has created a ripe environment for rumor. On Monday, the website of another official media outlet, China National Radio, published an article from Xinhua stating that an associate of Mr. Xu had been shot and killed by the police while trying to escape. The report was quickly retracted with no explanation and was not available on Xinhua\u2019s website. Later in the day, Xinhua reported on one of its social media accounts that its name and that of one of its reporters were used falsely to spread a \u201crumor\u201d that the police had killed Mr. Xu\u2019s associate. Xinhua reported the incident to the police. A picture purportedly of Mr. Xu\u2019s arrest, with him in handcuffs and wearing what looked like a white lab coat, was posted on the website of Sina.com, one of the most popular Internet portals in China.", "answer": "China National Radio", "sentence": "On Monday, the website of another official media outlet, China National Radio , published an article from Xinhua stating that an associate of Mr. Xu had been shot and killed by the police while trying to escape.", "paragraph_sentence": "With a dearth of information from the government, the market mayhem \u2014 and the crackdown that has followed \u2014 has created a ripe environment for rumor. On Monday, the website of another official media outlet, China National Radio , published an article from Xinhua stating that an associate of Mr. Xu had been shot and killed by the police while trying to escape. The report was quickly retracted with no explanation and was not available on Xinhua\u2019s website. Later in the day, Xinhua reported on one of its social media accounts that its name and that of one of its reporters were used falsely to spread a \u201crumor\u201d that the police had killed Mr. Xu\u2019s associate. Xinhua reported the incident to the police. A picture purportedly of Mr. Xu\u2019s arrest, with him in handcuffs and wearing what looked like a white lab coat, was posted on the website of Sina.com, one of the most popular Internet portals in China.", "paragraph_answer": "With a dearth of information from the government, the market mayhem \u2014 and the crackdown that has followed \u2014 has created a ripe environment for rumor. On Monday, the website of another official media outlet, China National Radio , published an article from Xinhua stating that an associate of Mr. Xu had been shot and killed by the police while trying to escape. The report was quickly retracted with no explanation and was not available on Xinhua\u2019s website. Later in the day, Xinhua reported on one of its social media accounts that its name and that of one of its reporters were used falsely to spread a \u201crumor\u201d that the police had killed Mr. Xu\u2019s associate. Xinhua reported the incident to the police. A picture purportedly of Mr. Xu\u2019s arrest, with him in handcuffs and wearing what looked like a white lab coat, was posted on the website of Sina.com, one of the most popular Internet portals in China.", "sentence_answer": "On Monday, the website of another official media outlet, China National Radio , published an article from Xinhua stating that an associate of Mr. Xu had been shot and killed by the police while trying to escape."} -{"question": "Where was the photo of Mr Xu Shared", "paragraph": "With a dearth of information from the government, the market mayhem \u2014 and the crackdown that has followed \u2014 has created a ripe environment for rumor. On Monday, the website of another official media outlet, China National Radio, published an article from Xinhua stating that an associate of Mr. Xu had been shot and killed by the police while trying to escape. The report was quickly retracted with no explanation and was not available on Xinhua\u2019s website. Later in the day, Xinhua reported on one of its social media accounts that its name and that of one of its reporters were used falsely to spread a \u201crumor\u201d that the police had killed Mr. Xu\u2019s associate. Xinhua reported the incident to the police. A picture purportedly of Mr. Xu\u2019s arrest, with him in handcuffs and wearing what looked like a white lab coat, was posted on the website of Sina.com, one of the most popular Internet portals in China.", "answer": "Sina.com", "sentence": "A picture purportedly of Mr. Xu\u2019s arrest, with him in handcuffs and wearing what looked like a white lab coat, was posted on the website of Sina.com , one of the most popular Internet portals in China.", "paragraph_sentence": "With a dearth of information from the government, the market mayhem \u2014 and the crackdown that has followed \u2014 has created a ripe environment for rumor. On Monday, the website of another official media outlet, China National Radio, published an article from Xinhua stating that an associate of Mr. Xu had been shot and killed by the police while trying to escape. The report was quickly retracted with no explanation and was not available on Xinhua\u2019s website. Later in the day, Xinhua reported on one of its social media accounts that its name and that of one of its reporters were used falsely to spread a \u201crumor\u201d that the police had killed Mr. Xu\u2019s associate. Xinhua reported the incident to the police. A picture purportedly of Mr. Xu\u2019s arrest, with him in handcuffs and wearing what looked like a white lab coat, was posted on the website of Sina.com , one of the most popular Internet portals in China. ", "paragraph_answer": "With a dearth of information from the government, the market mayhem \u2014 and the crackdown that has followed \u2014 has created a ripe environment for rumor. On Monday, the website of another official media outlet, China National Radio, published an article from Xinhua stating that an associate of Mr. Xu had been shot and killed by the police while trying to escape. The report was quickly retracted with no explanation and was not available on Xinhua\u2019s website. Later in the day, Xinhua reported on one of its social media accounts that its name and that of one of its reporters were used falsely to spread a \u201crumor\u201d that the police had killed Mr. Xu\u2019s associate. Xinhua reported the incident to the police. A picture purportedly of Mr. Xu\u2019s arrest, with him in handcuffs and wearing what looked like a white lab coat, was posted on the website of Sina.com , one of the most popular Internet portals in China.", "sentence_answer": "A picture purportedly of Mr. Xu\u2019s arrest, with him in handcuffs and wearing what looked like a white lab coat, was posted on the website of Sina.com , one of the most popular Internet portals in China."} -{"question": "What was Mr Xu doing when he was killed?", "paragraph": "With a dearth of information from the government, the market mayhem \u2014 and the crackdown that has followed \u2014 has created a ripe environment for rumor. On Monday, the website of another official media outlet, China National Radio, published an article from Xinhua stating that an associate of Mr. Xu had been shot and killed by the police while trying to escape. The report was quickly retracted with no explanation and was not available on Xinhua\u2019s website. Later in the day, Xinhua reported on one of its social media accounts that its name and that of one of its reporters were used falsely to spread a \u201crumor\u201d that the police had killed Mr. Xu\u2019s associate. Xinhua reported the incident to the police. A picture purportedly of Mr. Xu\u2019s arrest, with him in handcuffs and wearing what looked like a white lab coat, was posted on the website of Sina.com, one of the most popular Internet portals in China.", "answer": "trying to escape", "sentence": "On Monday, the website of another official media outlet, China National Radio, published an article from Xinhua stating that an associate of Mr. Xu had been shot and killed by the police while trying to escape .", "paragraph_sentence": "With a dearth of information from the government, the market mayhem \u2014 and the crackdown that has followed \u2014 has created a ripe environment for rumor. On Monday, the website of another official media outlet, China National Radio, published an article from Xinhua stating that an associate of Mr. Xu had been shot and killed by the police while trying to escape . The report was quickly retracted with no explanation and was not available on Xinhua\u2019s website. Later in the day, Xinhua reported on one of its social media accounts that its name and that of one of its reporters were used falsely to spread a \u201crumor\u201d that the police had killed Mr. Xu\u2019s associate. Xinhua reported the incident to the police. A picture purportedly of Mr. Xu\u2019s arrest, with him in handcuffs and wearing what looked like a white lab coat, was posted on the website of Sina.com, one of the most popular Internet portals in China.", "paragraph_answer": "With a dearth of information from the government, the market mayhem \u2014 and the crackdown that has followed \u2014 has created a ripe environment for rumor. On Monday, the website of another official media outlet, China National Radio, published an article from Xinhua stating that an associate of Mr. Xu had been shot and killed by the police while trying to escape . The report was quickly retracted with no explanation and was not available on Xinhua\u2019s website. Later in the day, Xinhua reported on one of its social media accounts that its name and that of one of its reporters were used falsely to spread a \u201crumor\u201d that the police had killed Mr. Xu\u2019s associate. Xinhua reported the incident to the police. A picture purportedly of Mr. Xu\u2019s arrest, with him in handcuffs and wearing what looked like a white lab coat, was posted on the website of Sina.com, one of the most popular Internet portals in China.", "sentence_answer": "On Monday, the website of another official media outlet, China National Radio, published an article from Xinhua stating that an associate of Mr. Xu had been shot and killed by the police while trying to escape ."} -{"question": "What did Mr Xu have in his arrest photo?", "paragraph": "With a dearth of information from the government, the market mayhem \u2014 and the crackdown that has followed \u2014 has created a ripe environment for rumor. On Monday, the website of another official media outlet, China National Radio, published an article from Xinhua stating that an associate of Mr. Xu had been shot and killed by the police while trying to escape. The report was quickly retracted with no explanation and was not available on Xinhua\u2019s website. Later in the day, Xinhua reported on one of its social media accounts that its name and that of one of its reporters were used falsely to spread a \u201crumor\u201d that the police had killed Mr. Xu\u2019s associate. Xinhua reported the incident to the police. A picture purportedly of Mr. Xu\u2019s arrest, with him in handcuffs and wearing what looked like a white lab coat, was posted on the website of Sina.com, one of the most popular Internet portals in China.", "answer": "handcuffs and wearing what looked like a white lab coat", "sentence": "A picture purportedly of Mr. Xu\u2019s arrest, with him in handcuffs and wearing what looked like a white lab coat , was posted on the website of Sina.com, one of the most popular Internet portals in China.", "paragraph_sentence": "With a dearth of information from the government, the market mayhem \u2014 and the crackdown that has followed \u2014 has created a ripe environment for rumor. On Monday, the website of another official media outlet, China National Radio, published an article from Xinhua stating that an associate of Mr. Xu had been shot and killed by the police while trying to escape. The report was quickly retracted with no explanation and was not available on Xinhua\u2019s website. Later in the day, Xinhua reported on one of its social media accounts that its name and that of one of its reporters were used falsely to spread a \u201crumor\u201d that the police had killed Mr. Xu\u2019s associate. Xinhua reported the incident to the police. A picture purportedly of Mr. Xu\u2019s arrest, with him in handcuffs and wearing what looked like a white lab coat , was posted on the website of Sina.com, one of the most popular Internet portals in China. ", "paragraph_answer": "With a dearth of information from the government, the market mayhem \u2014 and the crackdown that has followed \u2014 has created a ripe environment for rumor. On Monday, the website of another official media outlet, China National Radio, published an article from Xinhua stating that an associate of Mr. Xu had been shot and killed by the police while trying to escape. The report was quickly retracted with no explanation and was not available on Xinhua\u2019s website. Later in the day, Xinhua reported on one of its social media accounts that its name and that of one of its reporters were used falsely to spread a \u201crumor\u201d that the police had killed Mr. Xu\u2019s associate. Xinhua reported the incident to the police. A picture purportedly of Mr. Xu\u2019s arrest, with him in handcuffs and wearing what looked like a white lab coat , was posted on the website of Sina.com, one of the most popular Internet portals in China.", "sentence_answer": "A picture purportedly of Mr. Xu\u2019s arrest, with him in handcuffs and wearing what looked like a white lab coat , was posted on the website of Sina.com, one of the most popular Internet portals in China."} -{"question": "What did one of Xinhua reporters do?", "paragraph": "With a dearth of information from the government, the market mayhem \u2014 and the crackdown that has followed \u2014 has created a ripe environment for rumor. On Monday, the website of another official media outlet, China National Radio, published an article from Xinhua stating that an associate of Mr. Xu had been shot and killed by the police while trying to escape. The report was quickly retracted with no explanation and was not available on Xinhua\u2019s website. Later in the day, Xinhua reported on one of its social media accounts that its name and that of one of its reporters were used falsely to spread a \u201crumor\u201d that the police had killed Mr. Xu\u2019s associate. Xinhua reported the incident to the police. A picture purportedly of Mr. Xu\u2019s arrest, with him in handcuffs and wearing what looked like a white lab coat, was posted on the website of Sina.com, one of the most popular Internet portals in China.", "answer": "falsely to spread a \u201crumor\u201d", "sentence": "Later in the day, Xinhua reported on one of its social media accounts that its name and that of one of its reporters were used falsely to spread a \u201crumor\u201d that the police had killed Mr. Xu\u2019s associate.", "paragraph_sentence": "With a dearth of information from the government, the market mayhem \u2014 and the crackdown that has followed \u2014 has created a ripe environment for rumor. On Monday, the website of another official media outlet, China National Radio, published an article from Xinhua stating that an associate of Mr. Xu had been shot and killed by the police while trying to escape. The report was quickly retracted with no explanation and was not available on Xinhua\u2019s website. Later in the day, Xinhua reported on one of its social media accounts that its name and that of one of its reporters were used falsely to spread a \u201crumor\u201d that the police had killed Mr. Xu\u2019s associate. Xinhua reported the incident to the police. A picture purportedly of Mr. Xu\u2019s arrest, with him in handcuffs and wearing what looked like a white lab coat, was posted on the website of Sina.com, one of the most popular Internet portals in China.", "paragraph_answer": "With a dearth of information from the government, the market mayhem \u2014 and the crackdown that has followed \u2014 has created a ripe environment for rumor. On Monday, the website of another official media outlet, China National Radio, published an article from Xinhua stating that an associate of Mr. Xu had been shot and killed by the police while trying to escape. The report was quickly retracted with no explanation and was not available on Xinhua\u2019s website. Later in the day, Xinhua reported on one of its social media accounts that its name and that of one of its reporters were used falsely to spread a \u201crumor\u201d that the police had killed Mr. Xu\u2019s associate. Xinhua reported the incident to the police. A picture purportedly of Mr. Xu\u2019s arrest, with him in handcuffs and wearing what looked like a white lab coat, was posted on the website of Sina.com, one of the most popular Internet portals in China.", "sentence_answer": "Later in the day, Xinhua reported on one of its social media accounts that its name and that of one of its reporters were used falsely to spread a \u201crumor\u201d that the police had killed Mr. Xu\u2019s associate."} -{"question": "Who was the St. Louis County prosecutor?", "paragraph": "But the grand jury could not finish in time, the St. Louis County prosecutor, Robert P. McCulloch, told a law school audience here on Friday. Instead, it finished its work on a Monday and its decision to not indict the police officer was announced that evening. Protests followed that night, leading to looting and arson that left Ferguson\u2019s downtown devastated. Speaking to a symposium on Ferguson at the St. Louis University School of Law, Mr. McCulloch defended the timing of the announcement, along with his handling of the grand jury, which was widely criticized in the days after the rioting.", "answer": "Robert P. McCulloch", "sentence": "But the grand jury could not finish in time, the St. Louis County prosecutor, Robert P. McCulloch , told a law school audience here on Friday.", "paragraph_sentence": " But the grand jury could not finish in time, the St. Louis County prosecutor, Robert P. McCulloch , told a law school audience here on Friday. Instead, it finished its work on a Monday and its decision to not indict the police officer was announced that evening. Protests followed that night, leading to looting and arson that left Ferguson\u2019s downtown devastated. Speaking to a symposium on Ferguson at the St. Louis University School of Law, Mr. McCulloch defended the timing of the announcement, along with his handling of the grand jury, which was widely criticized in the days after the rioting.", "paragraph_answer": "But the grand jury could not finish in time, the St. Louis County prosecutor, Robert P. McCulloch , told a law school audience here on Friday. Instead, it finished its work on a Monday and its decision to not indict the police officer was announced that evening. Protests followed that night, leading to looting and arson that left Ferguson\u2019s downtown devastated. Speaking to a symposium on Ferguson at the St. Louis University School of Law, Mr. McCulloch defended the timing of the announcement, along with his handling of the grand jury, which was widely criticized in the days after the rioting.", "sentence_answer": "But the grand jury could not finish in time, the St. Louis County prosecutor, Robert P. McCulloch , told a law school audience here on Friday."} -{"question": "What night did the protests start?", "paragraph": "But the grand jury could not finish in time, the St. Louis County prosecutor, Robert P. McCulloch, told a law school audience here on Friday. Instead, it finished its work on a Monday and its decision to not indict the police officer was announced that evening. Protests followed that night, leading to looting and arson that left Ferguson\u2019s downtown devastated. Speaking to a symposium on Ferguson at the St. Louis University School of Law, Mr. McCulloch defended the timing of the announcement, along with his handling of the grand jury, which was widely criticized in the days after the rioting.", "answer": "Monday", "sentence": "Instead, it finished its work on a Monday and its decision to not indict the police officer was announced that evening.", "paragraph_sentence": "But the grand jury could not finish in time, the St. Louis County prosecutor, Robert P. McCulloch, told a law school audience here on Friday. Instead, it finished its work on a Monday and its decision to not indict the police officer was announced that evening. Protests followed that night, leading to looting and arson that left Ferguson\u2019s downtown devastated. Speaking to a symposium on Ferguson at the St. Louis University School of Law, Mr. McCulloch defended the timing of the announcement, along with his handling of the grand jury, which was widely criticized in the days after the rioting.", "paragraph_answer": "But the grand jury could not finish in time, the St. Louis County prosecutor, Robert P. McCulloch, told a law school audience here on Friday. Instead, it finished its work on a Monday and its decision to not indict the police officer was announced that evening. Protests followed that night, leading to looting and arson that left Ferguson\u2019s downtown devastated. Speaking to a symposium on Ferguson at the St. Louis University School of Law, Mr. McCulloch defended the timing of the announcement, along with his handling of the grand jury, which was widely criticized in the days after the rioting.", "sentence_answer": "Instead, it finished its work on a Monday and its decision to not indict the police officer was announced that evening."} -{"question": "What day was the grand jury's decision announced?", "paragraph": "But the grand jury could not finish in time, the St. Louis County prosecutor, Robert P. McCulloch, told a law school audience here on Friday. Instead, it finished its work on a Monday and its decision to not indict the police officer was announced that evening. Protests followed that night, leading to looting and arson that left Ferguson\u2019s downtown devastated. Speaking to a symposium on Ferguson at the St. Louis University School of Law, Mr. McCulloch defended the timing of the announcement, along with his handling of the grand jury, which was widely criticized in the days after the rioting.", "answer": "Monday", "sentence": "Instead, it finished its work on a Monday and its decision to not indict the police officer was announced that evening.", "paragraph_sentence": "But the grand jury could not finish in time, the St. Louis County prosecutor, Robert P. McCulloch, told a law school audience here on Friday. Instead, it finished its work on a Monday and its decision to not indict the police officer was announced that evening. Protests followed that night, leading to looting and arson that left Ferguson\u2019s downtown devastated. Speaking to a symposium on Ferguson at the St. Louis University School of Law, Mr. McCulloch defended the timing of the announcement, along with his handling of the grand jury, which was widely criticized in the days after the rioting.", "paragraph_answer": "But the grand jury could not finish in time, the St. Louis County prosecutor, Robert P. McCulloch, told a law school audience here on Friday. Instead, it finished its work on a Monday and its decision to not indict the police officer was announced that evening. Protests followed that night, leading to looting and arson that left Ferguson\u2019s downtown devastated. Speaking to a symposium on Ferguson at the St. Louis University School of Law, Mr. McCulloch defended the timing of the announcement, along with his handling of the grand jury, which was widely criticized in the days after the rioting.", "sentence_answer": "Instead, it finished its work on a Monday and its decision to not indict the police officer was announced that evening."} -{"question": "What caused destruction in downtown Ferguson?", "paragraph": "But the grand jury could not finish in time, the St. Louis County prosecutor, Robert P. McCulloch, told a law school audience here on Friday. Instead, it finished its work on a Monday and its decision to not indict the police officer was announced that evening. Protests followed that night, leading to looting and arson that left Ferguson\u2019s downtown devastated. Speaking to a symposium on Ferguson at the St. Louis University School of Law, Mr. McCulloch defended the timing of the announcement, along with his handling of the grand jury, which was widely criticized in the days after the rioting.", "answer": "looting and arson", "sentence": "Protests followed that night, leading to looting and arson that left Ferguson\u2019s downtown devastated.", "paragraph_sentence": "But the grand jury could not finish in time, the St. Louis County prosecutor, Robert P. McCulloch, told a law school audience here on Friday. Instead, it finished its work on a Monday and its decision to not indict the police officer was announced that evening. Protests followed that night, leading to looting and arson that left Ferguson\u2019s downtown devastated. Speaking to a symposium on Ferguson at the St. Louis University School of Law, Mr. McCulloch defended the timing of the announcement, along with his handling of the grand jury, which was widely criticized in the days after the rioting.", "paragraph_answer": "But the grand jury could not finish in time, the St. Louis County prosecutor, Robert P. McCulloch, told a law school audience here on Friday. Instead, it finished its work on a Monday and its decision to not indict the police officer was announced that evening. Protests followed that night, leading to looting and arson that left Ferguson\u2019s downtown devastated. Speaking to a symposium on Ferguson at the St. Louis University School of Law, Mr. McCulloch defended the timing of the announcement, along with his handling of the grand jury, which was widely criticized in the days after the rioting.", "sentence_answer": "Protests followed that night, leading to looting and arson that left Ferguson\u2019s downtown devastated."} -{"question": "Where did Mr. McCulloch defend his handling of the case?", "paragraph": "But the grand jury could not finish in time, the St. Louis County prosecutor, Robert P. McCulloch, told a law school audience here on Friday. Instead, it finished its work on a Monday and its decision to not indict the police officer was announced that evening. Protests followed that night, leading to looting and arson that left Ferguson\u2019s downtown devastated. Speaking to a symposium on Ferguson at the St. Louis University School of Law, Mr. McCulloch defended the timing of the announcement, along with his handling of the grand jury, which was widely criticized in the days after the rioting.", "answer": "St. Louis University School of Law", "sentence": "Speaking to a symposium on Ferguson at the St. Louis University School of Law , Mr. McCulloch defended the timing of the announcement, along with his handling of the grand jury, which was widely criticized in the days after the rioting.", "paragraph_sentence": "But the grand jury could not finish in time, the St. Louis County prosecutor, Robert P. McCulloch, told a law school audience here on Friday. Instead, it finished its work on a Monday and its decision to not indict the police officer was announced that evening. Protests followed that night, leading to looting and arson that left Ferguson\u2019s downtown devastated. Speaking to a symposium on Ferguson at the St. Louis University School of Law , Mr. McCulloch defended the timing of the announcement, along with his handling of the grand jury, which was widely criticized in the days after the rioting. ", "paragraph_answer": "But the grand jury could not finish in time, the St. Louis County prosecutor, Robert P. McCulloch, told a law school audience here on Friday. Instead, it finished its work on a Monday and its decision to not indict the police officer was announced that evening. Protests followed that night, leading to looting and arson that left Ferguson\u2019s downtown devastated. Speaking to a symposium on Ferguson at the St. Louis University School of Law , Mr. McCulloch defended the timing of the announcement, along with his handling of the grand jury, which was widely criticized in the days after the rioting.", "sentence_answer": "Speaking to a symposium on Ferguson at the St. Louis University School of Law , Mr. McCulloch defended the timing of the announcement, along with his handling of the grand jury, which was widely criticized in the days after the rioting."} -{"question": "What was the name of the victim?", "paragraph": "\u201cI could be wrong, but I\u2019m pretty sure all lives matter,\u201d the prosecutor said. In the aftermath of the grand jury decision, critics said that Mr. McCulloch and his assistants had presented evidence in ways that favored the police officer, Darren Wilson, and cast doubt on the victim, Michael Brown. On Friday, Mr. McCulloch devoted much of his talk to rebutting such criticism, which included that he gave incorrect instructions to the grand jury and that his assistants were not tough enough in their questioning of witnesses who supported Officer Wilson\u2019s version of events.", "answer": "Michael Brown", "sentence": "In the aftermath of the grand jury decision, critics said that Mr. McCulloch and his assistants had presented evidence in ways that favored the police officer, Darren Wilson, and cast doubt on the victim, Michael Brown .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI could be wrong, but I\u2019m pretty sure all lives matter,\u201d the prosecutor said. In the aftermath of the grand jury decision, critics said that Mr. McCulloch and his assistants had presented evidence in ways that favored the police officer, Darren Wilson, and cast doubt on the victim, Michael Brown . On Friday, Mr. McCulloch devoted much of his talk to rebutting such criticism, which included that he gave incorrect instructions to the grand jury and that his assistants were not tough enough in their questioning of witnesses who supported Officer Wilson\u2019s version of events.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI could be wrong, but I\u2019m pretty sure all lives matter,\u201d the prosecutor said. In the aftermath of the grand jury decision, critics said that Mr. McCulloch and his assistants had presented evidence in ways that favored the police officer, Darren Wilson, and cast doubt on the victim, Michael Brown . On Friday, Mr. McCulloch devoted much of his talk to rebutting such criticism, which included that he gave incorrect instructions to the grand jury and that his assistants were not tough enough in their questioning of witnesses who supported Officer Wilson\u2019s version of events.", "sentence_answer": "In the aftermath of the grand jury decision, critics said that Mr. McCulloch and his assistants had presented evidence in ways that favored the police officer, Darren Wilson, and cast doubt on the victim, Michael Brown ."} -{"question": "What did critics allege about the way the prosecutor presented evidence?", "paragraph": "\u201cI could be wrong, but I\u2019m pretty sure all lives matter,\u201d the prosecutor said. In the aftermath of the grand jury decision, critics said that Mr. McCulloch and his assistants had presented evidence in ways that favored the police officer, Darren Wilson, and cast doubt on the victim, Michael Brown. On Friday, Mr. McCulloch devoted much of his talk to rebutting such criticism, which included that he gave incorrect instructions to the grand jury and that his assistants were not tough enough in their questioning of witnesses who supported Officer Wilson\u2019s version of events.", "answer": "presented evidence in ways that favored the police officer", "sentence": "In the aftermath of the grand jury decision, critics said that Mr. McCulloch and his assistants had presented evidence in ways that favored the police officer , Darren Wilson, and cast doubt on the victim, Michael Brown.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI could be wrong, but I\u2019m pretty sure all lives matter,\u201d the prosecutor said. In the aftermath of the grand jury decision, critics said that Mr. McCulloch and his assistants had presented evidence in ways that favored the police officer , Darren Wilson, and cast doubt on the victim, Michael Brown. On Friday, Mr. McCulloch devoted much of his talk to rebutting such criticism, which included that he gave incorrect instructions to the grand jury and that his assistants were not tough enough in their questioning of witnesses who supported Officer Wilson\u2019s version of events.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI could be wrong, but I\u2019m pretty sure all lives matter,\u201d the prosecutor said. In the aftermath of the grand jury decision, critics said that Mr. McCulloch and his assistants had presented evidence in ways that favored the police officer , Darren Wilson, and cast doubt on the victim, Michael Brown. On Friday, Mr. McCulloch devoted much of his talk to rebutting such criticism, which included that he gave incorrect instructions to the grand jury and that his assistants were not tough enough in their questioning of witnesses who supported Officer Wilson\u2019s version of events.", "sentence_answer": "In the aftermath of the grand jury decision, critics said that Mr. McCulloch and his assistants had presented evidence in ways that favored the police officer , Darren Wilson, and cast doubt on the victim, Michael Brown."} -{"question": "Who did critics say the prosecutor and his assistants weren't tough enough on?", "paragraph": "\u201cI could be wrong, but I\u2019m pretty sure all lives matter,\u201d the prosecutor said. In the aftermath of the grand jury decision, critics said that Mr. McCulloch and his assistants had presented evidence in ways that favored the police officer, Darren Wilson, and cast doubt on the victim, Michael Brown. On Friday, Mr. McCulloch devoted much of his talk to rebutting such criticism, which included that he gave incorrect instructions to the grand jury and that his assistants were not tough enough in their questioning of witnesses who supported Officer Wilson\u2019s version of events.", "answer": "witnesses who supported Officer Wilson\u2019s version of events.", "sentence": "On Friday, Mr. McCulloch devoted much of his talk to rebutting such criticism, which included that he gave incorrect instructions to the grand jury and that his assistants were not tough enough in their questioning of witnesses who supported Officer Wilson\u2019s version of events.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI could be wrong, but I\u2019m pretty sure all lives matter,\u201d the prosecutor said. In the aftermath of the grand jury decision, critics said that Mr. McCulloch and his assistants had presented evidence in ways that favored the police officer, Darren Wilson, and cast doubt on the victim, Michael Brown. On Friday, Mr. McCulloch devoted much of his talk to rebutting such criticism, which included that he gave incorrect instructions to the grand jury and that his assistants were not tough enough in their questioning of witnesses who supported Officer Wilson\u2019s version of events. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI could be wrong, but I\u2019m pretty sure all lives matter,\u201d the prosecutor said. In the aftermath of the grand jury decision, critics said that Mr. McCulloch and his assistants had presented evidence in ways that favored the police officer, Darren Wilson, and cast doubt on the victim, Michael Brown. On Friday, Mr. McCulloch devoted much of his talk to rebutting such criticism, which included that he gave incorrect instructions to the grand jury and that his assistants were not tough enough in their questioning of witnesses who supported Officer Wilson\u2019s version of events. ", "sentence_answer": "On Friday, Mr. McCulloch devoted much of his talk to rebutting such criticism, which included that he gave incorrect instructions to the grand jury and that his assistants were not tough enough in their questioning of witnesses who supported Officer Wilson\u2019s version of events. "} -{"question": "What was the name of the man who said 'all lives matter'?", "paragraph": "\u201cI could be wrong, but I\u2019m pretty sure all lives matter,\u201d the prosecutor said. In the aftermath of the grand jury decision, critics said that Mr. McCulloch and his assistants had presented evidence in ways that favored the police officer, Darren Wilson, and cast doubt on the victim, Michael Brown. On Friday, Mr. McCulloch devoted much of his talk to rebutting such criticism, which included that he gave incorrect instructions to the grand jury and that his assistants were not tough enough in their questioning of witnesses who supported Officer Wilson\u2019s version of events.", "answer": "the prosecutor", "sentence": "\u201cI could be wrong, but I\u2019m pretty sure all lives matter,\u201d the prosecutor said.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI could be wrong, but I\u2019m pretty sure all lives matter,\u201d the prosecutor said. In the aftermath of the grand jury decision, critics said that Mr. McCulloch and his assistants had presented evidence in ways that favored the police officer, Darren Wilson, and cast doubt on the victim, Michael Brown. On Friday, Mr. McCulloch devoted much of his talk to rebutting such criticism, which included that he gave incorrect instructions to the grand jury and that his assistants were not tough enough in their questioning of witnesses who supported Officer Wilson\u2019s version of events.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI could be wrong, but I\u2019m pretty sure all lives matter,\u201d the prosecutor said. In the aftermath of the grand jury decision, critics said that Mr. McCulloch and his assistants had presented evidence in ways that favored the police officer, Darren Wilson, and cast doubt on the victim, Michael Brown. On Friday, Mr. McCulloch devoted much of his talk to rebutting such criticism, which included that he gave incorrect instructions to the grand jury and that his assistants were not tough enough in their questioning of witnesses who supported Officer Wilson\u2019s version of events.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI could be wrong, but I\u2019m pretty sure all lives matter,\u201d the prosecutor said."} -{"question": "Who moved beside the lake 12 years ago?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe moved here 12 years ago when there was another house on the site because we wanted to live beside the lake, in a home with its own mooring and fishing rights,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cThe location also appealed to us because it was so rare \u2014 it is extremely unusual to find a place like this, just half an hour from London and within easy reach of the M25 motorway.\u201d \u201cOur aim at the time was to extend and refurbish the original house, but as we looked into it we realized it would be better to completely rebuild,\u201d he continued. \u201cThat way we would end up with a home that was exactly what we wanted: something with a much more contemporary flavor.\u201d The 4,900-square-foot property, which is on the market for 2 million pounds, or $3.1 million, was six years in the planning before construction began in 2009. It took just nine months for the old house to be demolished and the first and second stories of the new building to be completed, then a further three or four months for the basement level and the interiors to be finished. \u201cWe spent approximately \u00a31 million on the build, with the builders beating the budget and completing on time,\u201d Mrs. Hague said.", "answer": "Mr. Hague", "sentence": "\u201cWe moved here 12 years ago when there was another house on the site because we wanted to live beside the lake, in a home with its own mooring and fishing rights,\u201d Mr. Hague said.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cWe moved here 12 years ago when there was another house on the site because we wanted to live beside the lake, in a home with its own mooring and fishing rights,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cThe location also appealed to us because it was so rare \u2014 it is extremely unusual to find a place like this, just half an hour from London and within easy reach of the M25 motorway.\u201d \u201cOur aim at the time was to extend and refurbish the original house, but as we looked into it we realized it would be better to completely rebuild,\u201d he continued. \u201cThat way we would end up with a home that was exactly what we wanted: something with a much more contemporary flavor.\u201d The 4,900-square-foot property, which is on the market for 2 million pounds, or $3.1 million, was six years in the planning before construction began in 2009. It took just nine months for the old house to be demolished and the first and second stories of the new building to be completed, then a further three or four months for the basement level and the interiors to be finished. \u201cWe spent approximately \u00a31 million on the build, with the builders beating the budget and completing on time,\u201d Mrs. Hague said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe moved here 12 years ago when there was another house on the site because we wanted to live beside the lake, in a home with its own mooring and fishing rights,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cThe location also appealed to us because it was so rare \u2014 it is extremely unusual to find a place like this, just half an hour from London and within easy reach of the M25 motorway.\u201d \u201cOur aim at the time was to extend and refurbish the original house, but as we looked into it we realized it would be better to completely rebuild,\u201d he continued. \u201cThat way we would end up with a home that was exactly what we wanted: something with a much more contemporary flavor.\u201d The 4,900-square-foot property, which is on the market for 2 million pounds, or $3.1 million, was six years in the planning before construction began in 2009. It took just nine months for the old house to be demolished and the first and second stories of the new building to be completed, then a further three or four months for the basement level and the interiors to be finished. \u201cWe spent approximately \u00a31 million on the build, with the builders beating the budget and completing on time,\u201d Mrs. Hague said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe moved here 12 years ago when there was another house on the site because we wanted to live beside the lake, in a home with its own mooring and fishing rights,\u201d Mr. Hague said."} -{"question": "What city is the house a half hour away from?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe moved here 12 years ago when there was another house on the site because we wanted to live beside the lake, in a home with its own mooring and fishing rights,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cThe location also appealed to us because it was so rare \u2014 it is extremely unusual to find a place like this, just half an hour from London and within easy reach of the M25 motorway.\u201d \u201cOur aim at the time was to extend and refurbish the original house, but as we looked into it we realized it would be better to completely rebuild,\u201d he continued. \u201cThat way we would end up with a home that was exactly what we wanted: something with a much more contemporary flavor.\u201d The 4,900-square-foot property, which is on the market for 2 million pounds, or $3.1 million, was six years in the planning before construction began in 2009. It took just nine months for the old house to be demolished and the first and second stories of the new building to be completed, then a further three or four months for the basement level and the interiors to be finished. \u201cWe spent approximately \u00a31 million on the build, with the builders beating the budget and completing on time,\u201d Mrs. Hague said.", "answer": "London", "sentence": "\u201cThe location also appealed to us because it was so rare \u2014 it is extremely unusual to find a place like this, just half an hour from London and within easy reach of the M25 motorway.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe moved here 12 years ago when there was another house on the site because we wanted to live beside the lake, in a home with its own mooring and fishing rights,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cThe location also appealed to us because it was so rare \u2014 it is extremely unusual to find a place like this, just half an hour from London and within easy reach of the M25 motorway.\u201d \u201cOur aim at the time was to extend and refurbish the original house, but as we looked into it we realized it would be better to completely rebuild,\u201d he continued. \u201cThat way we would end up with a home that was exactly what we wanted: something with a much more contemporary flavor.\u201d The 4,900-square-foot property, which is on the market for 2 million pounds, or $3.1 million, was six years in the planning before construction began in 2009. It took just nine months for the old house to be demolished and the first and second stories of the new building to be completed, then a further three or four months for the basement level and the interiors to be finished. \u201cWe spent approximately \u00a31 million on the build, with the builders beating the budget and completing on time,\u201d Mrs. Hague said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe moved here 12 years ago when there was another house on the site because we wanted to live beside the lake, in a home with its own mooring and fishing rights,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cThe location also appealed to us because it was so rare \u2014 it is extremely unusual to find a place like this, just half an hour from London and within easy reach of the M25 motorway.\u201d \u201cOur aim at the time was to extend and refurbish the original house, but as we looked into it we realized it would be better to completely rebuild,\u201d he continued. \u201cThat way we would end up with a home that was exactly what we wanted: something with a much more contemporary flavor.\u201d The 4,900-square-foot property, which is on the market for 2 million pounds, or $3.1 million, was six years in the planning before construction began in 2009. It took just nine months for the old house to be demolished and the first and second stories of the new building to be completed, then a further three or four months for the basement level and the interiors to be finished. \u201cWe spent approximately \u00a31 million on the build, with the builders beating the budget and completing on time,\u201d Mrs. Hague said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe location also appealed to us because it was so rare \u2014 it is extremely unusual to find a place like this, just half an hour from London and within easy reach of the M25 motorway.\u201d"} -{"question": "Which motorway is near the house?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe moved here 12 years ago when there was another house on the site because we wanted to live beside the lake, in a home with its own mooring and fishing rights,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cThe location also appealed to us because it was so rare \u2014 it is extremely unusual to find a place like this, just half an hour from London and within easy reach of the M25 motorway.\u201d \u201cOur aim at the time was to extend and refurbish the original house, but as we looked into it we realized it would be better to completely rebuild,\u201d he continued. \u201cThat way we would end up with a home that was exactly what we wanted: something with a much more contemporary flavor.\u201d The 4,900-square-foot property, which is on the market for 2 million pounds, or $3.1 million, was six years in the planning before construction began in 2009. It took just nine months for the old house to be demolished and the first and second stories of the new building to be completed, then a further three or four months for the basement level and the interiors to be finished. \u201cWe spent approximately \u00a31 million on the build, with the builders beating the budget and completing on time,\u201d Mrs. Hague said.", "answer": "M25", "sentence": "\u201cThe location also appealed to us because it was so rare \u2014 it is extremely unusual to find a place like this, just half an hour from London and within easy reach of the M25 motorway.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe moved here 12 years ago when there was another house on the site because we wanted to live beside the lake, in a home with its own mooring and fishing rights,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cThe location also appealed to us because it was so rare \u2014 it is extremely unusual to find a place like this, just half an hour from London and within easy reach of the M25 motorway.\u201d \u201cOur aim at the time was to extend and refurbish the original house, but as we looked into it we realized it would be better to completely rebuild,\u201d he continued. \u201cThat way we would end up with a home that was exactly what we wanted: something with a much more contemporary flavor.\u201d The 4,900-square-foot property, which is on the market for 2 million pounds, or $3.1 million, was six years in the planning before construction began in 2009. It took just nine months for the old house to be demolished and the first and second stories of the new building to be completed, then a further three or four months for the basement level and the interiors to be finished. \u201cWe spent approximately \u00a31 million on the build, with the builders beating the budget and completing on time,\u201d Mrs. Hague said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe moved here 12 years ago when there was another house on the site because we wanted to live beside the lake, in a home with its own mooring and fishing rights,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cThe location also appealed to us because it was so rare \u2014 it is extremely unusual to find a place like this, just half an hour from London and within easy reach of the M25 motorway.\u201d \u201cOur aim at the time was to extend and refurbish the original house, but as we looked into it we realized it would be better to completely rebuild,\u201d he continued. \u201cThat way we would end up with a home that was exactly what we wanted: something with a much more contemporary flavor.\u201d The 4,900-square-foot property, which is on the market for 2 million pounds, or $3.1 million, was six years in the planning before construction began in 2009. It took just nine months for the old house to be demolished and the first and second stories of the new building to be completed, then a further three or four months for the basement level and the interiors to be finished. \u201cWe spent approximately \u00a31 million on the build, with the builders beating the budget and completing on time,\u201d Mrs. Hague said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe location also appealed to us because it was so rare \u2014 it is extremely unusual to find a place like this, just half an hour from London and within easy reach of the M25 motorway.\u201d"} -{"question": "What size is the property?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe moved here 12 years ago when there was another house on the site because we wanted to live beside the lake, in a home with its own mooring and fishing rights,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cThe location also appealed to us because it was so rare \u2014 it is extremely unusual to find a place like this, just half an hour from London and within easy reach of the M25 motorway.\u201d \u201cOur aim at the time was to extend and refurbish the original house, but as we looked into it we realized it would be better to completely rebuild,\u201d he continued. \u201cThat way we would end up with a home that was exactly what we wanted: something with a much more contemporary flavor.\u201d The 4,900-square-foot property, which is on the market for 2 million pounds, or $3.1 million, was six years in the planning before construction began in 2009. It took just nine months for the old house to be demolished and the first and second stories of the new building to be completed, then a further three or four months for the basement level and the interiors to be finished. \u201cWe spent approximately \u00a31 million on the build, with the builders beating the budget and completing on time,\u201d Mrs. Hague said.", "answer": "4,900-square-foot", "sentence": "The 4,900-square-foot property, which is on the market for 2 million pounds, or $3.1 million, was six years in the planning before construction began in 2009.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe moved here 12 years ago when there was another house on the site because we wanted to live beside the lake, in a home with its own mooring and fishing rights,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cThe location also appealed to us because it was so rare \u2014 it is extremely unusual to find a place like this, just half an hour from London and within easy reach of the M25 motorway.\u201d \u201cOur aim at the time was to extend and refurbish the original house, but as we looked into it we realized it would be better to completely rebuild,\u201d he continued. \u201cThat way we would end up with a home that was exactly what we wanted: something with a much more contemporary flavor.\u201d The 4,900-square-foot property, which is on the market for 2 million pounds, or $3.1 million, was six years in the planning before construction began in 2009. It took just nine months for the old house to be demolished and the first and second stories of the new building to be completed, then a further three or four months for the basement level and the interiors to be finished. \u201cWe spent approximately \u00a31 million on the build, with the builders beating the budget and completing on time,\u201d Mrs. Hague said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe moved here 12 years ago when there was another house on the site because we wanted to live beside the lake, in a home with its own mooring and fishing rights,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cThe location also appealed to us because it was so rare \u2014 it is extremely unusual to find a place like this, just half an hour from London and within easy reach of the M25 motorway.\u201d \u201cOur aim at the time was to extend and refurbish the original house, but as we looked into it we realized it would be better to completely rebuild,\u201d he continued. \u201cThat way we would end up with a home that was exactly what we wanted: something with a much more contemporary flavor.\u201d The 4,900-square-foot property, which is on the market for 2 million pounds, or $3.1 million, was six years in the planning before construction began in 2009. It took just nine months for the old house to be demolished and the first and second stories of the new building to be completed, then a further three or four months for the basement level and the interiors to be finished. \u201cWe spent approximately \u00a31 million on the build, with the builders beating the budget and completing on time,\u201d Mrs. Hague said.", "sentence_answer": "The 4,900-square-foot property, which is on the market for 2 million pounds, or $3.1 million, was six years in the planning before construction began in 2009."} -{"question": "How much is the home worth?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe moved here 12 years ago when there was another house on the site because we wanted to live beside the lake, in a home with its own mooring and fishing rights,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cThe location also appealed to us because it was so rare \u2014 it is extremely unusual to find a place like this, just half an hour from London and within easy reach of the M25 motorway.\u201d \u201cOur aim at the time was to extend and refurbish the original house, but as we looked into it we realized it would be better to completely rebuild,\u201d he continued. \u201cThat way we would end up with a home that was exactly what we wanted: something with a much more contemporary flavor.\u201d The 4,900-square-foot property, which is on the market for 2 million pounds, or $3.1 million, was six years in the planning before construction began in 2009. It took just nine months for the old house to be demolished and the first and second stories of the new building to be completed, then a further three or four months for the basement level and the interiors to be finished. \u201cWe spent approximately \u00a31 million on the build, with the builders beating the budget and completing on time,\u201d Mrs. Hague said.", "answer": "2 million pounds, or $3.1 million", "sentence": "The 4,900-square-foot property, which is on the market for 2 million pounds, or $3.1 million , was six years in the planning before construction began in 2009.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe moved here 12 years ago when there was another house on the site because we wanted to live beside the lake, in a home with its own mooring and fishing rights,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cThe location also appealed to us because it was so rare \u2014 it is extremely unusual to find a place like this, just half an hour from London and within easy reach of the M25 motorway.\u201d \u201cOur aim at the time was to extend and refurbish the original house, but as we looked into it we realized it would be better to completely rebuild,\u201d he continued. \u201cThat way we would end up with a home that was exactly what we wanted: something with a much more contemporary flavor.\u201d The 4,900-square-foot property, which is on the market for 2 million pounds, or $3.1 million , was six years in the planning before construction began in 2009. It took just nine months for the old house to be demolished and the first and second stories of the new building to be completed, then a further three or four months for the basement level and the interiors to be finished. \u201cWe spent approximately \u00a31 million on the build, with the builders beating the budget and completing on time,\u201d Mrs. Hague said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe moved here 12 years ago when there was another house on the site because we wanted to live beside the lake, in a home with its own mooring and fishing rights,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cThe location also appealed to us because it was so rare \u2014 it is extremely unusual to find a place like this, just half an hour from London and within easy reach of the M25 motorway.\u201d \u201cOur aim at the time was to extend and refurbish the original house, but as we looked into it we realized it would be better to completely rebuild,\u201d he continued. \u201cThat way we would end up with a home that was exactly what we wanted: something with a much more contemporary flavor.\u201d The 4,900-square-foot property, which is on the market for 2 million pounds, or $3.1 million , was six years in the planning before construction began in 2009. It took just nine months for the old house to be demolished and the first and second stories of the new building to be completed, then a further three or four months for the basement level and the interiors to be finished. \u201cWe spent approximately \u00a31 million on the build, with the builders beating the budget and completing on time,\u201d Mrs. Hague said.", "sentence_answer": "The 4,900-square-foot property, which is on the market for 2 million pounds, or $3.1 million , was six years in the planning before construction began in 2009."} -{"question": "What type of design is the home?", "paragraph": "The couple told their architect that they wanted a home that would blend in with its setting yet also incorporate key elements of modern design, such as underfloor heating throughout. \u201cIt also needed to have six bedrooms and a central Poggenpohl kitchen,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cI wanted to be able to walk straight into the house at the first-floor level and not to be greeted by the sight of a staircase. Instead, I wanted to be greeted by the flames from a double-sided fireplace, which had been lined up exactly with the front door.\u201d", "answer": "modern design", "sentence": "The couple told their architect that they wanted a home that would blend in with its setting yet also incorporate key elements of modern design , such as underfloor heating throughout.", "paragraph_sentence": " The couple told their architect that they wanted a home that would blend in with its setting yet also incorporate key elements of modern design , such as underfloor heating throughout. \u201cIt also needed to have six bedrooms and a central Poggenpohl kitchen,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cI wanted to be able to walk straight into the house at the first-floor level and not to be greeted by the sight of a staircase. Instead, I wanted to be greeted by the flames from a double-sided fireplace, which had been lined up exactly with the front door.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The couple told their architect that they wanted a home that would blend in with its setting yet also incorporate key elements of modern design , such as underfloor heating throughout. \u201cIt also needed to have six bedrooms and a central Poggenpohl kitchen,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cI wanted to be able to walk straight into the house at the first-floor level and not to be greeted by the sight of a staircase. Instead, I wanted to be greeted by the flames from a double-sided fireplace, which had been lined up exactly with the front door.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The couple told their architect that they wanted a home that would blend in with its setting yet also incorporate key elements of modern design , such as underfloor heating throughout."} -{"question": "What was the required position of the fireplace?", "paragraph": "The couple told their architect that they wanted a home that would blend in with its setting yet also incorporate key elements of modern design, such as underfloor heating throughout. \u201cIt also needed to have six bedrooms and a central Poggenpohl kitchen,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cI wanted to be able to walk straight into the house at the first-floor level and not to be greeted by the sight of a staircase. Instead, I wanted to be greeted by the flames from a double-sided fireplace, which had been lined up exactly with the front door.\u201d", "answer": "lined up exactly with the front door", "sentence": "Instead, I wanted to be greeted by the flames from a double-sided fireplace, which had been lined up exactly with the front door .", "paragraph_sentence": "The couple told their architect that they wanted a home that would blend in with its setting yet also incorporate key elements of modern design, such as underfloor heating throughout. \u201cIt also needed to have six bedrooms and a central Poggenpohl kitchen,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cI wanted to be able to walk straight into the house at the first-floor level and not to be greeted by the sight of a staircase. Instead, I wanted to be greeted by the flames from a double-sided fireplace, which had been lined up exactly with the front door . \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The couple told their architect that they wanted a home that would blend in with its setting yet also incorporate key elements of modern design, such as underfloor heating throughout. \u201cIt also needed to have six bedrooms and a central Poggenpohl kitchen,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cI wanted to be able to walk straight into the house at the first-floor level and not to be greeted by the sight of a staircase. Instead, I wanted to be greeted by the flames from a double-sided fireplace, which had been lined up exactly with the front door .\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Instead, I wanted to be greeted by the flames from a double-sided fireplace, which had been lined up exactly with the front door ."} -{"question": "What type of kitchen was desired?", "paragraph": "The couple told their architect that they wanted a home that would blend in with its setting yet also incorporate key elements of modern design, such as underfloor heating throughout. \u201cIt also needed to have six bedrooms and a central Poggenpohl kitchen,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cI wanted to be able to walk straight into the house at the first-floor level and not to be greeted by the sight of a staircase. Instead, I wanted to be greeted by the flames from a double-sided fireplace, which had been lined up exactly with the front door.\u201d", "answer": "central Poggenpohl", "sentence": "\u201cIt also needed to have six bedrooms and a central Poggenpohl kitchen", "paragraph_sentence": "The couple told their architect that they wanted a home that would blend in with its setting yet also incorporate key elements of modern design, such as underfloor heating throughout. \u201cIt also needed to have six bedrooms and a central Poggenpohl kitchen ,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cI wanted to be able to walk straight into the house at the first-floor level and not to be greeted by the sight of a staircase. Instead, I wanted to be greeted by the flames from a double-sided fireplace, which had been lined up exactly with the front door.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The couple told their architect that they wanted a home that would blend in with its setting yet also incorporate key elements of modern design, such as underfloor heating throughout. \u201cIt also needed to have six bedrooms and a central Poggenpohl kitchen,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cI wanted to be able to walk straight into the house at the first-floor level and not to be greeted by the sight of a staircase. Instead, I wanted to be greeted by the flames from a double-sided fireplace, which had been lined up exactly with the front door.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt also needed to have six bedrooms and a central Poggenpohl kitchen"} -{"question": "How many bedrooms did the house need to have?", "paragraph": "The couple told their architect that they wanted a home that would blend in with its setting yet also incorporate key elements of modern design, such as underfloor heating throughout. \u201cIt also needed to have six bedrooms and a central Poggenpohl kitchen,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cI wanted to be able to walk straight into the house at the first-floor level and not to be greeted by the sight of a staircase. Instead, I wanted to be greeted by the flames from a double-sided fireplace, which had been lined up exactly with the front door.\u201d", "answer": "six", "sentence": "\u201cIt also needed to have six bedrooms and a central Poggenpohl kitchen,\u201d Mr. Hague said.", "paragraph_sentence": "The couple told their architect that they wanted a home that would blend in with its setting yet also incorporate key elements of modern design, such as underfloor heating throughout. \u201cIt also needed to have six bedrooms and a central Poggenpohl kitchen,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cI wanted to be able to walk straight into the house at the first-floor level and not to be greeted by the sight of a staircase. Instead, I wanted to be greeted by the flames from a double-sided fireplace, which had been lined up exactly with the front door.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The couple told their architect that they wanted a home that would blend in with its setting yet also incorporate key elements of modern design, such as underfloor heating throughout. \u201cIt also needed to have six bedrooms and a central Poggenpohl kitchen,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cI wanted to be able to walk straight into the house at the first-floor level and not to be greeted by the sight of a staircase. Instead, I wanted to be greeted by the flames from a double-sided fireplace, which had been lined up exactly with the front door.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt also needed to have six bedrooms and a central Poggenpohl kitchen,\u201d Mr. Hague said."} -{"question": "How did Mr. Hague want to be greeted?", "paragraph": "The couple told their architect that they wanted a home that would blend in with its setting yet also incorporate key elements of modern design, such as underfloor heating throughout. \u201cIt also needed to have six bedrooms and a central Poggenpohl kitchen,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cI wanted to be able to walk straight into the house at the first-floor level and not to be greeted by the sight of a staircase. Instead, I wanted to be greeted by the flames from a double-sided fireplace, which had been lined up exactly with the front door.\u201d", "answer": "by the flames from a double-sided fireplace", "sentence": "Instead, I wanted to be greeted by the flames from a double-sided fireplace , which had been lined up exactly with the front door.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "The couple told their architect that they wanted a home that would blend in with its setting yet also incorporate key elements of modern design, such as underfloor heating throughout. \u201cIt also needed to have six bedrooms and a central Poggenpohl kitchen,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cI wanted to be able to walk straight into the house at the first-floor level and not to be greeted by the sight of a staircase. Instead, I wanted to be greeted by the flames from a double-sided fireplace , which had been lined up exactly with the front door.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "The couple told their architect that they wanted a home that would blend in with its setting yet also incorporate key elements of modern design, such as underfloor heating throughout. \u201cIt also needed to have six bedrooms and a central Poggenpohl kitchen,\u201d Mr. Hague said. \u201cI wanted to be able to walk straight into the house at the first-floor level and not to be greeted by the sight of a staircase. Instead, I wanted to be greeted by the flames from a double-sided fireplace , which had been lined up exactly with the front door.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Instead, I wanted to be greeted by the flames from a double-sided fireplace , which had been lined up exactly with the front door.\u201d"} -{"question": "What type of staircase leads to the galleried landing?", "paragraph": "A custom-made staircase to the side of the reception hall leads up to a galleried landing, which gives on to the six bedrooms and family bathroom. At 195 square feet, the master bedroom has its own en-suite bathroom and access to a private balcony, taking in the vistas down toward the lake. Three smaller bedrooms open onto a second balcony overlooking the lake, while a fourth has a small balcony to the front. Baths in both the master suite and family bathroom have been set into picture bay windows to make the most of the spectacular views from their tubs. The basement was the final phase of the house to be completed. While this includes a laundry, it is largely a leisure space, comprising a cinema room, a gym and a sitting room with a wood-burning stove. The wall between the gym and the sitting room is partly filled with a double-sided Indian Ocean aquarium, which is illuminated and populated by an array of tropical fish. \u201cWe wanted this part of the house to be a place to come to relax after a busy day or week at work: there is a sauna, with a built-in television, and outside on the deck, a hot tub, with views down to the lake,\u201d Mr. Hague said. Leading from the driveway is a series of substantial outbuildings, including a game room and office, a second office, a store room and a garage.", "answer": "custom-made", "sentence": "A custom-made staircase to the side of the reception hall leads up to a galleried landing, which gives on to the six bedrooms and family bathroom.", "paragraph_sentence": " A custom-made staircase to the side of the reception hall leads up to a galleried landing, which gives on to the six bedrooms and family bathroom. At 195 square feet, the master bedroom has its own en-suite bathroom and access to a private balcony, taking in the vistas down toward the lake. Three smaller bedrooms open onto a second balcony overlooking the lake, while a fourth has a small balcony to the front. Baths in both the master suite and family bathroom have been set into picture bay windows to make the most of the spectacular views from their tubs. The basement was the final phase of the house to be completed. While this includes a laundry, it is largely a leisure space, comprising a cinema room, a gym and a sitting room with a wood-burning stove. The wall between the gym and the sitting room is partly filled with a double-sided Indian Ocean aquarium, which is illuminated and populated by an array of tropical fish. \u201cWe wanted this part of the house to be a place to come to relax after a busy day or week at work: there is a sauna, with a built-in television, and outside on the deck, a hot tub, with views down to the lake,\u201d Mr. Hague said. Leading from the driveway is a series of substantial outbuildings, including a game room and office, a second office, a store room and a garage.", "paragraph_answer": "A custom-made staircase to the side of the reception hall leads up to a galleried landing, which gives on to the six bedrooms and family bathroom. At 195 square feet, the master bedroom has its own en-suite bathroom and access to a private balcony, taking in the vistas down toward the lake. Three smaller bedrooms open onto a second balcony overlooking the lake, while a fourth has a small balcony to the front. Baths in both the master suite and family bathroom have been set into picture bay windows to make the most of the spectacular views from their tubs. The basement was the final phase of the house to be completed. While this includes a laundry, it is largely a leisure space, comprising a cinema room, a gym and a sitting room with a wood-burning stove. The wall between the gym and the sitting room is partly filled with a double-sided Indian Ocean aquarium, which is illuminated and populated by an array of tropical fish. \u201cWe wanted this part of the house to be a place to come to relax after a busy day or week at work: there is a sauna, with a built-in television, and outside on the deck, a hot tub, with views down to the lake,\u201d Mr. Hague said. Leading from the driveway is a series of substantial outbuildings, including a game room and office, a second office, a store room and a garage.", "sentence_answer": "A custom-made staircase to the side of the reception hall leads up to a galleried landing, which gives on to the six bedrooms and family bathroom."} -{"question": "How large is the master bedroom?", "paragraph": "A custom-made staircase to the side of the reception hall leads up to a galleried landing, which gives on to the six bedrooms and family bathroom. At 195 square feet, the master bedroom has its own en-suite bathroom and access to a private balcony, taking in the vistas down toward the lake. Three smaller bedrooms open onto a second balcony overlooking the lake, while a fourth has a small balcony to the front. Baths in both the master suite and family bathroom have been set into picture bay windows to make the most of the spectacular views from their tubs. The basement was the final phase of the house to be completed. While this includes a laundry, it is largely a leisure space, comprising a cinema room, a gym and a sitting room with a wood-burning stove. The wall between the gym and the sitting room is partly filled with a double-sided Indian Ocean aquarium, which is illuminated and populated by an array of tropical fish. \u201cWe wanted this part of the house to be a place to come to relax after a busy day or week at work: there is a sauna, with a built-in television, and outside on the deck, a hot tub, with views down to the lake,\u201d Mr. Hague said. Leading from the driveway is a series of substantial outbuildings, including a game room and office, a second office, a store room and a garage.", "answer": "195 square feet", "sentence": "At 195 square feet , the master bedroom has its own en-suite bathroom and access to a private balcony, taking in the vistas down toward the lake.", "paragraph_sentence": "A custom-made staircase to the side of the reception hall leads up to a galleried landing, which gives on to the six bedrooms and family bathroom. At 195 square feet , the master bedroom has its own en-suite bathroom and access to a private balcony, taking in the vistas down toward the lake. Three smaller bedrooms open onto a second balcony overlooking the lake, while a fourth has a small balcony to the front. Baths in both the master suite and family bathroom have been set into picture bay windows to make the most of the spectacular views from their tubs. The basement was the final phase of the house to be completed. While this includes a laundry, it is largely a leisure space, comprising a cinema room, a gym and a sitting room with a wood-burning stove. The wall between the gym and the sitting room is partly filled with a double-sided Indian Ocean aquarium, which is illuminated and populated by an array of tropical fish. \u201cWe wanted this part of the house to be a place to come to relax after a busy day or week at work: there is a sauna, with a built-in television, and outside on the deck, a hot tub, with views down to the lake,\u201d Mr. Hague said. Leading from the driveway is a series of substantial outbuildings, including a game room and office, a second office, a store room and a garage.", "paragraph_answer": "A custom-made staircase to the side of the reception hall leads up to a galleried landing, which gives on to the six bedrooms and family bathroom. At 195 square feet , the master bedroom has its own en-suite bathroom and access to a private balcony, taking in the vistas down toward the lake. Three smaller bedrooms open onto a second balcony overlooking the lake, while a fourth has a small balcony to the front. Baths in both the master suite and family bathroom have been set into picture bay windows to make the most of the spectacular views from their tubs. The basement was the final phase of the house to be completed. While this includes a laundry, it is largely a leisure space, comprising a cinema room, a gym and a sitting room with a wood-burning stove. The wall between the gym and the sitting room is partly filled with a double-sided Indian Ocean aquarium, which is illuminated and populated by an array of tropical fish. \u201cWe wanted this part of the house to be a place to come to relax after a busy day or week at work: there is a sauna, with a built-in television, and outside on the deck, a hot tub, with views down to the lake,\u201d Mr. Hague said. Leading from the driveway is a series of substantial outbuildings, including a game room and office, a second office, a store room and a garage.", "sentence_answer": "At 195 square feet , the master bedroom has its own en-suite bathroom and access to a private balcony, taking in the vistas down toward the lake."} -{"question": "How many bedrooms open to a second balcony?", "paragraph": "A custom-made staircase to the side of the reception hall leads up to a galleried landing, which gives on to the six bedrooms and family bathroom. At 195 square feet, the master bedroom has its own en-suite bathroom and access to a private balcony, taking in the vistas down toward the lake. Three smaller bedrooms open onto a second balcony overlooking the lake, while a fourth has a small balcony to the front. Baths in both the master suite and family bathroom have been set into picture bay windows to make the most of the spectacular views from their tubs. The basement was the final phase of the house to be completed. While this includes a laundry, it is largely a leisure space, comprising a cinema room, a gym and a sitting room with a wood-burning stove. The wall between the gym and the sitting room is partly filled with a double-sided Indian Ocean aquarium, which is illuminated and populated by an array of tropical fish. \u201cWe wanted this part of the house to be a place to come to relax after a busy day or week at work: there is a sauna, with a built-in television, and outside on the deck, a hot tub, with views down to the lake,\u201d Mr. Hague said. Leading from the driveway is a series of substantial outbuildings, including a game room and office, a second office, a store room and a garage.", "answer": "Three", "sentence": "Three smaller bedrooms open onto a second balcony overlooking the lake, while a fourth has a small balcony to the front.", "paragraph_sentence": "A custom-made staircase to the side of the reception hall leads up to a galleried landing, which gives on to the six bedrooms and family bathroom. At 195 square feet, the master bedroom has its own en-suite bathroom and access to a private balcony, taking in the vistas down toward the lake. Three smaller bedrooms open onto a second balcony overlooking the lake, while a fourth has a small balcony to the front. Baths in both the master suite and family bathroom have been set into picture bay windows to make the most of the spectacular views from their tubs. The basement was the final phase of the house to be completed. While this includes a laundry, it is largely a leisure space, comprising a cinema room, a gym and a sitting room with a wood-burning stove. The wall between the gym and the sitting room is partly filled with a double-sided Indian Ocean aquarium, which is illuminated and populated by an array of tropical fish. \u201cWe wanted this part of the house to be a place to come to relax after a busy day or week at work: there is a sauna, with a built-in television, and outside on the deck, a hot tub, with views down to the lake,\u201d Mr. Hague said. Leading from the driveway is a series of substantial outbuildings, including a game room and office, a second office, a store room and a garage.", "paragraph_answer": "A custom-made staircase to the side of the reception hall leads up to a galleried landing, which gives on to the six bedrooms and family bathroom. At 195 square feet, the master bedroom has its own en-suite bathroom and access to a private balcony, taking in the vistas down toward the lake. Three smaller bedrooms open onto a second balcony overlooking the lake, while a fourth has a small balcony to the front. Baths in both the master suite and family bathroom have been set into picture bay windows to make the most of the spectacular views from their tubs. The basement was the final phase of the house to be completed. While this includes a laundry, it is largely a leisure space, comprising a cinema room, a gym and a sitting room with a wood-burning stove. The wall between the gym and the sitting room is partly filled with a double-sided Indian Ocean aquarium, which is illuminated and populated by an array of tropical fish. \u201cWe wanted this part of the house to be a place to come to relax after a busy day or week at work: there is a sauna, with a built-in television, and outside on the deck, a hot tub, with views down to the lake,\u201d Mr. Hague said. Leading from the driveway is a series of substantial outbuildings, including a game room and office, a second office, a store room and a garage.", "sentence_answer": " Three smaller bedrooms open onto a second balcony overlooking the lake, while a fourth has a small balcony to the front."} -{"question": "Where does the fourth bedroom have a balcony to?", "paragraph": "A custom-made staircase to the side of the reception hall leads up to a galleried landing, which gives on to the six bedrooms and family bathroom. At 195 square feet, the master bedroom has its own en-suite bathroom and access to a private balcony, taking in the vistas down toward the lake. Three smaller bedrooms open onto a second balcony overlooking the lake, while a fourth has a small balcony to the front. Baths in both the master suite and family bathroom have been set into picture bay windows to make the most of the spectacular views from their tubs. The basement was the final phase of the house to be completed. While this includes a laundry, it is largely a leisure space, comprising a cinema room, a gym and a sitting room with a wood-burning stove. The wall between the gym and the sitting room is partly filled with a double-sided Indian Ocean aquarium, which is illuminated and populated by an array of tropical fish. \u201cWe wanted this part of the house to be a place to come to relax after a busy day or week at work: there is a sauna, with a built-in television, and outside on the deck, a hot tub, with views down to the lake,\u201d Mr. Hague said. Leading from the driveway is a series of substantial outbuildings, including a game room and office, a second office, a store room and a garage.", "answer": "the front", "sentence": "Three smaller bedrooms open onto a second balcony overlooking the lake, while a fourth has a small balcony to the front .", "paragraph_sentence": "A custom-made staircase to the side of the reception hall leads up to a galleried landing, which gives on to the six bedrooms and family bathroom. At 195 square feet, the master bedroom has its own en-suite bathroom and access to a private balcony, taking in the vistas down toward the lake. Three smaller bedrooms open onto a second balcony overlooking the lake, while a fourth has a small balcony to the front . Baths in both the master suite and family bathroom have been set into picture bay windows to make the most of the spectacular views from their tubs. The basement was the final phase of the house to be completed. While this includes a laundry, it is largely a leisure space, comprising a cinema room, a gym and a sitting room with a wood-burning stove. The wall between the gym and the sitting room is partly filled with a double-sided Indian Ocean aquarium, which is illuminated and populated by an array of tropical fish. \u201cWe wanted this part of the house to be a place to come to relax after a busy day or week at work: there is a sauna, with a built-in television, and outside on the deck, a hot tub, with views down to the lake,\u201d Mr. Hague said. Leading from the driveway is a series of substantial outbuildings, including a game room and office, a second office, a store room and a garage.", "paragraph_answer": "A custom-made staircase to the side of the reception hall leads up to a galleried landing, which gives on to the six bedrooms and family bathroom. At 195 square feet, the master bedroom has its own en-suite bathroom and access to a private balcony, taking in the vistas down toward the lake. Three smaller bedrooms open onto a second balcony overlooking the lake, while a fourth has a small balcony to the front . Baths in both the master suite and family bathroom have been set into picture bay windows to make the most of the spectacular views from their tubs. The basement was the final phase of the house to be completed. While this includes a laundry, it is largely a leisure space, comprising a cinema room, a gym and a sitting room with a wood-burning stove. The wall between the gym and the sitting room is partly filled with a double-sided Indian Ocean aquarium, which is illuminated and populated by an array of tropical fish. \u201cWe wanted this part of the house to be a place to come to relax after a busy day or week at work: there is a sauna, with a built-in television, and outside on the deck, a hot tub, with views down to the lake,\u201d Mr. Hague said. Leading from the driveway is a series of substantial outbuildings, including a game room and office, a second office, a store room and a garage.", "sentence_answer": "Three smaller bedrooms open onto a second balcony overlooking the lake, while a fourth has a small balcony to the front ."} -{"question": "What type of aquarium is present in the house?", "paragraph": "A custom-made staircase to the side of the reception hall leads up to a galleried landing, which gives on to the six bedrooms and family bathroom. At 195 square feet, the master bedroom has its own en-suite bathroom and access to a private balcony, taking in the vistas down toward the lake. Three smaller bedrooms open onto a second balcony overlooking the lake, while a fourth has a small balcony to the front. Baths in both the master suite and family bathroom have been set into picture bay windows to make the most of the spectacular views from their tubs. The basement was the final phase of the house to be completed. While this includes a laundry, it is largely a leisure space, comprising a cinema room, a gym and a sitting room with a wood-burning stove. The wall between the gym and the sitting room is partly filled with a double-sided Indian Ocean aquarium, which is illuminated and populated by an array of tropical fish. \u201cWe wanted this part of the house to be a place to come to relax after a busy day or week at work: there is a sauna, with a built-in television, and outside on the deck, a hot tub, with views down to the lake,\u201d Mr. Hague said. Leading from the driveway is a series of substantial outbuildings, including a game room and office, a second office, a store room and a garage.", "answer": "double-sided Indian Ocean aquarium", "sentence": "The wall between the gym and the sitting room is partly filled with a double-sided Indian Ocean aquarium , which is illuminated and populated by an array of tropical fish.", "paragraph_sentence": "A custom-made staircase to the side of the reception hall leads up to a galleried landing, which gives on to the six bedrooms and family bathroom. At 195 square feet, the master bedroom has its own en-suite bathroom and access to a private balcony, taking in the vistas down toward the lake. Three smaller bedrooms open onto a second balcony overlooking the lake, while a fourth has a small balcony to the front. Baths in both the master suite and family bathroom have been set into picture bay windows to make the most of the spectacular views from their tubs. The basement was the final phase of the house to be completed. While this includes a laundry, it is largely a leisure space, comprising a cinema room, a gym and a sitting room with a wood-burning stove. The wall between the gym and the sitting room is partly filled with a double-sided Indian Ocean aquarium , which is illuminated and populated by an array of tropical fish. \u201cWe wanted this part of the house to be a place to come to relax after a busy day or week at work: there is a sauna, with a built-in television, and outside on the deck, a hot tub, with views down to the lake,\u201d Mr. Hague said. Leading from the driveway is a series of substantial outbuildings, including a game room and office, a second office, a store room and a garage.", "paragraph_answer": "A custom-made staircase to the side of the reception hall leads up to a galleried landing, which gives on to the six bedrooms and family bathroom. At 195 square feet, the master bedroom has its own en-suite bathroom and access to a private balcony, taking in the vistas down toward the lake. Three smaller bedrooms open onto a second balcony overlooking the lake, while a fourth has a small balcony to the front. Baths in both the master suite and family bathroom have been set into picture bay windows to make the most of the spectacular views from their tubs. The basement was the final phase of the house to be completed. While this includes a laundry, it is largely a leisure space, comprising a cinema room, a gym and a sitting room with a wood-burning stove. The wall between the gym and the sitting room is partly filled with a double-sided Indian Ocean aquarium , which is illuminated and populated by an array of tropical fish. \u201cWe wanted this part of the house to be a place to come to relax after a busy day or week at work: there is a sauna, with a built-in television, and outside on the deck, a hot tub, with views down to the lake,\u201d Mr. Hague said. Leading from the driveway is a series of substantial outbuildings, including a game room and office, a second office, a store room and a garage.", "sentence_answer": "The wall between the gym and the sitting room is partly filled with a double-sided Indian Ocean aquarium , which is illuminated and populated by an array of tropical fish."} -{"question": "What day was memorialized?", "paragraph": "And yet the tragedy here is too vast, too diffuse, to be coated with a hard shell of spending. Look out Brookfield\u2019s front window and see, clumped together across the street, One World Trade Center, which one recent afternoon was half-cloaked in spooky fog, eerily telegraphing impermanence; Santiago Calatrava\u2019s bird, which would look majestic were it not beset at each side by new development; and the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. It is a chaos of remembrance, competitive and dense. And magnetic to visitors, or marks waiting to be pickpocketed the late-capitalist way: a mall. Even if you view Brookfield Place ahistorically, it is a shrugworthy set of stores, not much more inspiring than what you would find in Terminal 4 at Kennedy Airport. The product mix leans heavily on shoes, handbags and other accessories: luxury purchase as trauma-porn memento. Mostly it exists as an argument that capitalism is the safest space. As long as we protect it, almost any pain can be shouted down. (Any doubts about the mall as a site of political meaning need look no further than recent Black Lives Matter protests that have targeted shopping centers.)", "answer": "September 11", "sentence": "Look out Brookfield\u2019s front window and see, clumped together across the street, One World Trade Center, which one recent afternoon was half-cloaked in spooky fog, eerily telegraphing impermanence; Santiago Calatrava\u2019s bird, which would look majestic were it not beset at each side by new development; and the National September 11 Memorial and Museum.", "paragraph_sentence": "And yet the tragedy here is too vast, too diffuse, to be coated with a hard shell of spending. Look out Brookfield\u2019s front window and see, clumped together across the street, One World Trade Center, which one recent afternoon was half-cloaked in spooky fog, eerily telegraphing impermanence; Santiago Calatrava\u2019s bird, which would look majestic were it not beset at each side by new development; and the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. It is a chaos of remembrance, competitive and dense. And magnetic to visitors, or marks waiting to be pickpocketed the late-capitalist way: a mall. Even if you view Brookfield Place ahistorically, it is a shrugworthy set of stores, not much more inspiring than what you would find in Terminal 4 at Kennedy Airport. The product mix leans heavily on shoes, handbags and other accessories: luxury purchase as trauma-porn memento. Mostly it exists as an argument that capitalism is the safest space. As long as we protect it, almost any pain can be shouted down. (Any doubts about the mall as a site of political meaning need look no further than recent Black Lives Matter protests that have targeted shopping centers.)", "paragraph_answer": "And yet the tragedy here is too vast, too diffuse, to be coated with a hard shell of spending. Look out Brookfield\u2019s front window and see, clumped together across the street, One World Trade Center, which one recent afternoon was half-cloaked in spooky fog, eerily telegraphing impermanence; Santiago Calatrava\u2019s bird, which would look majestic were it not beset at each side by new development; and the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. It is a chaos of remembrance, competitive and dense. And magnetic to visitors, or marks waiting to be pickpocketed the late-capitalist way: a mall. Even if you view Brookfield Place ahistorically, it is a shrugworthy set of stores, not much more inspiring than what you would find in Terminal 4 at Kennedy Airport. The product mix leans heavily on shoes, handbags and other accessories: luxury purchase as trauma-porn memento. Mostly it exists as an argument that capitalism is the safest space. As long as we protect it, almost any pain can be shouted down. (Any doubts about the mall as a site of political meaning need look no further than recent Black Lives Matter protests that have targeted shopping centers.)", "sentence_answer": "Look out Brookfield\u2019s front window and see, clumped together across the street, One World Trade Center, which one recent afternoon was half-cloaked in spooky fog, eerily telegraphing impermanence; Santiago Calatrava\u2019s bird, which would look majestic were it not beset at each side by new development; and the National September 11 Memorial and Museum."} -{"question": "Where did they have protests?", "paragraph": "And yet the tragedy here is too vast, too diffuse, to be coated with a hard shell of spending. Look out Brookfield\u2019s front window and see, clumped together across the street, One World Trade Center, which one recent afternoon was half-cloaked in spooky fog, eerily telegraphing impermanence; Santiago Calatrava\u2019s bird, which would look majestic were it not beset at each side by new development; and the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. It is a chaos of remembrance, competitive and dense. And magnetic to visitors, or marks waiting to be pickpocketed the late-capitalist way: a mall. Even if you view Brookfield Place ahistorically, it is a shrugworthy set of stores, not much more inspiring than what you would find in Terminal 4 at Kennedy Airport. The product mix leans heavily on shoes, handbags and other accessories: luxury purchase as trauma-porn memento. Mostly it exists as an argument that capitalism is the safest space. As long as we protect it, almost any pain can be shouted down. (Any doubts about the mall as a site of political meaning need look no further than recent Black Lives Matter protests that have targeted shopping centers.)", "answer": "shopping centers", "sentence": "(Any doubts about the mall as a site of political meaning need look no further than recent Black Lives Matter protests that have targeted shopping centers .)", "paragraph_sentence": "And yet the tragedy here is too vast, too diffuse, to be coated with a hard shell of spending. Look out Brookfield\u2019s front window and see, clumped together across the street, One World Trade Center, which one recent afternoon was half-cloaked in spooky fog, eerily telegraphing impermanence; Santiago Calatrava\u2019s bird, which would look majestic were it not beset at each side by new development; and the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. It is a chaos of remembrance, competitive and dense. And magnetic to visitors, or marks waiting to be pickpocketed the late-capitalist way: a mall. Even if you view Brookfield Place ahistorically, it is a shrugworthy set of stores, not much more inspiring than what you would find in Terminal 4 at Kennedy Airport. The product mix leans heavily on shoes, handbags and other accessories: luxury purchase as trauma-porn memento. Mostly it exists as an argument that capitalism is the safest space. As long as we protect it, almost any pain can be shouted down. (Any doubts about the mall as a site of political meaning need look no further than recent Black Lives Matter protests that have targeted shopping centers .) ", "paragraph_answer": "And yet the tragedy here is too vast, too diffuse, to be coated with a hard shell of spending. Look out Brookfield\u2019s front window and see, clumped together across the street, One World Trade Center, which one recent afternoon was half-cloaked in spooky fog, eerily telegraphing impermanence; Santiago Calatrava\u2019s bird, which would look majestic were it not beset at each side by new development; and the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. It is a chaos of remembrance, competitive and dense. And magnetic to visitors, or marks waiting to be pickpocketed the late-capitalist way: a mall. Even if you view Brookfield Place ahistorically, it is a shrugworthy set of stores, not much more inspiring than what you would find in Terminal 4 at Kennedy Airport. The product mix leans heavily on shoes, handbags and other accessories: luxury purchase as trauma-porn memento. Mostly it exists as an argument that capitalism is the safest space. As long as we protect it, almost any pain can be shouted down. (Any doubts about the mall as a site of political meaning need look no further than recent Black Lives Matter protests that have targeted shopping centers .)", "sentence_answer": "(Any doubts about the mall as a site of political meaning need look no further than recent Black Lives Matter protests that have targeted shopping centers .)"} -{"question": "What economic system is mentioned as a safe space?", "paragraph": "And yet the tragedy here is too vast, too diffuse, to be coated with a hard shell of spending. Look out Brookfield\u2019s front window and see, clumped together across the street, One World Trade Center, which one recent afternoon was half-cloaked in spooky fog, eerily telegraphing impermanence; Santiago Calatrava\u2019s bird, which would look majestic were it not beset at each side by new development; and the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. It is a chaos of remembrance, competitive and dense. And magnetic to visitors, or marks waiting to be pickpocketed the late-capitalist way: a mall. Even if you view Brookfield Place ahistorically, it is a shrugworthy set of stores, not much more inspiring than what you would find in Terminal 4 at Kennedy Airport. The product mix leans heavily on shoes, handbags and other accessories: luxury purchase as trauma-porn memento. Mostly it exists as an argument that capitalism is the safest space. As long as we protect it, almost any pain can be shouted down. (Any doubts about the mall as a site of political meaning need look no further than recent Black Lives Matter protests that have targeted shopping centers.)", "answer": "capitalism", "sentence": "Mostly it exists as an argument that capitalism is the safest space.", "paragraph_sentence": "And yet the tragedy here is too vast, too diffuse, to be coated with a hard shell of spending. Look out Brookfield\u2019s front window and see, clumped together across the street, One World Trade Center, which one recent afternoon was half-cloaked in spooky fog, eerily telegraphing impermanence; Santiago Calatrava\u2019s bird, which would look majestic were it not beset at each side by new development; and the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. It is a chaos of remembrance, competitive and dense. And magnetic to visitors, or marks waiting to be pickpocketed the late-capitalist way: a mall. Even if you view Brookfield Place ahistorically, it is a shrugworthy set of stores, not much more inspiring than what you would find in Terminal 4 at Kennedy Airport. The product mix leans heavily on shoes, handbags and other accessories: luxury purchase as trauma-porn memento. Mostly it exists as an argument that capitalism is the safest space. As long as we protect it, almost any pain can be shouted down. (Any doubts about the mall as a site of political meaning need look no further than recent Black Lives Matter protests that have targeted shopping centers.)", "paragraph_answer": "And yet the tragedy here is too vast, too diffuse, to be coated with a hard shell of spending. Look out Brookfield\u2019s front window and see, clumped together across the street, One World Trade Center, which one recent afternoon was half-cloaked in spooky fog, eerily telegraphing impermanence; Santiago Calatrava\u2019s bird, which would look majestic were it not beset at each side by new development; and the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. It is a chaos of remembrance, competitive and dense. And magnetic to visitors, or marks waiting to be pickpocketed the late-capitalist way: a mall. Even if you view Brookfield Place ahistorically, it is a shrugworthy set of stores, not much more inspiring than what you would find in Terminal 4 at Kennedy Airport. The product mix leans heavily on shoes, handbags and other accessories: luxury purchase as trauma-porn memento. Mostly it exists as an argument that capitalism is the safest space. As long as we protect it, almost any pain can be shouted down. (Any doubts about the mall as a site of political meaning need look no further than recent Black Lives Matter protests that have targeted shopping centers.)", "sentence_answer": "Mostly it exists as an argument that capitalism is the safest space."} -{"question": "What are visitors who might be pick pocketed called?", "paragraph": "And yet the tragedy here is too vast, too diffuse, to be coated with a hard shell of spending. Look out Brookfield\u2019s front window and see, clumped together across the street, One World Trade Center, which one recent afternoon was half-cloaked in spooky fog, eerily telegraphing impermanence; Santiago Calatrava\u2019s bird, which would look majestic were it not beset at each side by new development; and the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. It is a chaos of remembrance, competitive and dense. And magnetic to visitors, or marks waiting to be pickpocketed the late-capitalist way: a mall. Even if you view Brookfield Place ahistorically, it is a shrugworthy set of stores, not much more inspiring than what you would find in Terminal 4 at Kennedy Airport. The product mix leans heavily on shoes, handbags and other accessories: luxury purchase as trauma-porn memento. Mostly it exists as an argument that capitalism is the safest space. As long as we protect it, almost any pain can be shouted down. (Any doubts about the mall as a site of political meaning need look no further than recent Black Lives Matter protests that have targeted shopping centers.)", "answer": "marks", "sentence": "And magnetic to visitors, or marks waiting to be pickpocketed the late-capitalist way: a mall.", "paragraph_sentence": "And yet the tragedy here is too vast, too diffuse, to be coated with a hard shell of spending. Look out Brookfield\u2019s front window and see, clumped together across the street, One World Trade Center, which one recent afternoon was half-cloaked in spooky fog, eerily telegraphing impermanence; Santiago Calatrava\u2019s bird, which would look majestic were it not beset at each side by new development; and the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. It is a chaos of remembrance, competitive and dense. And magnetic to visitors, or marks waiting to be pickpocketed the late-capitalist way: a mall. Even if you view Brookfield Place ahistorically, it is a shrugworthy set of stores, not much more inspiring than what you would find in Terminal 4 at Kennedy Airport. The product mix leans heavily on shoes, handbags and other accessories: luxury purchase as trauma-porn memento. Mostly it exists as an argument that capitalism is the safest space. As long as we protect it, almost any pain can be shouted down. (Any doubts about the mall as a site of political meaning need look no further than recent Black Lives Matter protests that have targeted shopping centers.)", "paragraph_answer": "And yet the tragedy here is too vast, too diffuse, to be coated with a hard shell of spending. Look out Brookfield\u2019s front window and see, clumped together across the street, One World Trade Center, which one recent afternoon was half-cloaked in spooky fog, eerily telegraphing impermanence; Santiago Calatrava\u2019s bird, which would look majestic were it not beset at each side by new development; and the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. It is a chaos of remembrance, competitive and dense. And magnetic to visitors, or marks waiting to be pickpocketed the late-capitalist way: a mall. Even if you view Brookfield Place ahistorically, it is a shrugworthy set of stores, not much more inspiring than what you would find in Terminal 4 at Kennedy Airport. The product mix leans heavily on shoes, handbags and other accessories: luxury purchase as trauma-porn memento. Mostly it exists as an argument that capitalism is the safest space. As long as we protect it, almost any pain can be shouted down. (Any doubts about the mall as a site of political meaning need look no further than recent Black Lives Matter protests that have targeted shopping centers.)", "sentence_answer": "And magnetic to visitors, or marks waiting to be pickpocketed the late-capitalist way: a mall."} -{"question": "What airport terminal is brought up?", "paragraph": "And yet the tragedy here is too vast, too diffuse, to be coated with a hard shell of spending. Look out Brookfield\u2019s front window and see, clumped together across the street, One World Trade Center, which one recent afternoon was half-cloaked in spooky fog, eerily telegraphing impermanence; Santiago Calatrava\u2019s bird, which would look majestic were it not beset at each side by new development; and the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. It is a chaos of remembrance, competitive and dense. And magnetic to visitors, or marks waiting to be pickpocketed the late-capitalist way: a mall. Even if you view Brookfield Place ahistorically, it is a shrugworthy set of stores, not much more inspiring than what you would find in Terminal 4 at Kennedy Airport. The product mix leans heavily on shoes, handbags and other accessories: luxury purchase as trauma-porn memento. Mostly it exists as an argument that capitalism is the safest space. As long as we protect it, almost any pain can be shouted down. (Any doubts about the mall as a site of political meaning need look no further than recent Black Lives Matter protests that have targeted shopping centers.)", "answer": "Terminal 4", "sentence": "Even if you view Brookfield Place ahistorically, it is a shrugworthy set of stores, not much more inspiring than what you would find in Terminal 4 at Kennedy Airport.", "paragraph_sentence": "And yet the tragedy here is too vast, too diffuse, to be coated with a hard shell of spending. Look out Brookfield\u2019s front window and see, clumped together across the street, One World Trade Center, which one recent afternoon was half-cloaked in spooky fog, eerily telegraphing impermanence; Santiago Calatrava\u2019s bird, which would look majestic were it not beset at each side by new development; and the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. It is a chaos of remembrance, competitive and dense. And magnetic to visitors, or marks waiting to be pickpocketed the late-capitalist way: a mall. Even if you view Brookfield Place ahistorically, it is a shrugworthy set of stores, not much more inspiring than what you would find in Terminal 4 at Kennedy Airport. The product mix leans heavily on shoes, handbags and other accessories: luxury purchase as trauma-porn memento. Mostly it exists as an argument that capitalism is the safest space. As long as we protect it, almost any pain can be shouted down. (Any doubts about the mall as a site of political meaning need look no further than recent Black Lives Matter protests that have targeted shopping centers.)", "paragraph_answer": "And yet the tragedy here is too vast, too diffuse, to be coated with a hard shell of spending. Look out Brookfield\u2019s front window and see, clumped together across the street, One World Trade Center, which one recent afternoon was half-cloaked in spooky fog, eerily telegraphing impermanence; Santiago Calatrava\u2019s bird, which would look majestic were it not beset at each side by new development; and the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. It is a chaos of remembrance, competitive and dense. And magnetic to visitors, or marks waiting to be pickpocketed the late-capitalist way: a mall. Even if you view Brookfield Place ahistorically, it is a shrugworthy set of stores, not much more inspiring than what you would find in Terminal 4 at Kennedy Airport. The product mix leans heavily on shoes, handbags and other accessories: luxury purchase as trauma-porn memento. Mostly it exists as an argument that capitalism is the safest space. As long as we protect it, almost any pain can be shouted down. (Any doubts about the mall as a site of political meaning need look no further than recent Black Lives Matter protests that have targeted shopping centers.)", "sentence_answer": "Even if you view Brookfield Place ahistorically, it is a shrugworthy set of stores, not much more inspiring than what you would find in Terminal 4 at Kennedy Airport."} -{"question": "What store opened next door?", "paragraph": "Next door is Gucci, the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele. His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast-food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810. The store is large and spare, not contemplative so much as blunt, and emphasizes items (like three-stripe sneakers and logo-print handbags) that are identifiable to even the most confused shopper. The store is currently carrying the cruise collection, but still it captures the conflict between Mr. Michele\u2019s responsibilities to the brand as a source of innovation and as a source of gift-shop totems, two approaches to luxury that don\u2019t always complement each other.", "answer": "Gucci", "sentence": "Next door is Gucci , the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele.", "paragraph_sentence": " Next door is Gucci , the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele. His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast-food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810. The store is large and spare, not contemplative so much as blunt, and emphasizes items (like three-stripe sneakers and logo-print handbags) that are identifiable to even the most confused shopper. The store is currently carrying the cruise collection, but still it captures the conflict between Mr. Michele\u2019s responsibilities to the brand as a source of innovation and as a source of gift-shop totems, two approaches to luxury that don\u2019t always complement each other.", "paragraph_answer": "Next door is Gucci , the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele. His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast-food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810. The store is large and spare, not contemplative so much as blunt, and emphasizes items (like three-stripe sneakers and logo-print handbags) that are identifiable to even the most confused shopper. The store is currently carrying the cruise collection, but still it captures the conflict between Mr. Michele\u2019s responsibilities to the brand as a source of innovation and as a source of gift-shop totems, two approaches to luxury that don\u2019t always complement each other.", "sentence_answer": "Next door is Gucci , the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele."} -{"question": "What shirt has a collar?", "paragraph": "Next door is Gucci, the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele. His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast-food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810. The store is large and spare, not contemplative so much as blunt, and emphasizes items (like three-stripe sneakers and logo-print handbags) that are identifiable to even the most confused shopper. The store is currently carrying the cruise collection, but still it captures the conflict between Mr. Michele\u2019s responsibilities to the brand as a source of innovation and as a source of gift-shop totems, two approaches to luxury that don\u2019t always complement each other.", "answer": "polo", "sentence": "His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast-food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810.", "paragraph_sentence": "Next door is Gucci, the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele. His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast-food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810. The store is large and spare, not contemplative so much as blunt, and emphasizes items (like three-stripe sneakers and logo-print handbags) that are identifiable to even the most confused shopper. The store is currently carrying the cruise collection, but still it captures the conflict between Mr. Michele\u2019s responsibilities to the brand as a source of innovation and as a source of gift-shop totems, two approaches to luxury that don\u2019t always complement each other.", "paragraph_answer": "Next door is Gucci, the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele. His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast-food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810. The store is large and spare, not contemplative so much as blunt, and emphasizes items (like three-stripe sneakers and logo-print handbags) that are identifiable to even the most confused shopper. The store is currently carrying the cruise collection, but still it captures the conflict between Mr. Michele\u2019s responsibilities to the brand as a source of innovation and as a source of gift-shop totems, two approaches to luxury that don\u2019t always complement each other.", "sentence_answer": "His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast-food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810."} -{"question": "What kind of sneakers are mentioned?", "paragraph": "Next door is Gucci, the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele. His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast-food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810. The store is large and spare, not contemplative so much as blunt, and emphasizes items (like three-stripe sneakers and logo-print handbags) that are identifiable to even the most confused shopper. The store is currently carrying the cruise collection, but still it captures the conflict between Mr. Michele\u2019s responsibilities to the brand as a source of innovation and as a source of gift-shop totems, two approaches to luxury that don\u2019t always complement each other.", "answer": "three-stripe sneakers", "sentence": "The store is large and spare, not contemplative so much as blunt, and emphasizes items (like three-stripe sneakers and logo-print handbags) that are identifiable to even the most confused shopper.", "paragraph_sentence": "Next door is Gucci, the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele. His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast-food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810. The store is large and spare, not contemplative so much as blunt, and emphasizes items (like three-stripe sneakers and logo-print handbags) that are identifiable to even the most confused shopper. The store is currently carrying the cruise collection, but still it captures the conflict between Mr. Michele\u2019s responsibilities to the brand as a source of innovation and as a source of gift-shop totems, two approaches to luxury that don\u2019t always complement each other.", "paragraph_answer": "Next door is Gucci, the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele. His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast-food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810. The store is large and spare, not contemplative so much as blunt, and emphasizes items (like three-stripe sneakers and logo-print handbags) that are identifiable to even the most confused shopper. The store is currently carrying the cruise collection, but still it captures the conflict between Mr. Michele\u2019s responsibilities to the brand as a source of innovation and as a source of gift-shop totems, two approaches to luxury that don\u2019t always complement each other.", "sentence_answer": "The store is large and spare, not contemplative so much as blunt, and emphasizes items (like three-stripe sneakers and logo-print handbags) that are identifiable to even the most confused shopper."} -{"question": "What kind of shop has totems?", "paragraph": "Next door is Gucci, the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele. His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast-food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810. The store is large and spare, not contemplative so much as blunt, and emphasizes items (like three-stripe sneakers and logo-print handbags) that are identifiable to even the most confused shopper. The store is currently carrying the cruise collection, but still it captures the conflict between Mr. Michele\u2019s responsibilities to the brand as a source of innovation and as a source of gift-shop totems, two approaches to luxury that don\u2019t always complement each other.", "answer": "gift-shop", "sentence": "The store is currently carrying the cruise collection, but still it captures the conflict between Mr. Michele\u2019s responsibilities to the brand as a source of innovation and as a source of gift-shop totems, two approaches to luxury that don\u2019t always complement each other.", "paragraph_sentence": "Next door is Gucci, the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele. His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast-food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810. The store is large and spare, not contemplative so much as blunt, and emphasizes items (like three-stripe sneakers and logo-print handbags) that are identifiable to even the most confused shopper. The store is currently carrying the cruise collection, but still it captures the conflict between Mr. Michele\u2019s responsibilities to the brand as a source of innovation and as a source of gift-shop totems, two approaches to luxury that don\u2019t always complement each other. ", "paragraph_answer": "Next door is Gucci, the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele. His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast-food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810. The store is large and spare, not contemplative so much as blunt, and emphasizes items (like three-stripe sneakers and logo-print handbags) that are identifiable to even the most confused shopper. The store is currently carrying the cruise collection, but still it captures the conflict between Mr. Michele\u2019s responsibilities to the brand as a source of innovation and as a source of gift-shop totems, two approaches to luxury that don\u2019t always complement each other.", "sentence_answer": "The store is currently carrying the cruise collection, but still it captures the conflict between Mr. Michele\u2019s responsibilities to the brand as a source of innovation and as a source of gift-shop totems, two approaches to luxury that don\u2019t always complement each other."} -{"question": "What speed is the food that is mentioned?", "paragraph": "Next door is Gucci, the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele. His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast-food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810. The store is large and spare, not contemplative so much as blunt, and emphasizes items (like three-stripe sneakers and logo-print handbags) that are identifiable to even the most confused shopper. The store is currently carrying the cruise collection, but still it captures the conflict between Mr. Michele\u2019s responsibilities to the brand as a source of innovation and as a source of gift-shop totems, two approaches to luxury that don\u2019t always complement each other.", "answer": "fast", "sentence": "His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast -food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810.", "paragraph_sentence": "Next door is Gucci, the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele. His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast -food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810. The store is large and spare, not contemplative so much as blunt, and emphasizes items (like three-stripe sneakers and logo-print handbags) that are identifiable to even the most confused shopper. The store is currently carrying the cruise collection, but still it captures the conflict between Mr. Michele\u2019s responsibilities to the brand as a source of innovation and as a source of gift-shop totems, two approaches to luxury that don\u2019t always complement each other.", "paragraph_answer": "Next door is Gucci, the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele. His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast -food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810. The store is large and spare, not contemplative so much as blunt, and emphasizes items (like three-stripe sneakers and logo-print handbags) that are identifiable to even the most confused shopper. The store is currently carrying the cruise collection, but still it captures the conflict between Mr. Michele\u2019s responsibilities to the brand as a source of innovation and as a source of gift-shop totems, two approaches to luxury that don\u2019t always complement each other.", "sentence_answer": "His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast -food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810."} -{"question": "Which direction is being looked in?", "paragraph": "That said, his more forward-looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension. But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop. A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos. And truly functional stores seem like outliers. What will become of humble, excellent Kamakura Shirts, relegated to a side corridor on the second floor, if the local business crowd doesn\u2019t find it? No one is coming to ground zero to buy an expertly cut oxford shirt.", "answer": "forward", "sentence": "That said, his more forward -looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension.", "paragraph_sentence": " That said, his more forward -looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension. But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop. A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos. And truly functional stores seem like outliers. What will become of humble, excellent Kamakura Shirts, relegated to a side corridor on the second floor, if the local business crowd doesn\u2019t find it? No one is coming to ground zero to buy an expertly cut oxford shirt.", "paragraph_answer": "That said, his more forward -looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension. But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop. A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos. And truly functional stores seem like outliers. What will become of humble, excellent Kamakura Shirts, relegated to a side corridor on the second floor, if the local business crowd doesn\u2019t find it? No one is coming to ground zero to buy an expertly cut oxford shirt.", "sentence_answer": "That said, his more forward -looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension."} -{"question": "What is the name of the perfume store?", "paragraph": "That said, his more forward-looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension. But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop. A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos. And truly functional stores seem like outliers. What will become of humble, excellent Kamakura Shirts, relegated to a side corridor on the second floor, if the local business crowd doesn\u2019t find it? No one is coming to ground zero to buy an expertly cut oxford shirt.", "answer": "Herm\u00e8s", "sentence": "But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop.", "paragraph_sentence": "That said, his more forward-looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension. But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop. A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos. And truly functional stores seem like outliers. What will become of humble, excellent Kamakura Shirts, relegated to a side corridor on the second floor, if the local business crowd doesn\u2019t find it? No one is coming to ground zero to buy an expertly cut oxford shirt.", "paragraph_answer": "That said, his more forward-looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension. But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop. A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos. And truly functional stores seem like outliers. What will become of humble, excellent Kamakura Shirts, relegated to a side corridor on the second floor, if the local business crowd doesn\u2019t find it? No one is coming to ground zero to buy an expertly cut oxford shirt.", "sentence_answer": "But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop."} -{"question": "How much is the embroidered bomber?", "paragraph": "That said, his more forward-looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension. But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop. A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos. And truly functional stores seem like outliers. What will become of humble, excellent Kamakura Shirts, relegated to a side corridor on the second floor, if the local business crowd doesn\u2019t find it? No one is coming to ground zero to buy an expertly cut oxford shirt.", "answer": "$1,890", "sentence": "That said, his more forward-looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ( $1,890 ) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension.", "paragraph_sentence": " That said, his more forward-looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ( $1,890 ) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension. But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop. A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos. And truly functional stores seem like outliers. What will become of humble, excellent Kamakura Shirts, relegated to a side corridor on the second floor, if the local business crowd doesn\u2019t find it? No one is coming to ground zero to buy an expertly cut oxford shirt.", "paragraph_answer": "That said, his more forward-looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ( $1,890 ) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension. But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop. A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos. And truly functional stores seem like outliers. What will become of humble, excellent Kamakura Shirts, relegated to a side corridor on the second floor, if the local business crowd doesn\u2019t find it? No one is coming to ground zero to buy an expertly cut oxford shirt.", "sentence_answer": "That said, his more forward-looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ( $1,890 ) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension."} -{"question": "Where might you purchase a magazine?", "paragraph": "That said, his more forward-looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension. But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop. A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos. And truly functional stores seem like outliers. What will become of humble, excellent Kamakura Shirts, relegated to a side corridor on the second floor, if the local business crowd doesn\u2019t find it? No one is coming to ground zero to buy an expertly cut oxford shirt.", "answer": "newsstand", "sentence": "A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos.", "paragraph_sentence": "That said, his more forward-looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension. But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop. A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos. And truly functional stores seem like outliers. What will become of humble, excellent Kamakura Shirts, relegated to a side corridor on the second floor, if the local business crowd doesn\u2019t find it? No one is coming to ground zero to buy an expertly cut oxford shirt.", "paragraph_answer": "That said, his more forward-looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension. But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop. A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos. And truly functional stores seem like outliers. What will become of humble, excellent Kamakura Shirts, relegated to a side corridor on the second floor, if the local business crowd doesn\u2019t find it? No one is coming to ground zero to buy an expertly cut oxford shirt.", "sentence_answer": "A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos."} -{"question": "What size are the Oreos?", "paragraph": "That said, his more forward-looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension. But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop. A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos. And truly functional stores seem like outliers. What will become of humble, excellent Kamakura Shirts, relegated to a side corridor on the second floor, if the local business crowd doesn\u2019t find it? No one is coming to ground zero to buy an expertly cut oxford shirt.", "answer": "mini", "sentence": "A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos.", "paragraph_sentence": "That said, his more forward-looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension. But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop. A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos. And truly functional stores seem like outliers. What will become of humble, excellent Kamakura Shirts, relegated to a side corridor on the second floor, if the local business crowd doesn\u2019t find it? No one is coming to ground zero to buy an expertly cut oxford shirt.", "paragraph_answer": "That said, his more forward-looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension. But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop. A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos. And truly functional stores seem like outliers. What will become of humble, excellent Kamakura Shirts, relegated to a side corridor on the second floor, if the local business crowd doesn\u2019t find it? No one is coming to ground zero to buy an expertly cut oxford shirt.", "sentence_answer": "A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos."} -{"question": "Where id the author take a seat?", "paragraph": "Both times I visited the mall, I needed respite badly. Once, I sat on the steps in the main atrium and tried to restore steady breathing; it felt as if I had just climbed a mountain and was being choked by thin air. Another time, I left and walked a few blocks to Century 21, which with its air of rank desperation felt more apt for the neighborhood. Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ($866, on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380).", "answer": "steps", "sentence": "Once, I sat on the steps in the main atrium and tried to restore steady breathing; it felt as if I had just climbed a mountain and was being choked by thin air.", "paragraph_sentence": "Both times I visited the mall, I needed respite badly. Once, I sat on the steps in the main atrium and tried to restore steady breathing; it felt as if I had just climbed a mountain and was being choked by thin air. Another time, I left and walked a few blocks to Century 21, which with its air of rank desperation felt more apt for the neighborhood. Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ($866, on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380).", "paragraph_answer": "Both times I visited the mall, I needed respite badly. Once, I sat on the steps in the main atrium and tried to restore steady breathing; it felt as if I had just climbed a mountain and was being choked by thin air. Another time, I left and walked a few blocks to Century 21, which with its air of rank desperation felt more apt for the neighborhood. Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ($866, on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380).", "sentence_answer": "Once, I sat on the steps in the main atrium and tried to restore steady breathing; it felt as if I had just climbed a mountain and was being choked by thin air."} -{"question": "What is the crew-neck made of?", "paragraph": "Both times I visited the mall, I needed respite badly. Once, I sat on the steps in the main atrium and tried to restore steady breathing; it felt as if I had just climbed a mountain and was being choked by thin air. Another time, I left and walked a few blocks to Century 21, which with its air of rank desperation felt more apt for the neighborhood. Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ($866, on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380).", "answer": "cowhide", "sentence": "Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ($866, on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380).", "paragraph_sentence": "Both times I visited the mall, I needed respite badly. Once, I sat on the steps in the main atrium and tried to restore steady breathing; it felt as if I had just climbed a mountain and was being choked by thin air. Another time, I left and walked a few blocks to Century 21, which with its air of rank desperation felt more apt for the neighborhood. Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ($866, on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380). ", "paragraph_answer": "Both times I visited the mall, I needed respite badly. Once, I sat on the steps in the main atrium and tried to restore steady breathing; it felt as if I had just climbed a mountain and was being choked by thin air. Another time, I left and walked a few blocks to Century 21, which with its air of rank desperation felt more apt for the neighborhood. Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ($866, on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380).", "sentence_answer": "Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ($866, on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380)."} -{"question": "What does century 21 require?", "paragraph": "Both times I visited the mall, I needed respite badly. Once, I sat on the steps in the main atrium and tried to restore steady breathing; it felt as if I had just climbed a mountain and was being choked by thin air. Another time, I left and walked a few blocks to Century 21, which with its air of rank desperation felt more apt for the neighborhood. Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ($866, on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380).", "answer": "pluck", "sentence": "Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ($866, on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380).", "paragraph_sentence": "Both times I visited the mall, I needed respite badly. Once, I sat on the steps in the main atrium and tried to restore steady breathing; it felt as if I had just climbed a mountain and was being choked by thin air. Another time, I left and walked a few blocks to Century 21, which with its air of rank desperation felt more apt for the neighborhood. Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ($866, on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380). ", "paragraph_answer": "Both times I visited the mall, I needed respite badly. Once, I sat on the steps in the main atrium and tried to restore steady breathing; it felt as if I had just climbed a mountain and was being choked by thin air. Another time, I left and walked a few blocks to Century 21, which with its air of rank desperation felt more apt for the neighborhood. Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ($866, on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380).", "sentence_answer": "Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ($866, on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380)."} -{"question": "What color is the blazer?", "paragraph": "Both times I visited the mall, I needed respite badly. Once, I sat on the steps in the main atrium and tried to restore steady breathing; it felt as if I had just climbed a mountain and was being choked by thin air. Another time, I left and walked a few blocks to Century 21, which with its air of rank desperation felt more apt for the neighborhood. Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ($866, on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380).", "answer": "white", "sentence": "Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ($866, on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380).", "paragraph_sentence": "Both times I visited the mall, I needed respite badly. Once, I sat on the steps in the main atrium and tried to restore steady breathing; it felt as if I had just climbed a mountain and was being choked by thin air. Another time, I left and walked a few blocks to Century 21, which with its air of rank desperation felt more apt for the neighborhood. Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ($866, on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380). ", "paragraph_answer": "Both times I visited the mall, I needed respite badly. Once, I sat on the steps in the main atrium and tried to restore steady breathing; it felt as if I had just climbed a mountain and was being choked by thin air. Another time, I left and walked a few blocks to Century 21, which with its air of rank desperation felt more apt for the neighborhood. Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ($866, on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380).", "sentence_answer": "Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ($866, on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380)."} -{"question": "How much for a crew-neck top?", "paragraph": "Both times I visited the mall, I needed respite badly. Once, I sat on the steps in the main atrium and tried to restore steady breathing; it felt as if I had just climbed a mountain and was being choked by thin air. Another time, I left and walked a few blocks to Century 21, which with its air of rank desperation felt more apt for the neighborhood. Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ($866, on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380).", "answer": "$866", "sentence": "Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ( $866 , on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380).", "paragraph_sentence": "Both times I visited the mall, I needed respite badly. Once, I sat on the steps in the main atrium and tried to restore steady breathing; it felt as if I had just climbed a mountain and was being choked by thin air. Another time, I left and walked a few blocks to Century 21, which with its air of rank desperation felt more apt for the neighborhood. Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ( $866 , on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380). ", "paragraph_answer": "Both times I visited the mall, I needed respite badly. Once, I sat on the steps in the main atrium and tried to restore steady breathing; it felt as if I had just climbed a mountain and was being choked by thin air. Another time, I left and walked a few blocks to Century 21, which with its air of rank desperation felt more apt for the neighborhood. Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ( $866 , on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380).", "sentence_answer": "Unlike Brookfield Place, where your happiness was heavily mediated, Century 21 required the usual pluck \u2014 maybe the gray cowhide crew-neck Valentino top ( $866 , on sale from $4,625) would fit, but probably not; same for the white linen-ish Lanvin peak lapel blazer ($799, on sale from $3,380)."} -{"question": "Who conducted the American Symphony Orchestra?", "paragraph": "Some of those elements are evident in his Piano Concerto (1938), a vast and sometimes unwieldy piece whose slow movement features an unusual duet between harp and piano and whose virtuosic whirlwinds, acerbic chords and gentle pentatonic, folklorish melodies were deftly and energetically rendered by the pianist Jorge Federico Osorio on Saturday evening, with Mr. Botstein conducting the American Symphony Orchestra. Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s catalog includes six symphonies. The second, the Sinfon\u00eda India, uses native Yaqui instruments and North Mexican melodies and is one of Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s best-known pieces; it led Copland and other prominent American supporters to identify Mr. Ch\u00e1vez as a quintessentially \u201cMexican composer.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Botstein", "sentence": "Some of those elements are evident in his Piano Concerto (1938), a vast and sometimes unwieldy piece whose slow movement features an unusual duet between harp and piano and whose virtuosic whirlwinds, acerbic chords and gentle pentatonic, folklorish melodies were deftly and energetically rendered by the pianist Jorge Federico Osorio on Saturday evening, with Mr. Botstein conducting the American Symphony Orchestra.", "paragraph_sentence": " Some of those elements are evident in his Piano Concerto (1938), a vast and sometimes unwieldy piece whose slow movement features an unusual duet between harp and piano and whose virtuosic whirlwinds, acerbic chords and gentle pentatonic, folklorish melodies were deftly and energetically rendered by the pianist Jorge Federico Osorio on Saturday evening, with Mr. Botstein conducting the American Symphony Orchestra. Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s catalog includes six symphonies. The second, the Sinfon\u00eda India, uses native Yaqui instruments and North Mexican melodies and is one of Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s best-known pieces; it led Copland and other prominent American supporters to identify Mr. Ch\u00e1vez as a quintessentially \u201cMexican composer.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Some of those elements are evident in his Piano Concerto (1938), a vast and sometimes unwieldy piece whose slow movement features an unusual duet between harp and piano and whose virtuosic whirlwinds, acerbic chords and gentle pentatonic, folklorish melodies were deftly and energetically rendered by the pianist Jorge Federico Osorio on Saturday evening, with Mr. Botstein conducting the American Symphony Orchestra. Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s catalog includes six symphonies. The second, the Sinfon\u00eda India, uses native Yaqui instruments and North Mexican melodies and is one of Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s best-known pieces; it led Copland and other prominent American supporters to identify Mr. Ch\u00e1vez as a quintessentially \u201cMexican composer.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Some of those elements are evident in his Piano Concerto (1938), a vast and sometimes unwieldy piece whose slow movement features an unusual duet between harp and piano and whose virtuosic whirlwinds, acerbic chords and gentle pentatonic, folklorish melodies were deftly and energetically rendered by the pianist Jorge Federico Osorio on Saturday evening, with Mr. Botstein conducting the American Symphony Orchestra."} -{"question": "what unusual duet is sometimes featured in his pieces?", "paragraph": "Some of those elements are evident in his Piano Concerto (1938), a vast and sometimes unwieldy piece whose slow movement features an unusual duet between harp and piano and whose virtuosic whirlwinds, acerbic chords and gentle pentatonic, folklorish melodies were deftly and energetically rendered by the pianist Jorge Federico Osorio on Saturday evening, with Mr. Botstein conducting the American Symphony Orchestra. Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s catalog includes six symphonies. The second, the Sinfon\u00eda India, uses native Yaqui instruments and North Mexican melodies and is one of Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s best-known pieces; it led Copland and other prominent American supporters to identify Mr. Ch\u00e1vez as a quintessentially \u201cMexican composer.\u201d", "answer": "harp and piano", "sentence": "Some of those elements are evident in his Piano Concerto (1938), a vast and sometimes unwieldy piece whose slow movement features an unusual duet between harp and piano and whose virtuosic whirlwinds, acerbic chords and gentle pentatonic, folklorish melodies were deftly and energetically rendered by the pianist Jorge Federico Osorio on Saturday evening, with Mr. Botstein conducting the American Symphony Orchestra.", "paragraph_sentence": " Some of those elements are evident in his Piano Concerto (1938), a vast and sometimes unwieldy piece whose slow movement features an unusual duet between harp and piano and whose virtuosic whirlwinds, acerbic chords and gentle pentatonic, folklorish melodies were deftly and energetically rendered by the pianist Jorge Federico Osorio on Saturday evening, with Mr. Botstein conducting the American Symphony Orchestra. Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s catalog includes six symphonies. The second, the Sinfon\u00eda India, uses native Yaqui instruments and North Mexican melodies and is one of Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s best-known pieces; it led Copland and other prominent American supporters to identify Mr. Ch\u00e1vez as a quintessentially \u201cMexican composer.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Some of those elements are evident in his Piano Concerto (1938), a vast and sometimes unwieldy piece whose slow movement features an unusual duet between harp and piano and whose virtuosic whirlwinds, acerbic chords and gentle pentatonic, folklorish melodies were deftly and energetically rendered by the pianist Jorge Federico Osorio on Saturday evening, with Mr. Botstein conducting the American Symphony Orchestra. Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s catalog includes six symphonies. The second, the Sinfon\u00eda India, uses native Yaqui instruments and North Mexican melodies and is one of Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s best-known pieces; it led Copland and other prominent American supporters to identify Mr. Ch\u00e1vez as a quintessentially \u201cMexican composer.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Some of those elements are evident in his Piano Concerto (1938), a vast and sometimes unwieldy piece whose slow movement features an unusual duet between harp and piano and whose virtuosic whirlwinds, acerbic chords and gentle pentatonic, folklorish melodies were deftly and energetically rendered by the pianist Jorge Federico Osorio on Saturday evening, with Mr. Botstein conducting the American Symphony Orchestra."} -{"question": "Who was identified as a Mexican composer?", "paragraph": "Some of those elements are evident in his Piano Concerto (1938), a vast and sometimes unwieldy piece whose slow movement features an unusual duet between harp and piano and whose virtuosic whirlwinds, acerbic chords and gentle pentatonic, folklorish melodies were deftly and energetically rendered by the pianist Jorge Federico Osorio on Saturday evening, with Mr. Botstein conducting the American Symphony Orchestra. Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s catalog includes six symphonies. The second, the Sinfon\u00eda India, uses native Yaqui instruments and North Mexican melodies and is one of Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s best-known pieces; it led Copland and other prominent American supporters to identify Mr. Ch\u00e1vez as a quintessentially \u201cMexican composer.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Ch\u00e1vez", "sentence": "Mr. Ch\u00e1vez \u2019s catalog includes six symphonies.", "paragraph_sentence": "Some of those elements are evident in his Piano Concerto (1938), a vast and sometimes unwieldy piece whose slow movement features an unusual duet between harp and piano and whose virtuosic whirlwinds, acerbic chords and gentle pentatonic, folklorish melodies were deftly and energetically rendered by the pianist Jorge Federico Osorio on Saturday evening, with Mr. Botstein conducting the American Symphony Orchestra. Mr. Ch\u00e1vez \u2019s catalog includes six symphonies. The second, the Sinfon\u00eda India, uses native Yaqui instruments and North Mexican melodies and is one of Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s best-known pieces; it led Copland and other prominent American supporters to identify Mr. Ch\u00e1vez as a quintessentially \u201cMexican composer.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Some of those elements are evident in his Piano Concerto (1938), a vast and sometimes unwieldy piece whose slow movement features an unusual duet between harp and piano and whose virtuosic whirlwinds, acerbic chords and gentle pentatonic, folklorish melodies were deftly and energetically rendered by the pianist Jorge Federico Osorio on Saturday evening, with Mr. Botstein conducting the American Symphony Orchestra. Mr. Ch\u00e1vez \u2019s catalog includes six symphonies. The second, the Sinfon\u00eda India, uses native Yaqui instruments and North Mexican melodies and is one of Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s best-known pieces; it led Copland and other prominent American supporters to identify Mr. Ch\u00e1vez as a quintessentially \u201cMexican composer.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Ch\u00e1vez \u2019s catalog includes six symphonies."} -{"question": "who played the piano on saturday evening?", "paragraph": "Some of those elements are evident in his Piano Concerto (1938), a vast and sometimes unwieldy piece whose slow movement features an unusual duet between harp and piano and whose virtuosic whirlwinds, acerbic chords and gentle pentatonic, folklorish melodies were deftly and energetically rendered by the pianist Jorge Federico Osorio on Saturday evening, with Mr. Botstein conducting the American Symphony Orchestra. Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s catalog includes six symphonies. The second, the Sinfon\u00eda India, uses native Yaqui instruments and North Mexican melodies and is one of Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s best-known pieces; it led Copland and other prominent American supporters to identify Mr. Ch\u00e1vez as a quintessentially \u201cMexican composer.\u201d", "answer": "Jorge Federico Osorio", "sentence": "Some of those elements are evident in his Piano Concerto (1938), a vast and sometimes unwieldy piece whose slow movement features an unusual duet between harp and piano and whose virtuosic whirlwinds, acerbic chords and gentle pentatonic, folklorish melodies were deftly and energetically rendered by the pianist Jorge Federico Osorio on Saturday evening, with Mr. Botstein conducting the American Symphony Orchestra.", "paragraph_sentence": " Some of those elements are evident in his Piano Concerto (1938), a vast and sometimes unwieldy piece whose slow movement features an unusual duet between harp and piano and whose virtuosic whirlwinds, acerbic chords and gentle pentatonic, folklorish melodies were deftly and energetically rendered by the pianist Jorge Federico Osorio on Saturday evening, with Mr. Botstein conducting the American Symphony Orchestra. Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s catalog includes six symphonies. The second, the Sinfon\u00eda India, uses native Yaqui instruments and North Mexican melodies and is one of Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s best-known pieces; it led Copland and other prominent American supporters to identify Mr. Ch\u00e1vez as a quintessentially \u201cMexican composer.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Some of those elements are evident in his Piano Concerto (1938), a vast and sometimes unwieldy piece whose slow movement features an unusual duet between harp and piano and whose virtuosic whirlwinds, acerbic chords and gentle pentatonic, folklorish melodies were deftly and energetically rendered by the pianist Jorge Federico Osorio on Saturday evening, with Mr. Botstein conducting the American Symphony Orchestra. Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s catalog includes six symphonies. The second, the Sinfon\u00eda India, uses native Yaqui instruments and North Mexican melodies and is one of Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s best-known pieces; it led Copland and other prominent American supporters to identify Mr. Ch\u00e1vez as a quintessentially \u201cMexican composer.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Some of those elements are evident in his Piano Concerto (1938), a vast and sometimes unwieldy piece whose slow movement features an unusual duet between harp and piano and whose virtuosic whirlwinds, acerbic chords and gentle pentatonic, folklorish melodies were deftly and energetically rendered by the pianist Jorge Federico Osorio on Saturday evening, with Mr. Botstein conducting the American Symphony Orchestra."} -{"question": "what are the name of the instruments used by the Sinfonia India?", "paragraph": "Some of those elements are evident in his Piano Concerto (1938), a vast and sometimes unwieldy piece whose slow movement features an unusual duet between harp and piano and whose virtuosic whirlwinds, acerbic chords and gentle pentatonic, folklorish melodies were deftly and energetically rendered by the pianist Jorge Federico Osorio on Saturday evening, with Mr. Botstein conducting the American Symphony Orchestra. Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s catalog includes six symphonies. The second, the Sinfon\u00eda India, uses native Yaqui instruments and North Mexican melodies and is one of Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s best-known pieces; it led Copland and other prominent American supporters to identify Mr. Ch\u00e1vez as a quintessentially \u201cMexican composer.\u201d", "answer": "Yaqui", "sentence": "The second, the Sinfon\u00eda India, uses native Yaqui instruments and North Mexican melodies", "paragraph_sentence": "Some of those elements are evident in his Piano Concerto (1938), a vast and sometimes unwieldy piece whose slow movement features an unusual duet between harp and piano and whose virtuosic whirlwinds, acerbic chords and gentle pentatonic, folklorish melodies were deftly and energetically rendered by the pianist Jorge Federico Osorio on Saturday evening, with Mr. Botstein conducting the American Symphony Orchestra. Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s catalog includes six symphonies. The second, the Sinfon\u00eda India, uses native Yaqui instruments and North Mexican melodies and is one of Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s best-known pieces; it led Copland and other prominent American supporters to identify Mr. Ch\u00e1vez as a quintessentially \u201cMexican composer.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Some of those elements are evident in his Piano Concerto (1938), a vast and sometimes unwieldy piece whose slow movement features an unusual duet between harp and piano and whose virtuosic whirlwinds, acerbic chords and gentle pentatonic, folklorish melodies were deftly and energetically rendered by the pianist Jorge Federico Osorio on Saturday evening, with Mr. Botstein conducting the American Symphony Orchestra. Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s catalog includes six symphonies. The second, the Sinfon\u00eda India, uses native Yaqui instruments and North Mexican melodies and is one of Mr. Ch\u00e1vez\u2019s best-known pieces; it led Copland and other prominent American supporters to identify Mr. Ch\u00e1vez as a quintessentially \u201cMexican composer.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The second, the Sinfon\u00eda India, uses native Yaqui instruments and North Mexican melodies"} -{"question": "what folk song was written by Mr. Chavez?", "paragraph": "Mr. Ch\u00e1vez wove the tunes of folk songs like \u201cLa Cucaracha\u201d through a modernist idiom in a work for solo piano, and altered a traditional song chromatically in his Sonatina for Violin and Piano. His \u201cCuatro Melod\u00edas Tradicionales Indias del Ecuador\u201d was beautifully sung by the soprano Cecilia Violetta L\u00f3pez, whose bright, expressive voice made a strong impression in several works, including de Falla\u2019s \u201cEl Retablo de Maese Pedro.\u201d The resetting of part of Don Quixote de la Mancha\u2019s story concluded the final program in a charming production featuring puppets and witty visuals designed by Doug Fitch.", "answer": "La Cucaracha", "sentence": "Mr. Ch\u00e1vez wove the tunes of folk songs like \u201c La Cucaracha \u201d through a modernist idiom in a work for solo piano, and altered a traditional song chromatically in his Sonatina for Violin and Piano.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Ch\u00e1vez wove the tunes of folk songs like \u201c La Cucaracha \u201d through a modernist idiom in a work for solo piano, and altered a traditional song chromatically in his Sonatina for Violin and Piano. His \u201cCuatro Melod\u00edas Tradicionales Indias del Ecuador\u201d was beautifully sung by the soprano Cecilia Violetta L\u00f3pez, whose bright, expressive voice made a strong impression in several works, including de Falla\u2019s \u201cEl Retablo de Maese Pedro.\u201d The resetting of part of Don Quixote de la Mancha\u2019s story concluded the final program in a charming production featuring puppets and witty visuals designed by Doug Fitch.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Ch\u00e1vez wove the tunes of folk songs like \u201c La Cucaracha \u201d through a modernist idiom in a work for solo piano, and altered a traditional song chromatically in his Sonatina for Violin and Piano. His \u201cCuatro Melod\u00edas Tradicionales Indias del Ecuador\u201d was beautifully sung by the soprano Cecilia Violetta L\u00f3pez, whose bright, expressive voice made a strong impression in several works, including de Falla\u2019s \u201cEl Retablo de Maese Pedro.\u201d The resetting of part of Don Quixote de la Mancha\u2019s story concluded the final program in a charming production featuring puppets and witty visuals designed by Doug Fitch.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Ch\u00e1vez wove the tunes of folk songs like \u201c La Cucaracha \u201d through a modernist idiom in a work for solo piano, and altered a traditional song chromatically in his Sonatina for Violin and Piano."} -{"question": "who sang \"Cuatro Melodias Tradicionales Indias del Ecuador\"?", "paragraph": "Mr. Ch\u00e1vez wove the tunes of folk songs like \u201cLa Cucaracha\u201d through a modernist idiom in a work for solo piano, and altered a traditional song chromatically in his Sonatina for Violin and Piano. His \u201cCuatro Melod\u00edas Tradicionales Indias del Ecuador\u201d was beautifully sung by the soprano Cecilia Violetta L\u00f3pez, whose bright, expressive voice made a strong impression in several works, including de Falla\u2019s \u201cEl Retablo de Maese Pedro.\u201d The resetting of part of Don Quixote de la Mancha\u2019s story concluded the final program in a charming production featuring puppets and witty visuals designed by Doug Fitch.", "answer": "Cecilia Violetta L\u00f3pez", "sentence": "His \u201cCuatro Melod\u00edas Tradicionales Indias del Ecuador\u201d was beautifully sung by the soprano Cecilia Violetta L\u00f3pez , whose bright, expressive voice made a strong impression in several works, including de Falla\u2019s \u201cEl Retablo de Maese Pedro.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Ch\u00e1vez wove the tunes of folk songs like \u201cLa Cucaracha\u201d through a modernist idiom in a work for solo piano, and altered a traditional song chromatically in his Sonatina for Violin and Piano. His \u201cCuatro Melod\u00edas Tradicionales Indias del Ecuador\u201d was beautifully sung by the soprano Cecilia Violetta L\u00f3pez , whose bright, expressive voice made a strong impression in several works, including de Falla\u2019s \u201cEl Retablo de Maese Pedro.\u201d The resetting of part of Don Quixote de la Mancha\u2019s story concluded the final program in a charming production featuring puppets and witty visuals designed by Doug Fitch.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Ch\u00e1vez wove the tunes of folk songs like \u201cLa Cucaracha\u201d through a modernist idiom in a work for solo piano, and altered a traditional song chromatically in his Sonatina for Violin and Piano. His \u201cCuatro Melod\u00edas Tradicionales Indias del Ecuador\u201d was beautifully sung by the soprano Cecilia Violetta L\u00f3pez , whose bright, expressive voice made a strong impression in several works, including de Falla\u2019s \u201cEl Retablo de Maese Pedro.\u201d The resetting of part of Don Quixote de la Mancha\u2019s story concluded the final program in a charming production featuring puppets and witty visuals designed by Doug Fitch.", "sentence_answer": "His \u201cCuatro Melod\u00edas Tradicionales Indias del Ecuador\u201d was beautifully sung by the soprano Cecilia Violetta L\u00f3pez , whose bright, expressive voice made a strong impression in several works, including de Falla\u2019s \u201cEl Retablo de Maese Pedro.\u201d"} -{"question": "which story featured puppets?", "paragraph": "Mr. Ch\u00e1vez wove the tunes of folk songs like \u201cLa Cucaracha\u201d through a modernist idiom in a work for solo piano, and altered a traditional song chromatically in his Sonatina for Violin and Piano. His \u201cCuatro Melod\u00edas Tradicionales Indias del Ecuador\u201d was beautifully sung by the soprano Cecilia Violetta L\u00f3pez, whose bright, expressive voice made a strong impression in several works, including de Falla\u2019s \u201cEl Retablo de Maese Pedro.\u201d The resetting of part of Don Quixote de la Mancha\u2019s story concluded the final program in a charming production featuring puppets and witty visuals designed by Doug Fitch.", "answer": "Don Quixote de la Mancha", "sentence": "The resetting of part of Don Quixote de la Mancha \u2019s story concluded the final program in a charming production featuring puppets and witty visuals designed by Doug Fitch.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Ch\u00e1vez wove the tunes of folk songs like \u201cLa Cucaracha\u201d through a modernist idiom in a work for solo piano, and altered a traditional song chromatically in his Sonatina for Violin and Piano. His \u201cCuatro Melod\u00edas Tradicionales Indias del Ecuador\u201d was beautifully sung by the soprano Cecilia Violetta L\u00f3pez, whose bright, expressive voice made a strong impression in several works, including de Falla\u2019s \u201cEl Retablo de Maese Pedro.\u201d The resetting of part of Don Quixote de la Mancha \u2019s story concluded the final program in a charming production featuring puppets and witty visuals designed by Doug Fitch. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Ch\u00e1vez wove the tunes of folk songs like \u201cLa Cucaracha\u201d through a modernist idiom in a work for solo piano, and altered a traditional song chromatically in his Sonatina for Violin and Piano. His \u201cCuatro Melod\u00edas Tradicionales Indias del Ecuador\u201d was beautifully sung by the soprano Cecilia Violetta L\u00f3pez, whose bright, expressive voice made a strong impression in several works, including de Falla\u2019s \u201cEl Retablo de Maese Pedro.\u201d The resetting of part of Don Quixote de la Mancha \u2019s story concluded the final program in a charming production featuring puppets and witty visuals designed by Doug Fitch.", "sentence_answer": "The resetting of part of Don Quixote de la Mancha \u2019s story concluded the final program in a charming production featuring puppets and witty visuals designed by Doug Fitch."} -{"question": "Who created the visuals for Don Quixote de la Mancha?", "paragraph": "Mr. Ch\u00e1vez wove the tunes of folk songs like \u201cLa Cucaracha\u201d through a modernist idiom in a work for solo piano, and altered a traditional song chromatically in his Sonatina for Violin and Piano. His \u201cCuatro Melod\u00edas Tradicionales Indias del Ecuador\u201d was beautifully sung by the soprano Cecilia Violetta L\u00f3pez, whose bright, expressive voice made a strong impression in several works, including de Falla\u2019s \u201cEl Retablo de Maese Pedro.\u201d The resetting of part of Don Quixote de la Mancha\u2019s story concluded the final program in a charming production featuring puppets and witty visuals designed by Doug Fitch.", "answer": "Doug Fitch", "sentence": "The resetting of part of Don Quixote de la Mancha\u2019s story concluded the final program in a charming production featuring puppets and witty visuals designed by Doug Fitch .", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Ch\u00e1vez wove the tunes of folk songs like \u201cLa Cucaracha\u201d through a modernist idiom in a work for solo piano, and altered a traditional song chromatically in his Sonatina for Violin and Piano. His \u201cCuatro Melod\u00edas Tradicionales Indias del Ecuador\u201d was beautifully sung by the soprano Cecilia Violetta L\u00f3pez, whose bright, expressive voice made a strong impression in several works, including de Falla\u2019s \u201cEl Retablo de Maese Pedro.\u201d The resetting of part of Don Quixote de la Mancha\u2019s story concluded the final program in a charming production featuring puppets and witty visuals designed by Doug Fitch . ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Ch\u00e1vez wove the tunes of folk songs like \u201cLa Cucaracha\u201d through a modernist idiom in a work for solo piano, and altered a traditional song chromatically in his Sonatina for Violin and Piano. His \u201cCuatro Melod\u00edas Tradicionales Indias del Ecuador\u201d was beautifully sung by the soprano Cecilia Violetta L\u00f3pez, whose bright, expressive voice made a strong impression in several works, including de Falla\u2019s \u201cEl Retablo de Maese Pedro.\u201d The resetting of part of Don Quixote de la Mancha\u2019s story concluded the final program in a charming production featuring puppets and witty visuals designed by Doug Fitch .", "sentence_answer": "The resetting of part of Don Quixote de la Mancha\u2019s story concluded the final program in a charming production featuring puppets and witty visuals designed by Doug Fitch ."} -{"question": "What were the 10 Turkish citizens and two Chinese Citizens accused of?", "paragraph": "BEIJING \u2014 The police in Shanghai have arrested 10 Turkish citizens and two Chinese citizens and accused them of providing altered Turkish passports to terrorist suspects from the western region of Xinjiang, a state-run newspaper reported on Wednesday. The people trying to use the passports \u2014 nine ethnic Uighurs trying to leave China illegally through a Shanghai airport \u2014 are also under arrest, according to the newspaper, Global Times. All of the suspects were detained in November and formally charged recently, the report said. It added that the nine Uighurs were planning to go to Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria after leaving China. Audio and video materials with content related to terrorism were found on those trying to leave, the report said.", "answer": "providing altered Turkish passports to terrorist suspects", "sentence": "BEIJING \u2014 The police in Shanghai have arrested 10 Turkish citizens and two Chinese citizens and accused them of providing altered Turkish passports to terrorist suspects from the western region of Xinjiang, a state-run newspaper reported on Wednesday.", "paragraph_sentence": " BEIJING \u2014 The police in Shanghai have arrested 10 Turkish citizens and two Chinese citizens and accused them of providing altered Turkish passports to terrorist suspects from the western region of Xinjiang, a state-run newspaper reported on Wednesday. The people trying to use the passports \u2014 nine ethnic Uighurs trying to leave China illegally through a Shanghai airport \u2014 are also under arrest, according to the newspaper, Global Times. All of the suspects were detained in November and formally charged recently, the report said. It added that the nine Uighurs were planning to go to Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria after leaving China. Audio and video materials with content related to terrorism were found on those trying to leave, the report said.", "paragraph_answer": "BEIJING \u2014 The police in Shanghai have arrested 10 Turkish citizens and two Chinese citizens and accused them of providing altered Turkish passports to terrorist suspects from the western region of Xinjiang, a state-run newspaper reported on Wednesday. The people trying to use the passports \u2014 nine ethnic Uighurs trying to leave China illegally through a Shanghai airport \u2014 are also under arrest, according to the newspaper, Global Times. All of the suspects were detained in November and formally charged recently, the report said. It added that the nine Uighurs were planning to go to Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria after leaving China. Audio and video materials with content related to terrorism were found on those trying to leave, the report said.", "sentence_answer": "BEIJING \u2014 The police in Shanghai have arrested 10 Turkish citizens and two Chinese citizens and accused them of providing altered Turkish passports to terrorist suspects from the western region of Xinjiang, a state-run newspaper reported on Wednesday."} -{"question": "What did the nine ethnic Uighurs try to use the passports for?", "paragraph": "BEIJING \u2014 The police in Shanghai have arrested 10 Turkish citizens and two Chinese citizens and accused them of providing altered Turkish passports to terrorist suspects from the western region of Xinjiang, a state-run newspaper reported on Wednesday. The people trying to use the passports \u2014 nine ethnic Uighurs trying to leave China illegally through a Shanghai airport \u2014 are also under arrest, according to the newspaper, Global Times. All of the suspects were detained in November and formally charged recently, the report said. It added that the nine Uighurs were planning to go to Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria after leaving China. Audio and video materials with content related to terrorism were found on those trying to leave, the report said.", "answer": "to leave China illegally", "sentence": "The people trying to use the passports \u2014 nine ethnic Uighurs trying to leave China illegally through a Shanghai airport \u2014 are also under arrest, according to the newspaper, Global Times.", "paragraph_sentence": "BEIJING \u2014 The police in Shanghai have arrested 10 Turkish citizens and two Chinese citizens and accused them of providing altered Turkish passports to terrorist suspects from the western region of Xinjiang, a state-run newspaper reported on Wednesday. The people trying to use the passports \u2014 nine ethnic Uighurs trying to leave China illegally through a Shanghai airport \u2014 are also under arrest, according to the newspaper, Global Times. All of the suspects were detained in November and formally charged recently, the report said. It added that the nine Uighurs were planning to go to Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria after leaving China. Audio and video materials with content related to terrorism were found on those trying to leave, the report said.", "paragraph_answer": "BEIJING \u2014 The police in Shanghai have arrested 10 Turkish citizens and two Chinese citizens and accused them of providing altered Turkish passports to terrorist suspects from the western region of Xinjiang, a state-run newspaper reported on Wednesday. The people trying to use the passports \u2014 nine ethnic Uighurs trying to leave China illegally through a Shanghai airport \u2014 are also under arrest, according to the newspaper, Global Times. All of the suspects were detained in November and formally charged recently, the report said. It added that the nine Uighurs were planning to go to Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria after leaving China. Audio and video materials with content related to terrorism were found on those trying to leave, the report said.", "sentence_answer": "The people trying to use the passports \u2014 nine ethnic Uighurs trying to leave China illegally through a Shanghai airport \u2014 are also under arrest, according to the newspaper, Global Times."} -{"question": "What month were all the Suspects Detained?", "paragraph": "BEIJING \u2014 The police in Shanghai have arrested 10 Turkish citizens and two Chinese citizens and accused them of providing altered Turkish passports to terrorist suspects from the western region of Xinjiang, a state-run newspaper reported on Wednesday. The people trying to use the passports \u2014 nine ethnic Uighurs trying to leave China illegally through a Shanghai airport \u2014 are also under arrest, according to the newspaper, Global Times. All of the suspects were detained in November and formally charged recently, the report said. It added that the nine Uighurs were planning to go to Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria after leaving China. Audio and video materials with content related to terrorism were found on those trying to leave, the report said.", "answer": "November", "sentence": "All of the suspects were detained in November and formally charged recently, the report said.", "paragraph_sentence": "BEIJING \u2014 The police in Shanghai have arrested 10 Turkish citizens and two Chinese citizens and accused them of providing altered Turkish passports to terrorist suspects from the western region of Xinjiang, a state-run newspaper reported on Wednesday. The people trying to use the passports \u2014 nine ethnic Uighurs trying to leave China illegally through a Shanghai airport \u2014 are also under arrest, according to the newspaper, Global Times. All of the suspects were detained in November and formally charged recently, the report said. It added that the nine Uighurs were planning to go to Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria after leaving China. Audio and video materials with content related to terrorism were found on those trying to leave, the report said.", "paragraph_answer": "BEIJING \u2014 The police in Shanghai have arrested 10 Turkish citizens and two Chinese citizens and accused them of providing altered Turkish passports to terrorist suspects from the western region of Xinjiang, a state-run newspaper reported on Wednesday. The people trying to use the passports \u2014 nine ethnic Uighurs trying to leave China illegally through a Shanghai airport \u2014 are also under arrest, according to the newspaper, Global Times. All of the suspects were detained in November and formally charged recently, the report said. It added that the nine Uighurs were planning to go to Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria after leaving China. Audio and video materials with content related to terrorism were found on those trying to leave, the report said.", "sentence_answer": "All of the suspects were detained in November and formally charged recently, the report said."} -{"question": "Who were arrested trying to use the passports?", "paragraph": "BEIJING \u2014 The police in Shanghai have arrested 10 Turkish citizens and two Chinese citizens and accused them of providing altered Turkish passports to terrorist suspects from the western region of Xinjiang, a state-run newspaper reported on Wednesday. The people trying to use the passports \u2014 nine ethnic Uighurs trying to leave China illegally through a Shanghai airport \u2014 are also under arrest, according to the newspaper, Global Times. All of the suspects were detained in November and formally charged recently, the report said. It added that the nine Uighurs were planning to go to Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria after leaving China. Audio and video materials with content related to terrorism were found on those trying to leave, the report said.", "answer": "nine ethnic Uighurs", "sentence": "The people trying to use the passports \u2014 nine ethnic Uighurs trying to leave China illegally through a Shanghai airport \u2014 are also under arrest, according to the newspaper, Global Times.", "paragraph_sentence": "BEIJING \u2014 The police in Shanghai have arrested 10 Turkish citizens and two Chinese citizens and accused them of providing altered Turkish passports to terrorist suspects from the western region of Xinjiang, a state-run newspaper reported on Wednesday. The people trying to use the passports \u2014 nine ethnic Uighurs trying to leave China illegally through a Shanghai airport \u2014 are also under arrest, according to the newspaper, Global Times. All of the suspects were detained in November and formally charged recently, the report said. It added that the nine Uighurs were planning to go to Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria after leaving China. Audio and video materials with content related to terrorism were found on those trying to leave, the report said.", "paragraph_answer": "BEIJING \u2014 The police in Shanghai have arrested 10 Turkish citizens and two Chinese citizens and accused them of providing altered Turkish passports to terrorist suspects from the western region of Xinjiang, a state-run newspaper reported on Wednesday. The people trying to use the passports \u2014 nine ethnic Uighurs trying to leave China illegally through a Shanghai airport \u2014 are also under arrest, according to the newspaper, Global Times. All of the suspects were detained in November and formally charged recently, the report said. It added that the nine Uighurs were planning to go to Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria after leaving China. Audio and video materials with content related to terrorism were found on those trying to leave, the report said.", "sentence_answer": "The people trying to use the passports \u2014 nine ethnic Uighurs trying to leave China illegally through a Shanghai airport \u2014 are also under arrest, according to the newspaper, Global Times."} -{"question": "Where were the terrorists suspects from that received the altered passports?", "paragraph": "BEIJING \u2014 The police in Shanghai have arrested 10 Turkish citizens and two Chinese citizens and accused them of providing altered Turkish passports to terrorist suspects from the western region of Xinjiang, a state-run newspaper reported on Wednesday. The people trying to use the passports \u2014 nine ethnic Uighurs trying to leave China illegally through a Shanghai airport \u2014 are also under arrest, according to the newspaper, Global Times. All of the suspects were detained in November and formally charged recently, the report said. It added that the nine Uighurs were planning to go to Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria after leaving China. Audio and video materials with content related to terrorism were found on those trying to leave, the report said.", "answer": "western region of Xinjiang", "sentence": "BEIJING \u2014 The police in Shanghai have arrested 10 Turkish citizens and two Chinese citizens and accused them of providing altered Turkish passports to terrorist suspects from the western region of Xinjiang , a state-run newspaper reported on Wednesday.", "paragraph_sentence": " BEIJING \u2014 The police in Shanghai have arrested 10 Turkish citizens and two Chinese citizens and accused them of providing altered Turkish passports to terrorist suspects from the western region of Xinjiang , a state-run newspaper reported on Wednesday. The people trying to use the passports \u2014 nine ethnic Uighurs trying to leave China illegally through a Shanghai airport \u2014 are also under arrest, according to the newspaper, Global Times. All of the suspects were detained in November and formally charged recently, the report said. It added that the nine Uighurs were planning to go to Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria after leaving China. Audio and video materials with content related to terrorism were found on those trying to leave, the report said.", "paragraph_answer": "BEIJING \u2014 The police in Shanghai have arrested 10 Turkish citizens and two Chinese citizens and accused them of providing altered Turkish passports to terrorist suspects from the western region of Xinjiang , a state-run newspaper reported on Wednesday. The people trying to use the passports \u2014 nine ethnic Uighurs trying to leave China illegally through a Shanghai airport \u2014 are also under arrest, according to the newspaper, Global Times. All of the suspects were detained in November and formally charged recently, the report said. It added that the nine Uighurs were planning to go to Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria after leaving China. Audio and video materials with content related to terrorism were found on those trying to leave, the report said.", "sentence_answer": "BEIJING \u2014 The police in Shanghai have arrested 10 Turkish citizens and two Chinese citizens and accused them of providing altered Turkish passports to terrorist suspects from the western region of Xinjiang , a state-run newspaper reported on Wednesday."} -{"question": "What country did many Uighurs try to flee to?", "paragraph": "Many Uighurs have been trying to flee China to Turkey, usually by first traveling overland through Southeast Asian countries to Malaysia. Last year, hundreds of Uighurs in separate groups, most of them women and children, were detained by Thai security forces in the jungles of southern Thailand. They told Thai officials that they were Turkish citizens, and they were later visited by diplomats from the Turkish Embassy in Bangkok. Chinese officials insisted to the Thai government that the migrants be sent back to China. The fate of those migrant Uighurs is unclear.", "answer": "Turkey", "sentence": "Many Uighurs have been trying to flee China to Turkey , usually by first traveling overland through Southeast Asian countries to Malaysia.", "paragraph_sentence": " Many Uighurs have been trying to flee China to Turkey , usually by first traveling overland through Southeast Asian countries to Malaysia. Last year, hundreds of Uighurs in separate groups, most of them women and children, were detained by Thai security forces in the jungles of southern Thailand. They told Thai officials that they were Turkish citizens, and they were later visited by diplomats from the Turkish Embassy in Bangkok. Chinese officials insisted to the Thai government that the migrants be sent back to China. The fate of those migrant Uighurs is unclear.", "paragraph_answer": "Many Uighurs have been trying to flee China to Turkey , usually by first traveling overland through Southeast Asian countries to Malaysia. Last year, hundreds of Uighurs in separate groups, most of them women and children, were detained by Thai security forces in the jungles of southern Thailand. They told Thai officials that they were Turkish citizens, and they were later visited by diplomats from the Turkish Embassy in Bangkok. Chinese officials insisted to the Thai government that the migrants be sent back to China. The fate of those migrant Uighurs is unclear.", "sentence_answer": "Many Uighurs have been trying to flee China to Turkey , usually by first traveling overland through Southeast Asian countries to Malaysia."} -{"question": "By what security forces were the Uighurs detained by?", "paragraph": "Many Uighurs have been trying to flee China to Turkey, usually by first traveling overland through Southeast Asian countries to Malaysia. Last year, hundreds of Uighurs in separate groups, most of them women and children, were detained by Thai security forces in the jungles of southern Thailand. They told Thai officials that they were Turkish citizens, and they were later visited by diplomats from the Turkish Embassy in Bangkok. Chinese officials insisted to the Thai government that the migrants be sent back to China. The fate of those migrant Uighurs is unclear.", "answer": "Thai security forces", "sentence": "Last year, hundreds of Uighurs in separate groups, most of them women and children, were detained by Thai security forces in the jungles of southern Thailand.", "paragraph_sentence": "Many Uighurs have been trying to flee China to Turkey, usually by first traveling overland through Southeast Asian countries to Malaysia. Last year, hundreds of Uighurs in separate groups, most of them women and children, were detained by Thai security forces in the jungles of southern Thailand. They told Thai officials that they were Turkish citizens, and they were later visited by diplomats from the Turkish Embassy in Bangkok. Chinese officials insisted to the Thai government that the migrants be sent back to China. The fate of those migrant Uighurs is unclear.", "paragraph_answer": "Many Uighurs have been trying to flee China to Turkey, usually by first traveling overland through Southeast Asian countries to Malaysia. Last year, hundreds of Uighurs in separate groups, most of them women and children, were detained by Thai security forces in the jungles of southern Thailand. They told Thai officials that they were Turkish citizens, and they were later visited by diplomats from the Turkish Embassy in Bangkok. Chinese officials insisted to the Thai government that the migrants be sent back to China. The fate of those migrant Uighurs is unclear.", "sentence_answer": "Last year, hundreds of Uighurs in separate groups, most of them women and children, were detained by Thai security forces in the jungles of southern Thailand."} -{"question": "Where were the Uighurs detained by Thai security forces?", "paragraph": "Many Uighurs have been trying to flee China to Turkey, usually by first traveling overland through Southeast Asian countries to Malaysia. Last year, hundreds of Uighurs in separate groups, most of them women and children, were detained by Thai security forces in the jungles of southern Thailand. They told Thai officials that they were Turkish citizens, and they were later visited by diplomats from the Turkish Embassy in Bangkok. Chinese officials insisted to the Thai government that the migrants be sent back to China. The fate of those migrant Uighurs is unclear.", "answer": "in the jungles of southern Thailand", "sentence": "Last year, hundreds of Uighurs in separate groups, most of them women and children, were detained by Thai security forces in the jungles of southern Thailand .", "paragraph_sentence": "Many Uighurs have been trying to flee China to Turkey, usually by first traveling overland through Southeast Asian countries to Malaysia. Last year, hundreds of Uighurs in separate groups, most of them women and children, were detained by Thai security forces in the jungles of southern Thailand . They told Thai officials that they were Turkish citizens, and they were later visited by diplomats from the Turkish Embassy in Bangkok. Chinese officials insisted to the Thai government that the migrants be sent back to China. The fate of those migrant Uighurs is unclear.", "paragraph_answer": "Many Uighurs have been trying to flee China to Turkey, usually by first traveling overland through Southeast Asian countries to Malaysia. Last year, hundreds of Uighurs in separate groups, most of them women and children, were detained by Thai security forces in the jungles of southern Thailand . They told Thai officials that they were Turkish citizens, and they were later visited by diplomats from the Turkish Embassy in Bangkok. Chinese officials insisted to the Thai government that the migrants be sent back to China. The fate of those migrant Uighurs is unclear.", "sentence_answer": "Last year, hundreds of Uighurs in separate groups, most of them women and children, were detained by Thai security forces in the jungles of southern Thailand ."} -{"question": "What did the Chinese officials insist to the Thai Government?", "paragraph": "Many Uighurs have been trying to flee China to Turkey, usually by first traveling overland through Southeast Asian countries to Malaysia. Last year, hundreds of Uighurs in separate groups, most of them women and children, were detained by Thai security forces in the jungles of southern Thailand. They told Thai officials that they were Turkish citizens, and they were later visited by diplomats from the Turkish Embassy in Bangkok. Chinese officials insisted to the Thai government that the migrants be sent back to China. The fate of those migrant Uighurs is unclear.", "answer": "that the migrants be sent back to China", "sentence": "Chinese officials insisted to the Thai government that the migrants be sent back to China .", "paragraph_sentence": "Many Uighurs have been trying to flee China to Turkey, usually by first traveling overland through Southeast Asian countries to Malaysia. Last year, hundreds of Uighurs in separate groups, most of them women and children, were detained by Thai security forces in the jungles of southern Thailand. They told Thai officials that they were Turkish citizens, and they were later visited by diplomats from the Turkish Embassy in Bangkok. Chinese officials insisted to the Thai government that the migrants be sent back to China . The fate of those migrant Uighurs is unclear.", "paragraph_answer": "Many Uighurs have been trying to flee China to Turkey, usually by first traveling overland through Southeast Asian countries to Malaysia. Last year, hundreds of Uighurs in separate groups, most of them women and children, were detained by Thai security forces in the jungles of southern Thailand. They told Thai officials that they were Turkish citizens, and they were later visited by diplomats from the Turkish Embassy in Bangkok. Chinese officials insisted to the Thai government that the migrants be sent back to China . The fate of those migrant Uighurs is unclear.", "sentence_answer": "Chinese officials insisted to the Thai government that the migrants be sent back to China ."} -{"question": "What citizens did the Uighurs tell the Thai officials they were?", "paragraph": "Many Uighurs have been trying to flee China to Turkey, usually by first traveling overland through Southeast Asian countries to Malaysia. Last year, hundreds of Uighurs in separate groups, most of them women and children, were detained by Thai security forces in the jungles of southern Thailand. They told Thai officials that they were Turkish citizens, and they were later visited by diplomats from the Turkish Embassy in Bangkok. Chinese officials insisted to the Thai government that the migrants be sent back to China. The fate of those migrant Uighurs is unclear.", "answer": "Turkish citizens", "sentence": "They told Thai officials that they were Turkish citizens , and they were later visited by diplomats from the Turkish Embassy in Bangkok.", "paragraph_sentence": "Many Uighurs have been trying to flee China to Turkey, usually by first traveling overland through Southeast Asian countries to Malaysia. Last year, hundreds of Uighurs in separate groups, most of them women and children, were detained by Thai security forces in the jungles of southern Thailand. They told Thai officials that they were Turkish citizens , and they were later visited by diplomats from the Turkish Embassy in Bangkok. Chinese officials insisted to the Thai government that the migrants be sent back to China. The fate of those migrant Uighurs is unclear.", "paragraph_answer": "Many Uighurs have been trying to flee China to Turkey, usually by first traveling overland through Southeast Asian countries to Malaysia. Last year, hundreds of Uighurs in separate groups, most of them women and children, were detained by Thai security forces in the jungles of southern Thailand. They told Thai officials that they were Turkish citizens , and they were later visited by diplomats from the Turkish Embassy in Bangkok. Chinese officials insisted to the Thai government that the migrants be sent back to China. The fate of those migrant Uighurs is unclear.", "sentence_answer": "They told Thai officials that they were Turkish citizens , and they were later visited by diplomats from the Turkish Embassy in Bangkok."} -{"question": "How much were the Turks paid for each passport?", "paragraph": "Nine of the Turkish citizens arrested in Shanghai had come to China to hand over their passports to traffickers who were trying to smuggle out the Uighurs, Global Times reported, adding that the Turks were paid $2,000 a passport. Each of the Uighurs had paid the traffickers 60,000 renminbi, or about $9,700, for a passport, according to the report. It said the Uighurs were trying to leave China on flights from Shanghai Pudong International Airport. The report identified the main two traffickers as Lamazan, a Turkish citizen, and Dawuti, a Chinese citizen living in Turkey. Dawuti is a Mandarin Chinese transliteration of a Uighur name. The report said Dawuti was a native of Kashgar, a Silk Road oasis city in the Uighur heartland near the border with Pakistan. The two men had a Turkish citizen, identified as Kaluke, alter the passports, the report said.", "answer": "$2,000", "sentence": "Nine of the Turkish citizens arrested in Shanghai had come to China to hand over their passports to traffickers who were trying to smuggle out the Uighurs, Global Times reported, adding that the Turks were paid $2,000 a passport.", "paragraph_sentence": " Nine of the Turkish citizens arrested in Shanghai had come to China to hand over their passports to traffickers who were trying to smuggle out the Uighurs, Global Times reported, adding that the Turks were paid $2,000 a passport. Each of the Uighurs had paid the traffickers 60,000 renminbi, or about $9,700, for a passport, according to the report. It said the Uighurs were trying to leave China on flights from Shanghai Pudong International Airport. The report identified the main two traffickers as Lamazan, a Turkish citizen, and Dawuti, a Chinese citizen living in Turkey. Dawuti is a Mandarin Chinese transliteration of a Uighur name. The report said Dawuti was a native of Kashgar, a Silk Road oasis city in the Uighur heartland near the border with Pakistan. The two men had a Turkish citizen, identified as Kaluke, alter the passports, the report said.", "paragraph_answer": "Nine of the Turkish citizens arrested in Shanghai had come to China to hand over their passports to traffickers who were trying to smuggle out the Uighurs, Global Times reported, adding that the Turks were paid $2,000 a passport. Each of the Uighurs had paid the traffickers 60,000 renminbi, or about $9,700, for a passport, according to the report. It said the Uighurs were trying to leave China on flights from Shanghai Pudong International Airport. The report identified the main two traffickers as Lamazan, a Turkish citizen, and Dawuti, a Chinese citizen living in Turkey. Dawuti is a Mandarin Chinese transliteration of a Uighur name. The report said Dawuti was a native of Kashgar, a Silk Road oasis city in the Uighur heartland near the border with Pakistan. The two men had a Turkish citizen, identified as Kaluke, alter the passports, the report said.", "sentence_answer": "Nine of the Turkish citizens arrested in Shanghai had come to China to hand over their passports to traffickers who were trying to smuggle out the Uighurs, Global Times reported, adding that the Turks were paid $2,000 a passport."} -{"question": "How much in Renminbi money were the traffickers paid by each Uighur for a passport??", "paragraph": "Nine of the Turkish citizens arrested in Shanghai had come to China to hand over their passports to traffickers who were trying to smuggle out the Uighurs, Global Times reported, adding that the Turks were paid $2,000 a passport. Each of the Uighurs had paid the traffickers 60,000 renminbi, or about $9,700, for a passport, according to the report. It said the Uighurs were trying to leave China on flights from Shanghai Pudong International Airport. The report identified the main two traffickers as Lamazan, a Turkish citizen, and Dawuti, a Chinese citizen living in Turkey. Dawuti is a Mandarin Chinese transliteration of a Uighur name. The report said Dawuti was a native of Kashgar, a Silk Road oasis city in the Uighur heartland near the border with Pakistan. The two men had a Turkish citizen, identified as Kaluke, alter the passports, the report said.", "answer": "60,000", "sentence": "Each of the Uighurs had paid the traffickers 60,000 renminbi, or about $9,700, for a passport, according to the report.", "paragraph_sentence": "Nine of the Turkish citizens arrested in Shanghai had come to China to hand over their passports to traffickers who were trying to smuggle out the Uighurs, Global Times reported, adding that the Turks were paid $2,000 a passport. Each of the Uighurs had paid the traffickers 60,000 renminbi, or about $9,700, for a passport, according to the report. It said the Uighurs were trying to leave China on flights from Shanghai Pudong International Airport. The report identified the main two traffickers as Lamazan, a Turkish citizen, and Dawuti, a Chinese citizen living in Turkey. Dawuti is a Mandarin Chinese transliteration of a Uighur name. The report said Dawuti was a native of Kashgar, a Silk Road oasis city in the Uighur heartland near the border with Pakistan. The two men had a Turkish citizen, identified as Kaluke, alter the passports, the report said.", "paragraph_answer": "Nine of the Turkish citizens arrested in Shanghai had come to China to hand over their passports to traffickers who were trying to smuggle out the Uighurs, Global Times reported, adding that the Turks were paid $2,000 a passport. Each of the Uighurs had paid the traffickers 60,000 renminbi, or about $9,700, for a passport, according to the report. It said the Uighurs were trying to leave China on flights from Shanghai Pudong International Airport. The report identified the main two traffickers as Lamazan, a Turkish citizen, and Dawuti, a Chinese citizen living in Turkey. Dawuti is a Mandarin Chinese transliteration of a Uighur name. The report said Dawuti was a native of Kashgar, a Silk Road oasis city in the Uighur heartland near the border with Pakistan. The two men had a Turkish citizen, identified as Kaluke, alter the passports, the report said.", "sentence_answer": "Each of the Uighurs had paid the traffickers 60,000 renminbi, or about $9,700, for a passport, according to the report."} -{"question": "From what airport were the Uighurs trying to leave china?", "paragraph": "Nine of the Turkish citizens arrested in Shanghai had come to China to hand over their passports to traffickers who were trying to smuggle out the Uighurs, Global Times reported, adding that the Turks were paid $2,000 a passport. Each of the Uighurs had paid the traffickers 60,000 renminbi, or about $9,700, for a passport, according to the report. It said the Uighurs were trying to leave China on flights from Shanghai Pudong International Airport. The report identified the main two traffickers as Lamazan, a Turkish citizen, and Dawuti, a Chinese citizen living in Turkey. Dawuti is a Mandarin Chinese transliteration of a Uighur name. The report said Dawuti was a native of Kashgar, a Silk Road oasis city in the Uighur heartland near the border with Pakistan. The two men had a Turkish citizen, identified as Kaluke, alter the passports, the report said.", "answer": "Shanghai Pudong International Airport", "sentence": "It said the Uighurs were trying to leave China on flights from Shanghai Pudong International Airport .", "paragraph_sentence": "Nine of the Turkish citizens arrested in Shanghai had come to China to hand over their passports to traffickers who were trying to smuggle out the Uighurs, Global Times reported, adding that the Turks were paid $2,000 a passport. Each of the Uighurs had paid the traffickers 60,000 renminbi, or about $9,700, for a passport, according to the report. It said the Uighurs were trying to leave China on flights from Shanghai Pudong International Airport . The report identified the main two traffickers as Lamazan, a Turkish citizen, and Dawuti, a Chinese citizen living in Turkey. Dawuti is a Mandarin Chinese transliteration of a Uighur name. The report said Dawuti was a native of Kashgar, a Silk Road oasis city in the Uighur heartland near the border with Pakistan. The two men had a Turkish citizen, identified as Kaluke, alter the passports, the report said.", "paragraph_answer": "Nine of the Turkish citizens arrested in Shanghai had come to China to hand over their passports to traffickers who were trying to smuggle out the Uighurs, Global Times reported, adding that the Turks were paid $2,000 a passport. Each of the Uighurs had paid the traffickers 60,000 renminbi, or about $9,700, for a passport, according to the report. It said the Uighurs were trying to leave China on flights from Shanghai Pudong International Airport . The report identified the main two traffickers as Lamazan, a Turkish citizen, and Dawuti, a Chinese citizen living in Turkey. Dawuti is a Mandarin Chinese transliteration of a Uighur name. The report said Dawuti was a native of Kashgar, a Silk Road oasis city in the Uighur heartland near the border with Pakistan. The two men had a Turkish citizen, identified as Kaluke, alter the passports, the report said.", "sentence_answer": "It said the Uighurs were trying to leave China on flights from Shanghai Pudong International Airport ."} -{"question": "Who were the two main traffickers?", "paragraph": "Nine of the Turkish citizens arrested in Shanghai had come to China to hand over their passports to traffickers who were trying to smuggle out the Uighurs, Global Times reported, adding that the Turks were paid $2,000 a passport. Each of the Uighurs had paid the traffickers 60,000 renminbi, or about $9,700, for a passport, according to the report. It said the Uighurs were trying to leave China on flights from Shanghai Pudong International Airport. The report identified the main two traffickers as Lamazan, a Turkish citizen, and Dawuti, a Chinese citizen living in Turkey. Dawuti is a Mandarin Chinese transliteration of a Uighur name. The report said Dawuti was a native of Kashgar, a Silk Road oasis city in the Uighur heartland near the border with Pakistan. The two men had a Turkish citizen, identified as Kaluke, alter the passports, the report said.", "answer": "Lamazan, a Turkish citizen, and Dawuti, a Chinese citizen", "sentence": "The report identified the main two traffickers as Lamazan, a Turkish citizen, and Dawuti, a Chinese citizen living in Turkey.", "paragraph_sentence": "Nine of the Turkish citizens arrested in Shanghai had come to China to hand over their passports to traffickers who were trying to smuggle out the Uighurs, Global Times reported, adding that the Turks were paid $2,000 a passport. Each of the Uighurs had paid the traffickers 60,000 renminbi, or about $9,700, for a passport, according to the report. It said the Uighurs were trying to leave China on flights from Shanghai Pudong International Airport. The report identified the main two traffickers as Lamazan, a Turkish citizen, and Dawuti, a Chinese citizen living in Turkey. Dawuti is a Mandarin Chinese transliteration of a Uighur name. The report said Dawuti was a native of Kashgar, a Silk Road oasis city in the Uighur heartland near the border with Pakistan. The two men had a Turkish citizen, identified as Kaluke, alter the passports, the report said.", "paragraph_answer": "Nine of the Turkish citizens arrested in Shanghai had come to China to hand over their passports to traffickers who were trying to smuggle out the Uighurs, Global Times reported, adding that the Turks were paid $2,000 a passport. Each of the Uighurs had paid the traffickers 60,000 renminbi, or about $9,700, for a passport, according to the report. It said the Uighurs were trying to leave China on flights from Shanghai Pudong International Airport. The report identified the main two traffickers as Lamazan, a Turkish citizen, and Dawuti, a Chinese citizen living in Turkey. Dawuti is a Mandarin Chinese transliteration of a Uighur name. The report said Dawuti was a native of Kashgar, a Silk Road oasis city in the Uighur heartland near the border with Pakistan. The two men had a Turkish citizen, identified as Kaluke, alter the passports, the report said.", "sentence_answer": "The report identified the main two traffickers as Lamazan, a Turkish citizen, and Dawuti, a Chinese citizen living in Turkey."} -{"question": "What country were both the Traffickers living in?", "paragraph": "Nine of the Turkish citizens arrested in Shanghai had come to China to hand over their passports to traffickers who were trying to smuggle out the Uighurs, Global Times reported, adding that the Turks were paid $2,000 a passport. Each of the Uighurs had paid the traffickers 60,000 renminbi, or about $9,700, for a passport, according to the report. It said the Uighurs were trying to leave China on flights from Shanghai Pudong International Airport. The report identified the main two traffickers as Lamazan, a Turkish citizen, and Dawuti, a Chinese citizen living in Turkey. Dawuti is a Mandarin Chinese transliteration of a Uighur name. The report said Dawuti was a native of Kashgar, a Silk Road oasis city in the Uighur heartland near the border with Pakistan. The two men had a Turkish citizen, identified as Kaluke, alter the passports, the report said.", "answer": "Turkey", "sentence": "The report identified the main two traffickers as Lamazan, a Turkish citizen, and Dawuti, a Chinese citizen living in Turkey .", "paragraph_sentence": "Nine of the Turkish citizens arrested in Shanghai had come to China to hand over their passports to traffickers who were trying to smuggle out the Uighurs, Global Times reported, adding that the Turks were paid $2,000 a passport. Each of the Uighurs had paid the traffickers 60,000 renminbi, or about $9,700, for a passport, according to the report. It said the Uighurs were trying to leave China on flights from Shanghai Pudong International Airport. The report identified the main two traffickers as Lamazan, a Turkish citizen, and Dawuti, a Chinese citizen living in Turkey . Dawuti is a Mandarin Chinese transliteration of a Uighur name. The report said Dawuti was a native of Kashgar, a Silk Road oasis city in the Uighur heartland near the border with Pakistan. The two men had a Turkish citizen, identified as Kaluke, alter the passports, the report said.", "paragraph_answer": "Nine of the Turkish citizens arrested in Shanghai had come to China to hand over their passports to traffickers who were trying to smuggle out the Uighurs, Global Times reported, adding that the Turks were paid $2,000 a passport. Each of the Uighurs had paid the traffickers 60,000 renminbi, or about $9,700, for a passport, according to the report. It said the Uighurs were trying to leave China on flights from Shanghai Pudong International Airport. The report identified the main two traffickers as Lamazan, a Turkish citizen, and Dawuti, a Chinese citizen living in Turkey . Dawuti is a Mandarin Chinese transliteration of a Uighur name. The report said Dawuti was a native of Kashgar, a Silk Road oasis city in the Uighur heartland near the border with Pakistan. The two men had a Turkish citizen, identified as Kaluke, alter the passports, the report said.", "sentence_answer": "The report identified the main two traffickers as Lamazan, a Turkish citizen, and Dawuti, a Chinese citizen living in Turkey ."} -{"question": "Which bank possess the highest proportion of lending assets in France overall?", "paragraph": "PARIS \u2014 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole and Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale, two of France\u2019s largest banks, reported higher third-quarter profits on Thursday as their retail divisions posted improved results. Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier. Its revenue slipped 2 percent to \u20ac3.9 billion, it said, though it noted that the figure was broadly stable after accounting for a revaluation of its own debt, loan hedges and other items. It said most business lines had improved, particularly domestic and international retail banking.", "answer": "BNP Paribas", "sentence": "Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier.", "paragraph_sentence": "PARIS \u2014 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole and Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale, two of France\u2019s largest banks, reported higher third-quarter profits on Thursday as their retail divisions posted improved results. Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier. Its revenue slipped 2 percent to \u20ac3.9 billion, it said, though it noted that the figure was broadly stable after accounting for a revaluation of its own debt, loan hedges and other items. It said most business lines had improved, particularly domestic and international retail banking.", "paragraph_answer": "PARIS \u2014 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole and Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale, two of France\u2019s largest banks, reported higher third-quarter profits on Thursday as their retail divisions posted improved results. Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier. Its revenue slipped 2 percent to \u20ac3.9 billion, it said, though it noted that the figure was broadly stable after accounting for a revaluation of its own debt, loan hedges and other items. It said most business lines had improved, particularly domestic and international retail banking.", "sentence_answer": "Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier."} -{"question": "What percent increase did Credit Agricole observe in net income from this year to last?", "paragraph": "PARIS \u2014 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole and Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale, two of France\u2019s largest banks, reported higher third-quarter profits on Thursday as their retail divisions posted improved results. Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier. Its revenue slipped 2 percent to \u20ac3.9 billion, it said, though it noted that the figure was broadly stable after accounting for a revaluation of its own debt, loan hedges and other items. It said most business lines had improved, particularly domestic and international retail banking.", "answer": "15 percent", "sentence": "Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier.", "paragraph_sentence": "PARIS \u2014 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole and Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale, two of France\u2019s largest banks, reported higher third-quarter profits on Thursday as their retail divisions posted improved results. Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier. Its revenue slipped 2 percent to \u20ac3.9 billion, it said, though it noted that the figure was broadly stable after accounting for a revaluation of its own debt, loan hedges and other items. It said most business lines had improved, particularly domestic and international retail banking.", "paragraph_answer": "PARIS \u2014 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole and Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale, two of France\u2019s largest banks, reported higher third-quarter profits on Thursday as their retail divisions posted improved results. Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier. Its revenue slipped 2 percent to \u20ac3.9 billion, it said, though it noted that the figure was broadly stable after accounting for a revaluation of its own debt, loan hedges and other items. It said most business lines had improved, particularly domestic and international retail banking.", "sentence_answer": "Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier."} -{"question": "Which fiscal quarter is being discussed in this article?", "paragraph": "PARIS \u2014 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole and Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale, two of France\u2019s largest banks, reported higher third-quarter profits on Thursday as their retail divisions posted improved results. Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier. Its revenue slipped 2 percent to \u20ac3.9 billion, it said, though it noted that the figure was broadly stable after accounting for a revaluation of its own debt, loan hedges and other items. It said most business lines had improved, particularly domestic and international retail banking.", "answer": "third-quarter", "sentence": "PARIS \u2014 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole and Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale, two of France\u2019s largest banks, reported higher third-quarter profits on Thursday as their retail divisions posted improved results.", "paragraph_sentence": " PARIS \u2014 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole and Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale, two of France\u2019s largest banks, reported higher third-quarter profits on Thursday as their retail divisions posted improved results. Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier. Its revenue slipped 2 percent to \u20ac3.9 billion, it said, though it noted that the figure was broadly stable after accounting for a revaluation of its own debt, loan hedges and other items. It said most business lines had improved, particularly domestic and international retail banking.", "paragraph_answer": "PARIS \u2014 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole and Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale, two of France\u2019s largest banks, reported higher third-quarter profits on Thursday as their retail divisions posted improved results. Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier. Its revenue slipped 2 percent to \u20ac3.9 billion, it said, though it noted that the figure was broadly stable after accounting for a revaluation of its own debt, loan hedges and other items. It said most business lines had improved, particularly domestic and international retail banking.", "sentence_answer": "PARIS \u2014 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole and Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale, two of France\u2019s largest banks, reported higher third-quarter profits on Thursday as their retail divisions posted improved results."} -{"question": "How long did it take Credit Agricole to earn 930 million euros in net income?", "paragraph": "PARIS \u2014 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole and Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale, two of France\u2019s largest banks, reported higher third-quarter profits on Thursday as their retail divisions posted improved results. Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier. Its revenue slipped 2 percent to \u20ac3.9 billion, it said, though it noted that the figure was broadly stable after accounting for a revaluation of its own debt, loan hedges and other items. It said most business lines had improved, particularly domestic and international retail banking.", "answer": "three months", "sentence": "Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier.", "paragraph_sentence": "PARIS \u2014 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole and Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale, two of France\u2019s largest banks, reported higher third-quarter profits on Thursday as their retail divisions posted improved results. Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier. Its revenue slipped 2 percent to \u20ac3.9 billion, it said, though it noted that the figure was broadly stable after accounting for a revaluation of its own debt, loan hedges and other items. It said most business lines had improved, particularly domestic and international retail banking.", "paragraph_answer": "PARIS \u2014 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole and Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale, two of France\u2019s largest banks, reported higher third-quarter profits on Thursday as their retail divisions posted improved results. Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier. Its revenue slipped 2 percent to \u20ac3.9 billion, it said, though it noted that the figure was broadly stable after accounting for a revaluation of its own debt, loan hedges and other items. It said most business lines had improved, particularly domestic and international retail banking.", "sentence_answer": "Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier."} -{"question": "Which two lines of business improved the most in this quarter?", "paragraph": "PARIS \u2014 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole and Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale, two of France\u2019s largest banks, reported higher third-quarter profits on Thursday as their retail divisions posted improved results. Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier. Its revenue slipped 2 percent to \u20ac3.9 billion, it said, though it noted that the figure was broadly stable after accounting for a revaluation of its own debt, loan hedges and other items. It said most business lines had improved, particularly domestic and international retail banking.", "answer": "domestic and international retail banking.", "sentence": "It said most business lines had improved, particularly domestic and international retail banking.", "paragraph_sentence": "PARIS \u2014 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole and Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale, two of France\u2019s largest banks, reported higher third-quarter profits on Thursday as their retail divisions posted improved results. Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier. Its revenue slipped 2 percent to \u20ac3.9 billion, it said, though it noted that the figure was broadly stable after accounting for a revaluation of its own debt, loan hedges and other items. It said most business lines had improved, particularly domestic and international retail banking. ", "paragraph_answer": "PARIS \u2014 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole and Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale, two of France\u2019s largest banks, reported higher third-quarter profits on Thursday as their retail divisions posted improved results. Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier. Its revenue slipped 2 percent to \u20ac3.9 billion, it said, though it noted that the figure was broadly stable after accounting for a revaluation of its own debt, loan hedges and other items. It said most business lines had improved, particularly domestic and international retail banking. ", "sentence_answer": "It said most business lines had improved, particularly domestic and international retail banking. "} -{"question": "How did the school board increase public spending on private schools?", "paragraph": "While slashing resources in its public schools, the school board vastly increased public spending on private schools. The cost of transporting children, including gender-segregated busing, rose to $27.3 million in 2013-14 from $22 million in 2009-10, a 24 percent increase. Public spending on private school placement for special education students grew by 33 percent between 2010-11 and 2013-14, and the district placed students in private schools when appropriate spaces were available in public ones.", "answer": "slashing resources", "sentence": "While slashing resources in its public schools, the school board vastly increased public spending on private schools.", "paragraph_sentence": " While slashing resources in its public schools, the school board vastly increased public spending on private schools. The cost of transporting children, including gender-segregated busing, rose to $27.3 million in 2013-14 from $22 million in 2009-10, a 24 percent increase. Public spending on private school placement for special education students grew by 33 percent between 2010-11 and 2013-14, and the district placed students in private schools when appropriate spaces were available in public ones.", "paragraph_answer": "While slashing resources in its public schools, the school board vastly increased public spending on private schools. The cost of transporting children, including gender-segregated busing, rose to $27.3 million in 2013-14 from $22 million in 2009-10, a 24 percent increase. Public spending on private school placement for special education students grew by 33 percent between 2010-11 and 2013-14, and the district placed students in private schools when appropriate spaces were available in public ones.", "sentence_answer": "While slashing resources in its public schools, the school board vastly increased public spending on private schools."} -{"question": "How much did public spending increase in regards to public school placement for special education students?", "paragraph": "While slashing resources in its public schools, the school board vastly increased public spending on private schools. The cost of transporting children, including gender-segregated busing, rose to $27.3 million in 2013-14 from $22 million in 2009-10, a 24 percent increase. Public spending on private school placement for special education students grew by 33 percent between 2010-11 and 2013-14, and the district placed students in private schools when appropriate spaces were available in public ones.", "answer": "33 percent", "sentence": "Public spending on private school placement for special education students grew by 33 percent between 2010-11 and 2013-14, and the district placed students in private schools when appropriate spaces were available in public ones.", "paragraph_sentence": "While slashing resources in its public schools, the school board vastly increased public spending on private schools. The cost of transporting children, including gender-segregated busing, rose to $27.3 million in 2013-14 from $22 million in 2009-10, a 24 percent increase. Public spending on private school placement for special education students grew by 33 percent between 2010-11 and 2013-14, and the district placed students in private schools when appropriate spaces were available in public ones. ", "paragraph_answer": "While slashing resources in its public schools, the school board vastly increased public spending on private schools. The cost of transporting children, including gender-segregated busing, rose to $27.3 million in 2013-14 from $22 million in 2009-10, a 24 percent increase. Public spending on private school placement for special education students grew by 33 percent between 2010-11 and 2013-14, and the district placed students in private schools when appropriate spaces were available in public ones.", "sentence_answer": "Public spending on private school placement for special education students grew by 33 percent between 2010-11 and 2013-14, and the district placed students in private schools when appropriate spaces were available in public ones."} -{"question": "The cost of transportation demonstrated an increase of how many percent between the years 2009-2014?", "paragraph": "While slashing resources in its public schools, the school board vastly increased public spending on private schools. The cost of transporting children, including gender-segregated busing, rose to $27.3 million in 2013-14 from $22 million in 2009-10, a 24 percent increase. Public spending on private school placement for special education students grew by 33 percent between 2010-11 and 2013-14, and the district placed students in private schools when appropriate spaces were available in public ones.", "answer": "24 percent increase", "sentence": "The cost of transporting children, including gender-segregated busing, rose to $27.3 million in 2013-14 from $22 million in 2009-10, a 24 percent increase .", "paragraph_sentence": "While slashing resources in its public schools, the school board vastly increased public spending on private schools. The cost of transporting children, including gender-segregated busing, rose to $27.3 million in 2013-14 from $22 million in 2009-10, a 24 percent increase . Public spending on private school placement for special education students grew by 33 percent between 2010-11 and 2013-14, and the district placed students in private schools when appropriate spaces were available in public ones.", "paragraph_answer": "While slashing resources in its public schools, the school board vastly increased public spending on private schools. The cost of transporting children, including gender-segregated busing, rose to $27.3 million in 2013-14 from $22 million in 2009-10, a 24 percent increase . Public spending on private school placement for special education students grew by 33 percent between 2010-11 and 2013-14, and the district placed students in private schools when appropriate spaces were available in public ones.", "sentence_answer": "The cost of transporting children, including gender-segregated busing, rose to $27.3 million in 2013-14 from $22 million in 2009-10, a 24 percent increase ."} -{"question": "What type of schools does the district place students in when their is an availability?", "paragraph": "While slashing resources in its public schools, the school board vastly increased public spending on private schools. The cost of transporting children, including gender-segregated busing, rose to $27.3 million in 2013-14 from $22 million in 2009-10, a 24 percent increase. Public spending on private school placement for special education students grew by 33 percent between 2010-11 and 2013-14, and the district placed students in private schools when appropriate spaces were available in public ones.", "answer": "private schools", "sentence": "While slashing resources in its public schools, the school board vastly increased public spending on private schools .", "paragraph_sentence": " While slashing resources in its public schools, the school board vastly increased public spending on private schools . The cost of transporting children, including gender-segregated busing, rose to $27.3 million in 2013-14 from $22 million in 2009-10, a 24 percent increase. Public spending on private school placement for special education students grew by 33 percent between 2010-11 and 2013-14, and the district placed students in private schools when appropriate spaces were available in public ones.", "paragraph_answer": "While slashing resources in its public schools, the school board vastly increased public spending on private schools . The cost of transporting children, including gender-segregated busing, rose to $27.3 million in 2013-14 from $22 million in 2009-10, a 24 percent increase. Public spending on private school placement for special education students grew by 33 percent between 2010-11 and 2013-14, and the district placed students in private schools when appropriate spaces were available in public ones.", "sentence_answer": "While slashing resources in its public schools, the school board vastly increased public spending on private schools ."} -{"question": "How much did the cost of transportation rise including the gender-segregated buses?", "paragraph": "While slashing resources in its public schools, the school board vastly increased public spending on private schools. The cost of transporting children, including gender-segregated busing, rose to $27.3 million in 2013-14 from $22 million in 2009-10, a 24 percent increase. Public spending on private school placement for special education students grew by 33 percent between 2010-11 and 2013-14, and the district placed students in private schools when appropriate spaces were available in public ones.", "answer": "$27.3 million", "sentence": "The cost of transporting children, including gender-segregated busing, rose to $27.3 million in 2013-14 from $22 million in 2009-10, a 24 percent increase.", "paragraph_sentence": "While slashing resources in its public schools, the school board vastly increased public spending on private schools. The cost of transporting children, including gender-segregated busing, rose to $27.3 million in 2013-14 from $22 million in 2009-10, a 24 percent increase. Public spending on private school placement for special education students grew by 33 percent between 2010-11 and 2013-14, and the district placed students in private schools when appropriate spaces were available in public ones.", "paragraph_answer": "While slashing resources in its public schools, the school board vastly increased public spending on private schools. The cost of transporting children, including gender-segregated busing, rose to $27.3 million in 2013-14 from $22 million in 2009-10, a 24 percent increase. Public spending on private school placement for special education students grew by 33 percent between 2010-11 and 2013-14, and the district placed students in private schools when appropriate spaces were available in public ones.", "sentence_answer": "The cost of transporting children, including gender-segregated busing, rose to $27.3 million in 2013-14 from $22 million in 2009-10, a 24 percent increase."} -{"question": "What percentage of meetings are held in a closed-door executive session?", "paragraph": "The report also exposed disturbing practices by board members. The board conducts 60 to 70 percent of its meetings in closed-door executive session. It does not tolerate, and is overtly hostile to, the complaints of public school parents, students and community members. Public protests against the board are now commonplace. The report proposed the appointment of a state fiscal monitor, who would oversee all of the board\u2019s financial and educational decisions and have the authority to override the board, when necessary, to protect the interests of the public-school community and improve education outcomes for public-school students. The report also recommended additional state funding to restore essential staff and services, but only if a monitor was in place to make certain the money was used effectively and efficiently to benefit all of the students. A bill in Albany \u2014 introduced in the Assembly by Ellen C. Jaffee and Kenneth P. Zebrowski and in the Senate by David Carlucci, who all represent parts of the school district \u2014 would implement a fiscal monitor for at least five years. It is a crucial step toward reversing the district\u2019s disastrous decline and repairing the deep rifts in the community. The New York State School Boards Association has found that the measure \u201crespects the democratic electoral process by leaving the elected board of education in place.\u201d The bill would not go as far as the Legislature went in 2002, when the school district in Roosevelt, on Long Island, was put under state control because of poor management. It is similar to what occurred in Lakewood, N.J., a district with circumstances similar to East Ramapo\u2019s. In recent weeks, in response to a lobbying campaign by the school board, momentum for the bill appears to have slowed. Advocates for the local school board and some leaders in the Orthodox community have accused supporters of state oversight of having anti-Semitic motives.", "answer": "60 to 70 percent", "sentence": "The board conducts 60 to 70 percent of its meetings in closed-door executive session.", "paragraph_sentence": "The report also exposed disturbing practices by board members. The board conducts 60 to 70 percent of its meetings in closed-door executive session. It does not tolerate, and is overtly hostile to, the complaints of public school parents, students and community members. Public protests against the board are now commonplace. The report proposed the appointment of a state fiscal monitor, who would oversee all of the board\u2019s financial and educational decisions and have the authority to override the board, when necessary, to protect the interests of the public-school community and improve education outcomes for public-school students. The report also recommended additional state funding to restore essential staff and services, but only if a monitor was in place to make certain the money was used effectively and efficiently to benefit all of the students. A bill in Albany \u2014 introduced in the Assembly by Ellen C. Jaffee and Kenneth P. Zebrowski and in the Senate by David Carlucci, who all represent parts of the school district \u2014 would implement a fiscal monitor for at least five years. It is a crucial step toward reversing the district\u2019s disastrous decline and repairing the deep rifts in the community. The New York State School Boards Association has found that the measure \u201crespects the democratic electoral process by leaving the elected board of education in place.\u201d The bill would not go as far as the Legislature went in 2002, when the school district in Roosevelt, on Long Island, was put under state control because of poor management. It is similar to what occurred in Lakewood, N.J., a district with circumstances similar to East Ramapo\u2019s. In recent weeks, in response to a lobbying campaign by the school board, momentum for the bill appears to have slowed. Advocates for the local school board and some leaders in the Orthodox community have accused supporters of state oversight of having anti-Semitic motives.", "paragraph_answer": "The report also exposed disturbing practices by board members. The board conducts 60 to 70 percent of its meetings in closed-door executive session. It does not tolerate, and is overtly hostile to, the complaints of public school parents, students and community members. Public protests against the board are now commonplace. The report proposed the appointment of a state fiscal monitor, who would oversee all of the board\u2019s financial and educational decisions and have the authority to override the board, when necessary, to protect the interests of the public-school community and improve education outcomes for public-school students. The report also recommended additional state funding to restore essential staff and services, but only if a monitor was in place to make certain the money was used effectively and efficiently to benefit all of the students. A bill in Albany \u2014 introduced in the Assembly by Ellen C. Jaffee and Kenneth P. Zebrowski and in the Senate by David Carlucci, who all represent parts of the school district \u2014 would implement a fiscal monitor for at least five years. It is a crucial step toward reversing the district\u2019s disastrous decline and repairing the deep rifts in the community. The New York State School Boards Association has found that the measure \u201crespects the democratic electoral process by leaving the elected board of education in place.\u201d The bill would not go as far as the Legislature went in 2002, when the school district in Roosevelt, on Long Island, was put under state control because of poor management. It is similar to what occurred in Lakewood, N.J., a district with circumstances similar to East Ramapo\u2019s. In recent weeks, in response to a lobbying campaign by the school board, momentum for the bill appears to have slowed. Advocates for the local school board and some leaders in the Orthodox community have accused supporters of state oversight of having anti-Semitic motives.", "sentence_answer": "The board conducts 60 to 70 percent of its meetings in closed-door executive session."} -{"question": "What did the report expose in regards to the board members?", "paragraph": "The report also exposed disturbing practices by board members. The board conducts 60 to 70 percent of its meetings in closed-door executive session. It does not tolerate, and is overtly hostile to, the complaints of public school parents, students and community members. Public protests against the board are now commonplace. The report proposed the appointment of a state fiscal monitor, who would oversee all of the board\u2019s financial and educational decisions and have the authority to override the board, when necessary, to protect the interests of the public-school community and improve education outcomes for public-school students. The report also recommended additional state funding to restore essential staff and services, but only if a monitor was in place to make certain the money was used effectively and efficiently to benefit all of the students. A bill in Albany \u2014 introduced in the Assembly by Ellen C. Jaffee and Kenneth P. Zebrowski and in the Senate by David Carlucci, who all represent parts of the school district \u2014 would implement a fiscal monitor for at least five years. It is a crucial step toward reversing the district\u2019s disastrous decline and repairing the deep rifts in the community. The New York State School Boards Association has found that the measure \u201crespects the democratic electoral process by leaving the elected board of education in place.\u201d The bill would not go as far as the Legislature went in 2002, when the school district in Roosevelt, on Long Island, was put under state control because of poor management. It is similar to what occurred in Lakewood, N.J., a district with circumstances similar to East Ramapo\u2019s. In recent weeks, in response to a lobbying campaign by the school board, momentum for the bill appears to have slowed. Advocates for the local school board and some leaders in the Orthodox community have accused supporters of state oversight of having anti-Semitic motives.", "answer": "disturbing practices", "sentence": "The report also exposed disturbing practices by board members.", "paragraph_sentence": " The report also exposed disturbing practices by board members. The board conducts 60 to 70 percent of its meetings in closed-door executive session. It does not tolerate, and is overtly hostile to, the complaints of public school parents, students and community members. Public protests against the board are now commonplace. The report proposed the appointment of a state fiscal monitor, who would oversee all of the board\u2019s financial and educational decisions and have the authority to override the board, when necessary, to protect the interests of the public-school community and improve education outcomes for public-school students. The report also recommended additional state funding to restore essential staff and services, but only if a monitor was in place to make certain the money was used effectively and efficiently to benefit all of the students. A bill in Albany \u2014 introduced in the Assembly by Ellen C. Jaffee and Kenneth P. Zebrowski and in the Senate by David Carlucci, who all represent parts of the school district \u2014 would implement a fiscal monitor for at least five years. It is a crucial step toward reversing the district\u2019s disastrous decline and repairing the deep rifts in the community. The New York State School Boards Association has found that the measure \u201crespects the democratic electoral process by leaving the elected board of education in place.\u201d The bill would not go as far as the Legislature went in 2002, when the school district in Roosevelt, on Long Island, was put under state control because of poor management. It is similar to what occurred in Lakewood, N.J., a district with circumstances similar to East Ramapo\u2019s. In recent weeks, in response to a lobbying campaign by the school board, momentum for the bill appears to have slowed. Advocates for the local school board and some leaders in the Orthodox community have accused supporters of state oversight of having anti-Semitic motives.", "paragraph_answer": "The report also exposed disturbing practices by board members. The board conducts 60 to 70 percent of its meetings in closed-door executive session. It does not tolerate, and is overtly hostile to, the complaints of public school parents, students and community members. Public protests against the board are now commonplace. The report proposed the appointment of a state fiscal monitor, who would oversee all of the board\u2019s financial and educational decisions and have the authority to override the board, when necessary, to protect the interests of the public-school community and improve education outcomes for public-school students. The report also recommended additional state funding to restore essential staff and services, but only if a monitor was in place to make certain the money was used effectively and efficiently to benefit all of the students. A bill in Albany \u2014 introduced in the Assembly by Ellen C. Jaffee and Kenneth P. Zebrowski and in the Senate by David Carlucci, who all represent parts of the school district \u2014 would implement a fiscal monitor for at least five years. It is a crucial step toward reversing the district\u2019s disastrous decline and repairing the deep rifts in the community. The New York State School Boards Association has found that the measure \u201crespects the democratic electoral process by leaving the elected board of education in place.\u201d The bill would not go as far as the Legislature went in 2002, when the school district in Roosevelt, on Long Island, was put under state control because of poor management. It is similar to what occurred in Lakewood, N.J., a district with circumstances similar to East Ramapo\u2019s. In recent weeks, in response to a lobbying campaign by the school board, momentum for the bill appears to have slowed. Advocates for the local school board and some leaders in the Orthodox community have accused supporters of state oversight of having anti-Semitic motives.", "sentence_answer": "The report also exposed disturbing practices by board members."} -{"question": "What is a common occurrence now against the board?", "paragraph": "The report also exposed disturbing practices by board members. The board conducts 60 to 70 percent of its meetings in closed-door executive session. It does not tolerate, and is overtly hostile to, the complaints of public school parents, students and community members. Public protests against the board are now commonplace. The report proposed the appointment of a state fiscal monitor, who would oversee all of the board\u2019s financial and educational decisions and have the authority to override the board, when necessary, to protect the interests of the public-school community and improve education outcomes for public-school students. The report also recommended additional state funding to restore essential staff and services, but only if a monitor was in place to make certain the money was used effectively and efficiently to benefit all of the students. A bill in Albany \u2014 introduced in the Assembly by Ellen C. Jaffee and Kenneth P. Zebrowski and in the Senate by David Carlucci, who all represent parts of the school district \u2014 would implement a fiscal monitor for at least five years. It is a crucial step toward reversing the district\u2019s disastrous decline and repairing the deep rifts in the community. The New York State School Boards Association has found that the measure \u201crespects the democratic electoral process by leaving the elected board of education in place.\u201d The bill would not go as far as the Legislature went in 2002, when the school district in Roosevelt, on Long Island, was put under state control because of poor management. It is similar to what occurred in Lakewood, N.J., a district with circumstances similar to East Ramapo\u2019s. In recent weeks, in response to a lobbying campaign by the school board, momentum for the bill appears to have slowed. Advocates for the local school board and some leaders in the Orthodox community have accused supporters of state oversight of having anti-Semitic motives.", "answer": "Public protests", "sentence": "Public protests against the board are now commonplace.", "paragraph_sentence": "The report also exposed disturbing practices by board members. The board conducts 60 to 70 percent of its meetings in closed-door executive session. It does not tolerate, and is overtly hostile to, the complaints of public school parents, students and community members. Public protests against the board are now commonplace. The report proposed the appointment of a state fiscal monitor, who would oversee all of the board\u2019s financial and educational decisions and have the authority to override the board, when necessary, to protect the interests of the public-school community and improve education outcomes for public-school students. The report also recommended additional state funding to restore essential staff and services, but only if a monitor was in place to make certain the money was used effectively and efficiently to benefit all of the students. A bill in Albany \u2014 introduced in the Assembly by Ellen C. Jaffee and Kenneth P. Zebrowski and in the Senate by David Carlucci, who all represent parts of the school district \u2014 would implement a fiscal monitor for at least five years. It is a crucial step toward reversing the district\u2019s disastrous decline and repairing the deep rifts in the community. The New York State School Boards Association has found that the measure \u201crespects the democratic electoral process by leaving the elected board of education in place.\u201d The bill would not go as far as the Legislature went in 2002, when the school district in Roosevelt, on Long Island, was put under state control because of poor management. It is similar to what occurred in Lakewood, N.J., a district with circumstances similar to East Ramapo\u2019s. In recent weeks, in response to a lobbying campaign by the school board, momentum for the bill appears to have slowed. Advocates for the local school board and some leaders in the Orthodox community have accused supporters of state oversight of having anti-Semitic motives.", "paragraph_answer": "The report also exposed disturbing practices by board members. The board conducts 60 to 70 percent of its meetings in closed-door executive session. It does not tolerate, and is overtly hostile to, the complaints of public school parents, students and community members. Public protests against the board are now commonplace. The report proposed the appointment of a state fiscal monitor, who would oversee all of the board\u2019s financial and educational decisions and have the authority to override the board, when necessary, to protect the interests of the public-school community and improve education outcomes for public-school students. The report also recommended additional state funding to restore essential staff and services, but only if a monitor was in place to make certain the money was used effectively and efficiently to benefit all of the students. A bill in Albany \u2014 introduced in the Assembly by Ellen C. Jaffee and Kenneth P. Zebrowski and in the Senate by David Carlucci, who all represent parts of the school district \u2014 would implement a fiscal monitor for at least five years. It is a crucial step toward reversing the district\u2019s disastrous decline and repairing the deep rifts in the community. The New York State School Boards Association has found that the measure \u201crespects the democratic electoral process by leaving the elected board of education in place.\u201d The bill would not go as far as the Legislature went in 2002, when the school district in Roosevelt, on Long Island, was put under state control because of poor management. It is similar to what occurred in Lakewood, N.J., a district with circumstances similar to East Ramapo\u2019s. In recent weeks, in response to a lobbying campaign by the school board, momentum for the bill appears to have slowed. Advocates for the local school board and some leaders in the Orthodox community have accused supporters of state oversight of having anti-Semitic motives.", "sentence_answer": " Public protests against the board are now commonplace."} -{"question": "What appointment was proposed by the report?", "paragraph": "The report also exposed disturbing practices by board members. The board conducts 60 to 70 percent of its meetings in closed-door executive session. It does not tolerate, and is overtly hostile to, the complaints of public school parents, students and community members. Public protests against the board are now commonplace. The report proposed the appointment of a state fiscal monitor, who would oversee all of the board\u2019s financial and educational decisions and have the authority to override the board, when necessary, to protect the interests of the public-school community and improve education outcomes for public-school students. The report also recommended additional state funding to restore essential staff and services, but only if a monitor was in place to make certain the money was used effectively and efficiently to benefit all of the students. A bill in Albany \u2014 introduced in the Assembly by Ellen C. Jaffee and Kenneth P. Zebrowski and in the Senate by David Carlucci, who all represent parts of the school district \u2014 would implement a fiscal monitor for at least five years. It is a crucial step toward reversing the district\u2019s disastrous decline and repairing the deep rifts in the community. The New York State School Boards Association has found that the measure \u201crespects the democratic electoral process by leaving the elected board of education in place.\u201d The bill would not go as far as the Legislature went in 2002, when the school district in Roosevelt, on Long Island, was put under state control because of poor management. It is similar to what occurred in Lakewood, N.J., a district with circumstances similar to East Ramapo\u2019s. In recent weeks, in response to a lobbying campaign by the school board, momentum for the bill appears to have slowed. Advocates for the local school board and some leaders in the Orthodox community have accused supporters of state oversight of having anti-Semitic motives.", "answer": "a state fiscal monitor", "sentence": "The report proposed the appointment of a state fiscal monitor , who would oversee all of the board\u2019s financial and educational decisions and have the authority to override the board, when necessary, to protect the interests of the public-school community and improve education outcomes for public-school students.", "paragraph_sentence": "The report also exposed disturbing practices by board members. The board conducts 60 to 70 percent of its meetings in closed-door executive session. It does not tolerate, and is overtly hostile to, the complaints of public school parents, students and community members. Public protests against the board are now commonplace. The report proposed the appointment of a state fiscal monitor , who would oversee all of the board\u2019s financial and educational decisions and have the authority to override the board, when necessary, to protect the interests of the public-school community and improve education outcomes for public-school students. The report also recommended additional state funding to restore essential staff and services, but only if a monitor was in place to make certain the money was used effectively and efficiently to benefit all of the students. A bill in Albany \u2014 introduced in the Assembly by Ellen C. Jaffee and Kenneth P. Zebrowski and in the Senate by David Carlucci, who all represent parts of the school district \u2014 would implement a fiscal monitor for at least five years. It is a crucial step toward reversing the district\u2019s disastrous decline and repairing the deep rifts in the community. The New York State School Boards Association has found that the measure \u201crespects the democratic electoral process by leaving the elected board of education in place.\u201d The bill would not go as far as the Legislature went in 2002, when the school district in Roosevelt, on Long Island, was put under state control because of poor management. It is similar to what occurred in Lakewood, N.J., a district with circumstances similar to East Ramapo\u2019s. In recent weeks, in response to a lobbying campaign by the school board, momentum for the bill appears to have slowed. Advocates for the local school board and some leaders in the Orthodox community have accused supporters of state oversight of having anti-Semitic motives.", "paragraph_answer": "The report also exposed disturbing practices by board members. The board conducts 60 to 70 percent of its meetings in closed-door executive session. It does not tolerate, and is overtly hostile to, the complaints of public school parents, students and community members. Public protests against the board are now commonplace. The report proposed the appointment of a state fiscal monitor , who would oversee all of the board\u2019s financial and educational decisions and have the authority to override the board, when necessary, to protect the interests of the public-school community and improve education outcomes for public-school students. The report also recommended additional state funding to restore essential staff and services, but only if a monitor was in place to make certain the money was used effectively and efficiently to benefit all of the students. A bill in Albany \u2014 introduced in the Assembly by Ellen C. Jaffee and Kenneth P. Zebrowski and in the Senate by David Carlucci, who all represent parts of the school district \u2014 would implement a fiscal monitor for at least five years. It is a crucial step toward reversing the district\u2019s disastrous decline and repairing the deep rifts in the community. The New York State School Boards Association has found that the measure \u201crespects the democratic electoral process by leaving the elected board of education in place.\u201d The bill would not go as far as the Legislature went in 2002, when the school district in Roosevelt, on Long Island, was put under state control because of poor management. It is similar to what occurred in Lakewood, N.J., a district with circumstances similar to East Ramapo\u2019s. In recent weeks, in response to a lobbying campaign by the school board, momentum for the bill appears to have slowed. Advocates for the local school board and some leaders in the Orthodox community have accused supporters of state oversight of having anti-Semitic motives.", "sentence_answer": "The report proposed the appointment of a state fiscal monitor , who would oversee all of the board\u2019s financial and educational decisions and have the authority to override the board, when necessary, to protect the interests of the public-school community and improve education outcomes for public-school students."} -{"question": "What is one of the roles assigned to the state fiscal monitor?", "paragraph": "The report also exposed disturbing practices by board members. The board conducts 60 to 70 percent of its meetings in closed-door executive session. It does not tolerate, and is overtly hostile to, the complaints of public school parents, students and community members. Public protests against the board are now commonplace. The report proposed the appointment of a state fiscal monitor, who would oversee all of the board\u2019s financial and educational decisions and have the authority to override the board, when necessary, to protect the interests of the public-school community and improve education outcomes for public-school students. The report also recommended additional state funding to restore essential staff and services, but only if a monitor was in place to make certain the money was used effectively and efficiently to benefit all of the students. A bill in Albany \u2014 introduced in the Assembly by Ellen C. Jaffee and Kenneth P. Zebrowski and in the Senate by David Carlucci, who all represent parts of the school district \u2014 would implement a fiscal monitor for at least five years. It is a crucial step toward reversing the district\u2019s disastrous decline and repairing the deep rifts in the community. The New York State School Boards Association has found that the measure \u201crespects the democratic electoral process by leaving the elected board of education in place.\u201d The bill would not go as far as the Legislature went in 2002, when the school district in Roosevelt, on Long Island, was put under state control because of poor management. It is similar to what occurred in Lakewood, N.J., a district with circumstances similar to East Ramapo\u2019s. In recent weeks, in response to a lobbying campaign by the school board, momentum for the bill appears to have slowed. Advocates for the local school board and some leaders in the Orthodox community have accused supporters of state oversight of having anti-Semitic motives.", "answer": "oversee all of the board\u2019s financial and educational decisions", "sentence": "The report proposed the appointment of a state fiscal monitor, who would oversee all of the board\u2019s financial and educational decisions and have the authority to override the board, when necessary, to protect the interests of the public-school community and improve education outcomes for public-school students.", "paragraph_sentence": "The report also exposed disturbing practices by board members. The board conducts 60 to 70 percent of its meetings in closed-door executive session. It does not tolerate, and is overtly hostile to, the complaints of public school parents, students and community members. Public protests against the board are now commonplace. The report proposed the appointment of a state fiscal monitor, who would oversee all of the board\u2019s financial and educational decisions and have the authority to override the board, when necessary, to protect the interests of the public-school community and improve education outcomes for public-school students. The report also recommended additional state funding to restore essential staff and services, but only if a monitor was in place to make certain the money was used effectively and efficiently to benefit all of the students. A bill in Albany \u2014 introduced in the Assembly by Ellen C. Jaffee and Kenneth P. Zebrowski and in the Senate by David Carlucci, who all represent parts of the school district \u2014 would implement a fiscal monitor for at least five years. It is a crucial step toward reversing the district\u2019s disastrous decline and repairing the deep rifts in the community. The New York State School Boards Association has found that the measure \u201crespects the democratic electoral process by leaving the elected board of education in place.\u201d The bill would not go as far as the Legislature went in 2002, when the school district in Roosevelt, on Long Island, was put under state control because of poor management. It is similar to what occurred in Lakewood, N.J., a district with circumstances similar to East Ramapo\u2019s. In recent weeks, in response to a lobbying campaign by the school board, momentum for the bill appears to have slowed. Advocates for the local school board and some leaders in the Orthodox community have accused supporters of state oversight of having anti-Semitic motives.", "paragraph_answer": "The report also exposed disturbing practices by board members. The board conducts 60 to 70 percent of its meetings in closed-door executive session. It does not tolerate, and is overtly hostile to, the complaints of public school parents, students and community members. Public protests against the board are now commonplace. The report proposed the appointment of a state fiscal monitor, who would oversee all of the board\u2019s financial and educational decisions and have the authority to override the board, when necessary, to protect the interests of the public-school community and improve education outcomes for public-school students. The report also recommended additional state funding to restore essential staff and services, but only if a monitor was in place to make certain the money was used effectively and efficiently to benefit all of the students. A bill in Albany \u2014 introduced in the Assembly by Ellen C. Jaffee and Kenneth P. Zebrowski and in the Senate by David Carlucci, who all represent parts of the school district \u2014 would implement a fiscal monitor for at least five years. It is a crucial step toward reversing the district\u2019s disastrous decline and repairing the deep rifts in the community. The New York State School Boards Association has found that the measure \u201crespects the democratic electoral process by leaving the elected board of education in place.\u201d The bill would not go as far as the Legislature went in 2002, when the school district in Roosevelt, on Long Island, was put under state control because of poor management. It is similar to what occurred in Lakewood, N.J., a district with circumstances similar to East Ramapo\u2019s. In recent weeks, in response to a lobbying campaign by the school board, momentum for the bill appears to have slowed. Advocates for the local school board and some leaders in the Orthodox community have accused supporters of state oversight of having anti-Semitic motives.", "sentence_answer": "The report proposed the appointment of a state fiscal monitor, who would oversee all of the board\u2019s financial and educational decisions and have the authority to override the board, when necessary, to protect the interests of the public-school community and improve education outcomes for public-school students."} -{"question": "What rights are the legislation acting in favor of?", "paragraph": "Nothing could be further from the truth. The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has endorsed the need for action in East Ramapo. Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students, who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer.", "answer": "civil rights", "sentence": "The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced.", "paragraph_sentence": "Nothing could be further from the truth. The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has endorsed the need for action in East Ramapo. Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students, who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer.", "paragraph_answer": "Nothing could be further from the truth. The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has endorsed the need for action in East Ramapo. Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students, who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer.", "sentence_answer": "The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced."} -{"question": "Does the legislation reprimand groups on the basis of their religious beliefs?", "paragraph": "Nothing could be further from the truth. The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has endorsed the need for action in East Ramapo. Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students, who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer.", "answer": "not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs", "sentence": "The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs ; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced.", "paragraph_sentence": "Nothing could be further from the truth. The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs ; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has endorsed the need for action in East Ramapo. Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students, who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer.", "paragraph_answer": "Nothing could be further from the truth. The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs ; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has endorsed the need for action in East Ramapo. Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students, who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer.", "sentence_answer": "The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs ; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced."} -{"question": "Who endorsed the need for action in East Ramapo?", "paragraph": "Nothing could be further from the truth. The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has endorsed the need for action in East Ramapo. Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students, who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer.", "answer": "Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo", "sentence": "Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has endorsed the need for action in East Ramapo.", "paragraph_sentence": "Nothing could be further from the truth. The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has endorsed the need for action in East Ramapo. Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students, who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer.", "paragraph_answer": "Nothing could be further from the truth. The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has endorsed the need for action in East Ramapo. Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students, who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer.", "sentence_answer": " Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has endorsed the need for action in East Ramapo."} -{"question": "In what interest should lawmakers act in reference to the issue?", "paragraph": "Nothing could be further from the truth. The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has endorsed the need for action in East Ramapo. Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students, who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer.", "answer": "students", "sentence": "Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students , who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer.", "paragraph_sentence": "Nothing could be further from the truth. The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has endorsed the need for action in East Ramapo. Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students , who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer. ", "paragraph_answer": "Nothing could be further from the truth. The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has endorsed the need for action in East Ramapo. Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students , who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer.", "sentence_answer": "Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students , who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer."} -{"question": "How have students been treated up until this intervention?", "paragraph": "Nothing could be further from the truth. The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has endorsed the need for action in East Ramapo. Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students, who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer.", "answer": "terribly", "sentence": "Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students, who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer.", "paragraph_sentence": "Nothing could be further from the truth. The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has endorsed the need for action in East Ramapo. Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students, who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer. ", "paragraph_answer": "Nothing could be further from the truth. The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has endorsed the need for action in East Ramapo. Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students, who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer.", "sentence_answer": "Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students, who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer."} -{"question": "How many years of experience does John Abraham Davis have?", "paragraph": "For John Abraham Davis, a black midlevel manager in the Government Printing Office with 30 years\u2019 experience, the change came almost overnight. Just months after Wilson was sworn in, Davis was demoted to a succession of menial jobs and ended up as a messenger making half his original salary. As his grandson, Gordon Davis, wrote on the Op-Ed page on Tuesday: \u201cBy April 1914, the family farm was auctioned off. John Davis, a self-made black man of achievement and stature in his community at the turn of the 20th century, was, by the end of Wilson\u2019s first term, a broken man. He died in 1928.\u201d", "answer": "30 years\u2019 experience", "sentence": "For John Abraham Davis, a black midlevel manager in the Government Printing Office with 30 years\u2019 experience , the change came almost overnight.", "paragraph_sentence": " For John Abraham Davis, a black midlevel manager in the Government Printing Office with 30 years\u2019 experience , the change came almost overnight. Just months after Wilson was sworn in, Davis was demoted to a succession of menial jobs and ended up as a messenger making half his original salary. As his grandson, Gordon Davis, wrote on the Op-Ed page on Tuesday: \u201cBy April 1914, the family farm was auctioned off. John Davis, a self-made black man of achievement and stature in his community at the turn of the 20th century, was, by the end of Wilson\u2019s first term, a broken man. He died in 1928.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "For John Abraham Davis, a black midlevel manager in the Government Printing Office with 30 years\u2019 experience , the change came almost overnight. Just months after Wilson was sworn in, Davis was demoted to a succession of menial jobs and ended up as a messenger making half his original salary. As his grandson, Gordon Davis, wrote on the Op-Ed page on Tuesday: \u201cBy April 1914, the family farm was auctioned off. John Davis, a self-made black man of achievement and stature in his community at the turn of the 20th century, was, by the end of Wilson\u2019s first term, a broken man. He died in 1928.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "For John Abraham Davis, a black midlevel manager in the Government Printing Office with 30 years\u2019 experience , the change came almost overnight."} -{"question": "Who wrote an Op-Ed about Davis on Tuesday?", "paragraph": "For John Abraham Davis, a black midlevel manager in the Government Printing Office with 30 years\u2019 experience, the change came almost overnight. Just months after Wilson was sworn in, Davis was demoted to a succession of menial jobs and ended up as a messenger making half his original salary. As his grandson, Gordon Davis, wrote on the Op-Ed page on Tuesday: \u201cBy April 1914, the family farm was auctioned off. John Davis, a self-made black man of achievement and stature in his community at the turn of the 20th century, was, by the end of Wilson\u2019s first term, a broken man. He died in 1928.\u201d", "answer": "his grandson, Gordon Davis", "sentence": "As his grandson, Gordon Davis , wrote on the Op-Ed page on Tuesday: \u201cBy April 1914, the family farm was auctioned off.", "paragraph_sentence": "For John Abraham Davis, a black midlevel manager in the Government Printing Office with 30 years\u2019 experience, the change came almost overnight. Just months after Wilson was sworn in, Davis was demoted to a succession of menial jobs and ended up as a messenger making half his original salary. As his grandson, Gordon Davis , wrote on the Op-Ed page on Tuesday: \u201cBy April 1914, the family farm was auctioned off. John Davis, a self-made black man of achievement and stature in his community at the turn of the 20th century, was, by the end of Wilson\u2019s first term, a broken man. He died in 1928.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "For John Abraham Davis, a black midlevel manager in the Government Printing Office with 30 years\u2019 experience, the change came almost overnight. Just months after Wilson was sworn in, Davis was demoted to a succession of menial jobs and ended up as a messenger making half his original salary. As his grandson, Gordon Davis , wrote on the Op-Ed page on Tuesday: \u201cBy April 1914, the family farm was auctioned off. John Davis, a self-made black man of achievement and stature in his community at the turn of the 20th century, was, by the end of Wilson\u2019s first term, a broken man. He died in 1928.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "As his grandson, Gordon Davis , wrote on the Op-Ed page on Tuesday: \u201cBy April 1914, the family farm was auctioned off."} -{"question": "How much did Davis make after Wilson's election?", "paragraph": "For John Abraham Davis, a black midlevel manager in the Government Printing Office with 30 years\u2019 experience, the change came almost overnight. Just months after Wilson was sworn in, Davis was demoted to a succession of menial jobs and ended up as a messenger making half his original salary. As his grandson, Gordon Davis, wrote on the Op-Ed page on Tuesday: \u201cBy April 1914, the family farm was auctioned off. John Davis, a self-made black man of achievement and stature in his community at the turn of the 20th century, was, by the end of Wilson\u2019s first term, a broken man. He died in 1928.\u201d", "answer": "half his original salary", "sentence": "Just months after Wilson was sworn in, Davis was demoted to a succession of menial jobs and ended up as a messenger making half his original salary .", "paragraph_sentence": "For John Abraham Davis, a black midlevel manager in the Government Printing Office with 30 years\u2019 experience, the change came almost overnight. Just months after Wilson was sworn in, Davis was demoted to a succession of menial jobs and ended up as a messenger making half his original salary . As his grandson, Gordon Davis, wrote on the Op-Ed page on Tuesday: \u201cBy April 1914, the family farm was auctioned off. John Davis, a self-made black man of achievement and stature in his community at the turn of the 20th century, was, by the end of Wilson\u2019s first term, a broken man. He died in 1928.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "For John Abraham Davis, a black midlevel manager in the Government Printing Office with 30 years\u2019 experience, the change came almost overnight. Just months after Wilson was sworn in, Davis was demoted to a succession of menial jobs and ended up as a messenger making half his original salary . As his grandson, Gordon Davis, wrote on the Op-Ed page on Tuesday: \u201cBy April 1914, the family farm was auctioned off. John Davis, a self-made black man of achievement and stature in his community at the turn of the 20th century, was, by the end of Wilson\u2019s first term, a broken man. He died in 1928.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Just months after Wilson was sworn in, Davis was demoted to a succession of menial jobs and ended up as a messenger making half his original salary ."} -{"question": "What happened to Davis after Wilson was sworn in?", "paragraph": "For John Abraham Davis, a black midlevel manager in the Government Printing Office with 30 years\u2019 experience, the change came almost overnight. Just months after Wilson was sworn in, Davis was demoted to a succession of menial jobs and ended up as a messenger making half his original salary. As his grandson, Gordon Davis, wrote on the Op-Ed page on Tuesday: \u201cBy April 1914, the family farm was auctioned off. John Davis, a self-made black man of achievement and stature in his community at the turn of the 20th century, was, by the end of Wilson\u2019s first term, a broken man. He died in 1928.\u201d", "answer": "Davis was demoted to a succession of menial jobs", "sentence": "Just months after Wilson was sworn in, Davis was demoted to a succession of menial jobs and ended up as a messenger making half his original salary.", "paragraph_sentence": "For John Abraham Davis, a black midlevel manager in the Government Printing Office with 30 years\u2019 experience, the change came almost overnight. Just months after Wilson was sworn in, Davis was demoted to a succession of menial jobs and ended up as a messenger making half his original salary. As his grandson, Gordon Davis, wrote on the Op-Ed page on Tuesday: \u201cBy April 1914, the family farm was auctioned off. John Davis, a self-made black man of achievement and stature in his community at the turn of the 20th century, was, by the end of Wilson\u2019s first term, a broken man. He died in 1928.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "For John Abraham Davis, a black midlevel manager in the Government Printing Office with 30 years\u2019 experience, the change came almost overnight. Just months after Wilson was sworn in, Davis was demoted to a succession of menial jobs and ended up as a messenger making half his original salary. As his grandson, Gordon Davis, wrote on the Op-Ed page on Tuesday: \u201cBy April 1914, the family farm was auctioned off. John Davis, a self-made black man of achievement and stature in his community at the turn of the 20th century, was, by the end of Wilson\u2019s first term, a broken man. He died in 1928.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Just months after Wilson was sworn in, Davis was demoted to a succession of menial jobs and ended up as a messenger making half his original salary."} -{"question": "When did John Davis die?", "paragraph": "For John Abraham Davis, a black midlevel manager in the Government Printing Office with 30 years\u2019 experience, the change came almost overnight. Just months after Wilson was sworn in, Davis was demoted to a succession of menial jobs and ended up as a messenger making half his original salary. As his grandson, Gordon Davis, wrote on the Op-Ed page on Tuesday: \u201cBy April 1914, the family farm was auctioned off. John Davis, a self-made black man of achievement and stature in his community at the turn of the 20th century, was, by the end of Wilson\u2019s first term, a broken man. He died in 1928.\u201d", "answer": "He died in 1928.", "sentence": "He died in 1928. \u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "For John Abraham Davis, a black midlevel manager in the Government Printing Office with 30 years\u2019 experience, the change came almost overnight. Just months after Wilson was sworn in, Davis was demoted to a succession of menial jobs and ended up as a messenger making half his original salary. As his grandson, Gordon Davis, wrote on the Op-Ed page on Tuesday: \u201cBy April 1914, the family farm was auctioned off. John Davis, a self-made black man of achievement and stature in his community at the turn of the 20th century, was, by the end of Wilson\u2019s first term, a broken man. He died in 1928. \u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "For John Abraham Davis, a black midlevel manager in the Government Printing Office with 30 years\u2019 experience, the change came almost overnight. Just months after Wilson was sworn in, Davis was demoted to a succession of menial jobs and ended up as a messenger making half his original salary. As his grandson, Gordon Davis, wrote on the Op-Ed page on Tuesday: \u201cBy April 1914, the family farm was auctioned off. John Davis, a self-made black man of achievement and stature in his community at the turn of the 20th century, was, by the end of Wilson\u2019s first term, a broken man. He died in 1928. \u201d", "sentence_answer": " He died in 1928. \u201d"} -{"question": "How many close friends has the son had?", "paragraph": "Our son is \u201cculminating\u201d from elementary school. He has had three close friends since preschool. We are close with two of their families, not so much with the third. They have a tough younger child, and we haven\u2019t grown close. After the ceremony, we are hosting a barbecue at our house. We will invite the two families we\u2019re close with, but it feels strange to invite the third. They aren\u2019t part of the group. But the mother of the third boy is very sensitive and will be upset if we don\u2019t include them. What do we do?", "answer": "three", "sentence": "He has had three close friends since preschool.", "paragraph_sentence": "Our son is \u201cculminating\u201d from elementary school. He has had three close friends since preschool. We are close with two of their families, not so much with the third. They have a tough younger child, and we haven\u2019t grown close. After the ceremony, we are hosting a barbecue at our house. We will invite the two families we\u2019re close with, but it feels strange to invite the third. They aren\u2019t part of the group. But the mother of the third boy is very sensitive and will be upset if we don\u2019t include them. What do we do?", "paragraph_answer": "Our son is \u201cculminating\u201d from elementary school. He has had three close friends since preschool. We are close with two of their families, not so much with the third. They have a tough younger child, and we haven\u2019t grown close. After the ceremony, we are hosting a barbecue at our house. We will invite the two families we\u2019re close with, but it feels strange to invite the third. They aren\u2019t part of the group. But the mother of the third boy is very sensitive and will be upset if we don\u2019t include them. What do we do?", "sentence_answer": "He has had three close friends since preschool."} -{"question": "What event was held at the house of the parents?", "paragraph": "Our son is \u201cculminating\u201d from elementary school. He has had three close friends since preschool. We are close with two of their families, not so much with the third. They have a tough younger child, and we haven\u2019t grown close. After the ceremony, we are hosting a barbecue at our house. We will invite the two families we\u2019re close with, but it feels strange to invite the third. They aren\u2019t part of the group. But the mother of the third boy is very sensitive and will be upset if we don\u2019t include them. What do we do?", "answer": "barbecue", "sentence": "After the ceremony, we are hosting a barbecue at our house.", "paragraph_sentence": "Our son is \u201cculminating\u201d from elementary school. He has had three close friends since preschool. We are close with two of their families, not so much with the third. They have a tough younger child, and we haven\u2019t grown close. After the ceremony, we are hosting a barbecue at our house. We will invite the two families we\u2019re close with, but it feels strange to invite the third. They aren\u2019t part of the group. But the mother of the third boy is very sensitive and will be upset if we don\u2019t include them. What do we do?", "paragraph_answer": "Our son is \u201cculminating\u201d from elementary school. He has had three close friends since preschool. We are close with two of their families, not so much with the third. They have a tough younger child, and we haven\u2019t grown close. After the ceremony, we are hosting a barbecue at our house. We will invite the two families we\u2019re close with, but it feels strange to invite the third. They aren\u2019t part of the group. But the mother of the third boy is very sensitive and will be upset if we don\u2019t include them. What do we do?", "sentence_answer": "After the ceremony, we are hosting a barbecue at our house."} -{"question": "From what school is the son graduating from?", "paragraph": "Our son is \u201cculminating\u201d from elementary school. He has had three close friends since preschool. We are close with two of their families, not so much with the third. They have a tough younger child, and we haven\u2019t grown close. After the ceremony, we are hosting a barbecue at our house. We will invite the two families we\u2019re close with, but it feels strange to invite the third. They aren\u2019t part of the group. But the mother of the third boy is very sensitive and will be upset if we don\u2019t include them. What do we do?", "answer": "elementary school", "sentence": "Our son is \u201cculminating\u201d from elementary school .", "paragraph_sentence": " Our son is \u201cculminating\u201d from elementary school . He has had three close friends since preschool. We are close with two of their families, not so much with the third. They have a tough younger child, and we haven\u2019t grown close. After the ceremony, we are hosting a barbecue at our house. We will invite the two families we\u2019re close with, but it feels strange to invite the third. They aren\u2019t part of the group. But the mother of the third boy is very sensitive and will be upset if we don\u2019t include them. What do we do?", "paragraph_answer": "Our son is \u201cculminating\u201d from elementary school . He has had three close friends since preschool. We are close with two of their families, not so much with the third. They have a tough younger child, and we haven\u2019t grown close. After the ceremony, we are hosting a barbecue at our house. We will invite the two families we\u2019re close with, but it feels strange to invite the third. They aren\u2019t part of the group. But the mother of the third boy is very sensitive and will be upset if we don\u2019t include them. What do we do?", "sentence_answer": "Our son is \u201cculminating\u201d from elementary school ."} -{"question": "What family may not be invited to the barbecue?", "paragraph": "Our son is \u201cculminating\u201d from elementary school. He has had three close friends since preschool. We are close with two of their families, not so much with the third. They have a tough younger child, and we haven\u2019t grown close. After the ceremony, we are hosting a barbecue at our house. We will invite the two families we\u2019re close with, but it feels strange to invite the third. They aren\u2019t part of the group. But the mother of the third boy is very sensitive and will be upset if we don\u2019t include them. What do we do?", "answer": "the third", "sentence": "We are close with two of their families, not so much with the third .", "paragraph_sentence": "Our son is \u201cculminating\u201d from elementary school. He has had three close friends since preschool. We are close with two of their families, not so much with the third . They have a tough younger child, and we haven\u2019t grown close. After the ceremony, we are hosting a barbecue at our house. We will invite the two families we\u2019re close with, but it feels strange to invite the third. They aren\u2019t part of the group. But the mother of the third boy is very sensitive and will be upset if we don\u2019t include them. What do we do?", "paragraph_answer": "Our son is \u201cculminating\u201d from elementary school. He has had three close friends since preschool. We are close with two of their families, not so much with the third . They have a tough younger child, and we haven\u2019t grown close. After the ceremony, we are hosting a barbecue at our house. We will invite the two families we\u2019re close with, but it feels strange to invite the third. They aren\u2019t part of the group. But the mother of the third boy is very sensitive and will be upset if we don\u2019t include them. What do we do?", "sentence_answer": "We are close with two of their families, not so much with the third ."} -{"question": "Which parent of the third family is emotional?", "paragraph": "Our son is \u201cculminating\u201d from elementary school. He has had three close friends since preschool. We are close with two of their families, not so much with the third. They have a tough younger child, and we haven\u2019t grown close. After the ceremony, we are hosting a barbecue at our house. We will invite the two families we\u2019re close with, but it feels strange to invite the third. They aren\u2019t part of the group. But the mother of the third boy is very sensitive and will be upset if we don\u2019t include them. What do we do?", "answer": "mother", "sentence": "But the mother of the third boy is very sensitive and will be upset if we don\u2019t include them.", "paragraph_sentence": "Our son is \u201cculminating\u201d from elementary school. He has had three close friends since preschool. We are close with two of their families, not so much with the third. They have a tough younger child, and we haven\u2019t grown close. After the ceremony, we are hosting a barbecue at our house. We will invite the two families we\u2019re close with, but it feels strange to invite the third. They aren\u2019t part of the group. But the mother of the third boy is very sensitive and will be upset if we don\u2019t include them. What do we do?", "paragraph_answer": "Our son is \u201cculminating\u201d from elementary school. He has had three close friends since preschool. We are close with two of their families, not so much with the third. They have a tough younger child, and we haven\u2019t grown close. After the ceremony, we are hosting a barbecue at our house. We will invite the two families we\u2019re close with, but it feels strange to invite the third. They aren\u2019t part of the group. But the mother of the third boy is very sensitive and will be upset if we don\u2019t include them. What do we do?", "sentence_answer": "But the mother of the third boy is very sensitive and will be upset if we don\u2019t include them."} -{"question": "What does David Monti Thrive on?", "paragraph": "\u201cMeb\u2019s the only one who asks for the redeye,\u201d David Monti, who helps recruit elite athletes for the race, said, laughing. \u201cHe\u2019s a guy that thrives on structure and detail.\u201d Attention to routine has built a glorious running career over 26.2 miles for Keflezighi, the only person who has won the New York City Marathon (2009), the Boston Marathon (2014) and an Olympic marathon medal (silver, 2004 Athens Games). At 40, he enters Sunday\u2019s race among a half-dozen favorites and is expected to qualify for the 2016 Rio Olympics by finishing among the top three at the United States Olympic marathon trials on Feb. 13 in Los Angeles. Frank Shorter is widely considered the greatest male American marathoner, having won gold at the 1972 Munich Olympics, taken silver at the 1976 Montreal Games and finished first for four consecutive years at Japan\u2019s Fukuoka Marathon, a de facto world championship in the 1970s. Yet given the persistence of Keflezighi\u2019s career in an event where the top runners often flare as brightly and briefly as shooting stars, said Amby Burfoot, winner of the 1968 Boston Marathon, \u201cMeb\u2019s longevity on top is without equal, I think.\u201d A thread that stitches Keflezighi\u2019s triumphs is his success not in time-trial races on flat courses like Berlin but on challenging courses without pacesetters in New York and Boston, and in championship races like the Olympics, where strategy and tactics are as important as sheer speed.", "answer": "structure and detail", "sentence": "\u201cHe\u2019s a guy that thrives on structure and detail .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cMeb\u2019s the only one who asks for the redeye,\u201d David Monti, who helps recruit elite athletes for the race, said, laughing. \u201cHe\u2019s a guy that thrives on structure and detail .\u201d Attention to routine has built a glorious running career over 26.2 miles for Keflezighi, the only person who has won the New York City Marathon (2009), the Boston Marathon (2014) and an Olympic marathon medal (silver, 2004 Athens Games). At 40, he enters Sunday\u2019s race among a half-dozen favorites and is expected to qualify for the 2016 Rio Olympics by finishing among the top three at the United States Olympic marathon trials on Feb. 13 in Los Angeles. Frank Shorter is widely considered the greatest male American marathoner, having won gold at the 1972 Munich Olympics, taken silver at the 1976 Montreal Games and finished first for four consecutive years at Japan\u2019s Fukuoka Marathon, a de facto world championship in the 1970s. Yet given the persistence of Keflezighi\u2019s career in an event where the top runners often flare as brightly and briefly as shooting stars, said Amby Burfoot, winner of the 1968 Boston Marathon, \u201cMeb\u2019s longevity on top is without equal, I think.\u201d A thread that stitches Keflezighi\u2019s triumphs is his success not in time-trial races on flat courses like Berlin but on challenging courses without pacesetters in New York and Boston, and in championship races like the Olympics, where strategy and tactics are as important as sheer speed.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cMeb\u2019s the only one who asks for the redeye,\u201d David Monti, who helps recruit elite athletes for the race, said, laughing. \u201cHe\u2019s a guy that thrives on structure and detail .\u201d Attention to routine has built a glorious running career over 26.2 miles for Keflezighi, the only person who has won the New York City Marathon (2009), the Boston Marathon (2014) and an Olympic marathon medal (silver, 2004 Athens Games). At 40, he enters Sunday\u2019s race among a half-dozen favorites and is expected to qualify for the 2016 Rio Olympics by finishing among the top three at the United States Olympic marathon trials on Feb. 13 in Los Angeles. Frank Shorter is widely considered the greatest male American marathoner, having won gold at the 1972 Munich Olympics, taken silver at the 1976 Montreal Games and finished first for four consecutive years at Japan\u2019s Fukuoka Marathon, a de facto world championship in the 1970s. Yet given the persistence of Keflezighi\u2019s career in an event where the top runners often flare as brightly and briefly as shooting stars, said Amby Burfoot, winner of the 1968 Boston Marathon, \u201cMeb\u2019s longevity on top is without equal, I think.\u201d A thread that stitches Keflezighi\u2019s triumphs is his success not in time-trial races on flat courses like Berlin but on challenging courses without pacesetters in New York and Boston, and in championship races like the Olympics, where strategy and tactics are as important as sheer speed.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cHe\u2019s a guy that thrives on structure and detail .\u201d"} -{"question": "Who does David Monti help recruit?", "paragraph": "\u201cMeb\u2019s the only one who asks for the redeye,\u201d David Monti, who helps recruit elite athletes for the race, said, laughing. \u201cHe\u2019s a guy that thrives on structure and detail.\u201d Attention to routine has built a glorious running career over 26.2 miles for Keflezighi, the only person who has won the New York City Marathon (2009), the Boston Marathon (2014) and an Olympic marathon medal (silver, 2004 Athens Games). At 40, he enters Sunday\u2019s race among a half-dozen favorites and is expected to qualify for the 2016 Rio Olympics by finishing among the top three at the United States Olympic marathon trials on Feb. 13 in Los Angeles. Frank Shorter is widely considered the greatest male American marathoner, having won gold at the 1972 Munich Olympics, taken silver at the 1976 Montreal Games and finished first for four consecutive years at Japan\u2019s Fukuoka Marathon, a de facto world championship in the 1970s. Yet given the persistence of Keflezighi\u2019s career in an event where the top runners often flare as brightly and briefly as shooting stars, said Amby Burfoot, winner of the 1968 Boston Marathon, \u201cMeb\u2019s longevity on top is without equal, I think.\u201d A thread that stitches Keflezighi\u2019s triumphs is his success not in time-trial races on flat courses like Berlin but on challenging courses without pacesetters in New York and Boston, and in championship races like the Olympics, where strategy and tactics are as important as sheer speed.", "answer": "elite athletes", "sentence": "\u201cMeb\u2019s the only one who asks for the redeye,\u201d David Monti, who helps recruit elite athletes for the race, said, laughing.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cMeb\u2019s the only one who asks for the redeye,\u201d David Monti, who helps recruit elite athletes for the race, said, laughing. \u201cHe\u2019s a guy that thrives on structure and detail.\u201d Attention to routine has built a glorious running career over 26.2 miles for Keflezighi, the only person who has won the New York City Marathon (2009), the Boston Marathon (2014) and an Olympic marathon medal (silver, 2004 Athens Games). At 40, he enters Sunday\u2019s race among a half-dozen favorites and is expected to qualify for the 2016 Rio Olympics by finishing among the top three at the United States Olympic marathon trials on Feb. 13 in Los Angeles. Frank Shorter is widely considered the greatest male American marathoner, having won gold at the 1972 Munich Olympics, taken silver at the 1976 Montreal Games and finished first for four consecutive years at Japan\u2019s Fukuoka Marathon, a de facto world championship in the 1970s. Yet given the persistence of Keflezighi\u2019s career in an event where the top runners often flare as brightly and briefly as shooting stars, said Amby Burfoot, winner of the 1968 Boston Marathon, \u201cMeb\u2019s longevity on top is without equal, I think.\u201d A thread that stitches Keflezighi\u2019s triumphs is his success not in time-trial races on flat courses like Berlin but on challenging courses without pacesetters in New York and Boston, and in championship races like the Olympics, where strategy and tactics are as important as sheer speed.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cMeb\u2019s the only one who asks for the redeye,\u201d David Monti, who helps recruit elite athletes for the race, said, laughing. \u201cHe\u2019s a guy that thrives on structure and detail.\u201d Attention to routine has built a glorious running career over 26.2 miles for Keflezighi, the only person who has won the New York City Marathon (2009), the Boston Marathon (2014) and an Olympic marathon medal (silver, 2004 Athens Games). At 40, he enters Sunday\u2019s race among a half-dozen favorites and is expected to qualify for the 2016 Rio Olympics by finishing among the top three at the United States Olympic marathon trials on Feb. 13 in Los Angeles. Frank Shorter is widely considered the greatest male American marathoner, having won gold at the 1972 Munich Olympics, taken silver at the 1976 Montreal Games and finished first for four consecutive years at Japan\u2019s Fukuoka Marathon, a de facto world championship in the 1970s. Yet given the persistence of Keflezighi\u2019s career in an event where the top runners often flare as brightly and briefly as shooting stars, said Amby Burfoot, winner of the 1968 Boston Marathon, \u201cMeb\u2019s longevity on top is without equal, I think.\u201d A thread that stitches Keflezighi\u2019s triumphs is his success not in time-trial races on flat courses like Berlin but on challenging courses without pacesetters in New York and Boston, and in championship races like the Olympics, where strategy and tactics are as important as sheer speed.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cMeb\u2019s the only one who asks for the redeye,\u201d David Monti, who helps recruit elite athletes for the race, said, laughing."} -{"question": "Who was David Monti's running career for?", "paragraph": "\u201cMeb\u2019s the only one who asks for the redeye,\u201d David Monti, who helps recruit elite athletes for the race, said, laughing. \u201cHe\u2019s a guy that thrives on structure and detail.\u201d Attention to routine has built a glorious running career over 26.2 miles for Keflezighi, the only person who has won the New York City Marathon (2009), the Boston Marathon (2014) and an Olympic marathon medal (silver, 2004 Athens Games). At 40, he enters Sunday\u2019s race among a half-dozen favorites and is expected to qualify for the 2016 Rio Olympics by finishing among the top three at the United States Olympic marathon trials on Feb. 13 in Los Angeles. Frank Shorter is widely considered the greatest male American marathoner, having won gold at the 1972 Munich Olympics, taken silver at the 1976 Montreal Games and finished first for four consecutive years at Japan\u2019s Fukuoka Marathon, a de facto world championship in the 1970s. Yet given the persistence of Keflezighi\u2019s career in an event where the top runners often flare as brightly and briefly as shooting stars, said Amby Burfoot, winner of the 1968 Boston Marathon, \u201cMeb\u2019s longevity on top is without equal, I think.\u201d A thread that stitches Keflezighi\u2019s triumphs is his success not in time-trial races on flat courses like Berlin but on challenging courses without pacesetters in New York and Boston, and in championship races like the Olympics, where strategy and tactics are as important as sheer speed.", "answer": "Keflezighi,", "sentence": "Attention to routine has built a glorious running career over 26.2 miles for Keflezighi, the only person who has won the New York City Marathon (2009), the Boston Marathon (2014) and an Olympic marathon medal (silver, 2004 Athens Games).", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cMeb\u2019s the only one who asks for the redeye,\u201d David Monti, who helps recruit elite athletes for the race, said, laughing. \u201cHe\u2019s a guy that thrives on structure and detail.\u201d Attention to routine has built a glorious running career over 26.2 miles for Keflezighi, the only person who has won the New York City Marathon (2009), the Boston Marathon (2014) and an Olympic marathon medal (silver, 2004 Athens Games). At 40, he enters Sunday\u2019s race among a half-dozen favorites and is expected to qualify for the 2016 Rio Olympics by finishing among the top three at the United States Olympic marathon trials on Feb. 13 in Los Angeles. Frank Shorter is widely considered the greatest male American marathoner, having won gold at the 1972 Munich Olympics, taken silver at the 1976 Montreal Games and finished first for four consecutive years at Japan\u2019s Fukuoka Marathon, a de facto world championship in the 1970s. Yet given the persistence of Keflezighi\u2019s career in an event where the top runners often flare as brightly and briefly as shooting stars, said Amby Burfoot, winner of the 1968 Boston Marathon, \u201cMeb\u2019s longevity on top is without equal, I think.\u201d A thread that stitches Keflezighi\u2019s triumphs is his success not in time-trial races on flat courses like Berlin but on challenging courses without pacesetters in New York and Boston, and in championship races like the Olympics, where strategy and tactics are as important as sheer speed.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cMeb\u2019s the only one who asks for the redeye,\u201d David Monti, who helps recruit elite athletes for the race, said, laughing. \u201cHe\u2019s a guy that thrives on structure and detail.\u201d Attention to routine has built a glorious running career over 26.2 miles for Keflezighi, the only person who has won the New York City Marathon (2009), the Boston Marathon (2014) and an Olympic marathon medal (silver, 2004 Athens Games). At 40, he enters Sunday\u2019s race among a half-dozen favorites and is expected to qualify for the 2016 Rio Olympics by finishing among the top three at the United States Olympic marathon trials on Feb. 13 in Los Angeles. Frank Shorter is widely considered the greatest male American marathoner, having won gold at the 1972 Munich Olympics, taken silver at the 1976 Montreal Games and finished first for four consecutive years at Japan\u2019s Fukuoka Marathon, a de facto world championship in the 1970s. Yet given the persistence of Keflezighi\u2019s career in an event where the top runners often flare as brightly and briefly as shooting stars, said Amby Burfoot, winner of the 1968 Boston Marathon, \u201cMeb\u2019s longevity on top is without equal, I think.\u201d A thread that stitches Keflezighi\u2019s triumphs is his success not in time-trial races on flat courses like Berlin but on challenging courses without pacesetters in New York and Boston, and in championship races like the Olympics, where strategy and tactics are as important as sheer speed.", "sentence_answer": "Attention to routine has built a glorious running career over 26.2 miles for Keflezighi, the only person who has won the New York City Marathon (2009), the Boston Marathon (2014) and an Olympic marathon medal (silver, 2004 Athens Games)."} -{"question": "What race did David Monti win a Silver medal in?", "paragraph": "\u201cMeb\u2019s the only one who asks for the redeye,\u201d David Monti, who helps recruit elite athletes for the race, said, laughing. \u201cHe\u2019s a guy that thrives on structure and detail.\u201d Attention to routine has built a glorious running career over 26.2 miles for Keflezighi, the only person who has won the New York City Marathon (2009), the Boston Marathon (2014) and an Olympic marathon medal (silver, 2004 Athens Games). At 40, he enters Sunday\u2019s race among a half-dozen favorites and is expected to qualify for the 2016 Rio Olympics by finishing among the top three at the United States Olympic marathon trials on Feb. 13 in Los Angeles. Frank Shorter is widely considered the greatest male American marathoner, having won gold at the 1972 Munich Olympics, taken silver at the 1976 Montreal Games and finished first for four consecutive years at Japan\u2019s Fukuoka Marathon, a de facto world championship in the 1970s. Yet given the persistence of Keflezighi\u2019s career in an event where the top runners often flare as brightly and briefly as shooting stars, said Amby Burfoot, winner of the 1968 Boston Marathon, \u201cMeb\u2019s longevity on top is without equal, I think.\u201d A thread that stitches Keflezighi\u2019s triumphs is his success not in time-trial races on flat courses like Berlin but on challenging courses without pacesetters in New York and Boston, and in championship races like the Olympics, where strategy and tactics are as important as sheer speed.", "answer": "an Olympic marathon medal (silver, 2004 Athens Games)", "sentence": "Attention to routine has built a glorious running career over 26.2 miles for Keflezighi, the only person who has won the New York City Marathon (2009), the Boston Marathon (2014) and an Olympic marathon medal (silver, 2004 Athens Games) .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cMeb\u2019s the only one who asks for the redeye,\u201d David Monti, who helps recruit elite athletes for the race, said, laughing. \u201cHe\u2019s a guy that thrives on structure and detail.\u201d Attention to routine has built a glorious running career over 26.2 miles for Keflezighi, the only person who has won the New York City Marathon (2009), the Boston Marathon (2014) and an Olympic marathon medal (silver, 2004 Athens Games) . At 40, he enters Sunday\u2019s race among a half-dozen favorites and is expected to qualify for the 2016 Rio Olympics by finishing among the top three at the United States Olympic marathon trials on Feb. 13 in Los Angeles. Frank Shorter is widely considered the greatest male American marathoner, having won gold at the 1972 Munich Olympics, taken silver at the 1976 Montreal Games and finished first for four consecutive years at Japan\u2019s Fukuoka Marathon, a de facto world championship in the 1970s. Yet given the persistence of Keflezighi\u2019s career in an event where the top runners often flare as brightly and briefly as shooting stars, said Amby Burfoot, winner of the 1968 Boston Marathon, \u201cMeb\u2019s longevity on top is without equal, I think.\u201d A thread that stitches Keflezighi\u2019s triumphs is his success not in time-trial races on flat courses like Berlin but on challenging courses without pacesetters in New York and Boston, and in championship races like the Olympics, where strategy and tactics are as important as sheer speed.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cMeb\u2019s the only one who asks for the redeye,\u201d David Monti, who helps recruit elite athletes for the race, said, laughing. \u201cHe\u2019s a guy that thrives on structure and detail.\u201d Attention to routine has built a glorious running career over 26.2 miles for Keflezighi, the only person who has won the New York City Marathon (2009), the Boston Marathon (2014) and an Olympic marathon medal (silver, 2004 Athens Games) . At 40, he enters Sunday\u2019s race among a half-dozen favorites and is expected to qualify for the 2016 Rio Olympics by finishing among the top three at the United States Olympic marathon trials on Feb. 13 in Los Angeles. Frank Shorter is widely considered the greatest male American marathoner, having won gold at the 1972 Munich Olympics, taken silver at the 1976 Montreal Games and finished first for four consecutive years at Japan\u2019s Fukuoka Marathon, a de facto world championship in the 1970s. Yet given the persistence of Keflezighi\u2019s career in an event where the top runners often flare as brightly and briefly as shooting stars, said Amby Burfoot, winner of the 1968 Boston Marathon, \u201cMeb\u2019s longevity on top is without equal, I think.\u201d A thread that stitches Keflezighi\u2019s triumphs is his success not in time-trial races on flat courses like Berlin but on challenging courses without pacesetters in New York and Boston, and in championship races like the Olympics, where strategy and tactics are as important as sheer speed.", "sentence_answer": "Attention to routine has built a glorious running career over 26.2 miles for Keflezighi, the only person who has won the New York City Marathon (2009), the Boston Marathon (2014) and an Olympic marathon medal (silver, 2004 Athens Games) ."} -{"question": "Who is considered the Greatest American runner by many people?", "paragraph": "\u201cMeb\u2019s the only one who asks for the redeye,\u201d David Monti, who helps recruit elite athletes for the race, said, laughing. \u201cHe\u2019s a guy that thrives on structure and detail.\u201d Attention to routine has built a glorious running career over 26.2 miles for Keflezighi, the only person who has won the New York City Marathon (2009), the Boston Marathon (2014) and an Olympic marathon medal (silver, 2004 Athens Games). At 40, he enters Sunday\u2019s race among a half-dozen favorites and is expected to qualify for the 2016 Rio Olympics by finishing among the top three at the United States Olympic marathon trials on Feb. 13 in Los Angeles. Frank Shorter is widely considered the greatest male American marathoner, having won gold at the 1972 Munich Olympics, taken silver at the 1976 Montreal Games and finished first for four consecutive years at Japan\u2019s Fukuoka Marathon, a de facto world championship in the 1970s. Yet given the persistence of Keflezighi\u2019s career in an event where the top runners often flare as brightly and briefly as shooting stars, said Amby Burfoot, winner of the 1968 Boston Marathon, \u201cMeb\u2019s longevity on top is without equal, I think.\u201d A thread that stitches Keflezighi\u2019s triumphs is his success not in time-trial races on flat courses like Berlin but on challenging courses without pacesetters in New York and Boston, and in championship races like the Olympics, where strategy and tactics are as important as sheer speed.", "answer": "Frank Shorter", "sentence": "Frank Shorter is widely considered the greatest male American marathoner, having won gold at the 1972 Munich Olympics, taken silver at the 1976 Montreal Games and finished first for four consecutive years at Japan\u2019s Fukuoka Marathon, a de facto world championship in the 1970s.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cMeb\u2019s the only one who asks for the redeye,\u201d David Monti, who helps recruit elite athletes for the race, said, laughing. \u201cHe\u2019s a guy that thrives on structure and detail.\u201d Attention to routine has built a glorious running career over 26.2 miles for Keflezighi, the only person who has won the New York City Marathon (2009), the Boston Marathon (2014) and an Olympic marathon medal (silver, 2004 Athens Games). At 40, he enters Sunday\u2019s race among a half-dozen favorites and is expected to qualify for the 2016 Rio Olympics by finishing among the top three at the United States Olympic marathon trials on Feb. 13 in Los Angeles. Frank Shorter is widely considered the greatest male American marathoner, having won gold at the 1972 Munich Olympics, taken silver at the 1976 Montreal Games and finished first for four consecutive years at Japan\u2019s Fukuoka Marathon, a de facto world championship in the 1970s. Yet given the persistence of Keflezighi\u2019s career in an event where the top runners often flare as brightly and briefly as shooting stars, said Amby Burfoot, winner of the 1968 Boston Marathon, \u201cMeb\u2019s longevity on top is without equal, I think.\u201d A thread that stitches Keflezighi\u2019s triumphs is his success not in time-trial races on flat courses like Berlin but on challenging courses without pacesetters in New York and Boston, and in championship races like the Olympics, where strategy and tactics are as important as sheer speed.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cMeb\u2019s the only one who asks for the redeye,\u201d David Monti, who helps recruit elite athletes for the race, said, laughing. \u201cHe\u2019s a guy that thrives on structure and detail.\u201d Attention to routine has built a glorious running career over 26.2 miles for Keflezighi, the only person who has won the New York City Marathon (2009), the Boston Marathon (2014) and an Olympic marathon medal (silver, 2004 Athens Games). At 40, he enters Sunday\u2019s race among a half-dozen favorites and is expected to qualify for the 2016 Rio Olympics by finishing among the top three at the United States Olympic marathon trials on Feb. 13 in Los Angeles. Frank Shorter is widely considered the greatest male American marathoner, having won gold at the 1972 Munich Olympics, taken silver at the 1976 Montreal Games and finished first for four consecutive years at Japan\u2019s Fukuoka Marathon, a de facto world championship in the 1970s. Yet given the persistence of Keflezighi\u2019s career in an event where the top runners often flare as brightly and briefly as shooting stars, said Amby Burfoot, winner of the 1968 Boston Marathon, \u201cMeb\u2019s longevity on top is without equal, I think.\u201d A thread that stitches Keflezighi\u2019s triumphs is his success not in time-trial races on flat courses like Berlin but on challenging courses without pacesetters in New York and Boston, and in championship races like the Olympics, where strategy and tactics are as important as sheer speed.", "sentence_answer": " Frank Shorter is widely considered the greatest male American marathoner, having won gold at the 1972 Munich Olympics, taken silver at the 1976 Montreal Games and finished first for four consecutive years at Japan\u2019s Fukuoka Marathon, a de facto world championship in the 1970s."} -{"question": "What is Goal number 1 for Keflexighi?", "paragraph": "\u201cI\u2019m here to compete,\u201d Keflezighi said. \u201cGoal No. 1 is to try to win\u201d or get a high placement. Barring that, his finishing time could be a kind of golden parachute, allowing a gentle, somewhat satisfactory landing. Seven of his nine marathons in New York have finished under the current masters record. What is his secret to staying competitive for so long? There are many theories. Keflezighi has kept the same coach, Bob Larsen, since his college days at U.C.L.A. He remains committed to the mundane routines of stretching and strength work. Training for so many years at altitude in Mammoth Lakes, Calif., much of it on soft surfaces, has perhaps prolonged Keflezighi\u2019s career, Larsen said, forcing him to restrict the intensity of his training while still providing him the cardiovascular benefits.", "answer": "to try to win", "sentence": "\u201cGoal No. 1 is to try to win \u201d or get a high placement.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI\u2019m here to compete,\u201d Keflezighi said. \u201cGoal No. 1 is to try to win \u201d or get a high placement. Barring that, his finishing time could be a kind of golden parachute, allowing a gentle, somewhat satisfactory landing. Seven of his nine marathons in New York have finished under the current masters record. What is his secret to staying competitive for so long? There are many theories. Keflezighi has kept the same coach, Bob Larsen, since his college days at U.C.L.A. He remains committed to the mundane routines of stretching and strength work. Training for so many years at altitude in Mammoth Lakes, Calif., much of it on soft surfaces, has perhaps prolonged Keflezighi\u2019s career, Larsen said, forcing him to restrict the intensity of his training while still providing him the cardiovascular benefits.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI\u2019m here to compete,\u201d Keflezighi said. \u201cGoal No. 1 is to try to win \u201d or get a high placement. Barring that, his finishing time could be a kind of golden parachute, allowing a gentle, somewhat satisfactory landing. Seven of his nine marathons in New York have finished under the current masters record. What is his secret to staying competitive for so long? There are many theories. Keflezighi has kept the same coach, Bob Larsen, since his college days at U.C.L.A. He remains committed to the mundane routines of stretching and strength work. Training for so many years at altitude in Mammoth Lakes, Calif., much of it on soft surfaces, has perhaps prolonged Keflezighi\u2019s career, Larsen said, forcing him to restrict the intensity of his training while still providing him the cardiovascular benefits.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cGoal No. 1 is to try to win \u201d or get a high placement."} -{"question": "Who has been Keflexghi's Coach Since his College days?", "paragraph": "\u201cI\u2019m here to compete,\u201d Keflezighi said. \u201cGoal No. 1 is to try to win\u201d or get a high placement. Barring that, his finishing time could be a kind of golden parachute, allowing a gentle, somewhat satisfactory landing. Seven of his nine marathons in New York have finished under the current masters record. What is his secret to staying competitive for so long? There are many theories. Keflezighi has kept the same coach, Bob Larsen, since his college days at U.C.L.A. He remains committed to the mundane routines of stretching and strength work. Training for so many years at altitude in Mammoth Lakes, Calif., much of it on soft surfaces, has perhaps prolonged Keflezighi\u2019s career, Larsen said, forcing him to restrict the intensity of his training while still providing him the cardiovascular benefits.", "answer": "Bob Larsen", "sentence": "Keflezighi has kept the same coach, Bob Larsen , since his college days at U.C.L.A. He remains committed to the mundane routines of stretching and strength work.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI\u2019m here to compete,\u201d Keflezighi said. \u201cGoal No. 1 is to try to win\u201d or get a high placement. Barring that, his finishing time could be a kind of golden parachute, allowing a gentle, somewhat satisfactory landing. Seven of his nine marathons in New York have finished under the current masters record. What is his secret to staying competitive for so long? There are many theories. Keflezighi has kept the same coach, Bob Larsen , since his college days at U.C.L.A. He remains committed to the mundane routines of stretching and strength work. Training for so many years at altitude in Mammoth Lakes, Calif., much of it on soft surfaces, has perhaps prolonged Keflezighi\u2019s career, Larsen said, forcing him to restrict the intensity of his training while still providing him the cardiovascular benefits.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI\u2019m here to compete,\u201d Keflezighi said. \u201cGoal No. 1 is to try to win\u201d or get a high placement. Barring that, his finishing time could be a kind of golden parachute, allowing a gentle, somewhat satisfactory landing. Seven of his nine marathons in New York have finished under the current masters record. What is his secret to staying competitive for so long? There are many theories. Keflezighi has kept the same coach, Bob Larsen , since his college days at U.C.L.A. He remains committed to the mundane routines of stretching and strength work. Training for so many years at altitude in Mammoth Lakes, Calif., much of it on soft surfaces, has perhaps prolonged Keflezighi\u2019s career, Larsen said, forcing him to restrict the intensity of his training while still providing him the cardiovascular benefits.", "sentence_answer": "Keflezighi has kept the same coach, Bob Larsen , since his college days at U.C.L.A. He remains committed to the mundane routines of stretching and strength work."} -{"question": "How many Keflexghi's Marathons in New York did he finish under the current masters record?", "paragraph": "\u201cI\u2019m here to compete,\u201d Keflezighi said. \u201cGoal No. 1 is to try to win\u201d or get a high placement. Barring that, his finishing time could be a kind of golden parachute, allowing a gentle, somewhat satisfactory landing. Seven of his nine marathons in New York have finished under the current masters record. What is his secret to staying competitive for so long? There are many theories. Keflezighi has kept the same coach, Bob Larsen, since his college days at U.C.L.A. He remains committed to the mundane routines of stretching and strength work. Training for so many years at altitude in Mammoth Lakes, Calif., much of it on soft surfaces, has perhaps prolonged Keflezighi\u2019s career, Larsen said, forcing him to restrict the intensity of his training while still providing him the cardiovascular benefits.", "answer": "Seven of his nine", "sentence": "Seven of his nine marathons in New York have finished under the current masters record.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI\u2019m here to compete,\u201d Keflezighi said. \u201cGoal No. 1 is to try to win\u201d or get a high placement. Barring that, his finishing time could be a kind of golden parachute, allowing a gentle, somewhat satisfactory landing. Seven of his nine marathons in New York have finished under the current masters record. What is his secret to staying competitive for so long? There are many theories. Keflezighi has kept the same coach, Bob Larsen, since his college days at U.C.L.A. He remains committed to the mundane routines of stretching and strength work. Training for so many years at altitude in Mammoth Lakes, Calif., much of it on soft surfaces, has perhaps prolonged Keflezighi\u2019s career, Larsen said, forcing him to restrict the intensity of his training while still providing him the cardiovascular benefits.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI\u2019m here to compete,\u201d Keflezighi said. \u201cGoal No. 1 is to try to win\u201d or get a high placement. Barring that, his finishing time could be a kind of golden parachute, allowing a gentle, somewhat satisfactory landing. Seven of his nine marathons in New York have finished under the current masters record. What is his secret to staying competitive for so long? There are many theories. Keflezighi has kept the same coach, Bob Larsen, since his college days at U.C.L.A. He remains committed to the mundane routines of stretching and strength work. Training for so many years at altitude in Mammoth Lakes, Calif., much of it on soft surfaces, has perhaps prolonged Keflezighi\u2019s career, Larsen said, forcing him to restrict the intensity of his training while still providing him the cardiovascular benefits.", "sentence_answer": " Seven of his nine marathons in New York have finished under the current masters record."} -{"question": "What college did Keflexghi go to?", "paragraph": "\u201cI\u2019m here to compete,\u201d Keflezighi said. \u201cGoal No. 1 is to try to win\u201d or get a high placement. Barring that, his finishing time could be a kind of golden parachute, allowing a gentle, somewhat satisfactory landing. Seven of his nine marathons in New York have finished under the current masters record. What is his secret to staying competitive for so long? There are many theories. Keflezighi has kept the same coach, Bob Larsen, since his college days at U.C.L.A. He remains committed to the mundane routines of stretching and strength work. Training for so many years at altitude in Mammoth Lakes, Calif., much of it on soft surfaces, has perhaps prolonged Keflezighi\u2019s career, Larsen said, forcing him to restrict the intensity of his training while still providing him the cardiovascular benefits.", "answer": "U.C.L.A", "sentence": "Keflezighi has kept the same coach, Bob Larsen, since his college days at U.C.L.A .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI\u2019m here to compete,\u201d Keflezighi said. \u201cGoal No. 1 is to try to win\u201d or get a high placement. Barring that, his finishing time could be a kind of golden parachute, allowing a gentle, somewhat satisfactory landing. Seven of his nine marathons in New York have finished under the current masters record. What is his secret to staying competitive for so long? There are many theories. Keflezighi has kept the same coach, Bob Larsen, since his college days at U.C.L.A . He remains committed to the mundane routines of stretching and strength work. Training for so many years at altitude in Mammoth Lakes, Calif., much of it on soft surfaces, has perhaps prolonged Keflezighi\u2019s career, Larsen said, forcing him to restrict the intensity of his training while still providing him the cardiovascular benefits.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI\u2019m here to compete,\u201d Keflezighi said. \u201cGoal No. 1 is to try to win\u201d or get a high placement. Barring that, his finishing time could be a kind of golden parachute, allowing a gentle, somewhat satisfactory landing. Seven of his nine marathons in New York have finished under the current masters record. What is his secret to staying competitive for so long? There are many theories. Keflezighi has kept the same coach, Bob Larsen, since his college days at U.C.L.A . He remains committed to the mundane routines of stretching and strength work. Training for so many years at altitude in Mammoth Lakes, Calif., much of it on soft surfaces, has perhaps prolonged Keflezighi\u2019s career, Larsen said, forcing him to restrict the intensity of his training while still providing him the cardiovascular benefits.", "sentence_answer": "Keflezighi has kept the same coach, Bob Larsen, since his college days at U.C.L.A ."} -{"question": "Where did Keflexghi train for many years?", "paragraph": "\u201cI\u2019m here to compete,\u201d Keflezighi said. \u201cGoal No. 1 is to try to win\u201d or get a high placement. Barring that, his finishing time could be a kind of golden parachute, allowing a gentle, somewhat satisfactory landing. Seven of his nine marathons in New York have finished under the current masters record. What is his secret to staying competitive for so long? There are many theories. Keflezighi has kept the same coach, Bob Larsen, since his college days at U.C.L.A. He remains committed to the mundane routines of stretching and strength work. Training for so many years at altitude in Mammoth Lakes, Calif., much of it on soft surfaces, has perhaps prolonged Keflezighi\u2019s career, Larsen said, forcing him to restrict the intensity of his training while still providing him the cardiovascular benefits.", "answer": "Mammoth Lakes, Calif", "sentence": "Training for so many years at altitude in Mammoth Lakes, Calif ., much of it on soft surfaces, has perhaps prolonged Keflezighi\u2019s career, Larsen said, forcing him to restrict the intensity of his training while still providing him the cardiovascular benefits.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI\u2019m here to compete,\u201d Keflezighi said. \u201cGoal No. 1 is to try to win\u201d or get a high placement. Barring that, his finishing time could be a kind of golden parachute, allowing a gentle, somewhat satisfactory landing. Seven of his nine marathons in New York have finished under the current masters record. What is his secret to staying competitive for so long? There are many theories. Keflezighi has kept the same coach, Bob Larsen, since his college days at U.C.L.A. He remains committed to the mundane routines of stretching and strength work. Training for so many years at altitude in Mammoth Lakes, Calif ., much of it on soft surfaces, has perhaps prolonged Keflezighi\u2019s career, Larsen said, forcing him to restrict the intensity of his training while still providing him the cardiovascular benefits. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI\u2019m here to compete,\u201d Keflezighi said. \u201cGoal No. 1 is to try to win\u201d or get a high placement. Barring that, his finishing time could be a kind of golden parachute, allowing a gentle, somewhat satisfactory landing. Seven of his nine marathons in New York have finished under the current masters record. What is his secret to staying competitive for so long? There are many theories. Keflezighi has kept the same coach, Bob Larsen, since his college days at U.C.L.A. He remains committed to the mundane routines of stretching and strength work. Training for so many years at altitude in Mammoth Lakes, Calif ., much of it on soft surfaces, has perhaps prolonged Keflezighi\u2019s career, Larsen said, forcing him to restrict the intensity of his training while still providing him the cardiovascular benefits.", "sentence_answer": "Training for so many years at altitude in Mammoth Lakes, Calif ., much of it on soft surfaces, has perhaps prolonged Keflezighi\u2019s career, Larsen said, forcing him to restrict the intensity of his training while still providing him the cardiovascular benefits."} -{"question": "How many children where in Meb Keflezighi's family?", "paragraph": "Of the 11 children in the family, Meb said, nine have earned college degrees. And one has become a champion marathon runner, even if first impressions were unnerving. At his first New York City Marathon, in 2002, he finished ninth in 2:12:35 and grew so chilled that his father tried to massage warmth back into his legs and his mother told him, \u201cNo more marathons for you.\u201d He remembers telling himself and others, \u201cI don\u2019t want to ever do that again.\u201d Now he is back in New York for a 10th marathon. And after a break of four days or so, Keflezighi will begin his recovery and buildup toward the Olympic trials in February. He did this successfully before the 2012 London Olympics on an even shorter turnaround. Presumably, his attention to detail will avoid a repeat of what happened during the 2011 New York City Marathon, when Keflezighi forgot to put a breathing strip on his nose, leaving it in his running shoe as he finished sixth. An irritation developed and his foot became infected, costing him three weeks of training. Still, Keflezighi rebounded to win the Olympic trials. \u201cHe was a little embarrassed,\u201d said Larsen, Keflezighi\u2019s coach. \u201cHe\u2019s very alert and precise at what he does. That was very unusual for him.\u201d", "answer": "11 children", "sentence": "Of the 11 children in the family, Meb said, nine have earned college degrees.", "paragraph_sentence": " Of the 11 children in the family, Meb said, nine have earned college degrees. And one has become a champion marathon runner, even if first impressions were unnerving. At his first New York City Marathon, in 2002, he finished ninth in 2:12:35 and grew so chilled that his father tried to massage warmth back into his legs and his mother told him, \u201cNo more marathons for you.\u201d He remembers telling himself and others, \u201cI don\u2019t want to ever do that again.\u201d Now he is back in New York for a 10th marathon. And after a break of four days or so, Keflezighi will begin his recovery and buildup toward the Olympic trials in February. He did this successfully before the 2012 London Olympics on an even shorter turnaround. Presumably, his attention to detail will avoid a repeat of what happened during the 2011 New York City Marathon, when Keflezighi forgot to put a breathing strip on his nose, leaving it in his running shoe as he finished sixth. An irritation developed and his foot became infected, costing him three weeks of training. Still, Keflezighi rebounded to win the Olympic trials. \u201cHe was a little embarrassed,\u201d said Larsen, Keflezighi\u2019s coach. \u201cHe\u2019s very alert and precise at what he does. That was very unusual for him.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Of the 11 children in the family, Meb said, nine have earned college degrees. And one has become a champion marathon runner, even if first impressions were unnerving. At his first New York City Marathon, in 2002, he finished ninth in 2:12:35 and grew so chilled that his father tried to massage warmth back into his legs and his mother told him, \u201cNo more marathons for you.\u201d He remembers telling himself and others, \u201cI don\u2019t want to ever do that again.\u201d Now he is back in New York for a 10th marathon. And after a break of four days or so, Keflezighi will begin his recovery and buildup toward the Olympic trials in February. He did this successfully before the 2012 London Olympics on an even shorter turnaround. Presumably, his attention to detail will avoid a repeat of what happened during the 2011 New York City Marathon, when Keflezighi forgot to put a breathing strip on his nose, leaving it in his running shoe as he finished sixth. An irritation developed and his foot became infected, costing him three weeks of training. Still, Keflezighi rebounded to win the Olympic trials. \u201cHe was a little embarrassed,\u201d said Larsen, Keflezighi\u2019s coach. \u201cHe\u2019s very alert and precise at what he does. That was very unusual for him.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Of the 11 children in the family, Meb said, nine have earned college degrees."} -{"question": "When was Meb Keflezighi's first New York City Marathon?", "paragraph": "Of the 11 children in the family, Meb said, nine have earned college degrees. And one has become a champion marathon runner, even if first impressions were unnerving. At his first New York City Marathon, in 2002, he finished ninth in 2:12:35 and grew so chilled that his father tried to massage warmth back into his legs and his mother told him, \u201cNo more marathons for you.\u201d He remembers telling himself and others, \u201cI don\u2019t want to ever do that again.\u201d Now he is back in New York for a 10th marathon. And after a break of four days or so, Keflezighi will begin his recovery and buildup toward the Olympic trials in February. He did this successfully before the 2012 London Olympics on an even shorter turnaround. Presumably, his attention to detail will avoid a repeat of what happened during the 2011 New York City Marathon, when Keflezighi forgot to put a breathing strip on his nose, leaving it in his running shoe as he finished sixth. An irritation developed and his foot became infected, costing him three weeks of training. Still, Keflezighi rebounded to win the Olympic trials. \u201cHe was a little embarrassed,\u201d said Larsen, Keflezighi\u2019s coach. \u201cHe\u2019s very alert and precise at what he does. That was very unusual for him.\u201d", "answer": "in 2002", "sentence": "At his first New York City Marathon, in 2002 , he finished ninth in 2:12:35 and grew so chilled that his father tried to massage warmth back into his legs and his mother told him, \u201cNo more marathons for you.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Of the 11 children in the family, Meb said, nine have earned college degrees. And one has become a champion marathon runner, even if first impressions were unnerving. At his first New York City Marathon, in 2002 , he finished ninth in 2:12:35 and grew so chilled that his father tried to massage warmth back into his legs and his mother told him, \u201cNo more marathons for you.\u201d He remembers telling himself and others, \u201cI don\u2019t want to ever do that again.\u201d Now he is back in New York for a 10th marathon. And after a break of four days or so, Keflezighi will begin his recovery and buildup toward the Olympic trials in February. He did this successfully before the 2012 London Olympics on an even shorter turnaround. Presumably, his attention to detail will avoid a repeat of what happened during the 2011 New York City Marathon, when Keflezighi forgot to put a breathing strip on his nose, leaving it in his running shoe as he finished sixth. An irritation developed and his foot became infected, costing him three weeks of training. Still, Keflezighi rebounded to win the Olympic trials. \u201cHe was a little embarrassed,\u201d said Larsen, Keflezighi\u2019s coach. \u201cHe\u2019s very alert and precise at what he does. That was very unusual for him.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Of the 11 children in the family, Meb said, nine have earned college degrees. And one has become a champion marathon runner, even if first impressions were unnerving. At his first New York City Marathon, in 2002 , he finished ninth in 2:12:35 and grew so chilled that his father tried to massage warmth back into his legs and his mother told him, \u201cNo more marathons for you.\u201d He remembers telling himself and others, \u201cI don\u2019t want to ever do that again.\u201d Now he is back in New York for a 10th marathon. And after a break of four days or so, Keflezighi will begin his recovery and buildup toward the Olympic trials in February. He did this successfully before the 2012 London Olympics on an even shorter turnaround. Presumably, his attention to detail will avoid a repeat of what happened during the 2011 New York City Marathon, when Keflezighi forgot to put a breathing strip on his nose, leaving it in his running shoe as he finished sixth. An irritation developed and his foot became infected, costing him three weeks of training. Still, Keflezighi rebounded to win the Olympic trials. \u201cHe was a little embarrassed,\u201d said Larsen, Keflezighi\u2019s coach. \u201cHe\u2019s very alert and precise at what he does. That was very unusual for him.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "At his first New York City Marathon, in 2002 , he finished ninth in 2:12:35 and grew so chilled that his father tried to massage warmth back into his legs and his mother told him, \u201cNo more marathons for you.\u201d"} -{"question": "What have nine of the children I Keflezighi's family earned?", "paragraph": "Of the 11 children in the family, Meb said, nine have earned college degrees. And one has become a champion marathon runner, even if first impressions were unnerving. At his first New York City Marathon, in 2002, he finished ninth in 2:12:35 and grew so chilled that his father tried to massage warmth back into his legs and his mother told him, \u201cNo more marathons for you.\u201d He remembers telling himself and others, \u201cI don\u2019t want to ever do that again.\u201d Now he is back in New York for a 10th marathon. And after a break of four days or so, Keflezighi will begin his recovery and buildup toward the Olympic trials in February. He did this successfully before the 2012 London Olympics on an even shorter turnaround. Presumably, his attention to detail will avoid a repeat of what happened during the 2011 New York City Marathon, when Keflezighi forgot to put a breathing strip on his nose, leaving it in his running shoe as he finished sixth. An irritation developed and his foot became infected, costing him three weeks of training. Still, Keflezighi rebounded to win the Olympic trials. \u201cHe was a little embarrassed,\u201d said Larsen, Keflezighi\u2019s coach. \u201cHe\u2019s very alert and precise at what he does. That was very unusual for him.\u201d", "answer": "college degrees", "sentence": "Of the 11 children in the family, Meb said, nine have earned college degrees .", "paragraph_sentence": " Of the 11 children in the family, Meb said, nine have earned college degrees . And one has become a champion marathon runner, even if first impressions were unnerving. At his first New York City Marathon, in 2002, he finished ninth in 2:12:35 and grew so chilled that his father tried to massage warmth back into his legs and his mother told him, \u201cNo more marathons for you.\u201d He remembers telling himself and others, \u201cI don\u2019t want to ever do that again.\u201d Now he is back in New York for a 10th marathon. And after a break of four days or so, Keflezighi will begin his recovery and buildup toward the Olympic trials in February. He did this successfully before the 2012 London Olympics on an even shorter turnaround. Presumably, his attention to detail will avoid a repeat of what happened during the 2011 New York City Marathon, when Keflezighi forgot to put a breathing strip on his nose, leaving it in his running shoe as he finished sixth. An irritation developed and his foot became infected, costing him three weeks of training. Still, Keflezighi rebounded to win the Olympic trials. \u201cHe was a little embarrassed,\u201d said Larsen, Keflezighi\u2019s coach. \u201cHe\u2019s very alert and precise at what he does. That was very unusual for him.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Of the 11 children in the family, Meb said, nine have earned college degrees . And one has become a champion marathon runner, even if first impressions were unnerving. At his first New York City Marathon, in 2002, he finished ninth in 2:12:35 and grew so chilled that his father tried to massage warmth back into his legs and his mother told him, \u201cNo more marathons for you.\u201d He remembers telling himself and others, \u201cI don\u2019t want to ever do that again.\u201d Now he is back in New York for a 10th marathon. And after a break of four days or so, Keflezighi will begin his recovery and buildup toward the Olympic trials in February. He did this successfully before the 2012 London Olympics on an even shorter turnaround. Presumably, his attention to detail will avoid a repeat of what happened during the 2011 New York City Marathon, when Keflezighi forgot to put a breathing strip on his nose, leaving it in his running shoe as he finished sixth. An irritation developed and his foot became infected, costing him three weeks of training. Still, Keflezighi rebounded to win the Olympic trials. \u201cHe was a little embarrassed,\u201d said Larsen, Keflezighi\u2019s coach. \u201cHe\u2019s very alert and precise at what he does. That was very unusual for him.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Of the 11 children in the family, Meb said, nine have earned college degrees ."} -{"question": "What place and in what time did Keflezighi finish at his first Marathon?", "paragraph": "Of the 11 children in the family, Meb said, nine have earned college degrees. And one has become a champion marathon runner, even if first impressions were unnerving. At his first New York City Marathon, in 2002, he finished ninth in 2:12:35 and grew so chilled that his father tried to massage warmth back into his legs and his mother told him, \u201cNo more marathons for you.\u201d He remembers telling himself and others, \u201cI don\u2019t want to ever do that again.\u201d Now he is back in New York for a 10th marathon. And after a break of four days or so, Keflezighi will begin his recovery and buildup toward the Olympic trials in February. He did this successfully before the 2012 London Olympics on an even shorter turnaround. Presumably, his attention to detail will avoid a repeat of what happened during the 2011 New York City Marathon, when Keflezighi forgot to put a breathing strip on his nose, leaving it in his running shoe as he finished sixth. An irritation developed and his foot became infected, costing him three weeks of training. Still, Keflezighi rebounded to win the Olympic trials. \u201cHe was a little embarrassed,\u201d said Larsen, Keflezighi\u2019s coach. \u201cHe\u2019s very alert and precise at what he does. That was very unusual for him.\u201d", "answer": "ninth in 2:12:35", "sentence": "At his first New York City Marathon, in 2002, he finished ninth in 2:12:35 and grew so chilled that his father tried to massage warmth back into his legs and his mother told him, \u201cNo more marathons for you.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Of the 11 children in the family, Meb said, nine have earned college degrees. And one has become a champion marathon runner, even if first impressions were unnerving. At his first New York City Marathon, in 2002, he finished ninth in 2:12:35 and grew so chilled that his father tried to massage warmth back into his legs and his mother told him, \u201cNo more marathons for you.\u201d He remembers telling himself and others, \u201cI don\u2019t want to ever do that again.\u201d Now he is back in New York for a 10th marathon. And after a break of four days or so, Keflezighi will begin his recovery and buildup toward the Olympic trials in February. He did this successfully before the 2012 London Olympics on an even shorter turnaround. Presumably, his attention to detail will avoid a repeat of what happened during the 2011 New York City Marathon, when Keflezighi forgot to put a breathing strip on his nose, leaving it in his running shoe as he finished sixth. An irritation developed and his foot became infected, costing him three weeks of training. Still, Keflezighi rebounded to win the Olympic trials. \u201cHe was a little embarrassed,\u201d said Larsen, Keflezighi\u2019s coach. \u201cHe\u2019s very alert and precise at what he does. That was very unusual for him.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Of the 11 children in the family, Meb said, nine have earned college degrees. And one has become a champion marathon runner, even if first impressions were unnerving. At his first New York City Marathon, in 2002, he finished ninth in 2:12:35 and grew so chilled that his father tried to massage warmth back into his legs and his mother told him, \u201cNo more marathons for you.\u201d He remembers telling himself and others, \u201cI don\u2019t want to ever do that again.\u201d Now he is back in New York for a 10th marathon. And after a break of four days or so, Keflezighi will begin his recovery and buildup toward the Olympic trials in February. He did this successfully before the 2012 London Olympics on an even shorter turnaround. Presumably, his attention to detail will avoid a repeat of what happened during the 2011 New York City Marathon, when Keflezighi forgot to put a breathing strip on his nose, leaving it in his running shoe as he finished sixth. An irritation developed and his foot became infected, costing him three weeks of training. Still, Keflezighi rebounded to win the Olympic trials. \u201cHe was a little embarrassed,\u201d said Larsen, Keflezighi\u2019s coach. \u201cHe\u2019s very alert and precise at what he does. That was very unusual for him.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "At his first New York City Marathon, in 2002, he finished ninth in 2:12:35 and grew so chilled that his father tried to massage warmth back into his legs and his mother told him, \u201cNo more marathons for you.\u201d"} -{"question": "What did Keflezighi forget to put on his nose at the 2011 New York City Marathon?", "paragraph": "Of the 11 children in the family, Meb said, nine have earned college degrees. And one has become a champion marathon runner, even if first impressions were unnerving. At his first New York City Marathon, in 2002, he finished ninth in 2:12:35 and grew so chilled that his father tried to massage warmth back into his legs and his mother told him, \u201cNo more marathons for you.\u201d He remembers telling himself and others, \u201cI don\u2019t want to ever do that again.\u201d Now he is back in New York for a 10th marathon. And after a break of four days or so, Keflezighi will begin his recovery and buildup toward the Olympic trials in February. He did this successfully before the 2012 London Olympics on an even shorter turnaround. Presumably, his attention to detail will avoid a repeat of what happened during the 2011 New York City Marathon, when Keflezighi forgot to put a breathing strip on his nose, leaving it in his running shoe as he finished sixth. An irritation developed and his foot became infected, costing him three weeks of training. Still, Keflezighi rebounded to win the Olympic trials. \u201cHe was a little embarrassed,\u201d said Larsen, Keflezighi\u2019s coach. \u201cHe\u2019s very alert and precise at what he does. That was very unusual for him.\u201d", "answer": "a breathing strip", "sentence": "Presumably, his attention to detail will avoid a repeat of what happened during the 2011 New York City Marathon, when Keflezighi forgot to put a breathing strip on his nose, leaving it in his running shoe as he finished sixth.", "paragraph_sentence": "Of the 11 children in the family, Meb said, nine have earned college degrees. And one has become a champion marathon runner, even if first impressions were unnerving. At his first New York City Marathon, in 2002, he finished ninth in 2:12:35 and grew so chilled that his father tried to massage warmth back into his legs and his mother told him, \u201cNo more marathons for you.\u201d He remembers telling himself and others, \u201cI don\u2019t want to ever do that again.\u201d Now he is back in New York for a 10th marathon. And after a break of four days or so, Keflezighi will begin his recovery and buildup toward the Olympic trials in February. He did this successfully before the 2012 London Olympics on an even shorter turnaround. Presumably, his attention to detail will avoid a repeat of what happened during the 2011 New York City Marathon, when Keflezighi forgot to put a breathing strip on his nose, leaving it in his running shoe as he finished sixth. An irritation developed and his foot became infected, costing him three weeks of training. Still, Keflezighi rebounded to win the Olympic trials. \u201cHe was a little embarrassed,\u201d said Larsen, Keflezighi\u2019s coach. \u201cHe\u2019s very alert and precise at what he does. That was very unusual for him.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Of the 11 children in the family, Meb said, nine have earned college degrees. And one has become a champion marathon runner, even if first impressions were unnerving. At his first New York City Marathon, in 2002, he finished ninth in 2:12:35 and grew so chilled that his father tried to massage warmth back into his legs and his mother told him, \u201cNo more marathons for you.\u201d He remembers telling himself and others, \u201cI don\u2019t want to ever do that again.\u201d Now he is back in New York for a 10th marathon. And after a break of four days or so, Keflezighi will begin his recovery and buildup toward the Olympic trials in February. He did this successfully before the 2012 London Olympics on an even shorter turnaround. Presumably, his attention to detail will avoid a repeat of what happened during the 2011 New York City Marathon, when Keflezighi forgot to put a breathing strip on his nose, leaving it in his running shoe as he finished sixth. An irritation developed and his foot became infected, costing him three weeks of training. Still, Keflezighi rebounded to win the Olympic trials. \u201cHe was a little embarrassed,\u201d said Larsen, Keflezighi\u2019s coach. \u201cHe\u2019s very alert and precise at what he does. That was very unusual for him.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Presumably, his attention to detail will avoid a repeat of what happened during the 2011 New York City Marathon, when Keflezighi forgot to put a breathing strip on his nose, leaving it in his running shoe as he finished sixth."} -{"question": "What successful film did George Lucas make before \"Star Wars\"?", "paragraph": "It might even be said that Mr. Canby was an original fanboy. His review began: \u201c\u2018Star Wars,\u2019 George Lucas\u2019s first film since his terrifically successful \u2018American Graffiti,\u2019 is the movie that the teenagers in \u2018American Graffiti\u2019 would have broken their necks to see.\u201d He described the film as \u201cthe most elaborate, most expensive, most beautiful movie serial ever made.\u201d It was, he wrote, \u201cboth an apotheosis of \u2018Flash Gordon\u2019 serials and a witty critique that makes associations with a variety of literature that is nothing if not eclectic: \u2018Quo Vadis?,\u2019 \u2018Buck Rogers,\u2019 \u2018Ivanhoe,\u2019 \u2018Superman,\u2019 \u2018The Wizard of Oz,\u2019 \u2018The Gospel According to St. Matthew,\u2019 the legend of King Arthur and the knights of the Round Table.\u201d", "answer": "American Graffiti", "sentence": "His review began: \u201c\u2018Star Wars,\u2019 George Lucas\u2019s first film since his terrifically successful \u2018 American Graffiti ,\u2019 is the movie that the teenagers in \u2018American Graffiti\u2019 would have broken their necks to see.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "It might even be said that Mr. Canby was an original fanboy. His review began: \u201c\u2018Star Wars,\u2019 George Lucas\u2019s first film since his terrifically successful \u2018 American Graffiti ,\u2019 is the movie that the teenagers in \u2018American Graffiti\u2019 would have broken their necks to see.\u201d He described the film as \u201cthe most elaborate, most expensive, most beautiful movie serial ever made.\u201d It was, he wrote, \u201cboth an apotheosis of \u2018Flash Gordon\u2019 serials and a witty critique that makes associations with a variety of literature that is nothing if not eclectic: \u2018Quo Vadis?,\u2019 \u2018Buck Rogers,\u2019 \u2018Ivanhoe,\u2019 \u2018Superman,\u2019 \u2018The Wizard of Oz,\u2019 \u2018The Gospel According to St. Matthew,\u2019 the legend of King Arthur and the knights of the Round Table.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "It might even be said that Mr. Canby was an original fanboy. His review began: \u201c\u2018Star Wars,\u2019 George Lucas\u2019s first film since his terrifically successful \u2018 American Graffiti ,\u2019 is the movie that the teenagers in \u2018American Graffiti\u2019 would have broken their necks to see.\u201d He described the film as \u201cthe most elaborate, most expensive, most beautiful movie serial ever made.\u201d It was, he wrote, \u201cboth an apotheosis of \u2018Flash Gordon\u2019 serials and a witty critique that makes associations with a variety of literature that is nothing if not eclectic: \u2018Quo Vadis?,\u2019 \u2018Buck Rogers,\u2019 \u2018Ivanhoe,\u2019 \u2018Superman,\u2019 \u2018The Wizard of Oz,\u2019 \u2018The Gospel According to St. Matthew,\u2019 the legend of King Arthur and the knights of the Round Table.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "His review began: \u201c\u2018Star Wars,\u2019 George Lucas\u2019s first film since his terrifically successful \u2018 American Graffiti ,\u2019 is the movie that the teenagers in \u2018American Graffiti\u2019 would have broken their necks to see.\u201d"} -{"question": "What did Mr. Canby think \"Star Wars\" was an apotheosis of?", "paragraph": "It might even be said that Mr. Canby was an original fanboy. His review began: \u201c\u2018Star Wars,\u2019 George Lucas\u2019s first film since his terrifically successful \u2018American Graffiti,\u2019 is the movie that the teenagers in \u2018American Graffiti\u2019 would have broken their necks to see.\u201d He described the film as \u201cthe most elaborate, most expensive, most beautiful movie serial ever made.\u201d It was, he wrote, \u201cboth an apotheosis of \u2018Flash Gordon\u2019 serials and a witty critique that makes associations with a variety of literature that is nothing if not eclectic: \u2018Quo Vadis?,\u2019 \u2018Buck Rogers,\u2019 \u2018Ivanhoe,\u2019 \u2018Superman,\u2019 \u2018The Wizard of Oz,\u2019 \u2018The Gospel According to St. Matthew,\u2019 the legend of King Arthur and the knights of the Round Table.\u201d", "answer": "Flash Gordon", "sentence": "It was, he wrote, \u201cboth an apotheosis of \u2018 Flash Gordon \u2019 serials and a witty critique that makes associations with a variety of literature that is nothing if not eclectic: \u2018Quo Vadis?,\u2019 \u2018Buck Rogers,\u2019 \u2018Ivanhoe,\u2019 \u2018Superman,\u2019 \u2018The Wizard of Oz,\u2019 \u2018The Gospel According to St. Matthew,\u2019 the legend of King Arthur and the knights of the Round Table.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "It might even be said that Mr. Canby was an original fanboy. His review began: \u201c\u2018Star Wars,\u2019 George Lucas\u2019s first film since his terrifically successful \u2018American Graffiti,\u2019 is the movie that the teenagers in \u2018American Graffiti\u2019 would have broken their necks to see.\u201d He described the film as \u201cthe most elaborate, most expensive, most beautiful movie serial ever made.\u201d It was, he wrote, \u201cboth an apotheosis of \u2018 Flash Gordon \u2019 serials and a witty critique that makes associations with a variety of literature that is nothing if not eclectic: \u2018Quo Vadis?,\u2019 \u2018Buck Rogers,\u2019 \u2018Ivanhoe,\u2019 \u2018Superman,\u2019 \u2018The Wizard of Oz,\u2019 \u2018The Gospel According to St. Matthew,\u2019 the legend of King Arthur and the knights of the Round Table.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "It might even be said that Mr. Canby was an original fanboy. His review began: \u201c\u2018Star Wars,\u2019 George Lucas\u2019s first film since his terrifically successful \u2018American Graffiti,\u2019 is the movie that the teenagers in \u2018American Graffiti\u2019 would have broken their necks to see.\u201d He described the film as \u201cthe most elaborate, most expensive, most beautiful movie serial ever made.\u201d It was, he wrote, \u201cboth an apotheosis of \u2018 Flash Gordon \u2019 serials and a witty critique that makes associations with a variety of literature that is nothing if not eclectic: \u2018Quo Vadis?,\u2019 \u2018Buck Rogers,\u2019 \u2018Ivanhoe,\u2019 \u2018Superman,\u2019 \u2018The Wizard of Oz,\u2019 \u2018The Gospel According to St. Matthew,\u2019 the legend of King Arthur and the knights of the Round Table.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "It was, he wrote, \u201cboth an apotheosis of \u2018 Flash Gordon \u2019 serials and a witty critique that makes associations with a variety of literature that is nothing if not eclectic: \u2018Quo Vadis?,\u2019 \u2018Buck Rogers,\u2019 \u2018Ivanhoe,\u2019 \u2018Superman,\u2019 \u2018The Wizard of Oz,\u2019 \u2018The Gospel According to St. Matthew,\u2019 the legend of King Arthur and the knights of the Round Table.\u201d"} -{"question": "In Mr. Canby's opinion, what would the teenagers in \"American Grafitti\" done to see \"Star Wars\"?", "paragraph": "It might even be said that Mr. Canby was an original fanboy. His review began: \u201c\u2018Star Wars,\u2019 George Lucas\u2019s first film since his terrifically successful \u2018American Graffiti,\u2019 is the movie that the teenagers in \u2018American Graffiti\u2019 would have broken their necks to see.\u201d He described the film as \u201cthe most elaborate, most expensive, most beautiful movie serial ever made.\u201d It was, he wrote, \u201cboth an apotheosis of \u2018Flash Gordon\u2019 serials and a witty critique that makes associations with a variety of literature that is nothing if not eclectic: \u2018Quo Vadis?,\u2019 \u2018Buck Rogers,\u2019 \u2018Ivanhoe,\u2019 \u2018Superman,\u2019 \u2018The Wizard of Oz,\u2019 \u2018The Gospel According to St. Matthew,\u2019 the legend of King Arthur and the knights of the Round Table.\u201d", "answer": "broken their necks", "sentence": "His review began: \u201c\u2018Star Wars,\u2019 George Lucas\u2019s first film since his terrifically successful \u2018American Graffiti,\u2019 is the movie that the teenagers in \u2018American Graffiti\u2019 would have broken their necks to see.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "It might even be said that Mr. Canby was an original fanboy. His review began: \u201c\u2018Star Wars,\u2019 George Lucas\u2019s first film since his terrifically successful \u2018American Graffiti,\u2019 is the movie that the teenagers in \u2018American Graffiti\u2019 would have broken their necks to see.\u201d He described the film as \u201cthe most elaborate, most expensive, most beautiful movie serial ever made.\u201d It was, he wrote, \u201cboth an apotheosis of \u2018Flash Gordon\u2019 serials and a witty critique that makes associations with a variety of literature that is nothing if not eclectic: \u2018Quo Vadis?,\u2019 \u2018Buck Rogers,\u2019 \u2018Ivanhoe,\u2019 \u2018Superman,\u2019 \u2018The Wizard of Oz,\u2019 \u2018The Gospel According to St. Matthew,\u2019 the legend of King Arthur and the knights of the Round Table.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "It might even be said that Mr. Canby was an original fanboy. His review began: \u201c\u2018Star Wars,\u2019 George Lucas\u2019s first film since his terrifically successful \u2018American Graffiti,\u2019 is the movie that the teenagers in \u2018American Graffiti\u2019 would have broken their necks to see.\u201d He described the film as \u201cthe most elaborate, most expensive, most beautiful movie serial ever made.\u201d It was, he wrote, \u201cboth an apotheosis of \u2018Flash Gordon\u2019 serials and a witty critique that makes associations with a variety of literature that is nothing if not eclectic: \u2018Quo Vadis?,\u2019 \u2018Buck Rogers,\u2019 \u2018Ivanhoe,\u2019 \u2018Superman,\u2019 \u2018The Wizard of Oz,\u2019 \u2018The Gospel According to St. Matthew,\u2019 the legend of King Arthur and the knights of the Round Table.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "His review began: \u201c\u2018Star Wars,\u2019 George Lucas\u2019s first film since his terrifically successful \u2018American Graffiti,\u2019 is the movie that the teenagers in \u2018American Graffiti\u2019 would have broken their necks to see.\u201d"} -{"question": "What is Mr. canby described as?", "paragraph": "It might even be said that Mr. Canby was an original fanboy. His review began: \u201c\u2018Star Wars,\u2019 George Lucas\u2019s first film since his terrifically successful \u2018American Graffiti,\u2019 is the movie that the teenagers in \u2018American Graffiti\u2019 would have broken their necks to see.\u201d He described the film as \u201cthe most elaborate, most expensive, most beautiful movie serial ever made.\u201d It was, he wrote, \u201cboth an apotheosis of \u2018Flash Gordon\u2019 serials and a witty critique that makes associations with a variety of literature that is nothing if not eclectic: \u2018Quo Vadis?,\u2019 \u2018Buck Rogers,\u2019 \u2018Ivanhoe,\u2019 \u2018Superman,\u2019 \u2018The Wizard of Oz,\u2019 \u2018The Gospel According to St. Matthew,\u2019 the legend of King Arthur and the knights of the Round Table.\u201d", "answer": "an original fanboy", "sentence": "It might even be said that Mr. Canby was an original fanboy .", "paragraph_sentence": " It might even be said that Mr. Canby was an original fanboy . His review began: \u201c\u2018Star Wars,\u2019 George Lucas\u2019s first film since his terrifically successful \u2018American Graffiti,\u2019 is the movie that the teenagers in \u2018American Graffiti\u2019 would have broken their necks to see.\u201d He described the film as \u201cthe most elaborate, most expensive, most beautiful movie serial ever made.\u201d It was, he wrote, \u201cboth an apotheosis of \u2018Flash Gordon\u2019 serials and a witty critique that makes associations with a variety of literature that is nothing if not eclectic: \u2018Quo Vadis?,\u2019 \u2018Buck Rogers,\u2019 \u2018Ivanhoe,\u2019 \u2018Superman,\u2019 \u2018The Wizard of Oz,\u2019 \u2018The Gospel According to St. Matthew,\u2019 the legend of King Arthur and the knights of the Round Table.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "It might even be said that Mr. Canby was an original fanboy . His review began: \u201c\u2018Star Wars,\u2019 George Lucas\u2019s first film since his terrifically successful \u2018American Graffiti,\u2019 is the movie that the teenagers in \u2018American Graffiti\u2019 would have broken their necks to see.\u201d He described the film as \u201cthe most elaborate, most expensive, most beautiful movie serial ever made.\u201d It was, he wrote, \u201cboth an apotheosis of \u2018Flash Gordon\u2019 serials and a witty critique that makes associations with a variety of literature that is nothing if not eclectic: \u2018Quo Vadis?,\u2019 \u2018Buck Rogers,\u2019 \u2018Ivanhoe,\u2019 \u2018Superman,\u2019 \u2018The Wizard of Oz,\u2019 \u2018The Gospel According to St. Matthew,\u2019 the legend of King Arthur and the knights of the Round Table.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "It might even be said that Mr. Canby was an original fanboy ."} -{"question": "Where did Mr. Canby defend the movie against critics?", "paragraph": "The gadgetry \u201cI have a particular fondness for the look of the interior of a gigantic satellite called the Death Star, a place full of the kind of waste space one finds today only in old Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries.\u201d A week later, Mr. Canby took to his Sunday column to defend against a charge by some critics that movies like \u201cStar Wars,\u201d a \u201cgigantic comic strip of a sci-fi movie,\u201d were \u201cthe seminal works of a new age of Non-Think, an anti-intellectual reaction to the plays and films that go out of their way to insult, shock, provoke and disturb, that question everything, including the system that allows the artist to express his outrage.\u201d", "answer": "his Sunday column", "sentence": "A week later, Mr. Canby took to his Sunday column to defend against a charge by some critics that movies like \u201cStar Wars,\u201d a \u201cgigantic comic strip of a sci-fi movie,\u201d were \u201cthe seminal works of a new age of Non-Think, an anti-intellectual reaction to the plays and films that go out of their way to insult, shock, provoke and disturb, that question everything, including the system that allows the artist to express his outrage.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "The gadgetry \u201cI have a particular fondness for the look of the interior of a gigantic satellite called the Death Star, a place full of the kind of waste space one finds today only in old Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries.\u201d A week later, Mr. Canby took to his Sunday column to defend against a charge by some critics that movies like \u201cStar Wars,\u201d a \u201cgigantic comic strip of a sci-fi movie,\u201d were \u201cthe seminal works of a new age of Non-Think, an anti-intellectual reaction to the plays and films that go out of their way to insult, shock, provoke and disturb, that question everything, including the system that allows the artist to express his outrage.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "The gadgetry \u201cI have a particular fondness for the look of the interior of a gigantic satellite called the Death Star, a place full of the kind of waste space one finds today only in old Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries.\u201d A week later, Mr. Canby took to his Sunday column to defend against a charge by some critics that movies like \u201cStar Wars,\u201d a \u201cgigantic comic strip of a sci-fi movie,\u201d were \u201cthe seminal works of a new age of Non-Think, an anti-intellectual reaction to the plays and films that go out of their way to insult, shock, provoke and disturb, that question everything, including the system that allows the artist to express his outrage.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "A week later, Mr. Canby took to his Sunday column to defend against a charge by some critics that movies like \u201cStar Wars,\u201d a \u201cgigantic comic strip of a sci-fi movie,\u201d were \u201cthe seminal works of a new age of Non-Think, an anti-intellectual reaction to the plays and films that go out of their way to insult, shock, provoke and disturb, that question everything, including the system that allows the artist to express his outrage.\u201d"} -{"question": "What is the giant satellite called?", "paragraph": "The gadgetry \u201cI have a particular fondness for the look of the interior of a gigantic satellite called the Death Star, a place full of the kind of waste space one finds today only in old Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries.\u201d A week later, Mr. Canby took to his Sunday column to defend against a charge by some critics that movies like \u201cStar Wars,\u201d a \u201cgigantic comic strip of a sci-fi movie,\u201d were \u201cthe seminal works of a new age of Non-Think, an anti-intellectual reaction to the plays and films that go out of their way to insult, shock, provoke and disturb, that question everything, including the system that allows the artist to express his outrage.\u201d", "answer": "Death Star", "sentence": "The gadgetry \u201cI have a particular fondness for the look of the interior of a gigantic satellite called the Death Star , a place full of the kind of waste space one finds today only in old Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " The gadgetry \u201cI have a particular fondness for the look of the interior of a gigantic satellite called the Death Star , a place full of the kind of waste space one finds today only in old Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries.\u201d A week later, Mr. Canby took to his Sunday column to defend against a charge by some critics that movies like \u201cStar Wars,\u201d a \u201cgigantic comic strip of a sci-fi movie,\u201d were \u201cthe seminal works of a new age of Non-Think, an anti-intellectual reaction to the plays and films that go out of their way to insult, shock, provoke and disturb, that question everything, including the system that allows the artist to express his outrage.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The gadgetry \u201cI have a particular fondness for the look of the interior of a gigantic satellite called the Death Star , a place full of the kind of waste space one finds today only in old Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries.\u201d A week later, Mr. Canby took to his Sunday column to defend against a charge by some critics that movies like \u201cStar Wars,\u201d a \u201cgigantic comic strip of a sci-fi movie,\u201d were \u201cthe seminal works of a new age of Non-Think, an anti-intellectual reaction to the plays and films that go out of their way to insult, shock, provoke and disturb, that question everything, including the system that allows the artist to express his outrage.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The gadgetry \u201cI have a particular fondness for the look of the interior of a gigantic satellite called the Death Star , a place full of the kind of waste space one finds today only in old Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries.\u201d"} -{"question": "According to Mr. Canby, what can you find today in Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries?", "paragraph": "The gadgetry \u201cI have a particular fondness for the look of the interior of a gigantic satellite called the Death Star, a place full of the kind of waste space one finds today only in old Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries.\u201d A week later, Mr. Canby took to his Sunday column to defend against a charge by some critics that movies like \u201cStar Wars,\u201d a \u201cgigantic comic strip of a sci-fi movie,\u201d were \u201cthe seminal works of a new age of Non-Think, an anti-intellectual reaction to the plays and films that go out of their way to insult, shock, provoke and disturb, that question everything, including the system that allows the artist to express his outrage.\u201d", "answer": "waste space", "sentence": "The gadgetry \u201cI have a particular fondness for the look of the interior of a gigantic satellite called the Death Star, a place full of the kind of waste space one finds today only in old Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " The gadgetry \u201cI have a particular fondness for the look of the interior of a gigantic satellite called the Death Star, a place full of the kind of waste space one finds today only in old Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries.\u201d A week later, Mr. Canby took to his Sunday column to defend against a charge by some critics that movies like \u201cStar Wars,\u201d a \u201cgigantic comic strip of a sci-fi movie,\u201d were \u201cthe seminal works of a new age of Non-Think, an anti-intellectual reaction to the plays and films that go out of their way to insult, shock, provoke and disturb, that question everything, including the system that allows the artist to express his outrage.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The gadgetry \u201cI have a particular fondness for the look of the interior of a gigantic satellite called the Death Star, a place full of the kind of waste space one finds today only in old Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries.\u201d A week later, Mr. Canby took to his Sunday column to defend against a charge by some critics that movies like \u201cStar Wars,\u201d a \u201cgigantic comic strip of a sci-fi movie,\u201d were \u201cthe seminal works of a new age of Non-Think, an anti-intellectual reaction to the plays and films that go out of their way to insult, shock, provoke and disturb, that question everything, including the system that allows the artist to express his outrage.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The gadgetry \u201cI have a particular fondness for the look of the interior of a gigantic satellite called the Death Star, a place full of the kind of waste space one finds today only in old Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries.\u201d"} -{"question": "Who did critics think \"Star Wars\" was the seminal works of?", "paragraph": "The gadgetry \u201cI have a particular fondness for the look of the interior of a gigantic satellite called the Death Star, a place full of the kind of waste space one finds today only in old Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries.\u201d A week later, Mr. Canby took to his Sunday column to defend against a charge by some critics that movies like \u201cStar Wars,\u201d a \u201cgigantic comic strip of a sci-fi movie,\u201d were \u201cthe seminal works of a new age of Non-Think, an anti-intellectual reaction to the plays and films that go out of their way to insult, shock, provoke and disturb, that question everything, including the system that allows the artist to express his outrage.\u201d", "answer": "a new age of Non-Think", "sentence": "A week later, Mr. Canby took to his Sunday column to defend against a charge by some critics that movies like \u201cStar Wars,\u201d a \u201cgigantic comic strip of a sci-fi movie,\u201d were \u201cthe seminal works of a new age of Non-Think , an anti-intellectual reaction to the plays and films that go out of their way to insult, shock, provoke and disturb, that question everything, including the system that allows the artist to express his outrage.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "The gadgetry \u201cI have a particular fondness for the look of the interior of a gigantic satellite called the Death Star, a place full of the kind of waste space one finds today only in old Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries.\u201d A week later, Mr. Canby took to his Sunday column to defend against a charge by some critics that movies like \u201cStar Wars,\u201d a \u201cgigantic comic strip of a sci-fi movie,\u201d were \u201cthe seminal works of a new age of Non-Think , an anti-intellectual reaction to the plays and films that go out of their way to insult, shock, provoke and disturb, that question everything, including the system that allows the artist to express his outrage.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "The gadgetry \u201cI have a particular fondness for the look of the interior of a gigantic satellite called the Death Star, a place full of the kind of waste space one finds today only in old Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries.\u201d A week later, Mr. Canby took to his Sunday column to defend against a charge by some critics that movies like \u201cStar Wars,\u201d a \u201cgigantic comic strip of a sci-fi movie,\u201d were \u201cthe seminal works of a new age of Non-Think , an anti-intellectual reaction to the plays and films that go out of their way to insult, shock, provoke and disturb, that question everything, including the system that allows the artist to express his outrage.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "A week later, Mr. Canby took to his Sunday column to defend against a charge by some critics that movies like \u201cStar Wars,\u201d a \u201cgigantic comic strip of a sci-fi movie,\u201d were \u201cthe seminal works of a new age of Non-Think , an anti-intellectual reaction to the plays and films that go out of their way to insult, shock, provoke and disturb, that question everything, including the system that allows the artist to express his outrage.\u201d"} -{"question": "When did Mr. Canby defend \"Star Wars\" against some critics?", "paragraph": "The gadgetry \u201cI have a particular fondness for the look of the interior of a gigantic satellite called the Death Star, a place full of the kind of waste space one finds today only in old Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries.\u201d A week later, Mr. Canby took to his Sunday column to defend against a charge by some critics that movies like \u201cStar Wars,\u201d a \u201cgigantic comic strip of a sci-fi movie,\u201d were \u201cthe seminal works of a new age of Non-Think, an anti-intellectual reaction to the plays and films that go out of their way to insult, shock, provoke and disturb, that question everything, including the system that allows the artist to express his outrage.\u201d", "answer": "A week later", "sentence": "The gadgetry \u201cI have a particular fondness for the look of the interior of a gigantic satellite called the Death Star, a place full of the kind of waste space one finds today only in old Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries.\u201d A week later , Mr. Canby took to his Sunday column to defend against a charge by some critics that movies like \u201cStar Wars,\u201d a \u201cgigantic comic strip of a sci-fi movie,\u201d were \u201cthe seminal works of a new age of Non-Think, an anti-intellectual reaction to the plays and films that go out of their way to insult, shock, provoke and disturb, that question everything, including the system that allows the artist to express his outrage.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " The gadgetry \u201cI have a particular fondness for the look of the interior of a gigantic satellite called the Death Star, a place full of the kind of waste space one finds today only in old Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries.\u201d A week later , Mr. Canby took to his Sunday column to defend against a charge by some critics that movies like \u201cStar Wars,\u201d a \u201cgigantic comic strip of a sci-fi movie,\u201d were \u201cthe seminal works of a new age of Non-Think, an anti-intellectual reaction to the plays and films that go out of their way to insult, shock, provoke and disturb, that question everything, including the system that allows the artist to express his outrage.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "The gadgetry \u201cI have a particular fondness for the look of the interior of a gigantic satellite called the Death Star, a place full of the kind of waste space one finds today only in old Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries.\u201d A week later , Mr. Canby took to his Sunday column to defend against a charge by some critics that movies like \u201cStar Wars,\u201d a \u201cgigantic comic strip of a sci-fi movie,\u201d were \u201cthe seminal works of a new age of Non-Think, an anti-intellectual reaction to the plays and films that go out of their way to insult, shock, provoke and disturb, that question everything, including the system that allows the artist to express his outrage.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The gadgetry \u201cI have a particular fondness for the look of the interior of a gigantic satellite called the Death Star, a place full of the kind of waste space one finds today only in old Fifth Avenue mansions and public libraries.\u201d A week later , Mr. Canby took to his Sunday column to defend against a charge by some critics that movies like \u201cStar Wars,\u201d a \u201cgigantic comic strip of a sci-fi movie,\u201d were \u201cthe seminal works of a new age of Non-Think, an anti-intellectual reaction to the plays and films that go out of their way to insult, shock, provoke and disturb, that question everything, including the system that allows the artist to express his outrage.\u201d"} -{"question": "What island did the paragraph state was hit by the storm?", "paragraph": "After Tropical Storm Erika shuttered the main airport on the island of Dominica in late August, the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority has approved its reopening to commercial flights. Liat has resumed flights to the island\u2019s Douglas-Charles Airport from Antigua, Barbados and Guadeloupe. Seaborne Airlines has restarted flights from San Juan. Winair, which established service to Dominica\u2019s smaller Canefield Airport after the storm, will continue to fly there until Oct. 25. As of Oct. 3, it will resume flights to the main airport from Guadeloupe and St. Maarten. The L\u2019Express Des lles ferry service, which operates between Guadeloupe, Martinique and St. Lucia, was largely unaffected by the storm. A CRAFT-STYLE COCKTAIL ON UNITED FLIGHTS", "answer": "Dominica", "sentence": "After Tropical Storm Erika shuttered the main airport on the island of Dominica in late August, the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority has approved its reopening to commercial flights.", "paragraph_sentence": " After Tropical Storm Erika shuttered the main airport on the island of Dominica in late August, the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority has approved its reopening to commercial flights. Liat has resumed flights to the island\u2019s Douglas-Charles Airport from Antigua, Barbados and Guadeloupe. Seaborne Airlines has restarted flights from San Juan. Winair, which established service to Dominica\u2019s smaller Canefield Airport after the storm, will continue to fly there until Oct. 25. As of Oct. 3, it will resume flights to the main airport from Guadeloupe and St. Maarten. The L\u2019Express Des lles ferry service, which operates between Guadeloupe, Martinique and St. Lucia, was largely unaffected by the storm. A CRAFT-STYLE COCKTAIL ON UNITED FLIGHTS", "paragraph_answer": "After Tropical Storm Erika shuttered the main airport on the island of Dominica in late August, the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority has approved its reopening to commercial flights. Liat has resumed flights to the island\u2019s Douglas-Charles Airport from Antigua, Barbados and Guadeloupe. Seaborne Airlines has restarted flights from San Juan. Winair, which established service to Dominica\u2019s smaller Canefield Airport after the storm, will continue to fly there until Oct. 25. As of Oct. 3, it will resume flights to the main airport from Guadeloupe and St. Maarten. The L\u2019Express Des lles ferry service, which operates between Guadeloupe, Martinique and St. Lucia, was largely unaffected by the storm. A CRAFT-STYLE COCKTAIL ON UNITED FLIGHTS", "sentence_answer": "After Tropical Storm Erika shuttered the main airport on the island of Dominica in late August, the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority has approved its reopening to commercial flights."} -{"question": "What is the storm's name?", "paragraph": "After Tropical Storm Erika shuttered the main airport on the island of Dominica in late August, the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority has approved its reopening to commercial flights. Liat has resumed flights to the island\u2019s Douglas-Charles Airport from Antigua, Barbados and Guadeloupe. Seaborne Airlines has restarted flights from San Juan. Winair, which established service to Dominica\u2019s smaller Canefield Airport after the storm, will continue to fly there until Oct. 25. As of Oct. 3, it will resume flights to the main airport from Guadeloupe and St. Maarten. The L\u2019Express Des lles ferry service, which operates between Guadeloupe, Martinique and St. Lucia, was largely unaffected by the storm. A CRAFT-STYLE COCKTAIL ON UNITED FLIGHTS", "answer": "Erika", "sentence": "After Tropical Storm Erika shuttered the main airport on the island of Dominica in late August, the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority has approved its reopening to commercial flights.", "paragraph_sentence": " After Tropical Storm Erika shuttered the main airport on the island of Dominica in late August, the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority has approved its reopening to commercial flights. Liat has resumed flights to the island\u2019s Douglas-Charles Airport from Antigua, Barbados and Guadeloupe. Seaborne Airlines has restarted flights from San Juan. Winair, which established service to Dominica\u2019s smaller Canefield Airport after the storm, will continue to fly there until Oct. 25. As of Oct. 3, it will resume flights to the main airport from Guadeloupe and St. Maarten. The L\u2019Express Des lles ferry service, which operates between Guadeloupe, Martinique and St. Lucia, was largely unaffected by the storm. A CRAFT-STYLE COCKTAIL ON UNITED FLIGHTS", "paragraph_answer": "After Tropical Storm Erika shuttered the main airport on the island of Dominica in late August, the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority has approved its reopening to commercial flights. Liat has resumed flights to the island\u2019s Douglas-Charles Airport from Antigua, Barbados and Guadeloupe. Seaborne Airlines has restarted flights from San Juan. Winair, which established service to Dominica\u2019s smaller Canefield Airport after the storm, will continue to fly there until Oct. 25. As of Oct. 3, it will resume flights to the main airport from Guadeloupe and St. Maarten. The L\u2019Express Des lles ferry service, which operates between Guadeloupe, Martinique and St. Lucia, was largely unaffected by the storm. A CRAFT-STYLE COCKTAIL ON UNITED FLIGHTS", "sentence_answer": "After Tropical Storm Erika shuttered the main airport on the island of Dominica in late August, the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority has approved its reopening to commercial flights."} -{"question": "What month did the airport get shattered?", "paragraph": "After Tropical Storm Erika shuttered the main airport on the island of Dominica in late August, the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority has approved its reopening to commercial flights. Liat has resumed flights to the island\u2019s Douglas-Charles Airport from Antigua, Barbados and Guadeloupe. Seaborne Airlines has restarted flights from San Juan. Winair, which established service to Dominica\u2019s smaller Canefield Airport after the storm, will continue to fly there until Oct. 25. As of Oct. 3, it will resume flights to the main airport from Guadeloupe and St. Maarten. The L\u2019Express Des lles ferry service, which operates between Guadeloupe, Martinique and St. Lucia, was largely unaffected by the storm. A CRAFT-STYLE COCKTAIL ON UNITED FLIGHTS", "answer": "August", "sentence": "After Tropical Storm Erika shuttered the main airport on the island of Dominica in late August , the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority has approved its reopening to commercial flights.", "paragraph_sentence": " After Tropical Storm Erika shuttered the main airport on the island of Dominica in late August , the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority has approved its reopening to commercial flights. Liat has resumed flights to the island\u2019s Douglas-Charles Airport from Antigua, Barbados and Guadeloupe. Seaborne Airlines has restarted flights from San Juan. Winair, which established service to Dominica\u2019s smaller Canefield Airport after the storm, will continue to fly there until Oct. 25. As of Oct. 3, it will resume flights to the main airport from Guadeloupe and St. Maarten. The L\u2019Express Des lles ferry service, which operates between Guadeloupe, Martinique and St. Lucia, was largely unaffected by the storm. A CRAFT-STYLE COCKTAIL ON UNITED FLIGHTS", "paragraph_answer": "After Tropical Storm Erika shuttered the main airport on the island of Dominica in late August , the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority has approved its reopening to commercial flights. Liat has resumed flights to the island\u2019s Douglas-Charles Airport from Antigua, Barbados and Guadeloupe. Seaborne Airlines has restarted flights from San Juan. Winair, which established service to Dominica\u2019s smaller Canefield Airport after the storm, will continue to fly there until Oct. 25. As of Oct. 3, it will resume flights to the main airport from Guadeloupe and St. Maarten. The L\u2019Express Des lles ferry service, which operates between Guadeloupe, Martinique and St. Lucia, was largely unaffected by the storm. A CRAFT-STYLE COCKTAIL ON UNITED FLIGHTS", "sentence_answer": "After Tropical Storm Erika shuttered the main airport on the island of Dominica in late August , the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority has approved its reopening to commercial flights."} -{"question": "What airport has Liat resumed flights to?", "paragraph": "After Tropical Storm Erika shuttered the main airport on the island of Dominica in late August, the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority has approved its reopening to commercial flights. Liat has resumed flights to the island\u2019s Douglas-Charles Airport from Antigua, Barbados and Guadeloupe. Seaborne Airlines has restarted flights from San Juan. Winair, which established service to Dominica\u2019s smaller Canefield Airport after the storm, will continue to fly there until Oct. 25. As of Oct. 3, it will resume flights to the main airport from Guadeloupe and St. Maarten. The L\u2019Express Des lles ferry service, which operates between Guadeloupe, Martinique and St. Lucia, was largely unaffected by the storm. A CRAFT-STYLE COCKTAIL ON UNITED FLIGHTS", "answer": "Douglas-Charles", "sentence": "Liat has resumed flights to the island\u2019s Douglas-Charles Airport from Antigua, Barbados and Guadeloupe.", "paragraph_sentence": "After Tropical Storm Erika shuttered the main airport on the island of Dominica in late August, the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority has approved its reopening to commercial flights. Liat has resumed flights to the island\u2019s Douglas-Charles Airport from Antigua, Barbados and Guadeloupe. Seaborne Airlines has restarted flights from San Juan. Winair, which established service to Dominica\u2019s smaller Canefield Airport after the storm, will continue to fly there until Oct. 25. As of Oct. 3, it will resume flights to the main airport from Guadeloupe and St. Maarten. The L\u2019Express Des lles ferry service, which operates between Guadeloupe, Martinique and St. Lucia, was largely unaffected by the storm. A CRAFT-STYLE COCKTAIL ON UNITED FLIGHTS", "paragraph_answer": "After Tropical Storm Erika shuttered the main airport on the island of Dominica in late August, the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority has approved its reopening to commercial flights. Liat has resumed flights to the island\u2019s Douglas-Charles Airport from Antigua, Barbados and Guadeloupe. Seaborne Airlines has restarted flights from San Juan. Winair, which established service to Dominica\u2019s smaller Canefield Airport after the storm, will continue to fly there until Oct. 25. As of Oct. 3, it will resume flights to the main airport from Guadeloupe and St. Maarten. The L\u2019Express Des lles ferry service, which operates between Guadeloupe, Martinique and St. Lucia, was largely unaffected by the storm. A CRAFT-STYLE COCKTAIL ON UNITED FLIGHTS", "sentence_answer": "Liat has resumed flights to the island\u2019s Douglas-Charles Airport from Antigua, Barbados and Guadeloupe."} -{"question": "When will Canefield Airport resume flights to the main airport?", "paragraph": "After Tropical Storm Erika shuttered the main airport on the island of Dominica in late August, the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority has approved its reopening to commercial flights. Liat has resumed flights to the island\u2019s Douglas-Charles Airport from Antigua, Barbados and Guadeloupe. Seaborne Airlines has restarted flights from San Juan. Winair, which established service to Dominica\u2019s smaller Canefield Airport after the storm, will continue to fly there until Oct. 25. As of Oct. 3, it will resume flights to the main airport from Guadeloupe and St. Maarten. The L\u2019Express Des lles ferry service, which operates between Guadeloupe, Martinique and St. Lucia, was largely unaffected by the storm. A CRAFT-STYLE COCKTAIL ON UNITED FLIGHTS", "answer": "Oct. 3", "sentence": "As of Oct. 3 , it will resume flights to the main airport from Guadeloupe and St. Maarten.", "paragraph_sentence": "After Tropical Storm Erika shuttered the main airport on the island of Dominica in late August, the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority has approved its reopening to commercial flights. Liat has resumed flights to the island\u2019s Douglas-Charles Airport from Antigua, Barbados and Guadeloupe. Seaborne Airlines has restarted flights from San Juan. Winair, which established service to Dominica\u2019s smaller Canefield Airport after the storm, will continue to fly there until Oct. 25. As of Oct. 3 , it will resume flights to the main airport from Guadeloupe and St. Maarten. The L\u2019Express Des lles ferry service, which operates between Guadeloupe, Martinique and St. Lucia, was largely unaffected by the storm. A CRAFT-STYLE COCKTAIL ON UNITED FLIGHTS", "paragraph_answer": "After Tropical Storm Erika shuttered the main airport on the island of Dominica in late August, the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority has approved its reopening to commercial flights. Liat has resumed flights to the island\u2019s Douglas-Charles Airport from Antigua, Barbados and Guadeloupe. Seaborne Airlines has restarted flights from San Juan. Winair, which established service to Dominica\u2019s smaller Canefield Airport after the storm, will continue to fly there until Oct. 25. As of Oct. 3 , it will resume flights to the main airport from Guadeloupe and St. Maarten. The L\u2019Express Des lles ferry service, which operates between Guadeloupe, Martinique and St. Lucia, was largely unaffected by the storm. A CRAFT-STYLE COCKTAIL ON UNITED FLIGHTS", "sentence_answer": "As of Oct. 3 , it will resume flights to the main airport from Guadeloupe and St. Maarten."} -{"question": "Who did the search and rescue team call after downloading the cellphone call history?", "paragraph": "The daily rhythm of search and disappointment continued until last Friday. That afternoon Mr. Shrestha received a call from the police confirming what he and his family had feared. Search and rescue teams had found a woman\u2019s body in the rubble, bruised and bloated, lying next to a handbag. Inside was a cellphone, and the police were able to download the call history and identify a phone number that it had called the most. The number was her brother\u2019s. Summoned to Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, he and his brother-in-law were led crying into a room and shown the body. It was hers. Sita Shrestha was gone, but no longer missing.", "answer": "her brother\u2019s", "sentence": "The number was her brother\u2019s .", "paragraph_sentence": "The daily rhythm of search and disappointment continued until last Friday. That afternoon Mr. Shrestha received a call from the police confirming what he and his family had feared. Search and rescue teams had found a woman\u2019s body in the rubble, bruised and bloated, lying next to a handbag. Inside was a cellphone, and the police were able to download the call history and identify a phone number that it had called the most. The number was her brother\u2019s . Summoned to Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, he and his brother-in-law were led crying into a room and shown the body. It was hers. Sita Shrestha was gone, but no longer missing.", "paragraph_answer": "The daily rhythm of search and disappointment continued until last Friday. That afternoon Mr. Shrestha received a call from the police confirming what he and his family had feared. Search and rescue teams had found a woman\u2019s body in the rubble, bruised and bloated, lying next to a handbag. Inside was a cellphone, and the police were able to download the call history and identify a phone number that it had called the most. The number was her brother\u2019s . Summoned to Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, he and his brother-in-law were led crying into a room and shown the body. It was hers. Sita Shrestha was gone, but no longer missing.", "sentence_answer": "The number was her brother\u2019s ."} -{"question": "Who was missing and later identified?", "paragraph": "The daily rhythm of search and disappointment continued until last Friday. That afternoon Mr. Shrestha received a call from the police confirming what he and his family had feared. Search and rescue teams had found a woman\u2019s body in the rubble, bruised and bloated, lying next to a handbag. Inside was a cellphone, and the police were able to download the call history and identify a phone number that it had called the most. The number was her brother\u2019s. Summoned to Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, he and his brother-in-law were led crying into a room and shown the body. It was hers. Sita Shrestha was gone, but no longer missing.", "answer": "Sita Shrestha", "sentence": "Sita Shrestha was gone, but no longer missing.", "paragraph_sentence": "The daily rhythm of search and disappointment continued until last Friday. That afternoon Mr. Shrestha received a call from the police confirming what he and his family had feared. Search and rescue teams had found a woman\u2019s body in the rubble, bruised and bloated, lying next to a handbag. Inside was a cellphone, and the police were able to download the call history and identify a phone number that it had called the most. The number was her brother\u2019s. Summoned to Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, he and his brother-in-law were led crying into a room and shown the body. It was hers. Sita Shrestha was gone, but no longer missing. ", "paragraph_answer": "The daily rhythm of search and disappointment continued until last Friday. That afternoon Mr. Shrestha received a call from the police confirming what he and his family had feared. Search and rescue teams had found a woman\u2019s body in the rubble, bruised and bloated, lying next to a handbag. Inside was a cellphone, and the police were able to download the call history and identify a phone number that it had called the most. The number was her brother\u2019s. Summoned to Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, he and his brother-in-law were led crying into a room and shown the body. It was hers. Sita Shrestha was gone, but no longer missing.", "sentence_answer": " Sita Shrestha was gone, but no longer missing."} -{"question": "Where was Sita Shrestha's body found?", "paragraph": "The daily rhythm of search and disappointment continued until last Friday. That afternoon Mr. Shrestha received a call from the police confirming what he and his family had feared. Search and rescue teams had found a woman\u2019s body in the rubble, bruised and bloated, lying next to a handbag. Inside was a cellphone, and the police were able to download the call history and identify a phone number that it had called the most. The number was her brother\u2019s. Summoned to Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, he and his brother-in-law were led crying into a room and shown the body. It was hers. Sita Shrestha was gone, but no longer missing.", "answer": "next to a handbag", "sentence": "Search and rescue teams had found a woman\u2019s body in the rubble, bruised and bloated, lying next to a handbag .", "paragraph_sentence": "The daily rhythm of search and disappointment continued until last Friday. That afternoon Mr. Shrestha received a call from the police confirming what he and his family had feared. Search and rescue teams had found a woman\u2019s body in the rubble, bruised and bloated, lying next to a handbag . Inside was a cellphone, and the police were able to download the call history and identify a phone number that it had called the most. The number was her brother\u2019s. Summoned to Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, he and his brother-in-law were led crying into a room and shown the body. It was hers. Sita Shrestha was gone, but no longer missing.", "paragraph_answer": "The daily rhythm of search and disappointment continued until last Friday. That afternoon Mr. Shrestha received a call from the police confirming what he and his family had feared. Search and rescue teams had found a woman\u2019s body in the rubble, bruised and bloated, lying next to a handbag . Inside was a cellphone, and the police were able to download the call history and identify a phone number that it had called the most. The number was her brother\u2019s. Summoned to Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, he and his brother-in-law were led crying into a room and shown the body. It was hers. Sita Shrestha was gone, but no longer missing.", "sentence_answer": "Search and rescue teams had found a woman\u2019s body in the rubble, bruised and bloated, lying next to a handbag ."} -{"question": "What was inside the handbag that search and rescue team's found?", "paragraph": "The daily rhythm of search and disappointment continued until last Friday. That afternoon Mr. Shrestha received a call from the police confirming what he and his family had feared. Search and rescue teams had found a woman\u2019s body in the rubble, bruised and bloated, lying next to a handbag. Inside was a cellphone, and the police were able to download the call history and identify a phone number that it had called the most. The number was her brother\u2019s. Summoned to Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, he and his brother-in-law were led crying into a room and shown the body. It was hers. Sita Shrestha was gone, but no longer missing.", "answer": "cellphone", "sentence": "Inside was a cellphone , and the police were able to download the call history and identify a phone number that it had called the most.", "paragraph_sentence": "The daily rhythm of search and disappointment continued until last Friday. That afternoon Mr. Shrestha received a call from the police confirming what he and his family had feared. Search and rescue teams had found a woman\u2019s body in the rubble, bruised and bloated, lying next to a handbag. Inside was a cellphone , and the police were able to download the call history and identify a phone number that it had called the most. The number was her brother\u2019s. Summoned to Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, he and his brother-in-law were led crying into a room and shown the body. It was hers. Sita Shrestha was gone, but no longer missing.", "paragraph_answer": "The daily rhythm of search and disappointment continued until last Friday. That afternoon Mr. Shrestha received a call from the police confirming what he and his family had feared. Search and rescue teams had found a woman\u2019s body in the rubble, bruised and bloated, lying next to a handbag. Inside was a cellphone , and the police were able to download the call history and identify a phone number that it had called the most. The number was her brother\u2019s. Summoned to Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, he and his brother-in-law were led crying into a room and shown the body. It was hers. Sita Shrestha was gone, but no longer missing.", "sentence_answer": "Inside was a cellphone , and the police were able to download the call history and identify a phone number that it had called the most."} -{"question": "Who went to the Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital to see Sita Shrestha's body?", "paragraph": "The daily rhythm of search and disappointment continued until last Friday. That afternoon Mr. Shrestha received a call from the police confirming what he and his family had feared. Search and rescue teams had found a woman\u2019s body in the rubble, bruised and bloated, lying next to a handbag. Inside was a cellphone, and the police were able to download the call history and identify a phone number that it had called the most. The number was her brother\u2019s. Summoned to Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, he and his brother-in-law were led crying into a room and shown the body. It was hers. Sita Shrestha was gone, but no longer missing.", "answer": "he and his brother-in-law", "sentence": "Summoned to Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, he and his brother-in-law were led crying into a room and shown the body.", "paragraph_sentence": "The daily rhythm of search and disappointment continued until last Friday. That afternoon Mr. Shrestha received a call from the police confirming what he and his family had feared. Search and rescue teams had found a woman\u2019s body in the rubble, bruised and bloated, lying next to a handbag. Inside was a cellphone, and the police were able to download the call history and identify a phone number that it had called the most. The number was her brother\u2019s. Summoned to Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, he and his brother-in-law were led crying into a room and shown the body. It was hers. Sita Shrestha was gone, but no longer missing.", "paragraph_answer": "The daily rhythm of search and disappointment continued until last Friday. That afternoon Mr. Shrestha received a call from the police confirming what he and his family had feared. Search and rescue teams had found a woman\u2019s body in the rubble, bruised and bloated, lying next to a handbag. Inside was a cellphone, and the police were able to download the call history and identify a phone number that it had called the most. The number was her brother\u2019s. Summoned to Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, he and his brother-in-law were led crying into a room and shown the body. It was hers. Sita Shrestha was gone, but no longer missing.", "sentence_answer": "Summoned to Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, he and his brother-in-law were led crying into a room and shown the body."} -{"question": "What fear do women have besides fear of eviction?", "paragraph": "A review of research on the legislation that the Swedish Association for Sexuality Education commissioned from Malmo University found that it was unclear to what extent mobile phones and the Internet, rather than the law, may have accelerated the reduction in street prostitution by bringing buyers and sellers together electronically. The stigma against prostitutes remains widespread, the review also found, making it difficult for women to get help from social services and the police, and stoking their fear of eviction or loss of custody of their children.", "answer": "loss of custody of their children.", "sentence": "The stigma against prostitutes remains widespread, the review also found, making it difficult for women to get help from social services and the police, and stoking their fear of eviction or loss of custody of their children.", "paragraph_sentence": "A review of research on the legislation that the Swedish Association for Sexuality Education commissioned from Malmo University found that it was unclear to what extent mobile phones and the Internet, rather than the law, may have accelerated the reduction in street prostitution by bringing buyers and sellers together electronically. The stigma against prostitutes remains widespread, the review also found, making it difficult for women to get help from social services and the police, and stoking their fear of eviction or loss of custody of their children. ", "paragraph_answer": "A review of research on the legislation that the Swedish Association for Sexuality Education commissioned from Malmo University found that it was unclear to what extent mobile phones and the Internet, rather than the law, may have accelerated the reduction in street prostitution by bringing buyers and sellers together electronically. The stigma against prostitutes remains widespread, the review also found, making it difficult for women to get help from social services and the police, and stoking their fear of eviction or loss of custody of their children. ", "sentence_answer": "The stigma against prostitutes remains widespread, the review also found, making it difficult for women to get help from social services and the police, and stoking their fear of eviction or loss of custody of their children. "} -{"question": "What two things have accelerated the reduction of street prostitution?", "paragraph": "A review of research on the legislation that the Swedish Association for Sexuality Education commissioned from Malmo University found that it was unclear to what extent mobile phones and the Internet, rather than the law, may have accelerated the reduction in street prostitution by bringing buyers and sellers together electronically. The stigma against prostitutes remains widespread, the review also found, making it difficult for women to get help from social services and the police, and stoking their fear of eviction or loss of custody of their children.", "answer": "mobile phones and the Internet", "sentence": "A review of research on the legislation that the Swedish Association for Sexuality Education commissioned from Malmo University found that it was unclear to what extent mobile phones and the Internet , rather than the law, may have accelerated the reduction in street prostitution by bringing buyers and sellers together electronically.", "paragraph_sentence": " A review of research on the legislation that the Swedish Association for Sexuality Education commissioned from Malmo University found that it was unclear to what extent mobile phones and the Internet , rather than the law, may have accelerated the reduction in street prostitution by bringing buyers and sellers together electronically. The stigma against prostitutes remains widespread, the review also found, making it difficult for women to get help from social services and the police, and stoking their fear of eviction or loss of custody of their children.", "paragraph_answer": "A review of research on the legislation that the Swedish Association for Sexuality Education commissioned from Malmo University found that it was unclear to what extent mobile phones and the Internet , rather than the law, may have accelerated the reduction in street prostitution by bringing buyers and sellers together electronically. The stigma against prostitutes remains widespread, the review also found, making it difficult for women to get help from social services and the police, and stoking their fear of eviction or loss of custody of their children.", "sentence_answer": "A review of research on the legislation that the Swedish Association for Sexuality Education commissioned from Malmo University found that it was unclear to what extent mobile phones and the Internet , rather than the law, may have accelerated the reduction in street prostitution by bringing buyers and sellers together electronically."} -{"question": "What has brought buyers and sellers together?", "paragraph": "A review of research on the legislation that the Swedish Association for Sexuality Education commissioned from Malmo University found that it was unclear to what extent mobile phones and the Internet, rather than the law, may have accelerated the reduction in street prostitution by bringing buyers and sellers together electronically. The stigma against prostitutes remains widespread, the review also found, making it difficult for women to get help from social services and the police, and stoking their fear of eviction or loss of custody of their children.", "answer": "electronic", "sentence": "A review of research on the legislation that the Swedish Association for Sexuality Education commissioned from Malmo University found that it was unclear to what extent mobile phones and the Internet, rather than the law, may have accelerated the reduction in street prostitution by bringing buyers and sellers together electronic ally.", "paragraph_sentence": " A review of research on the legislation that the Swedish Association for Sexuality Education commissioned from Malmo University found that it was unclear to what extent mobile phones and the Internet, rather than the law, may have accelerated the reduction in street prostitution by bringing buyers and sellers together electronic ally. The stigma against prostitutes remains widespread, the review also found, making it difficult for women to get help from social services and the police, and stoking their fear of eviction or loss of custody of their children.", "paragraph_answer": "A review of research on the legislation that the Swedish Association for Sexuality Education commissioned from Malmo University found that it was unclear to what extent mobile phones and the Internet, rather than the law, may have accelerated the reduction in street prostitution by bringing buyers and sellers together electronic ally. The stigma against prostitutes remains widespread, the review also found, making it difficult for women to get help from social services and the police, and stoking their fear of eviction or loss of custody of their children.", "sentence_answer": "A review of research on the legislation that the Swedish Association for Sexuality Education commissioned from Malmo University found that it was unclear to what extent mobile phones and the Internet, rather than the law, may have accelerated the reduction in street prostitution by bringing buyers and sellers together electronic ally."} -{"question": "What university the Swedish Association for Sexuality Education commissioned?", "paragraph": "A review of research on the legislation that the Swedish Association for Sexuality Education commissioned from Malmo University found that it was unclear to what extent mobile phones and the Internet, rather than the law, may have accelerated the reduction in street prostitution by bringing buyers and sellers together electronically. The stigma against prostitutes remains widespread, the review also found, making it difficult for women to get help from social services and the police, and stoking their fear of eviction or loss of custody of their children.", "answer": "Malmo University", "sentence": "A review of research on the legislation that the Swedish Association for Sexuality Education commissioned from Malmo University found that it was unclear to what extent mobile phones and the Internet, rather than the law, may have accelerated the reduction in street prostitution by bringing buyers and sellers together electronically.", "paragraph_sentence": " A review of research on the legislation that the Swedish Association for Sexuality Education commissioned from Malmo University found that it was unclear to what extent mobile phones and the Internet, rather than the law, may have accelerated the reduction in street prostitution by bringing buyers and sellers together electronically. The stigma against prostitutes remains widespread, the review also found, making it difficult for women to get help from social services and the police, and stoking their fear of eviction or loss of custody of their children.", "paragraph_answer": "A review of research on the legislation that the Swedish Association for Sexuality Education commissioned from Malmo University found that it was unclear to what extent mobile phones and the Internet, rather than the law, may have accelerated the reduction in street prostitution by bringing buyers and sellers together electronically. The stigma against prostitutes remains widespread, the review also found, making it difficult for women to get help from social services and the police, and stoking their fear of eviction or loss of custody of their children.", "sentence_answer": "A review of research on the legislation that the Swedish Association for Sexuality Education commissioned from Malmo University found that it was unclear to what extent mobile phones and the Internet, rather than the law, may have accelerated the reduction in street prostitution by bringing buyers and sellers together electronically."} -{"question": "How many of Sweden's top women's rights lobbied for combating prostitution?", "paragraph": "In an open letter last month, 12 of Sweden\u2019s top women\u2019s rights lobbies noted that a number of countries were looking toward the Swedish model of combating prostitution. \u201cTherefore, we are happy and proud that Swedish feminist and progressive legislation shows the way forward instead of backward,\u201d they wrote. The report released Friday by the County Administrative Board of Stockholm found that while there had been a huge increase in online ads for escorts selling sex to men, one seller was often behind multiple ads. \u201cAgainst this background, there is nothing indicating that the actual number of individuals engaging in prostitution has increased,\u201d it said.", "answer": "12", "sentence": "In an open letter last month, 12 of Sweden\u2019s top women\u2019s rights lobbies noted that a number of countries were looking toward the Swedish model of combating prostitution.", "paragraph_sentence": " In an open letter last month, 12 of Sweden\u2019s top women\u2019s rights lobbies noted that a number of countries were looking toward the Swedish model of combating prostitution. \u201cTherefore, we are happy and proud that Swedish feminist and progressive legislation shows the way forward instead of backward,\u201d they wrote. The report released Friday by the County Administrative Board of Stockholm found that while there had been a huge increase in online ads for escorts selling sex to men, one seller was often behind multiple ads. \u201cAgainst this background, there is nothing indicating that the actual number of individuals engaging in prostitution has increased,\u201d it said.", "paragraph_answer": "In an open letter last month, 12 of Sweden\u2019s top women\u2019s rights lobbies noted that a number of countries were looking toward the Swedish model of combating prostitution. \u201cTherefore, we are happy and proud that Swedish feminist and progressive legislation shows the way forward instead of backward,\u201d they wrote. The report released Friday by the County Administrative Board of Stockholm found that while there had been a huge increase in online ads for escorts selling sex to men, one seller was often behind multiple ads. \u201cAgainst this background, there is nothing indicating that the actual number of individuals engaging in prostitution has increased,\u201d it said.", "sentence_answer": "In an open letter last month, 12 of Sweden\u2019s top women\u2019s rights lobbies noted that a number of countries were looking toward the Swedish model of combating prostitution."} -{"question": "What was shown to have increased online ?", "paragraph": "In an open letter last month, 12 of Sweden\u2019s top women\u2019s rights lobbies noted that a number of countries were looking toward the Swedish model of combating prostitution. \u201cTherefore, we are happy and proud that Swedish feminist and progressive legislation shows the way forward instead of backward,\u201d they wrote. The report released Friday by the County Administrative Board of Stockholm found that while there had been a huge increase in online ads for escorts selling sex to men, one seller was often behind multiple ads. \u201cAgainst this background, there is nothing indicating that the actual number of individuals engaging in prostitution has increased,\u201d it said.", "answer": "ads for escorts selling sex to men", "sentence": "The report released Friday by the County Administrative Board of Stockholm found that while there had been a huge increase in online ads for escorts selling sex to men , one seller was often behind multiple ads.", "paragraph_sentence": "In an open letter last month, 12 of Sweden\u2019s top women\u2019s rights lobbies noted that a number of countries were looking toward the Swedish model of combating prostitution. \u201cTherefore, we are happy and proud that Swedish feminist and progressive legislation shows the way forward instead of backward,\u201d they wrote. The report released Friday by the County Administrative Board of Stockholm found that while there had been a huge increase in online ads for escorts selling sex to men , one seller was often behind multiple ads. \u201cAgainst this background, there is nothing indicating that the actual number of individuals engaging in prostitution has increased,\u201d it said.", "paragraph_answer": "In an open letter last month, 12 of Sweden\u2019s top women\u2019s rights lobbies noted that a number of countries were looking toward the Swedish model of combating prostitution. \u201cTherefore, we are happy and proud that Swedish feminist and progressive legislation shows the way forward instead of backward,\u201d they wrote. The report released Friday by the County Administrative Board of Stockholm found that while there had been a huge increase in online ads for escorts selling sex to men , one seller was often behind multiple ads. \u201cAgainst this background, there is nothing indicating that the actual number of individuals engaging in prostitution has increased,\u201d it said.", "sentence_answer": "The report released Friday by the County Administrative Board of Stockholm found that while there had been a huge increase in online ads for escorts selling sex to men , one seller was often behind multiple ads."} -{"question": "How many sellers were responsible for the numerous sex ads?", "paragraph": "In an open letter last month, 12 of Sweden\u2019s top women\u2019s rights lobbies noted that a number of countries were looking toward the Swedish model of combating prostitution. \u201cTherefore, we are happy and proud that Swedish feminist and progressive legislation shows the way forward instead of backward,\u201d they wrote. The report released Friday by the County Administrative Board of Stockholm found that while there had been a huge increase in online ads for escorts selling sex to men, one seller was often behind multiple ads. \u201cAgainst this background, there is nothing indicating that the actual number of individuals engaging in prostitution has increased,\u201d it said.", "answer": "one seller was often behind multiple ads.", "sentence": "The report released Friday by the County Administrative Board of Stockholm found that while there had been a huge increase in online ads for escorts selling sex to men, one seller was often behind multiple ads. \u201cAgainst this background, there is nothing indicating that the actual number of individuals engaging in prostitution has increased,\u201d it said.", "paragraph_sentence": "In an open letter last month, 12 of Sweden\u2019s top women\u2019s rights lobbies noted that a number of countries were looking toward the Swedish model of combating prostitution. \u201cTherefore, we are happy and proud that Swedish feminist and progressive legislation shows the way forward instead of backward,\u201d they wrote. The report released Friday by the County Administrative Board of Stockholm found that while there had been a huge increase in online ads for escorts selling sex to men, one seller was often behind multiple ads. \u201cAgainst this background, there is nothing indicating that the actual number of individuals engaging in prostitution has increased,\u201d it said. ", "paragraph_answer": "In an open letter last month, 12 of Sweden\u2019s top women\u2019s rights lobbies noted that a number of countries were looking toward the Swedish model of combating prostitution. \u201cTherefore, we are happy and proud that Swedish feminist and progressive legislation shows the way forward instead of backward,\u201d they wrote. The report released Friday by the County Administrative Board of Stockholm found that while there had been a huge increase in online ads for escorts selling sex to men, one seller was often behind multiple ads. \u201cAgainst this background, there is nothing indicating that the actual number of individuals engaging in prostitution has increased,\u201d it said.", "sentence_answer": "The report released Friday by the County Administrative Board of Stockholm found that while there had been a huge increase in online ads for escorts selling sex to men, one seller was often behind multiple ads. \u201cAgainst this background, there is nothing indicating that the actual number of individuals engaging in prostitution has increased,\u201d it said."} -{"question": "What emotions are the Swedish feminist group feeling about combating prostitution?", "paragraph": "In an open letter last month, 12 of Sweden\u2019s top women\u2019s rights lobbies noted that a number of countries were looking toward the Swedish model of combating prostitution. \u201cTherefore, we are happy and proud that Swedish feminist and progressive legislation shows the way forward instead of backward,\u201d they wrote. The report released Friday by the County Administrative Board of Stockholm found that while there had been a huge increase in online ads for escorts selling sex to men, one seller was often behind multiple ads. \u201cAgainst this background, there is nothing indicating that the actual number of individuals engaging in prostitution has increased,\u201d it said.", "answer": "happy and proud", "sentence": "\u201cTherefore, we are happy and proud that Swedish feminist and progressive legislation shows the way forward instead of backward,\u201d they wrote.", "paragraph_sentence": "In an open letter last month, 12 of Sweden\u2019s top women\u2019s rights lobbies noted that a number of countries were looking toward the Swedish model of combating prostitution. \u201cTherefore, we are happy and proud that Swedish feminist and progressive legislation shows the way forward instead of backward,\u201d they wrote. The report released Friday by the County Administrative Board of Stockholm found that while there had been a huge increase in online ads for escorts selling sex to men, one seller was often behind multiple ads. \u201cAgainst this background, there is nothing indicating that the actual number of individuals engaging in prostitution has increased,\u201d it said.", "paragraph_answer": "In an open letter last month, 12 of Sweden\u2019s top women\u2019s rights lobbies noted that a number of countries were looking toward the Swedish model of combating prostitution. \u201cTherefore, we are happy and proud that Swedish feminist and progressive legislation shows the way forward instead of backward,\u201d they wrote. The report released Friday by the County Administrative Board of Stockholm found that while there had been a huge increase in online ads for escorts selling sex to men, one seller was often behind multiple ads. \u201cAgainst this background, there is nothing indicating that the actual number of individuals engaging in prostitution has increased,\u201d it said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cTherefore, we are happy and proud that Swedish feminist and progressive legislation shows the way forward instead of backward,\u201d they wrote."} -{"question": "Who released the report on the increase of sex ads online?", "paragraph": "In an open letter last month, 12 of Sweden\u2019s top women\u2019s rights lobbies noted that a number of countries were looking toward the Swedish model of combating prostitution. \u201cTherefore, we are happy and proud that Swedish feminist and progressive legislation shows the way forward instead of backward,\u201d they wrote. The report released Friday by the County Administrative Board of Stockholm found that while there had been a huge increase in online ads for escorts selling sex to men, one seller was often behind multiple ads. \u201cAgainst this background, there is nothing indicating that the actual number of individuals engaging in prostitution has increased,\u201d it said.", "answer": "County Administrative Board of Stockholm", "sentence": "The report released Friday by the County Administrative Board of Stockholm found that while there had been a huge increase in online ads for escorts selling sex to men, one seller was often behind multiple ads.", "paragraph_sentence": "In an open letter last month, 12 of Sweden\u2019s top women\u2019s rights lobbies noted that a number of countries were looking toward the Swedish model of combating prostitution. \u201cTherefore, we are happy and proud that Swedish feminist and progressive legislation shows the way forward instead of backward,\u201d they wrote. The report released Friday by the County Administrative Board of Stockholm found that while there had been a huge increase in online ads for escorts selling sex to men, one seller was often behind multiple ads. \u201cAgainst this background, there is nothing indicating that the actual number of individuals engaging in prostitution has increased,\u201d it said.", "paragraph_answer": "In an open letter last month, 12 of Sweden\u2019s top women\u2019s rights lobbies noted that a number of countries were looking toward the Swedish model of combating prostitution. \u201cTherefore, we are happy and proud that Swedish feminist and progressive legislation shows the way forward instead of backward,\u201d they wrote. The report released Friday by the County Administrative Board of Stockholm found that while there had been a huge increase in online ads for escorts selling sex to men, one seller was often behind multiple ads. \u201cAgainst this background, there is nothing indicating that the actual number of individuals engaging in prostitution has increased,\u201d it said.", "sentence_answer": "The report released Friday by the County Administrative Board of Stockholm found that while there had been a huge increase in online ads for escorts selling sex to men, one seller was often behind multiple ads."} -{"question": "Has the number of Swedes in favor of a ban on the sale of sex increase or decreased?", "paragraph": "The law is forcing women who sell sex into more dangerous situations, it said, arguing that transactions have become faster and more furtive because men are afraid of the police, leading women to jump into cars without first checking if the driver is drunk, high or otherwise threatening. And the number of Swedes in favor of a ban on the sale of sex as well as its purchase appears to have grown. The Swedish Association for Sexuality Education \u2014 known by its Swedish initials, R.F.S.U. \u2014 said the results of the research review raised questions about the law\u2019s effectiveness, as well as its impact on prostitutes and on women like Daniella seeking to leave prostitution. The group said in February that it was \u201cfar from obvious that the legislation had had the intended effect.\u201d It said the law had increased stigma and discrimination, putting women who sell sex \u201cin an even more precarious position,\u201d and should be changed to better protect their rights. Kristina Ljungros, the group\u2019s president, said she opposed legalizing the purchase of sex, as Germany and the Netherlands have done. Instead, she said, her group wants to open a discussion about what it considers the unintended consequences of Sweden\u2019s law. \u201cSome people selling sex report that it is very hard to find a social service that will help women unless they stop selling sex,\u201d Ms. Ljungros said. \u201cI think we need more of a harm reduction perspective that would protect people selling sex and their rights in a better way.\u201d", "answer": "appears to have grown.", "sentence": "And the number of Swedes in favor of a ban on the sale of sex as well as its purchase appears to have grown. The Swedish Association for Sexuality Education \u2014 known by its Swedish initials, R.F.S.U. \u2014 said the results of the research review raised questions about the law\u2019s effectiveness, as well as its impact on prostitutes and on women like Daniella seeking to leave prostitution.", "paragraph_sentence": "The law is forcing women who sell sex into more dangerous situations, it said, arguing that transactions have become faster and more furtive because men are afraid of the police, leading women to jump into cars without first checking if the driver is drunk, high or otherwise threatening. And the number of Swedes in favor of a ban on the sale of sex as well as its purchase appears to have grown. The Swedish Association for Sexuality Education \u2014 known by its Swedish initials, R.F.S.U. \u2014 said the results of the research review raised questions about the law\u2019s effectiveness, as well as its impact on prostitutes and on women like Daniella seeking to leave prostitution. The group said in February that it was \u201cfar from obvious that the legislation had had the intended effect.\u201d It said the law had increased stigma and discrimination, putting women who sell sex \u201cin an even more precarious position,\u201d and should be changed to better protect their rights. Kristina Ljungros, the group\u2019s president, said she opposed legalizing the purchase of sex, as Germany and the Netherlands have done. Instead, she said, her group wants to open a discussion about what it considers the unintended consequences of Sweden\u2019s law. \u201cSome people selling sex report that it is very hard to find a social service that will help women unless they stop selling sex,\u201d Ms. Ljungros said. \u201cI think we need more of a harm reduction perspective that would protect people selling sex and their rights in a better way.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The law is forcing women who sell sex into more dangerous situations, it said, arguing that transactions have become faster and more furtive because men are afraid of the police, leading women to jump into cars without first checking if the driver is drunk, high or otherwise threatening. And the number of Swedes in favor of a ban on the sale of sex as well as its purchase appears to have grown. The Swedish Association for Sexuality Education \u2014 known by its Swedish initials, R.F.S.U. \u2014 said the results of the research review raised questions about the law\u2019s effectiveness, as well as its impact on prostitutes and on women like Daniella seeking to leave prostitution. The group said in February that it was \u201cfar from obvious that the legislation had had the intended effect.\u201d It said the law had increased stigma and discrimination, putting women who sell sex \u201cin an even more precarious position,\u201d and should be changed to better protect their rights. Kristina Ljungros, the group\u2019s president, said she opposed legalizing the purchase of sex, as Germany and the Netherlands have done. Instead, she said, her group wants to open a discussion about what it considers the unintended consequences of Sweden\u2019s law. \u201cSome people selling sex report that it is very hard to find a social service that will help women unless they stop selling sex,\u201d Ms. Ljungros said. \u201cI think we need more of a harm reduction perspective that would protect people selling sex and their rights in a better way.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "And the number of Swedes in favor of a ban on the sale of sex as well as its purchase appears to have grown. The Swedish Association for Sexuality Education \u2014 known by its Swedish initials, R.F.S.U. \u2014 said the results of the research review raised questions about the law\u2019s effectiveness, as well as its impact on prostitutes and on women like Daniella seeking to leave prostitution."} -{"question": "What do women that sell sex face in the community?", "paragraph": "The law is forcing women who sell sex into more dangerous situations, it said, arguing that transactions have become faster and more furtive because men are afraid of the police, leading women to jump into cars without first checking if the driver is drunk, high or otherwise threatening. And the number of Swedes in favor of a ban on the sale of sex as well as its purchase appears to have grown. The Swedish Association for Sexuality Education \u2014 known by its Swedish initials, R.F.S.U. \u2014 said the results of the research review raised questions about the law\u2019s effectiveness, as well as its impact on prostitutes and on women like Daniella seeking to leave prostitution. The group said in February that it was \u201cfar from obvious that the legislation had had the intended effect.\u201d It said the law had increased stigma and discrimination, putting women who sell sex \u201cin an even more precarious position,\u201d and should be changed to better protect their rights. Kristina Ljungros, the group\u2019s president, said she opposed legalizing the purchase of sex, as Germany and the Netherlands have done. Instead, she said, her group wants to open a discussion about what it considers the unintended consequences of Sweden\u2019s law. \u201cSome people selling sex report that it is very hard to find a social service that will help women unless they stop selling sex,\u201d Ms. Ljungros said. \u201cI think we need more of a harm reduction perspective that would protect people selling sex and their rights in a better way.\u201d", "answer": "increased stigma and discrimination", "sentence": "It said the law had increased stigma and discrimination , putting women who sell sex \u201cin an even more precarious position,\u201d and should be changed to better protect their rights.", "paragraph_sentence": "The law is forcing women who sell sex into more dangerous situations, it said, arguing that transactions have become faster and more furtive because men are afraid of the police, leading women to jump into cars without first checking if the driver is drunk, high or otherwise threatening. And the number of Swedes in favor of a ban on the sale of sex as well as its purchase appears to have grown. The Swedish Association for Sexuality Education \u2014 known by its Swedish initials, R.F.S.U. \u2014 said the results of the research review raised questions about the law\u2019s effectiveness, as well as its impact on prostitutes and on women like Daniella seeking to leave prostitution. The group said in February that it was \u201cfar from obvious that the legislation had had the intended effect.\u201d It said the law had increased stigma and discrimination , putting women who sell sex \u201cin an even more precarious position,\u201d and should be changed to better protect their rights. Kristina Ljungros, the group\u2019s president, said she opposed legalizing the purchase of sex, as Germany and the Netherlands have done. Instead, she said, her group wants to open a discussion about what it considers the unintended consequences of Sweden\u2019s law. \u201cSome people selling sex report that it is very hard to find a social service that will help women unless they stop selling sex,\u201d Ms. Ljungros said. \u201cI think we need more of a harm reduction perspective that would protect people selling sex and their rights in a better way.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The law is forcing women who sell sex into more dangerous situations, it said, arguing that transactions have become faster and more furtive because men are afraid of the police, leading women to jump into cars without first checking if the driver is drunk, high or otherwise threatening. And the number of Swedes in favor of a ban on the sale of sex as well as its purchase appears to have grown. The Swedish Association for Sexuality Education \u2014 known by its Swedish initials, R.F.S.U. \u2014 said the results of the research review raised questions about the law\u2019s effectiveness, as well as its impact on prostitutes and on women like Daniella seeking to leave prostitution. The group said in February that it was \u201cfar from obvious that the legislation had had the intended effect.\u201d It said the law had increased stigma and discrimination , putting women who sell sex \u201cin an even more precarious position,\u201d and should be changed to better protect their rights. Kristina Ljungros, the group\u2019s president, said she opposed legalizing the purchase of sex, as Germany and the Netherlands have done. Instead, she said, her group wants to open a discussion about what it considers the unintended consequences of Sweden\u2019s law. \u201cSome people selling sex report that it is very hard to find a social service that will help women unless they stop selling sex,\u201d Ms. Ljungros said. \u201cI think we need more of a harm reduction perspective that would protect people selling sex and their rights in a better way.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "It said the law had increased stigma and discrimination , putting women who sell sex \u201cin an even more precarious position,\u201d and should be changed to better protect their rights."} -{"question": "What do women who sell sex have to do in order to get help from social services?", "paragraph": "The law is forcing women who sell sex into more dangerous situations, it said, arguing that transactions have become faster and more furtive because men are afraid of the police, leading women to jump into cars without first checking if the driver is drunk, high or otherwise threatening. And the number of Swedes in favor of a ban on the sale of sex as well as its purchase appears to have grown. The Swedish Association for Sexuality Education \u2014 known by its Swedish initials, R.F.S.U. \u2014 said the results of the research review raised questions about the law\u2019s effectiveness, as well as its impact on prostitutes and on women like Daniella seeking to leave prostitution. The group said in February that it was \u201cfar from obvious that the legislation had had the intended effect.\u201d It said the law had increased stigma and discrimination, putting women who sell sex \u201cin an even more precarious position,\u201d and should be changed to better protect their rights. Kristina Ljungros, the group\u2019s president, said she opposed legalizing the purchase of sex, as Germany and the Netherlands have done. Instead, she said, her group wants to open a discussion about what it considers the unintended consequences of Sweden\u2019s law. \u201cSome people selling sex report that it is very hard to find a social service that will help women unless they stop selling sex,\u201d Ms. Ljungros said. \u201cI think we need more of a harm reduction perspective that would protect people selling sex and their rights in a better way.\u201d", "answer": "they stop selling sex", "sentence": "\u201cSome people selling sex report that it is very hard to find a social service that will help women unless they stop selling sex ,\u201d Ms. Ljungros said.", "paragraph_sentence": "The law is forcing women who sell sex into more dangerous situations, it said, arguing that transactions have become faster and more furtive because men are afraid of the police, leading women to jump into cars without first checking if the driver is drunk, high or otherwise threatening. And the number of Swedes in favor of a ban on the sale of sex as well as its purchase appears to have grown. The Swedish Association for Sexuality Education \u2014 known by its Swedish initials, R.F.S.U. \u2014 said the results of the research review raised questions about the law\u2019s effectiveness, as well as its impact on prostitutes and on women like Daniella seeking to leave prostitution. The group said in February that it was \u201cfar from obvious that the legislation had had the intended effect.\u201d It said the law had increased stigma and discrimination, putting women who sell sex \u201cin an even more precarious position,\u201d and should be changed to better protect their rights. Kristina Ljungros, the group\u2019s president, said she opposed legalizing the purchase of sex, as Germany and the Netherlands have done. Instead, she said, her group wants to open a discussion about what it considers the unintended consequences of Sweden\u2019s law. \u201cSome people selling sex report that it is very hard to find a social service that will help women unless they stop selling sex ,\u201d Ms. Ljungros said. \u201cI think we need more of a harm reduction perspective that would protect people selling sex and their rights in a better way.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The law is forcing women who sell sex into more dangerous situations, it said, arguing that transactions have become faster and more furtive because men are afraid of the police, leading women to jump into cars without first checking if the driver is drunk, high or otherwise threatening. And the number of Swedes in favor of a ban on the sale of sex as well as its purchase appears to have grown. The Swedish Association for Sexuality Education \u2014 known by its Swedish initials, R.F.S.U. \u2014 said the results of the research review raised questions about the law\u2019s effectiveness, as well as its impact on prostitutes and on women like Daniella seeking to leave prostitution. The group said in February that it was \u201cfar from obvious that the legislation had had the intended effect.\u201d It said the law had increased stigma and discrimination, putting women who sell sex \u201cin an even more precarious position,\u201d and should be changed to better protect their rights. Kristina Ljungros, the group\u2019s president, said she opposed legalizing the purchase of sex, as Germany and the Netherlands have done. Instead, she said, her group wants to open a discussion about what it considers the unintended consequences of Sweden\u2019s law. \u201cSome people selling sex report that it is very hard to find a social service that will help women unless they stop selling sex ,\u201d Ms. Ljungros said. \u201cI think we need more of a harm reduction perspective that would protect people selling sex and their rights in a better way.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cSome people selling sex report that it is very hard to find a social service that will help women unless they stop selling sex ,\u201d Ms. Ljungros said."} -{"question": "What are men afraid of when looking for women who sell sex?", "paragraph": "The law is forcing women who sell sex into more dangerous situations, it said, arguing that transactions have become faster and more furtive because men are afraid of the police, leading women to jump into cars without first checking if the driver is drunk, high or otherwise threatening. And the number of Swedes in favor of a ban on the sale of sex as well as its purchase appears to have grown. The Swedish Association for Sexuality Education \u2014 known by its Swedish initials, R.F.S.U. \u2014 said the results of the research review raised questions about the law\u2019s effectiveness, as well as its impact on prostitutes and on women like Daniella seeking to leave prostitution. The group said in February that it was \u201cfar from obvious that the legislation had had the intended effect.\u201d It said the law had increased stigma and discrimination, putting women who sell sex \u201cin an even more precarious position,\u201d and should be changed to better protect their rights. Kristina Ljungros, the group\u2019s president, said she opposed legalizing the purchase of sex, as Germany and the Netherlands have done. Instead, she said, her group wants to open a discussion about what it considers the unintended consequences of Sweden\u2019s law. \u201cSome people selling sex report that it is very hard to find a social service that will help women unless they stop selling sex,\u201d Ms. Ljungros said. \u201cI think we need more of a harm reduction perspective that would protect people selling sex and their rights in a better way.\u201d", "answer": "the police", "sentence": "The law is forcing women who sell sex into more dangerous situations, it said, arguing that transactions have become faster and more furtive because men are afraid of the police , leading women to jump into cars without first checking if the driver is drunk, high or otherwise threatening.", "paragraph_sentence": " The law is forcing women who sell sex into more dangerous situations, it said, arguing that transactions have become faster and more furtive because men are afraid of the police , leading women to jump into cars without first checking if the driver is drunk, high or otherwise threatening. And the number of Swedes in favor of a ban on the sale of sex as well as its purchase appears to have grown. The Swedish Association for Sexuality Education \u2014 known by its Swedish initials, R.F.S.U. \u2014 said the results of the research review raised questions about the law\u2019s effectiveness, as well as its impact on prostitutes and on women like Daniella seeking to leave prostitution. The group said in February that it was \u201cfar from obvious that the legislation had had the intended effect.\u201d It said the law had increased stigma and discrimination, putting women who sell sex \u201cin an even more precarious position,\u201d and should be changed to better protect their rights. Kristina Ljungros, the group\u2019s president, said she opposed legalizing the purchase of sex, as Germany and the Netherlands have done. Instead, she said, her group wants to open a discussion about what it considers the unintended consequences of Sweden\u2019s law. \u201cSome people selling sex report that it is very hard to find a social service that will help women unless they stop selling sex,\u201d Ms. Ljungros said. \u201cI think we need more of a harm reduction perspective that would protect people selling sex and their rights in a better way.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The law is forcing women who sell sex into more dangerous situations, it said, arguing that transactions have become faster and more furtive because men are afraid of the police , leading women to jump into cars without first checking if the driver is drunk, high or otherwise threatening. And the number of Swedes in favor of a ban on the sale of sex as well as its purchase appears to have grown. The Swedish Association for Sexuality Education \u2014 known by its Swedish initials, R.F.S.U. \u2014 said the results of the research review raised questions about the law\u2019s effectiveness, as well as its impact on prostitutes and on women like Daniella seeking to leave prostitution. The group said in February that it was \u201cfar from obvious that the legislation had had the intended effect.\u201d It said the law had increased stigma and discrimination, putting women who sell sex \u201cin an even more precarious position,\u201d and should be changed to better protect their rights. Kristina Ljungros, the group\u2019s president, said she opposed legalizing the purchase of sex, as Germany and the Netherlands have done. Instead, she said, her group wants to open a discussion about what it considers the unintended consequences of Sweden\u2019s law. \u201cSome people selling sex report that it is very hard to find a social service that will help women unless they stop selling sex,\u201d Ms. Ljungros said. \u201cI think we need more of a harm reduction perspective that would protect people selling sex and their rights in a better way.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The law is forcing women who sell sex into more dangerous situations, it said, arguing that transactions have become faster and more furtive because men are afraid of the police , leading women to jump into cars without first checking if the driver is drunk, high or otherwise threatening."} -{"question": "What are the 3 things women who sell sex are not checking for when meeting men?", "paragraph": "The law is forcing women who sell sex into more dangerous situations, it said, arguing that transactions have become faster and more furtive because men are afraid of the police, leading women to jump into cars without first checking if the driver is drunk, high or otherwise threatening. And the number of Swedes in favor of a ban on the sale of sex as well as its purchase appears to have grown. The Swedish Association for Sexuality Education \u2014 known by its Swedish initials, R.F.S.U. \u2014 said the results of the research review raised questions about the law\u2019s effectiveness, as well as its impact on prostitutes and on women like Daniella seeking to leave prostitution. The group said in February that it was \u201cfar from obvious that the legislation had had the intended effect.\u201d It said the law had increased stigma and discrimination, putting women who sell sex \u201cin an even more precarious position,\u201d and should be changed to better protect their rights. Kristina Ljungros, the group\u2019s president, said she opposed legalizing the purchase of sex, as Germany and the Netherlands have done. Instead, she said, her group wants to open a discussion about what it considers the unintended consequences of Sweden\u2019s law. \u201cSome people selling sex report that it is very hard to find a social service that will help women unless they stop selling sex,\u201d Ms. Ljungros said. \u201cI think we need more of a harm reduction perspective that would protect people selling sex and their rights in a better way.\u201d", "answer": "checking if the driver is drunk, high or otherwise threatening.", "sentence": "The law is forcing women who sell sex into more dangerous situations, it said, arguing that transactions have become faster and more furtive because men are afraid of the police, leading women to jump into cars without first checking if the driver is drunk, high or otherwise threatening. And the number of Swedes in favor of a ban on the sale of sex as well as its purchase appears to have grown.", "paragraph_sentence": " The law is forcing women who sell sex into more dangerous situations, it said, arguing that transactions have become faster and more furtive because men are afraid of the police, leading women to jump into cars without first checking if the driver is drunk, high or otherwise threatening. And the number of Swedes in favor of a ban on the sale of sex as well as its purchase appears to have grown. The Swedish Association for Sexuality Education \u2014 known by its Swedish initials, R.F.S.U. \u2014 said the results of the research review raised questions about the law\u2019s effectiveness, as well as its impact on prostitutes and on women like Daniella seeking to leave prostitution. The group said in February that it was \u201cfar from obvious that the legislation had had the intended effect.\u201d It said the law had increased stigma and discrimination, putting women who sell sex \u201cin an even more precarious position,\u201d and should be changed to better protect their rights. Kristina Ljungros, the group\u2019s president, said she opposed legalizing the purchase of sex, as Germany and the Netherlands have done. Instead, she said, her group wants to open a discussion about what it considers the unintended consequences of Sweden\u2019s law. \u201cSome people selling sex report that it is very hard to find a social service that will help women unless they stop selling sex,\u201d Ms. Ljungros said. \u201cI think we need more of a harm reduction perspective that would protect people selling sex and their rights in a better way.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The law is forcing women who sell sex into more dangerous situations, it said, arguing that transactions have become faster and more furtive because men are afraid of the police, leading women to jump into cars without first checking if the driver is drunk, high or otherwise threatening. And the number of Swedes in favor of a ban on the sale of sex as well as its purchase appears to have grown. The Swedish Association for Sexuality Education \u2014 known by its Swedish initials, R.F.S.U. \u2014 said the results of the research review raised questions about the law\u2019s effectiveness, as well as its impact on prostitutes and on women like Daniella seeking to leave prostitution. The group said in February that it was \u201cfar from obvious that the legislation had had the intended effect.\u201d It said the law had increased stigma and discrimination, putting women who sell sex \u201cin an even more precarious position,\u201d and should be changed to better protect their rights. Kristina Ljungros, the group\u2019s president, said she opposed legalizing the purchase of sex, as Germany and the Netherlands have done. Instead, she said, her group wants to open a discussion about what it considers the unintended consequences of Sweden\u2019s law. \u201cSome people selling sex report that it is very hard to find a social service that will help women unless they stop selling sex,\u201d Ms. Ljungros said. \u201cI think we need more of a harm reduction perspective that would protect people selling sex and their rights in a better way.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The law is forcing women who sell sex into more dangerous situations, it said, arguing that transactions have become faster and more furtive because men are afraid of the police, leading women to jump into cars without first checking if the driver is drunk, high or otherwise threatening. And the number of Swedes in favor of a ban on the sale of sex as well as its purchase appears to have grown."} -{"question": "Who has to approve the deal before the vote?", "paragraph": "If the union leaders approve, the deal would next be voted on by G.M.\u2019s U.A.W. members. In a statement, the union president, Dennis Williams, praised the accord, saying, \u201cWe believe that this agreement will present stable long-term significant wage gains and job security commitments to U.A.W. members now and in the future.\u201d No details were disclosed, but in its statement the union suggested that the tentative agreement used the wage-progression formula agreed to in the Fiat Chrysler contract that was ratified last week. In that agreement, entry-level workers eventually reach pay parity with more senior counterparts. But the wage-tier issue is not as prominent at G.M. because the carmaker employs less than half the number of entry-level employees that Fiat Chrysler does.", "answer": "union leaders", "sentence": "If the union leaders approve, the deal would next be voted on by G.M.\u2019s U.A.W. members.", "paragraph_sentence": " If the union leaders approve, the deal would next be voted on by G.M.\u2019s U.A.W. members. In a statement, the union president, Dennis Williams, praised the accord, saying, \u201cWe believe that this agreement will present stable long-term significant wage gains and job security commitments to U.A.W. members now and in the future.\u201d No details were disclosed, but in its statement the union suggested that the tentative agreement used the wage-progression formula agreed to in the Fiat Chrysler contract that was ratified last week. In that agreement, entry-level workers eventually reach pay parity with more senior counterparts. But the wage-tier issue is not as prominent at G.M. because the carmaker employs less than half the number of entry-level employees that Fiat Chrysler does.", "paragraph_answer": "If the union leaders approve, the deal would next be voted on by G.M.\u2019s U.A.W. members. In a statement, the union president, Dennis Williams, praised the accord, saying, \u201cWe believe that this agreement will present stable long-term significant wage gains and job security commitments to U.A.W. members now and in the future.\u201d No details were disclosed, but in its statement the union suggested that the tentative agreement used the wage-progression formula agreed to in the Fiat Chrysler contract that was ratified last week. In that agreement, entry-level workers eventually reach pay parity with more senior counterparts. But the wage-tier issue is not as prominent at G.M. because the carmaker employs less than half the number of entry-level employees that Fiat Chrysler does.", "sentence_answer": "If the union leaders approve, the deal would next be voted on by G.M.\u2019s U.A.W. members."} -{"question": "Who is the union president?", "paragraph": "If the union leaders approve, the deal would next be voted on by G.M.\u2019s U.A.W. members. In a statement, the union president, Dennis Williams, praised the accord, saying, \u201cWe believe that this agreement will present stable long-term significant wage gains and job security commitments to U.A.W. members now and in the future.\u201d No details were disclosed, but in its statement the union suggested that the tentative agreement used the wage-progression formula agreed to in the Fiat Chrysler contract that was ratified last week. In that agreement, entry-level workers eventually reach pay parity with more senior counterparts. But the wage-tier issue is not as prominent at G.M. because the carmaker employs less than half the number of entry-level employees that Fiat Chrysler does.", "answer": "Dennis Williams", "sentence": "In a statement, the union president, Dennis Williams , praised the accord, saying, \u201cWe believe that this agreement will present stable long-term significant wage gains and job security commitments to U.A.W. members now and in the future.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "If the union leaders approve, the deal would next be voted on by G.M.\u2019s U.A.W. members. In a statement, the union president, Dennis Williams , praised the accord, saying, \u201cWe believe that this agreement will present stable long-term significant wage gains and job security commitments to U.A.W. members now and in the future.\u201d No details were disclosed, but in its statement the union suggested that the tentative agreement used the wage-progression formula agreed to in the Fiat Chrysler contract that was ratified last week. In that agreement, entry-level workers eventually reach pay parity with more senior counterparts. But the wage-tier issue is not as prominent at G.M. because the carmaker employs less than half the number of entry-level employees that Fiat Chrysler does.", "paragraph_answer": "If the union leaders approve, the deal would next be voted on by G.M.\u2019s U.A.W. members. In a statement, the union president, Dennis Williams , praised the accord, saying, \u201cWe believe that this agreement will present stable long-term significant wage gains and job security commitments to U.A.W. members now and in the future.\u201d No details were disclosed, but in its statement the union suggested that the tentative agreement used the wage-progression formula agreed to in the Fiat Chrysler contract that was ratified last week. In that agreement, entry-level workers eventually reach pay parity with more senior counterparts. But the wage-tier issue is not as prominent at G.M. because the carmaker employs less than half the number of entry-level employees that Fiat Chrysler does.", "sentence_answer": "In a statement, the union president, Dennis Williams , praised the accord, saying, \u201cWe believe that this agreement will present stable long-term significant wage gains and job security commitments to U.A.W. members now and in the future.\u201d"} -{"question": "What contract was ratified last week?", "paragraph": "If the union leaders approve, the deal would next be voted on by G.M.\u2019s U.A.W. members. In a statement, the union president, Dennis Williams, praised the accord, saying, \u201cWe believe that this agreement will present stable long-term significant wage gains and job security commitments to U.A.W. members now and in the future.\u201d No details were disclosed, but in its statement the union suggested that the tentative agreement used the wage-progression formula agreed to in the Fiat Chrysler contract that was ratified last week. In that agreement, entry-level workers eventually reach pay parity with more senior counterparts. But the wage-tier issue is not as prominent at G.M. because the carmaker employs less than half the number of entry-level employees that Fiat Chrysler does.", "answer": "Fiat Chrysler", "sentence": "No details were disclosed, but in its statement the union suggested that the tentative agreement used the wage-progression formula agreed to in the Fiat Chrysler contract that was ratified last week.", "paragraph_sentence": "If the union leaders approve, the deal would next be voted on by G.M.\u2019s U.A.W. members. In a statement, the union president, Dennis Williams, praised the accord, saying, \u201cWe believe that this agreement will present stable long-term significant wage gains and job security commitments to U.A.W. members now and in the future.\u201d No details were disclosed, but in its statement the union suggested that the tentative agreement used the wage-progression formula agreed to in the Fiat Chrysler contract that was ratified last week. In that agreement, entry-level workers eventually reach pay parity with more senior counterparts. But the wage-tier issue is not as prominent at G.M. because the carmaker employs less than half the number of entry-level employees that Fiat Chrysler does.", "paragraph_answer": "If the union leaders approve, the deal would next be voted on by G.M.\u2019s U.A.W. members. In a statement, the union president, Dennis Williams, praised the accord, saying, \u201cWe believe that this agreement will present stable long-term significant wage gains and job security commitments to U.A.W. members now and in the future.\u201d No details were disclosed, but in its statement the union suggested that the tentative agreement used the wage-progression formula agreed to in the Fiat Chrysler contract that was ratified last week. In that agreement, entry-level workers eventually reach pay parity with more senior counterparts. But the wage-tier issue is not as prominent at G.M. because the carmaker employs less than half the number of entry-level employees that Fiat Chrysler does.", "sentence_answer": "No details were disclosed, but in its statement the union suggested that the tentative agreement used the wage-progression formula agreed to in the Fiat Chrysler contract that was ratified last week."} -{"question": "What does the union suggest be used in the tentative agreement?", "paragraph": "If the union leaders approve, the deal would next be voted on by G.M.\u2019s U.A.W. members. In a statement, the union president, Dennis Williams, praised the accord, saying, \u201cWe believe that this agreement will present stable long-term significant wage gains and job security commitments to U.A.W. members now and in the future.\u201d No details were disclosed, but in its statement the union suggested that the tentative agreement used the wage-progression formula agreed to in the Fiat Chrysler contract that was ratified last week. In that agreement, entry-level workers eventually reach pay parity with more senior counterparts. But the wage-tier issue is not as prominent at G.M. because the carmaker employs less than half the number of entry-level employees that Fiat Chrysler does.", "answer": "wage-progression formula", "sentence": "No details were disclosed, but in its statement the union suggested that the tentative agreement used the wage-progression formula agreed to in the Fiat Chrysler contract that was ratified last week.", "paragraph_sentence": "If the union leaders approve, the deal would next be voted on by G.M.\u2019s U.A.W. members. In a statement, the union president, Dennis Williams, praised the accord, saying, \u201cWe believe that this agreement will present stable long-term significant wage gains and job security commitments to U.A.W. members now and in the future.\u201d No details were disclosed, but in its statement the union suggested that the tentative agreement used the wage-progression formula agreed to in the Fiat Chrysler contract that was ratified last week. In that agreement, entry-level workers eventually reach pay parity with more senior counterparts. But the wage-tier issue is not as prominent at G.M. because the carmaker employs less than half the number of entry-level employees that Fiat Chrysler does.", "paragraph_answer": "If the union leaders approve, the deal would next be voted on by G.M.\u2019s U.A.W. members. In a statement, the union president, Dennis Williams, praised the accord, saying, \u201cWe believe that this agreement will present stable long-term significant wage gains and job security commitments to U.A.W. members now and in the future.\u201d No details were disclosed, but in its statement the union suggested that the tentative agreement used the wage-progression formula agreed to in the Fiat Chrysler contract that was ratified last week. In that agreement, entry-level workers eventually reach pay parity with more senior counterparts. But the wage-tier issue is not as prominent at G.M. because the carmaker employs less than half the number of entry-level employees that Fiat Chrysler does.", "sentence_answer": "No details were disclosed, but in its statement the union suggested that the tentative agreement used the wage-progression formula agreed to in the Fiat Chrysler contract that was ratified last week."} -{"question": "How many entry-level employees does GM employ compared to Fiat Chrysler?", "paragraph": "If the union leaders approve, the deal would next be voted on by G.M.\u2019s U.A.W. members. In a statement, the union president, Dennis Williams, praised the accord, saying, \u201cWe believe that this agreement will present stable long-term significant wage gains and job security commitments to U.A.W. members now and in the future.\u201d No details were disclosed, but in its statement the union suggested that the tentative agreement used the wage-progression formula agreed to in the Fiat Chrysler contract that was ratified last week. In that agreement, entry-level workers eventually reach pay parity with more senior counterparts. But the wage-tier issue is not as prominent at G.M. because the carmaker employs less than half the number of entry-level employees that Fiat Chrysler does.", "answer": "less than half", "sentence": "But the wage-tier issue is not as prominent at G.M. because the carmaker employs less than half the number of entry-level employees that Fiat Chrysler does.", "paragraph_sentence": "If the union leaders approve, the deal would next be voted on by G.M.\u2019s U.A.W. members. In a statement, the union president, Dennis Williams, praised the accord, saying, \u201cWe believe that this agreement will present stable long-term significant wage gains and job security commitments to U.A.W. members now and in the future.\u201d No details were disclosed, but in its statement the union suggested that the tentative agreement used the wage-progression formula agreed to in the Fiat Chrysler contract that was ratified last week. In that agreement, entry-level workers eventually reach pay parity with more senior counterparts. But the wage-tier issue is not as prominent at G.M. because the carmaker employs less than half the number of entry-level employees that Fiat Chrysler does. ", "paragraph_answer": "If the union leaders approve, the deal would next be voted on by G.M.\u2019s U.A.W. members. In a statement, the union president, Dennis Williams, praised the accord, saying, \u201cWe believe that this agreement will present stable long-term significant wage gains and job security commitments to U.A.W. members now and in the future.\u201d No details were disclosed, but in its statement the union suggested that the tentative agreement used the wage-progression formula agreed to in the Fiat Chrysler contract that was ratified last week. In that agreement, entry-level workers eventually reach pay parity with more senior counterparts. But the wage-tier issue is not as prominent at G.M. because the carmaker employs less than half the number of entry-level employees that Fiat Chrysler does.", "sentence_answer": "But the wage-tier issue is not as prominent at G.M. because the carmaker employs less than half the number of entry-level employees that Fiat Chrysler does."} -{"question": "Who is the VP for North American manufacturing and labor relations for GM?", "paragraph": "Cathy Clegg, the General Motors vice president for North American manufacturing and labor relations, said in a statement about the agreement, \u201cWorking with our U.A.W. partners, we developed constructive solutions that benefit employees and provide flexibility for the company to respond to the needs of the marketplace.\u201d David Cole, chairman emeritus of the Center for Automotive Research, an industry group in Ann Arbor, Mich., said workers should not expect too much, given the industry\u2019s cyclical nature.", "answer": "Cathy Clegg", "sentence": "Cathy Clegg , the General Motors vice president for North American manufacturing and labor relations, said in a statement about the agreement, \u201cWorking with our U.A.W. partners, we developed constructive solutions that benefit employees and provide flexibility for the company to respond to the needs of the marketplace.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Cathy Clegg , the General Motors vice president for North American manufacturing and labor relations, said in a statement about the agreement, \u201cWorking with our U.A.W. partners, we developed constructive solutions that benefit employees and provide flexibility for the company to respond to the needs of the marketplace.\u201d David Cole, chairman emeritus of the Center for Automotive Research, an industry group in Ann Arbor, Mich., said workers should not expect too much, given the industry\u2019s cyclical nature.", "paragraph_answer": " Cathy Clegg , the General Motors vice president for North American manufacturing and labor relations, said in a statement about the agreement, \u201cWorking with our U.A.W. partners, we developed constructive solutions that benefit employees and provide flexibility for the company to respond to the needs of the marketplace.\u201d David Cole, chairman emeritus of the Center for Automotive Research, an industry group in Ann Arbor, Mich., said workers should not expect too much, given the industry\u2019s cyclical nature.", "sentence_answer": " Cathy Clegg , the General Motors vice president for North American manufacturing and labor relations, said in a statement about the agreement, \u201cWorking with our U.A.W. partners, we developed constructive solutions that benefit employees and provide flexibility for the company to respond to the needs of the marketplace.\u201d"} -{"question": "What will benefit employees and give the company flexibility in the markeplace?", "paragraph": "Cathy Clegg, the General Motors vice president for North American manufacturing and labor relations, said in a statement about the agreement, \u201cWorking with our U.A.W. partners, we developed constructive solutions that benefit employees and provide flexibility for the company to respond to the needs of the marketplace.\u201d David Cole, chairman emeritus of the Center for Automotive Research, an industry group in Ann Arbor, Mich., said workers should not expect too much, given the industry\u2019s cyclical nature.", "answer": "constructive solutions", "sentence": "Cathy Clegg, the General Motors vice president for North American manufacturing and labor relations, said in a statement about the agreement, \u201cWorking with our U.A.W. partners, we developed constructive solutions that benefit employees and provide flexibility for the company to respond to the needs of the marketplace.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Cathy Clegg, the General Motors vice president for North American manufacturing and labor relations, said in a statement about the agreement, \u201cWorking with our U.A.W. partners, we developed constructive solutions that benefit employees and provide flexibility for the company to respond to the needs of the marketplace.\u201d David Cole, chairman emeritus of the Center for Automotive Research, an industry group in Ann Arbor, Mich., said workers should not expect too much, given the industry\u2019s cyclical nature.", "paragraph_answer": "Cathy Clegg, the General Motors vice president for North American manufacturing and labor relations, said in a statement about the agreement, \u201cWorking with our U.A.W. partners, we developed constructive solutions that benefit employees and provide flexibility for the company to respond to the needs of the marketplace.\u201d David Cole, chairman emeritus of the Center for Automotive Research, an industry group in Ann Arbor, Mich., said workers should not expect too much, given the industry\u2019s cyclical nature.", "sentence_answer": "Cathy Clegg, the General Motors vice president for North American manufacturing and labor relations, said in a statement about the agreement, \u201cWorking with our U.A.W. partners, we developed constructive solutions that benefit employees and provide flexibility for the company to respond to the needs of the marketplace.\u201d"} -{"question": "Who does David Cole work for?", "paragraph": "Cathy Clegg, the General Motors vice president for North American manufacturing and labor relations, said in a statement about the agreement, \u201cWorking with our U.A.W. partners, we developed constructive solutions that benefit employees and provide flexibility for the company to respond to the needs of the marketplace.\u201d David Cole, chairman emeritus of the Center for Automotive Research, an industry group in Ann Arbor, Mich., said workers should not expect too much, given the industry\u2019s cyclical nature.", "answer": "Center for Automotive Research", "sentence": "David Cole, chairman emeritus of the Center for Automotive Research , an industry group in Ann Arbor, Mich., said workers should not expect too much, given the industry\u2019s cyclical nature.", "paragraph_sentence": "Cathy Clegg, the General Motors vice president for North American manufacturing and labor relations, said in a statement about the agreement, \u201cWorking with our U.A.W. partners, we developed constructive solutions that benefit employees and provide flexibility for the company to respond to the needs of the marketplace.\u201d David Cole, chairman emeritus of the Center for Automotive Research , an industry group in Ann Arbor, Mich., said workers should not expect too much, given the industry\u2019s cyclical nature. ", "paragraph_answer": "Cathy Clegg, the General Motors vice president for North American manufacturing and labor relations, said in a statement about the agreement, \u201cWorking with our U.A.W. partners, we developed constructive solutions that benefit employees and provide flexibility for the company to respond to the needs of the marketplace.\u201d David Cole, chairman emeritus of the Center for Automotive Research , an industry group in Ann Arbor, Mich., said workers should not expect too much, given the industry\u2019s cyclical nature.", "sentence_answer": "David Cole, chairman emeritus of the Center for Automotive Research , an industry group in Ann Arbor, Mich., said workers should not expect too much, given the industry\u2019s cyclical nature."} -{"question": "What is the nature of the automobile industry?", "paragraph": "Cathy Clegg, the General Motors vice president for North American manufacturing and labor relations, said in a statement about the agreement, \u201cWorking with our U.A.W. partners, we developed constructive solutions that benefit employees and provide flexibility for the company to respond to the needs of the marketplace.\u201d David Cole, chairman emeritus of the Center for Automotive Research, an industry group in Ann Arbor, Mich., said workers should not expect too much, given the industry\u2019s cyclical nature.", "answer": "cyclical", "sentence": "David Cole, chairman emeritus of the Center for Automotive Research, an industry group in Ann Arbor, Mich., said workers should not expect too much, given the industry\u2019s cyclical nature.", "paragraph_sentence": "Cathy Clegg, the General Motors vice president for North American manufacturing and labor relations, said in a statement about the agreement, \u201cWorking with our U.A.W. partners, we developed constructive solutions that benefit employees and provide flexibility for the company to respond to the needs of the marketplace.\u201d David Cole, chairman emeritus of the Center for Automotive Research, an industry group in Ann Arbor, Mich., said workers should not expect too much, given the industry\u2019s cyclical nature. ", "paragraph_answer": "Cathy Clegg, the General Motors vice president for North American manufacturing and labor relations, said in a statement about the agreement, \u201cWorking with our U.A.W. partners, we developed constructive solutions that benefit employees and provide flexibility for the company to respond to the needs of the marketplace.\u201d David Cole, chairman emeritus of the Center for Automotive Research, an industry group in Ann Arbor, Mich., said workers should not expect too much, given the industry\u2019s cyclical nature.", "sentence_answer": "David Cole, chairman emeritus of the Center for Automotive Research, an industry group in Ann Arbor, Mich., said workers should not expect too much, given the industry\u2019s cyclical nature."} -{"question": "Who is Clegg and GM working with?", "paragraph": "Cathy Clegg, the General Motors vice president for North American manufacturing and labor relations, said in a statement about the agreement, \u201cWorking with our U.A.W. partners, we developed constructive solutions that benefit employees and provide flexibility for the company to respond to the needs of the marketplace.\u201d David Cole, chairman emeritus of the Center for Automotive Research, an industry group in Ann Arbor, Mich., said workers should not expect too much, given the industry\u2019s cyclical nature.", "answer": "U.A.W.", "sentence": "Cathy Clegg, the General Motors vice president for North American manufacturing and labor relations, said in a statement about the agreement, \u201cWorking with our U.A.W. partners, we developed constructive solutions that benefit employees and provide flexibility for the company to respond to the needs of the marketplace.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Cathy Clegg, the General Motors vice president for North American manufacturing and labor relations, said in a statement about the agreement, \u201cWorking with our U.A.W. partners, we developed constructive solutions that benefit employees and provide flexibility for the company to respond to the needs of the marketplace.\u201d David Cole, chairman emeritus of the Center for Automotive Research, an industry group in Ann Arbor, Mich., said workers should not expect too much, given the industry\u2019s cyclical nature.", "paragraph_answer": "Cathy Clegg, the General Motors vice president for North American manufacturing and labor relations, said in a statement about the agreement, \u201cWorking with our U.A.W. partners, we developed constructive solutions that benefit employees and provide flexibility for the company to respond to the needs of the marketplace.\u201d David Cole, chairman emeritus of the Center for Automotive Research, an industry group in Ann Arbor, Mich., said workers should not expect too much, given the industry\u2019s cyclical nature.", "sentence_answer": "Cathy Clegg, the General Motors vice president for North American manufacturing and labor relations, said in a statement about the agreement, \u201cWorking with our U.A.W. partners, we developed constructive solutions that benefit employees and provide flexibility for the company to respond to the needs of the marketplace.\u201d"} -{"question": "Where did Maria and Randy arrive to?", "paragraph": "A legal fight over the struggle for ownership of an artwork is hardly the stuff of high drama. And the screenplay can\u2019t find a way to make that conflict, or the ethical and moral issues involved, compelling beyond the obvious guessing game of who will win. Maria\u2019s ambivalence about continuing to pursue what sometimes seems to be a hopeless quest is the dramatic core of the film. Once she and Randy arrive in Vienna, the paperwork concerning the painting\u2019s history is withheld from them. Only with the help of a local journalist (Daniel Br\u00fchl) can they penetrate the wall of secrecy and evasion and learn that the painting, commissioned by Adele\u2019s husband, and later acquired by the Belvedere\u2019s duplicitous curator, belonged not to Adele, but to her husband, who willed it to his heirs.", "answer": "Vienna", "sentence": "Once she and Randy arrive in Vienna , the paperwork concerning the painting\u2019s history is withheld from them.", "paragraph_sentence": "A legal fight over the struggle for ownership of an artwork is hardly the stuff of high drama. And the screenplay can\u2019t find a way to make that conflict, or the ethical and moral issues involved, compelling beyond the obvious guessing game of who will win. Maria\u2019s ambivalence about continuing to pursue what sometimes seems to be a hopeless quest is the dramatic core of the film. Once she and Randy arrive in Vienna , the paperwork concerning the painting\u2019s history is withheld from them. Only with the help of a local journalist (Daniel Br\u00fchl) can they penetrate the wall of secrecy and evasion and learn that the painting, commissioned by Adele\u2019s husband, and later acquired by the Belvedere\u2019s duplicitous curator, belonged not to Adele, but to her husband, who willed it to his heirs.", "paragraph_answer": "A legal fight over the struggle for ownership of an artwork is hardly the stuff of high drama. And the screenplay can\u2019t find a way to make that conflict, or the ethical and moral issues involved, compelling beyond the obvious guessing game of who will win. Maria\u2019s ambivalence about continuing to pursue what sometimes seems to be a hopeless quest is the dramatic core of the film. Once she and Randy arrive in Vienna , the paperwork concerning the painting\u2019s history is withheld from them. Only with the help of a local journalist (Daniel Br\u00fchl) can they penetrate the wall of secrecy and evasion and learn that the painting, commissioned by Adele\u2019s husband, and later acquired by the Belvedere\u2019s duplicitous curator, belonged not to Adele, but to her husband, who willed it to his heirs.", "sentence_answer": "Once she and Randy arrive in Vienna , the paperwork concerning the painting\u2019s history is withheld from them."} -{"question": "Who helps them penetrate the wall of secrecy?", "paragraph": "A legal fight over the struggle for ownership of an artwork is hardly the stuff of high drama. And the screenplay can\u2019t find a way to make that conflict, or the ethical and moral issues involved, compelling beyond the obvious guessing game of who will win. Maria\u2019s ambivalence about continuing to pursue what sometimes seems to be a hopeless quest is the dramatic core of the film. Once she and Randy arrive in Vienna, the paperwork concerning the painting\u2019s history is withheld from them. Only with the help of a local journalist (Daniel Br\u00fchl) can they penetrate the wall of secrecy and evasion and learn that the painting, commissioned by Adele\u2019s husband, and later acquired by the Belvedere\u2019s duplicitous curator, belonged not to Adele, but to her husband, who willed it to his heirs.", "answer": "Daniel Br\u00fchl", "sentence": "Only with the help of a local journalist ( Daniel Br\u00fchl ) can they penetrate the wall of secrecy and evasion and learn that the painting, commissioned by Adele\u2019s husband, and later acquired by the Belvedere\u2019s duplicitous curator, belonged not to Adele, but to her husband, who willed it to his heirs.", "paragraph_sentence": "A legal fight over the struggle for ownership of an artwork is hardly the stuff of high drama. And the screenplay can\u2019t find a way to make that conflict, or the ethical and moral issues involved, compelling beyond the obvious guessing game of who will win. Maria\u2019s ambivalence about continuing to pursue what sometimes seems to be a hopeless quest is the dramatic core of the film. Once she and Randy arrive in Vienna, the paperwork concerning the painting\u2019s history is withheld from them. Only with the help of a local journalist ( Daniel Br\u00fchl ) can they penetrate the wall of secrecy and evasion and learn that the painting, commissioned by Adele\u2019s husband, and later acquired by the Belvedere\u2019s duplicitous curator, belonged not to Adele, but to her husband, who willed it to his heirs. ", "paragraph_answer": "A legal fight over the struggle for ownership of an artwork is hardly the stuff of high drama. And the screenplay can\u2019t find a way to make that conflict, or the ethical and moral issues involved, compelling beyond the obvious guessing game of who will win. Maria\u2019s ambivalence about continuing to pursue what sometimes seems to be a hopeless quest is the dramatic core of the film. Once she and Randy arrive in Vienna, the paperwork concerning the painting\u2019s history is withheld from them. Only with the help of a local journalist ( Daniel Br\u00fchl ) can they penetrate the wall of secrecy and evasion and learn that the painting, commissioned by Adele\u2019s husband, and later acquired by the Belvedere\u2019s duplicitous curator, belonged not to Adele, but to her husband, who willed it to his heirs.", "sentence_answer": "Only with the help of a local journalist ( Daniel Br\u00fchl ) can they penetrate the wall of secrecy and evasion and learn that the painting, commissioned by Adele\u2019s husband, and later acquired by the Belvedere\u2019s duplicitous curator, belonged not to Adele, but to her husband, who willed it to his heirs."} -{"question": "What is withheld from them?", "paragraph": "A legal fight over the struggle for ownership of an artwork is hardly the stuff of high drama. And the screenplay can\u2019t find a way to make that conflict, or the ethical and moral issues involved, compelling beyond the obvious guessing game of who will win. Maria\u2019s ambivalence about continuing to pursue what sometimes seems to be a hopeless quest is the dramatic core of the film. Once she and Randy arrive in Vienna, the paperwork concerning the painting\u2019s history is withheld from them. Only with the help of a local journalist (Daniel Br\u00fchl) can they penetrate the wall of secrecy and evasion and learn that the painting, commissioned by Adele\u2019s husband, and later acquired by the Belvedere\u2019s duplicitous curator, belonged not to Adele, but to her husband, who willed it to his heirs.", "answer": "the paperwork concerning the painting\u2019s history", "sentence": "Once she and Randy arrive in Vienna, the paperwork concerning the painting\u2019s history is withheld from them.", "paragraph_sentence": "A legal fight over the struggle for ownership of an artwork is hardly the stuff of high drama. And the screenplay can\u2019t find a way to make that conflict, or the ethical and moral issues involved, compelling beyond the obvious guessing game of who will win. Maria\u2019s ambivalence about continuing to pursue what sometimes seems to be a hopeless quest is the dramatic core of the film. Once she and Randy arrive in Vienna, the paperwork concerning the painting\u2019s history is withheld from them. Only with the help of a local journalist (Daniel Br\u00fchl) can they penetrate the wall of secrecy and evasion and learn that the painting, commissioned by Adele\u2019s husband, and later acquired by the Belvedere\u2019s duplicitous curator, belonged not to Adele, but to her husband, who willed it to his heirs.", "paragraph_answer": "A legal fight over the struggle for ownership of an artwork is hardly the stuff of high drama. And the screenplay can\u2019t find a way to make that conflict, or the ethical and moral issues involved, compelling beyond the obvious guessing game of who will win. Maria\u2019s ambivalence about continuing to pursue what sometimes seems to be a hopeless quest is the dramatic core of the film. Once she and Randy arrive in Vienna, the paperwork concerning the painting\u2019s history is withheld from them. Only with the help of a local journalist (Daniel Br\u00fchl) can they penetrate the wall of secrecy and evasion and learn that the painting, commissioned by Adele\u2019s husband, and later acquired by the Belvedere\u2019s duplicitous curator, belonged not to Adele, but to her husband, who willed it to his heirs.", "sentence_answer": "Once she and Randy arrive in Vienna, the paperwork concerning the painting\u2019s history is withheld from them."} -{"question": "What is Daniel Bruhl's profession?", "paragraph": "A legal fight over the struggle for ownership of an artwork is hardly the stuff of high drama. And the screenplay can\u2019t find a way to make that conflict, or the ethical and moral issues involved, compelling beyond the obvious guessing game of who will win. Maria\u2019s ambivalence about continuing to pursue what sometimes seems to be a hopeless quest is the dramatic core of the film. Once she and Randy arrive in Vienna, the paperwork concerning the painting\u2019s history is withheld from them. Only with the help of a local journalist (Daniel Br\u00fchl) can they penetrate the wall of secrecy and evasion and learn that the painting, commissioned by Adele\u2019s husband, and later acquired by the Belvedere\u2019s duplicitous curator, belonged not to Adele, but to her husband, who willed it to his heirs.", "answer": "Adele\u2019s husband", "sentence": "Only with the help of a local journalist (Daniel Br\u00fchl) can they penetrate the wall of secrecy and evasion and learn that the painting, commissioned by Adele\u2019s husband , and later acquired by the Belvedere\u2019s duplicitous curator, belonged not to Adele, but to her husband, who willed it to his heirs.", "paragraph_sentence": "A legal fight over the struggle for ownership of an artwork is hardly the stuff of high drama. And the screenplay can\u2019t find a way to make that conflict, or the ethical and moral issues involved, compelling beyond the obvious guessing game of who will win. Maria\u2019s ambivalence about continuing to pursue what sometimes seems to be a hopeless quest is the dramatic core of the film. Once she and Randy arrive in Vienna, the paperwork concerning the painting\u2019s history is withheld from them. Only with the help of a local journalist (Daniel Br\u00fchl) can they penetrate the wall of secrecy and evasion and learn that the painting, commissioned by Adele\u2019s husband , and later acquired by the Belvedere\u2019s duplicitous curator, belonged not to Adele, but to her husband, who willed it to his heirs. ", "paragraph_answer": "A legal fight over the struggle for ownership of an artwork is hardly the stuff of high drama. And the screenplay can\u2019t find a way to make that conflict, or the ethical and moral issues involved, compelling beyond the obvious guessing game of who will win. Maria\u2019s ambivalence about continuing to pursue what sometimes seems to be a hopeless quest is the dramatic core of the film. Once she and Randy arrive in Vienna, the paperwork concerning the painting\u2019s history is withheld from them. Only with the help of a local journalist (Daniel Br\u00fchl) can they penetrate the wall of secrecy and evasion and learn that the painting, commissioned by Adele\u2019s husband , and later acquired by the Belvedere\u2019s duplicitous curator, belonged not to Adele, but to her husband, who willed it to his heirs.", "sentence_answer": "Only with the help of a local journalist (Daniel Br\u00fchl) can they penetrate the wall of secrecy and evasion and learn that the painting, commissioned by Adele\u2019s husband , and later acquired by the Belvedere\u2019s duplicitous curator, belonged not to Adele, but to her husband, who willed it to his heirs."} -{"question": "Who was the painting commissioned by?", "paragraph": "A legal fight over the struggle for ownership of an artwork is hardly the stuff of high drama. And the screenplay can\u2019t find a way to make that conflict, or the ethical and moral issues involved, compelling beyond the obvious guessing game of who will win. Maria\u2019s ambivalence about continuing to pursue what sometimes seems to be a hopeless quest is the dramatic core of the film. Once she and Randy arrive in Vienna, the paperwork concerning the painting\u2019s history is withheld from them. Only with the help of a local journalist (Daniel Br\u00fchl) can they penetrate the wall of secrecy and evasion and learn that the painting, commissioned by Adele\u2019s husband, and later acquired by the Belvedere\u2019s duplicitous curator, belonged not to Adele, but to her husband, who willed it to his heirs.", "answer": "Adele\u2019s husband", "sentence": "Only with the help of a local journalist (Daniel Br\u00fchl) can they penetrate the wall of secrecy and evasion and learn that the painting, commissioned by Adele\u2019s husband , and later acquired by the Belvedere\u2019s duplicitous curator, belonged not to Adele, but to her husband, who willed it to his heirs.", "paragraph_sentence": "A legal fight over the struggle for ownership of an artwork is hardly the stuff of high drama. And the screenplay can\u2019t find a way to make that conflict, or the ethical and moral issues involved, compelling beyond the obvious guessing game of who will win. Maria\u2019s ambivalence about continuing to pursue what sometimes seems to be a hopeless quest is the dramatic core of the film. Once she and Randy arrive in Vienna, the paperwork concerning the painting\u2019s history is withheld from them. Only with the help of a local journalist (Daniel Br\u00fchl) can they penetrate the wall of secrecy and evasion and learn that the painting, commissioned by Adele\u2019s husband , and later acquired by the Belvedere\u2019s duplicitous curator, belonged not to Adele, but to her husband, who willed it to his heirs. ", "paragraph_answer": "A legal fight over the struggle for ownership of an artwork is hardly the stuff of high drama. And the screenplay can\u2019t find a way to make that conflict, or the ethical and moral issues involved, compelling beyond the obvious guessing game of who will win. Maria\u2019s ambivalence about continuing to pursue what sometimes seems to be a hopeless quest is the dramatic core of the film. Once she and Randy arrive in Vienna, the paperwork concerning the painting\u2019s history is withheld from them. Only with the help of a local journalist (Daniel Br\u00fchl) can they penetrate the wall of secrecy and evasion and learn that the painting, commissioned by Adele\u2019s husband , and later acquired by the Belvedere\u2019s duplicitous curator, belonged not to Adele, but to her husband, who willed it to his heirs.", "sentence_answer": "Only with the help of a local journalist (Daniel Br\u00fchl) can they penetrate the wall of secrecy and evasion and learn that the painting, commissioned by Adele\u2019s husband , and later acquired by the Belvedere\u2019s duplicitous curator, belonged not to Adele, but to her husband, who willed it to his heirs."} -{"question": "How many people did Legionnaire's disease kill?", "paragraph": "5. New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 101 people and killed 10. But city and state officials sometimes tripped over each other to claim credit for responding. 6. Two Army women have made it through most of the arduous course of the elite Ranger School and stand a strong chance of being the first females to graduate. But if so, they will still be barred from the combat roles their male counterparts qualify for. 7. It\u2019s been a year since the unarmed black youth Michael Brown was fatally shot by a white police officer, at the spot marked by this repaved patch of street. A Times analysis finds that, despite the intervening intense debates and promises of change, Ferguson, Mo., remains one of the most segregated places in the country.", "answer": "10", "sentence": "New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 10 1 people and killed 10.", "paragraph_sentence": "5. New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 10 1 people and killed 10. But city and state officials sometimes tripped over each other to claim credit for responding. 6. Two Army women have made it through most of the arduous course of the elite Ranger School and stand a strong chance of being the first females to graduate. But if so, they will still be barred from the combat roles their male counterparts qualify for. 7. It\u2019s been a year since the unarmed black youth Michael Brown was fatally shot by a white police officer, at the spot marked by this repaved patch of street. A Times analysis finds that, despite the intervening intense debates and promises of change, Ferguson, Mo., remains one of the most segregated places in the country.", "paragraph_answer": "5. New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 10 1 people and killed 10. But city and state officials sometimes tripped over each other to claim credit for responding. 6. Two Army women have made it through most of the arduous course of the elite Ranger School and stand a strong chance of being the first females to graduate. But if so, they will still be barred from the combat roles their male counterparts qualify for. 7. It\u2019s been a year since the unarmed black youth Michael Brown was fatally shot by a white police officer, at the spot marked by this repaved patch of street. A Times analysis finds that, despite the intervening intense debates and promises of change, Ferguson, Mo., remains one of the most segregated places in the country.", "sentence_answer": "New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 10 1 people and killed 10."} -{"question": "How many women made it through ranger school?", "paragraph": "5. New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 101 people and killed 10. But city and state officials sometimes tripped over each other to claim credit for responding. 6. Two Army women have made it through most of the arduous course of the elite Ranger School and stand a strong chance of being the first females to graduate. But if so, they will still be barred from the combat roles their male counterparts qualify for. 7. It\u2019s been a year since the unarmed black youth Michael Brown was fatally shot by a white police officer, at the spot marked by this repaved patch of street. A Times analysis finds that, despite the intervening intense debates and promises of change, Ferguson, Mo., remains one of the most segregated places in the country.", "answer": "Two Army women", "sentence": "Two Army women have made it through most of the arduous course of the elite Ranger School and stand a strong chance of being the first females to graduate.", "paragraph_sentence": "5. New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 101 people and killed 10. But city and state officials sometimes tripped over each other to claim credit for responding. 6. Two Army women have made it through most of the arduous course of the elite Ranger School and stand a strong chance of being the first females to graduate. But if so, they will still be barred from the combat roles their male counterparts qualify for. 7. It\u2019s been a year since the unarmed black youth Michael Brown was fatally shot by a white police officer, at the spot marked by this repaved patch of street. A Times analysis finds that, despite the intervening intense debates and promises of change, Ferguson, Mo., remains one of the most segregated places in the country.", "paragraph_answer": "5. New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 101 people and killed 10. But city and state officials sometimes tripped over each other to claim credit for responding. 6. Two Army women have made it through most of the arduous course of the elite Ranger School and stand a strong chance of being the first females to graduate. But if so, they will still be barred from the combat roles their male counterparts qualify for. 7. It\u2019s been a year since the unarmed black youth Michael Brown was fatally shot by a white police officer, at the spot marked by this repaved patch of street. A Times analysis finds that, despite the intervening intense debates and promises of change, Ferguson, Mo., remains one of the most segregated places in the country.", "sentence_answer": " Two Army women have made it through most of the arduous course of the elite Ranger School and stand a strong chance of being the first females to graduate."} -{"question": "Who was Michael Brown shot by?", "paragraph": "5. New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 101 people and killed 10. But city and state officials sometimes tripped over each other to claim credit for responding. 6. Two Army women have made it through most of the arduous course of the elite Ranger School and stand a strong chance of being the first females to graduate. But if so, they will still be barred from the combat roles their male counterparts qualify for. 7. It\u2019s been a year since the unarmed black youth Michael Brown was fatally shot by a white police officer, at the spot marked by this repaved patch of street. A Times analysis finds that, despite the intervening intense debates and promises of change, Ferguson, Mo., remains one of the most segregated places in the country.", "answer": "white police officer", "sentence": "a white police officer , at the spot marked by this repaved patch of street.", "paragraph_sentence": "5. New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 101 people and killed 10. But city and state officials sometimes tripped over each other to claim credit for responding. 6. Two Army women have made it through most of the arduous course of the elite Ranger School and stand a strong chance of being the first females to graduate. But if so, they will still be barred from the combat roles their male counterparts qualify for. 7. It\u2019s been a year since the unarmed black youth Michael Brown was fatally shot by a white police officer , at the spot marked by this repaved patch of street. A Times analysis finds that, despite the intervening intense debates and promises of change, Ferguson, Mo., remains one of the most segregated places in the country.", "paragraph_answer": "5. New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 101 people and killed 10. But city and state officials sometimes tripped over each other to claim credit for responding. 6. Two Army women have made it through most of the arduous course of the elite Ranger School and stand a strong chance of being the first females to graduate. But if so, they will still be barred from the combat roles their male counterparts qualify for. 7. It\u2019s been a year since the unarmed black youth Michael Brown was fatally shot by a white police officer , at the spot marked by this repaved patch of street. A Times analysis finds that, despite the intervening intense debates and promises of change, Ferguson, Mo., remains one of the most segregated places in the country.", "sentence_answer": "a white police officer , at the spot marked by this repaved patch of street."} -{"question": "What is the most segregated place in the country?", "paragraph": "5. New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 101 people and killed 10. But city and state officials sometimes tripped over each other to claim credit for responding. 6. Two Army women have made it through most of the arduous course of the elite Ranger School and stand a strong chance of being the first females to graduate. But if so, they will still be barred from the combat roles their male counterparts qualify for. 7. It\u2019s been a year since the unarmed black youth Michael Brown was fatally shot by a white police officer, at the spot marked by this repaved patch of street. A Times analysis finds that, despite the intervening intense debates and promises of change, Ferguson, Mo., remains one of the most segregated places in the country.", "answer": "Ferguson, Mo.", "sentence": "A Times analysis finds that, despite the intervening intense debates and promises of change, Ferguson, Mo. , remains one of the most segregated places in the country.", "paragraph_sentence": "5. New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 101 people and killed 10. But city and state officials sometimes tripped over each other to claim credit for responding. 6. Two Army women have made it through most of the arduous course of the elite Ranger School and stand a strong chance of being the first females to graduate. But if so, they will still be barred from the combat roles their male counterparts qualify for. 7. It\u2019s been a year since the unarmed black youth Michael Brown was fatally shot by a white police officer, at the spot marked by this repaved patch of street. A Times analysis finds that, despite the intervening intense debates and promises of change, Ferguson, Mo. , remains one of the most segregated places in the country. ", "paragraph_answer": "5. New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 101 people and killed 10. But city and state officials sometimes tripped over each other to claim credit for responding. 6. Two Army women have made it through most of the arduous course of the elite Ranger School and stand a strong chance of being the first females to graduate. But if so, they will still be barred from the combat roles their male counterparts qualify for. 7. It\u2019s been a year since the unarmed black youth Michael Brown was fatally shot by a white police officer, at the spot marked by this repaved patch of street. A Times analysis finds that, despite the intervening intense debates and promises of change, Ferguson, Mo. , remains one of the most segregated places in the country.", "sentence_answer": "A Times analysis finds that, despite the intervening intense debates and promises of change, Ferguson, Mo. , remains one of the most segregated places in the country."} -{"question": "How many people got sick from Legionnaire's disease?", "paragraph": "5. New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 101 people and killed 10. But city and state officials sometimes tripped over each other to claim credit for responding. 6. Two Army women have made it through most of the arduous course of the elite Ranger School and stand a strong chance of being the first females to graduate. But if so, they will still be barred from the combat roles their male counterparts qualify for. 7. It\u2019s been a year since the unarmed black youth Michael Brown was fatally shot by a white police officer, at the spot marked by this repaved patch of street. A Times analysis finds that, despite the intervening intense debates and promises of change, Ferguson, Mo., remains one of the most segregated places in the country.", "answer": "101", "sentence": "New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 101 people and killed 10.", "paragraph_sentence": "5. New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 101 people and killed 10. But city and state officials sometimes tripped over each other to claim credit for responding. 6. Two Army women have made it through most of the arduous course of the elite Ranger School and stand a strong chance of being the first females to graduate. But if so, they will still be barred from the combat roles their male counterparts qualify for. 7. It\u2019s been a year since the unarmed black youth Michael Brown was fatally shot by a white police officer, at the spot marked by this repaved patch of street. A Times analysis finds that, despite the intervening intense debates and promises of change, Ferguson, Mo., remains one of the most segregated places in the country.", "paragraph_answer": "5. New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 101 people and killed 10. But city and state officials sometimes tripped over each other to claim credit for responding. 6. Two Army women have made it through most of the arduous course of the elite Ranger School and stand a strong chance of being the first females to graduate. But if so, they will still be barred from the combat roles their male counterparts qualify for. 7. It\u2019s been a year since the unarmed black youth Michael Brown was fatally shot by a white police officer, at the spot marked by this repaved patch of street. A Times analysis finds that, despite the intervening intense debates and promises of change, Ferguson, Mo., remains one of the most segregated places in the country.", "sentence_answer": "New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 101 people and killed 10."} -{"question": "Who had an incredible run at the championships?", "paragraph": "10. More aquatic news: The U.S. swimmer Katie Ledecky had an incredible run at the World Championships. The 18-year-old set three world records, won five gold medals and became the first swimmer to win the 200-, 400-, 800- and 1,500-meter freestyles in a major competition. Look out, Rio!", "answer": "Katie Ledecky", "sentence": "More aquatic news: The U.S. swimmer Katie Ledecky had an incredible run at the World Championships.", "paragraph_sentence": "10. More aquatic news: The U.S. swimmer Katie Ledecky had an incredible run at the World Championships. The 18-year-old set three world records, won five gold medals and became the first swimmer to win the 200-, 400-, 800- and 1,500-meter freestyles in a major competition. Look out, Rio!", "paragraph_answer": "10. More aquatic news: The U.S. swimmer Katie Ledecky had an incredible run at the World Championships. The 18-year-old set three world records, won five gold medals and became the first swimmer to win the 200-, 400-, 800- and 1,500-meter freestyles in a major competition. Look out, Rio!", "sentence_answer": "More aquatic news: The U.S. swimmer Katie Ledecky had an incredible run at the World Championships."} -{"question": "How many records did Katie Ledecky set?", "paragraph": "10. More aquatic news: The U.S. swimmer Katie Ledecky had an incredible run at the World Championships. The 18-year-old set three world records, won five gold medals and became the first swimmer to win the 200-, 400-, 800- and 1,500-meter freestyles in a major competition. Look out, Rio!", "answer": "three", "sentence": "The 18-year-old set three world records, won five gold medals and became the first swimmer to win the 200-, 400-, 800- and 1,500-meter freestyles in a major competition.", "paragraph_sentence": "10. More aquatic news: The U.S. swimmer Katie Ledecky had an incredible run at the World Championships. The 18-year-old set three world records, won five gold medals and became the first swimmer to win the 200-, 400-, 800- and 1,500-meter freestyles in a major competition. Look out, Rio!", "paragraph_answer": "10. More aquatic news: The U.S. swimmer Katie Ledecky had an incredible run at the World Championships. The 18-year-old set three world records, won five gold medals and became the first swimmer to win the 200-, 400-, 800- and 1,500-meter freestyles in a major competition. Look out, Rio!", "sentence_answer": "The 18-year-old set three world records, won five gold medals and became the first swimmer to win the 200-, 400-, 800- and 1,500-meter freestyles in a major competition."} -{"question": "How many gold medals did Katie win?", "paragraph": "10. More aquatic news: The U.S. swimmer Katie Ledecky had an incredible run at the World Championships. The 18-year-old set three world records, won five gold medals and became the first swimmer to win the 200-, 400-, 800- and 1,500-meter freestyles in a major competition. Look out, Rio!", "answer": "five", "sentence": "The 18-year-old set three world records, won five gold medals and became the first swimmer to win the 200-, 400-, 800- and 1,500-meter freestyles in a major competition.", "paragraph_sentence": "10. More aquatic news: The U.S. swimmer Katie Ledecky had an incredible run at the World Championships. The 18-year-old set three world records, won five gold medals and became the first swimmer to win the 200-, 400-, 800- and 1,500-meter freestyles in a major competition. Look out, Rio!", "paragraph_answer": "10. More aquatic news: The U.S. swimmer Katie Ledecky had an incredible run at the World Championships. The 18-year-old set three world records, won five gold medals and became the first swimmer to win the 200-, 400-, 800- and 1,500-meter freestyles in a major competition. Look out, Rio!", "sentence_answer": "The 18-year-old set three world records, won five gold medals and became the first swimmer to win the 200-, 400-, 800- and 1,500-meter freestyles in a major competition."} -{"question": "Which competitions did Katie win?", "paragraph": "10. More aquatic news: The U.S. swimmer Katie Ledecky had an incredible run at the World Championships. The 18-year-old set three world records, won five gold medals and became the first swimmer to win the 200-, 400-, 800- and 1,500-meter freestyles in a major competition. Look out, Rio!", "answer": "200-, 400-, 800- and 1,500-meter freestyles", "sentence": "The 18-year-old set three world records, won five gold medals and became the first swimmer to win the 200-, 400-, 800- and 1,500-meter freestyles in a major competition.", "paragraph_sentence": "10. More aquatic news: The U.S. swimmer Katie Ledecky had an incredible run at the World Championships. The 18-year-old set three world records, won five gold medals and became the first swimmer to win the 200-, 400-, 800- and 1,500-meter freestyles in a major competition. Look out, Rio!", "paragraph_answer": "10. More aquatic news: The U.S. swimmer Katie Ledecky had an incredible run at the World Championships. The 18-year-old set three world records, won five gold medals and became the first swimmer to win the 200-, 400-, 800- and 1,500-meter freestyles in a major competition. Look out, Rio!", "sentence_answer": "The 18-year-old set three world records, won five gold medals and became the first swimmer to win the 200-, 400-, 800- and 1,500-meter freestyles in a major competition."} -{"question": "How many games had the Celtics won prior to matching up with the Lakers?", "paragraph": "LAKERS 112, CELTICS 104 Kobe Bryant had 15 points and 11 rebounds for his first double-double of the season while playing what was most likely his final game in Boston. Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics, who had won four straight. Boston trailed by 11 with just over six minutes left but used a 9-0 run to close to 100-98 on Avery Bradley\u2019s dunk with 3:35 to go. It remained a 2-point game until Bryant hit his second 3-pointer of the quarter, making it 107-102 with 1:40 left. Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball, a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry.", "answer": "won four straight", "sentence": "Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics, who had won four straight .", "paragraph_sentence": "LAKERS 112, CELTICS 104 Kobe Bryant had 15 points and 11 rebounds for his first double-double of the season while playing what was most likely his final game in Boston. Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics, who had won four straight . Boston trailed by 11 with just over six minutes left but used a 9-0 run to close to 100-98 on Avery Bradley\u2019s dunk with 3:35 to go. It remained a 2-point game until Bryant hit his second 3-pointer of the quarter, making it 107-102 with 1:40 left. Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball, a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry.", "paragraph_answer": "LAKERS 112, CELTICS 104 Kobe Bryant had 15 points and 11 rebounds for his first double-double of the season while playing what was most likely his final game in Boston. Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics, who had won four straight . Boston trailed by 11 with just over six minutes left but used a 9-0 run to close to 100-98 on Avery Bradley\u2019s dunk with 3:35 to go. It remained a 2-point game until Bryant hit his second 3-pointer of the quarter, making it 107-102 with 1:40 left. Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball, a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry.", "sentence_answer": "Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics, who had won four straight ."} -{"question": "Who acquired their first double-double of the season in this match-up?", "paragraph": "LAKERS 112, CELTICS 104 Kobe Bryant had 15 points and 11 rebounds for his first double-double of the season while playing what was most likely his final game in Boston. Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics, who had won four straight. Boston trailed by 11 with just over six minutes left but used a 9-0 run to close to 100-98 on Avery Bradley\u2019s dunk with 3:35 to go. It remained a 2-point game until Bryant hit his second 3-pointer of the quarter, making it 107-102 with 1:40 left. Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball, a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry.", "answer": "Kobe Bryant", "sentence": "LAKERS 112, CELTICS 104 Kobe Bryant had 15 points and 11 rebounds for his first double-double of the season while playing what was most likely his final game in Boston.", "paragraph_sentence": " LAKERS 112, CELTICS 104 Kobe Bryant had 15 points and 11 rebounds for his first double-double of the season while playing what was most likely his final game in Boston. Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics, who had won four straight. Boston trailed by 11 with just over six minutes left but used a 9-0 run to close to 100-98 on Avery Bradley\u2019s dunk with 3:35 to go. It remained a 2-point game until Bryant hit his second 3-pointer of the quarter, making it 107-102 with 1:40 left. Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball, a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry.", "paragraph_answer": "LAKERS 112, CELTICS 104 Kobe Bryant had 15 points and 11 rebounds for his first double-double of the season while playing what was most likely his final game in Boston. Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics, who had won four straight. Boston trailed by 11 with just over six minutes left but used a 9-0 run to close to 100-98 on Avery Bradley\u2019s dunk with 3:35 to go. It remained a 2-point game until Bryant hit his second 3-pointer of the quarter, making it 107-102 with 1:40 left. Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball, a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry.", "sentence_answer": "LAKERS 112, CELTICS 104 Kobe Bryant had 15 points and 11 rebounds for his first double-double of the season while playing what was most likely his final game in Boston."} -{"question": "How did the Celtic fans react to Kobe Bryant's being in the starting lineup?", "paragraph": "LAKERS 112, CELTICS 104 Kobe Bryant had 15 points and 11 rebounds for his first double-double of the season while playing what was most likely his final game in Boston. Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics, who had won four straight. Boston trailed by 11 with just over six minutes left but used a 9-0 run to close to 100-98 on Avery Bradley\u2019s dunk with 3:35 to go. It remained a 2-point game until Bryant hit his second 3-pointer of the quarter, making it 107-102 with 1:40 left. Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball, a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry.", "answer": "Bryant received a huge ovation", "sentence": "Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball, a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry.", "paragraph_sentence": "LAKERS 112, CELTICS 104 Kobe Bryant had 15 points and 11 rebounds for his first double-double of the season while playing what was most likely his final game in Boston. Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics, who had won four straight. Boston trailed by 11 with just over six minutes left but used a 9-0 run to close to 100-98 on Avery Bradley\u2019s dunk with 3:35 to go. It remained a 2-point game until Bryant hit his second 3-pointer of the quarter, making it 107-102 with 1:40 left. Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball, a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry. ", "paragraph_answer": "LAKERS 112, CELTICS 104 Kobe Bryant had 15 points and 11 rebounds for his first double-double of the season while playing what was most likely his final game in Boston. Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics, who had won four straight. Boston trailed by 11 with just over six minutes left but used a 9-0 run to close to 100-98 on Avery Bradley\u2019s dunk with 3:35 to go. It remained a 2-point game until Bryant hit his second 3-pointer of the quarter, making it 107-102 with 1:40 left. Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball, a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry.", "sentence_answer": " Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball, a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry."} -{"question": "How many points did Evan Turner score for the Celtics?", "paragraph": "LAKERS 112, CELTICS 104 Kobe Bryant had 15 points and 11 rebounds for his first double-double of the season while playing what was most likely his final game in Boston. Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics, who had won four straight. Boston trailed by 11 with just over six minutes left but used a 9-0 run to close to 100-98 on Avery Bradley\u2019s dunk with 3:35 to go. It remained a 2-point game until Bryant hit his second 3-pointer of the quarter, making it 107-102 with 1:40 left. Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball, a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry.", "answer": "Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics", "sentence": "Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics , who had won four straight.", "paragraph_sentence": "LAKERS 112, CELTICS 104 Kobe Bryant had 15 points and 11 rebounds for his first double-double of the season while playing what was most likely his final game in Boston. Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics , who had won four straight. Boston trailed by 11 with just over six minutes left but used a 9-0 run to close to 100-98 on Avery Bradley\u2019s dunk with 3:35 to go. It remained a 2-point game until Bryant hit his second 3-pointer of the quarter, making it 107-102 with 1:40 left. Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball, a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry.", "paragraph_answer": "LAKERS 112, CELTICS 104 Kobe Bryant had 15 points and 11 rebounds for his first double-double of the season while playing what was most likely his final game in Boston. Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics , who had won four straight. Boston trailed by 11 with just over six minutes left but used a 9-0 run to close to 100-98 on Avery Bradley\u2019s dunk with 3:35 to go. It remained a 2-point game until Bryant hit his second 3-pointer of the quarter, making it 107-102 with 1:40 left. Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball, a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry.", "sentence_answer": "Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics , who had won four straight."} -{"question": "How did the Celtic fans react when Kobe Bryant touched the ball for the first time?", "paragraph": "LAKERS 112, CELTICS 104 Kobe Bryant had 15 points and 11 rebounds for his first double-double of the season while playing what was most likely his final game in Boston. Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics, who had won four straight. Boston trailed by 11 with just over six minutes left but used a 9-0 run to close to 100-98 on Avery Bradley\u2019s dunk with 3:35 to go. It remained a 2-point game until Bryant hit his second 3-pointer of the quarter, making it 107-102 with 1:40 left. Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball, a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry.", "answer": "he was jeered the first time he got the ball", "sentence": "Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball , a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry.", "paragraph_sentence": "LAKERS 112, CELTICS 104 Kobe Bryant had 15 points and 11 rebounds for his first double-double of the season while playing what was most likely his final game in Boston. Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics, who had won four straight. Boston trailed by 11 with just over six minutes left but used a 9-0 run to close to 100-98 on Avery Bradley\u2019s dunk with 3:35 to go. It remained a 2-point game until Bryant hit his second 3-pointer of the quarter, making it 107-102 with 1:40 left. Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball , a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry. ", "paragraph_answer": "LAKERS 112, CELTICS 104 Kobe Bryant had 15 points and 11 rebounds for his first double-double of the season while playing what was most likely his final game in Boston. Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics, who had won four straight. Boston trailed by 11 with just over six minutes left but used a 9-0 run to close to 100-98 on Avery Bradley\u2019s dunk with 3:35 to go. It remained a 2-point game until Bryant hit his second 3-pointer of the quarter, making it 107-102 with 1:40 left. Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball , a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry.", "sentence_answer": "Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball , a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry."} -{"question": "How many 3-point attempts did the Wizards miss in the closing seconds of the game?", "paragraph": "Otto Porter led the Wizards (14-16) with 20 points and 9 rebounds. John Wall had 19 points, 11 assists and 7 rebounds. The Raptors appeared to be in charge when they took a 90-81 lead with 3:13 to go in the fourth. But the Wizards scored the next 7 points. They cut the deficit to 1 before Kyle Lowry hit a pair of free throws and Washington missed three 3-point attempts in the final seconds.", "answer": "three 3-point attempts", "sentence": "They cut the deficit to 1 before Kyle Lowry hit a pair of free throws and Washington missed three 3-point attempts in the final seconds.", "paragraph_sentence": "Otto Porter led the Wizards (14-16) with 20 points and 9 rebounds. John Wall had 19 points, 11 assists and 7 rebounds. The Raptors appeared to be in charge when they took a 90-81 lead with 3:13 to go in the fourth. But the Wizards scored the next 7 points. They cut the deficit to 1 before Kyle Lowry hit a pair of free throws and Washington missed three 3-point attempts in the final seconds. ", "paragraph_answer": "Otto Porter led the Wizards (14-16) with 20 points and 9 rebounds. John Wall had 19 points, 11 assists and 7 rebounds. The Raptors appeared to be in charge when they took a 90-81 lead with 3:13 to go in the fourth. But the Wizards scored the next 7 points. They cut the deficit to 1 before Kyle Lowry hit a pair of free throws and Washington missed three 3-point attempts in the final seconds.", "sentence_answer": "They cut the deficit to 1 before Kyle Lowry hit a pair of free throws and Washington missed three 3-point attempts in the final seconds."} -{"question": "What player had a double-double and just missed a triple-double?", "paragraph": "Otto Porter led the Wizards (14-16) with 20 points and 9 rebounds. John Wall had 19 points, 11 assists and 7 rebounds. The Raptors appeared to be in charge when they took a 90-81 lead with 3:13 to go in the fourth. But the Wizards scored the next 7 points. They cut the deficit to 1 before Kyle Lowry hit a pair of free throws and Washington missed three 3-point attempts in the final seconds.", "answer": "John Wall", "sentence": "John Wall had 19 points, 11 assists and 7 rebounds.", "paragraph_sentence": "Otto Porter led the Wizards (14-16) with 20 points and 9 rebounds. John Wall had 19 points, 11 assists and 7 rebounds. The Raptors appeared to be in charge when they took a 90-81 lead with 3:13 to go in the fourth. But the Wizards scored the next 7 points. They cut the deficit to 1 before Kyle Lowry hit a pair of free throws and Washington missed three 3-point attempts in the final seconds.", "paragraph_answer": "Otto Porter led the Wizards (14-16) with 20 points and 9 rebounds. John Wall had 19 points, 11 assists and 7 rebounds. The Raptors appeared to be in charge when they took a 90-81 lead with 3:13 to go in the fourth. But the Wizards scored the next 7 points. They cut the deficit to 1 before Kyle Lowry hit a pair of free throws and Washington missed three 3-point attempts in the final seconds.", "sentence_answer": " John Wall had 19 points, 11 assists and 7 rebounds."} -{"question": "What Raptor player extended the lead with a pair of free throws?", "paragraph": "Otto Porter led the Wizards (14-16) with 20 points and 9 rebounds. John Wall had 19 points, 11 assists and 7 rebounds. The Raptors appeared to be in charge when they took a 90-81 lead with 3:13 to go in the fourth. But the Wizards scored the next 7 points. They cut the deficit to 1 before Kyle Lowry hit a pair of free throws and Washington missed three 3-point attempts in the final seconds.", "answer": "Kyle Lowry", "sentence": "They cut the deficit to 1 before Kyle Lowry hit a pair of free throws and Washington missed three 3-point attempts in the final seconds.", "paragraph_sentence": "Otto Porter led the Wizards (14-16) with 20 points and 9 rebounds. John Wall had 19 points, 11 assists and 7 rebounds. The Raptors appeared to be in charge when they took a 90-81 lead with 3:13 to go in the fourth. But the Wizards scored the next 7 points. They cut the deficit to 1 before Kyle Lowry hit a pair of free throws and Washington missed three 3-point attempts in the final seconds. ", "paragraph_answer": "Otto Porter led the Wizards (14-16) with 20 points and 9 rebounds. John Wall had 19 points, 11 assists and 7 rebounds. The Raptors appeared to be in charge when they took a 90-81 lead with 3:13 to go in the fourth. But the Wizards scored the next 7 points. They cut the deficit to 1 before Kyle Lowry hit a pair of free throws and Washington missed three 3-point attempts in the final seconds.", "sentence_answer": "They cut the deficit to 1 before Kyle Lowry hit a pair of free throws and Washington missed three 3-point attempts in the final seconds."} -{"question": "How many unanswered points did the Wizards score in the closing minutes of the game?", "paragraph": "Otto Porter led the Wizards (14-16) with 20 points and 9 rebounds. John Wall had 19 points, 11 assists and 7 rebounds. The Raptors appeared to be in charge when they took a 90-81 lead with 3:13 to go in the fourth. But the Wizards scored the next 7 points. They cut the deficit to 1 before Kyle Lowry hit a pair of free throws and Washington missed three 3-point attempts in the final seconds.", "answer": "7 points", "sentence": "But the Wizards scored the next 7 points .", "paragraph_sentence": "Otto Porter led the Wizards (14-16) with 20 points and 9 rebounds. John Wall had 19 points, 11 assists and 7 rebounds. The Raptors appeared to be in charge when they took a 90-81 lead with 3:13 to go in the fourth. But the Wizards scored the next 7 points . They cut the deficit to 1 before Kyle Lowry hit a pair of free throws and Washington missed three 3-point attempts in the final seconds.", "paragraph_answer": "Otto Porter led the Wizards (14-16) with 20 points and 9 rebounds. John Wall had 19 points, 11 assists and 7 rebounds. The Raptors appeared to be in charge when they took a 90-81 lead with 3:13 to go in the fourth. But the Wizards scored the next 7 points . They cut the deficit to 1 before Kyle Lowry hit a pair of free throws and Washington missed three 3-point attempts in the final seconds.", "sentence_answer": "But the Wizards scored the next 7 points ."} -{"question": "Which Washington player led in points and rebounds?", "paragraph": "Otto Porter led the Wizards (14-16) with 20 points and 9 rebounds. John Wall had 19 points, 11 assists and 7 rebounds. The Raptors appeared to be in charge when they took a 90-81 lead with 3:13 to go in the fourth. But the Wizards scored the next 7 points. They cut the deficit to 1 before Kyle Lowry hit a pair of free throws and Washington missed three 3-point attempts in the final seconds.", "answer": "Otto Porter", "sentence": "Otto Porter led the Wizards (14-16) with 20 points and 9 rebounds.", "paragraph_sentence": " Otto Porter led the Wizards (14-16) with 20 points and 9 rebounds. John Wall had 19 points, 11 assists and 7 rebounds. The Raptors appeared to be in charge when they took a 90-81 lead with 3:13 to go in the fourth. But the Wizards scored the next 7 points. They cut the deficit to 1 before Kyle Lowry hit a pair of free throws and Washington missed three 3-point attempts in the final seconds.", "paragraph_answer": " Otto Porter led the Wizards (14-16) with 20 points and 9 rebounds. John Wall had 19 points, 11 assists and 7 rebounds. The Raptors appeared to be in charge when they took a 90-81 lead with 3:13 to go in the fourth. But the Wizards scored the next 7 points. They cut the deficit to 1 before Kyle Lowry hit a pair of free throws and Washington missed three 3-point attempts in the final seconds.", "sentence_answer": " Otto Porter led the Wizards (14-16) with 20 points and 9 rebounds."} -{"question": "In the game which Utah player did not compete?", "paragraph": "Ricky Rubio tied a career high with 17 assists for the Timberwolves, who held off a late charge from the Jazz that cut a 15-point deficit to 6 even as Utah was playing without Derrick Favors. Trey Burke scored all 23 of his points in the second half for Utah. The Jazz have been gutted by injuries to much of their foundation, including Rudy Gobert, Dante Exum and Alec Burks. Relying on replacements for them and for Favors has left the team playing sloppy basketball of late. SPURS 112, SUNS 79 LaMarcus Aldridge had 21 points and 12 rebounds, and San Antonio easily won its 19th straight home game to start the season. The Spurs also extended their franchise-record home winning streak to 28 straight games dating to last season.", "answer": "Derrick Favors", "sentence": "Ricky Rubio tied a career high with 17 assists for the Timberwolves, who held off a late charge from the Jazz that cut a 15-point deficit to 6 even as Utah was playing without Derrick Favors .", "paragraph_sentence": " Ricky Rubio tied a career high with 17 assists for the Timberwolves, who held off a late charge from the Jazz that cut a 15-point deficit to 6 even as Utah was playing without Derrick Favors . Trey Burke scored all 23 of his points in the second half for Utah. The Jazz have been gutted by injuries to much of their foundation, including Rudy Gobert, Dante Exum and Alec Burks. Relying on replacements for them and for Favors has left the team playing sloppy basketball of late. SPURS 112, SUNS 79 LaMarcus Aldridge had 21 points and 12 rebounds, and San Antonio easily won its 19th straight home game to start the season. The Spurs also extended their franchise-record home winning streak to 28 straight games dating to last season.", "paragraph_answer": "Ricky Rubio tied a career high with 17 assists for the Timberwolves, who held off a late charge from the Jazz that cut a 15-point deficit to 6 even as Utah was playing without Derrick Favors . Trey Burke scored all 23 of his points in the second half for Utah. The Jazz have been gutted by injuries to much of their foundation, including Rudy Gobert, Dante Exum and Alec Burks. Relying on replacements for them and for Favors has left the team playing sloppy basketball of late. SPURS 112, SUNS 79 LaMarcus Aldridge had 21 points and 12 rebounds, and San Antonio easily won its 19th straight home game to start the season. The Spurs also extended their franchise-record home winning streak to 28 straight games dating to last season.", "sentence_answer": "Ricky Rubio tied a career high with 17 assists for the Timberwolves, who held off a late charge from the Jazz that cut a 15-point deficit to 6 even as Utah was playing without Derrick Favors ."} -{"question": "How many games is the current home winning streak of San Antonio?", "paragraph": "Ricky Rubio tied a career high with 17 assists for the Timberwolves, who held off a late charge from the Jazz that cut a 15-point deficit to 6 even as Utah was playing without Derrick Favors. Trey Burke scored all 23 of his points in the second half for Utah. The Jazz have been gutted by injuries to much of their foundation, including Rudy Gobert, Dante Exum and Alec Burks. Relying on replacements for them and for Favors has left the team playing sloppy basketball of late. SPURS 112, SUNS 79 LaMarcus Aldridge had 21 points and 12 rebounds, and San Antonio easily won its 19th straight home game to start the season. The Spurs also extended their franchise-record home winning streak to 28 straight games dating to last season.", "answer": "28 straight games", "sentence": "The Spurs also extended their franchise-record home winning streak to 28 straight games dating to last season.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ricky Rubio tied a career high with 17 assists for the Timberwolves, who held off a late charge from the Jazz that cut a 15-point deficit to 6 even as Utah was playing without Derrick Favors. Trey Burke scored all 23 of his points in the second half for Utah. The Jazz have been gutted by injuries to much of their foundation, including Rudy Gobert, Dante Exum and Alec Burks. Relying on replacements for them and for Favors has left the team playing sloppy basketball of late. SPURS 112, SUNS 79 LaMarcus Aldridge had 21 points and 12 rebounds, and San Antonio easily won its 19th straight home game to start the season. The Spurs also extended their franchise-record home winning streak to 28 straight games dating to last season. ", "paragraph_answer": "Ricky Rubio tied a career high with 17 assists for the Timberwolves, who held off a late charge from the Jazz that cut a 15-point deficit to 6 even as Utah was playing without Derrick Favors. Trey Burke scored all 23 of his points in the second half for Utah. The Jazz have been gutted by injuries to much of their foundation, including Rudy Gobert, Dante Exum and Alec Burks. Relying on replacements for them and for Favors has left the team playing sloppy basketball of late. SPURS 112, SUNS 79 LaMarcus Aldridge had 21 points and 12 rebounds, and San Antonio easily won its 19th straight home game to start the season. The Spurs also extended their franchise-record home winning streak to 28 straight games dating to last season.", "sentence_answer": "The Spurs also extended their franchise-record home winning streak to 28 straight games dating to last season."} -{"question": "Minnesota held off a furious attempt and held their lead to how many points late in the game?", "paragraph": "Ricky Rubio tied a career high with 17 assists for the Timberwolves, who held off a late charge from the Jazz that cut a 15-point deficit to 6 even as Utah was playing without Derrick Favors. Trey Burke scored all 23 of his points in the second half for Utah. The Jazz have been gutted by injuries to much of their foundation, including Rudy Gobert, Dante Exum and Alec Burks. Relying on replacements for them and for Favors has left the team playing sloppy basketball of late. SPURS 112, SUNS 79 LaMarcus Aldridge had 21 points and 12 rebounds, and San Antonio easily won its 19th straight home game to start the season. The Spurs also extended their franchise-record home winning streak to 28 straight games dating to last season.", "answer": "6", "sentence": "Ricky Rubio tied a career high with 17 assists for the Timberwolves, who held off a late charge from the Jazz that cut a 15-point deficit to 6 even as Utah was playing without Derrick Favors.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ricky Rubio tied a career high with 17 assists for the Timberwolves, who held off a late charge from the Jazz that cut a 15-point deficit to 6 even as Utah was playing without Derrick Favors. Trey Burke scored all 23 of his points in the second half for Utah. The Jazz have been gutted by injuries to much of their foundation, including Rudy Gobert, Dante Exum and Alec Burks. Relying on replacements for them and for Favors has left the team playing sloppy basketball of late. SPURS 112, SUNS 79 LaMarcus Aldridge had 21 points and 12 rebounds, and San Antonio easily won its 19th straight home game to start the season. The Spurs also extended their franchise-record home winning streak to 28 straight games dating to last season.", "paragraph_answer": "Ricky Rubio tied a career high with 17 assists for the Timberwolves, who held off a late charge from the Jazz that cut a 15-point deficit to 6 even as Utah was playing without Derrick Favors. Trey Burke scored all 23 of his points in the second half for Utah. The Jazz have been gutted by injuries to much of their foundation, including Rudy Gobert, Dante Exum and Alec Burks. Relying on replacements for them and for Favors has left the team playing sloppy basketball of late. SPURS 112, SUNS 79 LaMarcus Aldridge had 21 points and 12 rebounds, and San Antonio easily won its 19th straight home game to start the season. The Spurs also extended their franchise-record home winning streak to 28 straight games dating to last season.", "sentence_answer": "Ricky Rubio tied a career high with 17 assists for the Timberwolves, who held off a late charge from the Jazz that cut a 15-point deficit to 6 even as Utah was playing without Derrick Favors."} -{"question": "What has had a great impact on the Utah Jazz so far this season?", "paragraph": "Ricky Rubio tied a career high with 17 assists for the Timberwolves, who held off a late charge from the Jazz that cut a 15-point deficit to 6 even as Utah was playing without Derrick Favors. Trey Burke scored all 23 of his points in the second half for Utah. The Jazz have been gutted by injuries to much of their foundation, including Rudy Gobert, Dante Exum and Alec Burks. Relying on replacements for them and for Favors has left the team playing sloppy basketball of late. SPURS 112, SUNS 79 LaMarcus Aldridge had 21 points and 12 rebounds, and San Antonio easily won its 19th straight home game to start the season. The Spurs also extended their franchise-record home winning streak to 28 straight games dating to last season.", "answer": "injuries", "sentence": "The Jazz have been gutted by injuries to much of their foundation, including Rudy Gobert, Dante Exum and Alec Burks.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ricky Rubio tied a career high with 17 assists for the Timberwolves, who held off a late charge from the Jazz that cut a 15-point deficit to 6 even as Utah was playing without Derrick Favors. Trey Burke scored all 23 of his points in the second half for Utah. The Jazz have been gutted by injuries to much of their foundation, including Rudy Gobert, Dante Exum and Alec Burks. Relying on replacements for them and for Favors has left the team playing sloppy basketball of late. SPURS 112, SUNS 79 LaMarcus Aldridge had 21 points and 12 rebounds, and San Antonio easily won its 19th straight home game to start the season. The Spurs also extended their franchise-record home winning streak to 28 straight games dating to last season.", "paragraph_answer": "Ricky Rubio tied a career high with 17 assists for the Timberwolves, who held off a late charge from the Jazz that cut a 15-point deficit to 6 even as Utah was playing without Derrick Favors. Trey Burke scored all 23 of his points in the second half for Utah. The Jazz have been gutted by injuries to much of their foundation, including Rudy Gobert, Dante Exum and Alec Burks. Relying on replacements for them and for Favors has left the team playing sloppy basketball of late. SPURS 112, SUNS 79 LaMarcus Aldridge had 21 points and 12 rebounds, and San Antonio easily won its 19th straight home game to start the season. The Spurs also extended their franchise-record home winning streak to 28 straight games dating to last season.", "sentence_answer": "The Jazz have been gutted by injuries to much of their foundation, including Rudy Gobert, Dante Exum and Alec Burks."} -{"question": "When did San Antonio last lose at home?", "paragraph": "Ricky Rubio tied a career high with 17 assists for the Timberwolves, who held off a late charge from the Jazz that cut a 15-point deficit to 6 even as Utah was playing without Derrick Favors. Trey Burke scored all 23 of his points in the second half for Utah. The Jazz have been gutted by injuries to much of their foundation, including Rudy Gobert, Dante Exum and Alec Burks. Relying on replacements for them and for Favors has left the team playing sloppy basketball of late. SPURS 112, SUNS 79 LaMarcus Aldridge had 21 points and 12 rebounds, and San Antonio easily won its 19th straight home game to start the season. The Spurs also extended their franchise-record home winning streak to 28 straight games dating to last season.", "answer": "last season", "sentence": "The Spurs also extended their franchise-record home winning streak to 28 straight games dating to last season .", "paragraph_sentence": "Ricky Rubio tied a career high with 17 assists for the Timberwolves, who held off a late charge from the Jazz that cut a 15-point deficit to 6 even as Utah was playing without Derrick Favors. Trey Burke scored all 23 of his points in the second half for Utah. The Jazz have been gutted by injuries to much of their foundation, including Rudy Gobert, Dante Exum and Alec Burks. Relying on replacements for them and for Favors has left the team playing sloppy basketball of late. SPURS 112, SUNS 79 LaMarcus Aldridge had 21 points and 12 rebounds, and San Antonio easily won its 19th straight home game to start the season. The Spurs also extended their franchise-record home winning streak to 28 straight games dating to last season . ", "paragraph_answer": "Ricky Rubio tied a career high with 17 assists for the Timberwolves, who held off a late charge from the Jazz that cut a 15-point deficit to 6 even as Utah was playing without Derrick Favors. Trey Burke scored all 23 of his points in the second half for Utah. The Jazz have been gutted by injuries to much of their foundation, including Rudy Gobert, Dante Exum and Alec Burks. Relying on replacements for them and for Favors has left the team playing sloppy basketball of late. SPURS 112, SUNS 79 LaMarcus Aldridge had 21 points and 12 rebounds, and San Antonio easily won its 19th straight home game to start the season. The Spurs also extended their franchise-record home winning streak to 28 straight games dating to last season .", "sentence_answer": "The Spurs also extended their franchise-record home winning streak to 28 straight games dating to last season ."} -{"question": "What store did the author stumble across?", "paragraph": "I\u2019m wearing a dress I picked up in New York City a few days ago, on sale at this really great store I stumbled upon called & Other Stories. I pretty much love everything they sell. I had never heard of them before, but now I\u2019m a huge fan. When we played Pitchfork Festival, it was the brightest and hottest part of the day, so I borrowed my guitar player\u2019s sunglasses because they matched my dress. But my favorite part of this outfit is definitely my gold shoes. I got them in Paris, on sale too, and they have become a staple in my stage wardrobe. How much of a role do your clothes play in your performances? A huge part! I love wearing dresses, but more simplistic, classic looking dresses. It\u2019s very important to be comfortable, and it has to be made out of material that will withstand being shoved in a suitcase and backpack everyday. It\u2019s harder than you think to find a dress that\u2019s your style and also made out of really durable material. When I find something that works, I tend to wear it over and over.", "answer": "& Other Stories", "sentence": "I\u2019m wearing a dress I picked up in New York City a few days ago, on sale at this really great store I stumbled upon called & Other Stories .", "paragraph_sentence": " I\u2019m wearing a dress I picked up in New York City a few days ago, on sale at this really great store I stumbled upon called & Other Stories . I pretty much love everything they sell. I had never heard of them before, but now I\u2019m a huge fan. When we played Pitchfork Festival, it was the brightest and hottest part of the day, so I borrowed my guitar player\u2019s sunglasses because they matched my dress. But my favorite part of this outfit is definitely my gold shoes. I got them in Paris, on sale too, and they have become a staple in my stage wardrobe. How much of a role do your clothes play in your performances? A huge part! I love wearing dresses, but more simplistic, classic looking dresses. It\u2019s very important to be comfortable, and it has to be made out of material that will withstand being shoved in a suitcase and backpack everyday. It\u2019s harder than you think to find a dress that\u2019s your style and also made out of really durable material. When I find something that works, I tend to wear it over and over.", "paragraph_answer": "I\u2019m wearing a dress I picked up in New York City a few days ago, on sale at this really great store I stumbled upon called & Other Stories . I pretty much love everything they sell. I had never heard of them before, but now I\u2019m a huge fan. When we played Pitchfork Festival, it was the brightest and hottest part of the day, so I borrowed my guitar player\u2019s sunglasses because they matched my dress. But my favorite part of this outfit is definitely my gold shoes. I got them in Paris, on sale too, and they have become a staple in my stage wardrobe. How much of a role do your clothes play in your performances? A huge part! I love wearing dresses, but more simplistic, classic looking dresses. It\u2019s very important to be comfortable, and it has to be made out of material that will withstand being shoved in a suitcase and backpack everyday. It\u2019s harder than you think to find a dress that\u2019s your style and also made out of really durable material. When I find something that works, I tend to wear it over and over.", "sentence_answer": "I\u2019m wearing a dress I picked up in New York City a few days ago, on sale at this really great store I stumbled upon called & Other Stories ."} -{"question": "What festival did the author state they played at?", "paragraph": "I\u2019m wearing a dress I picked up in New York City a few days ago, on sale at this really great store I stumbled upon called & Other Stories. I pretty much love everything they sell. I had never heard of them before, but now I\u2019m a huge fan. When we played Pitchfork Festival, it was the brightest and hottest part of the day, so I borrowed my guitar player\u2019s sunglasses because they matched my dress. But my favorite part of this outfit is definitely my gold shoes. I got them in Paris, on sale too, and they have become a staple in my stage wardrobe. How much of a role do your clothes play in your performances? A huge part! I love wearing dresses, but more simplistic, classic looking dresses. It\u2019s very important to be comfortable, and it has to be made out of material that will withstand being shoved in a suitcase and backpack everyday. It\u2019s harder than you think to find a dress that\u2019s your style and also made out of really durable material. When I find something that works, I tend to wear it over and over.", "answer": "Pitchfork Festival", "sentence": "When we played Pitchfork Festival , it was the brightest and hottest part of the day, so I borrowed my guitar player\u2019s sunglasses because they matched my dress.", "paragraph_sentence": "I\u2019m wearing a dress I picked up in New York City a few days ago, on sale at this really great store I stumbled upon called & Other Stories. I pretty much love everything they sell. I had never heard of them before, but now I\u2019m a huge fan. When we played Pitchfork Festival , it was the brightest and hottest part of the day, so I borrowed my guitar player\u2019s sunglasses because they matched my dress. But my favorite part of this outfit is definitely my gold shoes. I got them in Paris, on sale too, and they have become a staple in my stage wardrobe. How much of a role do your clothes play in your performances? A huge part! I love wearing dresses, but more simplistic, classic looking dresses. It\u2019s very important to be comfortable, and it has to be made out of material that will withstand being shoved in a suitcase and backpack everyday. It\u2019s harder than you think to find a dress that\u2019s your style and also made out of really durable material. When I find something that works, I tend to wear it over and over.", "paragraph_answer": "I\u2019m wearing a dress I picked up in New York City a few days ago, on sale at this really great store I stumbled upon called & Other Stories. I pretty much love everything they sell. I had never heard of them before, but now I\u2019m a huge fan. When we played Pitchfork Festival , it was the brightest and hottest part of the day, so I borrowed my guitar player\u2019s sunglasses because they matched my dress. But my favorite part of this outfit is definitely my gold shoes. I got them in Paris, on sale too, and they have become a staple in my stage wardrobe. How much of a role do your clothes play in your performances? A huge part! I love wearing dresses, but more simplistic, classic looking dresses. It\u2019s very important to be comfortable, and it has to be made out of material that will withstand being shoved in a suitcase and backpack everyday. It\u2019s harder than you think to find a dress that\u2019s your style and also made out of really durable material. When I find something that works, I tend to wear it over and over.", "sentence_answer": "When we played Pitchfork Festival , it was the brightest and hottest part of the day, so I borrowed my guitar player\u2019s sunglasses because they matched my dress."} -{"question": "What is the author's favorite part of her outfit?", "paragraph": "I\u2019m wearing a dress I picked up in New York City a few days ago, on sale at this really great store I stumbled upon called & Other Stories. I pretty much love everything they sell. I had never heard of them before, but now I\u2019m a huge fan. When we played Pitchfork Festival, it was the brightest and hottest part of the day, so I borrowed my guitar player\u2019s sunglasses because they matched my dress. But my favorite part of this outfit is definitely my gold shoes. I got them in Paris, on sale too, and they have become a staple in my stage wardrobe. How much of a role do your clothes play in your performances? A huge part! I love wearing dresses, but more simplistic, classic looking dresses. It\u2019s very important to be comfortable, and it has to be made out of material that will withstand being shoved in a suitcase and backpack everyday. It\u2019s harder than you think to find a dress that\u2019s your style and also made out of really durable material. When I find something that works, I tend to wear it over and over.", "answer": "gold shoes", "sentence": "But my favorite part of this outfit is definitely my gold shoes .", "paragraph_sentence": "I\u2019m wearing a dress I picked up in New York City a few days ago, on sale at this really great store I stumbled upon called & Other Stories. I pretty much love everything they sell. I had never heard of them before, but now I\u2019m a huge fan. When we played Pitchfork Festival, it was the brightest and hottest part of the day, so I borrowed my guitar player\u2019s sunglasses because they matched my dress. But my favorite part of this outfit is definitely my gold shoes . I got them in Paris, on sale too, and they have become a staple in my stage wardrobe. How much of a role do your clothes play in your performances? A huge part! I love wearing dresses, but more simplistic, classic looking dresses. It\u2019s very important to be comfortable, and it has to be made out of material that will withstand being shoved in a suitcase and backpack everyday. It\u2019s harder than you think to find a dress that\u2019s your style and also made out of really durable material. When I find something that works, I tend to wear it over and over.", "paragraph_answer": "I\u2019m wearing a dress I picked up in New York City a few days ago, on sale at this really great store I stumbled upon called & Other Stories. I pretty much love everything they sell. I had never heard of them before, but now I\u2019m a huge fan. When we played Pitchfork Festival, it was the brightest and hottest part of the day, so I borrowed my guitar player\u2019s sunglasses because they matched my dress. But my favorite part of this outfit is definitely my gold shoes . I got them in Paris, on sale too, and they have become a staple in my stage wardrobe. How much of a role do your clothes play in your performances? A huge part! I love wearing dresses, but more simplistic, classic looking dresses. It\u2019s very important to be comfortable, and it has to be made out of material that will withstand being shoved in a suitcase and backpack everyday. It\u2019s harder than you think to find a dress that\u2019s your style and also made out of really durable material. When I find something that works, I tend to wear it over and over.", "sentence_answer": "But my favorite part of this outfit is definitely my gold shoes ."} -{"question": "Where did the author get thier gold shoes?", "paragraph": "I\u2019m wearing a dress I picked up in New York City a few days ago, on sale at this really great store I stumbled upon called & Other Stories. I pretty much love everything they sell. I had never heard of them before, but now I\u2019m a huge fan. When we played Pitchfork Festival, it was the brightest and hottest part of the day, so I borrowed my guitar player\u2019s sunglasses because they matched my dress. But my favorite part of this outfit is definitely my gold shoes. I got them in Paris, on sale too, and they have become a staple in my stage wardrobe. How much of a role do your clothes play in your performances? A huge part! I love wearing dresses, but more simplistic, classic looking dresses. It\u2019s very important to be comfortable, and it has to be made out of material that will withstand being shoved in a suitcase and backpack everyday. It\u2019s harder than you think to find a dress that\u2019s your style and also made out of really durable material. When I find something that works, I tend to wear it over and over.", "answer": "Paris", "sentence": "I got them in Paris , on sale too, and they have become a staple in my stage wardrobe.", "paragraph_sentence": "I\u2019m wearing a dress I picked up in New York City a few days ago, on sale at this really great store I stumbled upon called & Other Stories. I pretty much love everything they sell. I had never heard of them before, but now I\u2019m a huge fan. When we played Pitchfork Festival, it was the brightest and hottest part of the day, so I borrowed my guitar player\u2019s sunglasses because they matched my dress. But my favorite part of this outfit is definitely my gold shoes. I got them in Paris , on sale too, and they have become a staple in my stage wardrobe. How much of a role do your clothes play in your performances? A huge part! I love wearing dresses, but more simplistic, classic looking dresses. It\u2019s very important to be comfortable, and it has to be made out of material that will withstand being shoved in a suitcase and backpack everyday. It\u2019s harder than you think to find a dress that\u2019s your style and also made out of really durable material. When I find something that works, I tend to wear it over and over.", "paragraph_answer": "I\u2019m wearing a dress I picked up in New York City a few days ago, on sale at this really great store I stumbled upon called & Other Stories. I pretty much love everything they sell. I had never heard of them before, but now I\u2019m a huge fan. When we played Pitchfork Festival, it was the brightest and hottest part of the day, so I borrowed my guitar player\u2019s sunglasses because they matched my dress. But my favorite part of this outfit is definitely my gold shoes. I got them in Paris , on sale too, and they have become a staple in my stage wardrobe. How much of a role do your clothes play in your performances? A huge part! I love wearing dresses, but more simplistic, classic looking dresses. It\u2019s very important to be comfortable, and it has to be made out of material that will withstand being shoved in a suitcase and backpack everyday. It\u2019s harder than you think to find a dress that\u2019s your style and also made out of really durable material. When I find something that works, I tend to wear it over and over.", "sentence_answer": "I got them in Paris , on sale too, and they have become a staple in my stage wardrobe."} -{"question": "When the author finds something that works for them, what do they tend to do?", "paragraph": "I\u2019m wearing a dress I picked up in New York City a few days ago, on sale at this really great store I stumbled upon called & Other Stories. I pretty much love everything they sell. I had never heard of them before, but now I\u2019m a huge fan. When we played Pitchfork Festival, it was the brightest and hottest part of the day, so I borrowed my guitar player\u2019s sunglasses because they matched my dress. But my favorite part of this outfit is definitely my gold shoes. I got them in Paris, on sale too, and they have become a staple in my stage wardrobe. How much of a role do your clothes play in your performances? A huge part! I love wearing dresses, but more simplistic, classic looking dresses. It\u2019s very important to be comfortable, and it has to be made out of material that will withstand being shoved in a suitcase and backpack everyday. It\u2019s harder than you think to find a dress that\u2019s your style and also made out of really durable material. When I find something that works, I tend to wear it over and over.", "answer": "wear it over and over", "sentence": "When I find something that works, I tend to wear it over and over .", "paragraph_sentence": "I\u2019m wearing a dress I picked up in New York City a few days ago, on sale at this really great store I stumbled upon called & Other Stories. I pretty much love everything they sell. I had never heard of them before, but now I\u2019m a huge fan. When we played Pitchfork Festival, it was the brightest and hottest part of the day, so I borrowed my guitar player\u2019s sunglasses because they matched my dress. But my favorite part of this outfit is definitely my gold shoes. I got them in Paris, on sale too, and they have become a staple in my stage wardrobe. How much of a role do your clothes play in your performances? A huge part! I love wearing dresses, but more simplistic, classic looking dresses. It\u2019s very important to be comfortable, and it has to be made out of material that will withstand being shoved in a suitcase and backpack everyday. It\u2019s harder than you think to find a dress that\u2019s your style and also made out of really durable material. When I find something that works, I tend to wear it over and over . ", "paragraph_answer": "I\u2019m wearing a dress I picked up in New York City a few days ago, on sale at this really great store I stumbled upon called & Other Stories. I pretty much love everything they sell. I had never heard of them before, but now I\u2019m a huge fan. When we played Pitchfork Festival, it was the brightest and hottest part of the day, so I borrowed my guitar player\u2019s sunglasses because they matched my dress. But my favorite part of this outfit is definitely my gold shoes. I got them in Paris, on sale too, and they have become a staple in my stage wardrobe. How much of a role do your clothes play in your performances? A huge part! I love wearing dresses, but more simplistic, classic looking dresses. It\u2019s very important to be comfortable, and it has to be made out of material that will withstand being shoved in a suitcase and backpack everyday. It\u2019s harder than you think to find a dress that\u2019s your style and also made out of really durable material. When I find something that works, I tend to wear it over and over .", "sentence_answer": "When I find something that works, I tend to wear it over and over ."} -{"question": "What is the main differentiator according to the author?", "paragraph": "Tights are the main differentiator. In venues, I tend to get cold, so no matter what time of year it is, I\u2019ll wear tights. But for festivals you\u2019re outside and tights are way too hot to handle. That\u2019s pretty much the only difference. What inspires your overall style? Audrey Hepburn is a huge influence on my style. She\u2019s classy, confident and simplistic. She\u2019s a tomboy and also super feminine. Overall, I have a relaxed yet put together kind of thing going on at all times. Except for my hair, I can\u2019t quite seem to keep that together.", "answer": "Tights", "sentence": "Tights are the main differentiator.", "paragraph_sentence": " Tights are the main differentiator. In venues, I tend to get cold, so no matter what time of year it is, I\u2019ll wear tights. But for festivals you\u2019re outside and tights are way too hot to handle. That\u2019s pretty much the only difference. What inspires your overall style? Audrey Hepburn is a huge influence on my style. She\u2019s classy, confident and simplistic. She\u2019s a tomboy and also super feminine. Overall, I have a relaxed yet put together kind of thing going on at all times. Except for my hair, I can\u2019t quite seem to keep that together.", "paragraph_answer": " Tights are the main differentiator. In venues, I tend to get cold, so no matter what time of year it is, I\u2019ll wear tights. But for festivals you\u2019re outside and tights are way too hot to handle. That\u2019s pretty much the only difference. What inspires your overall style? Audrey Hepburn is a huge influence on my style. She\u2019s classy, confident and simplistic. She\u2019s a tomboy and also super feminine. Overall, I have a relaxed yet put together kind of thing going on at all times. Except for my hair, I can\u2019t quite seem to keep that together.", "sentence_answer": " Tights are the main differentiator."} -{"question": "Who inspires the authors overall style?", "paragraph": "Tights are the main differentiator. In venues, I tend to get cold, so no matter what time of year it is, I\u2019ll wear tights. But for festivals you\u2019re outside and tights are way too hot to handle. That\u2019s pretty much the only difference. What inspires your overall style? Audrey Hepburn is a huge influence on my style. She\u2019s classy, confident and simplistic. She\u2019s a tomboy and also super feminine. Overall, I have a relaxed yet put together kind of thing going on at all times. Except for my hair, I can\u2019t quite seem to keep that together.", "answer": "Audrey Hepburn", "sentence": "What inspires your overall style? Audrey Hepburn is a huge influence on my style.", "paragraph_sentence": "Tights are the main differentiator. In venues, I tend to get cold, so no matter what time of year it is, I\u2019ll wear tights. But for festivals you\u2019re outside and tights are way too hot to handle. That\u2019s pretty much the only difference. What inspires your overall style? Audrey Hepburn is a huge influence on my style. She\u2019s classy, confident and simplistic. She\u2019s a tomboy and also super feminine. Overall, I have a relaxed yet put together kind of thing going on at all times. Except for my hair, I can\u2019t quite seem to keep that together.", "paragraph_answer": "Tights are the main differentiator. In venues, I tend to get cold, so no matter what time of year it is, I\u2019ll wear tights. But for festivals you\u2019re outside and tights are way too hot to handle. That\u2019s pretty much the only difference. What inspires your overall style? Audrey Hepburn is a huge influence on my style. She\u2019s classy, confident and simplistic. She\u2019s a tomboy and also super feminine. Overall, I have a relaxed yet put together kind of thing going on at all times. Except for my hair, I can\u2019t quite seem to keep that together.", "sentence_answer": "What inspires your overall style? Audrey Hepburn is a huge influence on my style."} -{"question": "What three characteristics does Audrey Hepburn have?", "paragraph": "Tights are the main differentiator. In venues, I tend to get cold, so no matter what time of year it is, I\u2019ll wear tights. But for festivals you\u2019re outside and tights are way too hot to handle. That\u2019s pretty much the only difference. What inspires your overall style? Audrey Hepburn is a huge influence on my style. She\u2019s classy, confident and simplistic. She\u2019s a tomboy and also super feminine. Overall, I have a relaxed yet put together kind of thing going on at all times. Except for my hair, I can\u2019t quite seem to keep that together.", "answer": "classy, confident and simplistic", "sentence": "She\u2019s classy, confident and simplistic .", "paragraph_sentence": "Tights are the main differentiator. In venues, I tend to get cold, so no matter what time of year it is, I\u2019ll wear tights. But for festivals you\u2019re outside and tights are way too hot to handle. That\u2019s pretty much the only difference. What inspires your overall style? Audrey Hepburn is a huge influence on my style. She\u2019s classy, confident and simplistic . She\u2019s a tomboy and also super feminine. Overall, I have a relaxed yet put together kind of thing going on at all times. Except for my hair, I can\u2019t quite seem to keep that together.", "paragraph_answer": "Tights are the main differentiator. In venues, I tend to get cold, so no matter what time of year it is, I\u2019ll wear tights. But for festivals you\u2019re outside and tights are way too hot to handle. That\u2019s pretty much the only difference. What inspires your overall style? Audrey Hepburn is a huge influence on my style. She\u2019s classy, confident and simplistic . She\u2019s a tomboy and also super feminine. Overall, I have a relaxed yet put together kind of thing going on at all times. Except for my hair, I can\u2019t quite seem to keep that together.", "sentence_answer": "She\u2019s classy, confident and simplistic ."} -{"question": "Where was the author's first big show?", "paragraph": "One of my first big shows in Nashville, like probably six years ago, I went to a thrift store and bought all the black hooded sweatshirts I could find. Then I hot-glued silver bead strands to the outside of the hoods so when you put the hood up, the long beads dangled over your face like a mask. I did this to a huge pair of sunglasses as well that I wore. I\u2019ve always been into visuals and visual art, but this was probably my most \u201cout there\u201d on stage wardrobe I ever wore. My band wouldn\u2019t wear the ones I made for them and I don\u2019t blame them for that.", "answer": "Nashville", "sentence": "One of my first big shows in Nashville , like probably six years ago, I went to a thrift store and bought all the black hooded sweatshirts I could find.", "paragraph_sentence": " One of my first big shows in Nashville , like probably six years ago, I went to a thrift store and bought all the black hooded sweatshirts I could find. Then I hot-glued silver bead strands to the outside of the hoods so when you put the hood up, the long beads dangled over your face like a mask. I did this to a huge pair of sunglasses as well that I wore. I\u2019ve always been into visuals and visual art, but this was probably my most \u201cout there\u201d on stage wardrobe I ever wore. My band wouldn\u2019t wear the ones I made for them and I don\u2019t blame them for that.", "paragraph_answer": "One of my first big shows in Nashville , like probably six years ago, I went to a thrift store and bought all the black hooded sweatshirts I could find. Then I hot-glued silver bead strands to the outside of the hoods so when you put the hood up, the long beads dangled over your face like a mask. I did this to a huge pair of sunglasses as well that I wore. I\u2019ve always been into visuals and visual art, but this was probably my most \u201cout there\u201d on stage wardrobe I ever wore. My band wouldn\u2019t wear the ones I made for them and I don\u2019t blame them for that.", "sentence_answer": "One of my first big shows in Nashville , like probably six years ago, I went to a thrift store and bought all the black hooded sweatshirts I could find."} -{"question": "In addition to the sweatshirts, what else did the author hot glue the silver beads to?", "paragraph": "One of my first big shows in Nashville, like probably six years ago, I went to a thrift store and bought all the black hooded sweatshirts I could find. Then I hot-glued silver bead strands to the outside of the hoods so when you put the hood up, the long beads dangled over your face like a mask. I did this to a huge pair of sunglasses as well that I wore. I\u2019ve always been into visuals and visual art, but this was probably my most \u201cout there\u201d on stage wardrobe I ever wore. My band wouldn\u2019t wear the ones I made for them and I don\u2019t blame them for that.", "answer": "huge pair of sunglasses", "sentence": "I did this to a huge pair of sunglasses as well that I wore.", "paragraph_sentence": "One of my first big shows in Nashville, like probably six years ago, I went to a thrift store and bought all the black hooded sweatshirts I could find. Then I hot-glued silver bead strands to the outside of the hoods so when you put the hood up, the long beads dangled over your face like a mask. I did this to a huge pair of sunglasses as well that I wore. I\u2019ve always been into visuals and visual art, but this was probably my most \u201cout there\u201d on stage wardrobe I ever wore. My band wouldn\u2019t wear the ones I made for them and I don\u2019t blame them for that.", "paragraph_answer": "One of my first big shows in Nashville, like probably six years ago, I went to a thrift store and bought all the black hooded sweatshirts I could find. Then I hot-glued silver bead strands to the outside of the hoods so when you put the hood up, the long beads dangled over your face like a mask. I did this to a huge pair of sunglasses as well that I wore. I\u2019ve always been into visuals and visual art, but this was probably my most \u201cout there\u201d on stage wardrobe I ever wore. My band wouldn\u2019t wear the ones I made for them and I don\u2019t blame them for that.", "sentence_answer": "I did this to a huge pair of sunglasses as well that I wore."} -{"question": "What did the author hot glue to the outside of the hoods on the sweat shirts?", "paragraph": "One of my first big shows in Nashville, like probably six years ago, I went to a thrift store and bought all the black hooded sweatshirts I could find. Then I hot-glued silver bead strands to the outside of the hoods so when you put the hood up, the long beads dangled over your face like a mask. I did this to a huge pair of sunglasses as well that I wore. I\u2019ve always been into visuals and visual art, but this was probably my most \u201cout there\u201d on stage wardrobe I ever wore. My band wouldn\u2019t wear the ones I made for them and I don\u2019t blame them for that.", "answer": "silver bead strands", "sentence": "Then I hot-glued silver bead strands to the outside of the hoods so when you put the hood up, the long beads dangled over your face like a mask.", "paragraph_sentence": "One of my first big shows in Nashville, like probably six years ago, I went to a thrift store and bought all the black hooded sweatshirts I could find. Then I hot-glued silver bead strands to the outside of the hoods so when you put the hood up, the long beads dangled over your face like a mask. I did this to a huge pair of sunglasses as well that I wore. I\u2019ve always been into visuals and visual art, but this was probably my most \u201cout there\u201d on stage wardrobe I ever wore. My band wouldn\u2019t wear the ones I made for them and I don\u2019t blame them for that.", "paragraph_answer": "One of my first big shows in Nashville, like probably six years ago, I went to a thrift store and bought all the black hooded sweatshirts I could find. Then I hot-glued silver bead strands to the outside of the hoods so when you put the hood up, the long beads dangled over your face like a mask. I did this to a huge pair of sunglasses as well that I wore. I\u2019ve always been into visuals and visual art, but this was probably my most \u201cout there\u201d on stage wardrobe I ever wore. My band wouldn\u2019t wear the ones I made for them and I don\u2019t blame them for that.", "sentence_answer": "Then I hot-glued silver bead strands to the outside of the hoods so when you put the hood up, the long beads dangled over your face like a mask."} -{"question": "Who would'nt wear the outfits that were made for them by the author?", "paragraph": "One of my first big shows in Nashville, like probably six years ago, I went to a thrift store and bought all the black hooded sweatshirts I could find. Then I hot-glued silver bead strands to the outside of the hoods so when you put the hood up, the long beads dangled over your face like a mask. I did this to a huge pair of sunglasses as well that I wore. I\u2019ve always been into visuals and visual art, but this was probably my most \u201cout there\u201d on stage wardrobe I ever wore. My band wouldn\u2019t wear the ones I made for them and I don\u2019t blame them for that.", "answer": "band", "sentence": "My band wouldn\u2019t wear the ones I made for them and I don\u2019t blame them for that.", "paragraph_sentence": "One of my first big shows in Nashville, like probably six years ago, I went to a thrift store and bought all the black hooded sweatshirts I could find. Then I hot-glued silver bead strands to the outside of the hoods so when you put the hood up, the long beads dangled over your face like a mask. I did this to a huge pair of sunglasses as well that I wore. I\u2019ve always been into visuals and visual art, but this was probably my most \u201cout there\u201d on stage wardrobe I ever wore. My band wouldn\u2019t wear the ones I made for them and I don\u2019t blame them for that. ", "paragraph_answer": "One of my first big shows in Nashville, like probably six years ago, I went to a thrift store and bought all the black hooded sweatshirts I could find. Then I hot-glued silver bead strands to the outside of the hoods so when you put the hood up, the long beads dangled over your face like a mask. I did this to a huge pair of sunglasses as well that I wore. I\u2019ve always been into visuals and visual art, but this was probably my most \u201cout there\u201d on stage wardrobe I ever wore. My band wouldn\u2019t wear the ones I made for them and I don\u2019t blame them for that.", "sentence_answer": "My band wouldn\u2019t wear the ones I made for them and I don\u2019t blame them for that."} -{"question": "How many years ago approximately was the Nashville show?", "paragraph": "One of my first big shows in Nashville, like probably six years ago, I went to a thrift store and bought all the black hooded sweatshirts I could find. Then I hot-glued silver bead strands to the outside of the hoods so when you put the hood up, the long beads dangled over your face like a mask. I did this to a huge pair of sunglasses as well that I wore. I\u2019ve always been into visuals and visual art, but this was probably my most \u201cout there\u201d on stage wardrobe I ever wore. My band wouldn\u2019t wear the ones I made for them and I don\u2019t blame them for that.", "answer": "six years ago", "sentence": "One of my first big shows in Nashville, like probably six years ago , I went to a thrift store and bought all the black hooded sweatshirts I could find.", "paragraph_sentence": " One of my first big shows in Nashville, like probably six years ago , I went to a thrift store and bought all the black hooded sweatshirts I could find. Then I hot-glued silver bead strands to the outside of the hoods so when you put the hood up, the long beads dangled over your face like a mask. I did this to a huge pair of sunglasses as well that I wore. I\u2019ve always been into visuals and visual art, but this was probably my most \u201cout there\u201d on stage wardrobe I ever wore. My band wouldn\u2019t wear the ones I made for them and I don\u2019t blame them for that.", "paragraph_answer": "One of my first big shows in Nashville, like probably six years ago , I went to a thrift store and bought all the black hooded sweatshirts I could find. Then I hot-glued silver bead strands to the outside of the hoods so when you put the hood up, the long beads dangled over your face like a mask. I did this to a huge pair of sunglasses as well that I wore. I\u2019ve always been into visuals and visual art, but this was probably my most \u201cout there\u201d on stage wardrobe I ever wore. My band wouldn\u2019t wear the ones I made for them and I don\u2019t blame them for that.", "sentence_answer": "One of my first big shows in Nashville, like probably six years ago , I went to a thrift store and bought all the black hooded sweatshirts I could find."} -{"question": "How many World Series Championships do the Yankees have?", "paragraph": "Noticing more blue-and-orange caps and fewer navy pinstripes around New York these days? Hearing more talk about how the Mets keep finding ways to win? It could be that the Yankees\u2019 seemingly unshakable hold on the city\u2019s baseball heart is loosening amid the sudden and stunning turnaround for the Mets. Both teams may be headed for the postseason, so another test of popularity may be coming soon. And measuring the pulse of a fan base in a two-team baseball city is never simple, especially when one of them is the Yankees, with their 27 World Series championship and 20 retired numbers.", "answer": "27 World Series championship", "sentence": "their 27 World Series championship and 20 retired numbers.", "paragraph_sentence": "Noticing more blue-and-orange caps and fewer navy pinstripes around New York these days? Hearing more talk about how the Mets keep finding ways to win? It could be that the Yankees\u2019 seemingly unshakable hold on the city\u2019s baseball heart is loosening amid the sudden and stunning turnaround for the Mets. Both teams may be headed for the postseason, so another test of popularity may be coming soon. And measuring the pulse of a fan base in a two-team baseball city is never simple, especially when one of them is the Yankees, with their 27 World Series championship and 20 retired numbers. ", "paragraph_answer": "Noticing more blue-and-orange caps and fewer navy pinstripes around New York these days? Hearing more talk about how the Mets keep finding ways to win? It could be that the Yankees\u2019 seemingly unshakable hold on the city\u2019s baseball heart is loosening amid the sudden and stunning turnaround for the Mets. Both teams may be headed for the postseason, so another test of popularity may be coming soon. And measuring the pulse of a fan base in a two-team baseball city is never simple, especially when one of them is the Yankees, with their 27 World Series championship and 20 retired numbers.", "sentence_answer": "their 27 World Series championship and 20 retired numbers."} -{"question": "How many retired numbers do the Yankees have?", "paragraph": "Noticing more blue-and-orange caps and fewer navy pinstripes around New York these days? Hearing more talk about how the Mets keep finding ways to win? It could be that the Yankees\u2019 seemingly unshakable hold on the city\u2019s baseball heart is loosening amid the sudden and stunning turnaround for the Mets. Both teams may be headed for the postseason, so another test of popularity may be coming soon. And measuring the pulse of a fan base in a two-team baseball city is never simple, especially when one of them is the Yankees, with their 27 World Series championship and 20 retired numbers.", "answer": "20 retired numbers", "sentence": "And measuring the pulse of a fan base in a two-team baseball city is never simple, especially when one of them is the Yankees, with their 27 World Series championship and 20 retired numbers .", "paragraph_sentence": "Noticing more blue-and-orange caps and fewer navy pinstripes around New York these days? Hearing more talk about how the Mets keep finding ways to win? It could be that the Yankees\u2019 seemingly unshakable hold on the city\u2019s baseball heart is loosening amid the sudden and stunning turnaround for the Mets. Both teams may be headed for the postseason, so another test of popularity may be coming soon. And measuring the pulse of a fan base in a two-team baseball city is never simple, especially when one of them is the Yankees, with their 27 World Series championship and 20 retired numbers . ", "paragraph_answer": "Noticing more blue-and-orange caps and fewer navy pinstripes around New York these days? Hearing more talk about how the Mets keep finding ways to win? It could be that the Yankees\u2019 seemingly unshakable hold on the city\u2019s baseball heart is loosening amid the sudden and stunning turnaround for the Mets. Both teams may be headed for the postseason, so another test of popularity may be coming soon. And measuring the pulse of a fan base in a two-team baseball city is never simple, especially when one of them is the Yankees, with their 27 World Series championship and 20 retired numbers .", "sentence_answer": "And measuring the pulse of a fan base in a two-team baseball city is never simple, especially when one of them is the Yankees, with their 27 World Series championship and 20 retired numbers ."} -{"question": "How many teams are in New York?", "paragraph": "Noticing more blue-and-orange caps and fewer navy pinstripes around New York these days? Hearing more talk about how the Mets keep finding ways to win? It could be that the Yankees\u2019 seemingly unshakable hold on the city\u2019s baseball heart is loosening amid the sudden and stunning turnaround for the Mets. Both teams may be headed for the postseason, so another test of popularity may be coming soon. And measuring the pulse of a fan base in a two-team baseball city is never simple, especially when one of them is the Yankees, with their 27 World Series championship and 20 retired numbers.", "answer": "two-team baseball city", "sentence": "And measuring the pulse of a fan base in a two-team baseball city is never simple, especially when one of them is the Yankees, with their 27 World Series championship and 20 retired numbers.", "paragraph_sentence": "Noticing more blue-and-orange caps and fewer navy pinstripes around New York these days? Hearing more talk about how the Mets keep finding ways to win? It could be that the Yankees\u2019 seemingly unshakable hold on the city\u2019s baseball heart is loosening amid the sudden and stunning turnaround for the Mets. Both teams may be headed for the postseason, so another test of popularity may be coming soon. And measuring the pulse of a fan base in a two-team baseball city is never simple, especially when one of them is the Yankees, with their 27 World Series championship and 20 retired numbers. ", "paragraph_answer": "Noticing more blue-and-orange caps and fewer navy pinstripes around New York these days? Hearing more talk about how the Mets keep finding ways to win? It could be that the Yankees\u2019 seemingly unshakable hold on the city\u2019s baseball heart is loosening amid the sudden and stunning turnaround for the Mets. Both teams may be headed for the postseason, so another test of popularity may be coming soon. And measuring the pulse of a fan base in a two-team baseball city is never simple, especially when one of them is the Yankees, with their 27 World Series championship and 20 retired numbers.", "sentence_answer": "And measuring the pulse of a fan base in a two-team baseball city is never simple, especially when one of them is the Yankees, with their 27 World Series championship and 20 retired numbers."} -{"question": "Besides the Yankees what is the New York baseball team?", "paragraph": "Noticing more blue-and-orange caps and fewer navy pinstripes around New York these days? Hearing more talk about how the Mets keep finding ways to win? It could be that the Yankees\u2019 seemingly unshakable hold on the city\u2019s baseball heart is loosening amid the sudden and stunning turnaround for the Mets. Both teams may be headed for the postseason, so another test of popularity may be coming soon. And measuring the pulse of a fan base in a two-team baseball city is never simple, especially when one of them is the Yankees, with their 27 World Series championship and 20 retired numbers.", "answer": "Mets", "sentence": "Hearing more talk about how the Mets keep finding ways to win?", "paragraph_sentence": "Noticing more blue-and-orange caps and fewer navy pinstripes around New York these days? Hearing more talk about how the Mets keep finding ways to win? It could be that the Yankees\u2019 seemingly unshakable hold on the city\u2019s baseball heart is loosening amid the sudden and stunning turnaround for the Mets. Both teams may be headed for the postseason, so another test of popularity may be coming soon. And measuring the pulse of a fan base in a two-team baseball city is never simple, especially when one of them is the Yankees, with their 27 World Series championship and 20 retired numbers.", "paragraph_answer": "Noticing more blue-and-orange caps and fewer navy pinstripes around New York these days? Hearing more talk about how the Mets keep finding ways to win? It could be that the Yankees\u2019 seemingly unshakable hold on the city\u2019s baseball heart is loosening amid the sudden and stunning turnaround for the Mets. Both teams may be headed for the postseason, so another test of popularity may be coming soon. And measuring the pulse of a fan base in a two-team baseball city is never simple, especially when one of them is the Yankees, with their 27 World Series championship and 20 retired numbers.", "sentence_answer": "Hearing more talk about how the Mets keep finding ways to win?"} -{"question": "Which team is experiencing a turnaround?", "paragraph": "Noticing more blue-and-orange caps and fewer navy pinstripes around New York these days? Hearing more talk about how the Mets keep finding ways to win? It could be that the Yankees\u2019 seemingly unshakable hold on the city\u2019s baseball heart is loosening amid the sudden and stunning turnaround for the Mets. Both teams may be headed for the postseason, so another test of popularity may be coming soon. And measuring the pulse of a fan base in a two-team baseball city is never simple, especially when one of them is the Yankees, with their 27 World Series championship and 20 retired numbers.", "answer": "Mets", "sentence": "Hearing more talk about how the Mets keep finding ways to win?", "paragraph_sentence": "Noticing more blue-and-orange caps and fewer navy pinstripes around New York these days? Hearing more talk about how the Mets keep finding ways to win? It could be that the Yankees\u2019 seemingly unshakable hold on the city\u2019s baseball heart is loosening amid the sudden and stunning turnaround for the Mets. Both teams may be headed for the postseason, so another test of popularity may be coming soon. And measuring the pulse of a fan base in a two-team baseball city is never simple, especially when one of them is the Yankees, with their 27 World Series championship and 20 retired numbers.", "paragraph_answer": "Noticing more blue-and-orange caps and fewer navy pinstripes around New York these days? Hearing more talk about how the Mets keep finding ways to win? It could be that the Yankees\u2019 seemingly unshakable hold on the city\u2019s baseball heart is loosening amid the sudden and stunning turnaround for the Mets. Both teams may be headed for the postseason, so another test of popularity may be coming soon. And measuring the pulse of a fan base in a two-team baseball city is never simple, especially when one of them is the Yankees, with their 27 World Series championship and 20 retired numbers.", "sentence_answer": "Hearing more talk about how the Mets keep finding ways to win?"} -{"question": "When was the Mets last championship season?", "paragraph": "But some telling evidence points to trouble for the Yankees and a boon for the Mets, suggesting that New York might be turning into a Mets town for the first time since their championship season of 1986. \u201cIt certainly feels like something\u2019s happening,\u201d said Greg Prince, a blogger for the website Faith and Fear in Flushing. \u201cWinning certainly can change the equation, especially winning that hasn\u2019t happened in a long time. It\u2019s not that the other team in New York isn\u2019t winning, but there doesn\u2019t seem to be a lot of spark to it, while what\u2019s happening to the Mets feels fresh and novel.\u201d It is not just a feeling. By the measures of attendance and television viewership, the Mets are surging while their crosstown rivals are sliding a bit. It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000, capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series.", "answer": "1986", "sentence": "But some telling evidence points to trouble for the Yankees and a boon for the Mets, suggesting that New York might be turning into a Mets town for the first time since their championship season of 1986 .", "paragraph_sentence": " But some telling evidence points to trouble for the Yankees and a boon for the Mets, suggesting that New York might be turning into a Mets town for the first time since their championship season of 1986 . \u201cIt certainly feels like something\u2019s happening,\u201d said Greg Prince, a blogger for the website Faith and Fear in Flushing. \u201cWinning certainly can change the equation, especially winning that hasn\u2019t happened in a long time. It\u2019s not that the other team in New York isn\u2019t winning, but there doesn\u2019t seem to be a lot of spark to it, while what\u2019s happening to the Mets feels fresh and novel.\u201d It is not just a feeling. By the measures of attendance and television viewership, the Mets are surging while their crosstown rivals are sliding a bit. It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000, capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series.", "paragraph_answer": "But some telling evidence points to trouble for the Yankees and a boon for the Mets, suggesting that New York might be turning into a Mets town for the first time since their championship season of 1986 . \u201cIt certainly feels like something\u2019s happening,\u201d said Greg Prince, a blogger for the website Faith and Fear in Flushing. \u201cWinning certainly can change the equation, especially winning that hasn\u2019t happened in a long time. It\u2019s not that the other team in New York isn\u2019t winning, but there doesn\u2019t seem to be a lot of spark to it, while what\u2019s happening to the Mets feels fresh and novel.\u201d It is not just a feeling. By the measures of attendance and television viewership, the Mets are surging while their crosstown rivals are sliding a bit. It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000, capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series.", "sentence_answer": "But some telling evidence points to trouble for the Yankees and a boon for the Mets, suggesting that New York might be turning into a Mets town for the first time since their championship season of 1986 ."} -{"question": "What does Greg Prince say about what's happening to the Mets?", "paragraph": "But some telling evidence points to trouble for the Yankees and a boon for the Mets, suggesting that New York might be turning into a Mets town for the first time since their championship season of 1986. \u201cIt certainly feels like something\u2019s happening,\u201d said Greg Prince, a blogger for the website Faith and Fear in Flushing. \u201cWinning certainly can change the equation, especially winning that hasn\u2019t happened in a long time. It\u2019s not that the other team in New York isn\u2019t winning, but there doesn\u2019t seem to be a lot of spark to it, while what\u2019s happening to the Mets feels fresh and novel.\u201d It is not just a feeling. By the measures of attendance and television viewership, the Mets are surging while their crosstown rivals are sliding a bit. It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000, capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series.", "answer": "feels fresh and novel", "sentence": "It\u2019s not that the other team in New York isn\u2019t winning, but there doesn\u2019t seem to be a lot of spark to it, while what\u2019s happening to the Mets feels fresh and novel .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "But some telling evidence points to trouble for the Yankees and a boon for the Mets, suggesting that New York might be turning into a Mets town for the first time since their championship season of 1986. \u201cIt certainly feels like something\u2019s happening,\u201d said Greg Prince, a blogger for the website Faith and Fear in Flushing. \u201cWinning certainly can change the equation, especially winning that hasn\u2019t happened in a long time. It\u2019s not that the other team in New York isn\u2019t winning, but there doesn\u2019t seem to be a lot of spark to it, while what\u2019s happening to the Mets feels fresh and novel .\u201d It is not just a feeling. By the measures of attendance and television viewership, the Mets are surging while their crosstown rivals are sliding a bit. It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000, capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series.", "paragraph_answer": "But some telling evidence points to trouble for the Yankees and a boon for the Mets, suggesting that New York might be turning into a Mets town for the first time since their championship season of 1986. \u201cIt certainly feels like something\u2019s happening,\u201d said Greg Prince, a blogger for the website Faith and Fear in Flushing. \u201cWinning certainly can change the equation, especially winning that hasn\u2019t happened in a long time. It\u2019s not that the other team in New York isn\u2019t winning, but there doesn\u2019t seem to be a lot of spark to it, while what\u2019s happening to the Mets feels fresh and novel .\u201d It is not just a feeling. By the measures of attendance and television viewership, the Mets are surging while their crosstown rivals are sliding a bit. It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000, capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series.", "sentence_answer": "It\u2019s not that the other team in New York isn\u2019t winning, but there doesn\u2019t seem to be a lot of spark to it, while what\u2019s happening to the Mets feels fresh and novel .\u201d"} -{"question": "Who is Greg Prince?", "paragraph": "But some telling evidence points to trouble for the Yankees and a boon for the Mets, suggesting that New York might be turning into a Mets town for the first time since their championship season of 1986. \u201cIt certainly feels like something\u2019s happening,\u201d said Greg Prince, a blogger for the website Faith and Fear in Flushing. \u201cWinning certainly can change the equation, especially winning that hasn\u2019t happened in a long time. It\u2019s not that the other team in New York isn\u2019t winning, but there doesn\u2019t seem to be a lot of spark to it, while what\u2019s happening to the Mets feels fresh and novel.\u201d It is not just a feeling. By the measures of attendance and television viewership, the Mets are surging while their crosstown rivals are sliding a bit. It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000, capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series.", "answer": "a blogger for the website Faith and Fear in Flushing", "sentence": "\u201cIt certainly feels like something\u2019s happening,\u201d said Greg Prince, a blogger for the website Faith and Fear in Flushing .", "paragraph_sentence": "But some telling evidence points to trouble for the Yankees and a boon for the Mets, suggesting that New York might be turning into a Mets town for the first time since their championship season of 1986. \u201cIt certainly feels like something\u2019s happening,\u201d said Greg Prince, a blogger for the website Faith and Fear in Flushing . \u201cWinning certainly can change the equation, especially winning that hasn\u2019t happened in a long time. It\u2019s not that the other team in New York isn\u2019t winning, but there doesn\u2019t seem to be a lot of spark to it, while what\u2019s happening to the Mets feels fresh and novel.\u201d It is not just a feeling. By the measures of attendance and television viewership, the Mets are surging while their crosstown rivals are sliding a bit. It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000, capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series.", "paragraph_answer": "But some telling evidence points to trouble for the Yankees and a boon for the Mets, suggesting that New York might be turning into a Mets town for the first time since their championship season of 1986. \u201cIt certainly feels like something\u2019s happening,\u201d said Greg Prince, a blogger for the website Faith and Fear in Flushing . \u201cWinning certainly can change the equation, especially winning that hasn\u2019t happened in a long time. It\u2019s not that the other team in New York isn\u2019t winning, but there doesn\u2019t seem to be a lot of spark to it, while what\u2019s happening to the Mets feels fresh and novel.\u201d It is not just a feeling. By the measures of attendance and television viewership, the Mets are surging while their crosstown rivals are sliding a bit. It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000, capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt certainly feels like something\u2019s happening,\u201d said Greg Prince, a blogger for the website Faith and Fear in Flushing ."} -{"question": "What years did the Yankees win the world series 4 times in a row?", "paragraph": "But some telling evidence points to trouble for the Yankees and a boon for the Mets, suggesting that New York might be turning into a Mets town for the first time since their championship season of 1986. \u201cIt certainly feels like something\u2019s happening,\u201d said Greg Prince, a blogger for the website Faith and Fear in Flushing. \u201cWinning certainly can change the equation, especially winning that hasn\u2019t happened in a long time. It\u2019s not that the other team in New York isn\u2019t winning, but there doesn\u2019t seem to be a lot of spark to it, while what\u2019s happening to the Mets feels fresh and novel.\u201d It is not just a feeling. By the measures of attendance and television viewership, the Mets are surging while their crosstown rivals are sliding a bit. It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000, capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series.", "answer": "1996 to 2000", "sentence": "It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000 , capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series.", "paragraph_sentence": "But some telling evidence points to trouble for the Yankees and a boon for the Mets, suggesting that New York might be turning into a Mets town for the first time since their championship season of 1986. \u201cIt certainly feels like something\u2019s happening,\u201d said Greg Prince, a blogger for the website Faith and Fear in Flushing. \u201cWinning certainly can change the equation, especially winning that hasn\u2019t happened in a long time. It\u2019s not that the other team in New York isn\u2019t winning, but there doesn\u2019t seem to be a lot of spark to it, while what\u2019s happening to the Mets feels fresh and novel.\u201d It is not just a feeling. By the measures of attendance and television viewership, the Mets are surging while their crosstown rivals are sliding a bit. It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000 , capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series. ", "paragraph_answer": "But some telling evidence points to trouble for the Yankees and a boon for the Mets, suggesting that New York might be turning into a Mets town for the first time since their championship season of 1986. \u201cIt certainly feels like something\u2019s happening,\u201d said Greg Prince, a blogger for the website Faith and Fear in Flushing. \u201cWinning certainly can change the equation, especially winning that hasn\u2019t happened in a long time. It\u2019s not that the other team in New York isn\u2019t winning, but there doesn\u2019t seem to be a lot of spark to it, while what\u2019s happening to the Mets feels fresh and novel.\u201d It is not just a feeling. By the measures of attendance and television viewership, the Mets are surging while their crosstown rivals are sliding a bit. It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000 , capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series.", "sentence_answer": "It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000 , capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series."} -{"question": "Who lost the Subway Series?", "paragraph": "But some telling evidence points to trouble for the Yankees and a boon for the Mets, suggesting that New York might be turning into a Mets town for the first time since their championship season of 1986. \u201cIt certainly feels like something\u2019s happening,\u201d said Greg Prince, a blogger for the website Faith and Fear in Flushing. \u201cWinning certainly can change the equation, especially winning that hasn\u2019t happened in a long time. It\u2019s not that the other team in New York isn\u2019t winning, but there doesn\u2019t seem to be a lot of spark to it, while what\u2019s happening to the Mets feels fresh and novel.\u201d It is not just a feeling. By the measures of attendance and television viewership, the Mets are surging while their crosstown rivals are sliding a bit. It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000, capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series.", "answer": "capped by a triumph over the Mets", "sentence": "It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000, capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series.", "paragraph_sentence": "But some telling evidence points to trouble for the Yankees and a boon for the Mets, suggesting that New York might be turning into a Mets town for the first time since their championship season of 1986. \u201cIt certainly feels like something\u2019s happening,\u201d said Greg Prince, a blogger for the website Faith and Fear in Flushing. \u201cWinning certainly can change the equation, especially winning that hasn\u2019t happened in a long time. It\u2019s not that the other team in New York isn\u2019t winning, but there doesn\u2019t seem to be a lot of spark to it, while what\u2019s happening to the Mets feels fresh and novel.\u201d It is not just a feeling. By the measures of attendance and television viewership, the Mets are surging while their crosstown rivals are sliding a bit. It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000, capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series. ", "paragraph_answer": "But some telling evidence points to trouble for the Yankees and a boon for the Mets, suggesting that New York might be turning into a Mets town for the first time since their championship season of 1986. \u201cIt certainly feels like something\u2019s happening,\u201d said Greg Prince, a blogger for the website Faith and Fear in Flushing. \u201cWinning certainly can change the equation, especially winning that hasn\u2019t happened in a long time. It\u2019s not that the other team in New York isn\u2019t winning, but there doesn\u2019t seem to be a lot of spark to it, while what\u2019s happening to the Mets feels fresh and novel.\u201d It is not just a feeling. By the measures of attendance and television viewership, the Mets are surging while their crosstown rivals are sliding a bit. It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000, capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series.", "sentence_answer": "It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000, capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series."} -{"question": "What is the Mets average home attendance per game?", "paragraph": "(Major League Baseball, which calculates attendance differently, has the Yankees\u2019 average home attendance at 40,086.) The Mets are averaging 31,257 a game this season, a 17.6 percent rise from last season. That is still about 10,000 short of the capacity at Citi Field, but this season\u2019s increase of 4,689 fans a game represents a drastic shift from a dispiriting trend: Attendance had fallen almost 32 percent from a peak of 38,941 during the inaugural season of the ballpark six years ago. Yet perhaps a more precise reflection of the passion of a fan base is viewership on a team\u2019s cable television channel. After all, most fans prefer to watch games without having to buy tickets, which can be expensive. The Yankees\u2019 YES Network started in 2002, soon after the peak years of the dynasty. The Mets\u2019 SNY began in 2006 and then capitalized on a three-year period when the Mets were a good team, albeit one that endured heart-wrenching late-season collapses in 2007 and 2008.", "answer": "31,257", "sentence": "The Mets are averaging 31,257 a game this season, a 17.6 percent rise from last season.", "paragraph_sentence": "(Major League Baseball, which calculates attendance differently, has the Yankees\u2019 average home attendance at 40,086.) The Mets are averaging 31,257 a game this season, a 17.6 percent rise from last season. That is still about 10,000 short of the capacity at Citi Field, but this season\u2019s increase of 4,689 fans a game represents a drastic shift from a dispiriting trend: Attendance had fallen almost 32 percent from a peak of 38,941 during the inaugural season of the ballpark six years ago. Yet perhaps a more precise reflection of the passion of a fan base is viewership on a team\u2019s cable television channel. After all, most fans prefer to watch games without having to buy tickets, which can be expensive. The Yankees\u2019 YES Network started in 2002, soon after the peak years of the dynasty. The Mets\u2019 SNY began in 2006 and then capitalized on a three-year period when the Mets were a good team, albeit one that endured heart-wrenching late-season collapses in 2007 and 2008.", "paragraph_answer": "(Major League Baseball, which calculates attendance differently, has the Yankees\u2019 average home attendance at 40,086.) The Mets are averaging 31,257 a game this season, a 17.6 percent rise from last season. That is still about 10,000 short of the capacity at Citi Field, but this season\u2019s increase of 4,689 fans a game represents a drastic shift from a dispiriting trend: Attendance had fallen almost 32 percent from a peak of 38,941 during the inaugural season of the ballpark six years ago. Yet perhaps a more precise reflection of the passion of a fan base is viewership on a team\u2019s cable television channel. After all, most fans prefer to watch games without having to buy tickets, which can be expensive. The Yankees\u2019 YES Network started in 2002, soon after the peak years of the dynasty. The Mets\u2019 SNY began in 2006 and then capitalized on a three-year period when the Mets were a good team, albeit one that endured heart-wrenching late-season collapses in 2007 and 2008.", "sentence_answer": "The Mets are averaging 31,257 a game this season, a 17.6 percent rise from last season."} -{"question": "How much has the average attendence for the Mets risen since last year?", "paragraph": "(Major League Baseball, which calculates attendance differently, has the Yankees\u2019 average home attendance at 40,086.) The Mets are averaging 31,257 a game this season, a 17.6 percent rise from last season. That is still about 10,000 short of the capacity at Citi Field, but this season\u2019s increase of 4,689 fans a game represents a drastic shift from a dispiriting trend: Attendance had fallen almost 32 percent from a peak of 38,941 during the inaugural season of the ballpark six years ago. Yet perhaps a more precise reflection of the passion of a fan base is viewership on a team\u2019s cable television channel. After all, most fans prefer to watch games without having to buy tickets, which can be expensive. The Yankees\u2019 YES Network started in 2002, soon after the peak years of the dynasty. The Mets\u2019 SNY began in 2006 and then capitalized on a three-year period when the Mets were a good team, albeit one that endured heart-wrenching late-season collapses in 2007 and 2008.", "answer": "17.6 percent", "sentence": "The Mets are averaging 31,257 a game this season, a 17.6 percent rise from last season.", "paragraph_sentence": "(Major League Baseball, which calculates attendance differently, has the Yankees\u2019 average home attendance at 40,086.) The Mets are averaging 31,257 a game this season, a 17.6 percent rise from last season. That is still about 10,000 short of the capacity at Citi Field, but this season\u2019s increase of 4,689 fans a game represents a drastic shift from a dispiriting trend: Attendance had fallen almost 32 percent from a peak of 38,941 during the inaugural season of the ballpark six years ago. Yet perhaps a more precise reflection of the passion of a fan base is viewership on a team\u2019s cable television channel. After all, most fans prefer to watch games without having to buy tickets, which can be expensive. The Yankees\u2019 YES Network started in 2002, soon after the peak years of the dynasty. The Mets\u2019 SNY began in 2006 and then capitalized on a three-year period when the Mets were a good team, albeit one that endured heart-wrenching late-season collapses in 2007 and 2008.", "paragraph_answer": "(Major League Baseball, which calculates attendance differently, has the Yankees\u2019 average home attendance at 40,086.) The Mets are averaging 31,257 a game this season, a 17.6 percent rise from last season. That is still about 10,000 short of the capacity at Citi Field, but this season\u2019s increase of 4,689 fans a game represents a drastic shift from a dispiriting trend: Attendance had fallen almost 32 percent from a peak of 38,941 during the inaugural season of the ballpark six years ago. Yet perhaps a more precise reflection of the passion of a fan base is viewership on a team\u2019s cable television channel. After all, most fans prefer to watch games without having to buy tickets, which can be expensive. The Yankees\u2019 YES Network started in 2002, soon after the peak years of the dynasty. The Mets\u2019 SNY began in 2006 and then capitalized on a three-year period when the Mets were a good team, albeit one that endured heart-wrenching late-season collapses in 2007 and 2008.", "sentence_answer": "The Mets are averaging 31,257 a game this season, a 17.6 percent rise from last season."} -{"question": "What is the Yankee's average home attendance according to MLB?", "paragraph": "(Major League Baseball, which calculates attendance differently, has the Yankees\u2019 average home attendance at 40,086.) The Mets are averaging 31,257 a game this season, a 17.6 percent rise from last season. That is still about 10,000 short of the capacity at Citi Field, but this season\u2019s increase of 4,689 fans a game represents a drastic shift from a dispiriting trend: Attendance had fallen almost 32 percent from a peak of 38,941 during the inaugural season of the ballpark six years ago. Yet perhaps a more precise reflection of the passion of a fan base is viewership on a team\u2019s cable television channel. After all, most fans prefer to watch games without having to buy tickets, which can be expensive. The Yankees\u2019 YES Network started in 2002, soon after the peak years of the dynasty. The Mets\u2019 SNY began in 2006 and then capitalized on a three-year period when the Mets were a good team, albeit one that endured heart-wrenching late-season collapses in 2007 and 2008.", "answer": "40,086", "sentence": "(Major League Baseball, which calculates attendance differently, has the Yankees\u2019 average home attendance at 40,086 .)", "paragraph_sentence": " (Major League Baseball, which calculates attendance differently, has the Yankees\u2019 average home attendance at 40,086 .) The Mets are averaging 31,257 a game this season, a 17.6 percent rise from last season. That is still about 10,000 short of the capacity at Citi Field, but this season\u2019s increase of 4,689 fans a game represents a drastic shift from a dispiriting trend: Attendance had fallen almost 32 percent from a peak of 38,941 during the inaugural season of the ballpark six years ago. Yet perhaps a more precise reflection of the passion of a fan base is viewership on a team\u2019s cable television channel. After all, most fans prefer to watch games without having to buy tickets, which can be expensive. The Yankees\u2019 YES Network started in 2002, soon after the peak years of the dynasty. The Mets\u2019 SNY began in 2006 and then capitalized on a three-year period when the Mets were a good team, albeit one that endured heart-wrenching late-season collapses in 2007 and 2008.", "paragraph_answer": "(Major League Baseball, which calculates attendance differently, has the Yankees\u2019 average home attendance at 40,086 .) The Mets are averaging 31,257 a game this season, a 17.6 percent rise from last season. That is still about 10,000 short of the capacity at Citi Field, but this season\u2019s increase of 4,689 fans a game represents a drastic shift from a dispiriting trend: Attendance had fallen almost 32 percent from a peak of 38,941 during the inaugural season of the ballpark six years ago. Yet perhaps a more precise reflection of the passion of a fan base is viewership on a team\u2019s cable television channel. After all, most fans prefer to watch games without having to buy tickets, which can be expensive. The Yankees\u2019 YES Network started in 2002, soon after the peak years of the dynasty. The Mets\u2019 SNY began in 2006 and then capitalized on a three-year period when the Mets were a good team, albeit one that endured heart-wrenching late-season collapses in 2007 and 2008.", "sentence_answer": "(Major League Baseball, which calculates attendance differently, has the Yankees\u2019 average home attendance at 40,086 .)"} -{"question": "How many more fans at a Mets game are needed to fill Citi Field?", "paragraph": "(Major League Baseball, which calculates attendance differently, has the Yankees\u2019 average home attendance at 40,086.) The Mets are averaging 31,257 a game this season, a 17.6 percent rise from last season. That is still about 10,000 short of the capacity at Citi Field, but this season\u2019s increase of 4,689 fans a game represents a drastic shift from a dispiriting trend: Attendance had fallen almost 32 percent from a peak of 38,941 during the inaugural season of the ballpark six years ago. Yet perhaps a more precise reflection of the passion of a fan base is viewership on a team\u2019s cable television channel. After all, most fans prefer to watch games without having to buy tickets, which can be expensive. The Yankees\u2019 YES Network started in 2002, soon after the peak years of the dynasty. The Mets\u2019 SNY began in 2006 and then capitalized on a three-year period when the Mets were a good team, albeit one that endured heart-wrenching late-season collapses in 2007 and 2008.", "answer": "10,000 short of the capacity at Citi Field", "sentence": "That is still about 10,000 short of the capacity at Citi Field , but this season\u2019s increase of 4,689 fans a game represents a drastic shift from a dispiriting trend: Attendance had fallen almost 32 percent from a peak of 38,941 during the inaugural season of the ballpark six years ago.", "paragraph_sentence": "(Major League Baseball, which calculates attendance differently, has the Yankees\u2019 average home attendance at 40,086.) The Mets are averaging 31,257 a game this season, a 17.6 percent rise from last season. That is still about 10,000 short of the capacity at Citi Field , but this season\u2019s increase of 4,689 fans a game represents a drastic shift from a dispiriting trend: Attendance had fallen almost 32 percent from a peak of 38,941 during the inaugural season of the ballpark six years ago. Yet perhaps a more precise reflection of the passion of a fan base is viewership on a team\u2019s cable television channel. After all, most fans prefer to watch games without having to buy tickets, which can be expensive. The Yankees\u2019 YES Network started in 2002, soon after the peak years of the dynasty. The Mets\u2019 SNY began in 2006 and then capitalized on a three-year period when the Mets were a good team, albeit one that endured heart-wrenching late-season collapses in 2007 and 2008.", "paragraph_answer": "(Major League Baseball, which calculates attendance differently, has the Yankees\u2019 average home attendance at 40,086.) The Mets are averaging 31,257 a game this season, a 17.6 percent rise from last season. That is still about 10,000 short of the capacity at Citi Field , but this season\u2019s increase of 4,689 fans a game represents a drastic shift from a dispiriting trend: Attendance had fallen almost 32 percent from a peak of 38,941 during the inaugural season of the ballpark six years ago. Yet perhaps a more precise reflection of the passion of a fan base is viewership on a team\u2019s cable television channel. After all, most fans prefer to watch games without having to buy tickets, which can be expensive. The Yankees\u2019 YES Network started in 2002, soon after the peak years of the dynasty. The Mets\u2019 SNY began in 2006 and then capitalized on a three-year period when the Mets were a good team, albeit one that endured heart-wrenching late-season collapses in 2007 and 2008.", "sentence_answer": "That is still about 10,000 short of the capacity at Citi Field , but this season\u2019s increase of 4,689 fans a game represents a drastic shift from a dispiriting trend: Attendance had fallen almost 32 percent from a peak of 38,941 during the inaugural season of the ballpark six years ago."} -{"question": "How does Prince measure Mets progress on a train?", "paragraph": "Still, the task of turning New York into a Mets town is far from complete. Prince, the blogger, offered two ways to measure future progress: when Mets caps are highly visible on all trains, not just the 7 line to Flushing, and when a fan\u2019s request to turn a restaurant television to a Mets game is not met with a look \u201clike you have three eyes.\u201d More important, they probably need to do well in the postseason and then re-sign Cespedes. \u201cI think we have a great chance of going all the way,\u201d Breuer said.", "answer": "Mets caps", "sentence": "Prince, the blogger, offered two ways to measure future progress: when Mets caps are highly visible on all trains, not just the 7 line to Flushing, and when a fan\u2019s request to turn a restaurant television to a Mets game is not met with a look \u201clike you have three eyes.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Still, the task of turning New York into a Mets town is far from complete. Prince, the blogger, offered two ways to measure future progress: when Mets caps are highly visible on all trains, not just the 7 line to Flushing, and when a fan\u2019s request to turn a restaurant television to a Mets game is not met with a look \u201clike you have three eyes.\u201d More important, they probably need to do well in the postseason and then re-sign Cespedes. \u201cI think we have a great chance of going all the way,\u201d Breuer said.", "paragraph_answer": "Still, the task of turning New York into a Mets town is far from complete. Prince, the blogger, offered two ways to measure future progress: when Mets caps are highly visible on all trains, not just the 7 line to Flushing, and when a fan\u2019s request to turn a restaurant television to a Mets game is not met with a look \u201clike you have three eyes.\u201d More important, they probably need to do well in the postseason and then re-sign Cespedes. \u201cI think we have a great chance of going all the way,\u201d Breuer said.", "sentence_answer": "Prince, the blogger, offered two ways to measure future progress: when Mets caps are highly visible on all trains, not just the 7 line to Flushing, and when a fan\u2019s request to turn a restaurant television to a Mets game is not met with a look \u201clike you have three eyes.\u201d"} -{"question": "Who does Breuer think the Mets need to re-sign?", "paragraph": "Still, the task of turning New York into a Mets town is far from complete. Prince, the blogger, offered two ways to measure future progress: when Mets caps are highly visible on all trains, not just the 7 line to Flushing, and when a fan\u2019s request to turn a restaurant television to a Mets game is not met with a look \u201clike you have three eyes.\u201d More important, they probably need to do well in the postseason and then re-sign Cespedes. \u201cI think we have a great chance of going all the way,\u201d Breuer said.", "answer": "Cespedes", "sentence": "More important, they probably need to do well in the postseason and then re-sign Cespedes .", "paragraph_sentence": "Still, the task of turning New York into a Mets town is far from complete. Prince, the blogger, offered two ways to measure future progress: when Mets caps are highly visible on all trains, not just the 7 line to Flushing, and when a fan\u2019s request to turn a restaurant television to a Mets game is not met with a look \u201clike you have three eyes.\u201d More important, they probably need to do well in the postseason and then re-sign Cespedes . \u201cI think we have a great chance of going all the way,\u201d Breuer said.", "paragraph_answer": "Still, the task of turning New York into a Mets town is far from complete. Prince, the blogger, offered two ways to measure future progress: when Mets caps are highly visible on all trains, not just the 7 line to Flushing, and when a fan\u2019s request to turn a restaurant television to a Mets game is not met with a look \u201clike you have three eyes.\u201d More important, they probably need to do well in the postseason and then re-sign Cespedes . \u201cI think we have a great chance of going all the way,\u201d Breuer said.", "sentence_answer": "More important, they probably need to do well in the postseason and then re-sign Cespedes ."} -{"question": "What does Prince expect to be more common in restaurants as the Mets gain popularity?", "paragraph": "Still, the task of turning New York into a Mets town is far from complete. Prince, the blogger, offered two ways to measure future progress: when Mets caps are highly visible on all trains, not just the 7 line to Flushing, and when a fan\u2019s request to turn a restaurant television to a Mets game is not met with a look \u201clike you have three eyes.\u201d More important, they probably need to do well in the postseason and then re-sign Cespedes. \u201cI think we have a great chance of going all the way,\u201d Breuer said.", "answer": "turn a restaurant television to a Mets game", "sentence": "Prince, the blogger, offered two ways to measure future progress: when Mets caps are highly visible on all trains, not just the 7 line to Flushing, and when a fan\u2019s request to turn a restaurant television to a Mets game is not met with a look \u201clike you have three eyes.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Still, the task of turning New York into a Mets town is far from complete. Prince, the blogger, offered two ways to measure future progress: when Mets caps are highly visible on all trains, not just the 7 line to Flushing, and when a fan\u2019s request to turn a restaurant television to a Mets game is not met with a look \u201clike you have three eyes.\u201d More important, they probably need to do well in the postseason and then re-sign Cespedes. \u201cI think we have a great chance of going all the way,\u201d Breuer said.", "paragraph_answer": "Still, the task of turning New York into a Mets town is far from complete. Prince, the blogger, offered two ways to measure future progress: when Mets caps are highly visible on all trains, not just the 7 line to Flushing, and when a fan\u2019s request to turn a restaurant television to a Mets game is not met with a look \u201clike you have three eyes.\u201d More important, they probably need to do well in the postseason and then re-sign Cespedes. \u201cI think we have a great chance of going all the way,\u201d Breuer said.", "sentence_answer": "Prince, the blogger, offered two ways to measure future progress: when Mets caps are highly visible on all trains, not just the 7 line to Flushing, and when a fan\u2019s request to turn a restaurant television to a Mets game is not met with a look \u201clike you have three eyes.\u201d"} -{"question": "What train do you commonly see Mets caps on today?", "paragraph": "Still, the task of turning New York into a Mets town is far from complete. Prince, the blogger, offered two ways to measure future progress: when Mets caps are highly visible on all trains, not just the 7 line to Flushing, and when a fan\u2019s request to turn a restaurant television to a Mets game is not met with a look \u201clike you have three eyes.\u201d More important, they probably need to do well in the postseason and then re-sign Cespedes. \u201cI think we have a great chance of going all the way,\u201d Breuer said.", "answer": "7 line to Flushing", "sentence": "Prince, the blogger, offered two ways to measure future progress: when Mets caps are highly visible on all trains, not just the 7 line to Flushing , and when a fan\u2019s request to turn a restaurant television to a Mets game is not met with a look \u201clike you have three eyes.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Still, the task of turning New York into a Mets town is far from complete. Prince, the blogger, offered two ways to measure future progress: when Mets caps are highly visible on all trains, not just the 7 line to Flushing , and when a fan\u2019s request to turn a restaurant television to a Mets game is not met with a look \u201clike you have three eyes.\u201d More important, they probably need to do well in the postseason and then re-sign Cespedes. \u201cI think we have a great chance of going all the way,\u201d Breuer said.", "paragraph_answer": "Still, the task of turning New York into a Mets town is far from complete. Prince, the blogger, offered two ways to measure future progress: when Mets caps are highly visible on all trains, not just the 7 line to Flushing , and when a fan\u2019s request to turn a restaurant television to a Mets game is not met with a look \u201clike you have three eyes.\u201d More important, they probably need to do well in the postseason and then re-sign Cespedes. \u201cI think we have a great chance of going all the way,\u201d Breuer said.", "sentence_answer": "Prince, the blogger, offered two ways to measure future progress: when Mets caps are highly visible on all trains, not just the 7 line to Flushing , and when a fan\u2019s request to turn a restaurant television to a Mets game is not met with a look \u201clike you have three eyes.\u201d"} -{"question": "What was the Met's average TV audience in 2007?", "paragraph": "The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138,627 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season. But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game. And games are averaging 324,195 viewers since the Mets acquired the slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes on July 31. For the season, the Yankees\u2019 lead over the Mets in average viewership is about 20,000 \u2014 a far cry from four years ago, when the difference was more than 200,000.", "answer": "314,171", "sentence": "The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138,627 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138,627 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season. But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game. And games are averaging 324,195 viewers since the Mets acquired the slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes on July 31. For the season, the Yankees\u2019 lead over the Mets in average viewership is about 20,000 \u2014 a far cry from four years ago, when the difference was more than 200,000.", "paragraph_answer": "The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138,627 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season. But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game. And games are averaging 324,195 viewers since the Mets acquired the slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes on July 31. For the season, the Yankees\u2019 lead over the Mets in average viewership is about 20,000 \u2014 a far cry from four years ago, when the difference was more than 200,000.", "sentence_answer": "The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138,627 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season."} -{"question": "What percentage is viewership up this season?", "paragraph": "The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138,627 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season. But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game. And games are averaging 324,195 viewers since the Mets acquired the slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes on July 31. For the season, the Yankees\u2019 lead over the Mets in average viewership is about 20,000 \u2014 a far cry from four years ago, when the difference was more than 200,000.", "answer": "62", "sentence": "The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138, 62 7 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138, 62 7 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season. But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game. And games are averaging 324,195 viewers since the Mets acquired the slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes on July 31. For the season, the Yankees\u2019 lead over the Mets in average viewership is about 20,000 \u2014 a far cry from four years ago, when the difference was more than 200,000.", "paragraph_answer": "The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138, 62 7 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season. But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game. And games are averaging 324,195 viewers since the Mets acquired the slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes on July 31. For the season, the Yankees\u2019 lead over the Mets in average viewership is about 20,000 \u2014 a far cry from four years ago, when the difference was more than 200,000.", "sentence_answer": "The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138, 62 7 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season."} -{"question": "What was the lowest TV audience the Mets saw after 2007?", "paragraph": "The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138,627 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season. But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game. And games are averaging 324,195 viewers since the Mets acquired the slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes on July 31. For the season, the Yankees\u2019 lead over the Mets in average viewership is about 20,000 \u2014 a far cry from four years ago, when the difference was more than 200,000.", "answer": "138,627", "sentence": "The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138,627 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138,627 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season. But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game. And games are averaging 324,195 viewers since the Mets acquired the slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes on July 31. For the season, the Yankees\u2019 lead over the Mets in average viewership is about 20,000 \u2014 a far cry from four years ago, when the difference was more than 200,000.", "paragraph_answer": "The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138,627 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season. But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game. And games are averaging 324,195 viewers since the Mets acquired the slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes on July 31. For the season, the Yankees\u2019 lead over the Mets in average viewership is about 20,000 \u2014 a far cry from four years ago, when the difference was more than 200,000.", "sentence_answer": "The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138,627 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season."} -{"question": "How many people are watching on TV on average this season?", "paragraph": "The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138,627 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season. But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game. And games are averaging 324,195 viewers since the Mets acquired the slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes on July 31. For the season, the Yankees\u2019 lead over the Mets in average viewership is about 20,000 \u2014 a far cry from four years ago, when the difference was more than 200,000.", "answer": "240,091", "sentence": "But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138,627 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season. But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game. And games are averaging 324,195 viewers since the Mets acquired the slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes on July 31. For the season, the Yankees\u2019 lead over the Mets in average viewership is about 20,000 \u2014 a far cry from four years ago, when the difference was more than 200,000.", "paragraph_answer": "The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138,627 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season. But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game. And games are averaging 324,195 viewers since the Mets acquired the slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes on July 31. For the season, the Yankees\u2019 lead over the Mets in average viewership is about 20,000 \u2014 a far cry from four years ago, when the difference was more than 200,000.", "sentence_answer": "But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game."} -{"question": "Who increased the viewership average even more?", "paragraph": "The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138,627 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season. But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game. And games are averaging 324,195 viewers since the Mets acquired the slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes on July 31. For the season, the Yankees\u2019 lead over the Mets in average viewership is about 20,000 \u2014 a far cry from four years ago, when the difference was more than 200,000.", "answer": "slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes", "sentence": "And games are averaging 324,195 viewers since the Mets acquired the slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes on July 31.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138,627 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season. But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game. And games are averaging 324,195 viewers since the Mets acquired the slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes on July 31. For the season, the Yankees\u2019 lead over the Mets in average viewership is about 20,000 \u2014 a far cry from four years ago, when the difference was more than 200,000.", "paragraph_answer": "The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138,627 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season. But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game. And games are averaging 324,195 viewers since the Mets acquired the slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes on July 31. For the season, the Yankees\u2019 lead over the Mets in average viewership is about 20,000 \u2014 a far cry from four years ago, when the difference was more than 200,000.", "sentence_answer": "And games are averaging 324,195 viewers since the Mets acquired the slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes on July 31."} -{"question": "What year did Derek Jeter retire?", "paragraph": "\u201cI was like, \u2018All right, we have to lose once in a while,\u2019 \u201d he said by phone while on his way to Monday night\u2019s game against Miami. \u201cThen Lagares hit the double and Granderson walked, and you just knew it; you just knew it,\u201d he added, referring to Juan Lagares and Curtis Granderson, who started the Mets\u2019 ninth-inning rally. Breuer said that when Daniel Murphy came to the plate, \u201cI said, \u2018He\u2019s going to belt a homer,\u2019 and when he did, I laughed \u2014 I just couldn\u2019t stop giggling.\u201d The Yankees are an older, less flashy team that lost much of its charisma with the retirements of Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter in 2013 and 2014. The former ace C. C. Sabathia is struggling with a bad knee and the wear and tear of pitching nearly 3,000 innings in his career, and the Yankees\u2019 current top pitcher, Masahiro Tanaka, is soldiering on with a slightly torn elbow ligament. Their biggest star is probably Alex Rodriguez, whose unlikely comeback after a season-long suspension has helped keep the Yankees in the pennant race. Although it seems that fans have grudgingly accepted him because he is producing well and not causing trouble, he is not a Jeter-like presence who draws fans to the stadium in droves.", "answer": "2014", "sentence": "The Yankees are an older, less flashy team that lost much of its charisma with the retirements of Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter in 2013 and 2014 .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI was like, \u2018All right, we have to lose once in a while,\u2019 \u201d he said by phone while on his way to Monday night\u2019s game against Miami. \u201cThen Lagares hit the double and Granderson walked, and you just knew it; you just knew it,\u201d he added, referring to Juan Lagares and Curtis Granderson, who started the Mets\u2019 ninth-inning rally. Breuer said that when Daniel Murphy came to the plate, \u201cI said, \u2018He\u2019s going to belt a homer,\u2019 and when he did, I laughed \u2014 I just couldn\u2019t stop giggling.\u201d The Yankees are an older, less flashy team that lost much of its charisma with the retirements of Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter in 2013 and 2014 . The former ace C. C. Sabathia is struggling with a bad knee and the wear and tear of pitching nearly 3,000 innings in his career, and the Yankees\u2019 current top pitcher, Masahiro Tanaka, is soldiering on with a slightly torn elbow ligament. Their biggest star is probably Alex Rodriguez, whose unlikely comeback after a season-long suspension has helped keep the Yankees in the pennant race. Although it seems that fans have grudgingly accepted him because he is producing well and not causing trouble, he is not a Jeter-like presence who draws fans to the stadium in droves.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI was like, \u2018All right, we have to lose once in a while,\u2019 \u201d he said by phone while on his way to Monday night\u2019s game against Miami. \u201cThen Lagares hit the double and Granderson walked, and you just knew it; you just knew it,\u201d he added, referring to Juan Lagares and Curtis Granderson, who started the Mets\u2019 ninth-inning rally. Breuer said that when Daniel Murphy came to the plate, \u201cI said, \u2018He\u2019s going to belt a homer,\u2019 and when he did, I laughed \u2014 I just couldn\u2019t stop giggling.\u201d The Yankees are an older, less flashy team that lost much of its charisma with the retirements of Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter in 2013 and 2014 . The former ace C. C. Sabathia is struggling with a bad knee and the wear and tear of pitching nearly 3,000 innings in his career, and the Yankees\u2019 current top pitcher, Masahiro Tanaka, is soldiering on with a slightly torn elbow ligament. Their biggest star is probably Alex Rodriguez, whose unlikely comeback after a season-long suspension has helped keep the Yankees in the pennant race. Although it seems that fans have grudgingly accepted him because he is producing well and not causing trouble, he is not a Jeter-like presence who draws fans to the stadium in droves.", "sentence_answer": "The Yankees are an older, less flashy team that lost much of its charisma with the retirements of Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter in 2013 and 2014 ."} -{"question": "Who hit the double in the game on Monday?", "paragraph": "\u201cI was like, \u2018All right, we have to lose once in a while,\u2019 \u201d he said by phone while on his way to Monday night\u2019s game against Miami. \u201cThen Lagares hit the double and Granderson walked, and you just knew it; you just knew it,\u201d he added, referring to Juan Lagares and Curtis Granderson, who started the Mets\u2019 ninth-inning rally. Breuer said that when Daniel Murphy came to the plate, \u201cI said, \u2018He\u2019s going to belt a homer,\u2019 and when he did, I laughed \u2014 I just couldn\u2019t stop giggling.\u201d The Yankees are an older, less flashy team that lost much of its charisma with the retirements of Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter in 2013 and 2014. The former ace C. C. Sabathia is struggling with a bad knee and the wear and tear of pitching nearly 3,000 innings in his career, and the Yankees\u2019 current top pitcher, Masahiro Tanaka, is soldiering on with a slightly torn elbow ligament. Their biggest star is probably Alex Rodriguez, whose unlikely comeback after a season-long suspension has helped keep the Yankees in the pennant race. Although it seems that fans have grudgingly accepted him because he is producing well and not causing trouble, he is not a Jeter-like presence who draws fans to the stadium in droves.", "answer": "Juan Lagares", "sentence": "\u201cThen Lagares hit the double and Granderson walked, and you just knew it; you just knew it,\u201d he added, referring to Juan Lagares and Curtis Granderson, who started the Mets\u2019 ninth-inning rally.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI was like, \u2018All right, we have to lose once in a while,\u2019 \u201d he said by phone while on his way to Monday night\u2019s game against Miami. \u201cThen Lagares hit the double and Granderson walked, and you just knew it; you just knew it,\u201d he added, referring to Juan Lagares and Curtis Granderson, who started the Mets\u2019 ninth-inning rally. Breuer said that when Daniel Murphy came to the plate, \u201cI said, \u2018He\u2019s going to belt a homer,\u2019 and when he did, I laughed \u2014 I just couldn\u2019t stop giggling.\u201d The Yankees are an older, less flashy team that lost much of its charisma with the retirements of Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter in 2013 and 2014. The former ace C. C. Sabathia is struggling with a bad knee and the wear and tear of pitching nearly 3,000 innings in his career, and the Yankees\u2019 current top pitcher, Masahiro Tanaka, is soldiering on with a slightly torn elbow ligament. Their biggest star is probably Alex Rodriguez, whose unlikely comeback after a season-long suspension has helped keep the Yankees in the pennant race. Although it seems that fans have grudgingly accepted him because he is producing well and not causing trouble, he is not a Jeter-like presence who draws fans to the stadium in droves.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI was like, \u2018All right, we have to lose once in a while,\u2019 \u201d he said by phone while on his way to Monday night\u2019s game against Miami. \u201cThen Lagares hit the double and Granderson walked, and you just knew it; you just knew it,\u201d he added, referring to Juan Lagares and Curtis Granderson, who started the Mets\u2019 ninth-inning rally. Breuer said that when Daniel Murphy came to the plate, \u201cI said, \u2018He\u2019s going to belt a homer,\u2019 and when he did, I laughed \u2014 I just couldn\u2019t stop giggling.\u201d The Yankees are an older, less flashy team that lost much of its charisma with the retirements of Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter in 2013 and 2014. The former ace C. C. Sabathia is struggling with a bad knee and the wear and tear of pitching nearly 3,000 innings in his career, and the Yankees\u2019 current top pitcher, Masahiro Tanaka, is soldiering on with a slightly torn elbow ligament. Their biggest star is probably Alex Rodriguez, whose unlikely comeback after a season-long suspension has helped keep the Yankees in the pennant race. Although it seems that fans have grudgingly accepted him because he is producing well and not causing trouble, he is not a Jeter-like presence who draws fans to the stadium in droves.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThen Lagares hit the double and Granderson walked, and you just knew it; you just knew it,\u201d he added, referring to Juan Lagares and Curtis Granderson, who started the Mets\u2019 ninth-inning rally."} -{"question": "What is troubling the player Sabathia?", "paragraph": "\u201cI was like, \u2018All right, we have to lose once in a while,\u2019 \u201d he said by phone while on his way to Monday night\u2019s game against Miami. \u201cThen Lagares hit the double and Granderson walked, and you just knew it; you just knew it,\u201d he added, referring to Juan Lagares and Curtis Granderson, who started the Mets\u2019 ninth-inning rally. Breuer said that when Daniel Murphy came to the plate, \u201cI said, \u2018He\u2019s going to belt a homer,\u2019 and when he did, I laughed \u2014 I just couldn\u2019t stop giggling.\u201d The Yankees are an older, less flashy team that lost much of its charisma with the retirements of Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter in 2013 and 2014. The former ace C. C. Sabathia is struggling with a bad knee and the wear and tear of pitching nearly 3,000 innings in his career, and the Yankees\u2019 current top pitcher, Masahiro Tanaka, is soldiering on with a slightly torn elbow ligament. Their biggest star is probably Alex Rodriguez, whose unlikely comeback after a season-long suspension has helped keep the Yankees in the pennant race. Although it seems that fans have grudgingly accepted him because he is producing well and not causing trouble, he is not a Jeter-like presence who draws fans to the stadium in droves.", "answer": "bad knee and the wear and tear of pitching", "sentence": "The former ace C. C. Sabathia is struggling with a bad knee and the wear and tear of pitching nearly 3,000 innings in his career, and the Yankees\u2019 current top pitcher, Masahiro Tanaka, is soldiering on with a slightly torn elbow ligament.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI was like, \u2018All right, we have to lose once in a while,\u2019 \u201d he said by phone while on his way to Monday night\u2019s game against Miami. \u201cThen Lagares hit the double and Granderson walked, and you just knew it; you just knew it,\u201d he added, referring to Juan Lagares and Curtis Granderson, who started the Mets\u2019 ninth-inning rally. Breuer said that when Daniel Murphy came to the plate, \u201cI said, \u2018He\u2019s going to belt a homer,\u2019 and when he did, I laughed \u2014 I just couldn\u2019t stop giggling.\u201d The Yankees are an older, less flashy team that lost much of its charisma with the retirements of Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter in 2013 and 2014. The former ace C. C. Sabathia is struggling with a bad knee and the wear and tear of pitching nearly 3,000 innings in his career, and the Yankees\u2019 current top pitcher, Masahiro Tanaka, is soldiering on with a slightly torn elbow ligament. Their biggest star is probably Alex Rodriguez, whose unlikely comeback after a season-long suspension has helped keep the Yankees in the pennant race. Although it seems that fans have grudgingly accepted him because he is producing well and not causing trouble, he is not a Jeter-like presence who draws fans to the stadium in droves.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI was like, \u2018All right, we have to lose once in a while,\u2019 \u201d he said by phone while on his way to Monday night\u2019s game against Miami. \u201cThen Lagares hit the double and Granderson walked, and you just knew it; you just knew it,\u201d he added, referring to Juan Lagares and Curtis Granderson, who started the Mets\u2019 ninth-inning rally. Breuer said that when Daniel Murphy came to the plate, \u201cI said, \u2018He\u2019s going to belt a homer,\u2019 and when he did, I laughed \u2014 I just couldn\u2019t stop giggling.\u201d The Yankees are an older, less flashy team that lost much of its charisma with the retirements of Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter in 2013 and 2014. The former ace C. C. Sabathia is struggling with a bad knee and the wear and tear of pitching nearly 3,000 innings in his career, and the Yankees\u2019 current top pitcher, Masahiro Tanaka, is soldiering on with a slightly torn elbow ligament. Their biggest star is probably Alex Rodriguez, whose unlikely comeback after a season-long suspension has helped keep the Yankees in the pennant race. Although it seems that fans have grudgingly accepted him because he is producing well and not causing trouble, he is not a Jeter-like presence who draws fans to the stadium in droves.", "sentence_answer": "The former ace C. C. Sabathia is struggling with a bad knee and the wear and tear of pitching nearly 3,000 innings in his career, and the Yankees\u2019 current top pitcher, Masahiro Tanaka, is soldiering on with a slightly torn elbow ligament."} -{"question": "Who was Monday night's game against?", "paragraph": "\u201cI was like, \u2018All right, we have to lose once in a while,\u2019 \u201d he said by phone while on his way to Monday night\u2019s game against Miami. \u201cThen Lagares hit the double and Granderson walked, and you just knew it; you just knew it,\u201d he added, referring to Juan Lagares and Curtis Granderson, who started the Mets\u2019 ninth-inning rally. Breuer said that when Daniel Murphy came to the plate, \u201cI said, \u2018He\u2019s going to belt a homer,\u2019 and when he did, I laughed \u2014 I just couldn\u2019t stop giggling.\u201d The Yankees are an older, less flashy team that lost much of its charisma with the retirements of Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter in 2013 and 2014. The former ace C. C. Sabathia is struggling with a bad knee and the wear and tear of pitching nearly 3,000 innings in his career, and the Yankees\u2019 current top pitcher, Masahiro Tanaka, is soldiering on with a slightly torn elbow ligament. Their biggest star is probably Alex Rodriguez, whose unlikely comeback after a season-long suspension has helped keep the Yankees in the pennant race. Although it seems that fans have grudgingly accepted him because he is producing well and not causing trouble, he is not a Jeter-like presence who draws fans to the stadium in droves.", "answer": "Miami", "sentence": "\u201cI was like, \u2018All right, we have to lose once in a while,\u2019 \u201d he said by phone while on his way to Monday night\u2019s game against Miami .", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI was like, \u2018All right, we have to lose once in a while,\u2019 \u201d he said by phone while on his way to Monday night\u2019s game against Miami . \u201cThen Lagares hit the double and Granderson walked, and you just knew it; you just knew it,\u201d he added, referring to Juan Lagares and Curtis Granderson, who started the Mets\u2019 ninth-inning rally. Breuer said that when Daniel Murphy came to the plate, \u201cI said, \u2018He\u2019s going to belt a homer,\u2019 and when he did, I laughed \u2014 I just couldn\u2019t stop giggling.\u201d The Yankees are an older, less flashy team that lost much of its charisma with the retirements of Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter in 2013 and 2014. The former ace C. C. Sabathia is struggling with a bad knee and the wear and tear of pitching nearly 3,000 innings in his career, and the Yankees\u2019 current top pitcher, Masahiro Tanaka, is soldiering on with a slightly torn elbow ligament. Their biggest star is probably Alex Rodriguez, whose unlikely comeback after a season-long suspension has helped keep the Yankees in the pennant race. Although it seems that fans have grudgingly accepted him because he is producing well and not causing trouble, he is not a Jeter-like presence who draws fans to the stadium in droves.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI was like, \u2018All right, we have to lose once in a while,\u2019 \u201d he said by phone while on his way to Monday night\u2019s game against Miami . \u201cThen Lagares hit the double and Granderson walked, and you just knew it; you just knew it,\u201d he added, referring to Juan Lagares and Curtis Granderson, who started the Mets\u2019 ninth-inning rally. Breuer said that when Daniel Murphy came to the plate, \u201cI said, \u2018He\u2019s going to belt a homer,\u2019 and when he did, I laughed \u2014 I just couldn\u2019t stop giggling.\u201d The Yankees are an older, less flashy team that lost much of its charisma with the retirements of Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter in 2013 and 2014. The former ace C. C. Sabathia is struggling with a bad knee and the wear and tear of pitching nearly 3,000 innings in his career, and the Yankees\u2019 current top pitcher, Masahiro Tanaka, is soldiering on with a slightly torn elbow ligament. Their biggest star is probably Alex Rodriguez, whose unlikely comeback after a season-long suspension has helped keep the Yankees in the pennant race. Although it seems that fans have grudgingly accepted him because he is producing well and not causing trouble, he is not a Jeter-like presence who draws fans to the stadium in droves.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI was like, \u2018All right, we have to lose once in a while,\u2019 \u201d he said by phone while on his way to Monday night\u2019s game against Miami ."} -{"question": "What occupation did the stranger have?", "paragraph": "One Saturday afternoon this past winter, when my family and I were having lunch at the Metropolitan Museum of Art during a ritual viewing of mummies and armor with our 5-year-old son, I noticed a young man a few tables away staring at us. He had a notebook and began to sketch; he drew intensely and quickly. I was flattered and vaguely unsettled; he looked like someone in a Todd Solondz movie perhaps up to something not entirely sane. When we got up to leave, he followed us, continuing to draw as he kept pace. He showed my husband the results, explaining that he was a graduate student. My husband accepted the drawing and gave him $10, a gift for which he seemed appreciative.", "answer": "graduate student", "sentence": "He showed my husband the results, explaining that he was a graduate student .", "paragraph_sentence": "One Saturday afternoon this past winter, when my family and I were having lunch at the Metropolitan Museum of Art during a ritual viewing of mummies and armor with our 5-year-old son, I noticed a young man a few tables away staring at us. He had a notebook and began to sketch; he drew intensely and quickly. I was flattered and vaguely unsettled; he looked like someone in a Todd Solondz movie perhaps up to something not entirely sane. When we got up to leave, he followed us, continuing to draw as he kept pace. He showed my husband the results, explaining that he was a graduate student . My husband accepted the drawing and gave him $10, a gift for which he seemed appreciative.", "paragraph_answer": "One Saturday afternoon this past winter, when my family and I were having lunch at the Metropolitan Museum of Art during a ritual viewing of mummies and armor with our 5-year-old son, I noticed a young man a few tables away staring at us. He had a notebook and began to sketch; he drew intensely and quickly. I was flattered and vaguely unsettled; he looked like someone in a Todd Solondz movie perhaps up to something not entirely sane. When we got up to leave, he followed us, continuing to draw as he kept pace. He showed my husband the results, explaining that he was a graduate student . My husband accepted the drawing and gave him $10, a gift for which he seemed appreciative.", "sentence_answer": "He showed my husband the results, explaining that he was a graduate student ."} -{"question": "From what movie did the stranger look like he was from?", "paragraph": "One Saturday afternoon this past winter, when my family and I were having lunch at the Metropolitan Museum of Art during a ritual viewing of mummies and armor with our 5-year-old son, I noticed a young man a few tables away staring at us. He had a notebook and began to sketch; he drew intensely and quickly. I was flattered and vaguely unsettled; he looked like someone in a Todd Solondz movie perhaps up to something not entirely sane. When we got up to leave, he followed us, continuing to draw as he kept pace. He showed my husband the results, explaining that he was a graduate student. My husband accepted the drawing and gave him $10, a gift for which he seemed appreciative.", "answer": "Todd Solondz", "sentence": "I was flattered and vaguely unsettled; he looked like someone in a Todd Solondz movie perhaps up to something not entirely sane.", "paragraph_sentence": "One Saturday afternoon this past winter, when my family and I were having lunch at the Metropolitan Museum of Art during a ritual viewing of mummies and armor with our 5-year-old son, I noticed a young man a few tables away staring at us. He had a notebook and began to sketch; he drew intensely and quickly. I was flattered and vaguely unsettled; he looked like someone in a Todd Solondz movie perhaps up to something not entirely sane. When we got up to leave, he followed us, continuing to draw as he kept pace. He showed my husband the results, explaining that he was a graduate student. My husband accepted the drawing and gave him $10, a gift for which he seemed appreciative.", "paragraph_answer": "One Saturday afternoon this past winter, when my family and I were having lunch at the Metropolitan Museum of Art during a ritual viewing of mummies and armor with our 5-year-old son, I noticed a young man a few tables away staring at us. He had a notebook and began to sketch; he drew intensely and quickly. I was flattered and vaguely unsettled; he looked like someone in a Todd Solondz movie perhaps up to something not entirely sane. When we got up to leave, he followed us, continuing to draw as he kept pace. He showed my husband the results, explaining that he was a graduate student. My husband accepted the drawing and gave him $10, a gift for which he seemed appreciative.", "sentence_answer": "I was flattered and vaguely unsettled; he looked like someone in a Todd Solondz movie perhaps up to something not entirely sane."} -{"question": "How much money did the stranger give the son?", "paragraph": "One Saturday afternoon this past winter, when my family and I were having lunch at the Metropolitan Museum of Art during a ritual viewing of mummies and armor with our 5-year-old son, I noticed a young man a few tables away staring at us. He had a notebook and began to sketch; he drew intensely and quickly. I was flattered and vaguely unsettled; he looked like someone in a Todd Solondz movie perhaps up to something not entirely sane. When we got up to leave, he followed us, continuing to draw as he kept pace. He showed my husband the results, explaining that he was a graduate student. My husband accepted the drawing and gave him $10, a gift for which he seemed appreciative.", "answer": "$10", "sentence": "My husband accepted the drawing and gave him $10 , a gift for which he seemed appreciative.", "paragraph_sentence": "One Saturday afternoon this past winter, when my family and I were having lunch at the Metropolitan Museum of Art during a ritual viewing of mummies and armor with our 5-year-old son, I noticed a young man a few tables away staring at us. He had a notebook and began to sketch; he drew intensely and quickly. I was flattered and vaguely unsettled; he looked like someone in a Todd Solondz movie perhaps up to something not entirely sane. When we got up to leave, he followed us, continuing to draw as he kept pace. He showed my husband the results, explaining that he was a graduate student. My husband accepted the drawing and gave him $10 , a gift for which he seemed appreciative. ", "paragraph_answer": "One Saturday afternoon this past winter, when my family and I were having lunch at the Metropolitan Museum of Art during a ritual viewing of mummies and armor with our 5-year-old son, I noticed a young man a few tables away staring at us. He had a notebook and began to sketch; he drew intensely and quickly. I was flattered and vaguely unsettled; he looked like someone in a Todd Solondz movie perhaps up to something not entirely sane. When we got up to leave, he followed us, continuing to draw as he kept pace. He showed my husband the results, explaining that he was a graduate student. My husband accepted the drawing and gave him $10 , a gift for which he seemed appreciative.", "sentence_answer": "My husband accepted the drawing and gave him $10 , a gift for which he seemed appreciative."} -{"question": "Where did the family have lunch?", "paragraph": "One Saturday afternoon this past winter, when my family and I were having lunch at the Metropolitan Museum of Art during a ritual viewing of mummies and armor with our 5-year-old son, I noticed a young man a few tables away staring at us. He had a notebook and began to sketch; he drew intensely and quickly. I was flattered and vaguely unsettled; he looked like someone in a Todd Solondz movie perhaps up to something not entirely sane. When we got up to leave, he followed us, continuing to draw as he kept pace. He showed my husband the results, explaining that he was a graduate student. My husband accepted the drawing and gave him $10, a gift for which he seemed appreciative.", "answer": "Metropolitan Museum of Art", "sentence": "One Saturday afternoon this past winter, when my family and I were having lunch at the Metropolitan Museum of Art during a ritual viewing of mummies and armor with our 5-year-old son, I noticed a young man a few tables away staring at us.", "paragraph_sentence": " One Saturday afternoon this past winter, when my family and I were having lunch at the Metropolitan Museum of Art during a ritual viewing of mummies and armor with our 5-year-old son, I noticed a young man a few tables away staring at us. He had a notebook and began to sketch; he drew intensely and quickly. I was flattered and vaguely unsettled; he looked like someone in a Todd Solondz movie perhaps up to something not entirely sane. When we got up to leave, he followed us, continuing to draw as he kept pace. He showed my husband the results, explaining that he was a graduate student. My husband accepted the drawing and gave him $10, a gift for which he seemed appreciative.", "paragraph_answer": "One Saturday afternoon this past winter, when my family and I were having lunch at the Metropolitan Museum of Art during a ritual viewing of mummies and armor with our 5-year-old son, I noticed a young man a few tables away staring at us. He had a notebook and began to sketch; he drew intensely and quickly. I was flattered and vaguely unsettled; he looked like someone in a Todd Solondz movie perhaps up to something not entirely sane. When we got up to leave, he followed us, continuing to draw as he kept pace. He showed my husband the results, explaining that he was a graduate student. My husband accepted the drawing and gave him $10, a gift for which he seemed appreciative.", "sentence_answer": "One Saturday afternoon this past winter, when my family and I were having lunch at the Metropolitan Museum of Art during a ritual viewing of mummies and armor with our 5-year-old son, I noticed a young man a few tables away staring at us."} -{"question": "How old is the child of the family?", "paragraph": "One Saturday afternoon this past winter, when my family and I were having lunch at the Metropolitan Museum of Art during a ritual viewing of mummies and armor with our 5-year-old son, I noticed a young man a few tables away staring at us. He had a notebook and began to sketch; he drew intensely and quickly. I was flattered and vaguely unsettled; he looked like someone in a Todd Solondz movie perhaps up to something not entirely sane. When we got up to leave, he followed us, continuing to draw as he kept pace. He showed my husband the results, explaining that he was a graduate student. My husband accepted the drawing and gave him $10, a gift for which he seemed appreciative.", "answer": "5-year-old", "sentence": "One Saturday afternoon this past winter, when my family and I were having lunch at the Metropolitan Museum of Art during a ritual viewing of mummies and armor with our 5-year-old son, I noticed a young man a few tables away staring at us.", "paragraph_sentence": " One Saturday afternoon this past winter, when my family and I were having lunch at the Metropolitan Museum of Art during a ritual viewing of mummies and armor with our 5-year-old son, I noticed a young man a few tables away staring at us. He had a notebook and began to sketch; he drew intensely and quickly. I was flattered and vaguely unsettled; he looked like someone in a Todd Solondz movie perhaps up to something not entirely sane. When we got up to leave, he followed us, continuing to draw as he kept pace. He showed my husband the results, explaining that he was a graduate student. My husband accepted the drawing and gave him $10, a gift for which he seemed appreciative.", "paragraph_answer": "One Saturday afternoon this past winter, when my family and I were having lunch at the Metropolitan Museum of Art during a ritual viewing of mummies and armor with our 5-year-old son, I noticed a young man a few tables away staring at us. He had a notebook and began to sketch; he drew intensely and quickly. I was flattered and vaguely unsettled; he looked like someone in a Todd Solondz movie perhaps up to something not entirely sane. When we got up to leave, he followed us, continuing to draw as he kept pace. He showed my husband the results, explaining that he was a graduate student. My husband accepted the drawing and gave him $10, a gift for which he seemed appreciative.", "sentence_answer": "One Saturday afternoon this past winter, when my family and I were having lunch at the Metropolitan Museum of Art during a ritual viewing of mummies and armor with our 5-year-old son, I noticed a young man a few tables away staring at us."} -{"question": "Where was Rosenblatt built?", "paragraph": "The offensive downturn alarmed coaches nationwide, although the bat was not the only reason. Rosenblatt was built on a hill, and the prevailing wind blew out. At TD Ameritrade, the wind often blows in, knocking down well-hit balls in the alleys and straightaway center. Minnesota Coach John Anderson, who pushed for the new standard while serving on the N.C.A.A. Division I baseball committee, wished it had had more time to study its effects before the stadium opened. \u201cWe would have designed the stadium with shorter dimensions in left-center, center and right-center,\u201d Anderson said. The power falloff was not limited to Omaha. Regular-season home runs per game last year sank to 0.39, the lowest since the N.C.A.A. began keeping records. Bold outfielders with the speed to run down balls over their heads played shallower, cutting off singles and reducing scoring further. \u201cFor a few years, the field was playing like a softball field,\u201d said Coach Rick Vanderhook of California State Fullerton. \u201cWhen you\u2019ve got good athletes, they can cover the whole softball field. Hits were at a premium.\u201d The seam height on the new ball, though only 0.015 of an inch less than that of the old one, is enough to cause a significant reduction in drag. The Washington State University Sport Science Laboratory, which specializes in bat and ball dynamics, found that the lower-seamed ball flew about 20 feet farther on average in 2013 testing. Performance suggests the change achieved its objective. Regular-season home runs rose to 0.58 per game, according to the N.C.A.A. Teams combined for 135 home runs in N.C.A.A. regional and super-regional play, or 0.56 per game, a jump of more than one-third over last season (84, 0.34 per game).", "answer": "on a hill", "sentence": "Rosenblatt was built on a hill , and the prevailing wind blew out.", "paragraph_sentence": "The offensive downturn alarmed coaches nationwide, although the bat was not the only reason. Rosenblatt was built on a hill , and the prevailing wind blew out. At TD Ameritrade, the wind often blows in, knocking down well-hit balls in the alleys and straightaway center. Minnesota Coach John Anderson, who pushed for the new standard while serving on the N.C.A.A. Division I baseball committee, wished it had had more time to study its effects before the stadium opened. \u201cWe would have designed the stadium with shorter dimensions in left-center, center and right-center,\u201d Anderson said. The power falloff was not limited to Omaha. Regular-season home runs per game last year sank to 0.39, the lowest since the N.C.A.A. began keeping records. Bold outfielders with the speed to run down balls over their heads played shallower, cutting off singles and reducing scoring further. \u201cFor a few years, the field was playing like a softball field,\u201d said Coach Rick Vanderhook of California State Fullerton. \u201cWhen you\u2019ve got good athletes, they can cover the whole softball field. Hits were at a premium.\u201d The seam height on the new ball, though only 0.015 of an inch less than that of the old one, is enough to cause a significant reduction in drag. The Washington State University Sport Science Laboratory, which specializes in bat and ball dynamics, found that the lower-seamed ball flew about 20 feet farther on average in 2013 testing. Performance suggests the change achieved its objective. Regular-season home runs rose to 0.58 per game, according to the N.C.A.A. Teams combined for 135 home runs in N.C.A.A. regional and super-regional play, or 0.56 per game, a jump of more than one-third over last season (84, 0.34 per game).", "paragraph_answer": "The offensive downturn alarmed coaches nationwide, although the bat was not the only reason. Rosenblatt was built on a hill , and the prevailing wind blew out. At TD Ameritrade, the wind often blows in, knocking down well-hit balls in the alleys and straightaway center. Minnesota Coach John Anderson, who pushed for the new standard while serving on the N.C.A.A. Division I baseball committee, wished it had had more time to study its effects before the stadium opened. \u201cWe would have designed the stadium with shorter dimensions in left-center, center and right-center,\u201d Anderson said. The power falloff was not limited to Omaha. Regular-season home runs per game last year sank to 0.39, the lowest since the N.C.A.A. began keeping records. Bold outfielders with the speed to run down balls over their heads played shallower, cutting off singles and reducing scoring further. \u201cFor a few years, the field was playing like a softball field,\u201d said Coach Rick Vanderhook of California State Fullerton. \u201cWhen you\u2019ve got good athletes, they can cover the whole softball field. Hits were at a premium.\u201d The seam height on the new ball, though only 0.015 of an inch less than that of the old one, is enough to cause a significant reduction in drag. The Washington State University Sport Science Laboratory, which specializes in bat and ball dynamics, found that the lower-seamed ball flew about 20 feet farther on average in 2013 testing. Performance suggests the change achieved its objective. Regular-season home runs rose to 0.58 per game, according to the N.C.A.A. Teams combined for 135 home runs in N.C.A.A. regional and super-regional play, or 0.56 per game, a jump of more than one-third over last season (84, 0.34 per game).", "sentence_answer": "Rosenblatt was built on a hill , and the prevailing wind blew out."} -{"question": "How does the wind blow at TD Ameritrade?", "paragraph": "The offensive downturn alarmed coaches nationwide, although the bat was not the only reason. Rosenblatt was built on a hill, and the prevailing wind blew out. At TD Ameritrade, the wind often blows in, knocking down well-hit balls in the alleys and straightaway center. Minnesota Coach John Anderson, who pushed for the new standard while serving on the N.C.A.A. Division I baseball committee, wished it had had more time to study its effects before the stadium opened. \u201cWe would have designed the stadium with shorter dimensions in left-center, center and right-center,\u201d Anderson said. The power falloff was not limited to Omaha. Regular-season home runs per game last year sank to 0.39, the lowest since the N.C.A.A. began keeping records. Bold outfielders with the speed to run down balls over their heads played shallower, cutting off singles and reducing scoring further. \u201cFor a few years, the field was playing like a softball field,\u201d said Coach Rick Vanderhook of California State Fullerton. \u201cWhen you\u2019ve got good athletes, they can cover the whole softball field. Hits were at a premium.\u201d The seam height on the new ball, though only 0.015 of an inch less than that of the old one, is enough to cause a significant reduction in drag. The Washington State University Sport Science Laboratory, which specializes in bat and ball dynamics, found that the lower-seamed ball flew about 20 feet farther on average in 2013 testing. Performance suggests the change achieved its objective. Regular-season home runs rose to 0.58 per game, according to the N.C.A.A. Teams combined for 135 home runs in N.C.A.A. regional and super-regional play, or 0.56 per game, a jump of more than one-third over last season (84, 0.34 per game).", "answer": "the wind often blows in", "sentence": "At TD Ameritrade, the wind often blows in , knocking down well-hit balls in the alleys and straightaway center.", "paragraph_sentence": "The offensive downturn alarmed coaches nationwide, although the bat was not the only reason. Rosenblatt was built on a hill, and the prevailing wind blew out. At TD Ameritrade, the wind often blows in , knocking down well-hit balls in the alleys and straightaway center. Minnesota Coach John Anderson, who pushed for the new standard while serving on the N.C.A.A. Division I baseball committee, wished it had had more time to study its effects before the stadium opened. \u201cWe would have designed the stadium with shorter dimensions in left-center, center and right-center,\u201d Anderson said. The power falloff was not limited to Omaha. Regular-season home runs per game last year sank to 0.39, the lowest since the N.C.A.A. began keeping records. Bold outfielders with the speed to run down balls over their heads played shallower, cutting off singles and reducing scoring further. \u201cFor a few years, the field was playing like a softball field,\u201d said Coach Rick Vanderhook of California State Fullerton. \u201cWhen you\u2019ve got good athletes, they can cover the whole softball field. Hits were at a premium.\u201d The seam height on the new ball, though only 0.015 of an inch less than that of the old one, is enough to cause a significant reduction in drag. The Washington State University Sport Science Laboratory, which specializes in bat and ball dynamics, found that the lower-seamed ball flew about 20 feet farther on average in 2013 testing. Performance suggests the change achieved its objective. Regular-season home runs rose to 0.58 per game, according to the N.C.A.A. Teams combined for 135 home runs in N.C.A.A. regional and super-regional play, or 0.56 per game, a jump of more than one-third over last season (84, 0.34 per game).", "paragraph_answer": "The offensive downturn alarmed coaches nationwide, although the bat was not the only reason. Rosenblatt was built on a hill, and the prevailing wind blew out. At TD Ameritrade, the wind often blows in , knocking down well-hit balls in the alleys and straightaway center. Minnesota Coach John Anderson, who pushed for the new standard while serving on the N.C.A.A. Division I baseball committee, wished it had had more time to study its effects before the stadium opened. \u201cWe would have designed the stadium with shorter dimensions in left-center, center and right-center,\u201d Anderson said. The power falloff was not limited to Omaha. Regular-season home runs per game last year sank to 0.39, the lowest since the N.C.A.A. began keeping records. Bold outfielders with the speed to run down balls over their heads played shallower, cutting off singles and reducing scoring further. \u201cFor a few years, the field was playing like a softball field,\u201d said Coach Rick Vanderhook of California State Fullerton. \u201cWhen you\u2019ve got good athletes, they can cover the whole softball field. Hits were at a premium.\u201d The seam height on the new ball, though only 0.015 of an inch less than that of the old one, is enough to cause a significant reduction in drag. The Washington State University Sport Science Laboratory, which specializes in bat and ball dynamics, found that the lower-seamed ball flew about 20 feet farther on average in 2013 testing. Performance suggests the change achieved its objective. Regular-season home runs rose to 0.58 per game, according to the N.C.A.A. Teams combined for 135 home runs in N.C.A.A. regional and super-regional play, or 0.56 per game, a jump of more than one-third over last season (84, 0.34 per game).", "sentence_answer": "At TD Ameritrade, the wind often blows in , knocking down well-hit balls in the alleys and straightaway center."} -{"question": "Who is the coach for Minnesota?", "paragraph": "The offensive downturn alarmed coaches nationwide, although the bat was not the only reason. Rosenblatt was built on a hill, and the prevailing wind blew out. At TD Ameritrade, the wind often blows in, knocking down well-hit balls in the alleys and straightaway center. Minnesota Coach John Anderson, who pushed for the new standard while serving on the N.C.A.A. Division I baseball committee, wished it had had more time to study its effects before the stadium opened. \u201cWe would have designed the stadium with shorter dimensions in left-center, center and right-center,\u201d Anderson said. The power falloff was not limited to Omaha. Regular-season home runs per game last year sank to 0.39, the lowest since the N.C.A.A. began keeping records. Bold outfielders with the speed to run down balls over their heads played shallower, cutting off singles and reducing scoring further. \u201cFor a few years, the field was playing like a softball field,\u201d said Coach Rick Vanderhook of California State Fullerton. \u201cWhen you\u2019ve got good athletes, they can cover the whole softball field. Hits were at a premium.\u201d The seam height on the new ball, though only 0.015 of an inch less than that of the old one, is enough to cause a significant reduction in drag. The Washington State University Sport Science Laboratory, which specializes in bat and ball dynamics, found that the lower-seamed ball flew about 20 feet farther on average in 2013 testing. Performance suggests the change achieved its objective. Regular-season home runs rose to 0.58 per game, according to the N.C.A.A. Teams combined for 135 home runs in N.C.A.A. regional and super-regional play, or 0.56 per game, a jump of more than one-third over last season (84, 0.34 per game).", "answer": "John Anderson", "sentence": "Minnesota Coach John Anderson , who pushed for the new standard while serving on the N.C.A.A. Division I baseball committee, wished it had had more time to study its effects before the stadium opened.", "paragraph_sentence": "The offensive downturn alarmed coaches nationwide, although the bat was not the only reason. Rosenblatt was built on a hill, and the prevailing wind blew out. At TD Ameritrade, the wind often blows in, knocking down well-hit balls in the alleys and straightaway center. Minnesota Coach John Anderson , who pushed for the new standard while serving on the N.C.A.A. Division I baseball committee, wished it had had more time to study its effects before the stadium opened. \u201cWe would have designed the stadium with shorter dimensions in left-center, center and right-center,\u201d Anderson said. The power falloff was not limited to Omaha. Regular-season home runs per game last year sank to 0.39, the lowest since the N.C.A.A. began keeping records. Bold outfielders with the speed to run down balls over their heads played shallower, cutting off singles and reducing scoring further. \u201cFor a few years, the field was playing like a softball field,\u201d said Coach Rick Vanderhook of California State Fullerton. \u201cWhen you\u2019ve got good athletes, they can cover the whole softball field. Hits were at a premium.\u201d The seam height on the new ball, though only 0.015 of an inch less than that of the old one, is enough to cause a significant reduction in drag. The Washington State University Sport Science Laboratory, which specializes in bat and ball dynamics, found that the lower-seamed ball flew about 20 feet farther on average in 2013 testing. Performance suggests the change achieved its objective. Regular-season home runs rose to 0.58 per game, according to the N.C.A.A. Teams combined for 135 home runs in N.C.A.A. regional and super-regional play, or 0.56 per game, a jump of more than one-third over last season (84, 0.34 per game).", "paragraph_answer": "The offensive downturn alarmed coaches nationwide, although the bat was not the only reason. Rosenblatt was built on a hill, and the prevailing wind blew out. At TD Ameritrade, the wind often blows in, knocking down well-hit balls in the alleys and straightaway center. Minnesota Coach John Anderson , who pushed for the new standard while serving on the N.C.A.A. Division I baseball committee, wished it had had more time to study its effects before the stadium opened. \u201cWe would have designed the stadium with shorter dimensions in left-center, center and right-center,\u201d Anderson said. The power falloff was not limited to Omaha. Regular-season home runs per game last year sank to 0.39, the lowest since the N.C.A.A. began keeping records. Bold outfielders with the speed to run down balls over their heads played shallower, cutting off singles and reducing scoring further. \u201cFor a few years, the field was playing like a softball field,\u201d said Coach Rick Vanderhook of California State Fullerton. \u201cWhen you\u2019ve got good athletes, they can cover the whole softball field. Hits were at a premium.\u201d The seam height on the new ball, though only 0.015 of an inch less than that of the old one, is enough to cause a significant reduction in drag. The Washington State University Sport Science Laboratory, which specializes in bat and ball dynamics, found that the lower-seamed ball flew about 20 feet farther on average in 2013 testing. Performance suggests the change achieved its objective. Regular-season home runs rose to 0.58 per game, according to the N.C.A.A. Teams combined for 135 home runs in N.C.A.A. regional and super-regional play, or 0.56 per game, a jump of more than one-third over last season (84, 0.34 per game).", "sentence_answer": "Minnesota Coach John Anderson , who pushed for the new standard while serving on the N.C.A.A. Division I baseball committee, wished it had had more time to study its effects before the stadium opened."} -{"question": "Who is the coach for California State Fullerton?", "paragraph": "The offensive downturn alarmed coaches nationwide, although the bat was not the only reason. Rosenblatt was built on a hill, and the prevailing wind blew out. At TD Ameritrade, the wind often blows in, knocking down well-hit balls in the alleys and straightaway center. Minnesota Coach John Anderson, who pushed for the new standard while serving on the N.C.A.A. Division I baseball committee, wished it had had more time to study its effects before the stadium opened. \u201cWe would have designed the stadium with shorter dimensions in left-center, center and right-center,\u201d Anderson said. The power falloff was not limited to Omaha. Regular-season home runs per game last year sank to 0.39, the lowest since the N.C.A.A. began keeping records. Bold outfielders with the speed to run down balls over their heads played shallower, cutting off singles and reducing scoring further. \u201cFor a few years, the field was playing like a softball field,\u201d said Coach Rick Vanderhook of California State Fullerton. \u201cWhen you\u2019ve got good athletes, they can cover the whole softball field. Hits were at a premium.\u201d The seam height on the new ball, though only 0.015 of an inch less than that of the old one, is enough to cause a significant reduction in drag. The Washington State University Sport Science Laboratory, which specializes in bat and ball dynamics, found that the lower-seamed ball flew about 20 feet farther on average in 2013 testing. Performance suggests the change achieved its objective. Regular-season home runs rose to 0.58 per game, according to the N.C.A.A. Teams combined for 135 home runs in N.C.A.A. regional and super-regional play, or 0.56 per game, a jump of more than one-third over last season (84, 0.34 per game).", "answer": "Rick Vanderhook", "sentence": "\u201cFor a few years, the field was playing like a softball field,\u201d said Coach Rick Vanderhook of California State Fullerton.", "paragraph_sentence": "The offensive downturn alarmed coaches nationwide, although the bat was not the only reason. Rosenblatt was built on a hill, and the prevailing wind blew out. At TD Ameritrade, the wind often blows in, knocking down well-hit balls in the alleys and straightaway center. Minnesota Coach John Anderson, who pushed for the new standard while serving on the N.C.A.A. Division I baseball committee, wished it had had more time to study its effects before the stadium opened. \u201cWe would have designed the stadium with shorter dimensions in left-center, center and right-center,\u201d Anderson said. The power falloff was not limited to Omaha. Regular-season home runs per game last year sank to 0.39, the lowest since the N.C.A.A. began keeping records. Bold outfielders with the speed to run down balls over their heads played shallower, cutting off singles and reducing scoring further. \u201cFor a few years, the field was playing like a softball field,\u201d said Coach Rick Vanderhook of California State Fullerton. \u201cWhen you\u2019ve got good athletes, they can cover the whole softball field. Hits were at a premium.\u201d The seam height on the new ball, though only 0.015 of an inch less than that of the old one, is enough to cause a significant reduction in drag. The Washington State University Sport Science Laboratory, which specializes in bat and ball dynamics, found that the lower-seamed ball flew about 20 feet farther on average in 2013 testing. Performance suggests the change achieved its objective. Regular-season home runs rose to 0.58 per game, according to the N.C.A.A. Teams combined for 135 home runs in N.C.A.A. regional and super-regional play, or 0.56 per game, a jump of more than one-third over last season (84, 0.34 per game).", "paragraph_answer": "The offensive downturn alarmed coaches nationwide, although the bat was not the only reason. Rosenblatt was built on a hill, and the prevailing wind blew out. At TD Ameritrade, the wind often blows in, knocking down well-hit balls in the alleys and straightaway center. Minnesota Coach John Anderson, who pushed for the new standard while serving on the N.C.A.A. Division I baseball committee, wished it had had more time to study its effects before the stadium opened. \u201cWe would have designed the stadium with shorter dimensions in left-center, center and right-center,\u201d Anderson said. The power falloff was not limited to Omaha. Regular-season home runs per game last year sank to 0.39, the lowest since the N.C.A.A. began keeping records. Bold outfielders with the speed to run down balls over their heads played shallower, cutting off singles and reducing scoring further. \u201cFor a few years, the field was playing like a softball field,\u201d said Coach Rick Vanderhook of California State Fullerton. \u201cWhen you\u2019ve got good athletes, they can cover the whole softball field. Hits were at a premium.\u201d The seam height on the new ball, though only 0.015 of an inch less than that of the old one, is enough to cause a significant reduction in drag. The Washington State University Sport Science Laboratory, which specializes in bat and ball dynamics, found that the lower-seamed ball flew about 20 feet farther on average in 2013 testing. Performance suggests the change achieved its objective. Regular-season home runs rose to 0.58 per game, according to the N.C.A.A. Teams combined for 135 home runs in N.C.A.A. regional and super-regional play, or 0.56 per game, a jump of more than one-third over last season (84, 0.34 per game).", "sentence_answer": "\u201cFor a few years, the field was playing like a softball field,\u201d said Coach Rick Vanderhook of California State Fullerton."} -{"question": "Who is Vanderbilt's junior shortstop?", "paragraph": "\u201cIf you hit it well, you should get rewarded for it,\u201d said the Vanderbilt junior shortstop Dansby Swanson, the most outstanding player at last year\u2019s Series and the first overall pick in the major league amateur draft, by Arizona. \u201cI think that\u2019s what is happening this year.\u201d Swanson led the Commodores with 15 homers after hitting only three last season. Scoring rose as well, to 5.44 runs per game in the regular season from 5.08, reversing a recent trend. Curiously, so did strikeouts by pitchers, who discovered they could throw the new ball harder and snap sharper breaking pitches. Before Iowa lost in regional play, Hawkeyes Coach Rick Heller said he had never seen as many pitchers hit 95 miles per hour on the radar gun as he did this season. \u201cI think the biggest thing, quite frankly, is our pitchers enjoy throwing it more,\u201d said Louisiana State Coach Paul Mainieri, whose pitching staff struck out 93 more batters than it did last year. \u201cThere are no blisters. They get a little bit more movement, maybe even a little more velocity.\u201d", "answer": "Dansby Swanson", "sentence": "\u201cIf you hit it well, you should get rewarded for it,\u201d said the Vanderbilt junior shortstop Dansby Swanson , the most outstanding player at last year\u2019s Series and the first overall pick in the major league amateur draft, by Arizona.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cIf you hit it well, you should get rewarded for it,\u201d said the Vanderbilt junior shortstop Dansby Swanson , the most outstanding player at last year\u2019s Series and the first overall pick in the major league amateur draft, by Arizona. \u201cI think that\u2019s what is happening this year.\u201d Swanson led the Commodores with 15 homers after hitting only three last season. Scoring rose as well, to 5.44 runs per game in the regular season from 5.08, reversing a recent trend. Curiously, so did strikeouts by pitchers, who discovered they could throw the new ball harder and snap sharper breaking pitches. Before Iowa lost in regional play, Hawkeyes Coach Rick Heller said he had never seen as many pitchers hit 95 miles per hour on the radar gun as he did this season. \u201cI think the biggest thing, quite frankly, is our pitchers enjoy throwing it more,\u201d said Louisiana State Coach Paul Mainieri, whose pitching staff struck out 93 more batters than it did last year. \u201cThere are no blisters. They get a little bit more movement, maybe even a little more velocity.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIf you hit it well, you should get rewarded for it,\u201d said the Vanderbilt junior shortstop Dansby Swanson , the most outstanding player at last year\u2019s Series and the first overall pick in the major league amateur draft, by Arizona. \u201cI think that\u2019s what is happening this year.\u201d Swanson led the Commodores with 15 homers after hitting only three last season. Scoring rose as well, to 5.44 runs per game in the regular season from 5.08, reversing a recent trend. Curiously, so did strikeouts by pitchers, who discovered they could throw the new ball harder and snap sharper breaking pitches. Before Iowa lost in regional play, Hawkeyes Coach Rick Heller said he had never seen as many pitchers hit 95 miles per hour on the radar gun as he did this season. \u201cI think the biggest thing, quite frankly, is our pitchers enjoy throwing it more,\u201d said Louisiana State Coach Paul Mainieri, whose pitching staff struck out 93 more batters than it did last year. \u201cThere are no blisters. They get a little bit more movement, maybe even a little more velocity.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIf you hit it well, you should get rewarded for it,\u201d said the Vanderbilt junior shortstop Dansby Swanson , the most outstanding player at last year\u2019s Series and the first overall pick in the major league amateur draft, by Arizona."} -{"question": "How many homers did Swanson have?", "paragraph": "\u201cIf you hit it well, you should get rewarded for it,\u201d said the Vanderbilt junior shortstop Dansby Swanson, the most outstanding player at last year\u2019s Series and the first overall pick in the major league amateur draft, by Arizona. \u201cI think that\u2019s what is happening this year.\u201d Swanson led the Commodores with 15 homers after hitting only three last season. Scoring rose as well, to 5.44 runs per game in the regular season from 5.08, reversing a recent trend. Curiously, so did strikeouts by pitchers, who discovered they could throw the new ball harder and snap sharper breaking pitches. Before Iowa lost in regional play, Hawkeyes Coach Rick Heller said he had never seen as many pitchers hit 95 miles per hour on the radar gun as he did this season. \u201cI think the biggest thing, quite frankly, is our pitchers enjoy throwing it more,\u201d said Louisiana State Coach Paul Mainieri, whose pitching staff struck out 93 more batters than it did last year. \u201cThere are no blisters. They get a little bit more movement, maybe even a little more velocity.\u201d", "answer": "15", "sentence": "Swanson led the Commodores with 15 homers after hitting only three last season.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIf you hit it well, you should get rewarded for it,\u201d said the Vanderbilt junior shortstop Dansby Swanson, the most outstanding player at last year\u2019s Series and the first overall pick in the major league amateur draft, by Arizona. \u201cI think that\u2019s what is happening this year.\u201d Swanson led the Commodores with 15 homers after hitting only three last season. Scoring rose as well, to 5.44 runs per game in the regular season from 5.08, reversing a recent trend. Curiously, so did strikeouts by pitchers, who discovered they could throw the new ball harder and snap sharper breaking pitches. Before Iowa lost in regional play, Hawkeyes Coach Rick Heller said he had never seen as many pitchers hit 95 miles per hour on the radar gun as he did this season. \u201cI think the biggest thing, quite frankly, is our pitchers enjoy throwing it more,\u201d said Louisiana State Coach Paul Mainieri, whose pitching staff struck out 93 more batters than it did last year. \u201cThere are no blisters. They get a little bit more movement, maybe even a little more velocity.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIf you hit it well, you should get rewarded for it,\u201d said the Vanderbilt junior shortstop Dansby Swanson, the most outstanding player at last year\u2019s Series and the first overall pick in the major league amateur draft, by Arizona. \u201cI think that\u2019s what is happening this year.\u201d Swanson led the Commodores with 15 homers after hitting only three last season. Scoring rose as well, to 5.44 runs per game in the regular season from 5.08, reversing a recent trend. Curiously, so did strikeouts by pitchers, who discovered they could throw the new ball harder and snap sharper breaking pitches. Before Iowa lost in regional play, Hawkeyes Coach Rick Heller said he had never seen as many pitchers hit 95 miles per hour on the radar gun as he did this season. \u201cI think the biggest thing, quite frankly, is our pitchers enjoy throwing it more,\u201d said Louisiana State Coach Paul Mainieri, whose pitching staff struck out 93 more batters than it did last year. \u201cThere are no blisters. They get a little bit more movement, maybe even a little more velocity.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Swanson led the Commodores with 15 homers after hitting only three last season."} -{"question": "Who had the first overall pick in the major league amateur draft?", "paragraph": "\u201cIf you hit it well, you should get rewarded for it,\u201d said the Vanderbilt junior shortstop Dansby Swanson, the most outstanding player at last year\u2019s Series and the first overall pick in the major league amateur draft, by Arizona. \u201cI think that\u2019s what is happening this year.\u201d Swanson led the Commodores with 15 homers after hitting only three last season. Scoring rose as well, to 5.44 runs per game in the regular season from 5.08, reversing a recent trend. Curiously, so did strikeouts by pitchers, who discovered they could throw the new ball harder and snap sharper breaking pitches. Before Iowa lost in regional play, Hawkeyes Coach Rick Heller said he had never seen as many pitchers hit 95 miles per hour on the radar gun as he did this season. \u201cI think the biggest thing, quite frankly, is our pitchers enjoy throwing it more,\u201d said Louisiana State Coach Paul Mainieri, whose pitching staff struck out 93 more batters than it did last year. \u201cThere are no blisters. They get a little bit more movement, maybe even a little more velocity.\u201d", "answer": "Arizona", "sentence": "\u201cIf you hit it well, you should get rewarded for it,\u201d said the Vanderbilt junior shortstop Dansby Swanson, the most outstanding player at last year\u2019s Series and the first overall pick in the major league amateur draft, by Arizona .", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cIf you hit it well, you should get rewarded for it,\u201d said the Vanderbilt junior shortstop Dansby Swanson, the most outstanding player at last year\u2019s Series and the first overall pick in the major league amateur draft, by Arizona . \u201cI think that\u2019s what is happening this year.\u201d Swanson led the Commodores with 15 homers after hitting only three last season. Scoring rose as well, to 5.44 runs per game in the regular season from 5.08, reversing a recent trend. Curiously, so did strikeouts by pitchers, who discovered they could throw the new ball harder and snap sharper breaking pitches. Before Iowa lost in regional play, Hawkeyes Coach Rick Heller said he had never seen as many pitchers hit 95 miles per hour on the radar gun as he did this season. \u201cI think the biggest thing, quite frankly, is our pitchers enjoy throwing it more,\u201d said Louisiana State Coach Paul Mainieri, whose pitching staff struck out 93 more batters than it did last year. \u201cThere are no blisters. They get a little bit more movement, maybe even a little more velocity.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIf you hit it well, you should get rewarded for it,\u201d said the Vanderbilt junior shortstop Dansby Swanson, the most outstanding player at last year\u2019s Series and the first overall pick in the major league amateur draft, by Arizona . \u201cI think that\u2019s what is happening this year.\u201d Swanson led the Commodores with 15 homers after hitting only three last season. Scoring rose as well, to 5.44 runs per game in the regular season from 5.08, reversing a recent trend. Curiously, so did strikeouts by pitchers, who discovered they could throw the new ball harder and snap sharper breaking pitches. Before Iowa lost in regional play, Hawkeyes Coach Rick Heller said he had never seen as many pitchers hit 95 miles per hour on the radar gun as he did this season. \u201cI think the biggest thing, quite frankly, is our pitchers enjoy throwing it more,\u201d said Louisiana State Coach Paul Mainieri, whose pitching staff struck out 93 more batters than it did last year. \u201cThere are no blisters. They get a little bit more movement, maybe even a little more velocity.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIf you hit it well, you should get rewarded for it,\u201d said the Vanderbilt junior shortstop Dansby Swanson, the most outstanding player at last year\u2019s Series and the first overall pick in the major league amateur draft, by Arizona ."} -{"question": "Who is the Louisiana State Coach?", "paragraph": "\u201cIf you hit it well, you should get rewarded for it,\u201d said the Vanderbilt junior shortstop Dansby Swanson, the most outstanding player at last year\u2019s Series and the first overall pick in the major league amateur draft, by Arizona. \u201cI think that\u2019s what is happening this year.\u201d Swanson led the Commodores with 15 homers after hitting only three last season. Scoring rose as well, to 5.44 runs per game in the regular season from 5.08, reversing a recent trend. Curiously, so did strikeouts by pitchers, who discovered they could throw the new ball harder and snap sharper breaking pitches. Before Iowa lost in regional play, Hawkeyes Coach Rick Heller said he had never seen as many pitchers hit 95 miles per hour on the radar gun as he did this season. \u201cI think the biggest thing, quite frankly, is our pitchers enjoy throwing it more,\u201d said Louisiana State Coach Paul Mainieri, whose pitching staff struck out 93 more batters than it did last year. \u201cThere are no blisters. They get a little bit more movement, maybe even a little more velocity.\u201d", "answer": "Paul Mainieri", "sentence": "\u201cI think the biggest thing, quite frankly, is our pitchers enjoy throwing it more,\u201d said Louisiana State Coach Paul Mainieri , whose pitching staff struck out 93 more batters than it did last year.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIf you hit it well, you should get rewarded for it,\u201d said the Vanderbilt junior shortstop Dansby Swanson, the most outstanding player at last year\u2019s Series and the first overall pick in the major league amateur draft, by Arizona. \u201cI think that\u2019s what is happening this year.\u201d Swanson led the Commodores with 15 homers after hitting only three last season. Scoring rose as well, to 5.44 runs per game in the regular season from 5.08, reversing a recent trend. Curiously, so did strikeouts by pitchers, who discovered they could throw the new ball harder and snap sharper breaking pitches. Before Iowa lost in regional play, Hawkeyes Coach Rick Heller said he had never seen as many pitchers hit 95 miles per hour on the radar gun as he did this season. \u201cI think the biggest thing, quite frankly, is our pitchers enjoy throwing it more,\u201d said Louisiana State Coach Paul Mainieri , whose pitching staff struck out 93 more batters than it did last year. \u201cThere are no blisters. They get a little bit more movement, maybe even a little more velocity.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIf you hit it well, you should get rewarded for it,\u201d said the Vanderbilt junior shortstop Dansby Swanson, the most outstanding player at last year\u2019s Series and the first overall pick in the major league amateur draft, by Arizona. \u201cI think that\u2019s what is happening this year.\u201d Swanson led the Commodores with 15 homers after hitting only three last season. Scoring rose as well, to 5.44 runs per game in the regular season from 5.08, reversing a recent trend. Curiously, so did strikeouts by pitchers, who discovered they could throw the new ball harder and snap sharper breaking pitches. Before Iowa lost in regional play, Hawkeyes Coach Rick Heller said he had never seen as many pitchers hit 95 miles per hour on the radar gun as he did this season. \u201cI think the biggest thing, quite frankly, is our pitchers enjoy throwing it more,\u201d said Louisiana State Coach Paul Mainieri , whose pitching staff struck out 93 more batters than it did last year. \u201cThere are no blisters. They get a little bit more movement, maybe even a little more velocity.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI think the biggest thing, quite frankly, is our pitchers enjoy throwing it more,\u201d said Louisiana State Coach Paul Mainieri , whose pitching staff struck out 93 more batters than it did last year."} -{"question": "Who is the founder of Search Engine Land?", "paragraph": "Google has made several big changes. Companies will be docked for shortcomings like displaying links that are hard to click or forcing users to scroll horizontally on a lopsided site. In addition, the company recently announced that in certain cases it would also use information contained within apps as a ranking factor for mobile searches performed on phones that run its Android software. \u201cSince mobile search results are about half of what Google handles, anyone might be at risk,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, the founder of Search Engine Land, which closely tracks changes to Google\u2019s search engine. The shift to mobile devices has been a challenge for all businesses, Google included. In the space of a few years, phones have become the dominant portal through which people use the Internet. The United States had 134 million mobile users last year, about 100 million more than in 2010, according to eMarketer, a research company.", "answer": "about half", "sentence": "\u201cSince mobile search results are about half of what Google handles, anyone might be at risk,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, the founder of Search Engine Land, which closely tracks changes to Google\u2019s search engine.", "paragraph_sentence": "Google has made several big changes. Companies will be docked for shortcomings like displaying links that are hard to click or forcing users to scroll horizontally on a lopsided site. In addition, the company recently announced that in certain cases it would also use information contained within apps as a ranking factor for mobile searches performed on phones that run its Android software. \u201cSince mobile search results are about half of what Google handles, anyone might be at risk,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, the founder of Search Engine Land, which closely tracks changes to Google\u2019s search engine. The shift to mobile devices has been a challenge for all businesses, Google included. In the space of a few years, phones have become the dominant portal through which people use the Internet. The United States had 134 million mobile users last year, about 100 million more than in 2010, according to eMarketer, a research company.", "paragraph_answer": "Google has made several big changes. Companies will be docked for shortcomings like displaying links that are hard to click or forcing users to scroll horizontally on a lopsided site. In addition, the company recently announced that in certain cases it would also use information contained within apps as a ranking factor for mobile searches performed on phones that run its Android software. \u201cSince mobile search results are about half of what Google handles, anyone might be at risk,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, the founder of Search Engine Land, which closely tracks changes to Google\u2019s search engine. The shift to mobile devices has been a challenge for all businesses, Google included. In the space of a few years, phones have become the dominant portal through which people use the Internet. The United States had 134 million mobile users last year, about 100 million more than in 2010, according to eMarketer, a research company.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cSince mobile search results are about half of what Google handles, anyone might be at risk,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, the founder of Search Engine Land, which closely tracks changes to Google\u2019s search engine."} -{"question": "How many mobile users does the United States have?", "paragraph": "Google has made several big changes. Companies will be docked for shortcomings like displaying links that are hard to click or forcing users to scroll horizontally on a lopsided site. In addition, the company recently announced that in certain cases it would also use information contained within apps as a ranking factor for mobile searches performed on phones that run its Android software. \u201cSince mobile search results are about half of what Google handles, anyone might be at risk,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, the founder of Search Engine Land, which closely tracks changes to Google\u2019s search engine. The shift to mobile devices has been a challenge for all businesses, Google included. In the space of a few years, phones have become the dominant portal through which people use the Internet. The United States had 134 million mobile users last year, about 100 million more than in 2010, according to eMarketer, a research company.", "answer": "134 million", "sentence": "The United States had 134 million mobile users last year, about 100 million more than in 2010, according to eMarketer, a research company.", "paragraph_sentence": "Google has made several big changes. Companies will be docked for shortcomings like displaying links that are hard to click or forcing users to scroll horizontally on a lopsided site. In addition, the company recently announced that in certain cases it would also use information contained within apps as a ranking factor for mobile searches performed on phones that run its Android software. \u201cSince mobile search results are about half of what Google handles, anyone might be at risk,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, the founder of Search Engine Land, which closely tracks changes to Google\u2019s search engine. The shift to mobile devices has been a challenge for all businesses, Google included. In the space of a few years, phones have become the dominant portal through which people use the Internet. The United States had 134 million mobile users last year, about 100 million more than in 2010, according to eMarketer, a research company. ", "paragraph_answer": "Google has made several big changes. Companies will be docked for shortcomings like displaying links that are hard to click or forcing users to scroll horizontally on a lopsided site. In addition, the company recently announced that in certain cases it would also use information contained within apps as a ranking factor for mobile searches performed on phones that run its Android software. \u201cSince mobile search results are about half of what Google handles, anyone might be at risk,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, the founder of Search Engine Land, which closely tracks changes to Google\u2019s search engine. The shift to mobile devices has been a challenge for all businesses, Google included. In the space of a few years, phones have become the dominant portal through which people use the Internet. The United States had 134 million mobile users last year, about 100 million more than in 2010, according to eMarketer, a research company.", "sentence_answer": "The United States had 134 million mobile users last year, about 100 million more than in 2010, according to eMarketer, a research company."} -{"question": "About how many search results that Google handles are mobile?", "paragraph": "Google has made several big changes. Companies will be docked for shortcomings like displaying links that are hard to click or forcing users to scroll horizontally on a lopsided site. In addition, the company recently announced that in certain cases it would also use information contained within apps as a ranking factor for mobile searches performed on phones that run its Android software. \u201cSince mobile search results are about half of what Google handles, anyone might be at risk,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, the founder of Search Engine Land, which closely tracks changes to Google\u2019s search engine. The shift to mobile devices has been a challenge for all businesses, Google included. In the space of a few years, phones have become the dominant portal through which people use the Internet. The United States had 134 million mobile users last year, about 100 million more than in 2010, according to eMarketer, a research company.", "answer": "about half", "sentence": "\u201cSince mobile search results are about half of what Google handles, anyone might be at risk,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, the founder of Search Engine Land, which closely tracks changes to Google\u2019s search engine.", "paragraph_sentence": "Google has made several big changes. Companies will be docked for shortcomings like displaying links that are hard to click or forcing users to scroll horizontally on a lopsided site. In addition, the company recently announced that in certain cases it would also use information contained within apps as a ranking factor for mobile searches performed on phones that run its Android software. \u201cSince mobile search results are about half of what Google handles, anyone might be at risk,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, the founder of Search Engine Land, which closely tracks changes to Google\u2019s search engine. The shift to mobile devices has been a challenge for all businesses, Google included. In the space of a few years, phones have become the dominant portal through which people use the Internet. The United States had 134 million mobile users last year, about 100 million more than in 2010, according to eMarketer, a research company.", "paragraph_answer": "Google has made several big changes. Companies will be docked for shortcomings like displaying links that are hard to click or forcing users to scroll horizontally on a lopsided site. In addition, the company recently announced that in certain cases it would also use information contained within apps as a ranking factor for mobile searches performed on phones that run its Android software. \u201cSince mobile search results are about half of what Google handles, anyone might be at risk,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, the founder of Search Engine Land, which closely tracks changes to Google\u2019s search engine. The shift to mobile devices has been a challenge for all businesses, Google included. In the space of a few years, phones have become the dominant portal through which people use the Internet. The United States had 134 million mobile users last year, about 100 million more than in 2010, according to eMarketer, a research company.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cSince mobile search results are about half of what Google handles, anyone might be at risk,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, the founder of Search Engine Land, which closely tracks changes to Google\u2019s search engine."} -{"question": "What brand of software does Google run?", "paragraph": "Google has made several big changes. Companies will be docked for shortcomings like displaying links that are hard to click or forcing users to scroll horizontally on a lopsided site. In addition, the company recently announced that in certain cases it would also use information contained within apps as a ranking factor for mobile searches performed on phones that run its Android software. \u201cSince mobile search results are about half of what Google handles, anyone might be at risk,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, the founder of Search Engine Land, which closely tracks changes to Google\u2019s search engine. The shift to mobile devices has been a challenge for all businesses, Google included. In the space of a few years, phones have become the dominant portal through which people use the Internet. The United States had 134 million mobile users last year, about 100 million more than in 2010, according to eMarketer, a research company.", "answer": "Android", "sentence": "In addition, the company recently announced that in certain cases it would also use information contained within apps as a ranking factor for mobile searches performed on phones that run its Android software.", "paragraph_sentence": "Google has made several big changes. Companies will be docked for shortcomings like displaying links that are hard to click or forcing users to scroll horizontally on a lopsided site. In addition, the company recently announced that in certain cases it would also use information contained within apps as a ranking factor for mobile searches performed on phones that run its Android software. \u201cSince mobile search results are about half of what Google handles, anyone might be at risk,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, the founder of Search Engine Land, which closely tracks changes to Google\u2019s search engine. The shift to mobile devices has been a challenge for all businesses, Google included. In the space of a few years, phones have become the dominant portal through which people use the Internet. The United States had 134 million mobile users last year, about 100 million more than in 2010, according to eMarketer, a research company.", "paragraph_answer": "Google has made several big changes. Companies will be docked for shortcomings like displaying links that are hard to click or forcing users to scroll horizontally on a lopsided site. In addition, the company recently announced that in certain cases it would also use information contained within apps as a ranking factor for mobile searches performed on phones that run its Android software. \u201cSince mobile search results are about half of what Google handles, anyone might be at risk,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, the founder of Search Engine Land, which closely tracks changes to Google\u2019s search engine. The shift to mobile devices has been a challenge for all businesses, Google included. In the space of a few years, phones have become the dominant portal through which people use the Internet. The United States had 134 million mobile users last year, about 100 million more than in 2010, according to eMarketer, a research company.", "sentence_answer": "In addition, the company recently announced that in certain cases it would also use information contained within apps as a ranking factor for mobile searches performed on phones that run its Android software."} -{"question": "What type of device do most people use the internet on?", "paragraph": "Google has made several big changes. Companies will be docked for shortcomings like displaying links that are hard to click or forcing users to scroll horizontally on a lopsided site. In addition, the company recently announced that in certain cases it would also use information contained within apps as a ranking factor for mobile searches performed on phones that run its Android software. \u201cSince mobile search results are about half of what Google handles, anyone might be at risk,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, the founder of Search Engine Land, which closely tracks changes to Google\u2019s search engine. The shift to mobile devices has been a challenge for all businesses, Google included. In the space of a few years, phones have become the dominant portal through which people use the Internet. The United States had 134 million mobile users last year, about 100 million more than in 2010, according to eMarketer, a research company.", "answer": "phones", "sentence": "In addition, the company recently announced that in certain cases it would also use information contained within apps as a ranking factor for mobile searches performed on phones that run its Android software.", "paragraph_sentence": "Google has made several big changes. Companies will be docked for shortcomings like displaying links that are hard to click or forcing users to scroll horizontally on a lopsided site. In addition, the company recently announced that in certain cases it would also use information contained within apps as a ranking factor for mobile searches performed on phones that run its Android software. \u201cSince mobile search results are about half of what Google handles, anyone might be at risk,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, the founder of Search Engine Land, which closely tracks changes to Google\u2019s search engine. The shift to mobile devices has been a challenge for all businesses, Google included. In the space of a few years, phones have become the dominant portal through which people use the Internet. The United States had 134 million mobile users last year, about 100 million more than in 2010, according to eMarketer, a research company.", "paragraph_answer": "Google has made several big changes. Companies will be docked for shortcomings like displaying links that are hard to click or forcing users to scroll horizontally on a lopsided site. In addition, the company recently announced that in certain cases it would also use information contained within apps as a ranking factor for mobile searches performed on phones that run its Android software. \u201cSince mobile search results are about half of what Google handles, anyone might be at risk,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, the founder of Search Engine Land, which closely tracks changes to Google\u2019s search engine. The shift to mobile devices has been a challenge for all businesses, Google included. In the space of a few years, phones have become the dominant portal through which people use the Internet. The United States had 134 million mobile users last year, about 100 million more than in 2010, according to eMarketer, a research company.", "sentence_answer": "In addition, the company recently announced that in certain cases it would also use information contained within apps as a ranking factor for mobile searches performed on phones that run its Android software."} -{"question": "Who did Mr. Moyer say that his company would be committed to serving?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe are committed to providing the best service to our clients and will remain committed to ensuring accepted standards are met,\u201d Mr. Moyer said. Baltimore has been the scene of riots that exploded over the death of Freddie Gray, a young black man who was injured in police custody and later died, though the motion is unrelated to that death, which led to charges against six police officers. The motion came days after Martin O\u2019Malley, who as governor of Maryland oversaw the jail system from 2007 through 2015, announced that he was running for president. Earlier, as mayor of Baltimore, Mr. O\u2019Malley introduced a \u201czero tolerance\u201d brand of policing, the lingering effects of which are still being felt in the relationship between law enforcement and city\u2019s poor, black neighborhoods.", "answer": "clients", "sentence": "\u201cWe are committed to providing the best service to our clients and will remain committed to ensuring accepted standards are met,\u201d Mr. Moyer said.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cWe are committed to providing the best service to our clients and will remain committed to ensuring accepted standards are met,\u201d Mr. Moyer said. Baltimore has been the scene of riots that exploded over the death of Freddie Gray, a young black man who was injured in police custody and later died, though the motion is unrelated to that death, which led to charges against six police officers. The motion came days after Martin O\u2019Malley, who as governor of Maryland oversaw the jail system from 2007 through 2015, announced that he was running for president. Earlier, as mayor of Baltimore, Mr. O\u2019Malley introduced a \u201czero tolerance\u201d brand of policing, the lingering effects of which are still being felt in the relationship between law enforcement and city\u2019s poor, black neighborhoods.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe are committed to providing the best service to our clients and will remain committed to ensuring accepted standards are met,\u201d Mr. Moyer said. Baltimore has been the scene of riots that exploded over the death of Freddie Gray, a young black man who was injured in police custody and later died, though the motion is unrelated to that death, which led to charges against six police officers. The motion came days after Martin O\u2019Malley, who as governor of Maryland oversaw the jail system from 2007 through 2015, announced that he was running for president. Earlier, as mayor of Baltimore, Mr. O\u2019Malley introduced a \u201czero tolerance\u201d brand of policing, the lingering effects of which are still being felt in the relationship between law enforcement and city\u2019s poor, black neighborhoods.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe are committed to providing the best service to our clients and will remain committed to ensuring accepted standards are met,\u201d Mr. Moyer said."} -{"question": "Whose death caused riots in Baltimore?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe are committed to providing the best service to our clients and will remain committed to ensuring accepted standards are met,\u201d Mr. Moyer said. Baltimore has been the scene of riots that exploded over the death of Freddie Gray, a young black man who was injured in police custody and later died, though the motion is unrelated to that death, which led to charges against six police officers. The motion came days after Martin O\u2019Malley, who as governor of Maryland oversaw the jail system from 2007 through 2015, announced that he was running for president. Earlier, as mayor of Baltimore, Mr. O\u2019Malley introduced a \u201czero tolerance\u201d brand of policing, the lingering effects of which are still being felt in the relationship between law enforcement and city\u2019s poor, black neighborhoods.", "answer": "Freddie Gray", "sentence": "Baltimore has been the scene of riots that exploded over the death of Freddie Gray , a young black man who was injured in police custody and later died, though the motion is unrelated to that death, which led to charges against six police officers.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe are committed to providing the best service to our clients and will remain committed to ensuring accepted standards are met,\u201d Mr. Moyer said. Baltimore has been the scene of riots that exploded over the death of Freddie Gray , a young black man who was injured in police custody and later died, though the motion is unrelated to that death, which led to charges against six police officers. The motion came days after Martin O\u2019Malley, who as governor of Maryland oversaw the jail system from 2007 through 2015, announced that he was running for president. Earlier, as mayor of Baltimore, Mr. O\u2019Malley introduced a \u201czero tolerance\u201d brand of policing, the lingering effects of which are still being felt in the relationship between law enforcement and city\u2019s poor, black neighborhoods.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe are committed to providing the best service to our clients and will remain committed to ensuring accepted standards are met,\u201d Mr. Moyer said. Baltimore has been the scene of riots that exploded over the death of Freddie Gray , a young black man who was injured in police custody and later died, though the motion is unrelated to that death, which led to charges against six police officers. The motion came days after Martin O\u2019Malley, who as governor of Maryland oversaw the jail system from 2007 through 2015, announced that he was running for president. Earlier, as mayor of Baltimore, Mr. O\u2019Malley introduced a \u201czero tolerance\u201d brand of policing, the lingering effects of which are still being felt in the relationship between law enforcement and city\u2019s poor, black neighborhoods.", "sentence_answer": "Baltimore has been the scene of riots that exploded over the death of Freddie Gray , a young black man who was injured in police custody and later died, though the motion is unrelated to that death, which led to charges against six police officers."} -{"question": "How many police officers were charged in the death of Freddie Gray?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe are committed to providing the best service to our clients and will remain committed to ensuring accepted standards are met,\u201d Mr. Moyer said. Baltimore has been the scene of riots that exploded over the death of Freddie Gray, a young black man who was injured in police custody and later died, though the motion is unrelated to that death, which led to charges against six police officers. The motion came days after Martin O\u2019Malley, who as governor of Maryland oversaw the jail system from 2007 through 2015, announced that he was running for president. Earlier, as mayor of Baltimore, Mr. O\u2019Malley introduced a \u201czero tolerance\u201d brand of policing, the lingering effects of which are still being felt in the relationship between law enforcement and city\u2019s poor, black neighborhoods.", "answer": "six police officers", "sentence": "Baltimore has been the scene of riots that exploded over the death of Freddie Gray, a young black man who was injured in police custody and later died, though the motion is unrelated to that death, which led to charges against six police officers .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe are committed to providing the best service to our clients and will remain committed to ensuring accepted standards are met,\u201d Mr. Moyer said. Baltimore has been the scene of riots that exploded over the death of Freddie Gray, a young black man who was injured in police custody and later died, though the motion is unrelated to that death, which led to charges against six police officers . The motion came days after Martin O\u2019Malley, who as governor of Maryland oversaw the jail system from 2007 through 2015, announced that he was running for president. Earlier, as mayor of Baltimore, Mr. O\u2019Malley introduced a \u201czero tolerance\u201d brand of policing, the lingering effects of which are still being felt in the relationship between law enforcement and city\u2019s poor, black neighborhoods.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe are committed to providing the best service to our clients and will remain committed to ensuring accepted standards are met,\u201d Mr. Moyer said. Baltimore has been the scene of riots that exploded over the death of Freddie Gray, a young black man who was injured in police custody and later died, though the motion is unrelated to that death, which led to charges against six police officers . The motion came days after Martin O\u2019Malley, who as governor of Maryland oversaw the jail system from 2007 through 2015, announced that he was running for president. Earlier, as mayor of Baltimore, Mr. O\u2019Malley introduced a \u201czero tolerance\u201d brand of policing, the lingering effects of which are still being felt in the relationship between law enforcement and city\u2019s poor, black neighborhoods.", "sentence_answer": "Baltimore has been the scene of riots that exploded over the death of Freddie Gray, a young black man who was injured in police custody and later died, though the motion is unrelated to that death, which led to charges against six police officers ."} -{"question": "Who was the governor of Maryland in 2007?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe are committed to providing the best service to our clients and will remain committed to ensuring accepted standards are met,\u201d Mr. Moyer said. Baltimore has been the scene of riots that exploded over the death of Freddie Gray, a young black man who was injured in police custody and later died, though the motion is unrelated to that death, which led to charges against six police officers. The motion came days after Martin O\u2019Malley, who as governor of Maryland oversaw the jail system from 2007 through 2015, announced that he was running for president. Earlier, as mayor of Baltimore, Mr. O\u2019Malley introduced a \u201czero tolerance\u201d brand of policing, the lingering effects of which are still being felt in the relationship between law enforcement and city\u2019s poor, black neighborhoods.", "answer": "Martin O\u2019Malley", "sentence": "The motion came days after Martin O\u2019Malley , who as governor of Maryland oversaw the jail system from 2007 through 2015, announced that he was running for president.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe are committed to providing the best service to our clients and will remain committed to ensuring accepted standards are met,\u201d Mr. Moyer said. Baltimore has been the scene of riots that exploded over the death of Freddie Gray, a young black man who was injured in police custody and later died, though the motion is unrelated to that death, which led to charges against six police officers. The motion came days after Martin O\u2019Malley , who as governor of Maryland oversaw the jail system from 2007 through 2015, announced that he was running for president. Earlier, as mayor of Baltimore, Mr. O\u2019Malley introduced a \u201czero tolerance\u201d brand of policing, the lingering effects of which are still being felt in the relationship between law enforcement and city\u2019s poor, black neighborhoods.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe are committed to providing the best service to our clients and will remain committed to ensuring accepted standards are met,\u201d Mr. Moyer said. Baltimore has been the scene of riots that exploded over the death of Freddie Gray, a young black man who was injured in police custody and later died, though the motion is unrelated to that death, which led to charges against six police officers. The motion came days after Martin O\u2019Malley , who as governor of Maryland oversaw the jail system from 2007 through 2015, announced that he was running for president. Earlier, as mayor of Baltimore, Mr. O\u2019Malley introduced a \u201czero tolerance\u201d brand of policing, the lingering effects of which are still being felt in the relationship between law enforcement and city\u2019s poor, black neighborhoods.", "sentence_answer": "The motion came days after Martin O\u2019Malley , who as governor of Maryland oversaw the jail system from 2007 through 2015, announced that he was running for president."} -{"question": "After the officers were charged, what government position did Martin O' Malley begin running for?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe are committed to providing the best service to our clients and will remain committed to ensuring accepted standards are met,\u201d Mr. Moyer said. Baltimore has been the scene of riots that exploded over the death of Freddie Gray, a young black man who was injured in police custody and later died, though the motion is unrelated to that death, which led to charges against six police officers. The motion came days after Martin O\u2019Malley, who as governor of Maryland oversaw the jail system from 2007 through 2015, announced that he was running for president. Earlier, as mayor of Baltimore, Mr. O\u2019Malley introduced a \u201czero tolerance\u201d brand of policing, the lingering effects of which are still being felt in the relationship between law enforcement and city\u2019s poor, black neighborhoods.", "answer": "for president", "sentence": "The motion came days after Martin O\u2019Malley, who as governor of Maryland oversaw the jail system from 2007 through 2015, announced that he was running for president .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe are committed to providing the best service to our clients and will remain committed to ensuring accepted standards are met,\u201d Mr. Moyer said. Baltimore has been the scene of riots that exploded over the death of Freddie Gray, a young black man who was injured in police custody and later died, though the motion is unrelated to that death, which led to charges against six police officers. The motion came days after Martin O\u2019Malley, who as governor of Maryland oversaw the jail system from 2007 through 2015, announced that he was running for president . Earlier, as mayor of Baltimore, Mr. O\u2019Malley introduced a \u201czero tolerance\u201d brand of policing, the lingering effects of which are still being felt in the relationship between law enforcement and city\u2019s poor, black neighborhoods.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe are committed to providing the best service to our clients and will remain committed to ensuring accepted standards are met,\u201d Mr. Moyer said. Baltimore has been the scene of riots that exploded over the death of Freddie Gray, a young black man who was injured in police custody and later died, though the motion is unrelated to that death, which led to charges against six police officers. The motion came days after Martin O\u2019Malley, who as governor of Maryland oversaw the jail system from 2007 through 2015, announced that he was running for president . Earlier, as mayor of Baltimore, Mr. O\u2019Malley introduced a \u201czero tolerance\u201d brand of policing, the lingering effects of which are still being felt in the relationship between law enforcement and city\u2019s poor, black neighborhoods.", "sentence_answer": "The motion came days after Martin O\u2019Malley, who as governor of Maryland oversaw the jail system from 2007 through 2015, announced that he was running for president ."} -{"question": "What group was trying to enforce changes at the jail?", "paragraph": "Tuesday\u2019s move is the latest in a long push by the A.C.L.U. to force changes at the jail. The group filed its first class action on behalf of inmates in 1993, saying the poor conditions constituted cruel and unusual punishment. In the years since, the jail has staved off court orders by agreeing to improve conditions. The most recent settlement was in 2009. But the A.C.L.U. said the state had failed to make meaningful improvements at the jail, which overwhelmingly houses poor, black residents caught up in drug-related crimes.", "answer": "A.C.L.U.", "sentence": "Tuesday\u2019s move is the latest in a long push by the A.C.L.U. to force changes at the jail.", "paragraph_sentence": " Tuesday\u2019s move is the latest in a long push by the A.C.L.U. to force changes at the jail. The group filed its first class action on behalf of inmates in 1993, saying the poor conditions constituted cruel and unusual punishment. In the years since, the jail has staved off court orders by agreeing to improve conditions. The most recent settlement was in 2009. But the A.C.L.U. said the state had failed to make meaningful improvements at the jail, which overwhelmingly houses poor, black residents caught up in drug-related crimes.", "paragraph_answer": "Tuesday\u2019s move is the latest in a long push by the A.C.L.U. to force changes at the jail. The group filed its first class action on behalf of inmates in 1993, saying the poor conditions constituted cruel and unusual punishment. In the years since, the jail has staved off court orders by agreeing to improve conditions. The most recent settlement was in 2009. But the A.C.L.U. said the state had failed to make meaningful improvements at the jail, which overwhelmingly houses poor, black residents caught up in drug-related crimes.", "sentence_answer": "Tuesday\u2019s move is the latest in a long push by the A.C.L.U. to force changes at the jail."} -{"question": "When did the A.C.L.U. file its first class action against the jail?", "paragraph": "Tuesday\u2019s move is the latest in a long push by the A.C.L.U. to force changes at the jail. The group filed its first class action on behalf of inmates in 1993, saying the poor conditions constituted cruel and unusual punishment. In the years since, the jail has staved off court orders by agreeing to improve conditions. The most recent settlement was in 2009. But the A.C.L.U. said the state had failed to make meaningful improvements at the jail, which overwhelmingly houses poor, black residents caught up in drug-related crimes.", "answer": "in 1993", "sentence": "The group filed its first class action on behalf of inmates in 1993 , saying the poor conditions constituted cruel and unusual punishment.", "paragraph_sentence": "Tuesday\u2019s move is the latest in a long push by the A.C.L.U. to force changes at the jail. The group filed its first class action on behalf of inmates in 1993 , saying the poor conditions constituted cruel and unusual punishment. In the years since, the jail has staved off court orders by agreeing to improve conditions. The most recent settlement was in 2009. But the A.C.L.U. said the state had failed to make meaningful improvements at the jail, which overwhelmingly houses poor, black residents caught up in drug-related crimes.", "paragraph_answer": "Tuesday\u2019s move is the latest in a long push by the A.C.L.U. to force changes at the jail. The group filed its first class action on behalf of inmates in 1993 , saying the poor conditions constituted cruel and unusual punishment. In the years since, the jail has staved off court orders by agreeing to improve conditions. The most recent settlement was in 2009. But the A.C.L.U. said the state had failed to make meaningful improvements at the jail, which overwhelmingly houses poor, black residents caught up in drug-related crimes.", "sentence_answer": "The group filed its first class action on behalf of inmates in 1993 , saying the poor conditions constituted cruel and unusual punishment."} -{"question": "Who was the class action suit filed on behalf of?", "paragraph": "Tuesday\u2019s move is the latest in a long push by the A.C.L.U. to force changes at the jail. The group filed its first class action on behalf of inmates in 1993, saying the poor conditions constituted cruel and unusual punishment. In the years since, the jail has staved off court orders by agreeing to improve conditions. The most recent settlement was in 2009. But the A.C.L.U. said the state had failed to make meaningful improvements at the jail, which overwhelmingly houses poor, black residents caught up in drug-related crimes.", "answer": "on behalf of inmates", "sentence": "The group filed its first class action on behalf of inmates in 1993, saying the poor conditions constituted cruel and unusual punishment.", "paragraph_sentence": "Tuesday\u2019s move is the latest in a long push by the A.C.L.U. to force changes at the jail. The group filed its first class action on behalf of inmates in 1993, saying the poor conditions constituted cruel and unusual punishment. In the years since, the jail has staved off court orders by agreeing to improve conditions. The most recent settlement was in 2009. But the A.C.L.U. said the state had failed to make meaningful improvements at the jail, which overwhelmingly houses poor, black residents caught up in drug-related crimes.", "paragraph_answer": "Tuesday\u2019s move is the latest in a long push by the A.C.L.U. to force changes at the jail. The group filed its first class action on behalf of inmates in 1993, saying the poor conditions constituted cruel and unusual punishment. In the years since, the jail has staved off court orders by agreeing to improve conditions. The most recent settlement was in 2009. But the A.C.L.U. said the state had failed to make meaningful improvements at the jail, which overwhelmingly houses poor, black residents caught up in drug-related crimes.", "sentence_answer": "The group filed its first class action on behalf of inmates in 1993, saying the poor conditions constituted cruel and unusual punishment."} -{"question": "When was the most recent settlement by the jail?", "paragraph": "Tuesday\u2019s move is the latest in a long push by the A.C.L.U. to force changes at the jail. The group filed its first class action on behalf of inmates in 1993, saying the poor conditions constituted cruel and unusual punishment. In the years since, the jail has staved off court orders by agreeing to improve conditions. The most recent settlement was in 2009. But the A.C.L.U. said the state had failed to make meaningful improvements at the jail, which overwhelmingly houses poor, black residents caught up in drug-related crimes.", "answer": "in 2009", "sentence": "The most recent settlement was in 2009 .", "paragraph_sentence": "Tuesday\u2019s move is the latest in a long push by the A.C.L.U. to force changes at the jail. The group filed its first class action on behalf of inmates in 1993, saying the poor conditions constituted cruel and unusual punishment. In the years since, the jail has staved off court orders by agreeing to improve conditions. The most recent settlement was in 2009 . But the A.C.L.U. said the state had failed to make meaningful improvements at the jail, which overwhelmingly houses poor, black residents caught up in drug-related crimes.", "paragraph_answer": "Tuesday\u2019s move is the latest in a long push by the A.C.L.U. to force changes at the jail. The group filed its first class action on behalf of inmates in 1993, saying the poor conditions constituted cruel and unusual punishment. In the years since, the jail has staved off court orders by agreeing to improve conditions. The most recent settlement was in 2009 . But the A.C.L.U. said the state had failed to make meaningful improvements at the jail, which overwhelmingly houses poor, black residents caught up in drug-related crimes.", "sentence_answer": "The most recent settlement was in 2009 ."} -{"question": "What race does the jail mostly house?", "paragraph": "Tuesday\u2019s move is the latest in a long push by the A.C.L.U. to force changes at the jail. The group filed its first class action on behalf of inmates in 1993, saying the poor conditions constituted cruel and unusual punishment. In the years since, the jail has staved off court orders by agreeing to improve conditions. The most recent settlement was in 2009. But the A.C.L.U. said the state had failed to make meaningful improvements at the jail, which overwhelmingly houses poor, black residents caught up in drug-related crimes.", "answer": "black residents", "sentence": "But the A.C.L.U. said the state had failed to make meaningful improvements at the jail, which overwhelmingly houses poor, black residents caught up in drug-related crimes.", "paragraph_sentence": "Tuesday\u2019s move is the latest in a long push by the A.C.L.U. to force changes at the jail. The group filed its first class action on behalf of inmates in 1993, saying the poor conditions constituted cruel and unusual punishment. In the years since, the jail has staved off court orders by agreeing to improve conditions. The most recent settlement was in 2009. But the A.C.L.U. said the state had failed to make meaningful improvements at the jail, which overwhelmingly houses poor, black residents caught up in drug-related crimes. ", "paragraph_answer": "Tuesday\u2019s move is the latest in a long push by the A.C.L.U. to force changes at the jail. The group filed its first class action on behalf of inmates in 1993, saying the poor conditions constituted cruel and unusual punishment. In the years since, the jail has staved off court orders by agreeing to improve conditions. The most recent settlement was in 2009. But the A.C.L.U. said the state had failed to make meaningful improvements at the jail, which overwhelmingly houses poor, black residents caught up in drug-related crimes.", "sentence_answer": "But the A.C.L.U. said the state had failed to make meaningful improvements at the jail, which overwhelmingly houses poor, black residents caught up in drug-related crimes."} -{"question": "According to the motion, what sort of care are inmates not receiving?", "paragraph": "Many inmates do not get the required medical care, the motion says. \u201cIt must be remembered that the great majority of those confined in B.C.D.C. are awaiting trial, and so, under our Constitution, may not be punished,\u201d the motion said, referring to the Baltimore City Detention Center. \u201cMoreover, even for those confined in the jail who have been convicted, the Constitution does not permit them to be punished by denial of medical or mental health care, or by subjecting them to conditions of confinement that are unreasonably dangerous or inconsistent with human dignity.\u201d The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s, said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion. \u201cThere have been decades of neglect; this didn\u2019t just happen in a day,\u201d she said. \u201cLack of staff, lack of resources and ultimately a lack of priority for people who don\u2019t have much influence in society all led to this.\u201d", "answer": "medical care", "sentence": "Many inmates do not get the required medical care , the motion says.", "paragraph_sentence": " Many inmates do not get the required medical care , the motion says. \u201cIt must be remembered that the great majority of those confined in B.C.D.C. are awaiting trial, and so, under our Constitution, may not be punished,\u201d the motion said, referring to the Baltimore City Detention Center. \u201cMoreover, even for those confined in the jail who have been convicted, the Constitution does not permit them to be punished by denial of medical or mental health care, or by subjecting them to conditions of confinement that are unreasonably dangerous or inconsistent with human dignity.\u201d The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s, said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion. \u201cThere have been decades of neglect; this didn\u2019t just happen in a day,\u201d she said. \u201cLack of staff, lack of resources and ultimately a lack of priority for people who don\u2019t have much influence in society all led to this.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Many inmates do not get the required medical care , the motion says. \u201cIt must be remembered that the great majority of those confined in B.C.D.C. are awaiting trial, and so, under our Constitution, may not be punished,\u201d the motion said, referring to the Baltimore City Detention Center. \u201cMoreover, even for those confined in the jail who have been convicted, the Constitution does not permit them to be punished by denial of medical or mental health care, or by subjecting them to conditions of confinement that are unreasonably dangerous or inconsistent with human dignity.\u201d The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s, said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion. \u201cThere have been decades of neglect; this didn\u2019t just happen in a day,\u201d she said. \u201cLack of staff, lack of resources and ultimately a lack of priority for people who don\u2019t have much influence in society all led to this.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Many inmates do not get the required medical care , the motion says."} -{"question": "What are the majority of inmates confined in B.C.D.C doing?", "paragraph": "Many inmates do not get the required medical care, the motion says. \u201cIt must be remembered that the great majority of those confined in B.C.D.C. are awaiting trial, and so, under our Constitution, may not be punished,\u201d the motion said, referring to the Baltimore City Detention Center. \u201cMoreover, even for those confined in the jail who have been convicted, the Constitution does not permit them to be punished by denial of medical or mental health care, or by subjecting them to conditions of confinement that are unreasonably dangerous or inconsistent with human dignity.\u201d The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s, said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion. \u201cThere have been decades of neglect; this didn\u2019t just happen in a day,\u201d she said. \u201cLack of staff, lack of resources and ultimately a lack of priority for people who don\u2019t have much influence in society all led to this.\u201d", "answer": "awaiting trial", "sentence": "\u201cIt must be remembered that the great majority of those confined in B.C.D.C. are awaiting trial , and so, under our Constitution, may not be punished,\u201d the motion said, referring to the Baltimore City Detention Center.", "paragraph_sentence": "Many inmates do not get the required medical care, the motion says. \u201cIt must be remembered that the great majority of those confined in B.C.D.C. are awaiting trial , and so, under our Constitution, may not be punished,\u201d the motion said, referring to the Baltimore City Detention Center. \u201cMoreover, even for those confined in the jail who have been convicted, the Constitution does not permit them to be punished by denial of medical or mental health care, or by subjecting them to conditions of confinement that are unreasonably dangerous or inconsistent with human dignity.\u201d The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s, said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion. \u201cThere have been decades of neglect; this didn\u2019t just happen in a day,\u201d she said. \u201cLack of staff, lack of resources and ultimately a lack of priority for people who don\u2019t have much influence in society all led to this.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Many inmates do not get the required medical care, the motion says. \u201cIt must be remembered that the great majority of those confined in B.C.D.C. are awaiting trial , and so, under our Constitution, may not be punished,\u201d the motion said, referring to the Baltimore City Detention Center. \u201cMoreover, even for those confined in the jail who have been convicted, the Constitution does not permit them to be punished by denial of medical or mental health care, or by subjecting them to conditions of confinement that are unreasonably dangerous or inconsistent with human dignity.\u201d The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s, said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion. \u201cThere have been decades of neglect; this didn\u2019t just happen in a day,\u201d she said. \u201cLack of staff, lack of resources and ultimately a lack of priority for people who don\u2019t have much influence in society all led to this.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt must be remembered that the great majority of those confined in B.C.D.C. are awaiting trial , and so, under our Constitution, may not be punished,\u201d the motion said, referring to the Baltimore City Detention Center."} -{"question": "What did Baltimore not invest in?", "paragraph": "Many inmates do not get the required medical care, the motion says. \u201cIt must be remembered that the great majority of those confined in B.C.D.C. are awaiting trial, and so, under our Constitution, may not be punished,\u201d the motion said, referring to the Baltimore City Detention Center. \u201cMoreover, even for those confined in the jail who have been convicted, the Constitution does not permit them to be punished by denial of medical or mental health care, or by subjecting them to conditions of confinement that are unreasonably dangerous or inconsistent with human dignity.\u201d The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s, said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion. \u201cThere have been decades of neglect; this didn\u2019t just happen in a day,\u201d she said. \u201cLack of staff, lack of resources and ultimately a lack of priority for people who don\u2019t have much influence in society all led to this.\u201d", "answer": "upkeep of the jail", "sentence": "The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail , the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s, said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion.", "paragraph_sentence": "Many inmates do not get the required medical care, the motion says. \u201cIt must be remembered that the great majority of those confined in B.C.D.C. are awaiting trial, and so, under our Constitution, may not be punished,\u201d the motion said, referring to the Baltimore City Detention Center. \u201cMoreover, even for those confined in the jail who have been convicted, the Constitution does not permit them to be punished by denial of medical or mental health care, or by subjecting them to conditions of confinement that are unreasonably dangerous or inconsistent with human dignity.\u201d The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail , the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s, said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion. \u201cThere have been decades of neglect; this didn\u2019t just happen in a day,\u201d she said. \u201cLack of staff, lack of resources and ultimately a lack of priority for people who don\u2019t have much influence in society all led to this.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Many inmates do not get the required medical care, the motion says. \u201cIt must be remembered that the great majority of those confined in B.C.D.C. are awaiting trial, and so, under our Constitution, may not be punished,\u201d the motion said, referring to the Baltimore City Detention Center. \u201cMoreover, even for those confined in the jail who have been convicted, the Constitution does not permit them to be punished by denial of medical or mental health care, or by subjecting them to conditions of confinement that are unreasonably dangerous or inconsistent with human dignity.\u201d The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail , the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s, said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion. \u201cThere have been decades of neglect; this didn\u2019t just happen in a day,\u201d she said. \u201cLack of staff, lack of resources and ultimately a lack of priority for people who don\u2019t have much influence in society all led to this.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail , the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s, said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion."} -{"question": "How long ago does the oldest sections of the jail date back to?", "paragraph": "Many inmates do not get the required medical care, the motion says. \u201cIt must be remembered that the great majority of those confined in B.C.D.C. are awaiting trial, and so, under our Constitution, may not be punished,\u201d the motion said, referring to the Baltimore City Detention Center. \u201cMoreover, even for those confined in the jail who have been convicted, the Constitution does not permit them to be punished by denial of medical or mental health care, or by subjecting them to conditions of confinement that are unreasonably dangerous or inconsistent with human dignity.\u201d The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s, said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion. \u201cThere have been decades of neglect; this didn\u2019t just happen in a day,\u201d she said. \u201cLack of staff, lack of resources and ultimately a lack of priority for people who don\u2019t have much influence in society all led to this.\u201d", "answer": "the 1850s", "sentence": "The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s , said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion.", "paragraph_sentence": "Many inmates do not get the required medical care, the motion says. \u201cIt must be remembered that the great majority of those confined in B.C.D.C. are awaiting trial, and so, under our Constitution, may not be punished,\u201d the motion said, referring to the Baltimore City Detention Center. \u201cMoreover, even for those confined in the jail who have been convicted, the Constitution does not permit them to be punished by denial of medical or mental health care, or by subjecting them to conditions of confinement that are unreasonably dangerous or inconsistent with human dignity.\u201d The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s , said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion. \u201cThere have been decades of neglect; this didn\u2019t just happen in a day,\u201d she said. \u201cLack of staff, lack of resources and ultimately a lack of priority for people who don\u2019t have much influence in society all led to this.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Many inmates do not get the required medical care, the motion says. \u201cIt must be remembered that the great majority of those confined in B.C.D.C. are awaiting trial, and so, under our Constitution, may not be punished,\u201d the motion said, referring to the Baltimore City Detention Center. \u201cMoreover, even for those confined in the jail who have been convicted, the Constitution does not permit them to be punished by denial of medical or mental health care, or by subjecting them to conditions of confinement that are unreasonably dangerous or inconsistent with human dignity.\u201d The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s , said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion. \u201cThere have been decades of neglect; this didn\u2019t just happen in a day,\u201d she said. \u201cLack of staff, lack of resources and ultimately a lack of priority for people who don\u2019t have much influence in society all led to this.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s , said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion."} -{"question": "Who is the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U,?", "paragraph": "Many inmates do not get the required medical care, the motion says. \u201cIt must be remembered that the great majority of those confined in B.C.D.C. are awaiting trial, and so, under our Constitution, may not be punished,\u201d the motion said, referring to the Baltimore City Detention Center. \u201cMoreover, even for those confined in the jail who have been convicted, the Constitution does not permit them to be punished by denial of medical or mental health care, or by subjecting them to conditions of confinement that are unreasonably dangerous or inconsistent with human dignity.\u201d The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s, said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion. \u201cThere have been decades of neglect; this didn\u2019t just happen in a day,\u201d she said. \u201cLack of staff, lack of resources and ultimately a lack of priority for people who don\u2019t have much influence in society all led to this.\u201d", "answer": "Elizabeth Alexander", "sentence": "The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s, said Elizabeth Alexander , the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion.", "paragraph_sentence": "Many inmates do not get the required medical care, the motion says. \u201cIt must be remembered that the great majority of those confined in B.C.D.C. are awaiting trial, and so, under our Constitution, may not be punished,\u201d the motion said, referring to the Baltimore City Detention Center. \u201cMoreover, even for those confined in the jail who have been convicted, the Constitution does not permit them to be punished by denial of medical or mental health care, or by subjecting them to conditions of confinement that are unreasonably dangerous or inconsistent with human dignity.\u201d The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s, said Elizabeth Alexander , the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion. \u201cThere have been decades of neglect; this didn\u2019t just happen in a day,\u201d she said. \u201cLack of staff, lack of resources and ultimately a lack of priority for people who don\u2019t have much influence in society all led to this.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Many inmates do not get the required medical care, the motion says. \u201cIt must be remembered that the great majority of those confined in B.C.D.C. are awaiting trial, and so, under our Constitution, may not be punished,\u201d the motion said, referring to the Baltimore City Detention Center. \u201cMoreover, even for those confined in the jail who have been convicted, the Constitution does not permit them to be punished by denial of medical or mental health care, or by subjecting them to conditions of confinement that are unreasonably dangerous or inconsistent with human dignity.\u201d The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s, said Elizabeth Alexander , the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion. \u201cThere have been decades of neglect; this didn\u2019t just happen in a day,\u201d she said. \u201cLack of staff, lack of resources and ultimately a lack of priority for people who don\u2019t have much influence in society all led to this.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s, said Elizabeth Alexander , the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion."} -{"question": "How many did Jerome Williams strike out?", "paragraph": "Jerome Williams (2-3) lasted just five innings, giving up three runs and four hits. He struck out four and walked two. BREWERS 10, WHITE SOX 7 Elian Herrera hit a two-run homer in the eighth inning and Khris Davis followed with a solo shot for host Milwaukee. Herrera, filling in at third for the injured starter Aramis Ramirez, homered for the second straight night. His shot into the left-field stands off reliever Zach Duke (1-2) broke a 7-all tie. Davis followed two batters later with his pinch-hit homer high and deep to left. RANGERS 8, ROYALS 2 Adrian Beltre hit his 399th career home run, and Thomas Field hit his first as Texas beat visiting Kansas City. Prince Fielder also homered for the Rangers to back Colby Lewis (3-2), who beat the Royals for the first time since 2003 by limiting them to one run and three hits over seven innings. Lewis struck out five and walked two.", "answer": "four", "sentence": "Jerome Williams (2-3) lasted just five innings, giving up three runs and four hits.", "paragraph_sentence": " Jerome Williams (2-3) lasted just five innings, giving up three runs and four hits. He struck out four and walked two. BREWERS 10, WHITE SOX 7 Elian Herrera hit a two-run homer in the eighth inning and Khris Davis followed with a solo shot for host Milwaukee. Herrera, filling in at third for the injured starter Aramis Ramirez, homered for the second straight night. His shot into the left-field stands off reliever Zach Duke (1-2) broke a 7-all tie. Davis followed two batters later with his pinch-hit homer high and deep to left. RANGERS 8, ROYALS 2 Adrian Beltre hit his 399th career home run, and Thomas Field hit his first as Texas beat visiting Kansas City. Prince Fielder also homered for the Rangers to back Colby Lewis (3-2), who beat the Royals for the first time since 2003 by limiting them to one run and three hits over seven innings. Lewis struck out five and walked two.", "paragraph_answer": "Jerome Williams (2-3) lasted just five innings, giving up three runs and four hits. He struck out four and walked two. BREWERS 10, WHITE SOX 7 Elian Herrera hit a two-run homer in the eighth inning and Khris Davis followed with a solo shot for host Milwaukee. Herrera, filling in at third for the injured starter Aramis Ramirez, homered for the second straight night. His shot into the left-field stands off reliever Zach Duke (1-2) broke a 7-all tie. Davis followed two batters later with his pinch-hit homer high and deep to left. RANGERS 8, ROYALS 2 Adrian Beltre hit his 399th career home run, and Thomas Field hit his first as Texas beat visiting Kansas City. Prince Fielder also homered for the Rangers to back Colby Lewis (3-2), who beat the Royals for the first time since 2003 by limiting them to one run and three hits over seven innings. Lewis struck out five and walked two.", "sentence_answer": "Jerome Williams (2-3) lasted just five innings, giving up three runs and four hits."} -{"question": "How many did Jerome Williams walk?", "paragraph": "Jerome Williams (2-3) lasted just five innings, giving up three runs and four hits. He struck out four and walked two. BREWERS 10, WHITE SOX 7 Elian Herrera hit a two-run homer in the eighth inning and Khris Davis followed with a solo shot for host Milwaukee. Herrera, filling in at third for the injured starter Aramis Ramirez, homered for the second straight night. His shot into the left-field stands off reliever Zach Duke (1-2) broke a 7-all tie. Davis followed two batters later with his pinch-hit homer high and deep to left. RANGERS 8, ROYALS 2 Adrian Beltre hit his 399th career home run, and Thomas Field hit his first as Texas beat visiting Kansas City. Prince Fielder also homered for the Rangers to back Colby Lewis (3-2), who beat the Royals for the first time since 2003 by limiting them to one run and three hits over seven innings. Lewis struck out five and walked two.", "answer": "two", "sentence": "He struck out four and walked two .", "paragraph_sentence": "Jerome Williams (2-3) lasted just five innings, giving up three runs and four hits. He struck out four and walked two . BREWERS 10, WHITE SOX 7 Elian Herrera hit a two-run homer in the eighth inning and Khris Davis followed with a solo shot for host Milwaukee. Herrera, filling in at third for the injured starter Aramis Ramirez, homered for the second straight night. His shot into the left-field stands off reliever Zach Duke (1-2) broke a 7-all tie. Davis followed two batters later with his pinch-hit homer high and deep to left. RANGERS 8, ROYALS 2 Adrian Beltre hit his 399th career home run, and Thomas Field hit his first as Texas beat visiting Kansas City. Prince Fielder also homered for the Rangers to back Colby Lewis (3-2), who beat the Royals for the first time since 2003 by limiting them to one run and three hits over seven innings. Lewis struck out five and walked two.", "paragraph_answer": "Jerome Williams (2-3) lasted just five innings, giving up three runs and four hits. He struck out four and walked two . BREWERS 10, WHITE SOX 7 Elian Herrera hit a two-run homer in the eighth inning and Khris Davis followed with a solo shot for host Milwaukee. Herrera, filling in at third for the injured starter Aramis Ramirez, homered for the second straight night. His shot into the left-field stands off reliever Zach Duke (1-2) broke a 7-all tie. Davis followed two batters later with his pinch-hit homer high and deep to left. RANGERS 8, ROYALS 2 Adrian Beltre hit his 399th career home run, and Thomas Field hit his first as Texas beat visiting Kansas City. Prince Fielder also homered for the Rangers to back Colby Lewis (3-2), who beat the Royals for the first time since 2003 by limiting them to one run and three hits over seven innings. Lewis struck out five and walked two.", "sentence_answer": "He struck out four and walked two ."} -{"question": "Who lasted just 5 innings?", "paragraph": "Jerome Williams (2-3) lasted just five innings, giving up three runs and four hits. He struck out four and walked two. BREWERS 10, WHITE SOX 7 Elian Herrera hit a two-run homer in the eighth inning and Khris Davis followed with a solo shot for host Milwaukee. Herrera, filling in at third for the injured starter Aramis Ramirez, homered for the second straight night. His shot into the left-field stands off reliever Zach Duke (1-2) broke a 7-all tie. Davis followed two batters later with his pinch-hit homer high and deep to left. RANGERS 8, ROYALS 2 Adrian Beltre hit his 399th career home run, and Thomas Field hit his first as Texas beat visiting Kansas City. Prince Fielder also homered for the Rangers to back Colby Lewis (3-2), who beat the Royals for the first time since 2003 by limiting them to one run and three hits over seven innings. Lewis struck out five and walked two.", "answer": "Jerome Williams", "sentence": "Jerome Williams (2-3) lasted just five innings, giving up three runs and four hits.", "paragraph_sentence": " Jerome Williams (2-3) lasted just five innings, giving up three runs and four hits. He struck out four and walked two. BREWERS 10, WHITE SOX 7 Elian Herrera hit a two-run homer in the eighth inning and Khris Davis followed with a solo shot for host Milwaukee. Herrera, filling in at third for the injured starter Aramis Ramirez, homered for the second straight night. His shot into the left-field stands off reliever Zach Duke (1-2) broke a 7-all tie. Davis followed two batters later with his pinch-hit homer high and deep to left. RANGERS 8, ROYALS 2 Adrian Beltre hit his 399th career home run, and Thomas Field hit his first as Texas beat visiting Kansas City. Prince Fielder also homered for the Rangers to back Colby Lewis (3-2), who beat the Royals for the first time since 2003 by limiting them to one run and three hits over seven innings. Lewis struck out five and walked two.", "paragraph_answer": " Jerome Williams (2-3) lasted just five innings, giving up three runs and four hits. He struck out four and walked two. BREWERS 10, WHITE SOX 7 Elian Herrera hit a two-run homer in the eighth inning and Khris Davis followed with a solo shot for host Milwaukee. Herrera, filling in at third for the injured starter Aramis Ramirez, homered for the second straight night. His shot into the left-field stands off reliever Zach Duke (1-2) broke a 7-all tie. Davis followed two batters later with his pinch-hit homer high and deep to left. RANGERS 8, ROYALS 2 Adrian Beltre hit his 399th career home run, and Thomas Field hit his first as Texas beat visiting Kansas City. Prince Fielder also homered for the Rangers to back Colby Lewis (3-2), who beat the Royals for the first time since 2003 by limiting them to one run and three hits over seven innings. Lewis struck out five and walked two.", "sentence_answer": " Jerome Williams (2-3) lasted just five innings, giving up three runs and four hits."} -{"question": "Who hit a two-run homer?", "paragraph": "Jerome Williams (2-3) lasted just five innings, giving up three runs and four hits. He struck out four and walked two. BREWERS 10, WHITE SOX 7 Elian Herrera hit a two-run homer in the eighth inning and Khris Davis followed with a solo shot for host Milwaukee. Herrera, filling in at third for the injured starter Aramis Ramirez, homered for the second straight night. His shot into the left-field stands off reliever Zach Duke (1-2) broke a 7-all tie. Davis followed two batters later with his pinch-hit homer high and deep to left. RANGERS 8, ROYALS 2 Adrian Beltre hit his 399th career home run, and Thomas Field hit his first as Texas beat visiting Kansas City. Prince Fielder also homered for the Rangers to back Colby Lewis (3-2), who beat the Royals for the first time since 2003 by limiting them to one run and three hits over seven innings. Lewis struck out five and walked two.", "answer": "Elian Herrera", "sentence": "BREWERS 10, WHITE SOX 7 Elian Herrera hit a two-run homer in the eighth inning and Khris Davis followed with a solo shot for host Milwaukee.", "paragraph_sentence": "Jerome Williams (2-3) lasted just five innings, giving up three runs and four hits. He struck out four and walked two. BREWERS 10, WHITE SOX 7 Elian Herrera hit a two-run homer in the eighth inning and Khris Davis followed with a solo shot for host Milwaukee. Herrera, filling in at third for the injured starter Aramis Ramirez, homered for the second straight night. His shot into the left-field stands off reliever Zach Duke (1-2) broke a 7-all tie. Davis followed two batters later with his pinch-hit homer high and deep to left. RANGERS 8, ROYALS 2 Adrian Beltre hit his 399th career home run, and Thomas Field hit his first as Texas beat visiting Kansas City. Prince Fielder also homered for the Rangers to back Colby Lewis (3-2), who beat the Royals for the first time since 2003 by limiting them to one run and three hits over seven innings. Lewis struck out five and walked two.", "paragraph_answer": "Jerome Williams (2-3) lasted just five innings, giving up three runs and four hits. He struck out four and walked two. BREWERS 10, WHITE SOX 7 Elian Herrera hit a two-run homer in the eighth inning and Khris Davis followed with a solo shot for host Milwaukee. Herrera, filling in at third for the injured starter Aramis Ramirez, homered for the second straight night. His shot into the left-field stands off reliever Zach Duke (1-2) broke a 7-all tie. Davis followed two batters later with his pinch-hit homer high and deep to left. RANGERS 8, ROYALS 2 Adrian Beltre hit his 399th career home run, and Thomas Field hit his first as Texas beat visiting Kansas City. Prince Fielder also homered for the Rangers to back Colby Lewis (3-2), who beat the Royals for the first time since 2003 by limiting them to one run and three hits over seven innings. Lewis struck out five and walked two.", "sentence_answer": "BREWERS 10, WHITE SOX 7 Elian Herrera hit a two-run homer in the eighth inning and Khris Davis followed with a solo shot for host Milwaukee."} -{"question": "Who hit his 399th career home run?", "paragraph": "Jerome Williams (2-3) lasted just five innings, giving up three runs and four hits. He struck out four and walked two. BREWERS 10, WHITE SOX 7 Elian Herrera hit a two-run homer in the eighth inning and Khris Davis followed with a solo shot for host Milwaukee. Herrera, filling in at third for the injured starter Aramis Ramirez, homered for the second straight night. His shot into the left-field stands off reliever Zach Duke (1-2) broke a 7-all tie. Davis followed two batters later with his pinch-hit homer high and deep to left. RANGERS 8, ROYALS 2 Adrian Beltre hit his 399th career home run, and Thomas Field hit his first as Texas beat visiting Kansas City. Prince Fielder also homered for the Rangers to back Colby Lewis (3-2), who beat the Royals for the first time since 2003 by limiting them to one run and three hits over seven innings. Lewis struck out five and walked two.", "answer": "Adrian Beltre", "sentence": "RANGERS 8, ROYALS 2 Adrian Beltre hit his 399th career home run, and Thomas Field hit his first as Texas beat visiting Kansas City.", "paragraph_sentence": "Jerome Williams (2-3) lasted just five innings, giving up three runs and four hits. He struck out four and walked two. BREWERS 10, WHITE SOX 7 Elian Herrera hit a two-run homer in the eighth inning and Khris Davis followed with a solo shot for host Milwaukee. Herrera, filling in at third for the injured starter Aramis Ramirez, homered for the second straight night. His shot into the left-field stands off reliever Zach Duke (1-2) broke a 7-all tie. Davis followed two batters later with his pinch-hit homer high and deep to left. RANGERS 8, ROYALS 2 Adrian Beltre hit his 399th career home run, and Thomas Field hit his first as Texas beat visiting Kansas City. Prince Fielder also homered for the Rangers to back Colby Lewis (3-2), who beat the Royals for the first time since 2003 by limiting them to one run and three hits over seven innings. Lewis struck out five and walked two.", "paragraph_answer": "Jerome Williams (2-3) lasted just five innings, giving up three runs and four hits. He struck out four and walked two. BREWERS 10, WHITE SOX 7 Elian Herrera hit a two-run homer in the eighth inning and Khris Davis followed with a solo shot for host Milwaukee. Herrera, filling in at third for the injured starter Aramis Ramirez, homered for the second straight night. His shot into the left-field stands off reliever Zach Duke (1-2) broke a 7-all tie. Davis followed two batters later with his pinch-hit homer high and deep to left. RANGERS 8, ROYALS 2 Adrian Beltre hit his 399th career home run, and Thomas Field hit his first as Texas beat visiting Kansas City. Prince Fielder also homered for the Rangers to back Colby Lewis (3-2), who beat the Royals for the first time since 2003 by limiting them to one run and three hits over seven innings. Lewis struck out five and walked two.", "sentence_answer": "RANGERS 8, ROYALS 2 Adrian Beltre hit his 399th career home run, and Thomas Field hit his first as Texas beat visiting Kansas City."} -{"question": "What team is local to New York?", "paragraph": "For the first time since 1998, and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks. The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd. The N.B.A. distributed two-thirds of the tickets to its marketing and broadcast partners and affiliates, the participating players and the players\u2019 union, as well as league alumni. The league said that around 1,800 credentials were issued to various media outlets.", "answer": "Knicks.", "sentence": "For the first time since 1998, and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks. The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn.", "paragraph_sentence": " For the first time since 1998, and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks. The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd. The N.B.A. distributed two-thirds of the tickets to its marketing and broadcast partners and affiliates, the participating players and the players\u2019 union, as well as league alumni. The league said that around 1,800 credentials were issued to various media outlets.", "paragraph_answer": "For the first time since 1998, and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks. The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd. The N.B.A. distributed two-thirds of the tickets to its marketing and broadcast partners and affiliates, the participating players and the players\u2019 union, as well as league alumni. The league said that around 1,800 credentials were issued to various media outlets.", "sentence_answer": "For the first time since 1998, and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks. The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn."} -{"question": "Who won the game?", "paragraph": "For the first time since 1998, and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks. The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd. The N.B.A. distributed two-thirds of the tickets to its marketing and broadcast partners and affiliates, the participating players and the players\u2019 union, as well as league alumni. The league said that around 1,800 credentials were issued to various media outlets.", "answer": "the Western Conference", "sentence": "In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd.", "paragraph_sentence": "For the first time since 1998, and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks. The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd. The N.B.A. distributed two-thirds of the tickets to its marketing and broadcast partners and affiliates, the participating players and the players\u2019 union, as well as league alumni. The league said that around 1,800 credentials were issued to various media outlets.", "paragraph_answer": "For the first time since 1998, and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks. The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd. The N.B.A. distributed two-thirds of the tickets to its marketing and broadcast partners and affiliates, the participating players and the players\u2019 union, as well as league alumni. The league said that around 1,800 credentials were issued to various media outlets.", "sentence_answer": "In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd."} -{"question": "Where is the Barclays Center located?", "paragraph": "For the first time since 1998, and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks. The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd. The N.B.A. distributed two-thirds of the tickets to its marketing and broadcast partners and affiliates, the participating players and the players\u2019 union, as well as league alumni. The league said that around 1,800 credentials were issued to various media outlets.", "answer": "Brooklyn", "sentence": "The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn .", "paragraph_sentence": "For the first time since 1998, and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks. The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn . In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd. The N.B.A. distributed two-thirds of the tickets to its marketing and broadcast partners and affiliates, the participating players and the players\u2019 union, as well as league alumni. The league said that around 1,800 credentials were issued to various media outlets.", "paragraph_answer": "For the first time since 1998, and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks. The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn . In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd. The N.B.A. distributed two-thirds of the tickets to its marketing and broadcast partners and affiliates, the participating players and the players\u2019 union, as well as league alumni. The league said that around 1,800 credentials were issued to various media outlets.", "sentence_answer": "The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn ."} -{"question": "How many tickets did the NBA distribute to marketing and broadcast partners?", "paragraph": "For the first time since 1998, and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks. The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd. The N.B.A. distributed two-thirds of the tickets to its marketing and broadcast partners and affiliates, the participating players and the players\u2019 union, as well as league alumni. The league said that around 1,800 credentials were issued to various media outlets.", "answer": "two-thirds", "sentence": "The N.B.A. distributed two-thirds of the tickets to its marketing and broadcast partners and affiliates, the participating players and the players\u2019 union, as well as league alumni.", "paragraph_sentence": "For the first time since 1998, and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks. The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd. The N.B.A. distributed two-thirds of the tickets to its marketing and broadcast partners and affiliates, the participating players and the players\u2019 union, as well as league alumni. The league said that around 1,800 credentials were issued to various media outlets.", "paragraph_answer": "For the first time since 1998, and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks. The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd. The N.B.A. distributed two-thirds of the tickets to its marketing and broadcast partners and affiliates, the participating players and the players\u2019 union, as well as league alumni. The league said that around 1,800 credentials were issued to various media outlets.", "sentence_answer": "The N.B.A. distributed two-thirds of the tickets to its marketing and broadcast partners and affiliates, the participating players and the players\u2019 union, as well as league alumni."} -{"question": "When was the last time the All Star Game took place in New York?", "paragraph": "For the first time since 1998, and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks. The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd. The N.B.A. distributed two-thirds of the tickets to its marketing and broadcast partners and affiliates, the participating players and the players\u2019 union, as well as league alumni. The league said that around 1,800 credentials were issued to various media outlets.", "answer": "1998", "sentence": "For the first time since 1998 , and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks.", "paragraph_sentence": " For the first time since 1998 , and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks. The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd. The N.B.A. distributed two-thirds of the tickets to its marketing and broadcast partners and affiliates, the participating players and the players\u2019 union, as well as league alumni. The league said that around 1,800 credentials were issued to various media outlets.", "paragraph_answer": "For the first time since 1998 , and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks. The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd. The N.B.A. distributed two-thirds of the tickets to its marketing and broadcast partners and affiliates, the participating players and the players\u2019 union, as well as league alumni. The league said that around 1,800 credentials were issued to various media outlets.", "sentence_answer": "For the first time since 1998 , and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks."} -{"question": "Who is the current president of the Knicks?", "paragraph": "The bombardment of loud sounds and bright sights was relentless. Every stoppage of play was put to use. The casts of multiple Broadway shows did musical numbers during some of the extra-long timeouts. In others, celebrated retired players associated with New York basketball, including the current Knicks president, Phil Jackson, were honored at center court. Late in the fourth quarter, fans were encouraged to stand for a karaoke version of \u201cNew York, New York.\u201d Almost no one did. There was basketball, too, of sorts. Russell Westbrook of the Oklahoma City Thunder took 28 shots, scored 41 points and won the Most Valuable Player Award. LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers led the Eastern Conference with 30 points. It was the second time that an All-Star team exceeded 160 points; last year was the first.", "answer": "Phil Jackson", "sentence": "In others, celebrated retired players associated with New York basketball, including the current Knicks president, Phil Jackson , were honored at center court.", "paragraph_sentence": "The bombardment of loud sounds and bright sights was relentless. Every stoppage of play was put to use. The casts of multiple Broadway shows did musical numbers during some of the extra-long timeouts. In others, celebrated retired players associated with New York basketball, including the current Knicks president, Phil Jackson , were honored at center court. Late in the fourth quarter, fans were encouraged to stand for a karaoke version of \u201cNew York, New York.\u201d Almost no one did. There was basketball, too, of sorts. Russell Westbrook of the Oklahoma City Thunder took 28 shots, scored 41 points and won the Most Valuable Player Award. LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers led the Eastern Conference with 30 points. It was the second time that an All-Star team exceeded 160 points; last year was the first.", "paragraph_answer": "The bombardment of loud sounds and bright sights was relentless. Every stoppage of play was put to use. The casts of multiple Broadway shows did musical numbers during some of the extra-long timeouts. In others, celebrated retired players associated with New York basketball, including the current Knicks president, Phil Jackson , were honored at center court. Late in the fourth quarter, fans were encouraged to stand for a karaoke version of \u201cNew York, New York.\u201d Almost no one did. There was basketball, too, of sorts. Russell Westbrook of the Oklahoma City Thunder took 28 shots, scored 41 points and won the Most Valuable Player Award. LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers led the Eastern Conference with 30 points. It was the second time that an All-Star team exceeded 160 points; last year was the first.", "sentence_answer": "In others, celebrated retired players associated with New York basketball, including the current Knicks president, Phil Jackson , were honored at center court."} -{"question": "How many shots did Russell Westbook take?", "paragraph": "The bombardment of loud sounds and bright sights was relentless. Every stoppage of play was put to use. The casts of multiple Broadway shows did musical numbers during some of the extra-long timeouts. In others, celebrated retired players associated with New York basketball, including the current Knicks president, Phil Jackson, were honored at center court. Late in the fourth quarter, fans were encouraged to stand for a karaoke version of \u201cNew York, New York.\u201d Almost no one did. There was basketball, too, of sorts. Russell Westbrook of the Oklahoma City Thunder took 28 shots, scored 41 points and won the Most Valuable Player Award. LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers led the Eastern Conference with 30 points. It was the second time that an All-Star team exceeded 160 points; last year was the first.", "answer": "28", "sentence": "Russell Westbrook of the Oklahoma City Thunder took 28 shots, scored 41 points and won the Most Valuable Player Award.", "paragraph_sentence": "The bombardment of loud sounds and bright sights was relentless. Every stoppage of play was put to use. The casts of multiple Broadway shows did musical numbers during some of the extra-long timeouts. In others, celebrated retired players associated with New York basketball, including the current Knicks president, Phil Jackson, were honored at center court. Late in the fourth quarter, fans were encouraged to stand for a karaoke version of \u201cNew York, New York.\u201d Almost no one did. There was basketball, too, of sorts. Russell Westbrook of the Oklahoma City Thunder took 28 shots, scored 41 points and won the Most Valuable Player Award. LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers led the Eastern Conference with 30 points. It was the second time that an All-Star team exceeded 160 points; last year was the first.", "paragraph_answer": "The bombardment of loud sounds and bright sights was relentless. Every stoppage of play was put to use. The casts of multiple Broadway shows did musical numbers during some of the extra-long timeouts. In others, celebrated retired players associated with New York basketball, including the current Knicks president, Phil Jackson, were honored at center court. Late in the fourth quarter, fans were encouraged to stand for a karaoke version of \u201cNew York, New York.\u201d Almost no one did. There was basketball, too, of sorts. Russell Westbrook of the Oklahoma City Thunder took 28 shots, scored 41 points and won the Most Valuable Player Award. LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers led the Eastern Conference with 30 points. It was the second time that an All-Star team exceeded 160 points; last year was the first.", "sentence_answer": "Russell Westbrook of the Oklahoma City Thunder took 28 shots, scored 41 points and won the Most Valuable Player Award."} -{"question": "What quarter did fans participate in a Karaoke performance?", "paragraph": "The bombardment of loud sounds and bright sights was relentless. Every stoppage of play was put to use. The casts of multiple Broadway shows did musical numbers during some of the extra-long timeouts. In others, celebrated retired players associated with New York basketball, including the current Knicks president, Phil Jackson, were honored at center court. Late in the fourth quarter, fans were encouraged to stand for a karaoke version of \u201cNew York, New York.\u201d Almost no one did. There was basketball, too, of sorts. Russell Westbrook of the Oklahoma City Thunder took 28 shots, scored 41 points and won the Most Valuable Player Award. LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers led the Eastern Conference with 30 points. It was the second time that an All-Star team exceeded 160 points; last year was the first.", "answer": "fourth", "sentence": "Late in the fourth quarter, fans were encouraged to stand for a karaoke version of \u201cNew York, New York.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "The bombardment of loud sounds and bright sights was relentless. Every stoppage of play was put to use. The casts of multiple Broadway shows did musical numbers during some of the extra-long timeouts. In others, celebrated retired players associated with New York basketball, including the current Knicks president, Phil Jackson, were honored at center court. Late in the fourth quarter, fans were encouraged to stand for a karaoke version of \u201cNew York, New York.\u201d Almost no one did. There was basketball, too, of sorts. Russell Westbrook of the Oklahoma City Thunder took 28 shots, scored 41 points and won the Most Valuable Player Award. LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers led the Eastern Conference with 30 points. It was the second time that an All-Star team exceeded 160 points; last year was the first.", "paragraph_answer": "The bombardment of loud sounds and bright sights was relentless. Every stoppage of play was put to use. The casts of multiple Broadway shows did musical numbers during some of the extra-long timeouts. In others, celebrated retired players associated with New York basketball, including the current Knicks president, Phil Jackson, were honored at center court. Late in the fourth quarter, fans were encouraged to stand for a karaoke version of \u201cNew York, New York.\u201d Almost no one did. There was basketball, too, of sorts. Russell Westbrook of the Oklahoma City Thunder took 28 shots, scored 41 points and won the Most Valuable Player Award. LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers led the Eastern Conference with 30 points. It was the second time that an All-Star team exceeded 160 points; last year was the first.", "sentence_answer": "Late in the fourth quarter, fans were encouraged to stand for a karaoke version of \u201cNew York, New York.\u201d"} -{"question": "What song were fans encouraged to sing along to during the game?", "paragraph": "The bombardment of loud sounds and bright sights was relentless. Every stoppage of play was put to use. The casts of multiple Broadway shows did musical numbers during some of the extra-long timeouts. In others, celebrated retired players associated with New York basketball, including the current Knicks president, Phil Jackson, were honored at center court. Late in the fourth quarter, fans were encouraged to stand for a karaoke version of \u201cNew York, New York.\u201d Almost no one did. There was basketball, too, of sorts. Russell Westbrook of the Oklahoma City Thunder took 28 shots, scored 41 points and won the Most Valuable Player Award. LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers led the Eastern Conference with 30 points. It was the second time that an All-Star team exceeded 160 points; last year was the first.", "answer": "New York, New York", "sentence": "Late in the fourth quarter, fans were encouraged to stand for a karaoke version of \u201c New York, New York .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "The bombardment of loud sounds and bright sights was relentless. Every stoppage of play was put to use. The casts of multiple Broadway shows did musical numbers during some of the extra-long timeouts. In others, celebrated retired players associated with New York basketball, including the current Knicks president, Phil Jackson, were honored at center court. Late in the fourth quarter, fans were encouraged to stand for a karaoke version of \u201c New York, New York .\u201d Almost no one did. There was basketball, too, of sorts. Russell Westbrook of the Oklahoma City Thunder took 28 shots, scored 41 points and won the Most Valuable Player Award. LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers led the Eastern Conference with 30 points. It was the second time that an All-Star team exceeded 160 points; last year was the first.", "paragraph_answer": "The bombardment of loud sounds and bright sights was relentless. Every stoppage of play was put to use. The casts of multiple Broadway shows did musical numbers during some of the extra-long timeouts. In others, celebrated retired players associated with New York basketball, including the current Knicks president, Phil Jackson, were honored at center court. Late in the fourth quarter, fans were encouraged to stand for a karaoke version of \u201c New York, New York .\u201d Almost no one did. There was basketball, too, of sorts. Russell Westbrook of the Oklahoma City Thunder took 28 shots, scored 41 points and won the Most Valuable Player Award. LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers led the Eastern Conference with 30 points. It was the second time that an All-Star team exceeded 160 points; last year was the first.", "sentence_answer": "Late in the fourth quarter, fans were encouraged to stand for a karaoke version of \u201c New York, New York .\u201d"} -{"question": "Who scored the most points for the Eastern Conference with 30?", "paragraph": "The bombardment of loud sounds and bright sights was relentless. Every stoppage of play was put to use. The casts of multiple Broadway shows did musical numbers during some of the extra-long timeouts. In others, celebrated retired players associated with New York basketball, including the current Knicks president, Phil Jackson, were honored at center court. Late in the fourth quarter, fans were encouraged to stand for a karaoke version of \u201cNew York, New York.\u201d Almost no one did. There was basketball, too, of sorts. Russell Westbrook of the Oklahoma City Thunder took 28 shots, scored 41 points and won the Most Valuable Player Award. LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers led the Eastern Conference with 30 points. It was the second time that an All-Star team exceeded 160 points; last year was the first.", "answer": "LeBron James", "sentence": "LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers led the Eastern Conference with 30 points.", "paragraph_sentence": "The bombardment of loud sounds and bright sights was relentless. Every stoppage of play was put to use. The casts of multiple Broadway shows did musical numbers during some of the extra-long timeouts. In others, celebrated retired players associated with New York basketball, including the current Knicks president, Phil Jackson, were honored at center court. Late in the fourth quarter, fans were encouraged to stand for a karaoke version of \u201cNew York, New York.\u201d Almost no one did. There was basketball, too, of sorts. Russell Westbrook of the Oklahoma City Thunder took 28 shots, scored 41 points and won the Most Valuable Player Award. LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers led the Eastern Conference with 30 points. It was the second time that an All-Star team exceeded 160 points; last year was the first.", "paragraph_answer": "The bombardment of loud sounds and bright sights was relentless. Every stoppage of play was put to use. The casts of multiple Broadway shows did musical numbers during some of the extra-long timeouts. In others, celebrated retired players associated with New York basketball, including the current Knicks president, Phil Jackson, were honored at center court. Late in the fourth quarter, fans were encouraged to stand for a karaoke version of \u201cNew York, New York.\u201d Almost no one did. There was basketball, too, of sorts. Russell Westbrook of the Oklahoma City Thunder took 28 shots, scored 41 points and won the Most Valuable Player Award. LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers led the Eastern Conference with 30 points. It was the second time that an All-Star team exceeded 160 points; last year was the first.", "sentence_answer": " LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers led the Eastern Conference with 30 points."} -{"question": "Who is facing time in a supermax penitentiary?", "paragraph": "The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts. The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado, sometimes called the ADX, where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison. William Weinreb, the lead prosecutor, told the judge in a sidebar that the prison conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face might be the most crucial factor weighed by the jury. \u201cThe jury cares a lot about this,\u201d Mr. Weinreb said, according to a transcript. \u201cWe\u2019re talking about maybe the most important thing for them.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Tsarnaev", "sentence": "The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado, sometimes called the ADX, where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison.", "paragraph_sentence": "The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts. The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado, sometimes called the ADX, where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison. William Weinreb, the lead prosecutor, told the judge in a sidebar that the prison conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face might be the most crucial factor weighed by the jury. \u201cThe jury cares a lot about this,\u201d Mr. Weinreb said, according to a transcript. \u201cWe\u2019re talking about maybe the most important thing for them.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts. The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado, sometimes called the ADX, where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison. William Weinreb, the lead prosecutor, told the judge in a sidebar that the prison conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face might be the most crucial factor weighed by the jury. \u201cThe jury cares a lot about this,\u201d Mr. Weinreb said, according to a transcript. \u201cWe\u2019re talking about maybe the most important thing for them.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado, sometimes called the ADX, where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison."} -{"question": "Who is the lead prosecutor?", "paragraph": "The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts. The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado, sometimes called the ADX, where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison. William Weinreb, the lead prosecutor, told the judge in a sidebar that the prison conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face might be the most crucial factor weighed by the jury. \u201cThe jury cares a lot about this,\u201d Mr. Weinreb said, according to a transcript. \u201cWe\u2019re talking about maybe the most important thing for them.\u201d", "answer": "William Weinreb", "sentence": "William Weinreb , the lead prosecutor, told the judge in a sidebar that the prison conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face might be the most crucial factor weighed by the jury.", "paragraph_sentence": "The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts. The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado, sometimes called the ADX, where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison. William Weinreb , the lead prosecutor, told the judge in a sidebar that the prison conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face might be the most crucial factor weighed by the jury. \u201cThe jury cares a lot about this,\u201d Mr. Weinreb said, according to a transcript. \u201cWe\u2019re talking about maybe the most important thing for them.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts. The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado, sometimes called the ADX, where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison. William Weinreb , the lead prosecutor, told the judge in a sidebar that the prison conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face might be the most crucial factor weighed by the jury. \u201cThe jury cares a lot about this,\u201d Mr. Weinreb said, according to a transcript. \u201cWe\u2019re talking about maybe the most important thing for them.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " William Weinreb , the lead prosecutor, told the judge in a sidebar that the prison conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face might be the most crucial factor weighed by the jury."} -{"question": "Who has the government been locked in intense battles with?", "paragraph": "The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts. The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado, sometimes called the ADX, where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison. William Weinreb, the lead prosecutor, told the judge in a sidebar that the prison conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face might be the most crucial factor weighed by the jury. \u201cThe jury cares a lot about this,\u201d Mr. Weinreb said, according to a transcript. \u201cWe\u2019re talking about maybe the most important thing for them.\u201d", "answer": "defense", "sentence": "The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts.", "paragraph_sentence": " The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts. The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado, sometimes called the ADX, where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison. William Weinreb, the lead prosecutor, told the judge in a sidebar that the prison conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face might be the most crucial factor weighed by the jury. \u201cThe jury cares a lot about this,\u201d Mr. Weinreb said, according to a transcript. \u201cWe\u2019re talking about maybe the most important thing for them.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts. The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado, sometimes called the ADX, where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison. William Weinreb, the lead prosecutor, told the judge in a sidebar that the prison conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face might be the most crucial factor weighed by the jury. \u201cThe jury cares a lot about this,\u201d Mr. Weinreb said, according to a transcript. \u201cWe\u2019re talking about maybe the most important thing for them.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts."} -{"question": "What is the supermax penitentiary also known as?", "paragraph": "The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts. The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado, sometimes called the ADX, where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison. William Weinreb, the lead prosecutor, told the judge in a sidebar that the prison conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face might be the most crucial factor weighed by the jury. \u201cThe jury cares a lot about this,\u201d Mr. Weinreb said, according to a transcript. \u201cWe\u2019re talking about maybe the most important thing for them.\u201d", "answer": "ADX", "sentence": "The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado, sometimes called the ADX , where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison.", "paragraph_sentence": "The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts. The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado, sometimes called the ADX , where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison. William Weinreb, the lead prosecutor, told the judge in a sidebar that the prison conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face might be the most crucial factor weighed by the jury. \u201cThe jury cares a lot about this,\u201d Mr. Weinreb said, according to a transcript. \u201cWe\u2019re talking about maybe the most important thing for them.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts. The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado, sometimes called the ADX , where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison. William Weinreb, the lead prosecutor, told the judge in a sidebar that the prison conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face might be the most crucial factor weighed by the jury. \u201cThe jury cares a lot about this,\u201d Mr. Weinreb said, according to a transcript. \u201cWe\u2019re talking about maybe the most important thing for them.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado, sometimes called the ADX , where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison."} -{"question": "Where is the supermax penitentiary?", "paragraph": "The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts. The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado, sometimes called the ADX, where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison. William Weinreb, the lead prosecutor, told the judge in a sidebar that the prison conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face might be the most crucial factor weighed by the jury. \u201cThe jury cares a lot about this,\u201d Mr. Weinreb said, according to a transcript. \u201cWe\u2019re talking about maybe the most important thing for them.\u201d", "answer": "Colorado", "sentence": "The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado , sometimes called the ADX, where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison.", "paragraph_sentence": "The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts. The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado , sometimes called the ADX, where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison. William Weinreb, the lead prosecutor, told the judge in a sidebar that the prison conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face might be the most crucial factor weighed by the jury. \u201cThe jury cares a lot about this,\u201d Mr. Weinreb said, according to a transcript. \u201cWe\u2019re talking about maybe the most important thing for them.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts. The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado , sometimes called the ADX, where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison. William Weinreb, the lead prosecutor, told the judge in a sidebar that the prison conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face might be the most crucial factor weighed by the jury. \u201cThe jury cares a lot about this,\u201d Mr. Weinreb said, according to a transcript. \u201cWe\u2019re talking about maybe the most important thing for them.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado , sometimes called the ADX, where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison."} -{"question": "What is the toughest federal prison?", "paragraph": "The ADX is the toughest prison in the federal system, and the defense has twice shown an aerial photo of the facility, covered with snow in the shadow of the Rockies, appearing so remote that it could be in Siberia. Mr. Mellin spent a great deal of time suggesting that the prison was in fact closer to civilization than was evident in the photo. The prosecutor also suggested that Mr. Tsarnaev could eventually be transferred to a less secure facility, but under defense questioning, Mr. Bezy batted away that notion: Mr. Tsarnaev would not be transferred, he said, because other inmates \u201cwould want to do him great bodily harm.\u201d At the ADX, he would be in solitary confinement 23 hours a day.", "answer": "The ADX", "sentence": "The ADX is the toughest prison in the federal system, and the defense has twice shown an aerial photo of the facility, covered with snow in the shadow of the Rockies, appearing so remote that it could be in Siberia.", "paragraph_sentence": " The ADX is the toughest prison in the federal system, and the defense has twice shown an aerial photo of the facility, covered with snow in the shadow of the Rockies, appearing so remote that it could be in Siberia. Mr. Mellin spent a great deal of time suggesting that the prison was in fact closer to civilization than was evident in the photo. The prosecutor also suggested that Mr. Tsarnaev could eventually be transferred to a less secure facility, but under defense questioning, Mr. Bezy batted away that notion: Mr. Tsarnaev would not be transferred, he said, because other inmates \u201cwould want to do him great bodily harm.\u201d At the ADX, he would be in solitary confinement 23 hours a day.", "paragraph_answer": " The ADX is the toughest prison in the federal system, and the defense has twice shown an aerial photo of the facility, covered with snow in the shadow of the Rockies, appearing so remote that it could be in Siberia. Mr. Mellin spent a great deal of time suggesting that the prison was in fact closer to civilization than was evident in the photo. The prosecutor also suggested that Mr. Tsarnaev could eventually be transferred to a less secure facility, but under defense questioning, Mr. Bezy batted away that notion: Mr. Tsarnaev would not be transferred, he said, because other inmates \u201cwould want to do him great bodily harm.\u201d At the ADX, he would be in solitary confinement 23 hours a day.", "sentence_answer": " The ADX is the toughest prison in the federal system, and the defense has twice shown an aerial photo of the facility, covered with snow in the shadow of the Rockies, appearing so remote that it could be in Siberia."} -{"question": "How many times has the defense shown a photo of the ADX?", "paragraph": "The ADX is the toughest prison in the federal system, and the defense has twice shown an aerial photo of the facility, covered with snow in the shadow of the Rockies, appearing so remote that it could be in Siberia. Mr. Mellin spent a great deal of time suggesting that the prison was in fact closer to civilization than was evident in the photo. The prosecutor also suggested that Mr. Tsarnaev could eventually be transferred to a less secure facility, but under defense questioning, Mr. Bezy batted away that notion: Mr. Tsarnaev would not be transferred, he said, because other inmates \u201cwould want to do him great bodily harm.\u201d At the ADX, he would be in solitary confinement 23 hours a day.", "answer": "twice", "sentence": "The ADX is the toughest prison in the federal system, and the defense has twice shown an aerial photo of the facility, covered with snow in the shadow of the Rockies, appearing so remote that it could be in Siberia.", "paragraph_sentence": " The ADX is the toughest prison in the federal system, and the defense has twice shown an aerial photo of the facility, covered with snow in the shadow of the Rockies, appearing so remote that it could be in Siberia. Mr. Mellin spent a great deal of time suggesting that the prison was in fact closer to civilization than was evident in the photo. The prosecutor also suggested that Mr. Tsarnaev could eventually be transferred to a less secure facility, but under defense questioning, Mr. Bezy batted away that notion: Mr. Tsarnaev would not be transferred, he said, because other inmates \u201cwould want to do him great bodily harm.\u201d At the ADX, he would be in solitary confinement 23 hours a day.", "paragraph_answer": "The ADX is the toughest prison in the federal system, and the defense has twice shown an aerial photo of the facility, covered with snow in the shadow of the Rockies, appearing so remote that it could be in Siberia. Mr. Mellin spent a great deal of time suggesting that the prison was in fact closer to civilization than was evident in the photo. The prosecutor also suggested that Mr. Tsarnaev could eventually be transferred to a less secure facility, but under defense questioning, Mr. Bezy batted away that notion: Mr. Tsarnaev would not be transferred, he said, because other inmates \u201cwould want to do him great bodily harm.\u201d At the ADX, he would be in solitary confinement 23 hours a day.", "sentence_answer": "The ADX is the toughest prison in the federal system, and the defense has twice shown an aerial photo of the facility, covered with snow in the shadow of the Rockies, appearing so remote that it could be in Siberia."} -{"question": "How many hours would Mr. Tsarnaev be in solitary confinement at the ADX?", "paragraph": "The ADX is the toughest prison in the federal system, and the defense has twice shown an aerial photo of the facility, covered with snow in the shadow of the Rockies, appearing so remote that it could be in Siberia. Mr. Mellin spent a great deal of time suggesting that the prison was in fact closer to civilization than was evident in the photo. The prosecutor also suggested that Mr. Tsarnaev could eventually be transferred to a less secure facility, but under defense questioning, Mr. Bezy batted away that notion: Mr. Tsarnaev would not be transferred, he said, because other inmates \u201cwould want to do him great bodily harm.\u201d At the ADX, he would be in solitary confinement 23 hours a day.", "answer": "23 hours a day", "sentence": "At the ADX, he would be in solitary confinement 23 hours a day .", "paragraph_sentence": "The ADX is the toughest prison in the federal system, and the defense has twice shown an aerial photo of the facility, covered with snow in the shadow of the Rockies, appearing so remote that it could be in Siberia. Mr. Mellin spent a great deal of time suggesting that the prison was in fact closer to civilization than was evident in the photo. The prosecutor also suggested that Mr. Tsarnaev could eventually be transferred to a less secure facility, but under defense questioning, Mr. Bezy batted away that notion: Mr. Tsarnaev would not be transferred, he said, because other inmates \u201cwould want to do him great bodily harm.\u201d At the ADX, he would be in solitary confinement 23 hours a day . ", "paragraph_answer": "The ADX is the toughest prison in the federal system, and the defense has twice shown an aerial photo of the facility, covered with snow in the shadow of the Rockies, appearing so remote that it could be in Siberia. Mr. Mellin spent a great deal of time suggesting that the prison was in fact closer to civilization than was evident in the photo. The prosecutor also suggested that Mr. Tsarnaev could eventually be transferred to a less secure facility, but under defense questioning, Mr. Bezy batted away that notion: Mr. Tsarnaev would not be transferred, he said, because other inmates \u201cwould want to do him great bodily harm.\u201d At the ADX, he would be in solitary confinement 23 hours a day .", "sentence_answer": "At the ADX, he would be in solitary confinement 23 hours a day ."} -{"question": "Why would Mr. Tsarnaev not be transferred?", "paragraph": "The ADX is the toughest prison in the federal system, and the defense has twice shown an aerial photo of the facility, covered with snow in the shadow of the Rockies, appearing so remote that it could be in Siberia. Mr. Mellin spent a great deal of time suggesting that the prison was in fact closer to civilization than was evident in the photo. The prosecutor also suggested that Mr. Tsarnaev could eventually be transferred to a less secure facility, but under defense questioning, Mr. Bezy batted away that notion: Mr. Tsarnaev would not be transferred, he said, because other inmates \u201cwould want to do him great bodily harm.\u201d At the ADX, he would be in solitary confinement 23 hours a day.", "answer": "other inmates \u201cwould want to do him great bodily harm.\u201d", "sentence": "The prosecutor also suggested that Mr. Tsarnaev could eventually be transferred to a less secure facility, but under defense questioning, Mr. Bezy batted away that notion: Mr. Tsarnaev would not be transferred, he said, because other inmates \u201cwould want to do him great bodily harm.\u201d At the ADX, he would be in solitary confinement 23 hours a day.", "paragraph_sentence": "The ADX is the toughest prison in the federal system, and the defense has twice shown an aerial photo of the facility, covered with snow in the shadow of the Rockies, appearing so remote that it could be in Siberia. Mr. Mellin spent a great deal of time suggesting that the prison was in fact closer to civilization than was evident in the photo. The prosecutor also suggested that Mr. Tsarnaev could eventually be transferred to a less secure facility, but under defense questioning, Mr. Bezy batted away that notion: Mr. Tsarnaev would not be transferred, he said, because other inmates \u201cwould want to do him great bodily harm.\u201d At the ADX, he would be in solitary confinement 23 hours a day. ", "paragraph_answer": "The ADX is the toughest prison in the federal system, and the defense has twice shown an aerial photo of the facility, covered with snow in the shadow of the Rockies, appearing so remote that it could be in Siberia. Mr. Mellin spent a great deal of time suggesting that the prison was in fact closer to civilization than was evident in the photo. The prosecutor also suggested that Mr. Tsarnaev could eventually be transferred to a less secure facility, but under defense questioning, Mr. Bezy batted away that notion: Mr. Tsarnaev would not be transferred, he said, because other inmates \u201cwould want to do him great bodily harm.\u201d At the ADX, he would be in solitary confinement 23 hours a day.", "sentence_answer": "The prosecutor also suggested that Mr. Tsarnaev could eventually be transferred to a less secure facility, but under defense questioning, Mr. Bezy batted away that notion: Mr. Tsarnaev would not be transferred, he said, because other inmates \u201cwould want to do him great bodily harm.\u201d At the ADX, he would be in solitary confinement 23 hours a day."} -{"question": "What is the ADX covered in?", "paragraph": "The ADX is the toughest prison in the federal system, and the defense has twice shown an aerial photo of the facility, covered with snow in the shadow of the Rockies, appearing so remote that it could be in Siberia. Mr. Mellin spent a great deal of time suggesting that the prison was in fact closer to civilization than was evident in the photo. The prosecutor also suggested that Mr. Tsarnaev could eventually be transferred to a less secure facility, but under defense questioning, Mr. Bezy batted away that notion: Mr. Tsarnaev would not be transferred, he said, because other inmates \u201cwould want to do him great bodily harm.\u201d At the ADX, he would be in solitary confinement 23 hours a day.", "answer": "snow", "sentence": "The ADX is the toughest prison in the federal system, and the defense has twice shown an aerial photo of the facility, covered with snow in the shadow of the Rockies, appearing so remote that it could be in Siberia.", "paragraph_sentence": " The ADX is the toughest prison in the federal system, and the defense has twice shown an aerial photo of the facility, covered with snow in the shadow of the Rockies, appearing so remote that it could be in Siberia. Mr. Mellin spent a great deal of time suggesting that the prison was in fact closer to civilization than was evident in the photo. The prosecutor also suggested that Mr. Tsarnaev could eventually be transferred to a less secure facility, but under defense questioning, Mr. Bezy batted away that notion: Mr. Tsarnaev would not be transferred, he said, because other inmates \u201cwould want to do him great bodily harm.\u201d At the ADX, he would be in solitary confinement 23 hours a day.", "paragraph_answer": "The ADX is the toughest prison in the federal system, and the defense has twice shown an aerial photo of the facility, covered with snow in the shadow of the Rockies, appearing so remote that it could be in Siberia. Mr. Mellin spent a great deal of time suggesting that the prison was in fact closer to civilization than was evident in the photo. The prosecutor also suggested that Mr. Tsarnaev could eventually be transferred to a less secure facility, but under defense questioning, Mr. Bezy batted away that notion: Mr. Tsarnaev would not be transferred, he said, because other inmates \u201cwould want to do him great bodily harm.\u201d At the ADX, he would be in solitary confinement 23 hours a day.", "sentence_answer": "The ADX is the toughest prison in the federal system, and the defense has twice shown an aerial photo of the facility, covered with snow in the shadow of the Rockies, appearing so remote that it could be in Siberia."} -{"question": "Where did Amelie Wisniak move to after Paris?", "paragraph": "After Amelie Wisniak moved to Manhattan from Paris four years ago, a friend told her, \u201cNever leave the island\u201d \u2014 Manhattan was the epicenter. At first Ms. Wisniak, an entrepreneur and a founder of SportChaser, a search engine that connects sports fans to bars, heeded that advice \u2014 \u201cI never went to Brooklyn,\u201d she said. But she and her boyfriend, Pascal Greilich, a software developer, could not afford to buy the kind of apartment they wanted in Manhattan and grew tired of spending $2,250 a month on rent for a one-bedroom in Hell\u2019s Kitchen. So the couple expanded their horizons, specifically to Clinton Hill, in north-central Brooklyn. They paid $995,000 for a two-bedroom two-bath condominium built in 2007.", "answer": "Manhattan", "sentence": "After Amelie Wisniak moved to Manhattan from Paris four years ago, a friend told her, \u201cNever leave the island\u201d \u2014 Manhattan was the epicenter.", "paragraph_sentence": " After Amelie Wisniak moved to Manhattan from Paris four years ago, a friend told her, \u201cNever leave the island\u201d \u2014 Manhattan was the epicenter. At first Ms. Wisniak, an entrepreneur and a founder of SportChaser, a search engine that connects sports fans to bars, heeded that advice \u2014 \u201cI never went to Brooklyn,\u201d she said. But she and her boyfriend, Pascal Greilich, a software developer, could not afford to buy the kind of apartment they wanted in Manhattan and grew tired of spending $2,250 a month on rent for a one-bedroom in Hell\u2019s Kitchen. So the couple expanded their horizons, specifically to Clinton Hill, in north-central Brooklyn. They paid $995,000 for a two-bedroom two-bath condominium built in 2007.", "paragraph_answer": "After Amelie Wisniak moved to Manhattan from Paris four years ago, a friend told her, \u201cNever leave the island\u201d \u2014 Manhattan was the epicenter. At first Ms. Wisniak, an entrepreneur and a founder of SportChaser, a search engine that connects sports fans to bars, heeded that advice \u2014 \u201cI never went to Brooklyn,\u201d she said. But she and her boyfriend, Pascal Greilich, a software developer, could not afford to buy the kind of apartment they wanted in Manhattan and grew tired of spending $2,250 a month on rent for a one-bedroom in Hell\u2019s Kitchen. So the couple expanded their horizons, specifically to Clinton Hill, in north-central Brooklyn. They paid $995,000 for a two-bedroom two-bath condominium built in 2007.", "sentence_answer": "After Amelie Wisniak moved to Manhattan from Paris four years ago, a friend told her, \u201cNever leave the island\u201d \u2014 Manhattan was the epicenter."} -{"question": "what did a friend tell Amelie when she moved to Manhattan?", "paragraph": "After Amelie Wisniak moved to Manhattan from Paris four years ago, a friend told her, \u201cNever leave the island\u201d \u2014 Manhattan was the epicenter. At first Ms. Wisniak, an entrepreneur and a founder of SportChaser, a search engine that connects sports fans to bars, heeded that advice \u2014 \u201cI never went to Brooklyn,\u201d she said. But she and her boyfriend, Pascal Greilich, a software developer, could not afford to buy the kind of apartment they wanted in Manhattan and grew tired of spending $2,250 a month on rent for a one-bedroom in Hell\u2019s Kitchen. So the couple expanded their horizons, specifically to Clinton Hill, in north-central Brooklyn. They paid $995,000 for a two-bedroom two-bath condominium built in 2007.", "answer": "Never leave the island", "sentence": "After Amelie Wisniak moved to Manhattan from Paris four years ago, a friend told her, \u201c Never leave the island \u201d \u2014 Manhattan was the epicenter.", "paragraph_sentence": " After Amelie Wisniak moved to Manhattan from Paris four years ago, a friend told her, \u201c Never leave the island \u201d \u2014 Manhattan was the epicenter. At first Ms. Wisniak, an entrepreneur and a founder of SportChaser, a search engine that connects sports fans to bars, heeded that advice \u2014 \u201cI never went to Brooklyn,\u201d she said. But she and her boyfriend, Pascal Greilich, a software developer, could not afford to buy the kind of apartment they wanted in Manhattan and grew tired of spending $2,250 a month on rent for a one-bedroom in Hell\u2019s Kitchen. So the couple expanded their horizons, specifically to Clinton Hill, in north-central Brooklyn. They paid $995,000 for a two-bedroom two-bath condominium built in 2007.", "paragraph_answer": "After Amelie Wisniak moved to Manhattan from Paris four years ago, a friend told her, \u201c Never leave the island \u201d \u2014 Manhattan was the epicenter. At first Ms. Wisniak, an entrepreneur and a founder of SportChaser, a search engine that connects sports fans to bars, heeded that advice \u2014 \u201cI never went to Brooklyn,\u201d she said. But she and her boyfriend, Pascal Greilich, a software developer, could not afford to buy the kind of apartment they wanted in Manhattan and grew tired of spending $2,250 a month on rent for a one-bedroom in Hell\u2019s Kitchen. So the couple expanded their horizons, specifically to Clinton Hill, in north-central Brooklyn. They paid $995,000 for a two-bedroom two-bath condominium built in 2007.", "sentence_answer": "After Amelie Wisniak moved to Manhattan from Paris four years ago, a friend told her, \u201c Never leave the island \u201d \u2014 Manhattan was the epicenter."} -{"question": "What company did Ms Wisniak help found?", "paragraph": "After Amelie Wisniak moved to Manhattan from Paris four years ago, a friend told her, \u201cNever leave the island\u201d \u2014 Manhattan was the epicenter. At first Ms. Wisniak, an entrepreneur and a founder of SportChaser, a search engine that connects sports fans to bars, heeded that advice \u2014 \u201cI never went to Brooklyn,\u201d she said. But she and her boyfriend, Pascal Greilich, a software developer, could not afford to buy the kind of apartment they wanted in Manhattan and grew tired of spending $2,250 a month on rent for a one-bedroom in Hell\u2019s Kitchen. So the couple expanded their horizons, specifically to Clinton Hill, in north-central Brooklyn. They paid $995,000 for a two-bedroom two-bath condominium built in 2007.", "answer": "SportChaser", "sentence": "At first Ms. Wisniak, an entrepreneur and a founder of SportChaser , a search engine that connects sports fans to bars, heeded that advice \u2014 \u201cI never went to Brooklyn,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_sentence": "After Amelie Wisniak moved to Manhattan from Paris four years ago, a friend told her, \u201cNever leave the island\u201d \u2014 Manhattan was the epicenter. At first Ms. Wisniak, an entrepreneur and a founder of SportChaser , a search engine that connects sports fans to bars, heeded that advice \u2014 \u201cI never went to Brooklyn,\u201d she said. But she and her boyfriend, Pascal Greilich, a software developer, could not afford to buy the kind of apartment they wanted in Manhattan and grew tired of spending $2,250 a month on rent for a one-bedroom in Hell\u2019s Kitchen. So the couple expanded their horizons, specifically to Clinton Hill, in north-central Brooklyn. They paid $995,000 for a two-bedroom two-bath condominium built in 2007.", "paragraph_answer": "After Amelie Wisniak moved to Manhattan from Paris four years ago, a friend told her, \u201cNever leave the island\u201d \u2014 Manhattan was the epicenter. At first Ms. Wisniak, an entrepreneur and a founder of SportChaser , a search engine that connects sports fans to bars, heeded that advice \u2014 \u201cI never went to Brooklyn,\u201d she said. But she and her boyfriend, Pascal Greilich, a software developer, could not afford to buy the kind of apartment they wanted in Manhattan and grew tired of spending $2,250 a month on rent for a one-bedroom in Hell\u2019s Kitchen. So the couple expanded their horizons, specifically to Clinton Hill, in north-central Brooklyn. They paid $995,000 for a two-bedroom two-bath condominium built in 2007.", "sentence_answer": "At first Ms. Wisniak, an entrepreneur and a founder of SportChaser , a search engine that connects sports fans to bars, heeded that advice \u2014 \u201cI never went to Brooklyn,\u201d she said."} -{"question": "What does Ms. Wisniak's boyfriend do for work?", "paragraph": "After Amelie Wisniak moved to Manhattan from Paris four years ago, a friend told her, \u201cNever leave the island\u201d \u2014 Manhattan was the epicenter. At first Ms. Wisniak, an entrepreneur and a founder of SportChaser, a search engine that connects sports fans to bars, heeded that advice \u2014 \u201cI never went to Brooklyn,\u201d she said. But she and her boyfriend, Pascal Greilich, a software developer, could not afford to buy the kind of apartment they wanted in Manhattan and grew tired of spending $2,250 a month on rent for a one-bedroom in Hell\u2019s Kitchen. So the couple expanded their horizons, specifically to Clinton Hill, in north-central Brooklyn. They paid $995,000 for a two-bedroom two-bath condominium built in 2007.", "answer": "software developer", "sentence": "But she and her boyfriend, Pascal Greilich, a software developer , could not afford to buy the kind of apartment they wanted in Manhattan and grew tired of spending $2,250 a month on rent for a one-bedroom in Hell\u2019s Kitchen.", "paragraph_sentence": "After Amelie Wisniak moved to Manhattan from Paris four years ago, a friend told her, \u201cNever leave the island\u201d \u2014 Manhattan was the epicenter. At first Ms. Wisniak, an entrepreneur and a founder of SportChaser, a search engine that connects sports fans to bars, heeded that advice \u2014 \u201cI never went to Brooklyn,\u201d she said. But she and her boyfriend, Pascal Greilich, a software developer , could not afford to buy the kind of apartment they wanted in Manhattan and grew tired of spending $2,250 a month on rent for a one-bedroom in Hell\u2019s Kitchen. So the couple expanded their horizons, specifically to Clinton Hill, in north-central Brooklyn. They paid $995,000 for a two-bedroom two-bath condominium built in 2007.", "paragraph_answer": "After Amelie Wisniak moved to Manhattan from Paris four years ago, a friend told her, \u201cNever leave the island\u201d \u2014 Manhattan was the epicenter. At first Ms. Wisniak, an entrepreneur and a founder of SportChaser, a search engine that connects sports fans to bars, heeded that advice \u2014 \u201cI never went to Brooklyn,\u201d she said. But she and her boyfriend, Pascal Greilich, a software developer , could not afford to buy the kind of apartment they wanted in Manhattan and grew tired of spending $2,250 a month on rent for a one-bedroom in Hell\u2019s Kitchen. So the couple expanded their horizons, specifically to Clinton Hill, in north-central Brooklyn. They paid $995,000 for a two-bedroom two-bath condominium built in 2007.", "sentence_answer": "But she and her boyfriend, Pascal Greilich, a software developer , could not afford to buy the kind of apartment they wanted in Manhattan and grew tired of spending $2,250 a month on rent for a one-bedroom in Hell\u2019s Kitchen."} -{"question": "how much was Ms. Wisniak's condo in Clinton Hill?", "paragraph": "After Amelie Wisniak moved to Manhattan from Paris four years ago, a friend told her, \u201cNever leave the island\u201d \u2014 Manhattan was the epicenter. At first Ms. Wisniak, an entrepreneur and a founder of SportChaser, a search engine that connects sports fans to bars, heeded that advice \u2014 \u201cI never went to Brooklyn,\u201d she said. But she and her boyfriend, Pascal Greilich, a software developer, could not afford to buy the kind of apartment they wanted in Manhattan and grew tired of spending $2,250 a month on rent for a one-bedroom in Hell\u2019s Kitchen. So the couple expanded their horizons, specifically to Clinton Hill, in north-central Brooklyn. They paid $995,000 for a two-bedroom two-bath condominium built in 2007.", "answer": "$995,000", "sentence": "They paid $995,000 for a two-bedroom two-bath condominium built in 2007.", "paragraph_sentence": "After Amelie Wisniak moved to Manhattan from Paris four years ago, a friend told her, \u201cNever leave the island\u201d \u2014 Manhattan was the epicenter. At first Ms. Wisniak, an entrepreneur and a founder of SportChaser, a search engine that connects sports fans to bars, heeded that advice \u2014 \u201cI never went to Brooklyn,\u201d she said. But she and her boyfriend, Pascal Greilich, a software developer, could not afford to buy the kind of apartment they wanted in Manhattan and grew tired of spending $2,250 a month on rent for a one-bedroom in Hell\u2019s Kitchen. So the couple expanded their horizons, specifically to Clinton Hill, in north-central Brooklyn. They paid $995,000 for a two-bedroom two-bath condominium built in 2007. ", "paragraph_answer": "After Amelie Wisniak moved to Manhattan from Paris four years ago, a friend told her, \u201cNever leave the island\u201d \u2014 Manhattan was the epicenter. At first Ms. Wisniak, an entrepreneur and a founder of SportChaser, a search engine that connects sports fans to bars, heeded that advice \u2014 \u201cI never went to Brooklyn,\u201d she said. But she and her boyfriend, Pascal Greilich, a software developer, could not afford to buy the kind of apartment they wanted in Manhattan and grew tired of spending $2,250 a month on rent for a one-bedroom in Hell\u2019s Kitchen. So the couple expanded their horizons, specifically to Clinton Hill, in north-central Brooklyn. They paid $995,000 for a two-bedroom two-bath condominium built in 2007.", "sentence_answer": "They paid $995,000 for a two-bedroom two-bath condominium built in 2007."} -{"question": "how large is the neighborhood?", "paragraph": "The boundaries of the neighborhood, which is about 0.6 square mile, are roughly Flushing Avenue to the north, Atlantic Avenue to the south, Vanderbilt Avenue to the west and Classon Avenue to the east. The United States Census Bureau\u2019s 2009-2013 American Community Survey estimated the population as 39 percent white, 36 percent black, 16 percent Hispanic and 5 percent Asian. The 2010 census showed a 149 percent increase in the white population over 2000 and a decline of 29 percent in the number of blacks. The architecture is a mix of wood-frame houses predating the Civil War, Italianate mansions, carriage houses, brownstones, midrise apartment buildings and three- to five-story brick rowhouses. Some are scrupulously restored while others are shedding paint. Here and there, a featureless tower pierces the sky. Pratt Institute is the neighborhood\u2019s centerpiece, its greensward campus\u2019s brick pathways braiding through a sculpture garden.", "answer": "0.6 square mile", "sentence": "The boundaries of the neighborhood, which is about 0.6 square mile , are roughly Flushing Avenue to the north, Atlantic Avenue to the south, Vanderbilt Avenue to the west and Classon Avenue to the east.", "paragraph_sentence": " The boundaries of the neighborhood, which is about 0.6 square mile , are roughly Flushing Avenue to the north, Atlantic Avenue to the south, Vanderbilt Avenue to the west and Classon Avenue to the east. The United States Census Bureau\u2019s 2009-2013 American Community Survey estimated the population as 39 percent white, 36 percent black, 16 percent Hispanic and 5 percent Asian. The 2010 census showed a 149 percent increase in the white population over 2000 and a decline of 29 percent in the number of blacks. The architecture is a mix of wood-frame houses predating the Civil War, Italianate mansions, carriage houses, brownstones, midrise apartment buildings and three- to five-story brick rowhouses. Some are scrupulously restored while others are shedding paint. Here and there, a featureless tower pierces the sky. Pratt Institute is the neighborhood\u2019s centerpiece, its greensward campus\u2019s brick pathways braiding through a sculpture garden.", "paragraph_answer": "The boundaries of the neighborhood, which is about 0.6 square mile , are roughly Flushing Avenue to the north, Atlantic Avenue to the south, Vanderbilt Avenue to the west and Classon Avenue to the east. The United States Census Bureau\u2019s 2009-2013 American Community Survey estimated the population as 39 percent white, 36 percent black, 16 percent Hispanic and 5 percent Asian. The 2010 census showed a 149 percent increase in the white population over 2000 and a decline of 29 percent in the number of blacks. The architecture is a mix of wood-frame houses predating the Civil War, Italianate mansions, carriage houses, brownstones, midrise apartment buildings and three- to five-story brick rowhouses. Some are scrupulously restored while others are shedding paint. Here and there, a featureless tower pierces the sky. Pratt Institute is the neighborhood\u2019s centerpiece, its greensward campus\u2019s brick pathways braiding through a sculpture garden.", "sentence_answer": "The boundaries of the neighborhood, which is about 0.6 square mile , are roughly Flushing Avenue to the north, Atlantic Avenue to the south, Vanderbilt Avenue to the west and Classon Avenue to the east."} -{"question": "what war do the houses construction predate?", "paragraph": "The boundaries of the neighborhood, which is about 0.6 square mile, are roughly Flushing Avenue to the north, Atlantic Avenue to the south, Vanderbilt Avenue to the west and Classon Avenue to the east. The United States Census Bureau\u2019s 2009-2013 American Community Survey estimated the population as 39 percent white, 36 percent black, 16 percent Hispanic and 5 percent Asian. The 2010 census showed a 149 percent increase in the white population over 2000 and a decline of 29 percent in the number of blacks. The architecture is a mix of wood-frame houses predating the Civil War, Italianate mansions, carriage houses, brownstones, midrise apartment buildings and three- to five-story brick rowhouses. Some are scrupulously restored while others are shedding paint. Here and there, a featureless tower pierces the sky. Pratt Institute is the neighborhood\u2019s centerpiece, its greensward campus\u2019s brick pathways braiding through a sculpture garden.", "answer": "Civil War", "sentence": "The architecture is a mix of wood-frame houses predating the Civil War , Italianate mansions, carriage houses, brownstones, midrise apartment buildings and three- to five-story brick rowhouses.", "paragraph_sentence": "The boundaries of the neighborhood, which is about 0.6 square mile, are roughly Flushing Avenue to the north, Atlantic Avenue to the south, Vanderbilt Avenue to the west and Classon Avenue to the east. The United States Census Bureau\u2019s 2009-2013 American Community Survey estimated the population as 39 percent white, 36 percent black, 16 percent Hispanic and 5 percent Asian. The 2010 census showed a 149 percent increase in the white population over 2000 and a decline of 29 percent in the number of blacks. The architecture is a mix of wood-frame houses predating the Civil War , Italianate mansions, carriage houses, brownstones, midrise apartment buildings and three- to five-story brick rowhouses. Some are scrupulously restored while others are shedding paint. Here and there, a featureless tower pierces the sky. Pratt Institute is the neighborhood\u2019s centerpiece, its greensward campus\u2019s brick pathways braiding through a sculpture garden.", "paragraph_answer": "The boundaries of the neighborhood, which is about 0.6 square mile, are roughly Flushing Avenue to the north, Atlantic Avenue to the south, Vanderbilt Avenue to the west and Classon Avenue to the east. The United States Census Bureau\u2019s 2009-2013 American Community Survey estimated the population as 39 percent white, 36 percent black, 16 percent Hispanic and 5 percent Asian. The 2010 census showed a 149 percent increase in the white population over 2000 and a decline of 29 percent in the number of blacks. The architecture is a mix of wood-frame houses predating the Civil War , Italianate mansions, carriage houses, brownstones, midrise apartment buildings and three- to five-story brick rowhouses. Some are scrupulously restored while others are shedding paint. Here and there, a featureless tower pierces the sky. Pratt Institute is the neighborhood\u2019s centerpiece, its greensward campus\u2019s brick pathways braiding through a sculpture garden.", "sentence_answer": "The architecture is a mix of wood-frame houses predating the Civil War , Italianate mansions, carriage houses, brownstones, midrise apartment buildings and three- to five-story brick rowhouses."} -{"question": "what was the percent of the neighborhood was hispanic in 2009-2013?", "paragraph": "The boundaries of the neighborhood, which is about 0.6 square mile, are roughly Flushing Avenue to the north, Atlantic Avenue to the south, Vanderbilt Avenue to the west and Classon Avenue to the east. The United States Census Bureau\u2019s 2009-2013 American Community Survey estimated the population as 39 percent white, 36 percent black, 16 percent Hispanic and 5 percent Asian. The 2010 census showed a 149 percent increase in the white population over 2000 and a decline of 29 percent in the number of blacks. The architecture is a mix of wood-frame houses predating the Civil War, Italianate mansions, carriage houses, brownstones, midrise apartment buildings and three- to five-story brick rowhouses. Some are scrupulously restored while others are shedding paint. Here and there, a featureless tower pierces the sky. Pratt Institute is the neighborhood\u2019s centerpiece, its greensward campus\u2019s brick pathways braiding through a sculpture garden.", "answer": "16", "sentence": "The United States Census Bureau\u2019s 2009-2013 American Community Survey estimated the population as 39 percent white, 36 percent black, 16 percent Hispanic and 5 percent Asian.", "paragraph_sentence": "The boundaries of the neighborhood, which is about 0.6 square mile, are roughly Flushing Avenue to the north, Atlantic Avenue to the south, Vanderbilt Avenue to the west and Classon Avenue to the east. The United States Census Bureau\u2019s 2009-2013 American Community Survey estimated the population as 39 percent white, 36 percent black, 16 percent Hispanic and 5 percent Asian. The 2010 census showed a 149 percent increase in the white population over 2000 and a decline of 29 percent in the number of blacks. The architecture is a mix of wood-frame houses predating the Civil War, Italianate mansions, carriage houses, brownstones, midrise apartment buildings and three- to five-story brick rowhouses. Some are scrupulously restored while others are shedding paint. Here and there, a featureless tower pierces the sky. Pratt Institute is the neighborhood\u2019s centerpiece, its greensward campus\u2019s brick pathways braiding through a sculpture garden.", "paragraph_answer": "The boundaries of the neighborhood, which is about 0.6 square mile, are roughly Flushing Avenue to the north, Atlantic Avenue to the south, Vanderbilt Avenue to the west and Classon Avenue to the east. The United States Census Bureau\u2019s 2009-2013 American Community Survey estimated the population as 39 percent white, 36 percent black, 16 percent Hispanic and 5 percent Asian. The 2010 census showed a 149 percent increase in the white population over 2000 and a decline of 29 percent in the number of blacks. The architecture is a mix of wood-frame houses predating the Civil War, Italianate mansions, carriage houses, brownstones, midrise apartment buildings and three- to five-story brick rowhouses. Some are scrupulously restored while others are shedding paint. Here and there, a featureless tower pierces the sky. Pratt Institute is the neighborhood\u2019s centerpiece, its greensward campus\u2019s brick pathways braiding through a sculpture garden.", "sentence_answer": "The United States Census Bureau\u2019s 2009-2013 American Community Survey estimated the population as 39 percent white, 36 percent black, 16 percent Hispanic and 5 percent Asian."} -{"question": "What is the neighborhood's centerpiece?", "paragraph": "The boundaries of the neighborhood, which is about 0.6 square mile, are roughly Flushing Avenue to the north, Atlantic Avenue to the south, Vanderbilt Avenue to the west and Classon Avenue to the east. The United States Census Bureau\u2019s 2009-2013 American Community Survey estimated the population as 39 percent white, 36 percent black, 16 percent Hispanic and 5 percent Asian. The 2010 census showed a 149 percent increase in the white population over 2000 and a decline of 29 percent in the number of blacks. The architecture is a mix of wood-frame houses predating the Civil War, Italianate mansions, carriage houses, brownstones, midrise apartment buildings and three- to five-story brick rowhouses. Some are scrupulously restored while others are shedding paint. Here and there, a featureless tower pierces the sky. Pratt Institute is the neighborhood\u2019s centerpiece, its greensward campus\u2019s brick pathways braiding through a sculpture garden.", "answer": "Pratt Institute", "sentence": "Pratt Institute is the neighborhood\u2019s centerpiece, its greensward campus\u2019s brick pathways braiding through a sculpture garden.", "paragraph_sentence": "The boundaries of the neighborhood, which is about 0.6 square mile, are roughly Flushing Avenue to the north, Atlantic Avenue to the south, Vanderbilt Avenue to the west and Classon Avenue to the east. The United States Census Bureau\u2019s 2009-2013 American Community Survey estimated the population as 39 percent white, 36 percent black, 16 percent Hispanic and 5 percent Asian. The 2010 census showed a 149 percent increase in the white population over 2000 and a decline of 29 percent in the number of blacks. The architecture is a mix of wood-frame houses predating the Civil War, Italianate mansions, carriage houses, brownstones, midrise apartment buildings and three- to five-story brick rowhouses. Some are scrupulously restored while others are shedding paint. Here and there, a featureless tower pierces the sky. Pratt Institute is the neighborhood\u2019s centerpiece, its greensward campus\u2019s brick pathways braiding through a sculpture garden. ", "paragraph_answer": "The boundaries of the neighborhood, which is about 0.6 square mile, are roughly Flushing Avenue to the north, Atlantic Avenue to the south, Vanderbilt Avenue to the west and Classon Avenue to the east. The United States Census Bureau\u2019s 2009-2013 American Community Survey estimated the population as 39 percent white, 36 percent black, 16 percent Hispanic and 5 percent Asian. The 2010 census showed a 149 percent increase in the white population over 2000 and a decline of 29 percent in the number of blacks. The architecture is a mix of wood-frame houses predating the Civil War, Italianate mansions, carriage houses, brownstones, midrise apartment buildings and three- to five-story brick rowhouses. Some are scrupulously restored while others are shedding paint. Here and there, a featureless tower pierces the sky. Pratt Institute is the neighborhood\u2019s centerpiece, its greensward campus\u2019s brick pathways braiding through a sculpture garden.", "sentence_answer": " Pratt Institute is the neighborhood\u2019s centerpiece, its greensward campus\u2019s brick pathways braiding through a sculpture garden."} -{"question": "Pratt Institute's brick pathways lead through what?", "paragraph": "The boundaries of the neighborhood, which is about 0.6 square mile, are roughly Flushing Avenue to the north, Atlantic Avenue to the south, Vanderbilt Avenue to the west and Classon Avenue to the east. The United States Census Bureau\u2019s 2009-2013 American Community Survey estimated the population as 39 percent white, 36 percent black, 16 percent Hispanic and 5 percent Asian. The 2010 census showed a 149 percent increase in the white population over 2000 and a decline of 29 percent in the number of blacks. The architecture is a mix of wood-frame houses predating the Civil War, Italianate mansions, carriage houses, brownstones, midrise apartment buildings and three- to five-story brick rowhouses. Some are scrupulously restored while others are shedding paint. Here and there, a featureless tower pierces the sky. Pratt Institute is the neighborhood\u2019s centerpiece, its greensward campus\u2019s brick pathways braiding through a sculpture garden.", "answer": "sculpture garden", "sentence": "a sculpture garden .", "paragraph_sentence": "The boundaries of the neighborhood, which is about 0.6 square mile, are roughly Flushing Avenue to the north, Atlantic Avenue to the south, Vanderbilt Avenue to the west and Classon Avenue to the east. The United States Census Bureau\u2019s 2009-2013 American Community Survey estimated the population as 39 percent white, 36 percent black, 16 percent Hispanic and 5 percent Asian. The 2010 census showed a 149 percent increase in the white population over 2000 and a decline of 29 percent in the number of blacks. The architecture is a mix of wood-frame houses predating the Civil War, Italianate mansions, carriage houses, brownstones, midrise apartment buildings and three- to five-story brick rowhouses. Some are scrupulously restored while others are shedding paint. Here and there, a featureless tower pierces the sky. Pratt Institute is the neighborhood\u2019s centerpiece, its greensward campus\u2019s brick pathways braiding through a sculpture garden . ", "paragraph_answer": "The boundaries of the neighborhood, which is about 0.6 square mile, are roughly Flushing Avenue to the north, Atlantic Avenue to the south, Vanderbilt Avenue to the west and Classon Avenue to the east. The United States Census Bureau\u2019s 2009-2013 American Community Survey estimated the population as 39 percent white, 36 percent black, 16 percent Hispanic and 5 percent Asian. The 2010 census showed a 149 percent increase in the white population over 2000 and a decline of 29 percent in the number of blacks. The architecture is a mix of wood-frame houses predating the Civil War, Italianate mansions, carriage houses, brownstones, midrise apartment buildings and three- to five-story brick rowhouses. Some are scrupulously restored while others are shedding paint. Here and there, a featureless tower pierces the sky. Pratt Institute is the neighborhood\u2019s centerpiece, its greensward campus\u2019s brick pathways braiding through a sculpture garden .", "sentence_answer": "a sculpture garden ."} -{"question": "How large was the Halstead Property?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe had a couple of nonnegotiable things \u2014 outdoor space and nothing smaller than 1,200 square feet,\u201d Ms. Wenk said. After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces. The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million, according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group. The area has \u201cdefinitely become a more popular neighborhood,\u201d said Lea Fulton, an agent at the Ideal Properties Group. \u201cPeople are coming in saying, \u2018Hey, I\u2019m interested in Clinton Hill,\u2019 and before it was \u2018I can\u2019t afford Fort Greene anymore, so I guess I\u2019ll look into Clinton Hill.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "1,500-square-foot", "sentence": "After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe had a couple of nonnegotiable things \u2014 outdoor space and nothing smaller than 1,200 square feet,\u201d Ms. Wenk said. After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces. The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million, according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group. The area has \u201cdefinitely become a more popular neighborhood,\u201d said Lea Fulton, an agent at the Ideal Properties Group. \u201cPeople are coming in saying, \u2018Hey, I\u2019m interested in Clinton Hill,\u2019 and before it was \u2018I can\u2019t afford Fort Greene anymore, so I guess I\u2019ll look into Clinton Hill.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe had a couple of nonnegotiable things \u2014 outdoor space and nothing smaller than 1,200 square feet,\u201d Ms. Wenk said. After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces. The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million, according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group. The area has \u201cdefinitely become a more popular neighborhood,\u201d said Lea Fulton, an agent at the Ideal Properties Group. \u201cPeople are coming in saying, \u2018Hey, I\u2019m interested in Clinton Hill,\u2019 and before it was \u2018I can\u2019t afford Fort Greene anymore, so I guess I\u2019ll look into Clinton Hill.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces."} -{"question": "What was Ms. Wenk's minimum required square footage?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe had a couple of nonnegotiable things \u2014 outdoor space and nothing smaller than 1,200 square feet,\u201d Ms. Wenk said. After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces. The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million, according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group. The area has \u201cdefinitely become a more popular neighborhood,\u201d said Lea Fulton, an agent at the Ideal Properties Group. \u201cPeople are coming in saying, \u2018Hey, I\u2019m interested in Clinton Hill,\u2019 and before it was \u2018I can\u2019t afford Fort Greene anymore, so I guess I\u2019ll look into Clinton Hill.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "1,200 square feet", "sentence": "\u201cWe had a couple of nonnegotiable things \u2014 outdoor space and nothing smaller than 1,200 square feet ,\u201d Ms. Wenk said.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cWe had a couple of nonnegotiable things \u2014 outdoor space and nothing smaller than 1,200 square feet ,\u201d Ms. Wenk said. After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces. The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million, according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group. The area has \u201cdefinitely become a more popular neighborhood,\u201d said Lea Fulton, an agent at the Ideal Properties Group. \u201cPeople are coming in saying, \u2018Hey, I\u2019m interested in Clinton Hill,\u2019 and before it was \u2018I can\u2019t afford Fort Greene anymore, so I guess I\u2019ll look into Clinton Hill.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe had a couple of nonnegotiable things \u2014 outdoor space and nothing smaller than 1,200 square feet ,\u201d Ms. Wenk said. After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces. The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million, according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group. The area has \u201cdefinitely become a more popular neighborhood,\u201d said Lea Fulton, an agent at the Ideal Properties Group. \u201cPeople are coming in saying, \u2018Hey, I\u2019m interested in Clinton Hill,\u2019 and before it was \u2018I can\u2019t afford Fort Greene anymore, so I guess I\u2019ll look into Clinton Hill.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe had a couple of nonnegotiable things \u2014 outdoor space and nothing smaller than 1,200 square feet ,\u201d Ms. Wenk said."} -{"question": "What was the cost of a three-bedroom property?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe had a couple of nonnegotiable things \u2014 outdoor space and nothing smaller than 1,200 square feet,\u201d Ms. Wenk said. After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces. The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million, according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group. The area has \u201cdefinitely become a more popular neighborhood,\u201d said Lea Fulton, an agent at the Ideal Properties Group. \u201cPeople are coming in saying, \u2018Hey, I\u2019m interested in Clinton Hill,\u2019 and before it was \u2018I can\u2019t afford Fort Greene anymore, so I guess I\u2019ll look into Clinton Hill.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "$1.85 million", "sentence": "The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million , according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe had a couple of nonnegotiable things \u2014 outdoor space and nothing smaller than 1,200 square feet,\u201d Ms. Wenk said. After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces. The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million , according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group. The area has \u201cdefinitely become a more popular neighborhood,\u201d said Lea Fulton, an agent at the Ideal Properties Group. \u201cPeople are coming in saying, \u2018Hey, I\u2019m interested in Clinton Hill,\u2019 and before it was \u2018I can\u2019t afford Fort Greene anymore, so I guess I\u2019ll look into Clinton Hill.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe had a couple of nonnegotiable things \u2014 outdoor space and nothing smaller than 1,200 square feet,\u201d Ms. Wenk said. After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces. The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million , according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group. The area has \u201cdefinitely become a more popular neighborhood,\u201d said Lea Fulton, an agent at the Ideal Properties Group. \u201cPeople are coming in saying, \u2018Hey, I\u2019m interested in Clinton Hill,\u2019 and before it was \u2018I can\u2019t afford Fort Greene anymore, so I guess I\u2019ll look into Clinton Hill.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million , according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group."} -{"question": "how long did Ms. Wenk search for a property?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe had a couple of nonnegotiable things \u2014 outdoor space and nothing smaller than 1,200 square feet,\u201d Ms. Wenk said. After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces. The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million, according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group. The area has \u201cdefinitely become a more popular neighborhood,\u201d said Lea Fulton, an agent at the Ideal Properties Group. \u201cPeople are coming in saying, \u2018Hey, I\u2019m interested in Clinton Hill,\u2019 and before it was \u2018I can\u2019t afford Fort Greene anymore, so I guess I\u2019ll look into Clinton Hill.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "nine months", "sentence": "After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe had a couple of nonnegotiable things \u2014 outdoor space and nothing smaller than 1,200 square feet,\u201d Ms. Wenk said. After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces. The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million, according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group. The area has \u201cdefinitely become a more popular neighborhood,\u201d said Lea Fulton, an agent at the Ideal Properties Group. \u201cPeople are coming in saying, \u2018Hey, I\u2019m interested in Clinton Hill,\u2019 and before it was \u2018I can\u2019t afford Fort Greene anymore, so I guess I\u2019ll look into Clinton Hill.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe had a couple of nonnegotiable things \u2014 outdoor space and nothing smaller than 1,200 square feet,\u201d Ms. Wenk said. After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces. The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million, according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group. The area has \u201cdefinitely become a more popular neighborhood,\u201d said Lea Fulton, an agent at the Ideal Properties Group. \u201cPeople are coming in saying, \u2018Hey, I\u2019m interested in Clinton Hill,\u2019 and before it was \u2018I can\u2019t afford Fort Greene anymore, so I guess I\u2019ll look into Clinton Hill.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces."} -{"question": "Why do people start looking into moving into Clinton Hill?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe had a couple of nonnegotiable things \u2014 outdoor space and nothing smaller than 1,200 square feet,\u201d Ms. Wenk said. After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces. The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million, according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group. The area has \u201cdefinitely become a more popular neighborhood,\u201d said Lea Fulton, an agent at the Ideal Properties Group. \u201cPeople are coming in saying, \u2018Hey, I\u2019m interested in Clinton Hill,\u2019 and before it was \u2018I can\u2019t afford Fort Greene anymore, so I guess I\u2019ll look into Clinton Hill.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "can\u2019t afford Fort Greene anymore", "sentence": "\u201cPeople are coming in saying, \u2018Hey, I\u2019m interested in Clinton Hill,\u2019 and before it was \u2018I can\u2019t afford Fort Greene anymore , so I guess I\u2019ll look into Clinton Hill.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe had a couple of nonnegotiable things \u2014 outdoor space and nothing smaller than 1,200 square feet,\u201d Ms. Wenk said. After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces. The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million, according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group. The area has \u201cdefinitely become a more popular neighborhood,\u201d said Lea Fulton, an agent at the Ideal Properties Group. \u201cPeople are coming in saying, \u2018Hey, I\u2019m interested in Clinton Hill,\u2019 and before it was \u2018I can\u2019t afford Fort Greene anymore , so I guess I\u2019ll look into Clinton Hill.\u2019 \u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe had a couple of nonnegotiable things \u2014 outdoor space and nothing smaller than 1,200 square feet,\u201d Ms. Wenk said. After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces. The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million, according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group. The area has \u201cdefinitely become a more popular neighborhood,\u201d said Lea Fulton, an agent at the Ideal Properties Group. \u201cPeople are coming in saying, \u2018Hey, I\u2019m interested in Clinton Hill,\u2019 and before it was \u2018I can\u2019t afford Fort Greene anymore , so I guess I\u2019ll look into Clinton Hill.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cPeople are coming in saying, \u2018Hey, I\u2019m interested in Clinton Hill,\u2019 and before it was \u2018I can\u2019t afford Fort Greene anymore , so I guess I\u2019ll look into Clinton Hill.\u2019 \u201d"} -{"question": "what are the median sale prices of a condo in Clinton Hill?", "paragraph": "What You\u2019ll Pay In the third quarter of 2015, the median sales price of a condo in Clinton Hill was $849,000, an increase of 28 percent from the same period last year, according to Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Terra Holdings, who said the small size of the market can cause data fluctuations. For co-ops, the median was $542,000, an increase of 13 percent. The biggest price jump was in townhouse sales, according to Mr. Heym, with the median price in the third quarter of 2015 at $2.67 million, an increase of 59 percent over the same period last year.", "answer": "$849,000", "sentence": "What You\u2019ll Pay In the third quarter of 2015, the median sales price of a condo in Clinton Hill was $849,000 , an increase of 28 percent from the same period last year, according to Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Terra Holdings, who said the small size of the market can cause data fluctuations.", "paragraph_sentence": " What You\u2019ll Pay In the third quarter of 2015, the median sales price of a condo in Clinton Hill was $849,000 , an increase of 28 percent from the same period last year, according to Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Terra Holdings, who said the small size of the market can cause data fluctuations. For co-ops, the median was $542,000, an increase of 13 percent. The biggest price jump was in townhouse sales, according to Mr. Heym, with the median price in the third quarter of 2015 at $2.67 million, an increase of 59 percent over the same period last year.", "paragraph_answer": "What You\u2019ll Pay In the third quarter of 2015, the median sales price of a condo in Clinton Hill was $849,000 , an increase of 28 percent from the same period last year, according to Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Terra Holdings, who said the small size of the market can cause data fluctuations. For co-ops, the median was $542,000, an increase of 13 percent. The biggest price jump was in townhouse sales, according to Mr. Heym, with the median price in the third quarter of 2015 at $2.67 million, an increase of 59 percent over the same period last year.", "sentence_answer": "What You\u2019ll Pay In the third quarter of 2015, the median sales price of a condo in Clinton Hill was $849,000 , an increase of 28 percent from the same period last year, according to Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Terra Holdings, who said the small size of the market can cause data fluctuations."} -{"question": "How much is the Clinton Hill sale price an increase of from last year?", "paragraph": "What You\u2019ll Pay In the third quarter of 2015, the median sales price of a condo in Clinton Hill was $849,000, an increase of 28 percent from the same period last year, according to Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Terra Holdings, who said the small size of the market can cause data fluctuations. For co-ops, the median was $542,000, an increase of 13 percent. The biggest price jump was in townhouse sales, according to Mr. Heym, with the median price in the third quarter of 2015 at $2.67 million, an increase of 59 percent over the same period last year.", "answer": "28 percent", "sentence": "What You\u2019ll Pay In the third quarter of 2015, the median sales price of a condo in Clinton Hill was $849,000, an increase of 28 percent from the same period last year, according to Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Terra Holdings, who said the small size of the market can cause data fluctuations.", "paragraph_sentence": " What You\u2019ll Pay In the third quarter of 2015, the median sales price of a condo in Clinton Hill was $849,000, an increase of 28 percent from the same period last year, according to Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Terra Holdings, who said the small size of the market can cause data fluctuations. For co-ops, the median was $542,000, an increase of 13 percent. The biggest price jump was in townhouse sales, according to Mr. Heym, with the median price in the third quarter of 2015 at $2.67 million, an increase of 59 percent over the same period last year.", "paragraph_answer": "What You\u2019ll Pay In the third quarter of 2015, the median sales price of a condo in Clinton Hill was $849,000, an increase of 28 percent from the same period last year, according to Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Terra Holdings, who said the small size of the market can cause data fluctuations. For co-ops, the median was $542,000, an increase of 13 percent. The biggest price jump was in townhouse sales, according to Mr. Heym, with the median price in the third quarter of 2015 at $2.67 million, an increase of 59 percent over the same period last year.", "sentence_answer": "What You\u2019ll Pay In the third quarter of 2015, the median sales price of a condo in Clinton Hill was $849,000, an increase of 28 percent from the same period last year, according to Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Terra Holdings, who said the small size of the market can cause data fluctuations."} -{"question": "what causes the data fluctuations?", "paragraph": "What You\u2019ll Pay In the third quarter of 2015, the median sales price of a condo in Clinton Hill was $849,000, an increase of 28 percent from the same period last year, according to Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Terra Holdings, who said the small size of the market can cause data fluctuations. For co-ops, the median was $542,000, an increase of 13 percent. The biggest price jump was in townhouse sales, according to Mr. Heym, with the median price in the third quarter of 2015 at $2.67 million, an increase of 59 percent over the same period last year.", "answer": "small size of the market", "sentence": "What You\u2019ll Pay In the third quarter of 2015, the median sales price of a condo in Clinton Hill was $849,000, an increase of 28 percent from the same period last year, according to Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Terra Holdings, who said the small size of the market can cause data fluctuations.", "paragraph_sentence": " What You\u2019ll Pay In the third quarter of 2015, the median sales price of a condo in Clinton Hill was $849,000, an increase of 28 percent from the same period last year, according to Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Terra Holdings, who said the small size of the market can cause data fluctuations. For co-ops, the median was $542,000, an increase of 13 percent. The biggest price jump was in townhouse sales, according to Mr. Heym, with the median price in the third quarter of 2015 at $2.67 million, an increase of 59 percent over the same period last year.", "paragraph_answer": "What You\u2019ll Pay In the third quarter of 2015, the median sales price of a condo in Clinton Hill was $849,000, an increase of 28 percent from the same period last year, according to Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Terra Holdings, who said the small size of the market can cause data fluctuations. For co-ops, the median was $542,000, an increase of 13 percent. The biggest price jump was in townhouse sales, according to Mr. Heym, with the median price in the third quarter of 2015 at $2.67 million, an increase of 59 percent over the same period last year.", "sentence_answer": "What You\u2019ll Pay In the third quarter of 2015, the median sales price of a condo in Clinton Hill was $849,000, an increase of 28 percent from the same period last year, according to Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Terra Holdings, who said the small size of the market can cause data fluctuations."} -{"question": "what had the biggest price jump?", "paragraph": "What You\u2019ll Pay In the third quarter of 2015, the median sales price of a condo in Clinton Hill was $849,000, an increase of 28 percent from the same period last year, according to Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Terra Holdings, who said the small size of the market can cause data fluctuations. For co-ops, the median was $542,000, an increase of 13 percent. The biggest price jump was in townhouse sales, according to Mr. Heym, with the median price in the third quarter of 2015 at $2.67 million, an increase of 59 percent over the same period last year.", "answer": "townhouse sales", "sentence": "The biggest price jump was in townhouse sales , according to Mr. Heym, with the median price in the third quarter of 2015 at $2.67 million, an increase of 59 percent over the same period last year.", "paragraph_sentence": "What You\u2019ll Pay In the third quarter of 2015, the median sales price of a condo in Clinton Hill was $849,000, an increase of 28 percent from the same period last year, according to Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Terra Holdings, who said the small size of the market can cause data fluctuations. For co-ops, the median was $542,000, an increase of 13 percent. The biggest price jump was in townhouse sales , according to Mr. Heym, with the median price in the third quarter of 2015 at $2.67 million, an increase of 59 percent over the same period last year. ", "paragraph_answer": "What You\u2019ll Pay In the third quarter of 2015, the median sales price of a condo in Clinton Hill was $849,000, an increase of 28 percent from the same period last year, according to Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Terra Holdings, who said the small size of the market can cause data fluctuations. For co-ops, the median was $542,000, an increase of 13 percent. The biggest price jump was in townhouse sales , according to Mr. Heym, with the median price in the third quarter of 2015 at $2.67 million, an increase of 59 percent over the same period last year.", "sentence_answer": "The biggest price jump was in townhouse sales , according to Mr. Heym, with the median price in the third quarter of 2015 at $2.67 million, an increase of 59 percent over the same period last year."} -{"question": "What was the median price in 2015 of townhouse sales?", "paragraph": "What You\u2019ll Pay In the third quarter of 2015, the median sales price of a condo in Clinton Hill was $849,000, an increase of 28 percent from the same period last year, according to Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Terra Holdings, who said the small size of the market can cause data fluctuations. For co-ops, the median was $542,000, an increase of 13 percent. The biggest price jump was in townhouse sales, according to Mr. Heym, with the median price in the third quarter of 2015 at $2.67 million, an increase of 59 percent over the same period last year.", "answer": "$2.67 million", "sentence": "The biggest price jump was in townhouse sales, according to Mr. Heym, with the median price in the third quarter of 2015 at $2.67 million , an increase of 59 percent over the same period last year.", "paragraph_sentence": "What You\u2019ll Pay In the third quarter of 2015, the median sales price of a condo in Clinton Hill was $849,000, an increase of 28 percent from the same period last year, according to Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Terra Holdings, who said the small size of the market can cause data fluctuations. For co-ops, the median was $542,000, an increase of 13 percent. The biggest price jump was in townhouse sales, according to Mr. Heym, with the median price in the third quarter of 2015 at $2.67 million , an increase of 59 percent over the same period last year. ", "paragraph_answer": "What You\u2019ll Pay In the third quarter of 2015, the median sales price of a condo in Clinton Hill was $849,000, an increase of 28 percent from the same period last year, according to Gregory J. Heym, the chief economist at Terra Holdings, who said the small size of the market can cause data fluctuations. For co-ops, the median was $542,000, an increase of 13 percent. The biggest price jump was in townhouse sales, according to Mr. Heym, with the median price in the third quarter of 2015 at $2.67 million , an increase of 59 percent over the same period last year.", "sentence_answer": "The biggest price jump was in townhouse sales, according to Mr. Heym, with the median price in the third quarter of 2015 at $2.67 million , an increase of 59 percent over the same period last year."} -{"question": "what century saw the beginning of Clinton Hill's glory days?", "paragraph": "History Clinton Hill\u2019s glory days began in the mid-19th century when a working-class enclave gave way to Gilded Age villas. In the 1920s it slipped from fashion, then plunged after World War II as low-cost high-rises were developed in the area. In 1967, Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe rented an apartment at 160 Hall Street, near Pratt Institute. She wrote in her 2010 memoir \u201cJust Kids\u201d that \u201cits aggressively seedy condition was out of my range of experience. The walls were smeared with blood and psychotic scribbling, the oven crammed with discarded syringes, and the refrigerator overrun with mold.\u201d The monthly rent was $80.", "answer": "mid-19th", "sentence": "History Clinton Hill\u2019s glory days began in the mid-19th century when a working-class enclave gave way to Gilded Age villas.", "paragraph_sentence": " History Clinton Hill\u2019s glory days began in the mid-19th century when a working-class enclave gave way to Gilded Age villas. In the 1920s it slipped from fashion, then plunged after World War II as low-cost high-rises were developed in the area. In 1967, Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe rented an apartment at 160 Hall Street, near Pratt Institute. She wrote in her 2010 memoir \u201cJust Kids\u201d that \u201cits aggressively seedy condition was out of my range of experience. The walls were smeared with blood and psychotic scribbling, the oven crammed with discarded syringes, and the refrigerator overrun with mold.\u201d The monthly rent was $80.", "paragraph_answer": "History Clinton Hill\u2019s glory days began in the mid-19th century when a working-class enclave gave way to Gilded Age villas. In the 1920s it slipped from fashion, then plunged after World War II as low-cost high-rises were developed in the area. In 1967, Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe rented an apartment at 160 Hall Street, near Pratt Institute. She wrote in her 2010 memoir \u201cJust Kids\u201d that \u201cits aggressively seedy condition was out of my range of experience. The walls were smeared with blood and psychotic scribbling, the oven crammed with discarded syringes, and the refrigerator overrun with mold.\u201d The monthly rent was $80.", "sentence_answer": "History Clinton Hill\u2019s glory days began in the mid-19th century when a working-class enclave gave way to Gilded Age villas."} -{"question": "What year were low-cost high-rises developed in the area?", "paragraph": "History Clinton Hill\u2019s glory days began in the mid-19th century when a working-class enclave gave way to Gilded Age villas. In the 1920s it slipped from fashion, then plunged after World War II as low-cost high-rises were developed in the area. In 1967, Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe rented an apartment at 160 Hall Street, near Pratt Institute. She wrote in her 2010 memoir \u201cJust Kids\u201d that \u201cits aggressively seedy condition was out of my range of experience. The walls were smeared with blood and psychotic scribbling, the oven crammed with discarded syringes, and the refrigerator overrun with mold.\u201d The monthly rent was $80.", "answer": "after World War II", "sentence": "In the 1920s it slipped from fashion, then plunged after World War II as low-cost high-rises were developed in the area.", "paragraph_sentence": "History Clinton Hill\u2019s glory days began in the mid-19th century when a working-class enclave gave way to Gilded Age villas. In the 1920s it slipped from fashion, then plunged after World War II as low-cost high-rises were developed in the area. In 1967, Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe rented an apartment at 160 Hall Street, near Pratt Institute. She wrote in her 2010 memoir \u201cJust Kids\u201d that \u201cits aggressively seedy condition was out of my range of experience. The walls were smeared with blood and psychotic scribbling, the oven crammed with discarded syringes, and the refrigerator overrun with mold.\u201d The monthly rent was $80.", "paragraph_answer": "History Clinton Hill\u2019s glory days began in the mid-19th century when a working-class enclave gave way to Gilded Age villas. In the 1920s it slipped from fashion, then plunged after World War II as low-cost high-rises were developed in the area. In 1967, Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe rented an apartment at 160 Hall Street, near Pratt Institute. She wrote in her 2010 memoir \u201cJust Kids\u201d that \u201cits aggressively seedy condition was out of my range of experience. The walls were smeared with blood and psychotic scribbling, the oven crammed with discarded syringes, and the refrigerator overrun with mold.\u201d The monthly rent was $80.", "sentence_answer": "In the 1920s it slipped from fashion, then plunged after World War II as low-cost high-rises were developed in the area."} -{"question": "What was Robert Mapplethorpe's apartment near?", "paragraph": "History Clinton Hill\u2019s glory days began in the mid-19th century when a working-class enclave gave way to Gilded Age villas. In the 1920s it slipped from fashion, then plunged after World War II as low-cost high-rises were developed in the area. In 1967, Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe rented an apartment at 160 Hall Street, near Pratt Institute. She wrote in her 2010 memoir \u201cJust Kids\u201d that \u201cits aggressively seedy condition was out of my range of experience. The walls were smeared with blood and psychotic scribbling, the oven crammed with discarded syringes, and the refrigerator overrun with mold.\u201d The monthly rent was $80.", "answer": "Pratt Institute", "sentence": "In 1967, Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe rented an apartment at 160 Hall Street, near Pratt Institute .", "paragraph_sentence": "History Clinton Hill\u2019s glory days began in the mid-19th century when a working-class enclave gave way to Gilded Age villas. In the 1920s it slipped from fashion, then plunged after World War II as low-cost high-rises were developed in the area. In 1967, Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe rented an apartment at 160 Hall Street, near Pratt Institute . She wrote in her 2010 memoir \u201cJust Kids\u201d that \u201cits aggressively seedy condition was out of my range of experience. The walls were smeared with blood and psychotic scribbling, the oven crammed with discarded syringes, and the refrigerator overrun with mold.\u201d The monthly rent was $80.", "paragraph_answer": "History Clinton Hill\u2019s glory days began in the mid-19th century when a working-class enclave gave way to Gilded Age villas. In the 1920s it slipped from fashion, then plunged after World War II as low-cost high-rises were developed in the area. In 1967, Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe rented an apartment at 160 Hall Street, near Pratt Institute . She wrote in her 2010 memoir \u201cJust Kids\u201d that \u201cits aggressively seedy condition was out of my range of experience. The walls were smeared with blood and psychotic scribbling, the oven crammed with discarded syringes, and the refrigerator overrun with mold.\u201d The monthly rent was $80.", "sentence_answer": "In 1967, Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe rented an apartment at 160 Hall Street, near Pratt Institute ."} -{"question": "what were the walls of Mapplethorpe's smeared with?", "paragraph": "History Clinton Hill\u2019s glory days began in the mid-19th century when a working-class enclave gave way to Gilded Age villas. In the 1920s it slipped from fashion, then plunged after World War II as low-cost high-rises were developed in the area. In 1967, Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe rented an apartment at 160 Hall Street, near Pratt Institute. She wrote in her 2010 memoir \u201cJust Kids\u201d that \u201cits aggressively seedy condition was out of my range of experience. The walls were smeared with blood and psychotic scribbling, the oven crammed with discarded syringes, and the refrigerator overrun with mold.\u201d The monthly rent was $80.", "answer": "blood and psychotic scribbling", "sentence": "The walls were smeared with blood and psychotic scribbling , the oven crammed with discarded syringes, and the refrigerator overrun with mold.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "History Clinton Hill\u2019s glory days began in the mid-19th century when a working-class enclave gave way to Gilded Age villas. In the 1920s it slipped from fashion, then plunged after World War II as low-cost high-rises were developed in the area. In 1967, Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe rented an apartment at 160 Hall Street, near Pratt Institute. She wrote in her 2010 memoir \u201cJust Kids\u201d that \u201cits aggressively seedy condition was out of my range of experience. The walls were smeared with blood and psychotic scribbling , the oven crammed with discarded syringes, and the refrigerator overrun with mold.\u201d The monthly rent was $80.", "paragraph_answer": "History Clinton Hill\u2019s glory days began in the mid-19th century when a working-class enclave gave way to Gilded Age villas. In the 1920s it slipped from fashion, then plunged after World War II as low-cost high-rises were developed in the area. In 1967, Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe rented an apartment at 160 Hall Street, near Pratt Institute. She wrote in her 2010 memoir \u201cJust Kids\u201d that \u201cits aggressively seedy condition was out of my range of experience. The walls were smeared with blood and psychotic scribbling , the oven crammed with discarded syringes, and the refrigerator overrun with mold.\u201d The monthly rent was $80.", "sentence_answer": "The walls were smeared with blood and psychotic scribbling , the oven crammed with discarded syringes, and the refrigerator overrun with mold.\u201d"} -{"question": "What was the rent of Mapplethorpe's rent?", "paragraph": "History Clinton Hill\u2019s glory days began in the mid-19th century when a working-class enclave gave way to Gilded Age villas. In the 1920s it slipped from fashion, then plunged after World War II as low-cost high-rises were developed in the area. In 1967, Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe rented an apartment at 160 Hall Street, near Pratt Institute. She wrote in her 2010 memoir \u201cJust Kids\u201d that \u201cits aggressively seedy condition was out of my range of experience. The walls were smeared with blood and psychotic scribbling, the oven crammed with discarded syringes, and the refrigerator overrun with mold.\u201d The monthly rent was $80.", "answer": "$80", "sentence": "The monthly rent was $80 .", "paragraph_sentence": "History Clinton Hill\u2019s glory days began in the mid-19th century when a working-class enclave gave way to Gilded Age villas. In the 1920s it slipped from fashion, then plunged after World War II as low-cost high-rises were developed in the area. In 1967, Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe rented an apartment at 160 Hall Street, near Pratt Institute. She wrote in her 2010 memoir \u201cJust Kids\u201d that \u201cits aggressively seedy condition was out of my range of experience. The walls were smeared with blood and psychotic scribbling, the oven crammed with discarded syringes, and the refrigerator overrun with mold.\u201d The monthly rent was $80 . ", "paragraph_answer": "History Clinton Hill\u2019s glory days began in the mid-19th century when a working-class enclave gave way to Gilded Age villas. In the 1920s it slipped from fashion, then plunged after World War II as low-cost high-rises were developed in the area. In 1967, Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe rented an apartment at 160 Hall Street, near Pratt Institute. She wrote in her 2010 memoir \u201cJust Kids\u201d that \u201cits aggressively seedy condition was out of my range of experience. The walls were smeared with blood and psychotic scribbling, the oven crammed with discarded syringes, and the refrigerator overrun with mold.\u201d The monthly rent was $80 .", "sentence_answer": "The monthly rent was $80 ."} -{"question": "What is predicted to hit earth in the next six days?", "paragraph": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "answer": "giant asteroid", "sentence": "This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed.", "paragraph_sentence": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "paragraph_answer": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "sentence_answer": "This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed."} -{"question": "What has not happened for 32 years?", "paragraph": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "answer": "That convergence", "sentence": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years.", "paragraph_sentence": " That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "paragraph_answer": " That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "sentence_answer": " That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years."} -{"question": "Is there any evidence that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates?", "paragraph": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "answer": "There is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence", "sentence": "This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201c There is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates", "paragraph_sentence": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201c There is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates ,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "paragraph_answer": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201c There is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "sentence_answer": "This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201c There is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates"} -{"question": "Who is the manager of NASA?", "paragraph": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "answer": "Dr. Paul Chodas", "sentence": "\u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas , manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "paragraph_sentence": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas , manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif. ", "paragraph_answer": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas , manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas , manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif."} -{"question": "Where was the NASA office located?", "paragraph": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "answer": "Pasadena, Calif", "sentence": "\u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif .", "paragraph_sentence": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif . ", "paragraph_answer": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif .", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif ."} -{"question": "What is predicted to hit earth in the next six days?", "paragraph": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "answer": "giant asteroid", "sentence": "This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed.", "paragraph_sentence": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "paragraph_answer": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "sentence_answer": "This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed."} -{"question": "Who is the manager of NASA?", "paragraph": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "answer": "Dr. Paul Chodas", "sentence": "\u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas , manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "paragraph_sentence": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas , manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif. ", "paragraph_answer": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas , manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas , manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif."} -{"question": "Is there any evidence that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates?", "paragraph": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "answer": "There is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence", "sentence": "This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201c There is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates", "paragraph_sentence": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201c There is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates ,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "paragraph_answer": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201c There is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "sentence_answer": "This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201c There is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates"} -{"question": "What has not happened for 32 years?", "paragraph": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "answer": "That convergence", "sentence": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years.", "paragraph_sentence": " That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "paragraph_answer": " That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "sentence_answer": " That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years."} -{"question": "Where was the NASA office located?", "paragraph": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif.", "answer": "Pasadena, Calif", "sentence": "\u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif .", "paragraph_sentence": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif . ", "paragraph_answer": "That convergence hasn\u2019t happened for 32 years. This last eclipse of the year has led some, er, imaginative observers to predict that a giant asteroid will hit Earth within the next six days \u2014 a notion that NASA has firmly rebuffed. \u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif .", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThere is no scientific basis \u2014 not one shred of evidence \u2014 that an asteroid or any other celestial object will impact Earth on those dates,\u201d said Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of NASA\u2019s Near-Earth Object office in Pasadena, Calif ."} -{"question": "At what age will Francis meet Obama?", "paragraph": "At 11, Francis will officially meet with President Obama, with topics likely to include climate change, income inequality and the refugee crisis in Europe. The pope\u2019s views on these issues have made him popular with non-Catholics. Francis will hold Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine for about 30,000 people at 4:15 p.m. The Secret Service is taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile. Live video from St. Matthew\u2019s Cathedral and live updates of the papal visit. \u2022 Cybertruce?", "answer": "At 11", "sentence": "At 11 , Francis will officially meet with President Obama, with topics likely to include climate change, income inequality and the refugee crisis in Europe.", "paragraph_sentence": " At 11 , Francis will officially meet with President Obama, with topics likely to include climate change, income inequality and the refugee crisis in Europe. The pope\u2019s views on these issues have made him popular with non-Catholics. Francis will hold Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine for about 30,000 people at 4:15 p.m. The Secret Service is taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile. Live video from St. Matthew\u2019s Cathedral and live updates of the papal visit. \u2022 Cybertruce?", "paragraph_answer": " At 11 , Francis will officially meet with President Obama, with topics likely to include climate change, income inequality and the refugee crisis in Europe. The pope\u2019s views on these issues have made him popular with non-Catholics. Francis will hold Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine for about 30,000 people at 4:15 p.m. The Secret Service is taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile. Live video from St. Matthew\u2019s Cathedral and live updates of the papal visit. \u2022 Cybertruce?", "sentence_answer": " At 11 , Francis will officially meet with President Obama, with topics likely to include climate change, income inequality and the refugee crisis in Europe."} -{"question": "Who is officially meeting President Obama?", "paragraph": "At 11, Francis will officially meet with President Obama, with topics likely to include climate change, income inequality and the refugee crisis in Europe. The pope\u2019s views on these issues have made him popular with non-Catholics. Francis will hold Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine for about 30,000 people at 4:15 p.m. The Secret Service is taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile. Live video from St. Matthew\u2019s Cathedral and live updates of the papal visit. \u2022 Cybertruce?", "answer": "Francis", "sentence": "At 11, Francis will officially meet with President Obama, with topics likely to include climate change, income inequality and the refugee crisis in Europe.", "paragraph_sentence": " At 11, Francis will officially meet with President Obama, with topics likely to include climate change, income inequality and the refugee crisis in Europe. The pope\u2019s views on these issues have made him popular with non-Catholics. Francis will hold Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine for about 30,000 people at 4:15 p.m. The Secret Service is taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile. Live video from St. Matthew\u2019s Cathedral and live updates of the papal visit. \u2022 Cybertruce?", "paragraph_answer": "At 11, Francis will officially meet with President Obama, with topics likely to include climate change, income inequality and the refugee crisis in Europe. The pope\u2019s views on these issues have made him popular with non-Catholics. Francis will hold Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine for about 30,000 people at 4:15 p.m. The Secret Service is taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile. Live video from St. Matthew\u2019s Cathedral and live updates of the papal visit. \u2022 Cybertruce?", "sentence_answer": "At 11, Francis will officially meet with President Obama, with topics likely to include climate change, income inequality and the refugee crisis in Europe."} -{"question": "What time will Francis hold Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine?", "paragraph": "At 11, Francis will officially meet with President Obama, with topics likely to include climate change, income inequality and the refugee crisis in Europe. The pope\u2019s views on these issues have made him popular with non-Catholics. Francis will hold Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine for about 30,000 people at 4:15 p.m. The Secret Service is taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile. Live video from St. Matthew\u2019s Cathedral and live updates of the papal visit. \u2022 Cybertruce?", "answer": "4:15 p.m.", "sentence": "Francis will hold Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine for about 30,000 people at 4:15 p.m. The Secret Service is taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile.", "paragraph_sentence": "At 11, Francis will officially meet with President Obama, with topics likely to include climate change, income inequality and the refugee crisis in Europe. The pope\u2019s views on these issues have made him popular with non-Catholics. Francis will hold Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine for about 30,000 people at 4:15 p.m. The Secret Service is taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile. Live video from St. Matthew\u2019s Cathedral and live updates of the papal visit. \u2022 Cybertruce?", "paragraph_answer": "At 11, Francis will officially meet with President Obama, with topics likely to include climate change, income inequality and the refugee crisis in Europe. The pope\u2019s views on these issues have made him popular with non-Catholics. Francis will hold Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine for about 30,000 people at 4:15 p.m. The Secret Service is taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile. Live video from St. Matthew\u2019s Cathedral and live updates of the papal visit. \u2022 Cybertruce?", "sentence_answer": "Francis will hold Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine for about 30,000 people at 4:15 p.m. The Secret Service is taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile."} -{"question": "For how many people will hold Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine?", "paragraph": "At 11, Francis will officially meet with President Obama, with topics likely to include climate change, income inequality and the refugee crisis in Europe. The pope\u2019s views on these issues have made him popular with non-Catholics. Francis will hold Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine for about 30,000 people at 4:15 p.m. The Secret Service is taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile. Live video from St. Matthew\u2019s Cathedral and live updates of the papal visit. \u2022 Cybertruce?", "answer": "for about 30,000", "sentence": "Francis will hold Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine for about 30,000 people at 4:15 p.m. The Secret Service is taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile.", "paragraph_sentence": "At 11, Francis will officially meet with President Obama, with topics likely to include climate change, income inequality and the refugee crisis in Europe. The pope\u2019s views on these issues have made him popular with non-Catholics. Francis will hold Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine for about 30,000 people at 4:15 p.m. The Secret Service is taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile. Live video from St. Matthew\u2019s Cathedral and live updates of the papal visit. \u2022 Cybertruce?", "paragraph_answer": "At 11, Francis will officially meet with President Obama, with topics likely to include climate change, income inequality and the refugee crisis in Europe. The pope\u2019s views on these issues have made him popular with non-Catholics. Francis will hold Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine for about 30,000 people at 4:15 p.m. The Secret Service is taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile. Live video from St. Matthew\u2019s Cathedral and live updates of the papal visit. \u2022 Cybertruce?", "sentence_answer": "Francis will hold Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine for about 30,000 people at 4:15 p.m. The Secret Service is taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile."} -{"question": "Who taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile?", "paragraph": "At 11, Francis will officially meet with President Obama, with topics likely to include climate change, income inequality and the refugee crisis in Europe. The pope\u2019s views on these issues have made him popular with non-Catholics. Francis will hold Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine for about 30,000 people at 4:15 p.m. The Secret Service is taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile. Live video from St. Matthew\u2019s Cathedral and live updates of the papal visit. \u2022 Cybertruce?", "answer": "The Secret Service", "sentence": "The Secret Service is taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile.", "paragraph_sentence": "At 11, Francis will officially meet with President Obama, with topics likely to include climate change, income inequality and the refugee crisis in Europe. The pope\u2019s views on these issues have made him popular with non-Catholics. Francis will hold Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine for about 30,000 people at 4:15 p.m. The Secret Service is taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile. Live video from St. Matthew\u2019s Cathedral and live updates of the papal visit. \u2022 Cybertruce?", "paragraph_answer": "At 11, Francis will officially meet with President Obama, with topics likely to include climate change, income inequality and the refugee crisis in Europe. The pope\u2019s views on these issues have made him popular with non-Catholics. Francis will hold Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine for about 30,000 people at 4:15 p.m. The Secret Service is taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile. Live video from St. Matthew\u2019s Cathedral and live updates of the papal visit. \u2022 Cybertruce?", "sentence_answer": " The Secret Service is taking the lead in protecting a pope who does not want to stay in his popemobile."} -{"question": "Who may approve a plan today to distribute 120,000 asylum seekers among member states?", "paragraph": "European Union leaders may approve a plan today to distribute 120,000 asylum seekers among member states, one day after a decision to move ahead was forced through by a majority vote. The plan, which barely addresses the crisis, is intended to display unity in the face of the largest movement of migrants on the Continent since World War II. \u2022 On Capitol Hill. Senate Republicans failed to advance a bill on legislation outlawing abortion at 20 weeks after fertilization. The legislation is based on the idea, rejected by mainstream medical groups, that a fetus feels pain then.", "answer": "European Union leaders", "sentence": "European Union leaders may approve a plan today to distribute 120,000 asylum seekers among member states, one day after a decision to move ahead was forced through by a majority vote.", "paragraph_sentence": " European Union leaders may approve a plan today to distribute 120,000 asylum seekers among member states, one day after a decision to move ahead was forced through by a majority vote. The plan, which barely addresses the crisis, is intended to display unity in the face of the largest movement of migrants on the Continent since World War II. \u2022 On Capitol Hill. Senate Republicans failed to advance a bill on legislation outlawing abortion at 20 weeks after fertilization. The legislation is based on the idea, rejected by mainstream medical groups, that a fetus feels pain then.", "paragraph_answer": " European Union leaders may approve a plan today to distribute 120,000 asylum seekers among member states, one day after a decision to move ahead was forced through by a majority vote. The plan, which barely addresses the crisis, is intended to display unity in the face of the largest movement of migrants on the Continent since World War II. \u2022 On Capitol Hill. Senate Republicans failed to advance a bill on legislation outlawing abortion at 20 weeks after fertilization. The legislation is based on the idea, rejected by mainstream medical groups, that a fetus feels pain then.", "sentence_answer": " European Union leaders may approve a plan today to distribute 120,000 asylum seekers among member states, one day after a decision to move ahead was forced through by a majority vote."} -{"question": "The legislation is based on what?", "paragraph": "European Union leaders may approve a plan today to distribute 120,000 asylum seekers among member states, one day after a decision to move ahead was forced through by a majority vote. The plan, which barely addresses the crisis, is intended to display unity in the face of the largest movement of migrants on the Continent since World War II. \u2022 On Capitol Hill. Senate Republicans failed to advance a bill on legislation outlawing abortion at 20 weeks after fertilization. The legislation is based on the idea, rejected by mainstream medical groups, that a fetus feels pain then.", "answer": "the idea", "sentence": "The legislation is based on the idea , rejected by mainstream medical groups, that a fetus feels pain then.", "paragraph_sentence": "European Union leaders may approve a plan today to distribute 120,000 asylum seekers among member states, one day after a decision to move ahead was forced through by a majority vote. The plan, which barely addresses the crisis, is intended to display unity in the face of the largest movement of migrants on the Continent since World War II. \u2022 On Capitol Hill. Senate Republicans failed to advance a bill on legislation outlawing abortion at 20 weeks after fertilization. The legislation is based on the idea , rejected by mainstream medical groups, that a fetus feels pain then. ", "paragraph_answer": "European Union leaders may approve a plan today to distribute 120,000 asylum seekers among member states, one day after a decision to move ahead was forced through by a majority vote. The plan, which barely addresses the crisis, is intended to display unity in the face of the largest movement of migrants on the Continent since World War II. \u2022 On Capitol Hill. Senate Republicans failed to advance a bill on legislation outlawing abortion at 20 weeks after fertilization. The legislation is based on the idea , rejected by mainstream medical groups, that a fetus feels pain then.", "sentence_answer": "The legislation is based on the idea , rejected by mainstream medical groups, that a fetus feels pain then."} -{"question": "Who failed to advance a bill on legislation outlawing abortion?", "paragraph": "European Union leaders may approve a plan today to distribute 120,000 asylum seekers among member states, one day after a decision to move ahead was forced through by a majority vote. The plan, which barely addresses the crisis, is intended to display unity in the face of the largest movement of migrants on the Continent since World War II. \u2022 On Capitol Hill. Senate Republicans failed to advance a bill on legislation outlawing abortion at 20 weeks after fertilization. The legislation is based on the idea, rejected by mainstream medical groups, that a fetus feels pain then.", "answer": "Capitol Hill. Senate", "sentence": "On Capitol Hill. Senate Republicans failed to advance a bill on legislation outlawing abortion at 20 weeks after fertilization.", "paragraph_sentence": "European Union leaders may approve a plan today to distribute 120,000 asylum seekers among member states, one day after a decision to move ahead was forced through by a majority vote. The plan, which barely addresses the crisis, is intended to display unity in the face of the largest movement of migrants on the Continent since World War II. \u2022 On Capitol Hill. Senate Republicans failed to advance a bill on legislation outlawing abortion at 20 weeks after fertilization. The legislation is based on the idea, rejected by mainstream medical groups, that a fetus feels pain then.", "paragraph_answer": "European Union leaders may approve a plan today to distribute 120,000 asylum seekers among member states, one day after a decision to move ahead was forced through by a majority vote. The plan, which barely addresses the crisis, is intended to display unity in the face of the largest movement of migrants on the Continent since World War II. \u2022 On Capitol Hill. Senate Republicans failed to advance a bill on legislation outlawing abortion at 20 weeks after fertilization. The legislation is based on the idea, rejected by mainstream medical groups, that a fetus feels pain then.", "sentence_answer": "On Capitol Hill. Senate Republicans failed to advance a bill on legislation outlawing abortion at 20 weeks after fertilization."} -{"question": "Who reject the idea?", "paragraph": "European Union leaders may approve a plan today to distribute 120,000 asylum seekers among member states, one day after a decision to move ahead was forced through by a majority vote. The plan, which barely addresses the crisis, is intended to display unity in the face of the largest movement of migrants on the Continent since World War II. \u2022 On Capitol Hill. Senate Republicans failed to advance a bill on legislation outlawing abortion at 20 weeks after fertilization. The legislation is based on the idea, rejected by mainstream medical groups, that a fetus feels pain then.", "answer": "mainstream medical groups", "sentence": "The legislation is based on the idea, rejected by mainstream medical groups , that a fetus feels pain then.", "paragraph_sentence": "European Union leaders may approve a plan today to distribute 120,000 asylum seekers among member states, one day after a decision to move ahead was forced through by a majority vote. The plan, which barely addresses the crisis, is intended to display unity in the face of the largest movement of migrants on the Continent since World War II. \u2022 On Capitol Hill. Senate Republicans failed to advance a bill on legislation outlawing abortion at 20 weeks after fertilization. The legislation is based on the idea, rejected by mainstream medical groups , that a fetus feels pain then. ", "paragraph_answer": "European Union leaders may approve a plan today to distribute 120,000 asylum seekers among member states, one day after a decision to move ahead was forced through by a majority vote. The plan, which barely addresses the crisis, is intended to display unity in the face of the largest movement of migrants on the Continent since World War II. \u2022 On Capitol Hill. Senate Republicans failed to advance a bill on legislation outlawing abortion at 20 weeks after fertilization. The legislation is based on the idea, rejected by mainstream medical groups , that a fetus feels pain then.", "sentence_answer": "The legislation is based on the idea, rejected by mainstream medical groups , that a fetus feels pain then."} -{"question": "What feels pain after 20 weeks of fertilization?", "paragraph": "European Union leaders may approve a plan today to distribute 120,000 asylum seekers among member states, one day after a decision to move ahead was forced through by a majority vote. The plan, which barely addresses the crisis, is intended to display unity in the face of the largest movement of migrants on the Continent since World War II. \u2022 On Capitol Hill. Senate Republicans failed to advance a bill on legislation outlawing abortion at 20 weeks after fertilization. The legislation is based on the idea, rejected by mainstream medical groups, that a fetus feels pain then.", "answer": "fetus feels pain", "sentence": "The legislation is based on the idea, rejected by mainstream medical groups, that a fetus feels pain then.", "paragraph_sentence": "European Union leaders may approve a plan today to distribute 120,000 asylum seekers among member states, one day after a decision to move ahead was forced through by a majority vote. The plan, which barely addresses the crisis, is intended to display unity in the face of the largest movement of migrants on the Continent since World War II. \u2022 On Capitol Hill. Senate Republicans failed to advance a bill on legislation outlawing abortion at 20 weeks after fertilization. The legislation is based on the idea, rejected by mainstream medical groups, that a fetus feels pain then. ", "paragraph_answer": "European Union leaders may approve a plan today to distribute 120,000 asylum seekers among member states, one day after a decision to move ahead was forced through by a majority vote. The plan, which barely addresses the crisis, is intended to display unity in the face of the largest movement of migrants on the Continent since World War II. \u2022 On Capitol Hill. Senate Republicans failed to advance a bill on legislation outlawing abortion at 20 weeks after fertilization. The legislation is based on the idea, rejected by mainstream medical groups, that a fetus feels pain then.", "sentence_answer": "The legislation is based on the idea, rejected by mainstream medical groups, that a fetus feels pain then."} -{"question": "Where is the hajj pilgrimage located?", "paragraph": "It\u2019s also the main day of the hajj pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, where more than 2 million Muslims are sharing in rituals and prayers to erase their sins. \u2022 Print \u2014 yes, print \u2014 springs back. Readers are on a reverse migration to print, and one bookstore owner says that the \u201ce-book terror has kind of subsided.\u201d Digital sales have slowed sharply, though analysts once predicted that e-books would overtake print by 2015. \u2022 New to watch. \u201cRosewood,\u201d a medical procedural series that debuts today, stars Morris Chestnut as Miami\u2019s top private pathologist, ready to help the police solve the most challenging cases (8 p.m. Eastern, Fox). And the stars are coming out for the second season of the hip-hop soap opera \u201cEmpire.\u201d The cast of today\u2019s premiere includes Marisa Tomei, Chris Rock, Kelly Rowland, Don Lemon, Al Sharpton and Swizz Beatz (9 p.m., Fox).", "answer": "Mecca, Saudi Arabia", "sentence": "It\u2019s also the main day of the hajj pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia , where more than 2 million Muslims are sharing in rituals and prayers to erase their sins.", "paragraph_sentence": " It\u2019s also the main day of the hajj pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia , where more than 2 million Muslims are sharing in rituals and prayers to erase their sins. \u2022 Print \u2014 yes, print \u2014 springs back. Readers are on a reverse migration to print, and one bookstore owner says that the \u201ce-book terror has kind of subsided.\u201d Digital sales have slowed sharply, though analysts once predicted that e-books would overtake print by 2015. \u2022 New to watch. \u201cRosewood,\u201d a medical procedural series that debuts today, stars Morris Chestnut as Miami\u2019s top private pathologist, ready to help the police solve the most challenging cases (8 p.m. Eastern, Fox). And the stars are coming out for the second season of the hip-hop soap opera \u201cEmpire.\u201d The cast of today\u2019s premiere includes Marisa Tomei, Chris Rock, Kelly Rowland, Don Lemon, Al Sharpton and Swizz Beatz (9 p.m., Fox).", "paragraph_answer": "It\u2019s also the main day of the hajj pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia , where more than 2 million Muslims are sharing in rituals and prayers to erase their sins. \u2022 Print \u2014 yes, print \u2014 springs back. Readers are on a reverse migration to print, and one bookstore owner says that the \u201ce-book terror has kind of subsided.\u201d Digital sales have slowed sharply, though analysts once predicted that e-books would overtake print by 2015. \u2022 New to watch. \u201cRosewood,\u201d a medical procedural series that debuts today, stars Morris Chestnut as Miami\u2019s top private pathologist, ready to help the police solve the most challenging cases (8 p.m. Eastern, Fox). And the stars are coming out for the second season of the hip-hop soap opera \u201cEmpire.\u201d The cast of today\u2019s premiere includes Marisa Tomei, Chris Rock, Kelly Rowland, Don Lemon, Al Sharpton and Swizz Beatz (9 p.m., Fox).", "sentence_answer": "It\u2019s also the main day of the hajj pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia , where more than 2 million Muslims are sharing in rituals and prayers to erase their sins."} -{"question": "What have slowed sharply?", "paragraph": "It\u2019s also the main day of the hajj pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, where more than 2 million Muslims are sharing in rituals and prayers to erase their sins. \u2022 Print \u2014 yes, print \u2014 springs back. Readers are on a reverse migration to print, and one bookstore owner says that the \u201ce-book terror has kind of subsided.\u201d Digital sales have slowed sharply, though analysts once predicted that e-books would overtake print by 2015. \u2022 New to watch. \u201cRosewood,\u201d a medical procedural series that debuts today, stars Morris Chestnut as Miami\u2019s top private pathologist, ready to help the police solve the most challenging cases (8 p.m. Eastern, Fox). And the stars are coming out for the second season of the hip-hop soap opera \u201cEmpire.\u201d The cast of today\u2019s premiere includes Marisa Tomei, Chris Rock, Kelly Rowland, Don Lemon, Al Sharpton and Swizz Beatz (9 p.m., Fox).", "answer": "Digital sales", "sentence": "Readers are on a reverse migration to print, and one bookstore owner says that the \u201ce-book terror has kind of subsided.\u201d Digital sales have slowed sharply, though analysts once predicted that e-books would overtake print by 2015.", "paragraph_sentence": "It\u2019s also the main day of the hajj pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, where more than 2 million Muslims are sharing in rituals and prayers to erase their sins. \u2022 Print \u2014 yes, print \u2014 springs back. Readers are on a reverse migration to print, and one bookstore owner says that the \u201ce-book terror has kind of subsided.\u201d Digital sales have slowed sharply, though analysts once predicted that e-books would overtake print by 2015. \u2022 New to watch. \u201cRosewood,\u201d a medical procedural series that debuts today, stars Morris Chestnut as Miami\u2019s top private pathologist, ready to help the police solve the most challenging cases (8 p.m. Eastern, Fox). And the stars are coming out for the second season of the hip-hop soap opera \u201cEmpire.\u201d The cast of today\u2019s premiere includes Marisa Tomei, Chris Rock, Kelly Rowland, Don Lemon, Al Sharpton and Swizz Beatz (9 p.m., Fox).", "paragraph_answer": "It\u2019s also the main day of the hajj pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, where more than 2 million Muslims are sharing in rituals and prayers to erase their sins. \u2022 Print \u2014 yes, print \u2014 springs back. Readers are on a reverse migration to print, and one bookstore owner says that the \u201ce-book terror has kind of subsided.\u201d Digital sales have slowed sharply, though analysts once predicted that e-books would overtake print by 2015. \u2022 New to watch. \u201cRosewood,\u201d a medical procedural series that debuts today, stars Morris Chestnut as Miami\u2019s top private pathologist, ready to help the police solve the most challenging cases (8 p.m. Eastern, Fox). And the stars are coming out for the second season of the hip-hop soap opera \u201cEmpire.\u201d The cast of today\u2019s premiere includes Marisa Tomei, Chris Rock, Kelly Rowland, Don Lemon, Al Sharpton and Swizz Beatz (9 p.m., Fox).", "sentence_answer": "Readers are on a reverse migration to print, and one bookstore owner says that the \u201ce-book terror has kind of subsided.\u201d Digital sales have slowed sharply, though analysts once predicted that e-books would overtake print by 2015."} -{"question": "What were muslims sharing?", "paragraph": "It\u2019s also the main day of the hajj pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, where more than 2 million Muslims are sharing in rituals and prayers to erase their sins. \u2022 Print \u2014 yes, print \u2014 springs back. Readers are on a reverse migration to print, and one bookstore owner says that the \u201ce-book terror has kind of subsided.\u201d Digital sales have slowed sharply, though analysts once predicted that e-books would overtake print by 2015. \u2022 New to watch. \u201cRosewood,\u201d a medical procedural series that debuts today, stars Morris Chestnut as Miami\u2019s top private pathologist, ready to help the police solve the most challenging cases (8 p.m. Eastern, Fox). And the stars are coming out for the second season of the hip-hop soap opera \u201cEmpire.\u201d The cast of today\u2019s premiere includes Marisa Tomei, Chris Rock, Kelly Rowland, Don Lemon, Al Sharpton and Swizz Beatz (9 p.m., Fox).", "answer": "rituals and prayers to erase their sins", "sentence": "It\u2019s also the main day of the hajj pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, where more than 2 million Muslims are sharing in rituals and prayers to erase their sins .", "paragraph_sentence": " It\u2019s also the main day of the hajj pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, where more than 2 million Muslims are sharing in rituals and prayers to erase their sins . \u2022 Print \u2014 yes, print \u2014 springs back. Readers are on a reverse migration to print, and one bookstore owner says that the \u201ce-book terror has kind of subsided.\u201d Digital sales have slowed sharply, though analysts once predicted that e-books would overtake print by 2015. \u2022 New to watch. \u201cRosewood,\u201d a medical procedural series that debuts today, stars Morris Chestnut as Miami\u2019s top private pathologist, ready to help the police solve the most challenging cases (8 p.m. Eastern, Fox). And the stars are coming out for the second season of the hip-hop soap opera \u201cEmpire.\u201d The cast of today\u2019s premiere includes Marisa Tomei, Chris Rock, Kelly Rowland, Don Lemon, Al Sharpton and Swizz Beatz (9 p.m., Fox).", "paragraph_answer": "It\u2019s also the main day of the hajj pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, where more than 2 million Muslims are sharing in rituals and prayers to erase their sins . \u2022 Print \u2014 yes, print \u2014 springs back. Readers are on a reverse migration to print, and one bookstore owner says that the \u201ce-book terror has kind of subsided.\u201d Digital sales have slowed sharply, though analysts once predicted that e-books would overtake print by 2015. \u2022 New to watch. \u201cRosewood,\u201d a medical procedural series that debuts today, stars Morris Chestnut as Miami\u2019s top private pathologist, ready to help the police solve the most challenging cases (8 p.m. Eastern, Fox). And the stars are coming out for the second season of the hip-hop soap opera \u201cEmpire.\u201d The cast of today\u2019s premiere includes Marisa Tomei, Chris Rock, Kelly Rowland, Don Lemon, Al Sharpton and Swizz Beatz (9 p.m., Fox).", "sentence_answer": "It\u2019s also the main day of the hajj pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, where more than 2 million Muslims are sharing in rituals and prayers to erase their sins ."} -{"question": "What year did analyst predict that e-books will overtake print?", "paragraph": "It\u2019s also the main day of the hajj pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, where more than 2 million Muslims are sharing in rituals and prayers to erase their sins. \u2022 Print \u2014 yes, print \u2014 springs back. Readers are on a reverse migration to print, and one bookstore owner says that the \u201ce-book terror has kind of subsided.\u201d Digital sales have slowed sharply, though analysts once predicted that e-books would overtake print by 2015. \u2022 New to watch. \u201cRosewood,\u201d a medical procedural series that debuts today, stars Morris Chestnut as Miami\u2019s top private pathologist, ready to help the police solve the most challenging cases (8 p.m. Eastern, Fox). And the stars are coming out for the second season of the hip-hop soap opera \u201cEmpire.\u201d The cast of today\u2019s premiere includes Marisa Tomei, Chris Rock, Kelly Rowland, Don Lemon, Al Sharpton and Swizz Beatz (9 p.m., Fox).", "answer": "2015", "sentence": "Digital sales have slowed sharply, though analysts once predicted that e-books would overtake print by 2015 .", "paragraph_sentence": "It\u2019s also the main day of the hajj pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, where more than 2 million Muslims are sharing in rituals and prayers to erase their sins. \u2022 Print \u2014 yes, print \u2014 springs back. Readers are on a reverse migration to print, and one bookstore owner says that the \u201ce-book terror has kind of subsided.\u201d Digital sales have slowed sharply, though analysts once predicted that e-books would overtake print by 2015 . \u2022 New to watch. \u201cRosewood,\u201d a medical procedural series that debuts today, stars Morris Chestnut as Miami\u2019s top private pathologist, ready to help the police solve the most challenging cases (8 p.m. Eastern, Fox). And the stars are coming out for the second season of the hip-hop soap opera \u201cEmpire.\u201d The cast of today\u2019s premiere includes Marisa Tomei, Chris Rock, Kelly Rowland, Don Lemon, Al Sharpton and Swizz Beatz (9 p.m., Fox).", "paragraph_answer": "It\u2019s also the main day of the hajj pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, where more than 2 million Muslims are sharing in rituals and prayers to erase their sins. \u2022 Print \u2014 yes, print \u2014 springs back. Readers are on a reverse migration to print, and one bookstore owner says that the \u201ce-book terror has kind of subsided.\u201d Digital sales have slowed sharply, though analysts once predicted that e-books would overtake print by 2015 . \u2022 New to watch. \u201cRosewood,\u201d a medical procedural series that debuts today, stars Morris Chestnut as Miami\u2019s top private pathologist, ready to help the police solve the most challenging cases (8 p.m. Eastern, Fox). And the stars are coming out for the second season of the hip-hop soap opera \u201cEmpire.\u201d The cast of today\u2019s premiere includes Marisa Tomei, Chris Rock, Kelly Rowland, Don Lemon, Al Sharpton and Swizz Beatz (9 p.m., Fox).", "sentence_answer": "Digital sales have slowed sharply, though analysts once predicted that e-books would overtake print by 2015 ."} -{"question": "Who is the Miami\u2019s top private pathologist?", "paragraph": "It\u2019s also the main day of the hajj pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, where more than 2 million Muslims are sharing in rituals and prayers to erase their sins. \u2022 Print \u2014 yes, print \u2014 springs back. Readers are on a reverse migration to print, and one bookstore owner says that the \u201ce-book terror has kind of subsided.\u201d Digital sales have slowed sharply, though analysts once predicted that e-books would overtake print by 2015. \u2022 New to watch. \u201cRosewood,\u201d a medical procedural series that debuts today, stars Morris Chestnut as Miami\u2019s top private pathologist, ready to help the police solve the most challenging cases (8 p.m. Eastern, Fox). And the stars are coming out for the second season of the hip-hop soap opera \u201cEmpire.\u201d The cast of today\u2019s premiere includes Marisa Tomei, Chris Rock, Kelly Rowland, Don Lemon, Al Sharpton and Swizz Beatz (9 p.m., Fox).", "answer": "stars Morris Chestnut", "sentence": "\u201cRosewood,\u201d a medical procedural series that debuts today, stars Morris Chestnut as Miami\u2019s top private pathologist, ready to help the police solve the most challenging cases (8 p.m. Eastern, Fox).", "paragraph_sentence": "It\u2019s also the main day of the hajj pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, where more than 2 million Muslims are sharing in rituals and prayers to erase their sins. \u2022 Print \u2014 yes, print \u2014 springs back. Readers are on a reverse migration to print, and one bookstore owner says that the \u201ce-book terror has kind of subsided.\u201d Digital sales have slowed sharply, though analysts once predicted that e-books would overtake print by 2015. \u2022 New to watch. \u201cRosewood,\u201d a medical procedural series that debuts today, stars Morris Chestnut as Miami\u2019s top private pathologist, ready to help the police solve the most challenging cases (8 p.m. Eastern, Fox). And the stars are coming out for the second season of the hip-hop soap opera \u201cEmpire.\u201d The cast of today\u2019s premiere includes Marisa Tomei, Chris Rock, Kelly Rowland, Don Lemon, Al Sharpton and Swizz Beatz (9 p.m., Fox).", "paragraph_answer": "It\u2019s also the main day of the hajj pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, where more than 2 million Muslims are sharing in rituals and prayers to erase their sins. \u2022 Print \u2014 yes, print \u2014 springs back. Readers are on a reverse migration to print, and one bookstore owner says that the \u201ce-book terror has kind of subsided.\u201d Digital sales have slowed sharply, though analysts once predicted that e-books would overtake print by 2015. \u2022 New to watch. \u201cRosewood,\u201d a medical procedural series that debuts today, stars Morris Chestnut as Miami\u2019s top private pathologist, ready to help the police solve the most challenging cases (8 p.m. Eastern, Fox). And the stars are coming out for the second season of the hip-hop soap opera \u201cEmpire.\u201d The cast of today\u2019s premiere includes Marisa Tomei, Chris Rock, Kelly Rowland, Don Lemon, Al Sharpton and Swizz Beatz (9 p.m., Fox).", "sentence_answer": "\u201cRosewood,\u201d a medical procedural series that debuts today, stars Morris Chestnut as Miami\u2019s top private pathologist, ready to help the police solve the most challenging cases (8 p.m. Eastern, Fox)."} -{"question": "How many wins does Jake Arrieta reach this season?", "paragraph": "Jake Arrieta threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season, as the Chicago Cubs closed in on a playoff berth by shutting out Milwaukee, 4-0. The Yankees won and the Mets lost, and both gained ground in their pursuit of division titles. Roundup. Scoreboard. Schedule. \u2022 Popular tunes. A judge ruled that the long-claimed copyright on \u201cHappy Birthday to You\u201d is invalid. If the ruling stands, the song would become part of the public domain. And The Weeknd\u2019s \u201cBeauty Behind the Madness\u201d is spending a third week at No. 1 on Billboard\u2019s album chart, as industry data for the first half of 2015 indicates streaming is surging while CD sales are plunging. BACK STORY On Sunday, a total lunar eclipse coincides with a \u201csupermoon\u201d \u2014 when the moon is closest to Earth \u2014 promising us some dramatic nighttime theater.", "answer": "20 wins", "sentence": "Jake Arrieta threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season, as the Chicago Cubs closed in on a playoff berth by shutting out Milwaukee, 4-0.", "paragraph_sentence": " Jake Arrieta threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season, as the Chicago Cubs closed in on a playoff berth by shutting out Milwaukee, 4-0. The Yankees won and the Mets lost, and both gained ground in their pursuit of division titles. Roundup. Scoreboard. Schedule. \u2022 Popular tunes. A judge ruled that the long-claimed copyright on \u201cHappy Birthday to You\u201d is invalid. If the ruling stands, the song would become part of the public domain. And The Weeknd\u2019s \u201cBeauty Behind the Madness\u201d is spending a third week at No. 1 on Billboard\u2019s album chart, as industry data for the first half of 2015 indicates streaming is surging while CD sales are plunging. BACK STORY On Sunday, a total lunar eclipse coincides with a \u201csupermoon\u201d \u2014 when the moon is closest to Earth \u2014 promising us some dramatic nighttime theater.", "paragraph_answer": "Jake Arrieta threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season, as the Chicago Cubs closed in on a playoff berth by shutting out Milwaukee, 4-0. The Yankees won and the Mets lost, and both gained ground in their pursuit of division titles. Roundup. Scoreboard. Schedule. \u2022 Popular tunes. A judge ruled that the long-claimed copyright on \u201cHappy Birthday to You\u201d is invalid. If the ruling stands, the song would become part of the public domain. And The Weeknd\u2019s \u201cBeauty Behind the Madness\u201d is spending a third week at No. 1 on Billboard\u2019s album chart, as industry data for the first half of 2015 indicates streaming is surging while CD sales are plunging. BACK STORY On Sunday, a total lunar eclipse coincides with a \u201csupermoon\u201d \u2014 when the moon is closest to Earth \u2014 promising us some dramatic nighttime theater.", "sentence_answer": "Jake Arrieta threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season, as the Chicago Cubs closed in on a playoff berth by shutting out Milwaukee, 4-0."} -{"question": "Who ruled that the long-claimed copyright on \u201cHappy Birthday to You\u201d?", "paragraph": "Jake Arrieta threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season, as the Chicago Cubs closed in on a playoff berth by shutting out Milwaukee, 4-0. The Yankees won and the Mets lost, and both gained ground in their pursuit of division titles. Roundup. Scoreboard. Schedule. \u2022 Popular tunes. A judge ruled that the long-claimed copyright on \u201cHappy Birthday to You\u201d is invalid. If the ruling stands, the song would become part of the public domain. And The Weeknd\u2019s \u201cBeauty Behind the Madness\u201d is spending a third week at No. 1 on Billboard\u2019s album chart, as industry data for the first half of 2015 indicates streaming is surging while CD sales are plunging. BACK STORY On Sunday, a total lunar eclipse coincides with a \u201csupermoon\u201d \u2014 when the moon is closest to Earth \u2014 promising us some dramatic nighttime theater.", "answer": "A judge", "sentence": "A judge ruled that the long-claimed copyright on \u201cHappy Birthday to You\u201d is invalid.", "paragraph_sentence": "Jake Arrieta threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season, as the Chicago Cubs closed in on a playoff berth by shutting out Milwaukee, 4-0. The Yankees won and the Mets lost, and both gained ground in their pursuit of division titles. Roundup. Scoreboard. Schedule. \u2022 Popular tunes. A judge ruled that the long-claimed copyright on \u201cHappy Birthday to You\u201d is invalid. If the ruling stands, the song would become part of the public domain. And The Weeknd\u2019s \u201cBeauty Behind the Madness\u201d is spending a third week at No. 1 on Billboard\u2019s album chart, as industry data for the first half of 2015 indicates streaming is surging while CD sales are plunging. BACK STORY On Sunday, a total lunar eclipse coincides with a \u201csupermoon\u201d \u2014 when the moon is closest to Earth \u2014 promising us some dramatic nighttime theater.", "paragraph_answer": "Jake Arrieta threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season, as the Chicago Cubs closed in on a playoff berth by shutting out Milwaukee, 4-0. The Yankees won and the Mets lost, and both gained ground in their pursuit of division titles. Roundup. Scoreboard. Schedule. \u2022 Popular tunes. A judge ruled that the long-claimed copyright on \u201cHappy Birthday to You\u201d is invalid. If the ruling stands, the song would become part of the public domain. And The Weeknd\u2019s \u201cBeauty Behind the Madness\u201d is spending a third week at No. 1 on Billboard\u2019s album chart, as industry data for the first half of 2015 indicates streaming is surging while CD sales are plunging. BACK STORY On Sunday, a total lunar eclipse coincides with a \u201csupermoon\u201d \u2014 when the moon is closest to Earth \u2014 promising us some dramatic nighttime theater.", "sentence_answer": " A judge ruled that the long-claimed copyright on \u201cHappy Birthday to You\u201d is invalid."} -{"question": "Who threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season?", "paragraph": "Jake Arrieta threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season, as the Chicago Cubs closed in on a playoff berth by shutting out Milwaukee, 4-0. The Yankees won and the Mets lost, and both gained ground in their pursuit of division titles. Roundup. Scoreboard. Schedule. \u2022 Popular tunes. A judge ruled that the long-claimed copyright on \u201cHappy Birthday to You\u201d is invalid. If the ruling stands, the song would become part of the public domain. And The Weeknd\u2019s \u201cBeauty Behind the Madness\u201d is spending a third week at No. 1 on Billboard\u2019s album chart, as industry data for the first half of 2015 indicates streaming is surging while CD sales are plunging. BACK STORY On Sunday, a total lunar eclipse coincides with a \u201csupermoon\u201d \u2014 when the moon is closest to Earth \u2014 promising us some dramatic nighttime theater.", "answer": "Jake Arrieta", "sentence": "Jake Arrieta threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season, as the Chicago Cubs closed in on a playoff berth by shutting out Milwaukee, 4-0.", "paragraph_sentence": " Jake Arrieta threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season, as the Chicago Cubs closed in on a playoff berth by shutting out Milwaukee, 4-0. The Yankees won and the Mets lost, and both gained ground in their pursuit of division titles. Roundup. Scoreboard. Schedule. \u2022 Popular tunes. A judge ruled that the long-claimed copyright on \u201cHappy Birthday to You\u201d is invalid. If the ruling stands, the song would become part of the public domain. And The Weeknd\u2019s \u201cBeauty Behind the Madness\u201d is spending a third week at No. 1 on Billboard\u2019s album chart, as industry data for the first half of 2015 indicates streaming is surging while CD sales are plunging. BACK STORY On Sunday, a total lunar eclipse coincides with a \u201csupermoon\u201d \u2014 when the moon is closest to Earth \u2014 promising us some dramatic nighttime theater.", "paragraph_answer": " Jake Arrieta threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season, as the Chicago Cubs closed in on a playoff berth by shutting out Milwaukee, 4-0. The Yankees won and the Mets lost, and both gained ground in their pursuit of division titles. Roundup. Scoreboard. Schedule. \u2022 Popular tunes. A judge ruled that the long-claimed copyright on \u201cHappy Birthday to You\u201d is invalid. If the ruling stands, the song would become part of the public domain. And The Weeknd\u2019s \u201cBeauty Behind the Madness\u201d is spending a third week at No. 1 on Billboard\u2019s album chart, as industry data for the first half of 2015 indicates streaming is surging while CD sales are plunging. BACK STORY On Sunday, a total lunar eclipse coincides with a \u201csupermoon\u201d \u2014 when the moon is closest to Earth \u2014 promising us some dramatic nighttime theater.", "sentence_answer": " Jake Arrieta threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season, as the Chicago Cubs closed in on a playoff berth by shutting out Milwaukee, 4-0."} -{"question": "What is the score between Chicago Cubs and Milwaukee?", "paragraph": "Jake Arrieta threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season, as the Chicago Cubs closed in on a playoff berth by shutting out Milwaukee, 4-0. The Yankees won and the Mets lost, and both gained ground in their pursuit of division titles. Roundup. Scoreboard. Schedule. \u2022 Popular tunes. A judge ruled that the long-claimed copyright on \u201cHappy Birthday to You\u201d is invalid. If the ruling stands, the song would become part of the public domain. And The Weeknd\u2019s \u201cBeauty Behind the Madness\u201d is spending a third week at No. 1 on Billboard\u2019s album chart, as industry data for the first half of 2015 indicates streaming is surging while CD sales are plunging. BACK STORY On Sunday, a total lunar eclipse coincides with a \u201csupermoon\u201d \u2014 when the moon is closest to Earth \u2014 promising us some dramatic nighttime theater.", "answer": "4-0.", "sentence": "Jake Arrieta threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season, as the Chicago Cubs closed in on a playoff berth by shutting out Milwaukee, 4-0. The Yankees won and the Mets lost, and both gained ground in their pursuit of division titles.", "paragraph_sentence": " Jake Arrieta threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season, as the Chicago Cubs closed in on a playoff berth by shutting out Milwaukee, 4-0. The Yankees won and the Mets lost, and both gained ground in their pursuit of division titles. Roundup. Scoreboard. Schedule. \u2022 Popular tunes. A judge ruled that the long-claimed copyright on \u201cHappy Birthday to You\u201d is invalid. If the ruling stands, the song would become part of the public domain. And The Weeknd\u2019s \u201cBeauty Behind the Madness\u201d is spending a third week at No. 1 on Billboard\u2019s album chart, as industry data for the first half of 2015 indicates streaming is surging while CD sales are plunging. BACK STORY On Sunday, a total lunar eclipse coincides with a \u201csupermoon\u201d \u2014 when the moon is closest to Earth \u2014 promising us some dramatic nighttime theater.", "paragraph_answer": "Jake Arrieta threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season, as the Chicago Cubs closed in on a playoff berth by shutting out Milwaukee, 4-0. The Yankees won and the Mets lost, and both gained ground in their pursuit of division titles. Roundup. Scoreboard. Schedule. \u2022 Popular tunes. A judge ruled that the long-claimed copyright on \u201cHappy Birthday to You\u201d is invalid. If the ruling stands, the song would become part of the public domain. And The Weeknd\u2019s \u201cBeauty Behind the Madness\u201d is spending a third week at No. 1 on Billboard\u2019s album chart, as industry data for the first half of 2015 indicates streaming is surging while CD sales are plunging. BACK STORY On Sunday, a total lunar eclipse coincides with a \u201csupermoon\u201d \u2014 when the moon is closest to Earth \u2014 promising us some dramatic nighttime theater.", "sentence_answer": "Jake Arrieta threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season, as the Chicago Cubs closed in on a playoff berth by shutting out Milwaukee, 4-0. The Yankees won and the Mets lost, and both gained ground in their pursuit of division titles."} -{"question": "What is promising us some dramatic nighttime theater?", "paragraph": "Jake Arrieta threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season, as the Chicago Cubs closed in on a playoff berth by shutting out Milwaukee, 4-0. The Yankees won and the Mets lost, and both gained ground in their pursuit of division titles. Roundup. Scoreboard. Schedule. \u2022 Popular tunes. A judge ruled that the long-claimed copyright on \u201cHappy Birthday to You\u201d is invalid. If the ruling stands, the song would become part of the public domain. And The Weeknd\u2019s \u201cBeauty Behind the Madness\u201d is spending a third week at No. 1 on Billboard\u2019s album chart, as industry data for the first half of 2015 indicates streaming is surging while CD sales are plunging. BACK STORY On Sunday, a total lunar eclipse coincides with a \u201csupermoon\u201d \u2014 when the moon is closest to Earth \u2014 promising us some dramatic nighttime theater.", "answer": "when the moon is closest to Earth", "sentence": "BACK STORY On Sunday, a total lunar eclipse coincides with a \u201csupermoon\u201d \u2014 when the moon is closest to Earth \u2014 promising us some dramatic nighttime theater.", "paragraph_sentence": "Jake Arrieta threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season, as the Chicago Cubs closed in on a playoff berth by shutting out Milwaukee, 4-0. The Yankees won and the Mets lost, and both gained ground in their pursuit of division titles. Roundup. Scoreboard. Schedule. \u2022 Popular tunes. A judge ruled that the long-claimed copyright on \u201cHappy Birthday to You\u201d is invalid. If the ruling stands, the song would become part of the public domain. And The Weeknd\u2019s \u201cBeauty Behind the Madness\u201d is spending a third week at No. 1 on Billboard\u2019s album chart, as industry data for the first half of 2015 indicates streaming is surging while CD sales are plunging. BACK STORY On Sunday, a total lunar eclipse coincides with a \u201csupermoon\u201d \u2014 when the moon is closest to Earth \u2014 promising us some dramatic nighttime theater. ", "paragraph_answer": "Jake Arrieta threw a three-hitter to become the first pitcher to reach 20 wins this season, as the Chicago Cubs closed in on a playoff berth by shutting out Milwaukee, 4-0. The Yankees won and the Mets lost, and both gained ground in their pursuit of division titles. Roundup. Scoreboard. Schedule. \u2022 Popular tunes. A judge ruled that the long-claimed copyright on \u201cHappy Birthday to You\u201d is invalid. If the ruling stands, the song would become part of the public domain. And The Weeknd\u2019s \u201cBeauty Behind the Madness\u201d is spending a third week at No. 1 on Billboard\u2019s album chart, as industry data for the first half of 2015 indicates streaming is surging while CD sales are plunging. BACK STORY On Sunday, a total lunar eclipse coincides with a \u201csupermoon\u201d \u2014 when the moon is closest to Earth \u2014 promising us some dramatic nighttime theater.", "sentence_answer": "BACK STORY On Sunday, a total lunar eclipse coincides with a \u201csupermoon\u201d \u2014 when the moon is closest to Earth \u2014 promising us some dramatic nighttime theater."} -{"question": "Who was the paleontologist at George Washington University?", "paragraph": "Paleontologists have discovered a distant relative of Triceratops in western China that lived 160 million years ago. Named Hualianceratops wucaiwanensis, the plant-eater stood on its hind legs and was about the size of a spaniel. Hualianceratops and another dinosaur from the region, named Yinlong downsi, are the two oldest known ceratopsians, so-called horned dinosaurs, although neither the Hualianceratops nor Yinlong had horns. There were dozens of species of ceratopsians, but Triceratops, which lived in North America about 65 million years ago, is the best known. \u201cThese small dinosaurs were related to Triceratops, but very distantly,\u201d said Catherine A. Forster, a paleontologist at George Washington University and one of the team who discovered Hualianceratops. She and her colleagues recovered a partial skull and hind leg, and described their findings in the journal PLOS One.", "answer": "Catherine A. Forster", "sentence": "\u201cThese small dinosaurs were related to Triceratops, but very distantly,\u201d said Catherine A. Forster , a paleontologist at George Washington University and one of the team who discovered Hualianceratops.", "paragraph_sentence": "Paleontologists have discovered a distant relative of Triceratops in western China that lived 160 million years ago. Named Hualianceratops wucaiwanensis, the plant-eater stood on its hind legs and was about the size of a spaniel. Hualianceratops and another dinosaur from the region, named Yinlong downsi, are the two oldest known ceratopsians, so-called horned dinosaurs, although neither the Hualianceratops nor Yinlong had horns. There were dozens of species of ceratopsians, but Triceratops, which lived in North America about 65 million years ago, is the best known. \u201cThese small dinosaurs were related to Triceratops, but very distantly,\u201d said Catherine A. Forster , a paleontologist at George Washington University and one of the team who discovered Hualianceratops. She and her colleagues recovered a partial skull and hind leg, and described their findings in the journal PLOS One.", "paragraph_answer": "Paleontologists have discovered a distant relative of Triceratops in western China that lived 160 million years ago. Named Hualianceratops wucaiwanensis, the plant-eater stood on its hind legs and was about the size of a spaniel. Hualianceratops and another dinosaur from the region, named Yinlong downsi, are the two oldest known ceratopsians, so-called horned dinosaurs, although neither the Hualianceratops nor Yinlong had horns. There were dozens of species of ceratopsians, but Triceratops, which lived in North America about 65 million years ago, is the best known. \u201cThese small dinosaurs were related to Triceratops, but very distantly,\u201d said Catherine A. Forster , a paleontologist at George Washington University and one of the team who discovered Hualianceratops. She and her colleagues recovered a partial skull and hind leg, and described their findings in the journal PLOS One.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThese small dinosaurs were related to Triceratops, but very distantly,\u201d said Catherine A. Forster , a paleontologist at George Washington University and one of the team who discovered Hualianceratops."} -{"question": "Where was the distant relative of Triceratops found?", "paragraph": "Paleontologists have discovered a distant relative of Triceratops in western China that lived 160 million years ago. Named Hualianceratops wucaiwanensis, the plant-eater stood on its hind legs and was about the size of a spaniel. Hualianceratops and another dinosaur from the region, named Yinlong downsi, are the two oldest known ceratopsians, so-called horned dinosaurs, although neither the Hualianceratops nor Yinlong had horns. There were dozens of species of ceratopsians, but Triceratops, which lived in North America about 65 million years ago, is the best known. \u201cThese small dinosaurs were related to Triceratops, but very distantly,\u201d said Catherine A. Forster, a paleontologist at George Washington University and one of the team who discovered Hualianceratops. She and her colleagues recovered a partial skull and hind leg, and described their findings in the journal PLOS One.", "answer": "western China", "sentence": "Paleontologists have discovered a distant relative of Triceratops in western China that lived 160 million years ago.", "paragraph_sentence": " Paleontologists have discovered a distant relative of Triceratops in western China that lived 160 million years ago. Named Hualianceratops wucaiwanensis, the plant-eater stood on its hind legs and was about the size of a spaniel. Hualianceratops and another dinosaur from the region, named Yinlong downsi, are the two oldest known ceratopsians, so-called horned dinosaurs, although neither the Hualianceratops nor Yinlong had horns. There were dozens of species of ceratopsians, but Triceratops, which lived in North America about 65 million years ago, is the best known. \u201cThese small dinosaurs were related to Triceratops, but very distantly,\u201d said Catherine A. Forster, a paleontologist at George Washington University and one of the team who discovered Hualianceratops. She and her colleagues recovered a partial skull and hind leg, and described their findings in the journal PLOS One.", "paragraph_answer": "Paleontologists have discovered a distant relative of Triceratops in western China that lived 160 million years ago. Named Hualianceratops wucaiwanensis, the plant-eater stood on its hind legs and was about the size of a spaniel. Hualianceratops and another dinosaur from the region, named Yinlong downsi, are the two oldest known ceratopsians, so-called horned dinosaurs, although neither the Hualianceratops nor Yinlong had horns. There were dozens of species of ceratopsians, but Triceratops, which lived in North America about 65 million years ago, is the best known. \u201cThese small dinosaurs were related to Triceratops, but very distantly,\u201d said Catherine A. Forster, a paleontologist at George Washington University and one of the team who discovered Hualianceratops. She and her colleagues recovered a partial skull and hind leg, and described their findings in the journal PLOS One.", "sentence_answer": "Paleontologists have discovered a distant relative of Triceratops in western China that lived 160 million years ago."} -{"question": "How long ago did the Triceratops live in North America?", "paragraph": "Paleontologists have discovered a distant relative of Triceratops in western China that lived 160 million years ago. Named Hualianceratops wucaiwanensis, the plant-eater stood on its hind legs and was about the size of a spaniel. Hualianceratops and another dinosaur from the region, named Yinlong downsi, are the two oldest known ceratopsians, so-called horned dinosaurs, although neither the Hualianceratops nor Yinlong had horns. There were dozens of species of ceratopsians, but Triceratops, which lived in North America about 65 million years ago, is the best known. \u201cThese small dinosaurs were related to Triceratops, but very distantly,\u201d said Catherine A. Forster, a paleontologist at George Washington University and one of the team who discovered Hualianceratops. She and her colleagues recovered a partial skull and hind leg, and described their findings in the journal PLOS One.", "answer": "65 million years", "sentence": "There were dozens of species of ceratopsians, but Triceratops, which lived in North America about 65 million years ago, is the best known.", "paragraph_sentence": "Paleontologists have discovered a distant relative of Triceratops in western China that lived 160 million years ago. Named Hualianceratops wucaiwanensis, the plant-eater stood on its hind legs and was about the size of a spaniel. Hualianceratops and another dinosaur from the region, named Yinlong downsi, are the two oldest known ceratopsians, so-called horned dinosaurs, although neither the Hualianceratops nor Yinlong had horns. There were dozens of species of ceratopsians, but Triceratops, which lived in North America about 65 million years ago, is the best known. \u201cThese small dinosaurs were related to Triceratops, but very distantly,\u201d said Catherine A. Forster, a paleontologist at George Washington University and one of the team who discovered Hualianceratops. She and her colleagues recovered a partial skull and hind leg, and described their findings in the journal PLOS One.", "paragraph_answer": "Paleontologists have discovered a distant relative of Triceratops in western China that lived 160 million years ago. Named Hualianceratops wucaiwanensis, the plant-eater stood on its hind legs and was about the size of a spaniel. Hualianceratops and another dinosaur from the region, named Yinlong downsi, are the two oldest known ceratopsians, so-called horned dinosaurs, although neither the Hualianceratops nor Yinlong had horns. There were dozens of species of ceratopsians, but Triceratops, which lived in North America about 65 million years ago, is the best known. \u201cThese small dinosaurs were related to Triceratops, but very distantly,\u201d said Catherine A. Forster, a paleontologist at George Washington University and one of the team who discovered Hualianceratops. She and her colleagues recovered a partial skull and hind leg, and described their findings in the journal PLOS One.", "sentence_answer": "There were dozens of species of ceratopsians, but Triceratops, which lived in North America about 65 million years ago, is the best known."} -{"question": "What was the name of the distant relative of the Triceratops that was the size of a spaniel?", "paragraph": "Paleontologists have discovered a distant relative of Triceratops in western China that lived 160 million years ago. Named Hualianceratops wucaiwanensis, the plant-eater stood on its hind legs and was about the size of a spaniel. Hualianceratops and another dinosaur from the region, named Yinlong downsi, are the two oldest known ceratopsians, so-called horned dinosaurs, although neither the Hualianceratops nor Yinlong had horns. There were dozens of species of ceratopsians, but Triceratops, which lived in North America about 65 million years ago, is the best known. \u201cThese small dinosaurs were related to Triceratops, but very distantly,\u201d said Catherine A. Forster, a paleontologist at George Washington University and one of the team who discovered Hualianceratops. She and her colleagues recovered a partial skull and hind leg, and described their findings in the journal PLOS One.", "answer": "Hualianceratops wucaiwanensis", "sentence": "Named Hualianceratops wucaiwanensis , the plant-eater stood on its hind legs and was about the size of a spaniel.", "paragraph_sentence": "Paleontologists have discovered a distant relative of Triceratops in western China that lived 160 million years ago. Named Hualianceratops wucaiwanensis , the plant-eater stood on its hind legs and was about the size of a spaniel. Hualianceratops and another dinosaur from the region, named Yinlong downsi, are the two oldest known ceratopsians, so-called horned dinosaurs, although neither the Hualianceratops nor Yinlong had horns. There were dozens of species of ceratopsians, but Triceratops, which lived in North America about 65 million years ago, is the best known. \u201cThese small dinosaurs were related to Triceratops, but very distantly,\u201d said Catherine A. Forster, a paleontologist at George Washington University and one of the team who discovered Hualianceratops. She and her colleagues recovered a partial skull and hind leg, and described their findings in the journal PLOS One.", "paragraph_answer": "Paleontologists have discovered a distant relative of Triceratops in western China that lived 160 million years ago. Named Hualianceratops wucaiwanensis , the plant-eater stood on its hind legs and was about the size of a spaniel. Hualianceratops and another dinosaur from the region, named Yinlong downsi, are the two oldest known ceratopsians, so-called horned dinosaurs, although neither the Hualianceratops nor Yinlong had horns. There were dozens of species of ceratopsians, but Triceratops, which lived in North America about 65 million years ago, is the best known. \u201cThese small dinosaurs were related to Triceratops, but very distantly,\u201d said Catherine A. Forster, a paleontologist at George Washington University and one of the team who discovered Hualianceratops. She and her colleagues recovered a partial skull and hind leg, and described their findings in the journal PLOS One.", "sentence_answer": "Named Hualianceratops wucaiwanensis , the plant-eater stood on its hind legs and was about the size of a spaniel."} -{"question": "What did paleontologist, Catherine A. Forster, and colleagues recover?", "paragraph": "Paleontologists have discovered a distant relative of Triceratops in western China that lived 160 million years ago. Named Hualianceratops wucaiwanensis, the plant-eater stood on its hind legs and was about the size of a spaniel. Hualianceratops and another dinosaur from the region, named Yinlong downsi, are the two oldest known ceratopsians, so-called horned dinosaurs, although neither the Hualianceratops nor Yinlong had horns. There were dozens of species of ceratopsians, but Triceratops, which lived in North America about 65 million years ago, is the best known. \u201cThese small dinosaurs were related to Triceratops, but very distantly,\u201d said Catherine A. Forster, a paleontologist at George Washington University and one of the team who discovered Hualianceratops. She and her colleagues recovered a partial skull and hind leg, and described their findings in the journal PLOS One.", "answer": "a partial skull and hind leg", "sentence": "She and her colleagues recovered a partial skull and hind leg , and described their findings in the journal PLOS One.", "paragraph_sentence": "Paleontologists have discovered a distant relative of Triceratops in western China that lived 160 million years ago. Named Hualianceratops wucaiwanensis, the plant-eater stood on its hind legs and was about the size of a spaniel. Hualianceratops and another dinosaur from the region, named Yinlong downsi, are the two oldest known ceratopsians, so-called horned dinosaurs, although neither the Hualianceratops nor Yinlong had horns. There were dozens of species of ceratopsians, but Triceratops, which lived in North America about 65 million years ago, is the best known. \u201cThese small dinosaurs were related to Triceratops, but very distantly,\u201d said Catherine A. Forster, a paleontologist at George Washington University and one of the team who discovered Hualianceratops. She and her colleagues recovered a partial skull and hind leg , and described their findings in the journal PLOS One. ", "paragraph_answer": "Paleontologists have discovered a distant relative of Triceratops in western China that lived 160 million years ago. Named Hualianceratops wucaiwanensis, the plant-eater stood on its hind legs and was about the size of a spaniel. Hualianceratops and another dinosaur from the region, named Yinlong downsi, are the two oldest known ceratopsians, so-called horned dinosaurs, although neither the Hualianceratops nor Yinlong had horns. There were dozens of species of ceratopsians, but Triceratops, which lived in North America about 65 million years ago, is the best known. \u201cThese small dinosaurs were related to Triceratops, but very distantly,\u201d said Catherine A. Forster, a paleontologist at George Washington University and one of the team who discovered Hualianceratops. She and her colleagues recovered a partial skull and hind leg , and described their findings in the journal PLOS One.", "sentence_answer": "She and her colleagues recovered a partial skull and hind leg , and described their findings in the journal PLOS One."} -{"question": "What is the second incarnation of the Liberal Arts and Sciences test called?", "paragraph": "A federal judge on Friday found that an exam for New York teaching candidates was racially discriminatory because it did not measure skills necessary to do the job, the latest step in a court battle over teacher qualifications that has spanned nearly 20 years. The exam, the second incarnation of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Test, called the LAST-2, was administered from 2004 through 2012 and was designed to test an applicant\u2019s knowledge of liberal arts and science. But the test was found to fail minority teaching candidates at a higher rate than white candidates. According to Friday\u2019s decision, written by Judge Kimba M. Wood of Federal District Court in Manhattan, the pass rate for African-American and Latino candidates was between 54 percent and 75 percent of the pass rate for white candidates. Once it was established that minority applicants were failing at a disproportionately high rate, the burden shifted to education officials to prove that the skills being tested were necessary to do the job; otherwise, the test would be ruled discriminatory. In creating the test, the company, National Evaluation Systems, sent surveys to educators around New York State to determine if the test\u2019s \u201ccontent objectives\u201d were relevant and important to teaching. The samples for both surveys were small, however, Judge Wood said. The judge found that National Evaluation Systems, now called Evaluation Systems, part of Pearson Education, went about the process backward.", "answer": "LAST-2", "sentence": "The exam, the second incarnation of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Test, called the LAST-2 , was administered from 2004 through 2012 and was designed to test an applicant\u2019s knowledge of liberal arts and science.", "paragraph_sentence": "A federal judge on Friday found that an exam for New York teaching candidates was racially discriminatory because it did not measure skills necessary to do the job, the latest step in a court battle over teacher qualifications that has spanned nearly 20 years. The exam, the second incarnation of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Test, called the LAST-2 , was administered from 2004 through 2012 and was designed to test an applicant\u2019s knowledge of liberal arts and science. But the test was found to fail minority teaching candidates at a higher rate than white candidates. According to Friday\u2019s decision, written by Judge Kimba M. Wood of Federal District Court in Manhattan, the pass rate for African-American and Latino candidates was between 54 percent and 75 percent of the pass rate for white candidates. Once it was established that minority applicants were failing at a disproportionately high rate, the burden shifted to education officials to prove that the skills being tested were necessary to do the job; otherwise, the test would be ruled discriminatory. In creating the test, the company, National Evaluation Systems, sent surveys to educators around New York State to determine if the test\u2019s \u201ccontent objectives\u201d were relevant and important to teaching. The samples for both surveys were small, however, Judge Wood said. The judge found that National Evaluation Systems, now called Evaluation Systems, part of Pearson Education, went about the process backward.", "paragraph_answer": "A federal judge on Friday found that an exam for New York teaching candidates was racially discriminatory because it did not measure skills necessary to do the job, the latest step in a court battle over teacher qualifications that has spanned nearly 20 years. The exam, the second incarnation of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Test, called the LAST-2 , was administered from 2004 through 2012 and was designed to test an applicant\u2019s knowledge of liberal arts and science. But the test was found to fail minority teaching candidates at a higher rate than white candidates. According to Friday\u2019s decision, written by Judge Kimba M. Wood of Federal District Court in Manhattan, the pass rate for African-American and Latino candidates was between 54 percent and 75 percent of the pass rate for white candidates. Once it was established that minority applicants were failing at a disproportionately high rate, the burden shifted to education officials to prove that the skills being tested were necessary to do the job; otherwise, the test would be ruled discriminatory. In creating the test, the company, National Evaluation Systems, sent surveys to educators around New York State to determine if the test\u2019s \u201ccontent objectives\u201d were relevant and important to teaching. The samples for both surveys were small, however, Judge Wood said. The judge found that National Evaluation Systems, now called Evaluation Systems, part of Pearson Education, went about the process backward.", "sentence_answer": "The exam, the second incarnation of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Test, called the LAST-2 , was administered from 2004 through 2012 and was designed to test an applicant\u2019s knowledge of liberal arts and science."} -{"question": "What was the last year the LAST-2 was given?", "paragraph": "A federal judge on Friday found that an exam for New York teaching candidates was racially discriminatory because it did not measure skills necessary to do the job, the latest step in a court battle over teacher qualifications that has spanned nearly 20 years. The exam, the second incarnation of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Test, called the LAST-2, was administered from 2004 through 2012 and was designed to test an applicant\u2019s knowledge of liberal arts and science. But the test was found to fail minority teaching candidates at a higher rate than white candidates. According to Friday\u2019s decision, written by Judge Kimba M. Wood of Federal District Court in Manhattan, the pass rate for African-American and Latino candidates was between 54 percent and 75 percent of the pass rate for white candidates. Once it was established that minority applicants were failing at a disproportionately high rate, the burden shifted to education officials to prove that the skills being tested were necessary to do the job; otherwise, the test would be ruled discriminatory. In creating the test, the company, National Evaluation Systems, sent surveys to educators around New York State to determine if the test\u2019s \u201ccontent objectives\u201d were relevant and important to teaching. The samples for both surveys were small, however, Judge Wood said. The judge found that National Evaluation Systems, now called Evaluation Systems, part of Pearson Education, went about the process backward.", "answer": "2012", "sentence": "The exam, the second incarnation of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Test, called the LAST-2, was administered from 2004 through 2012 and was designed to test an applicant\u2019s knowledge of liberal arts and science.", "paragraph_sentence": "A federal judge on Friday found that an exam for New York teaching candidates was racially discriminatory because it did not measure skills necessary to do the job, the latest step in a court battle over teacher qualifications that has spanned nearly 20 years. The exam, the second incarnation of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Test, called the LAST-2, was administered from 2004 through 2012 and was designed to test an applicant\u2019s knowledge of liberal arts and science. But the test was found to fail minority teaching candidates at a higher rate than white candidates. According to Friday\u2019s decision, written by Judge Kimba M. Wood of Federal District Court in Manhattan, the pass rate for African-American and Latino candidates was between 54 percent and 75 percent of the pass rate for white candidates. Once it was established that minority applicants were failing at a disproportionately high rate, the burden shifted to education officials to prove that the skills being tested were necessary to do the job; otherwise, the test would be ruled discriminatory. In creating the test, the company, National Evaluation Systems, sent surveys to educators around New York State to determine if the test\u2019s \u201ccontent objectives\u201d were relevant and important to teaching. The samples for both surveys were small, however, Judge Wood said. The judge found that National Evaluation Systems, now called Evaluation Systems, part of Pearson Education, went about the process backward.", "paragraph_answer": "A federal judge on Friday found that an exam for New York teaching candidates was racially discriminatory because it did not measure skills necessary to do the job, the latest step in a court battle over teacher qualifications that has spanned nearly 20 years. The exam, the second incarnation of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Test, called the LAST-2, was administered from 2004 through 2012 and was designed to test an applicant\u2019s knowledge of liberal arts and science. But the test was found to fail minority teaching candidates at a higher rate than white candidates. According to Friday\u2019s decision, written by Judge Kimba M. Wood of Federal District Court in Manhattan, the pass rate for African-American and Latino candidates was between 54 percent and 75 percent of the pass rate for white candidates. Once it was established that minority applicants were failing at a disproportionately high rate, the burden shifted to education officials to prove that the skills being tested were necessary to do the job; otherwise, the test would be ruled discriminatory. In creating the test, the company, National Evaluation Systems, sent surveys to educators around New York State to determine if the test\u2019s \u201ccontent objectives\u201d were relevant and important to teaching. The samples for both surveys were small, however, Judge Wood said. The judge found that National Evaluation Systems, now called Evaluation Systems, part of Pearson Education, went about the process backward.", "sentence_answer": "The exam, the second incarnation of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Test, called the LAST-2, was administered from 2004 through 2012 and was designed to test an applicant\u2019s knowledge of liberal arts and science."} -{"question": "What group of teaching candidates failed the LAST-2 more often?", "paragraph": "A federal judge on Friday found that an exam for New York teaching candidates was racially discriminatory because it did not measure skills necessary to do the job, the latest step in a court battle over teacher qualifications that has spanned nearly 20 years. The exam, the second incarnation of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Test, called the LAST-2, was administered from 2004 through 2012 and was designed to test an applicant\u2019s knowledge of liberal arts and science. But the test was found to fail minority teaching candidates at a higher rate than white candidates. According to Friday\u2019s decision, written by Judge Kimba M. Wood of Federal District Court in Manhattan, the pass rate for African-American and Latino candidates was between 54 percent and 75 percent of the pass rate for white candidates. Once it was established that minority applicants were failing at a disproportionately high rate, the burden shifted to education officials to prove that the skills being tested were necessary to do the job; otherwise, the test would be ruled discriminatory. In creating the test, the company, National Evaluation Systems, sent surveys to educators around New York State to determine if the test\u2019s \u201ccontent objectives\u201d were relevant and important to teaching. The samples for both surveys were small, however, Judge Wood said. The judge found that National Evaluation Systems, now called Evaluation Systems, part of Pearson Education, went about the process backward.", "answer": "African-American and Latino", "sentence": "According to Friday\u2019s decision, written by Judge Kimba M. Wood of Federal District Court in Manhattan, the pass rate for African-American and Latino candidates was between 54 percent and 75 percent of the pass rate for white candidates.", "paragraph_sentence": "A federal judge on Friday found that an exam for New York teaching candidates was racially discriminatory because it did not measure skills necessary to do the job, the latest step in a court battle over teacher qualifications that has spanned nearly 20 years. The exam, the second incarnation of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Test, called the LAST-2, was administered from 2004 through 2012 and was designed to test an applicant\u2019s knowledge of liberal arts and science. But the test was found to fail minority teaching candidates at a higher rate than white candidates. According to Friday\u2019s decision, written by Judge Kimba M. Wood of Federal District Court in Manhattan, the pass rate for African-American and Latino candidates was between 54 percent and 75 percent of the pass rate for white candidates. Once it was established that minority applicants were failing at a disproportionately high rate, the burden shifted to education officials to prove that the skills being tested were necessary to do the job; otherwise, the test would be ruled discriminatory. In creating the test, the company, National Evaluation Systems, sent surveys to educators around New York State to determine if the test\u2019s \u201ccontent objectives\u201d were relevant and important to teaching. The samples for both surveys were small, however, Judge Wood said. The judge found that National Evaluation Systems, now called Evaluation Systems, part of Pearson Education, went about the process backward.", "paragraph_answer": "A federal judge on Friday found that an exam for New York teaching candidates was racially discriminatory because it did not measure skills necessary to do the job, the latest step in a court battle over teacher qualifications that has spanned nearly 20 years. The exam, the second incarnation of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Test, called the LAST-2, was administered from 2004 through 2012 and was designed to test an applicant\u2019s knowledge of liberal arts and science. But the test was found to fail minority teaching candidates at a higher rate than white candidates. According to Friday\u2019s decision, written by Judge Kimba M. Wood of Federal District Court in Manhattan, the pass rate for African-American and Latino candidates was between 54 percent and 75 percent of the pass rate for white candidates. Once it was established that minority applicants were failing at a disproportionately high rate, the burden shifted to education officials to prove that the skills being tested were necessary to do the job; otherwise, the test would be ruled discriminatory. In creating the test, the company, National Evaluation Systems, sent surveys to educators around New York State to determine if the test\u2019s \u201ccontent objectives\u201d were relevant and important to teaching. The samples for both surveys were small, however, Judge Wood said. The judge found that National Evaluation Systems, now called Evaluation Systems, part of Pearson Education, went about the process backward.", "sentence_answer": "According to Friday\u2019s decision, written by Judge Kimba M. Wood of Federal District Court in Manhattan, the pass rate for African-American and Latino candidates was between 54 percent and 75 percent of the pass rate for white candidates."} -{"question": "What was the average percentage rate white teaching candidates received on the LAST-2?", "paragraph": "A federal judge on Friday found that an exam for New York teaching candidates was racially discriminatory because it did not measure skills necessary to do the job, the latest step in a court battle over teacher qualifications that has spanned nearly 20 years. The exam, the second incarnation of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Test, called the LAST-2, was administered from 2004 through 2012 and was designed to test an applicant\u2019s knowledge of liberal arts and science. But the test was found to fail minority teaching candidates at a higher rate than white candidates. According to Friday\u2019s decision, written by Judge Kimba M. Wood of Federal District Court in Manhattan, the pass rate for African-American and Latino candidates was between 54 percent and 75 percent of the pass rate for white candidates. Once it was established that minority applicants were failing at a disproportionately high rate, the burden shifted to education officials to prove that the skills being tested were necessary to do the job; otherwise, the test would be ruled discriminatory. In creating the test, the company, National Evaluation Systems, sent surveys to educators around New York State to determine if the test\u2019s \u201ccontent objectives\u201d were relevant and important to teaching. The samples for both surveys were small, however, Judge Wood said. The judge found that National Evaluation Systems, now called Evaluation Systems, part of Pearson Education, went about the process backward.", "answer": "75", "sentence": "According to Friday\u2019s decision, written by Judge Kimba M. Wood of Federal District Court in Manhattan, the pass rate for African-American and Latino candidates was between 54 percent and 75 percent of the pass rate for white candidates.", "paragraph_sentence": "A federal judge on Friday found that an exam for New York teaching candidates was racially discriminatory because it did not measure skills necessary to do the job, the latest step in a court battle over teacher qualifications that has spanned nearly 20 years. The exam, the second incarnation of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Test, called the LAST-2, was administered from 2004 through 2012 and was designed to test an applicant\u2019s knowledge of liberal arts and science. But the test was found to fail minority teaching candidates at a higher rate than white candidates. According to Friday\u2019s decision, written by Judge Kimba M. Wood of Federal District Court in Manhattan, the pass rate for African-American and Latino candidates was between 54 percent and 75 percent of the pass rate for white candidates. Once it was established that minority applicants were failing at a disproportionately high rate, the burden shifted to education officials to prove that the skills being tested were necessary to do the job; otherwise, the test would be ruled discriminatory. In creating the test, the company, National Evaluation Systems, sent surveys to educators around New York State to determine if the test\u2019s \u201ccontent objectives\u201d were relevant and important to teaching. The samples for both surveys were small, however, Judge Wood said. The judge found that National Evaluation Systems, now called Evaluation Systems, part of Pearson Education, went about the process backward.", "paragraph_answer": "A federal judge on Friday found that an exam for New York teaching candidates was racially discriminatory because it did not measure skills necessary to do the job, the latest step in a court battle over teacher qualifications that has spanned nearly 20 years. The exam, the second incarnation of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Test, called the LAST-2, was administered from 2004 through 2012 and was designed to test an applicant\u2019s knowledge of liberal arts and science. But the test was found to fail minority teaching candidates at a higher rate than white candidates. According to Friday\u2019s decision, written by Judge Kimba M. Wood of Federal District Court in Manhattan, the pass rate for African-American and Latino candidates was between 54 percent and 75 percent of the pass rate for white candidates. Once it was established that minority applicants were failing at a disproportionately high rate, the burden shifted to education officials to prove that the skills being tested were necessary to do the job; otherwise, the test would be ruled discriminatory. In creating the test, the company, National Evaluation Systems, sent surveys to educators around New York State to determine if the test\u2019s \u201ccontent objectives\u201d were relevant and important to teaching. The samples for both surveys were small, however, Judge Wood said. The judge found that National Evaluation Systems, now called Evaluation Systems, part of Pearson Education, went about the process backward.", "sentence_answer": "According to Friday\u2019s decision, written by Judge Kimba M. Wood of Federal District Court in Manhattan, the pass rate for African-American and Latino candidates was between 54 percent and 75 percent of the pass rate for white candidates."} -{"question": "What was the original name of the Evaluation Systems?", "paragraph": "A federal judge on Friday found that an exam for New York teaching candidates was racially discriminatory because it did not measure skills necessary to do the job, the latest step in a court battle over teacher qualifications that has spanned nearly 20 years. The exam, the second incarnation of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Test, called the LAST-2, was administered from 2004 through 2012 and was designed to test an applicant\u2019s knowledge of liberal arts and science. But the test was found to fail minority teaching candidates at a higher rate than white candidates. According to Friday\u2019s decision, written by Judge Kimba M. Wood of Federal District Court in Manhattan, the pass rate for African-American and Latino candidates was between 54 percent and 75 percent of the pass rate for white candidates. Once it was established that minority applicants were failing at a disproportionately high rate, the burden shifted to education officials to prove that the skills being tested were necessary to do the job; otherwise, the test would be ruled discriminatory. In creating the test, the company, National Evaluation Systems, sent surveys to educators around New York State to determine if the test\u2019s \u201ccontent objectives\u201d were relevant and important to teaching. The samples for both surveys were small, however, Judge Wood said. The judge found that National Evaluation Systems, now called Evaluation Systems, part of Pearson Education, went about the process backward.", "answer": "National Evaluation Systems", "sentence": "In creating the test, the company, National Evaluation Systems , sent surveys to educators around New York State to determine if the test\u2019s \u201ccontent objectives\u201d were relevant and important to teaching.", "paragraph_sentence": "A federal judge on Friday found that an exam for New York teaching candidates was racially discriminatory because it did not measure skills necessary to do the job, the latest step in a court battle over teacher qualifications that has spanned nearly 20 years. The exam, the second incarnation of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Test, called the LAST-2, was administered from 2004 through 2012 and was designed to test an applicant\u2019s knowledge of liberal arts and science. But the test was found to fail minority teaching candidates at a higher rate than white candidates. According to Friday\u2019s decision, written by Judge Kimba M. Wood of Federal District Court in Manhattan, the pass rate for African-American and Latino candidates was between 54 percent and 75 percent of the pass rate for white candidates. Once it was established that minority applicants were failing at a disproportionately high rate, the burden shifted to education officials to prove that the skills being tested were necessary to do the job; otherwise, the test would be ruled discriminatory. In creating the test, the company, National Evaluation Systems , sent surveys to educators around New York State to determine if the test\u2019s \u201ccontent objectives\u201d were relevant and important to teaching. The samples for both surveys were small, however, Judge Wood said. The judge found that National Evaluation Systems, now called Evaluation Systems, part of Pearson Education, went about the process backward.", "paragraph_answer": "A federal judge on Friday found that an exam for New York teaching candidates was racially discriminatory because it did not measure skills necessary to do the job, the latest step in a court battle over teacher qualifications that has spanned nearly 20 years. The exam, the second incarnation of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Test, called the LAST-2, was administered from 2004 through 2012 and was designed to test an applicant\u2019s knowledge of liberal arts and science. But the test was found to fail minority teaching candidates at a higher rate than white candidates. According to Friday\u2019s decision, written by Judge Kimba M. Wood of Federal District Court in Manhattan, the pass rate for African-American and Latino candidates was between 54 percent and 75 percent of the pass rate for white candidates. Once it was established that minority applicants were failing at a disproportionately high rate, the burden shifted to education officials to prove that the skills being tested were necessary to do the job; otherwise, the test would be ruled discriminatory. In creating the test, the company, National Evaluation Systems , sent surveys to educators around New York State to determine if the test\u2019s \u201ccontent objectives\u201d were relevant and important to teaching. The samples for both surveys were small, however, Judge Wood said. The judge found that National Evaluation Systems, now called Evaluation Systems, part of Pearson Education, went about the process backward.", "sentence_answer": "In creating the test, the company, National Evaluation Systems , sent surveys to educators around New York State to determine if the test\u2019s \u201ccontent objectives\u201d were relevant and important to teaching."} -{"question": "What is the nationality of Stephane Heuet?", "paragraph": "Proust For The People: Almost 100 years after his death, Marcel Proust has finally cracked the best-seller list. Sort of. The French artist St\u00e9phane Heuet\u2019s illustrated interpretation of \u201cSwann\u2019s Way,\u201d the first volume of Proust\u2019s sprawling semiautobiographical novel \u201cIn Search of Lost Time,\u201d is at No. 5 in its seventh week on the graphic novel hardcover list. Heuet has been adapting the book since 1988, when the first installment was published in France \u2014 to violent dismay. Le Figaro called the project \u201cblasphemous\u201d and \u201ccatastrophic,\u201d with the critic Herv\u00e9 de Saint-Hilaire taking special exception to the depiction of the young Marcel (\u201ca formless little boy with idiotic eyes\u2019\u2019). Heuet defended himself, telling The New York Times: \u201cProust has been kept in a ghetto of snobs as a sort of precious gold and diamond object. For me, any effort to democratize Proust is valid.\u201d And, as it happens, lucrative. Despite the negative reviews, the first printing of 12,000 copies sold out in three weeks. Of course, comics play a surprisingly large and vital role in French publishing. According to Publishers Weekly, graphic novel sales in France have been put at about $458 million, and they make up about 12.5 percent of all books published, compared with about 3\u202fpercent in America. And critics should have no cause for concern; Heuet and Arthur Goldhammer, the book\u2019s translator, envision it as a tantalizing introduction to \u201cIn Search of Lost Time\u201d \u2014 not a substitute for the real thing. \u201cSt\u00e9phane Heuet and I have tried to preserve the \u2018flavor\u2019 of Proust .\u2008.\u2008. his \u2018fragrance\u2019 \u2014 as un menu de d\u00e9gustation, or tasting menu, tries to give a full sampling of the dishes in the repertoire of a great chef,\u201d Goldhammer writes in the preface. \u201cThose who find the taste to their liking will want to return often to savor fuller portions.\u201d", "answer": "French", "sentence": "The French artist St\u00e9phane Heuet\u2019s illustrated interpretation of \u201cSwann\u2019s Way,\u201d the first volume of Proust\u2019s sprawling semiautobiographical novel \u201cIn Search of Lost Time,\u201d is at No. 5 in its seventh week on the graphic novel hardcover list.", "paragraph_sentence": "Proust For The People: Almost 100 years after his death, Marcel Proust has finally cracked the best-seller list. Sort of. The French artist St\u00e9phane Heuet\u2019s illustrated interpretation of \u201cSwann\u2019s Way,\u201d the first volume of Proust\u2019s sprawling semiautobiographical novel \u201cIn Search of Lost Time,\u201d is at No. 5 in its seventh week on the graphic novel hardcover list. Heuet has been adapting the book since 1988, when the first installment was published in France \u2014 to violent dismay. Le Figaro called the project \u201cblasphemous\u201d and \u201ccatastrophic,\u201d with the critic Herv\u00e9 de Saint-Hilaire taking special exception to the depiction of the young Marcel (\u201ca formless little boy with idiotic eyes\u2019\u2019). Heuet defended himself, telling The New York Times: \u201cProust has been kept in a ghetto of snobs as a sort of precious gold and diamond object. For me, any effort to democratize Proust is valid.\u201d And, as it happens, lucrative. Despite the negative reviews, the first printing of 12,000 copies sold out in three weeks. Of course, comics play a surprisingly large and vital role in French publishing. According to Publishers Weekly, graphic novel sales in France have been put at about $458 million, and they make up about 12.5 percent of all books published, compared with about 3 percent in America. And critics should have no cause for concern; Heuet and Arthur Goldhammer, the book\u2019s translator, envision it as a tantalizing introduction to \u201cIn Search of Lost Time\u201d \u2014 not a substitute for the real thing. \u201cSt\u00e9phane Heuet and I have tried to preserve the \u2018flavor\u2019 of Proust . . . his \u2018fragrance\u2019 \u2014 as un menu de d\u00e9gustation, or tasting menu, tries to give a full sampling of the dishes in the repertoire of a great chef,\u201d Goldhammer writes in the preface. \u201cThose who find the taste to their liking will want to return often to savor fuller portions.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Proust For The People: Almost 100 years after his death, Marcel Proust has finally cracked the best-seller list. Sort of. The French artist St\u00e9phane Heuet\u2019s illustrated interpretation of \u201cSwann\u2019s Way,\u201d the first volume of Proust\u2019s sprawling semiautobiographical novel \u201cIn Search of Lost Time,\u201d is at No. 5 in its seventh week on the graphic novel hardcover list. Heuet has been adapting the book since 1988, when the first installment was published in France \u2014 to violent dismay. Le Figaro called the project \u201cblasphemous\u201d and \u201ccatastrophic,\u201d with the critic Herv\u00e9 de Saint-Hilaire taking special exception to the depiction of the young Marcel (\u201ca formless little boy with idiotic eyes\u2019\u2019). Heuet defended himself, telling The New York Times: \u201cProust has been kept in a ghetto of snobs as a sort of precious gold and diamond object. For me, any effort to democratize Proust is valid.\u201d And, as it happens, lucrative. Despite the negative reviews, the first printing of 12,000 copies sold out in three weeks. Of course, comics play a surprisingly large and vital role in French publishing. According to Publishers Weekly, graphic novel sales in France have been put at about $458 million, and they make up about 12.5 percent of all books published, compared with about 3 percent in America. And critics should have no cause for concern; Heuet and Arthur Goldhammer, the book\u2019s translator, envision it as a tantalizing introduction to \u201cIn Search of Lost Time\u201d \u2014 not a substitute for the real thing. \u201cSt\u00e9phane Heuet and I have tried to preserve the \u2018flavor\u2019 of Proust . . . his \u2018fragrance\u2019 \u2014 as un menu de d\u00e9gustation, or tasting menu, tries to give a full sampling of the dishes in the repertoire of a great chef,\u201d Goldhammer writes in the preface. \u201cThose who find the taste to their liking will want to return often to savor fuller portions.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The French artist St\u00e9phane Heuet\u2019s illustrated interpretation of \u201cSwann\u2019s Way,\u201d the first volume of Proust\u2019s sprawling semiautobiographical novel \u201cIn Search of Lost Time,\u201d is at No. 5 in its seventh week on the graphic novel hardcover list."} -{"question": "How long did it take to sell the first 12,000 copies?", "paragraph": "Proust For The People: Almost 100 years after his death, Marcel Proust has finally cracked the best-seller list. Sort of. The French artist St\u00e9phane Heuet\u2019s illustrated interpretation of \u201cSwann\u2019s Way,\u201d the first volume of Proust\u2019s sprawling semiautobiographical novel \u201cIn Search of Lost Time,\u201d is at No. 5 in its seventh week on the graphic novel hardcover list. Heuet has been adapting the book since 1988, when the first installment was published in France \u2014 to violent dismay. Le Figaro called the project \u201cblasphemous\u201d and \u201ccatastrophic,\u201d with the critic Herv\u00e9 de Saint-Hilaire taking special exception to the depiction of the young Marcel (\u201ca formless little boy with idiotic eyes\u2019\u2019). Heuet defended himself, telling The New York Times: \u201cProust has been kept in a ghetto of snobs as a sort of precious gold and diamond object. For me, any effort to democratize Proust is valid.\u201d And, as it happens, lucrative. Despite the negative reviews, the first printing of 12,000 copies sold out in three weeks. Of course, comics play a surprisingly large and vital role in French publishing. According to Publishers Weekly, graphic novel sales in France have been put at about $458 million, and they make up about 12.5 percent of all books published, compared with about 3\u202fpercent in America. And critics should have no cause for concern; Heuet and Arthur Goldhammer, the book\u2019s translator, envision it as a tantalizing introduction to \u201cIn Search of Lost Time\u201d \u2014 not a substitute for the real thing. \u201cSt\u00e9phane Heuet and I have tried to preserve the \u2018flavor\u2019 of Proust .\u2008.\u2008. his \u2018fragrance\u2019 \u2014 as un menu de d\u00e9gustation, or tasting menu, tries to give a full sampling of the dishes in the repertoire of a great chef,\u201d Goldhammer writes in the preface. \u201cThose who find the taste to their liking will want to return often to savor fuller portions.\u201d", "answer": "three weeks", "sentence": "Despite the negative reviews, the first printing of 12,000 copies sold out in three weeks .", "paragraph_sentence": "Proust For The People: Almost 100 years after his death, Marcel Proust has finally cracked the best-seller list. Sort of. The French artist St\u00e9phane Heuet\u2019s illustrated interpretation of \u201cSwann\u2019s Way,\u201d the first volume of Proust\u2019s sprawling semiautobiographical novel \u201cIn Search of Lost Time,\u201d is at No. 5 in its seventh week on the graphic novel hardcover list. Heuet has been adapting the book since 1988, when the first installment was published in France \u2014 to violent dismay. Le Figaro called the project \u201cblasphemous\u201d and \u201ccatastrophic,\u201d with the critic Herv\u00e9 de Saint-Hilaire taking special exception to the depiction of the young Marcel (\u201ca formless little boy with idiotic eyes\u2019\u2019). Heuet defended himself, telling The New York Times: \u201cProust has been kept in a ghetto of snobs as a sort of precious gold and diamond object. For me, any effort to democratize Proust is valid.\u201d And, as it happens, lucrative. Despite the negative reviews, the first printing of 12,000 copies sold out in three weeks . Of course, comics play a surprisingly large and vital role in French publishing. According to Publishers Weekly, graphic novel sales in France have been put at about $458 million, and they make up about 12.5 percent of all books published, compared with about 3 percent in America. And critics should have no cause for concern; Heuet and Arthur Goldhammer, the book\u2019s translator, envision it as a tantalizing introduction to \u201cIn Search of Lost Time\u201d \u2014 not a substitute for the real thing. \u201cSt\u00e9phane Heuet and I have tried to preserve the \u2018flavor\u2019 of Proust . . . his \u2018fragrance\u2019 \u2014 as un menu de d\u00e9gustation, or tasting menu, tries to give a full sampling of the dishes in the repertoire of a great chef,\u201d Goldhammer writes in the preface. \u201cThose who find the taste to their liking will want to return often to savor fuller portions.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Proust For The People: Almost 100 years after his death, Marcel Proust has finally cracked the best-seller list. Sort of. The French artist St\u00e9phane Heuet\u2019s illustrated interpretation of \u201cSwann\u2019s Way,\u201d the first volume of Proust\u2019s sprawling semiautobiographical novel \u201cIn Search of Lost Time,\u201d is at No. 5 in its seventh week on the graphic novel hardcover list. Heuet has been adapting the book since 1988, when the first installment was published in France \u2014 to violent dismay. Le Figaro called the project \u201cblasphemous\u201d and \u201ccatastrophic,\u201d with the critic Herv\u00e9 de Saint-Hilaire taking special exception to the depiction of the young Marcel (\u201ca formless little boy with idiotic eyes\u2019\u2019). Heuet defended himself, telling The New York Times: \u201cProust has been kept in a ghetto of snobs as a sort of precious gold and diamond object. For me, any effort to democratize Proust is valid.\u201d And, as it happens, lucrative. Despite the negative reviews, the first printing of 12,000 copies sold out in three weeks . Of course, comics play a surprisingly large and vital role in French publishing. According to Publishers Weekly, graphic novel sales in France have been put at about $458 million, and they make up about 12.5 percent of all books published, compared with about 3 percent in America. And critics should have no cause for concern; Heuet and Arthur Goldhammer, the book\u2019s translator, envision it as a tantalizing introduction to \u201cIn Search of Lost Time\u201d \u2014 not a substitute for the real thing. \u201cSt\u00e9phane Heuet and I have tried to preserve the \u2018flavor\u2019 of Proust . . . his \u2018fragrance\u2019 \u2014 as un menu de d\u00e9gustation, or tasting menu, tries to give a full sampling of the dishes in the repertoire of a great chef,\u201d Goldhammer writes in the preface. \u201cThose who find the taste to their liking will want to return often to savor fuller portions.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Despite the negative reviews, the first printing of 12,000 copies sold out in three weeks ."} -{"question": "Who wrote In Search of Lost Time?", "paragraph": "Proust For The People: Almost 100 years after his death, Marcel Proust has finally cracked the best-seller list. Sort of. The French artist St\u00e9phane Heuet\u2019s illustrated interpretation of \u201cSwann\u2019s Way,\u201d the first volume of Proust\u2019s sprawling semiautobiographical novel \u201cIn Search of Lost Time,\u201d is at No. 5 in its seventh week on the graphic novel hardcover list. Heuet has been adapting the book since 1988, when the first installment was published in France \u2014 to violent dismay. Le Figaro called the project \u201cblasphemous\u201d and \u201ccatastrophic,\u201d with the critic Herv\u00e9 de Saint-Hilaire taking special exception to the depiction of the young Marcel (\u201ca formless little boy with idiotic eyes\u2019\u2019). Heuet defended himself, telling The New York Times: \u201cProust has been kept in a ghetto of snobs as a sort of precious gold and diamond object. For me, any effort to democratize Proust is valid.\u201d And, as it happens, lucrative. Despite the negative reviews, the first printing of 12,000 copies sold out in three weeks. Of course, comics play a surprisingly large and vital role in French publishing. According to Publishers Weekly, graphic novel sales in France have been put at about $458 million, and they make up about 12.5 percent of all books published, compared with about 3\u202fpercent in America. And critics should have no cause for concern; Heuet and Arthur Goldhammer, the book\u2019s translator, envision it as a tantalizing introduction to \u201cIn Search of Lost Time\u201d \u2014 not a substitute for the real thing. \u201cSt\u00e9phane Heuet and I have tried to preserve the \u2018flavor\u2019 of Proust .\u2008.\u2008. his \u2018fragrance\u2019 \u2014 as un menu de d\u00e9gustation, or tasting menu, tries to give a full sampling of the dishes in the repertoire of a great chef,\u201d Goldhammer writes in the preface. \u201cThose who find the taste to their liking will want to return often to savor fuller portions.\u201d", "answer": "Marcel Proust", "sentence": "Proust For The People: Almost 100 years after his death, Marcel Proust has finally cracked the best-seller list.", "paragraph_sentence": " Proust For The People: Almost 100 years after his death, Marcel Proust has finally cracked the best-seller list. Sort of. The French artist St\u00e9phane Heuet\u2019s illustrated interpretation of \u201cSwann\u2019s Way,\u201d the first volume of Proust\u2019s sprawling semiautobiographical novel \u201cIn Search of Lost Time,\u201d is at No. 5 in its seventh week on the graphic novel hardcover list. Heuet has been adapting the book since 1988, when the first installment was published in France \u2014 to violent dismay. Le Figaro called the project \u201cblasphemous\u201d and \u201ccatastrophic,\u201d with the critic Herv\u00e9 de Saint-Hilaire taking special exception to the depiction of the young Marcel (\u201ca formless little boy with idiotic eyes\u2019\u2019). Heuet defended himself, telling The New York Times: \u201cProust has been kept in a ghetto of snobs as a sort of precious gold and diamond object. For me, any effort to democratize Proust is valid.\u201d And, as it happens, lucrative. Despite the negative reviews, the first printing of 12,000 copies sold out in three weeks. Of course, comics play a surprisingly large and vital role in French publishing. According to Publishers Weekly, graphic novel sales in France have been put at about $458 million, and they make up about 12.5 percent of all books published, compared with about 3 percent in America. And critics should have no cause for concern; Heuet and Arthur Goldhammer, the book\u2019s translator, envision it as a tantalizing introduction to \u201cIn Search of Lost Time\u201d \u2014 not a substitute for the real thing. \u201cSt\u00e9phane Heuet and I have tried to preserve the \u2018flavor\u2019 of Proust . . . his \u2018fragrance\u2019 \u2014 as un menu de d\u00e9gustation, or tasting menu, tries to give a full sampling of the dishes in the repertoire of a great chef,\u201d Goldhammer writes in the preface. \u201cThose who find the taste to their liking will want to return often to savor fuller portions.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Proust For The People: Almost 100 years after his death, Marcel Proust has finally cracked the best-seller list. Sort of. The French artist St\u00e9phane Heuet\u2019s illustrated interpretation of \u201cSwann\u2019s Way,\u201d the first volume of Proust\u2019s sprawling semiautobiographical novel \u201cIn Search of Lost Time,\u201d is at No. 5 in its seventh week on the graphic novel hardcover list. Heuet has been adapting the book since 1988, when the first installment was published in France \u2014 to violent dismay. Le Figaro called the project \u201cblasphemous\u201d and \u201ccatastrophic,\u201d with the critic Herv\u00e9 de Saint-Hilaire taking special exception to the depiction of the young Marcel (\u201ca formless little boy with idiotic eyes\u2019\u2019). Heuet defended himself, telling The New York Times: \u201cProust has been kept in a ghetto of snobs as a sort of precious gold and diamond object. For me, any effort to democratize Proust is valid.\u201d And, as it happens, lucrative. Despite the negative reviews, the first printing of 12,000 copies sold out in three weeks. Of course, comics play a surprisingly large and vital role in French publishing. According to Publishers Weekly, graphic novel sales in France have been put at about $458 million, and they make up about 12.5 percent of all books published, compared with about 3 percent in America. And critics should have no cause for concern; Heuet and Arthur Goldhammer, the book\u2019s translator, envision it as a tantalizing introduction to \u201cIn Search of Lost Time\u201d \u2014 not a substitute for the real thing. \u201cSt\u00e9phane Heuet and I have tried to preserve the \u2018flavor\u2019 of Proust . . . his \u2018fragrance\u2019 \u2014 as un menu de d\u00e9gustation, or tasting menu, tries to give a full sampling of the dishes in the repertoire of a great chef,\u201d Goldhammer writes in the preface. \u201cThose who find the taste to their liking will want to return often to savor fuller portions.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Proust For The People: Almost 100 years after his death, Marcel Proust has finally cracked the best-seller list."} -{"question": "Who translated the book?", "paragraph": "Proust For The People: Almost 100 years after his death, Marcel Proust has finally cracked the best-seller list. Sort of. The French artist St\u00e9phane Heuet\u2019s illustrated interpretation of \u201cSwann\u2019s Way,\u201d the first volume of Proust\u2019s sprawling semiautobiographical novel \u201cIn Search of Lost Time,\u201d is at No. 5 in its seventh week on the graphic novel hardcover list. Heuet has been adapting the book since 1988, when the first installment was published in France \u2014 to violent dismay. Le Figaro called the project \u201cblasphemous\u201d and \u201ccatastrophic,\u201d with the critic Herv\u00e9 de Saint-Hilaire taking special exception to the depiction of the young Marcel (\u201ca formless little boy with idiotic eyes\u2019\u2019). Heuet defended himself, telling The New York Times: \u201cProust has been kept in a ghetto of snobs as a sort of precious gold and diamond object. For me, any effort to democratize Proust is valid.\u201d And, as it happens, lucrative. Despite the negative reviews, the first printing of 12,000 copies sold out in three weeks. Of course, comics play a surprisingly large and vital role in French publishing. According to Publishers Weekly, graphic novel sales in France have been put at about $458 million, and they make up about 12.5 percent of all books published, compared with about 3\u202fpercent in America. And critics should have no cause for concern; Heuet and Arthur Goldhammer, the book\u2019s translator, envision it as a tantalizing introduction to \u201cIn Search of Lost Time\u201d \u2014 not a substitute for the real thing. \u201cSt\u00e9phane Heuet and I have tried to preserve the \u2018flavor\u2019 of Proust .\u2008.\u2008. his \u2018fragrance\u2019 \u2014 as un menu de d\u00e9gustation, or tasting menu, tries to give a full sampling of the dishes in the repertoire of a great chef,\u201d Goldhammer writes in the preface. \u201cThose who find the taste to their liking will want to return often to savor fuller portions.\u201d", "answer": "Arthur Goldhammer", "sentence": "And critics should have no cause for concern; Heuet and Arthur Goldhammer , the book\u2019s translator, envision it as a tantalizing introduction to \u201cIn Search of Lost Time\u201d \u2014 not a substitute for the real thing.", "paragraph_sentence": "Proust For The People: Almost 100 years after his death, Marcel Proust has finally cracked the best-seller list. Sort of. The French artist St\u00e9phane Heuet\u2019s illustrated interpretation of \u201cSwann\u2019s Way,\u201d the first volume of Proust\u2019s sprawling semiautobiographical novel \u201cIn Search of Lost Time,\u201d is at No. 5 in its seventh week on the graphic novel hardcover list. Heuet has been adapting the book since 1988, when the first installment was published in France \u2014 to violent dismay. Le Figaro called the project \u201cblasphemous\u201d and \u201ccatastrophic,\u201d with the critic Herv\u00e9 de Saint-Hilaire taking special exception to the depiction of the young Marcel (\u201ca formless little boy with idiotic eyes\u2019\u2019). Heuet defended himself, telling The New York Times: \u201cProust has been kept in a ghetto of snobs as a sort of precious gold and diamond object. For me, any effort to democratize Proust is valid.\u201d And, as it happens, lucrative. Despite the negative reviews, the first printing of 12,000 copies sold out in three weeks. Of course, comics play a surprisingly large and vital role in French publishing. According to Publishers Weekly, graphic novel sales in France have been put at about $458 million, and they make up about 12.5 percent of all books published, compared with about 3 percent in America. And critics should have no cause for concern; Heuet and Arthur Goldhammer , the book\u2019s translator, envision it as a tantalizing introduction to \u201cIn Search of Lost Time\u201d \u2014 not a substitute for the real thing. \u201cSt\u00e9phane Heuet and I have tried to preserve the \u2018flavor\u2019 of Proust . . . his \u2018fragrance\u2019 \u2014 as un menu de d\u00e9gustation, or tasting menu, tries to give a full sampling of the dishes in the repertoire of a great chef,\u201d Goldhammer writes in the preface. \u201cThose who find the taste to their liking will want to return often to savor fuller portions.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Proust For The People: Almost 100 years after his death, Marcel Proust has finally cracked the best-seller list. Sort of. The French artist St\u00e9phane Heuet\u2019s illustrated interpretation of \u201cSwann\u2019s Way,\u201d the first volume of Proust\u2019s sprawling semiautobiographical novel \u201cIn Search of Lost Time,\u201d is at No. 5 in its seventh week on the graphic novel hardcover list. Heuet has been adapting the book since 1988, when the first installment was published in France \u2014 to violent dismay. Le Figaro called the project \u201cblasphemous\u201d and \u201ccatastrophic,\u201d with the critic Herv\u00e9 de Saint-Hilaire taking special exception to the depiction of the young Marcel (\u201ca formless little boy with idiotic eyes\u2019\u2019). Heuet defended himself, telling The New York Times: \u201cProust has been kept in a ghetto of snobs as a sort of precious gold and diamond object. For me, any effort to democratize Proust is valid.\u201d And, as it happens, lucrative. Despite the negative reviews, the first printing of 12,000 copies sold out in three weeks. Of course, comics play a surprisingly large and vital role in French publishing. According to Publishers Weekly, graphic novel sales in France have been put at about $458 million, and they make up about 12.5 percent of all books published, compared with about 3 percent in America. And critics should have no cause for concern; Heuet and Arthur Goldhammer , the book\u2019s translator, envision it as a tantalizing introduction to \u201cIn Search of Lost Time\u201d \u2014 not a substitute for the real thing. \u201cSt\u00e9phane Heuet and I have tried to preserve the \u2018flavor\u2019 of Proust . . . his \u2018fragrance\u2019 \u2014 as un menu de d\u00e9gustation, or tasting menu, tries to give a full sampling of the dishes in the repertoire of a great chef,\u201d Goldhammer writes in the preface. \u201cThose who find the taste to their liking will want to return often to savor fuller portions.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "And critics should have no cause for concern; Heuet and Arthur Goldhammer , the book\u2019s translator, envision it as a tantalizing introduction to \u201cIn Search of Lost Time\u201d \u2014 not a substitute for the real thing."} -{"question": "In what year did Heuet begin adapting the book?", "paragraph": "Proust For The People: Almost 100 years after his death, Marcel Proust has finally cracked the best-seller list. Sort of. The French artist St\u00e9phane Heuet\u2019s illustrated interpretation of \u201cSwann\u2019s Way,\u201d the first volume of Proust\u2019s sprawling semiautobiographical novel \u201cIn Search of Lost Time,\u201d is at No. 5 in its seventh week on the graphic novel hardcover list. Heuet has been adapting the book since 1988, when the first installment was published in France \u2014 to violent dismay. Le Figaro called the project \u201cblasphemous\u201d and \u201ccatastrophic,\u201d with the critic Herv\u00e9 de Saint-Hilaire taking special exception to the depiction of the young Marcel (\u201ca formless little boy with idiotic eyes\u2019\u2019). Heuet defended himself, telling The New York Times: \u201cProust has been kept in a ghetto of snobs as a sort of precious gold and diamond object. For me, any effort to democratize Proust is valid.\u201d And, as it happens, lucrative. Despite the negative reviews, the first printing of 12,000 copies sold out in three weeks. Of course, comics play a surprisingly large and vital role in French publishing. According to Publishers Weekly, graphic novel sales in France have been put at about $458 million, and they make up about 12.5 percent of all books published, compared with about 3\u202fpercent in America. And critics should have no cause for concern; Heuet and Arthur Goldhammer, the book\u2019s translator, envision it as a tantalizing introduction to \u201cIn Search of Lost Time\u201d \u2014 not a substitute for the real thing. \u201cSt\u00e9phane Heuet and I have tried to preserve the \u2018flavor\u2019 of Proust .\u2008.\u2008. his \u2018fragrance\u2019 \u2014 as un menu de d\u00e9gustation, or tasting menu, tries to give a full sampling of the dishes in the repertoire of a great chef,\u201d Goldhammer writes in the preface. \u201cThose who find the taste to their liking will want to return often to savor fuller portions.\u201d", "answer": "1988", "sentence": "Heuet has been adapting the book since 1988 , when the first installment was published in France \u2014 to violent dismay.", "paragraph_sentence": "Proust For The People: Almost 100 years after his death, Marcel Proust has finally cracked the best-seller list. Sort of. The French artist St\u00e9phane Heuet\u2019s illustrated interpretation of \u201cSwann\u2019s Way,\u201d the first volume of Proust\u2019s sprawling semiautobiographical novel \u201cIn Search of Lost Time,\u201d is at No. 5 in its seventh week on the graphic novel hardcover list. Heuet has been adapting the book since 1988 , when the first installment was published in France \u2014 to violent dismay. Le Figaro called the project \u201cblasphemous\u201d and \u201ccatastrophic,\u201d with the critic Herv\u00e9 de Saint-Hilaire taking special exception to the depiction of the young Marcel (\u201ca formless little boy with idiotic eyes\u2019\u2019). Heuet defended himself, telling The New York Times: \u201cProust has been kept in a ghetto of snobs as a sort of precious gold and diamond object. For me, any effort to democratize Proust is valid.\u201d And, as it happens, lucrative. Despite the negative reviews, the first printing of 12,000 copies sold out in three weeks. Of course, comics play a surprisingly large and vital role in French publishing. According to Publishers Weekly, graphic novel sales in France have been put at about $458 million, and they make up about 12.5 percent of all books published, compared with about 3 percent in America. And critics should have no cause for concern; Heuet and Arthur Goldhammer, the book\u2019s translator, envision it as a tantalizing introduction to \u201cIn Search of Lost Time\u201d \u2014 not a substitute for the real thing. \u201cSt\u00e9phane Heuet and I have tried to preserve the \u2018flavor\u2019 of Proust . . . his \u2018fragrance\u2019 \u2014 as un menu de d\u00e9gustation, or tasting menu, tries to give a full sampling of the dishes in the repertoire of a great chef,\u201d Goldhammer writes in the preface. \u201cThose who find the taste to their liking will want to return often to savor fuller portions.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Proust For The People: Almost 100 years after his death, Marcel Proust has finally cracked the best-seller list. Sort of. The French artist St\u00e9phane Heuet\u2019s illustrated interpretation of \u201cSwann\u2019s Way,\u201d the first volume of Proust\u2019s sprawling semiautobiographical novel \u201cIn Search of Lost Time,\u201d is at No. 5 in its seventh week on the graphic novel hardcover list. Heuet has been adapting the book since 1988 , when the first installment was published in France \u2014 to violent dismay. Le Figaro called the project \u201cblasphemous\u201d and \u201ccatastrophic,\u201d with the critic Herv\u00e9 de Saint-Hilaire taking special exception to the depiction of the young Marcel (\u201ca formless little boy with idiotic eyes\u2019\u2019). Heuet defended himself, telling The New York Times: \u201cProust has been kept in a ghetto of snobs as a sort of precious gold and diamond object. For me, any effort to democratize Proust is valid.\u201d And, as it happens, lucrative. Despite the negative reviews, the first printing of 12,000 copies sold out in three weeks. Of course, comics play a surprisingly large and vital role in French publishing. According to Publishers Weekly, graphic novel sales in France have been put at about $458 million, and they make up about 12.5 percent of all books published, compared with about 3 percent in America. And critics should have no cause for concern; Heuet and Arthur Goldhammer, the book\u2019s translator, envision it as a tantalizing introduction to \u201cIn Search of Lost Time\u201d \u2014 not a substitute for the real thing. \u201cSt\u00e9phane Heuet and I have tried to preserve the \u2018flavor\u2019 of Proust . . . his \u2018fragrance\u2019 \u2014 as un menu de d\u00e9gustation, or tasting menu, tries to give a full sampling of the dishes in the repertoire of a great chef,\u201d Goldhammer writes in the preface. \u201cThose who find the taste to their liking will want to return often to savor fuller portions.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Heuet has been adapting the book since 1988 , when the first installment was published in France \u2014 to violent dismay."} -{"question": "What position was Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list?", "paragraph": "Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18, is another work of semiautobiographical fiction: \u201cA Manual for Cleaning Women,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler.", "answer": "18", "sentence": "18 , is another work of semiautobiographical fiction: \u201cA Manual for Cleaning Women,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler.", "paragraph_sentence": "Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18 , is another work of semiautobiographical fiction: \u201cA Manual for Cleaning Women,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler. ", "paragraph_answer": "Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18 , is another work of semiautobiographical fiction: \u201cA Manual for Cleaning Women,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler.", "sentence_answer": " 18 , is another work of semiautobiographical fiction: \u201cA Manual for Cleaning Women,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler."} -{"question": "When did Lucia Berlin cease to be alive?", "paragraph": "Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18, is another work of semiautobiographical fiction: \u201cA Manual for Cleaning Women,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler.", "answer": "2004", "sentence": "Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18, is another work of semiautobiographical fiction: \u201cA Manual for Cleaning Women,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler.", "paragraph_sentence": " Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18, is another work of semiautobiographical fiction: \u201cA Manual for Cleaning Women,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler. ", "paragraph_answer": "Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18, is another work of semiautobiographical fiction: \u201cA Manual for Cleaning Women,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler.", "sentence_answer": "Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18, is another work of semiautobiographical fiction: \u201cA Manual for Cleaning Women,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler."} -{"question": "What was the nationality of Lucia Berlin?", "paragraph": "Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18, is another work of semiautobiographical fiction: \u201cA Manual for Cleaning Women,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler.", "answer": "American", "sentence": "Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18, is another work of semiautobiographical fiction: \u201cA Manual for Cleaning Women,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler.", "paragraph_sentence": " Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18, is another work of semiautobiographical fiction: \u201cA Manual for Cleaning Women,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler. ", "paragraph_answer": "Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18, is another work of semiautobiographical fiction: \u201cA Manual for Cleaning Women,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler.", "sentence_answer": "Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18, is another work of semiautobiographical fiction: \u201cA Manual for Cleaning Women,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler."} -{"question": "What was the title of Lucia Berlin's work that was published after her death?", "paragraph": "Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18, is another work of semiautobiographical fiction: \u201cA Manual for Cleaning Women,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler.", "answer": "A Manual for Cleaning Women", "sentence": "Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18, is another work of semiautobiographical fiction: \u201c A Manual for Cleaning Women ,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler.", "paragraph_sentence": " Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18, is another work of semiautobiographical fiction: \u201c A Manual for Cleaning Women ,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler. ", "paragraph_answer": "Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18, is another work of semiautobiographical fiction: \u201c A Manual for Cleaning Women ,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler.", "sentence_answer": "Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18, is another work of semiautobiographical fiction: \u201c A Manual for Cleaning Women ,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler."} -{"question": "What genre was Lost And Found: New?", "paragraph": "Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18, is another work of semiautobiographical fiction: \u201cA Manual for Cleaning Women,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler.", "answer": "semiautobiographical fiction", "sentence": "Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18, is another work of semiautobiographical fiction : \u201cA Manual for Cleaning Women,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler.", "paragraph_sentence": " Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18, is another work of semiautobiographical fiction : \u201cA Manual for Cleaning Women,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler. ", "paragraph_answer": "Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18, is another work of semiautobiographical fiction : \u201cA Manual for Cleaning Women,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler.", "sentence_answer": "Lost And Found: New on the extended hardcover fiction list this week, at No. 18, is another work of semiautobiographical fiction : \u201cA Manual for Cleaning Women,\u201d a posthumously published story collection by Lucia Berlin, a little-known American writer who died in 2004 and who has been championed by Lydia Davis and August Kleinzahler."} -{"question": "What country is Turkey's second largest market for export?", "paragraph": "Russia is one of Turkey\u2019s largest markets for exports, after Germany. Eskisehir (pronounced Es-ki-SHARE) itself has a large sugar refinery, using sugar beets from nearby fields as its raw material; the city exports about $30 million worth of cookies, cakes, crackers and other foods to Russia, according to the local chamber of commerce. Turkey had been stepping up food exports to Russia in recent months as political frictions between Russia and the West led to a reduction in Russian food imports from the European Union.", "answer": "Germany", "sentence": "Russia is one of Turkey\u2019s largest markets for exports, after Germany .", "paragraph_sentence": " Russia is one of Turkey\u2019s largest markets for exports, after Germany . Eskisehir (pronounced Es-ki-SHARE) itself has a large sugar refinery, using sugar beets from nearby fields as its raw material; the city exports about $30 million worth of cookies, cakes, crackers and other foods to Russia, according to the local chamber of commerce. Turkey had been stepping up food exports to Russia in recent months as political frictions between Russia and the West led to a reduction in Russian food imports from the European Union.", "paragraph_answer": "Russia is one of Turkey\u2019s largest markets for exports, after Germany . Eskisehir (pronounced Es-ki-SHARE) itself has a large sugar refinery, using sugar beets from nearby fields as its raw material; the city exports about $30 million worth of cookies, cakes, crackers and other foods to Russia, according to the local chamber of commerce. Turkey had been stepping up food exports to Russia in recent months as political frictions between Russia and the West led to a reduction in Russian food imports from the European Union.", "sentence_answer": "Russia is one of Turkey\u2019s largest markets for exports, after Germany ."} -{"question": "Eskisehir has a large refinery for what?", "paragraph": "Russia is one of Turkey\u2019s largest markets for exports, after Germany. Eskisehir (pronounced Es-ki-SHARE) itself has a large sugar refinery, using sugar beets from nearby fields as its raw material; the city exports about $30 million worth of cookies, cakes, crackers and other foods to Russia, according to the local chamber of commerce. Turkey had been stepping up food exports to Russia in recent months as political frictions between Russia and the West led to a reduction in Russian food imports from the European Union.", "answer": "sugar beets", "sentence": "Eskisehir (pronounced Es-ki-SHARE) itself has a large sugar refinery, using sugar beets from nearby fields as its raw material; the city exports about $30 million worth of cookies, cakes, crackers and other foods to Russia, according to the local chamber of commerce.", "paragraph_sentence": "Russia is one of Turkey\u2019s largest markets for exports, after Germany. Eskisehir (pronounced Es-ki-SHARE) itself has a large sugar refinery, using sugar beets from nearby fields as its raw material; the city exports about $30 million worth of cookies, cakes, crackers and other foods to Russia, according to the local chamber of commerce. Turkey had been stepping up food exports to Russia in recent months as political frictions between Russia and the West led to a reduction in Russian food imports from the European Union.", "paragraph_answer": "Russia is one of Turkey\u2019s largest markets for exports, after Germany. Eskisehir (pronounced Es-ki-SHARE) itself has a large sugar refinery, using sugar beets from nearby fields as its raw material; the city exports about $30 million worth of cookies, cakes, crackers and other foods to Russia, according to the local chamber of commerce. Turkey had been stepping up food exports to Russia in recent months as political frictions between Russia and the West led to a reduction in Russian food imports from the European Union.", "sentence_answer": "Eskisehir (pronounced Es-ki-SHARE) itself has a large sugar refinery, using sugar beets from nearby fields as its raw material; the city exports about $30 million worth of cookies, cakes, crackers and other foods to Russia, according to the local chamber of commerce."} -{"question": "About how much the city of Eskisehir has exported to Russia?", "paragraph": "Russia is one of Turkey\u2019s largest markets for exports, after Germany. Eskisehir (pronounced Es-ki-SHARE) itself has a large sugar refinery, using sugar beets from nearby fields as its raw material; the city exports about $30 million worth of cookies, cakes, crackers and other foods to Russia, according to the local chamber of commerce. Turkey had been stepping up food exports to Russia in recent months as political frictions between Russia and the West led to a reduction in Russian food imports from the European Union.", "answer": "$30 million", "sentence": "Eskisehir (pronounced Es-ki-SHARE) itself has a large sugar refinery, using sugar beets from nearby fields as its raw material; the city exports about $30 million worth of cookies, cakes, crackers and other foods to Russia, according to the local chamber of commerce.", "paragraph_sentence": "Russia is one of Turkey\u2019s largest markets for exports, after Germany. Eskisehir (pronounced Es-ki-SHARE) itself has a large sugar refinery, using sugar beets from nearby fields as its raw material; the city exports about $30 million worth of cookies, cakes, crackers and other foods to Russia, according to the local chamber of commerce. Turkey had been stepping up food exports to Russia in recent months as political frictions between Russia and the West led to a reduction in Russian food imports from the European Union.", "paragraph_answer": "Russia is one of Turkey\u2019s largest markets for exports, after Germany. Eskisehir (pronounced Es-ki-SHARE) itself has a large sugar refinery, using sugar beets from nearby fields as its raw material; the city exports about $30 million worth of cookies, cakes, crackers and other foods to Russia, according to the local chamber of commerce. Turkey had been stepping up food exports to Russia in recent months as political frictions between Russia and the West led to a reduction in Russian food imports from the European Union.", "sentence_answer": "Eskisehir (pronounced Es-ki-SHARE) itself has a large sugar refinery, using sugar beets from nearby fields as its raw material; the city exports about $30 million worth of cookies, cakes, crackers and other foods to Russia, according to the local chamber of commerce."} -{"question": "Because of the conflict between Russia and the West, who reduced their food imports to Russia?", "paragraph": "Russia is one of Turkey\u2019s largest markets for exports, after Germany. Eskisehir (pronounced Es-ki-SHARE) itself has a large sugar refinery, using sugar beets from nearby fields as its raw material; the city exports about $30 million worth of cookies, cakes, crackers and other foods to Russia, according to the local chamber of commerce. Turkey had been stepping up food exports to Russia in recent months as political frictions between Russia and the West led to a reduction in Russian food imports from the European Union.", "answer": "European Union", "sentence": "Turkey had been stepping up food exports to Russia in recent months as political frictions between Russia and the West led to a reduction in Russian food imports from the European Union .", "paragraph_sentence": "Russia is one of Turkey\u2019s largest markets for exports, after Germany. Eskisehir (pronounced Es-ki-SHARE) itself has a large sugar refinery, using sugar beets from nearby fields as its raw material; the city exports about $30 million worth of cookies, cakes, crackers and other foods to Russia, according to the local chamber of commerce. Turkey had been stepping up food exports to Russia in recent months as political frictions between Russia and the West led to a reduction in Russian food imports from the European Union . ", "paragraph_answer": "Russia is one of Turkey\u2019s largest markets for exports, after Germany. Eskisehir (pronounced Es-ki-SHARE) itself has a large sugar refinery, using sugar beets from nearby fields as its raw material; the city exports about $30 million worth of cookies, cakes, crackers and other foods to Russia, according to the local chamber of commerce. Turkey had been stepping up food exports to Russia in recent months as political frictions between Russia and the West led to a reduction in Russian food imports from the European Union .", "sentence_answer": "Turkey had been stepping up food exports to Russia in recent months as political frictions between Russia and the West led to a reduction in Russian food imports from the European Union ."} -{"question": "The listed example of exports to Russia are cookies, crackers, and what?", "paragraph": "Russia is one of Turkey\u2019s largest markets for exports, after Germany. Eskisehir (pronounced Es-ki-SHARE) itself has a large sugar refinery, using sugar beets from nearby fields as its raw material; the city exports about $30 million worth of cookies, cakes, crackers and other foods to Russia, according to the local chamber of commerce. Turkey had been stepping up food exports to Russia in recent months as political frictions between Russia and the West led to a reduction in Russian food imports from the European Union.", "answer": "cakes", "sentence": "Eskisehir (pronounced Es-ki-SHARE) itself has a large sugar refinery, using sugar beets from nearby fields as its raw material; the city exports about $30 million worth of cookies, cakes , crackers and other foods to Russia, according to the local chamber of commerce.", "paragraph_sentence": "Russia is one of Turkey\u2019s largest markets for exports, after Germany. Eskisehir (pronounced Es-ki-SHARE) itself has a large sugar refinery, using sugar beets from nearby fields as its raw material; the city exports about $30 million worth of cookies, cakes , crackers and other foods to Russia, according to the local chamber of commerce. Turkey had been stepping up food exports to Russia in recent months as political frictions between Russia and the West led to a reduction in Russian food imports from the European Union.", "paragraph_answer": "Russia is one of Turkey\u2019s largest markets for exports, after Germany. Eskisehir (pronounced Es-ki-SHARE) itself has a large sugar refinery, using sugar beets from nearby fields as its raw material; the city exports about $30 million worth of cookies, cakes , crackers and other foods to Russia, according to the local chamber of commerce. Turkey had been stepping up food exports to Russia in recent months as political frictions between Russia and the West led to a reduction in Russian food imports from the European Union.", "sentence_answer": "Eskisehir (pronounced Es-ki-SHARE) itself has a large sugar refinery, using sugar beets from nearby fields as its raw material; the city exports about $30 million worth of cookies, cakes , crackers and other foods to Russia, according to the local chamber of commerce."} -{"question": "What was Russia the biggest source of Turkey of, before the past year?", "paragraph": "Russia had also been one of Turkey\u2019s biggest sources of tourists until the past year, when the combination of the fall of the ruble and Western sanctions on Russia for its support of Ukrainian insurgents began steeply eroding the number of Russians who could afford to travel. The decline in tourism was a worry for economists here even before the Russian jet was shot down. \u201cThe trade deficit is out of hand, exports cannot meet the import bill, so tourism revenues are a major item in our balance sheet,\u201d said Erinc Yeldan, the dean of the economics faculty at Bilkent University near Ankara. Still, Cengiz Kamil Firat, the deputy director general of general and bilateral economic affairs at Turkey\u2019s foreign ministry, said that the nation\u2019s economy was in better shape than it might seem.", "answer": "tourists", "sentence": "Russia had also been one of Turkey\u2019s biggest sources of tourists until the past year, when the combination of the fall of the ruble and Western sanctions on Russia for its support of Ukrainian insurgents began steeply eroding the number of Russians who could afford to travel.", "paragraph_sentence": " Russia had also been one of Turkey\u2019s biggest sources of tourists until the past year, when the combination of the fall of the ruble and Western sanctions on Russia for its support of Ukrainian insurgents began steeply eroding the number of Russians who could afford to travel. The decline in tourism was a worry for economists here even before the Russian jet was shot down. \u201cThe trade deficit is out of hand, exports cannot meet the import bill, so tourism revenues are a major item in our balance sheet,\u201d said Erinc Yeldan, the dean of the economics faculty at Bilkent University near Ankara. Still, Cengiz Kamil Firat, the deputy director general of general and bilateral economic affairs at Turkey\u2019s foreign ministry, said that the nation\u2019s economy was in better shape than it might seem.", "paragraph_answer": "Russia had also been one of Turkey\u2019s biggest sources of tourists until the past year, when the combination of the fall of the ruble and Western sanctions on Russia for its support of Ukrainian insurgents began steeply eroding the number of Russians who could afford to travel. The decline in tourism was a worry for economists here even before the Russian jet was shot down. \u201cThe trade deficit is out of hand, exports cannot meet the import bill, so tourism revenues are a major item in our balance sheet,\u201d said Erinc Yeldan, the dean of the economics faculty at Bilkent University near Ankara. Still, Cengiz Kamil Firat, the deputy director general of general and bilateral economic affairs at Turkey\u2019s foreign ministry, said that the nation\u2019s economy was in better shape than it might seem.", "sentence_answer": "Russia had also been one of Turkey\u2019s biggest sources of tourists until the past year, when the combination of the fall of the ruble and Western sanctions on Russia for its support of Ukrainian insurgents began steeply eroding the number of Russians who could afford to travel."} -{"question": "What was declining that got the economists worried?", "paragraph": "Russia had also been one of Turkey\u2019s biggest sources of tourists until the past year, when the combination of the fall of the ruble and Western sanctions on Russia for its support of Ukrainian insurgents began steeply eroding the number of Russians who could afford to travel. The decline in tourism was a worry for economists here even before the Russian jet was shot down. \u201cThe trade deficit is out of hand, exports cannot meet the import bill, so tourism revenues are a major item in our balance sheet,\u201d said Erinc Yeldan, the dean of the economics faculty at Bilkent University near Ankara. Still, Cengiz Kamil Firat, the deputy director general of general and bilateral economic affairs at Turkey\u2019s foreign ministry, said that the nation\u2019s economy was in better shape than it might seem.", "answer": "tourism", "sentence": "The decline in tourism was a worry for economists here even before the Russian jet was shot down.", "paragraph_sentence": "Russia had also been one of Turkey\u2019s biggest sources of tourists until the past year, when the combination of the fall of the ruble and Western sanctions on Russia for its support of Ukrainian insurgents began steeply eroding the number of Russians who could afford to travel. The decline in tourism was a worry for economists here even before the Russian jet was shot down. \u201cThe trade deficit is out of hand, exports cannot meet the import bill, so tourism revenues are a major item in our balance sheet,\u201d said Erinc Yeldan, the dean of the economics faculty at Bilkent University near Ankara. Still, Cengiz Kamil Firat, the deputy director general of general and bilateral economic affairs at Turkey\u2019s foreign ministry, said that the nation\u2019s economy was in better shape than it might seem.", "paragraph_answer": "Russia had also been one of Turkey\u2019s biggest sources of tourists until the past year, when the combination of the fall of the ruble and Western sanctions on Russia for its support of Ukrainian insurgents began steeply eroding the number of Russians who could afford to travel. The decline in tourism was a worry for economists here even before the Russian jet was shot down. \u201cThe trade deficit is out of hand, exports cannot meet the import bill, so tourism revenues are a major item in our balance sheet,\u201d said Erinc Yeldan, the dean of the economics faculty at Bilkent University near Ankara. Still, Cengiz Kamil Firat, the deputy director general of general and bilateral economic affairs at Turkey\u2019s foreign ministry, said that the nation\u2019s economy was in better shape than it might seem.", "sentence_answer": "The decline in tourism was a worry for economists here even before the Russian jet was shot down."} -{"question": "Other than the fall of ruble, what else was mentioned as a cause for Russians being unable to afford to travel?", "paragraph": "Russia had also been one of Turkey\u2019s biggest sources of tourists until the past year, when the combination of the fall of the ruble and Western sanctions on Russia for its support of Ukrainian insurgents began steeply eroding the number of Russians who could afford to travel. The decline in tourism was a worry for economists here even before the Russian jet was shot down. \u201cThe trade deficit is out of hand, exports cannot meet the import bill, so tourism revenues are a major item in our balance sheet,\u201d said Erinc Yeldan, the dean of the economics faculty at Bilkent University near Ankara. Still, Cengiz Kamil Firat, the deputy director general of general and bilateral economic affairs at Turkey\u2019s foreign ministry, said that the nation\u2019s economy was in better shape than it might seem.", "answer": "Western sanctions", "sentence": "Russia had also been one of Turkey\u2019s biggest sources of tourists until the past year, when the combination of the fall of the ruble and Western sanctions on Russia for its support of Ukrainian insurgents began steeply eroding the number of Russians who could afford to travel.", "paragraph_sentence": " Russia had also been one of Turkey\u2019s biggest sources of tourists until the past year, when the combination of the fall of the ruble and Western sanctions on Russia for its support of Ukrainian insurgents began steeply eroding the number of Russians who could afford to travel. The decline in tourism was a worry for economists here even before the Russian jet was shot down. \u201cThe trade deficit is out of hand, exports cannot meet the import bill, so tourism revenues are a major item in our balance sheet,\u201d said Erinc Yeldan, the dean of the economics faculty at Bilkent University near Ankara. Still, Cengiz Kamil Firat, the deputy director general of general and bilateral economic affairs at Turkey\u2019s foreign ministry, said that the nation\u2019s economy was in better shape than it might seem.", "paragraph_answer": "Russia had also been one of Turkey\u2019s biggest sources of tourists until the past year, when the combination of the fall of the ruble and Western sanctions on Russia for its support of Ukrainian insurgents began steeply eroding the number of Russians who could afford to travel. The decline in tourism was a worry for economists here even before the Russian jet was shot down. \u201cThe trade deficit is out of hand, exports cannot meet the import bill, so tourism revenues are a major item in our balance sheet,\u201d said Erinc Yeldan, the dean of the economics faculty at Bilkent University near Ankara. Still, Cengiz Kamil Firat, the deputy director general of general and bilateral economic affairs at Turkey\u2019s foreign ministry, said that the nation\u2019s economy was in better shape than it might seem.", "sentence_answer": "Russia had also been one of Turkey\u2019s biggest sources of tourists until the past year, when the combination of the fall of the ruble and Western sanctions on Russia for its support of Ukrainian insurgents began steeply eroding the number of Russians who could afford to travel."} -{"question": "At the Bilkent University near Ankara, who is the dean of economics faculty?", "paragraph": "Russia had also been one of Turkey\u2019s biggest sources of tourists until the past year, when the combination of the fall of the ruble and Western sanctions on Russia for its support of Ukrainian insurgents began steeply eroding the number of Russians who could afford to travel. The decline in tourism was a worry for economists here even before the Russian jet was shot down. \u201cThe trade deficit is out of hand, exports cannot meet the import bill, so tourism revenues are a major item in our balance sheet,\u201d said Erinc Yeldan, the dean of the economics faculty at Bilkent University near Ankara. Still, Cengiz Kamil Firat, the deputy director general of general and bilateral economic affairs at Turkey\u2019s foreign ministry, said that the nation\u2019s economy was in better shape than it might seem.", "answer": "Erinc Yeldan", "sentence": "\u201cThe trade deficit is out of hand, exports cannot meet the import bill, so tourism revenues are a major item in our balance sheet,\u201d said Erinc Yeldan , the dean of the economics faculty at Bilkent University near Ankara.", "paragraph_sentence": "Russia had also been one of Turkey\u2019s biggest sources of tourists until the past year, when the combination of the fall of the ruble and Western sanctions on Russia for its support of Ukrainian insurgents began steeply eroding the number of Russians who could afford to travel. The decline in tourism was a worry for economists here even before the Russian jet was shot down. \u201cThe trade deficit is out of hand, exports cannot meet the import bill, so tourism revenues are a major item in our balance sheet,\u201d said Erinc Yeldan , the dean of the economics faculty at Bilkent University near Ankara. Still, Cengiz Kamil Firat, the deputy director general of general and bilateral economic affairs at Turkey\u2019s foreign ministry, said that the nation\u2019s economy was in better shape than it might seem.", "paragraph_answer": "Russia had also been one of Turkey\u2019s biggest sources of tourists until the past year, when the combination of the fall of the ruble and Western sanctions on Russia for its support of Ukrainian insurgents began steeply eroding the number of Russians who could afford to travel. The decline in tourism was a worry for economists here even before the Russian jet was shot down. \u201cThe trade deficit is out of hand, exports cannot meet the import bill, so tourism revenues are a major item in our balance sheet,\u201d said Erinc Yeldan , the dean of the economics faculty at Bilkent University near Ankara. Still, Cengiz Kamil Firat, the deputy director general of general and bilateral economic affairs at Turkey\u2019s foreign ministry, said that the nation\u2019s economy was in better shape than it might seem.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe trade deficit is out of hand, exports cannot meet the import bill, so tourism revenues are a major item in our balance sheet,\u201d said Erinc Yeldan , the dean of the economics faculty at Bilkent University near Ankara."} -{"question": "Who is Turkey's Deputy Director General?", "paragraph": "Russia had also been one of Turkey\u2019s biggest sources of tourists until the past year, when the combination of the fall of the ruble and Western sanctions on Russia for its support of Ukrainian insurgents began steeply eroding the number of Russians who could afford to travel. The decline in tourism was a worry for economists here even before the Russian jet was shot down. \u201cThe trade deficit is out of hand, exports cannot meet the import bill, so tourism revenues are a major item in our balance sheet,\u201d said Erinc Yeldan, the dean of the economics faculty at Bilkent University near Ankara. Still, Cengiz Kamil Firat, the deputy director general of general and bilateral economic affairs at Turkey\u2019s foreign ministry, said that the nation\u2019s economy was in better shape than it might seem.", "answer": "Cengiz Kamil Firat", "sentence": "Still, Cengiz Kamil Firat , the deputy director general of general and bilateral economic affairs at Turkey\u2019s foreign ministry, said that the nation\u2019s economy was in better shape than it might seem.", "paragraph_sentence": "Russia had also been one of Turkey\u2019s biggest sources of tourists until the past year, when the combination of the fall of the ruble and Western sanctions on Russia for its support of Ukrainian insurgents began steeply eroding the number of Russians who could afford to travel. The decline in tourism was a worry for economists here even before the Russian jet was shot down. \u201cThe trade deficit is out of hand, exports cannot meet the import bill, so tourism revenues are a major item in our balance sheet,\u201d said Erinc Yeldan, the dean of the economics faculty at Bilkent University near Ankara. Still, Cengiz Kamil Firat , the deputy director general of general and bilateral economic affairs at Turkey\u2019s foreign ministry, said that the nation\u2019s economy was in better shape than it might seem. ", "paragraph_answer": "Russia had also been one of Turkey\u2019s biggest sources of tourists until the past year, when the combination of the fall of the ruble and Western sanctions on Russia for its support of Ukrainian insurgents began steeply eroding the number of Russians who could afford to travel. The decline in tourism was a worry for economists here even before the Russian jet was shot down. \u201cThe trade deficit is out of hand, exports cannot meet the import bill, so tourism revenues are a major item in our balance sheet,\u201d said Erinc Yeldan, the dean of the economics faculty at Bilkent University near Ankara. Still, Cengiz Kamil Firat , the deputy director general of general and bilateral economic affairs at Turkey\u2019s foreign ministry, said that the nation\u2019s economy was in better shape than it might seem.", "sentence_answer": "Still, Cengiz Kamil Firat , the deputy director general of general and bilateral economic affairs at Turkey\u2019s foreign ministry, said that the nation\u2019s economy was in better shape than it might seem."} -{"question": "According to Mr. Firat, who caused resentment in some places?", "paragraph": "Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive. Eskisehir\u2019s economic difficulties, and Turkey\u2019s, go beyond coping with migrants or an interruption in tourism. Many emerging markets are facing difficulties with the slowdown in global trade, Turkey among them. Turkey has long depended on exporting manufactured goods to Europe and the Middle East, two regions where demand is weak right now. That is partly because of geopolitics and partly because Chinese industries with overcapacity at home have been exporting at low prices to Turkey\u2019s longtime markets in the Middle East, Europe and Africa.", "answer": "Syrian refugees", "sentence": "Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive. Eskisehir\u2019s economic difficulties, and Turkey\u2019s, go beyond coping with migrants or an interruption in tourism. Many emerging markets are facing difficulties with the slowdown in global trade, Turkey among them. Turkey has long depended on exporting manufactured goods to Europe and the Middle East, two regions where demand is weak right now. That is partly because of geopolitics and partly because Chinese industries with overcapacity at home have been exporting at low prices to Turkey\u2019s longtime markets in the Middle East, Europe and Africa.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive. Eskisehir\u2019s economic difficulties, and Turkey\u2019s, go beyond coping with migrants or an interruption in tourism. Many emerging markets are facing difficulties with the slowdown in global trade, Turkey among them. Turkey has long depended on exporting manufactured goods to Europe and the Middle East, two regions where demand is weak right now. That is partly because of geopolitics and partly because Chinese industries with overcapacity at home have been exporting at low prices to Turkey\u2019s longtime markets in the Middle East, Europe and Africa.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive."} -{"question": "Except for Africa and Europe, where else is China exporting lower in prices than Turkey?", "paragraph": "Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive. Eskisehir\u2019s economic difficulties, and Turkey\u2019s, go beyond coping with migrants or an interruption in tourism. Many emerging markets are facing difficulties with the slowdown in global trade, Turkey among them. Turkey has long depended on exporting manufactured goods to Europe and the Middle East, two regions where demand is weak right now. That is partly because of geopolitics and partly because Chinese industries with overcapacity at home have been exporting at low prices to Turkey\u2019s longtime markets in the Middle East, Europe and Africa.", "answer": "Middle East", "sentence": "Turkey has long depended on exporting manufactured goods to Europe and the Middle East , two regions where demand is weak right now.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive. Eskisehir\u2019s economic difficulties, and Turkey\u2019s, go beyond coping with migrants or an interruption in tourism. Many emerging markets are facing difficulties with the slowdown in global trade, Turkey among them. Turkey has long depended on exporting manufactured goods to Europe and the Middle East , two regions where demand is weak right now. That is partly because of geopolitics and partly because Chinese industries with overcapacity at home have been exporting at low prices to Turkey\u2019s longtime markets in the Middle East, Europe and Africa.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive. Eskisehir\u2019s economic difficulties, and Turkey\u2019s, go beyond coping with migrants or an interruption in tourism. Many emerging markets are facing difficulties with the slowdown in global trade, Turkey among them. Turkey has long depended on exporting manufactured goods to Europe and the Middle East , two regions where demand is weak right now. That is partly because of geopolitics and partly because Chinese industries with overcapacity at home have been exporting at low prices to Turkey\u2019s longtime markets in the Middle East, Europe and Africa.", "sentence_answer": "Turkey has long depended on exporting manufactured goods to Europe and the Middle East , two regions where demand is weak right now."} -{"question": "The emerging markets are having difficulties because of slowdown in where?", "paragraph": "Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive. Eskisehir\u2019s economic difficulties, and Turkey\u2019s, go beyond coping with migrants or an interruption in tourism. Many emerging markets are facing difficulties with the slowdown in global trade, Turkey among them. Turkey has long depended on exporting manufactured goods to Europe and the Middle East, two regions where demand is weak right now. That is partly because of geopolitics and partly because Chinese industries with overcapacity at home have been exporting at low prices to Turkey\u2019s longtime markets in the Middle East, Europe and Africa.", "answer": "global trade", "sentence": "Many emerging markets are facing difficulties with the slowdown in global trade , Turkey among them.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive. Eskisehir\u2019s economic difficulties, and Turkey\u2019s, go beyond coping with migrants or an interruption in tourism. Many emerging markets are facing difficulties with the slowdown in global trade , Turkey among them. Turkey has long depended on exporting manufactured goods to Europe and the Middle East, two regions where demand is weak right now. That is partly because of geopolitics and partly because Chinese industries with overcapacity at home have been exporting at low prices to Turkey\u2019s longtime markets in the Middle East, Europe and Africa.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive. Eskisehir\u2019s economic difficulties, and Turkey\u2019s, go beyond coping with migrants or an interruption in tourism. Many emerging markets are facing difficulties with the slowdown in global trade , Turkey among them. Turkey has long depended on exporting manufactured goods to Europe and the Middle East, two regions where demand is weak right now. That is partly because of geopolitics and partly because Chinese industries with overcapacity at home have been exporting at low prices to Turkey\u2019s longtime markets in the Middle East, Europe and Africa.", "sentence_answer": "Many emerging markets are facing difficulties with the slowdown in global trade , Turkey among them."} -{"question": "What helps some business stay competitive that are available because of the refugees?", "paragraph": "Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive. Eskisehir\u2019s economic difficulties, and Turkey\u2019s, go beyond coping with migrants or an interruption in tourism. Many emerging markets are facing difficulties with the slowdown in global trade, Turkey among them. Turkey has long depended on exporting manufactured goods to Europe and the Middle East, two regions where demand is weak right now. That is partly because of geopolitics and partly because Chinese industries with overcapacity at home have been exporting at low prices to Turkey\u2019s longtime markets in the Middle East, Europe and Africa.", "answer": "cheap labor", "sentence": "Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive. Eskisehir\u2019s economic difficulties, and Turkey\u2019s, go beyond coping with migrants or an interruption in tourism. Many emerging markets are facing difficulties with the slowdown in global trade, Turkey among them. Turkey has long depended on exporting manufactured goods to Europe and the Middle East, two regions where demand is weak right now. That is partly because of geopolitics and partly because Chinese industries with overcapacity at home have been exporting at low prices to Turkey\u2019s longtime markets in the Middle East, Europe and Africa.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive. Eskisehir\u2019s economic difficulties, and Turkey\u2019s, go beyond coping with migrants or an interruption in tourism. Many emerging markets are facing difficulties with the slowdown in global trade, Turkey among them. Turkey has long depended on exporting manufactured goods to Europe and the Middle East, two regions where demand is weak right now. That is partly because of geopolitics and partly because Chinese industries with overcapacity at home have been exporting at low prices to Turkey\u2019s longtime markets in the Middle East, Europe and Africa.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive."} -{"question": "Demand is weak for manufactured goods partly because of China and partly because of what?", "paragraph": "Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive. Eskisehir\u2019s economic difficulties, and Turkey\u2019s, go beyond coping with migrants or an interruption in tourism. Many emerging markets are facing difficulties with the slowdown in global trade, Turkey among them. Turkey has long depended on exporting manufactured goods to Europe and the Middle East, two regions where demand is weak right now. That is partly because of geopolitics and partly because Chinese industries with overcapacity at home have been exporting at low prices to Turkey\u2019s longtime markets in the Middle East, Europe and Africa.", "answer": "geopolitics", "sentence": "That is partly because of geopolitics and partly because Chinese industries with overcapacity at home have been exporting at low prices to Turkey\u2019s longtime markets in the Middle East, Europe and Africa.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive. Eskisehir\u2019s economic difficulties, and Turkey\u2019s, go beyond coping with migrants or an interruption in tourism. Many emerging markets are facing difficulties with the slowdown in global trade, Turkey among them. Turkey has long depended on exporting manufactured goods to Europe and the Middle East, two regions where demand is weak right now. That is partly because of geopolitics and partly because Chinese industries with overcapacity at home have been exporting at low prices to Turkey\u2019s longtime markets in the Middle East, Europe and Africa. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive. Eskisehir\u2019s economic difficulties, and Turkey\u2019s, go beyond coping with migrants or an interruption in tourism. Many emerging markets are facing difficulties with the slowdown in global trade, Turkey among them. Turkey has long depended on exporting manufactured goods to Europe and the Middle East, two regions where demand is weak right now. That is partly because of geopolitics and partly because Chinese industries with overcapacity at home have been exporting at low prices to Turkey\u2019s longtime markets in the Middle East, Europe and Africa.", "sentence_answer": "That is partly because of geopolitics and partly because Chinese industries with overcapacity at home have been exporting at low prices to Turkey\u2019s longtime markets in the Middle East, Europe and Africa."} -{"question": "In Eskisehir, who is the leading industrialist that was mentioned?", "paragraph": "\u201cThey\u2019re not closed \u2014 there\u2019s a lot of smuggling, people have to live\u201d in Syria, said Savas M. Ozaydemir, a leading Eskisehir industrialist with holdings in roofing tile manufacturing, wiring manufacture and real estate. \u201cBut of course, it might be 30 percent of what it was.\u201d The route around Iraq and Syria through Iran is much longer and costlier \u2014 and Iran has imposed a hefty fee on Turkish trucks, ostensibly because they may fill up on subsidized diesel fuel while in Iran. Turkey\u2019s strong support for democracy in Syria and for the removal of Syria\u2019s president, Bashar al-Assad, an Iranian ally, have not helped.", "answer": "Savas M. Ozaydemir", "sentence": "\u201cThey\u2019re not closed \u2014 there\u2019s a lot of smuggling, people have to live\u201d in Syria, said Savas M. Ozaydemir , a leading Eskisehir industrialist with holdings in roofing tile manufacturing, wiring manufacture and real estate.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThey\u2019re not closed \u2014 there\u2019s a lot of smuggling, people have to live\u201d in Syria, said Savas M. Ozaydemir , a leading Eskisehir industrialist with holdings in roofing tile manufacturing, wiring manufacture and real estate. \u201cBut of course, it might be 30 percent of what it was.\u201d The route around Iraq and Syria through Iran is much longer and costlier \u2014 and Iran has imposed a hefty fee on Turkish trucks, ostensibly because they may fill up on subsidized diesel fuel while in Iran. Turkey\u2019s strong support for democracy in Syria and for the removal of Syria\u2019s president, Bashar al-Assad, an Iranian ally, have not helped.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThey\u2019re not closed \u2014 there\u2019s a lot of smuggling, people have to live\u201d in Syria, said Savas M. Ozaydemir , a leading Eskisehir industrialist with holdings in roofing tile manufacturing, wiring manufacture and real estate. \u201cBut of course, it might be 30 percent of what it was.\u201d The route around Iraq and Syria through Iran is much longer and costlier \u2014 and Iran has imposed a hefty fee on Turkish trucks, ostensibly because they may fill up on subsidized diesel fuel while in Iran. Turkey\u2019s strong support for democracy in Syria and for the removal of Syria\u2019s president, Bashar al-Assad, an Iranian ally, have not helped.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThey\u2019re not closed \u2014 there\u2019s a lot of smuggling, people have to live\u201d in Syria, said Savas M. Ozaydemir , a leading Eskisehir industrialist with holdings in roofing tile manufacturing, wiring manufacture and real estate."} -{"question": "Through Iran, the route is much longer and costlier between Syria and what country?", "paragraph": "\u201cThey\u2019re not closed \u2014 there\u2019s a lot of smuggling, people have to live\u201d in Syria, said Savas M. Ozaydemir, a leading Eskisehir industrialist with holdings in roofing tile manufacturing, wiring manufacture and real estate. \u201cBut of course, it might be 30 percent of what it was.\u201d The route around Iraq and Syria through Iran is much longer and costlier \u2014 and Iran has imposed a hefty fee on Turkish trucks, ostensibly because they may fill up on subsidized diesel fuel while in Iran. Turkey\u2019s strong support for democracy in Syria and for the removal of Syria\u2019s president, Bashar al-Assad, an Iranian ally, have not helped.", "answer": "Iraq", "sentence": "The route around Iraq and Syria through Iran is much longer and costlier \u2014 and Iran has imposed a hefty fee on Turkish trucks, ostensibly because they may fill up on subsidized diesel fuel while in Iran.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThey\u2019re not closed \u2014 there\u2019s a lot of smuggling, people have to live\u201d in Syria, said Savas M. Ozaydemir, a leading Eskisehir industrialist with holdings in roofing tile manufacturing, wiring manufacture and real estate. \u201cBut of course, it might be 30 percent of what it was.\u201d The route around Iraq and Syria through Iran is much longer and costlier \u2014 and Iran has imposed a hefty fee on Turkish trucks, ostensibly because they may fill up on subsidized diesel fuel while in Iran. Turkey\u2019s strong support for democracy in Syria and for the removal of Syria\u2019s president, Bashar al-Assad, an Iranian ally, have not helped.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThey\u2019re not closed \u2014 there\u2019s a lot of smuggling, people have to live\u201d in Syria, said Savas M. Ozaydemir, a leading Eskisehir industrialist with holdings in roofing tile manufacturing, wiring manufacture and real estate. \u201cBut of course, it might be 30 percent of what it was.\u201d The route around Iraq and Syria through Iran is much longer and costlier \u2014 and Iran has imposed a hefty fee on Turkish trucks, ostensibly because they may fill up on subsidized diesel fuel while in Iran. Turkey\u2019s strong support for democracy in Syria and for the removal of Syria\u2019s president, Bashar al-Assad, an Iranian ally, have not helped.", "sentence_answer": "The route around Iraq and Syria through Iran is much longer and costlier \u2014 and Iran has imposed a hefty fee on Turkish trucks, ostensibly because they may fill up on subsidized diesel fuel while in Iran."} -{"question": "Who is the President of Syria?", "paragraph": "\u201cThey\u2019re not closed \u2014 there\u2019s a lot of smuggling, people have to live\u201d in Syria, said Savas M. Ozaydemir, a leading Eskisehir industrialist with holdings in roofing tile manufacturing, wiring manufacture and real estate. \u201cBut of course, it might be 30 percent of what it was.\u201d The route around Iraq and Syria through Iran is much longer and costlier \u2014 and Iran has imposed a hefty fee on Turkish trucks, ostensibly because they may fill up on subsidized diesel fuel while in Iran. Turkey\u2019s strong support for democracy in Syria and for the removal of Syria\u2019s president, Bashar al-Assad, an Iranian ally, have not helped.", "answer": "Bashar al-Assad", "sentence": "Turkey\u2019s strong support for democracy in Syria and for the removal of Syria\u2019s president, Bashar al-Assad , an Iranian ally, have not helped.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThey\u2019re not closed \u2014 there\u2019s a lot of smuggling, people have to live\u201d in Syria, said Savas M. Ozaydemir, a leading Eskisehir industrialist with holdings in roofing tile manufacturing, wiring manufacture and real estate. \u201cBut of course, it might be 30 percent of what it was.\u201d The route around Iraq and Syria through Iran is much longer and costlier \u2014 and Iran has imposed a hefty fee on Turkish trucks, ostensibly because they may fill up on subsidized diesel fuel while in Iran. Turkey\u2019s strong support for democracy in Syria and for the removal of Syria\u2019s president, Bashar al-Assad , an Iranian ally, have not helped. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThey\u2019re not closed \u2014 there\u2019s a lot of smuggling, people have to live\u201d in Syria, said Savas M. Ozaydemir, a leading Eskisehir industrialist with holdings in roofing tile manufacturing, wiring manufacture and real estate. \u201cBut of course, it might be 30 percent of what it was.\u201d The route around Iraq and Syria through Iran is much longer and costlier \u2014 and Iran has imposed a hefty fee on Turkish trucks, ostensibly because they may fill up on subsidized diesel fuel while in Iran. Turkey\u2019s strong support for democracy in Syria and for the removal of Syria\u2019s president, Bashar al-Assad , an Iranian ally, have not helped.", "sentence_answer": "Turkey\u2019s strong support for democracy in Syria and for the removal of Syria\u2019s president, Bashar al-Assad , an Iranian ally, have not helped."} -{"question": "The Iran government has imposed huge fees on Turkish what?", "paragraph": "\u201cThey\u2019re not closed \u2014 there\u2019s a lot of smuggling, people have to live\u201d in Syria, said Savas M. Ozaydemir, a leading Eskisehir industrialist with holdings in roofing tile manufacturing, wiring manufacture and real estate. \u201cBut of course, it might be 30 percent of what it was.\u201d The route around Iraq and Syria through Iran is much longer and costlier \u2014 and Iran has imposed a hefty fee on Turkish trucks, ostensibly because they may fill up on subsidized diesel fuel while in Iran. Turkey\u2019s strong support for democracy in Syria and for the removal of Syria\u2019s president, Bashar al-Assad, an Iranian ally, have not helped.", "answer": "trucks", "sentence": "The route around Iraq and Syria through Iran is much longer and costlier \u2014 and Iran has imposed a hefty fee on Turkish trucks , ostensibly because they may fill up on subsidized diesel fuel while in Iran.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThey\u2019re not closed \u2014 there\u2019s a lot of smuggling, people have to live\u201d in Syria, said Savas M. Ozaydemir, a leading Eskisehir industrialist with holdings in roofing tile manufacturing, wiring manufacture and real estate. \u201cBut of course, it might be 30 percent of what it was.\u201d The route around Iraq and Syria through Iran is much longer and costlier \u2014 and Iran has imposed a hefty fee on Turkish trucks , ostensibly because they may fill up on subsidized diesel fuel while in Iran. Turkey\u2019s strong support for democracy in Syria and for the removal of Syria\u2019s president, Bashar al-Assad, an Iranian ally, have not helped.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThey\u2019re not closed \u2014 there\u2019s a lot of smuggling, people have to live\u201d in Syria, said Savas M. Ozaydemir, a leading Eskisehir industrialist with holdings in roofing tile manufacturing, wiring manufacture and real estate. \u201cBut of course, it might be 30 percent of what it was.\u201d The route around Iraq and Syria through Iran is much longer and costlier \u2014 and Iran has imposed a hefty fee on Turkish trucks , ostensibly because they may fill up on subsidized diesel fuel while in Iran. Turkey\u2019s strong support for democracy in Syria and for the removal of Syria\u2019s president, Bashar al-Assad, an Iranian ally, have not helped.", "sentence_answer": "The route around Iraq and Syria through Iran is much longer and costlier \u2014 and Iran has imposed a hefty fee on Turkish trucks , ostensibly because they may fill up on subsidized diesel fuel while in Iran."} -{"question": "Ozaydemir has holdings in wiring manufacture, roofing tile manufacturing, and what?", "paragraph": "\u201cThey\u2019re not closed \u2014 there\u2019s a lot of smuggling, people have to live\u201d in Syria, said Savas M. Ozaydemir, a leading Eskisehir industrialist with holdings in roofing tile manufacturing, wiring manufacture and real estate. \u201cBut of course, it might be 30 percent of what it was.\u201d The route around Iraq and Syria through Iran is much longer and costlier \u2014 and Iran has imposed a hefty fee on Turkish trucks, ostensibly because they may fill up on subsidized diesel fuel while in Iran. Turkey\u2019s strong support for democracy in Syria and for the removal of Syria\u2019s president, Bashar al-Assad, an Iranian ally, have not helped.", "answer": "real estate", "sentence": "\u201cThey\u2019re not closed \u2014 there\u2019s a lot of smuggling, people have to live\u201d in Syria, said Savas M. Ozaydemir, a leading Eskisehir industrialist with holdings in roofing tile manufacturing, wiring manufacture and real estate .", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThey\u2019re not closed \u2014 there\u2019s a lot of smuggling, people have to live\u201d in Syria, said Savas M. Ozaydemir, a leading Eskisehir industrialist with holdings in roofing tile manufacturing, wiring manufacture and real estate . \u201cBut of course, it might be 30 percent of what it was.\u201d The route around Iraq and Syria through Iran is much longer and costlier \u2014 and Iran has imposed a hefty fee on Turkish trucks, ostensibly because they may fill up on subsidized diesel fuel while in Iran. Turkey\u2019s strong support for democracy in Syria and for the removal of Syria\u2019s president, Bashar al-Assad, an Iranian ally, have not helped.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThey\u2019re not closed \u2014 there\u2019s a lot of smuggling, people have to live\u201d in Syria, said Savas M. Ozaydemir, a leading Eskisehir industrialist with holdings in roofing tile manufacturing, wiring manufacture and real estate . \u201cBut of course, it might be 30 percent of what it was.\u201d The route around Iraq and Syria through Iran is much longer and costlier \u2014 and Iran has imposed a hefty fee on Turkish trucks, ostensibly because they may fill up on subsidized diesel fuel while in Iran. Turkey\u2019s strong support for democracy in Syria and for the removal of Syria\u2019s president, Bashar al-Assad, an Iranian ally, have not helped.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThey\u2019re not closed \u2014 there\u2019s a lot of smuggling, people have to live\u201d in Syria, said Savas M. Ozaydemir, a leading Eskisehir industrialist with holdings in roofing tile manufacturing, wiring manufacture and real estate ."} -{"question": "What percentage of the world's reserve in commercial marble Turkey has?", "paragraph": "Turkey has 40 percent of the world\u2019s commercial marble reserves and has been by far the dominant supplier to China, where domestic marble tends to be heavily cracked and often an unattractive yellow. But the value and tonnage of China\u2019s marble imports have plunged by nearly a third just in the past year, paralleling a steep drop in housing starts there. For Cekicler Marble in Eskisehir, that has meant closing three of the company\u2019s nine marble quarries and laying off a third of the 450 workers. The company had designed for sale to China an automated production line that costs $550,000 and helps turn 25-ton blocks of Turkish marble into slim tiles. But after expecting to sell 10 a year, the company actually sold one last year and none this year, with leads for the sale of two next year.", "answer": "40 percent", "sentence": "Turkey has 40 percent of the world\u2019s commercial marble reserves and has been by far the dominant supplier to China, where domestic marble tends to be heavily cracked and often an unattractive yellow.", "paragraph_sentence": " Turkey has 40 percent of the world\u2019s commercial marble reserves and has been by far the dominant supplier to China, where domestic marble tends to be heavily cracked and often an unattractive yellow. But the value and tonnage of China\u2019s marble imports have plunged by nearly a third just in the past year, paralleling a steep drop in housing starts there. For Cekicler Marble in Eskisehir, that has meant closing three of the company\u2019s nine marble quarries and laying off a third of the 450 workers. The company had designed for sale to China an automated production line that costs $550,000 and helps turn 25-ton blocks of Turkish marble into slim tiles. But after expecting to sell 10 a year, the company actually sold one last year and none this year, with leads for the sale of two next year.", "paragraph_answer": "Turkey has 40 percent of the world\u2019s commercial marble reserves and has been by far the dominant supplier to China, where domestic marble tends to be heavily cracked and often an unattractive yellow. But the value and tonnage of China\u2019s marble imports have plunged by nearly a third just in the past year, paralleling a steep drop in housing starts there. For Cekicler Marble in Eskisehir, that has meant closing three of the company\u2019s nine marble quarries and laying off a third of the 450 workers. The company had designed for sale to China an automated production line that costs $550,000 and helps turn 25-ton blocks of Turkish marble into slim tiles. But after expecting to sell 10 a year, the company actually sold one last year and none this year, with leads for the sale of two next year.", "sentence_answer": "Turkey has 40 percent of the world\u2019s commercial marble reserves and has been by far the dominant supplier to China, where domestic marble tends to be heavily cracked and often an unattractive yellow."} -{"question": "What country has unattractive yellow tint and heavily cracked marbles?", "paragraph": "Turkey has 40 percent of the world\u2019s commercial marble reserves and has been by far the dominant supplier to China, where domestic marble tends to be heavily cracked and often an unattractive yellow. But the value and tonnage of China\u2019s marble imports have plunged by nearly a third just in the past year, paralleling a steep drop in housing starts there. For Cekicler Marble in Eskisehir, that has meant closing three of the company\u2019s nine marble quarries and laying off a third of the 450 workers. The company had designed for sale to China an automated production line that costs $550,000 and helps turn 25-ton blocks of Turkish marble into slim tiles. But after expecting to sell 10 a year, the company actually sold one last year and none this year, with leads for the sale of two next year.", "answer": "China", "sentence": "Turkey has 40 percent of the world\u2019s commercial marble reserves and has been by far the dominant supplier to China , where domestic marble tends to be heavily cracked and often an unattractive yellow.", "paragraph_sentence": " Turkey has 40 percent of the world\u2019s commercial marble reserves and has been by far the dominant supplier to China , where domestic marble tends to be heavily cracked and often an unattractive yellow. But the value and tonnage of China\u2019s marble imports have plunged by nearly a third just in the past year, paralleling a steep drop in housing starts there. For Cekicler Marble in Eskisehir, that has meant closing three of the company\u2019s nine marble quarries and laying off a third of the 450 workers. The company had designed for sale to China an automated production line that costs $550,000 and helps turn 25-ton blocks of Turkish marble into slim tiles. But after expecting to sell 10 a year, the company actually sold one last year and none this year, with leads for the sale of two next year.", "paragraph_answer": "Turkey has 40 percent of the world\u2019s commercial marble reserves and has been by far the dominant supplier to China , where domestic marble tends to be heavily cracked and often an unattractive yellow. But the value and tonnage of China\u2019s marble imports have plunged by nearly a third just in the past year, paralleling a steep drop in housing starts there. For Cekicler Marble in Eskisehir, that has meant closing three of the company\u2019s nine marble quarries and laying off a third of the 450 workers. The company had designed for sale to China an automated production line that costs $550,000 and helps turn 25-ton blocks of Turkish marble into slim tiles. But after expecting to sell 10 a year, the company actually sold one last year and none this year, with leads for the sale of two next year.", "sentence_answer": "Turkey has 40 percent of the world\u2019s commercial marble reserves and has been by far the dominant supplier to China , where domestic marble tends to be heavily cracked and often an unattractive yellow."} -{"question": "How many workers did Cekicler Marble let go out of the 450 employees?", "paragraph": "Turkey has 40 percent of the world\u2019s commercial marble reserves and has been by far the dominant supplier to China, where domestic marble tends to be heavily cracked and often an unattractive yellow. But the value and tonnage of China\u2019s marble imports have plunged by nearly a third just in the past year, paralleling a steep drop in housing starts there. For Cekicler Marble in Eskisehir, that has meant closing three of the company\u2019s nine marble quarries and laying off a third of the 450 workers. The company had designed for sale to China an automated production line that costs $550,000 and helps turn 25-ton blocks of Turkish marble into slim tiles. But after expecting to sell 10 a year, the company actually sold one last year and none this year, with leads for the sale of two next year.", "answer": "a third of the 450 workers", "sentence": "For Cekicler Marble in Eskisehir, that has meant closing three of the company\u2019s nine marble quarries and laying off a third of the 450 workers .", "paragraph_sentence": "Turkey has 40 percent of the world\u2019s commercial marble reserves and has been by far the dominant supplier to China, where domestic marble tends to be heavily cracked and often an unattractive yellow. But the value and tonnage of China\u2019s marble imports have plunged by nearly a third just in the past year, paralleling a steep drop in housing starts there. For Cekicler Marble in Eskisehir, that has meant closing three of the company\u2019s nine marble quarries and laying off a third of the 450 workers . The company had designed for sale to China an automated production line that costs $550,000 and helps turn 25-ton blocks of Turkish marble into slim tiles. But after expecting to sell 10 a year, the company actually sold one last year and none this year, with leads for the sale of two next year.", "paragraph_answer": "Turkey has 40 percent of the world\u2019s commercial marble reserves and has been by far the dominant supplier to China, where domestic marble tends to be heavily cracked and often an unattractive yellow. But the value and tonnage of China\u2019s marble imports have plunged by nearly a third just in the past year, paralleling a steep drop in housing starts there. For Cekicler Marble in Eskisehir, that has meant closing three of the company\u2019s nine marble quarries and laying off a third of the 450 workers . The company had designed for sale to China an automated production line that costs $550,000 and helps turn 25-ton blocks of Turkish marble into slim tiles. But after expecting to sell 10 a year, the company actually sold one last year and none this year, with leads for the sale of two next year.", "sentence_answer": "For Cekicler Marble in Eskisehir, that has meant closing three of the company\u2019s nine marble quarries and laying off a third of the 450 workers ."} -{"question": "This year, Cekicler Marble expected to sell ten 25-ton blocks of marble but actually sold how many?", "paragraph": "Turkey has 40 percent of the world\u2019s commercial marble reserves and has been by far the dominant supplier to China, where domestic marble tends to be heavily cracked and often an unattractive yellow. But the value and tonnage of China\u2019s marble imports have plunged by nearly a third just in the past year, paralleling a steep drop in housing starts there. For Cekicler Marble in Eskisehir, that has meant closing three of the company\u2019s nine marble quarries and laying off a third of the 450 workers. The company had designed for sale to China an automated production line that costs $550,000 and helps turn 25-ton blocks of Turkish marble into slim tiles. But after expecting to sell 10 a year, the company actually sold one last year and none this year, with leads for the sale of two next year.", "answer": "none", "sentence": "But after expecting to sell 10 a year, the company actually sold one last year and none this year, with leads for the sale of two next year.", "paragraph_sentence": "Turkey has 40 percent of the world\u2019s commercial marble reserves and has been by far the dominant supplier to China, where domestic marble tends to be heavily cracked and often an unattractive yellow. But the value and tonnage of China\u2019s marble imports have plunged by nearly a third just in the past year, paralleling a steep drop in housing starts there. For Cekicler Marble in Eskisehir, that has meant closing three of the company\u2019s nine marble quarries and laying off a third of the 450 workers. The company had designed for sale to China an automated production line that costs $550,000 and helps turn 25-ton blocks of Turkish marble into slim tiles. But after expecting to sell 10 a year, the company actually sold one last year and none this year, with leads for the sale of two next year. ", "paragraph_answer": "Turkey has 40 percent of the world\u2019s commercial marble reserves and has been by far the dominant supplier to China, where domestic marble tends to be heavily cracked and often an unattractive yellow. But the value and tonnage of China\u2019s marble imports have plunged by nearly a third just in the past year, paralleling a steep drop in housing starts there. For Cekicler Marble in Eskisehir, that has meant closing three of the company\u2019s nine marble quarries and laying off a third of the 450 workers. The company had designed for sale to China an automated production line that costs $550,000 and helps turn 25-ton blocks of Turkish marble into slim tiles. But after expecting to sell 10 a year, the company actually sold one last year and none this year, with leads for the sale of two next year.", "sentence_answer": "But after expecting to sell 10 a year, the company actually sold one last year and none this year, with leads for the sale of two next year."} -{"question": "The drop in price for China's marble also reflected the drop in what?", "paragraph": "Turkey has 40 percent of the world\u2019s commercial marble reserves and has been by far the dominant supplier to China, where domestic marble tends to be heavily cracked and often an unattractive yellow. But the value and tonnage of China\u2019s marble imports have plunged by nearly a third just in the past year, paralleling a steep drop in housing starts there. For Cekicler Marble in Eskisehir, that has meant closing three of the company\u2019s nine marble quarries and laying off a third of the 450 workers. The company had designed for sale to China an automated production line that costs $550,000 and helps turn 25-ton blocks of Turkish marble into slim tiles. But after expecting to sell 10 a year, the company actually sold one last year and none this year, with leads for the sale of two next year.", "answer": "housing", "sentence": "But the value and tonnage of China\u2019s marble imports have plunged by nearly a third just in the past year, paralleling a steep drop in housing starts there.", "paragraph_sentence": "Turkey has 40 percent of the world\u2019s commercial marble reserves and has been by far the dominant supplier to China, where domestic marble tends to be heavily cracked and often an unattractive yellow. But the value and tonnage of China\u2019s marble imports have plunged by nearly a third just in the past year, paralleling a steep drop in housing starts there. For Cekicler Marble in Eskisehir, that has meant closing three of the company\u2019s nine marble quarries and laying off a third of the 450 workers. The company had designed for sale to China an automated production line that costs $550,000 and helps turn 25-ton blocks of Turkish marble into slim tiles. But after expecting to sell 10 a year, the company actually sold one last year and none this year, with leads for the sale of two next year.", "paragraph_answer": "Turkey has 40 percent of the world\u2019s commercial marble reserves and has been by far the dominant supplier to China, where domestic marble tends to be heavily cracked and often an unattractive yellow. But the value and tonnage of China\u2019s marble imports have plunged by nearly a third just in the past year, paralleling a steep drop in housing starts there. For Cekicler Marble in Eskisehir, that has meant closing three of the company\u2019s nine marble quarries and laying off a third of the 450 workers. The company had designed for sale to China an automated production line that costs $550,000 and helps turn 25-ton blocks of Turkish marble into slim tiles. But after expecting to sell 10 a year, the company actually sold one last year and none this year, with leads for the sale of two next year.", "sentence_answer": "But the value and tonnage of China\u2019s marble imports have plunged by nearly a third just in the past year, paralleling a steep drop in housing starts there."} -{"question": "What is AMC reluctant to switch?", "paragraph": "AMC, however, is more reluctant to switch game plans. \u201cWith all the changes of the world today \u2014 whether it\u2019s technology, volume of programming, fewer and fewer shows breaking through \u2014 what we remain focused on are many of the things that got us to the dance in the first place,\u201d Mr. Collier said. That strategy, he said, is matching the quality of premium cable on basic cable, and becoming a home for the industry\u2019s best writers and showrunners. AMC had a small setback in the last few years when it was forced to adjust a development process that was described by some in the industry as onerous. The system, dismissively referred to as the \u201cbake-off,\u201d required producers to sketch out in extensive detail what their prospective show would look like after the pilot \u2014 forecasting what would happen several seasons down the line. Even then, AMC was not guaranteed to put the show on the air.", "answer": "game plans", "sentence": "AMC, however, is more reluctant to switch game plans .", "paragraph_sentence": " AMC, however, is more reluctant to switch game plans . \u201cWith all the changes of the world today \u2014 whether it\u2019s technology, volume of programming, fewer and fewer shows breaking through \u2014 what we remain focused on are many of the things that got us to the dance in the first place,\u201d Mr. Collier said. That strategy, he said, is matching the quality of premium cable on basic cable, and becoming a home for the industry\u2019s best writers and showrunners. AMC had a small setback in the last few years when it was forced to adjust a development process that was described by some in the industry as onerous. The system, dismissively referred to as the \u201cbake-off,\u201d required producers to sketch out in extensive detail what their prospective show would look like after the pilot \u2014 forecasting what would happen several seasons down the line. Even then, AMC was not guaranteed to put the show on the air.", "paragraph_answer": "AMC, however, is more reluctant to switch game plans . \u201cWith all the changes of the world today \u2014 whether it\u2019s technology, volume of programming, fewer and fewer shows breaking through \u2014 what we remain focused on are many of the things that got us to the dance in the first place,\u201d Mr. Collier said. That strategy, he said, is matching the quality of premium cable on basic cable, and becoming a home for the industry\u2019s best writers and showrunners. AMC had a small setback in the last few years when it was forced to adjust a development process that was described by some in the industry as onerous. The system, dismissively referred to as the \u201cbake-off,\u201d required producers to sketch out in extensive detail what their prospective show would look like after the pilot \u2014 forecasting what would happen several seasons down the line. Even then, AMC was not guaranteed to put the show on the air.", "sentence_answer": "AMC, however, is more reluctant to switch game plans ."} -{"question": "What are there fewer and fewer of breaking through?", "paragraph": "AMC, however, is more reluctant to switch game plans. \u201cWith all the changes of the world today \u2014 whether it\u2019s technology, volume of programming, fewer and fewer shows breaking through \u2014 what we remain focused on are many of the things that got us to the dance in the first place,\u201d Mr. Collier said. That strategy, he said, is matching the quality of premium cable on basic cable, and becoming a home for the industry\u2019s best writers and showrunners. AMC had a small setback in the last few years when it was forced to adjust a development process that was described by some in the industry as onerous. The system, dismissively referred to as the \u201cbake-off,\u201d required producers to sketch out in extensive detail what their prospective show would look like after the pilot \u2014 forecasting what would happen several seasons down the line. Even then, AMC was not guaranteed to put the show on the air.", "answer": "shows", "sentence": "\u201cWith all the changes of the world today \u2014 whether it\u2019s technology, volume of programming, fewer and fewer shows breaking through \u2014 what we remain focused on are many of the things that got us to the dance in the first place,\u201d Mr. Collier said.", "paragraph_sentence": "AMC, however, is more reluctant to switch game plans. \u201cWith all the changes of the world today \u2014 whether it\u2019s technology, volume of programming, fewer and fewer shows breaking through \u2014 what we remain focused on are many of the things that got us to the dance in the first place,\u201d Mr. Collier said. That strategy, he said, is matching the quality of premium cable on basic cable, and becoming a home for the industry\u2019s best writers and showrunners. AMC had a small setback in the last few years when it was forced to adjust a development process that was described by some in the industry as onerous. The system, dismissively referred to as the \u201cbake-off,\u201d required producers to sketch out in extensive detail what their prospective show would look like after the pilot \u2014 forecasting what would happen several seasons down the line. Even then, AMC was not guaranteed to put the show on the air.", "paragraph_answer": "AMC, however, is more reluctant to switch game plans. \u201cWith all the changes of the world today \u2014 whether it\u2019s technology, volume of programming, fewer and fewer shows breaking through \u2014 what we remain focused on are many of the things that got us to the dance in the first place,\u201d Mr. Collier said. That strategy, he said, is matching the quality of premium cable on basic cable, and becoming a home for the industry\u2019s best writers and showrunners. AMC had a small setback in the last few years when it was forced to adjust a development process that was described by some in the industry as onerous. The system, dismissively referred to as the \u201cbake-off,\u201d required producers to sketch out in extensive detail what their prospective show would look like after the pilot \u2014 forecasting what would happen several seasons down the line. Even then, AMC was not guaranteed to put the show on the air.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWith all the changes of the world today \u2014 whether it\u2019s technology, volume of programming, fewer and fewer shows breaking through \u2014 what we remain focused on are many of the things that got us to the dance in the first place,\u201d Mr. Collier said."} -{"question": "What does AMC want to match the quality of?", "paragraph": "AMC, however, is more reluctant to switch game plans. \u201cWith all the changes of the world today \u2014 whether it\u2019s technology, volume of programming, fewer and fewer shows breaking through \u2014 what we remain focused on are many of the things that got us to the dance in the first place,\u201d Mr. Collier said. That strategy, he said, is matching the quality of premium cable on basic cable, and becoming a home for the industry\u2019s best writers and showrunners. AMC had a small setback in the last few years when it was forced to adjust a development process that was described by some in the industry as onerous. The system, dismissively referred to as the \u201cbake-off,\u201d required producers to sketch out in extensive detail what their prospective show would look like after the pilot \u2014 forecasting what would happen several seasons down the line. Even then, AMC was not guaranteed to put the show on the air.", "answer": "premium cable", "sentence": "That strategy, he said, is matching the quality of premium cable on basic cable, and becoming a home for the industry\u2019s best writers and showrunners.", "paragraph_sentence": "AMC, however, is more reluctant to switch game plans. \u201cWith all the changes of the world today \u2014 whether it\u2019s technology, volume of programming, fewer and fewer shows breaking through \u2014 what we remain focused on are many of the things that got us to the dance in the first place,\u201d Mr. Collier said. That strategy, he said, is matching the quality of premium cable on basic cable, and becoming a home for the industry\u2019s best writers and showrunners. AMC had a small setback in the last few years when it was forced to adjust a development process that was described by some in the industry as onerous. The system, dismissively referred to as the \u201cbake-off,\u201d required producers to sketch out in extensive detail what their prospective show would look like after the pilot \u2014 forecasting what would happen several seasons down the line. Even then, AMC was not guaranteed to put the show on the air.", "paragraph_answer": "AMC, however, is more reluctant to switch game plans. \u201cWith all the changes of the world today \u2014 whether it\u2019s technology, volume of programming, fewer and fewer shows breaking through \u2014 what we remain focused on are many of the things that got us to the dance in the first place,\u201d Mr. Collier said. That strategy, he said, is matching the quality of premium cable on basic cable, and becoming a home for the industry\u2019s best writers and showrunners. AMC had a small setback in the last few years when it was forced to adjust a development process that was described by some in the industry as onerous. The system, dismissively referred to as the \u201cbake-off,\u201d required producers to sketch out in extensive detail what their prospective show would look like after the pilot \u2014 forecasting what would happen several seasons down the line. Even then, AMC was not guaranteed to put the show on the air.", "sentence_answer": "That strategy, he said, is matching the quality of premium cable on basic cable, and becoming a home for the industry\u2019s best writers and showrunners."} -{"question": "What was the size of AMC's setback in the last few years?", "paragraph": "AMC, however, is more reluctant to switch game plans. \u201cWith all the changes of the world today \u2014 whether it\u2019s technology, volume of programming, fewer and fewer shows breaking through \u2014 what we remain focused on are many of the things that got us to the dance in the first place,\u201d Mr. Collier said. That strategy, he said, is matching the quality of premium cable on basic cable, and becoming a home for the industry\u2019s best writers and showrunners. AMC had a small setback in the last few years when it was forced to adjust a development process that was described by some in the industry as onerous. The system, dismissively referred to as the \u201cbake-off,\u201d required producers to sketch out in extensive detail what their prospective show would look like after the pilot \u2014 forecasting what would happen several seasons down the line. Even then, AMC was not guaranteed to put the show on the air.", "answer": "small", "sentence": "AMC had a small setback in the last few years when it was forced to adjust a development process that was described by some in the industry as onerous.", "paragraph_sentence": "AMC, however, is more reluctant to switch game plans. \u201cWith all the changes of the world today \u2014 whether it\u2019s technology, volume of programming, fewer and fewer shows breaking through \u2014 what we remain focused on are many of the things that got us to the dance in the first place,\u201d Mr. Collier said. That strategy, he said, is matching the quality of premium cable on basic cable, and becoming a home for the industry\u2019s best writers and showrunners. AMC had a small setback in the last few years when it was forced to adjust a development process that was described by some in the industry as onerous. The system, dismissively referred to as the \u201cbake-off,\u201d required producers to sketch out in extensive detail what their prospective show would look like after the pilot \u2014 forecasting what would happen several seasons down the line. Even then, AMC was not guaranteed to put the show on the air.", "paragraph_answer": "AMC, however, is more reluctant to switch game plans. \u201cWith all the changes of the world today \u2014 whether it\u2019s technology, volume of programming, fewer and fewer shows breaking through \u2014 what we remain focused on are many of the things that got us to the dance in the first place,\u201d Mr. Collier said. That strategy, he said, is matching the quality of premium cable on basic cable, and becoming a home for the industry\u2019s best writers and showrunners. AMC had a small setback in the last few years when it was forced to adjust a development process that was described by some in the industry as onerous. The system, dismissively referred to as the \u201cbake-off,\u201d required producers to sketch out in extensive detail what their prospective show would look like after the pilot \u2014 forecasting what would happen several seasons down the line. Even then, AMC was not guaranteed to put the show on the air.", "sentence_answer": "AMC had a small setback in the last few years when it was forced to adjust a development process that was described by some in the industry as onerous."} -{"question": "What was the name of the system AMC made so producers sketched out their shows several seasons past the pilot?", "paragraph": "AMC, however, is more reluctant to switch game plans. \u201cWith all the changes of the world today \u2014 whether it\u2019s technology, volume of programming, fewer and fewer shows breaking through \u2014 what we remain focused on are many of the things that got us to the dance in the first place,\u201d Mr. Collier said. That strategy, he said, is matching the quality of premium cable on basic cable, and becoming a home for the industry\u2019s best writers and showrunners. AMC had a small setback in the last few years when it was forced to adjust a development process that was described by some in the industry as onerous. The system, dismissively referred to as the \u201cbake-off,\u201d required producers to sketch out in extensive detail what their prospective show would look like after the pilot \u2014 forecasting what would happen several seasons down the line. Even then, AMC was not guaranteed to put the show on the air.", "answer": "the \u201cbake-off,\u201d", "sentence": "The system, dismissively referred to as the \u201cbake-off,\u201d required producers to sketch out in extensive detail what their prospective show would look like after the pilot \u2014 forecasting what would happen several seasons down the line.", "paragraph_sentence": "AMC, however, is more reluctant to switch game plans. \u201cWith all the changes of the world today \u2014 whether it\u2019s technology, volume of programming, fewer and fewer shows breaking through \u2014 what we remain focused on are many of the things that got us to the dance in the first place,\u201d Mr. Collier said. That strategy, he said, is matching the quality of premium cable on basic cable, and becoming a home for the industry\u2019s best writers and showrunners. AMC had a small setback in the last few years when it was forced to adjust a development process that was described by some in the industry as onerous. The system, dismissively referred to as the \u201cbake-off,\u201d required producers to sketch out in extensive detail what their prospective show would look like after the pilot \u2014 forecasting what would happen several seasons down the line. Even then, AMC was not guaranteed to put the show on the air.", "paragraph_answer": "AMC, however, is more reluctant to switch game plans. \u201cWith all the changes of the world today \u2014 whether it\u2019s technology, volume of programming, fewer and fewer shows breaking through \u2014 what we remain focused on are many of the things that got us to the dance in the first place,\u201d Mr. Collier said. That strategy, he said, is matching the quality of premium cable on basic cable, and becoming a home for the industry\u2019s best writers and showrunners. AMC had a small setback in the last few years when it was forced to adjust a development process that was described by some in the industry as onerous. The system, dismissively referred to as the \u201cbake-off,\u201d required producers to sketch out in extensive detail what their prospective show would look like after the pilot \u2014 forecasting what would happen several seasons down the line. Even then, AMC was not guaranteed to put the show on the air.", "sentence_answer": "The system, dismissively referred to as the \u201cbake-off,\u201d required producers to sketch out in extensive detail what their prospective show would look like after the pilot \u2014 forecasting what would happen several seasons down the line."} -{"question": "Where did the criticisms come from?", "paragraph": "\u201cThis is continually evolving, and we made some adjustments early from some of the criticisms we heard from the creative community,\u201d said Joel Stillerman, president of original programming and development for the network. Both Mr. Stillerman and Mr. Collier treasure their relationships with showrunners, including Vince Gilligan, the star creator of \u201cBreaking Bad\u201d and now \u201cBetter Call Saul.\u201d Mr. Gilligan appreciated how he could help with marketing efforts for both of his shows, even when he \u201cwas a nobody,\u201d he said.", "answer": "the creative community", "sentence": "\u201cThis is continually evolving, and we made some adjustments early from some of the criticisms we heard from the creative community ,\u201d said Joel Stillerman, president of original programming and development for the network.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThis is continually evolving, and we made some adjustments early from some of the criticisms we heard from the creative community ,\u201d said Joel Stillerman, president of original programming and development for the network. Both Mr. Stillerman and Mr. Collier treasure their relationships with showrunners, including Vince Gilligan, the star creator of \u201cBreaking Bad\u201d and now \u201cBetter Call Saul.\u201d Mr. Gilligan appreciated how he could help with marketing efforts for both of his shows, even when he \u201cwas a nobody,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThis is continually evolving, and we made some adjustments early from some of the criticisms we heard from the creative community ,\u201d said Joel Stillerman, president of original programming and development for the network. Both Mr. Stillerman and Mr. Collier treasure their relationships with showrunners, including Vince Gilligan, the star creator of \u201cBreaking Bad\u201d and now \u201cBetter Call Saul.\u201d Mr. Gilligan appreciated how he could help with marketing efforts for both of his shows, even when he \u201cwas a nobody,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThis is continually evolving, and we made some adjustments early from some of the criticisms we heard from the creative community ,\u201d said Joel Stillerman, president of original programming and development for the network."} -{"question": "What did Vince Gilligan appreciate helping with?", "paragraph": "\u201cThis is continually evolving, and we made some adjustments early from some of the criticisms we heard from the creative community,\u201d said Joel Stillerman, president of original programming and development for the network. Both Mr. Stillerman and Mr. Collier treasure their relationships with showrunners, including Vince Gilligan, the star creator of \u201cBreaking Bad\u201d and now \u201cBetter Call Saul.\u201d Mr. Gilligan appreciated how he could help with marketing efforts for both of his shows, even when he \u201cwas a nobody,\u201d he said.", "answer": "marketing efforts", "sentence": "Mr. Gilligan appreciated how he could help with marketing efforts for both of his shows, even when he \u201cwas a nobody", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThis is continually evolving, and we made some adjustments early from some of the criticisms we heard from the creative community,\u201d said Joel Stillerman, president of original programming and development for the network. Both Mr. Stillerman and Mr. Collier treasure their relationships with showrunners, including Vince Gilligan, the star creator of \u201cBreaking Bad\u201d and now \u201cBetter Call Saul.\u201d Mr. Gilligan appreciated how he could help with marketing efforts for both of his shows, even when he \u201cwas a nobody ,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThis is continually evolving, and we made some adjustments early from some of the criticisms we heard from the creative community,\u201d said Joel Stillerman, president of original programming and development for the network. Both Mr. Stillerman and Mr. Collier treasure their relationships with showrunners, including Vince Gilligan, the star creator of \u201cBreaking Bad\u201d and now \u201cBetter Call Saul.\u201d Mr. Gilligan appreciated how he could help with marketing efforts for both of his shows, even when he \u201cwas a nobody,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Gilligan appreciated how he could help with marketing efforts for both of his shows, even when he \u201cwas a nobody"} -{"question": "Who created Breaking Bad?", "paragraph": "\u201cThis is continually evolving, and we made some adjustments early from some of the criticisms we heard from the creative community,\u201d said Joel Stillerman, president of original programming and development for the network. Both Mr. Stillerman and Mr. Collier treasure their relationships with showrunners, including Vince Gilligan, the star creator of \u201cBreaking Bad\u201d and now \u201cBetter Call Saul.\u201d Mr. Gilligan appreciated how he could help with marketing efforts for both of his shows, even when he \u201cwas a nobody,\u201d he said.", "answer": "Vince Gilligan", "sentence": "Both Mr. Stillerman and Mr. Collier treasure their relationships with showrunners, including Vince Gilligan , the star creator of \u201cBreaking Bad\u201d and now \u201cBetter Call Saul.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThis is continually evolving, and we made some adjustments early from some of the criticisms we heard from the creative community,\u201d said Joel Stillerman, president of original programming and development for the network. Both Mr. Stillerman and Mr. Collier treasure their relationships with showrunners, including Vince Gilligan , the star creator of \u201cBreaking Bad\u201d and now \u201cBetter Call Saul.\u201d Mr. Gilligan appreciated how he could help with marketing efforts for both of his shows, even when he \u201cwas a nobody,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThis is continually evolving, and we made some adjustments early from some of the criticisms we heard from the creative community,\u201d said Joel Stillerman, president of original programming and development for the network. Both Mr. Stillerman and Mr. Collier treasure their relationships with showrunners, including Vince Gilligan , the star creator of \u201cBreaking Bad\u201d and now \u201cBetter Call Saul.\u201d Mr. Gilligan appreciated how he could help with marketing efforts for both of his shows, even when he \u201cwas a nobody,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "Both Mr. Stillerman and Mr. Collier treasure their relationships with showrunners, including Vince Gilligan , the star creator of \u201cBreaking Bad\u201d and now \u201cBetter Call Saul.\u201d"} -{"question": "Who is president of original programming for the network?", "paragraph": "\u201cThis is continually evolving, and we made some adjustments early from some of the criticisms we heard from the creative community,\u201d said Joel Stillerman, president of original programming and development for the network. Both Mr. Stillerman and Mr. Collier treasure their relationships with showrunners, including Vince Gilligan, the star creator of \u201cBreaking Bad\u201d and now \u201cBetter Call Saul.\u201d Mr. Gilligan appreciated how he could help with marketing efforts for both of his shows, even when he \u201cwas a nobody,\u201d he said.", "answer": "Joel Stillerman", "sentence": "\u201cThis is continually evolving, and we made some adjustments early from some of the criticisms we heard from the creative community,\u201d said Joel Stillerman , president of original programming and development for the network.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThis is continually evolving, and we made some adjustments early from some of the criticisms we heard from the creative community,\u201d said Joel Stillerman , president of original programming and development for the network. Both Mr. Stillerman and Mr. Collier treasure their relationships with showrunners, including Vince Gilligan, the star creator of \u201cBreaking Bad\u201d and now \u201cBetter Call Saul.\u201d Mr. Gilligan appreciated how he could help with marketing efforts for both of his shows, even when he \u201cwas a nobody,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThis is continually evolving, and we made some adjustments early from some of the criticisms we heard from the creative community,\u201d said Joel Stillerman , president of original programming and development for the network. Both Mr. Stillerman and Mr. Collier treasure their relationships with showrunners, including Vince Gilligan, the star creator of \u201cBreaking Bad\u201d and now \u201cBetter Call Saul.\u201d Mr. Gilligan appreciated how he could help with marketing efforts for both of his shows, even when he \u201cwas a nobody,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThis is continually evolving, and we made some adjustments early from some of the criticisms we heard from the creative community,\u201d said Joel Stillerman , president of original programming and development for the network."} -{"question": "With whom did Mr. Stillerman and Mr. Collier treasure their relationship with?", "paragraph": "\u201cThis is continually evolving, and we made some adjustments early from some of the criticisms we heard from the creative community,\u201d said Joel Stillerman, president of original programming and development for the network. Both Mr. Stillerman and Mr. Collier treasure their relationships with showrunners, including Vince Gilligan, the star creator of \u201cBreaking Bad\u201d and now \u201cBetter Call Saul.\u201d Mr. Gilligan appreciated how he could help with marketing efforts for both of his shows, even when he \u201cwas a nobody,\u201d he said.", "answer": "showrunners", "sentence": "Both Mr. Stillerman and Mr. Collier treasure their relationships with showrunners , including Vince Gilligan, the star creator of \u201cBreaking Bad\u201d and now \u201cBetter Call Saul.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThis is continually evolving, and we made some adjustments early from some of the criticisms we heard from the creative community,\u201d said Joel Stillerman, president of original programming and development for the network. Both Mr. Stillerman and Mr. Collier treasure their relationships with showrunners , including Vince Gilligan, the star creator of \u201cBreaking Bad\u201d and now \u201cBetter Call Saul.\u201d Mr. Gilligan appreciated how he could help with marketing efforts for both of his shows, even when he \u201cwas a nobody,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThis is continually evolving, and we made some adjustments early from some of the criticisms we heard from the creative community,\u201d said Joel Stillerman, president of original programming and development for the network. Both Mr. Stillerman and Mr. Collier treasure their relationships with showrunners , including Vince Gilligan, the star creator of \u201cBreaking Bad\u201d and now \u201cBetter Call Saul.\u201d Mr. Gilligan appreciated how he could help with marketing efforts for both of his shows, even when he \u201cwas a nobody,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "Both Mr. Stillerman and Mr. Collier treasure their relationships with showrunners , including Vince Gilligan, the star creator of \u201cBreaking Bad\u201d and now \u201cBetter Call Saul.\u201d"} -{"question": "What was not removed from the DEA's list of harmful and addictive substances?", "paragraph": "A federal judge declined on Wednesday to order the removal of marijuana from the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s list of the most harmful and addictive drugs, disappointing those who had hoped the courts might help settle growing conflicts between federal and state laws. Judge Kimberly J. Mueller of United States District Court in Sacramento heard testimony on whether marijuana belonged alongside heroin and LSD on the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s Schedule I list: substances classified as having no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.", "answer": "marijuana", "sentence": "A federal judge declined on Wednesday to order the removal of marijuana from the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s list of the most harmful and addictive drugs, disappointing those who had hoped the courts might help settle growing conflicts between federal and state laws.", "paragraph_sentence": " A federal judge declined on Wednesday to order the removal of marijuana from the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s list of the most harmful and addictive drugs, disappointing those who had hoped the courts might help settle growing conflicts between federal and state laws. Judge Kimberly J. Mueller of United States District Court in Sacramento heard testimony on whether marijuana belonged alongside heroin and LSD on the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s Schedule I list: substances classified as having no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.", "paragraph_answer": "A federal judge declined on Wednesday to order the removal of marijuana from the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s list of the most harmful and addictive drugs, disappointing those who had hoped the courts might help settle growing conflicts between federal and state laws. Judge Kimberly J. Mueller of United States District Court in Sacramento heard testimony on whether marijuana belonged alongside heroin and LSD on the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s Schedule I list: substances classified as having no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.", "sentence_answer": "A federal judge declined on Wednesday to order the removal of marijuana from the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s list of the most harmful and addictive drugs, disappointing those who had hoped the courts might help settle growing conflicts between federal and state laws."} -{"question": "Which judge heard the testimony about whether marijuana was as harmful as heroin?", "paragraph": "A federal judge declined on Wednesday to order the removal of marijuana from the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s list of the most harmful and addictive drugs, disappointing those who had hoped the courts might help settle growing conflicts between federal and state laws. Judge Kimberly J. Mueller of United States District Court in Sacramento heard testimony on whether marijuana belonged alongside heroin and LSD on the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s Schedule I list: substances classified as having no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.", "answer": "Judge Kimberly J. Mueller", "sentence": "Judge Kimberly J. Mueller of United States District Court in Sacramento heard testimony on whether marijuana belonged alongside heroin and LSD on the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s Schedule I list: substances classified as having no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.", "paragraph_sentence": "A federal judge declined on Wednesday to order the removal of marijuana from the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s list of the most harmful and addictive drugs, disappointing those who had hoped the courts might help settle growing conflicts between federal and state laws. Judge Kimberly J. Mueller of United States District Court in Sacramento heard testimony on whether marijuana belonged alongside heroin and LSD on the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s Schedule I list: substances classified as having no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse. ", "paragraph_answer": "A federal judge declined on Wednesday to order the removal of marijuana from the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s list of the most harmful and addictive drugs, disappointing those who had hoped the courts might help settle growing conflicts between federal and state laws. Judge Kimberly J. Mueller of United States District Court in Sacramento heard testimony on whether marijuana belonged alongside heroin and LSD on the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s Schedule I list: substances classified as having no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.", "sentence_answer": " Judge Kimberly J. Mueller of United States District Court in Sacramento heard testimony on whether marijuana belonged alongside heroin and LSD on the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s Schedule I list: substances classified as having no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse."} -{"question": "What list is marijuana currently on with the DEA's classifications?", "paragraph": "A federal judge declined on Wednesday to order the removal of marijuana from the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s list of the most harmful and addictive drugs, disappointing those who had hoped the courts might help settle growing conflicts between federal and state laws. Judge Kimberly J. Mueller of United States District Court in Sacramento heard testimony on whether marijuana belonged alongside heroin and LSD on the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s Schedule I list: substances classified as having no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.", "answer": "Schedule I", "sentence": "Judge Kimberly J. Mueller of United States District Court in Sacramento heard testimony on whether marijuana belonged alongside heroin and LSD on the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s Schedule I list: substances classified as having no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.", "paragraph_sentence": "A federal judge declined on Wednesday to order the removal of marijuana from the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s list of the most harmful and addictive drugs, disappointing those who had hoped the courts might help settle growing conflicts between federal and state laws. Judge Kimberly J. Mueller of United States District Court in Sacramento heard testimony on whether marijuana belonged alongside heroin and LSD on the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s Schedule I list: substances classified as having no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse. ", "paragraph_answer": "A federal judge declined on Wednesday to order the removal of marijuana from the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s list of the most harmful and addictive drugs, disappointing those who had hoped the courts might help settle growing conflicts between federal and state laws. Judge Kimberly J. Mueller of United States District Court in Sacramento heard testimony on whether marijuana belonged alongside heroin and LSD on the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s Schedule I list: substances classified as having no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.", "sentence_answer": "Judge Kimberly J. Mueller of United States District Court in Sacramento heard testimony on whether marijuana belonged alongside heroin and LSD on the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s Schedule I list: substances classified as having no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse."} -{"question": "What is the conflict between that people were hoping would be settled?", "paragraph": "A federal judge declined on Wednesday to order the removal of marijuana from the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s list of the most harmful and addictive drugs, disappointing those who had hoped the courts might help settle growing conflicts between federal and state laws. Judge Kimberly J. Mueller of United States District Court in Sacramento heard testimony on whether marijuana belonged alongside heroin and LSD on the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s Schedule I list: substances classified as having no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.", "answer": "federal and state laws", "sentence": "A federal judge declined on Wednesday to order the removal of marijuana from the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s list of the most harmful and addictive drugs, disappointing those who had hoped the courts might help settle growing conflicts between federal and state laws .", "paragraph_sentence": " A federal judge declined on Wednesday to order the removal of marijuana from the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s list of the most harmful and addictive drugs, disappointing those who had hoped the courts might help settle growing conflicts between federal and state laws . Judge Kimberly J. Mueller of United States District Court in Sacramento heard testimony on whether marijuana belonged alongside heroin and LSD on the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s Schedule I list: substances classified as having no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.", "paragraph_answer": "A federal judge declined on Wednesday to order the removal of marijuana from the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s list of the most harmful and addictive drugs, disappointing those who had hoped the courts might help settle growing conflicts between federal and state laws . Judge Kimberly J. Mueller of United States District Court in Sacramento heard testimony on whether marijuana belonged alongside heroin and LSD on the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s Schedule I list: substances classified as having no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.", "sentence_answer": "A federal judge declined on Wednesday to order the removal of marijuana from the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s list of the most harmful and addictive drugs, disappointing those who had hoped the courts might help settle growing conflicts between federal and state laws ."} -{"question": "Where does Judge Mueller work?", "paragraph": "A federal judge declined on Wednesday to order the removal of marijuana from the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s list of the most harmful and addictive drugs, disappointing those who had hoped the courts might help settle growing conflicts between federal and state laws. Judge Kimberly J. Mueller of United States District Court in Sacramento heard testimony on whether marijuana belonged alongside heroin and LSD on the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s Schedule I list: substances classified as having no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.", "answer": "Sacramento", "sentence": "Judge Kimberly J. Mueller of United States District Court in Sacramento heard testimony on whether marijuana belonged alongside heroin and LSD on the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s Schedule I list: substances classified as having no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.", "paragraph_sentence": "A federal judge declined on Wednesday to order the removal of marijuana from the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s list of the most harmful and addictive drugs, disappointing those who had hoped the courts might help settle growing conflicts between federal and state laws. Judge Kimberly J. Mueller of United States District Court in Sacramento heard testimony on whether marijuana belonged alongside heroin and LSD on the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s Schedule I list: substances classified as having no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse. ", "paragraph_answer": "A federal judge declined on Wednesday to order the removal of marijuana from the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s list of the most harmful and addictive drugs, disappointing those who had hoped the courts might help settle growing conflicts between federal and state laws. Judge Kimberly J. Mueller of United States District Court in Sacramento heard testimony on whether marijuana belonged alongside heroin and LSD on the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s Schedule I list: substances classified as having no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.", "sentence_answer": "Judge Kimberly J. Mueller of United States District Court in Sacramento heard testimony on whether marijuana belonged alongside heroin and LSD on the Drug Enforcement Administration\u2019s Schedule I list: substances classified as having no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse."} -{"question": "What did defense lawyers argue about marijuana's Schedule I classification?", "paragraph": "Defense lawyers had argued in court filings that the charges should be dismissed in part because marijuana\u2019s Schedule I classification was arbitrary and unconstitutional. They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use. Judge Mueller ruled that any adjustments to the law were better left to Congress. \u201cThis is not the court and this is not the time,\u201d she said Wednesday, according to a report by The Associated Press. A written ruling will be issued by the end of the week. The decision dismayed advocates of marijuana legalization.", "answer": "arbitrary and unconstitutional", "sentence": "Defense lawyers had argued in court filings that the charges should be dismissed in part because marijuana\u2019s Schedule I classification was arbitrary and unconstitutional .", "paragraph_sentence": " Defense lawyers had argued in court filings that the charges should be dismissed in part because marijuana\u2019s Schedule I classification was arbitrary and unconstitutional . They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use. Judge Mueller ruled that any adjustments to the law were better left to Congress. \u201cThis is not the court and this is not the time,\u201d she said Wednesday, according to a report by The Associated Press. A written ruling will be issued by the end of the week. The decision dismayed advocates of marijuana legalization.", "paragraph_answer": "Defense lawyers had argued in court filings that the charges should be dismissed in part because marijuana\u2019s Schedule I classification was arbitrary and unconstitutional . They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use. Judge Mueller ruled that any adjustments to the law were better left to Congress. \u201cThis is not the court and this is not the time,\u201d she said Wednesday, according to a report by The Associated Press. A written ruling will be issued by the end of the week. The decision dismayed advocates of marijuana legalization.", "sentence_answer": "Defense lawyers had argued in court filings that the charges should be dismissed in part because marijuana\u2019s Schedule I classification was arbitrary and unconstitutional ."} -{"question": "What ruling did Judge Mueller make about adjustments to the law?", "paragraph": "Defense lawyers had argued in court filings that the charges should be dismissed in part because marijuana\u2019s Schedule I classification was arbitrary and unconstitutional. They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use. Judge Mueller ruled that any adjustments to the law were better left to Congress. \u201cThis is not the court and this is not the time,\u201d she said Wednesday, according to a report by The Associated Press. A written ruling will be issued by the end of the week. The decision dismayed advocates of marijuana legalization.", "answer": "better left to Congress", "sentence": "Judge Mueller ruled that any adjustments to the law were better left to Congress .", "paragraph_sentence": "Defense lawyers had argued in court filings that the charges should be dismissed in part because marijuana\u2019s Schedule I classification was arbitrary and unconstitutional. They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use. Judge Mueller ruled that any adjustments to the law were better left to Congress . \u201cThis is not the court and this is not the time,\u201d she said Wednesday, according to a report by The Associated Press. A written ruling will be issued by the end of the week. The decision dismayed advocates of marijuana legalization.", "paragraph_answer": "Defense lawyers had argued in court filings that the charges should be dismissed in part because marijuana\u2019s Schedule I classification was arbitrary and unconstitutional. They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use. Judge Mueller ruled that any adjustments to the law were better left to Congress . \u201cThis is not the court and this is not the time,\u201d she said Wednesday, according to a report by The Associated Press. A written ruling will be issued by the end of the week. The decision dismayed advocates of marijuana legalization.", "sentence_answer": "Judge Mueller ruled that any adjustments to the law were better left to Congress ."} -{"question": "Which Amendment did defense lawyers argue barred superseding state laws by the federal government?", "paragraph": "Defense lawyers had argued in court filings that the charges should be dismissed in part because marijuana\u2019s Schedule I classification was arbitrary and unconstitutional. They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use. Judge Mueller ruled that any adjustments to the law were better left to Congress. \u201cThis is not the court and this is not the time,\u201d she said Wednesday, according to a report by The Associated Press. A written ruling will be issued by the end of the week. The decision dismayed advocates of marijuana legalization.", "answer": "10th", "sentence": "They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use.", "paragraph_sentence": "Defense lawyers had argued in court filings that the charges should be dismissed in part because marijuana\u2019s Schedule I classification was arbitrary and unconstitutional. They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use. Judge Mueller ruled that any adjustments to the law were better left to Congress. \u201cThis is not the court and this is not the time,\u201d she said Wednesday, according to a report by The Associated Press. A written ruling will be issued by the end of the week. The decision dismayed advocates of marijuana legalization.", "paragraph_answer": "Defense lawyers had argued in court filings that the charges should be dismissed in part because marijuana\u2019s Schedule I classification was arbitrary and unconstitutional. They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use. Judge Mueller ruled that any adjustments to the law were better left to Congress. \u201cThis is not the court and this is not the time,\u201d she said Wednesday, according to a report by The Associated Press. A written ruling will be issued by the end of the week. The decision dismayed advocates of marijuana legalization.", "sentence_answer": "They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use."} -{"question": "Who was dismayed by the judge's decision?", "paragraph": "Defense lawyers had argued in court filings that the charges should be dismissed in part because marijuana\u2019s Schedule I classification was arbitrary and unconstitutional. They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use. Judge Mueller ruled that any adjustments to the law were better left to Congress. \u201cThis is not the court and this is not the time,\u201d she said Wednesday, according to a report by The Associated Press. A written ruling will be issued by the end of the week. The decision dismayed advocates of marijuana legalization.", "answer": "advocates of marijuana legalization", "sentence": "The decision dismayed advocates of marijuana legalization .", "paragraph_sentence": "Defense lawyers had argued in court filings that the charges should be dismissed in part because marijuana\u2019s Schedule I classification was arbitrary and unconstitutional. They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use. Judge Mueller ruled that any adjustments to the law were better left to Congress. \u201cThis is not the court and this is not the time,\u201d she said Wednesday, according to a report by The Associated Press. A written ruling will be issued by the end of the week. The decision dismayed advocates of marijuana legalization . ", "paragraph_answer": "Defense lawyers had argued in court filings that the charges should be dismissed in part because marijuana\u2019s Schedule I classification was arbitrary and unconstitutional. They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use. Judge Mueller ruled that any adjustments to the law were better left to Congress. \u201cThis is not the court and this is not the time,\u201d she said Wednesday, according to a report by The Associated Press. A written ruling will be issued by the end of the week. The decision dismayed advocates of marijuana legalization .", "sentence_answer": "The decision dismayed advocates of marijuana legalization ."} -{"question": "What is marijuana legally used for according to state laws?", "paragraph": "Defense lawyers had argued in court filings that the charges should be dismissed in part because marijuana\u2019s Schedule I classification was arbitrary and unconstitutional. They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use. Judge Mueller ruled that any adjustments to the law were better left to Congress. \u201cThis is not the court and this is not the time,\u201d she said Wednesday, according to a report by The Associated Press. A written ruling will be issued by the end of the week. The decision dismayed advocates of marijuana legalization.", "answer": "medicinal use", "sentence": "They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use .", "paragraph_sentence": "Defense lawyers had argued in court filings that the charges should be dismissed in part because marijuana\u2019s Schedule I classification was arbitrary and unconstitutional. They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use . Judge Mueller ruled that any adjustments to the law were better left to Congress. \u201cThis is not the court and this is not the time,\u201d she said Wednesday, according to a report by The Associated Press. A written ruling will be issued by the end of the week. The decision dismayed advocates of marijuana legalization.", "paragraph_answer": "Defense lawyers had argued in court filings that the charges should be dismissed in part because marijuana\u2019s Schedule I classification was arbitrary and unconstitutional. They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use . Judge Mueller ruled that any adjustments to the law were better left to Congress. \u201cThis is not the court and this is not the time,\u201d she said Wednesday, according to a report by The Associated Press. A written ruling will be issued by the end of the week. The decision dismayed advocates of marijuana legalization.", "sentence_answer": "They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use ."} -{"question": "What is the cannabis trade show mentioned in the article?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe medical benefits of cannabis are undeniable,\u201d said Jeremy Norrie, a medical marijuana user in West Hollywood, Calif., who operates the Secret Cup, a cannabis trade show. \u201cTo keep it in the Schedule I classification is knowingly ignorant. It seems more to me that this judge wanted to avoid controversy and having to deal with the issue. We don\u2019t see anywhere near the kind of public problems that the other drugs in Schedule I have.\u201d A spokesman for the D.E.A., Matthew R. Barden, said it would not comment until officials saw Judge Mueller\u2019s written ruling.", "answer": "Secret Cup", "sentence": "\u201cThe medical benefits of cannabis are undeniable,\u201d said Jeremy Norrie, a medical marijuana user in West Hollywood, Calif., who operates the Secret Cup , a cannabis trade show.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe medical benefits of cannabis are undeniable,\u201d said Jeremy Norrie, a medical marijuana user in West Hollywood, Calif., who operates the Secret Cup , a cannabis trade show. \u201cTo keep it in the Schedule I classification is knowingly ignorant. It seems more to me that this judge wanted to avoid controversy and having to deal with the issue. We don\u2019t see anywhere near the kind of public problems that the other drugs in Schedule I have.\u201d A spokesman for the D.E.A., Matthew R. Barden, said it would not comment until officials saw Judge Mueller\u2019s written ruling.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe medical benefits of cannabis are undeniable,\u201d said Jeremy Norrie, a medical marijuana user in West Hollywood, Calif., who operates the Secret Cup , a cannabis trade show. \u201cTo keep it in the Schedule I classification is knowingly ignorant. It seems more to me that this judge wanted to avoid controversy and having to deal with the issue. We don\u2019t see anywhere near the kind of public problems that the other drugs in Schedule I have.\u201d A spokesman for the D.E.A., Matthew R. Barden, said it would not comment until officials saw Judge Mueller\u2019s written ruling.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe medical benefits of cannabis are undeniable,\u201d said Jeremy Norrie, a medical marijuana user in West Hollywood, Calif., who operates the Secret Cup , a cannabis trade show."} -{"question": "Who runs the Secret Cup?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe medical benefits of cannabis are undeniable,\u201d said Jeremy Norrie, a medical marijuana user in West Hollywood, Calif., who operates the Secret Cup, a cannabis trade show. \u201cTo keep it in the Schedule I classification is knowingly ignorant. It seems more to me that this judge wanted to avoid controversy and having to deal with the issue. We don\u2019t see anywhere near the kind of public problems that the other drugs in Schedule I have.\u201d A spokesman for the D.E.A., Matthew R. Barden, said it would not comment until officials saw Judge Mueller\u2019s written ruling.", "answer": "Jeremy Norrie", "sentence": "\u201cThe medical benefits of cannabis are undeniable,\u201d said Jeremy Norrie , a medical marijuana user in West Hollywood, Calif., who operates the Secret Cup, a cannabis trade show.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe medical benefits of cannabis are undeniable,\u201d said Jeremy Norrie , a medical marijuana user in West Hollywood, Calif., who operates the Secret Cup, a cannabis trade show. \u201cTo keep it in the Schedule I classification is knowingly ignorant. It seems more to me that this judge wanted to avoid controversy and having to deal with the issue. We don\u2019t see anywhere near the kind of public problems that the other drugs in Schedule I have.\u201d A spokesman for the D.E.A., Matthew R. Barden, said it would not comment until officials saw Judge Mueller\u2019s written ruling.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe medical benefits of cannabis are undeniable,\u201d said Jeremy Norrie , a medical marijuana user in West Hollywood, Calif., who operates the Secret Cup, a cannabis trade show. \u201cTo keep it in the Schedule I classification is knowingly ignorant. It seems more to me that this judge wanted to avoid controversy and having to deal with the issue. We don\u2019t see anywhere near the kind of public problems that the other drugs in Schedule I have.\u201d A spokesman for the D.E.A., Matthew R. Barden, said it would not comment until officials saw Judge Mueller\u2019s written ruling.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe medical benefits of cannabis are undeniable,\u201d said Jeremy Norrie , a medical marijuana user in West Hollywood, Calif., who operates the Secret Cup, a cannabis trade show."} -{"question": "Norrie thinks that the judge's ruling is reflective of her aversion to what?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe medical benefits of cannabis are undeniable,\u201d said Jeremy Norrie, a medical marijuana user in West Hollywood, Calif., who operates the Secret Cup, a cannabis trade show. \u201cTo keep it in the Schedule I classification is knowingly ignorant. It seems more to me that this judge wanted to avoid controversy and having to deal with the issue. We don\u2019t see anywhere near the kind of public problems that the other drugs in Schedule I have.\u201d A spokesman for the D.E.A., Matthew R. Barden, said it would not comment until officials saw Judge Mueller\u2019s written ruling.", "answer": "controversy", "sentence": "It seems more to me that this judge wanted to avoid controversy and having to deal with the issue.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe medical benefits of cannabis are undeniable,\u201d said Jeremy Norrie, a medical marijuana user in West Hollywood, Calif., who operates the Secret Cup, a cannabis trade show. \u201cTo keep it in the Schedule I classification is knowingly ignorant. It seems more to me that this judge wanted to avoid controversy and having to deal with the issue. We don\u2019t see anywhere near the kind of public problems that the other drugs in Schedule I have.\u201d A spokesman for the D.E.A., Matthew R. Barden, said it would not comment until officials saw Judge Mueller\u2019s written ruling.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe medical benefits of cannabis are undeniable,\u201d said Jeremy Norrie, a medical marijuana user in West Hollywood, Calif., who operates the Secret Cup, a cannabis trade show. \u201cTo keep it in the Schedule I classification is knowingly ignorant. It seems more to me that this judge wanted to avoid controversy and having to deal with the issue. We don\u2019t see anywhere near the kind of public problems that the other drugs in Schedule I have.\u201d A spokesman for the D.E.A., Matthew R. Barden, said it would not comment until officials saw Judge Mueller\u2019s written ruling.", "sentence_answer": "It seems more to me that this judge wanted to avoid controversy and having to deal with the issue."} -{"question": "What lack of issues does Norrie compare marijuana use to?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe medical benefits of cannabis are undeniable,\u201d said Jeremy Norrie, a medical marijuana user in West Hollywood, Calif., who operates the Secret Cup, a cannabis trade show. \u201cTo keep it in the Schedule I classification is knowingly ignorant. It seems more to me that this judge wanted to avoid controversy and having to deal with the issue. We don\u2019t see anywhere near the kind of public problems that the other drugs in Schedule I have.\u201d A spokesman for the D.E.A., Matthew R. Barden, said it would not comment until officials saw Judge Mueller\u2019s written ruling.", "answer": "other drugs in Schedule I", "sentence": "We don\u2019t see anywhere near the kind of public problems that the other drugs in Schedule I have.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe medical benefits of cannabis are undeniable,\u201d said Jeremy Norrie, a medical marijuana user in West Hollywood, Calif., who operates the Secret Cup, a cannabis trade show. \u201cTo keep it in the Schedule I classification is knowingly ignorant. It seems more to me that this judge wanted to avoid controversy and having to deal with the issue. We don\u2019t see anywhere near the kind of public problems that the other drugs in Schedule I have.\u201d A spokesman for the D.E.A., Matthew R. Barden, said it would not comment until officials saw Judge Mueller\u2019s written ruling.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe medical benefits of cannabis are undeniable,\u201d said Jeremy Norrie, a medical marijuana user in West Hollywood, Calif., who operates the Secret Cup, a cannabis trade show. \u201cTo keep it in the Schedule I classification is knowingly ignorant. It seems more to me that this judge wanted to avoid controversy and having to deal with the issue. We don\u2019t see anywhere near the kind of public problems that the other drugs in Schedule I have.\u201d A spokesman for the D.E.A., Matthew R. Barden, said it would not comment until officials saw Judge Mueller\u2019s written ruling.", "sentence_answer": "We don\u2019t see anywhere near the kind of public problems that the other drugs in Schedule I have.\u201d"} -{"question": "What is the DEA waiting for before they comment to the press?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe medical benefits of cannabis are undeniable,\u201d said Jeremy Norrie, a medical marijuana user in West Hollywood, Calif., who operates the Secret Cup, a cannabis trade show. \u201cTo keep it in the Schedule I classification is knowingly ignorant. It seems more to me that this judge wanted to avoid controversy and having to deal with the issue. We don\u2019t see anywhere near the kind of public problems that the other drugs in Schedule I have.\u201d A spokesman for the D.E.A., Matthew R. Barden, said it would not comment until officials saw Judge Mueller\u2019s written ruling.", "answer": "Mueller\u2019s written ruling", "sentence": "A spokesman for the D.E.A., Matthew R. Barden, said it would not comment until officials saw Judge Mueller\u2019s written ruling .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe medical benefits of cannabis are undeniable,\u201d said Jeremy Norrie, a medical marijuana user in West Hollywood, Calif., who operates the Secret Cup, a cannabis trade show. \u201cTo keep it in the Schedule I classification is knowingly ignorant. It seems more to me that this judge wanted to avoid controversy and having to deal with the issue. We don\u2019t see anywhere near the kind of public problems that the other drugs in Schedule I have.\u201d A spokesman for the D.E.A., Matthew R. Barden, said it would not comment until officials saw Judge Mueller\u2019s written ruling . ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe medical benefits of cannabis are undeniable,\u201d said Jeremy Norrie, a medical marijuana user in West Hollywood, Calif., who operates the Secret Cup, a cannabis trade show. \u201cTo keep it in the Schedule I classification is knowingly ignorant. It seems more to me that this judge wanted to avoid controversy and having to deal with the issue. We don\u2019t see anywhere near the kind of public problems that the other drugs in Schedule I have.\u201d A spokesman for the D.E.A., Matthew R. Barden, said it would not comment until officials saw Judge Mueller\u2019s written ruling .", "sentence_answer": "A spokesman for the D.E.A., Matthew R. Barden, said it would not comment until officials saw Judge Mueller\u2019s written ruling ."} -{"question": "When did the Justice Department recommend not targeting marijuana users?", "paragraph": "The ruling is one of several indications that some resolution between federal and state marijuana laws may be approaching. In 2013, the Justice Department recommended that federal officials not target dispensaries, growers and patients who complied with state marijuana laws and had no links to cartels or interstate smuggling. Moreover, the 2015 appropriations bill passed by Congress in December barred the Justice Department from spending money to interfere with any state\u2019s efforts to carry out its medical marijuana laws. The Justice Department has countered that it can still prosecute violations of the federal marijuana ban and continue cases already in the courts.", "answer": "2013", "sentence": "In 2013 , the Justice Department recommended that federal officials not target dispensaries, growers and patients who complied with state marijuana laws and had no links to cartels or interstate smuggling.", "paragraph_sentence": "The ruling is one of several indications that some resolution between federal and state marijuana laws may be approaching. In 2013 , the Justice Department recommended that federal officials not target dispensaries, growers and patients who complied with state marijuana laws and had no links to cartels or interstate smuggling. Moreover, the 2015 appropriations bill passed by Congress in December barred the Justice Department from spending money to interfere with any state\u2019s efforts to carry out its medical marijuana laws. The Justice Department has countered that it can still prosecute violations of the federal marijuana ban and continue cases already in the courts.", "paragraph_answer": "The ruling is one of several indications that some resolution between federal and state marijuana laws may be approaching. In 2013 , the Justice Department recommended that federal officials not target dispensaries, growers and patients who complied with state marijuana laws and had no links to cartels or interstate smuggling. Moreover, the 2015 appropriations bill passed by Congress in December barred the Justice Department from spending money to interfere with any state\u2019s efforts to carry out its medical marijuana laws. The Justice Department has countered that it can still prosecute violations of the federal marijuana ban and continue cases already in the courts.", "sentence_answer": "In 2013 , the Justice Department recommended that federal officials not target dispensaries, growers and patients who complied with state marijuana laws and had no links to cartels or interstate smuggling."} -{"question": "What did the 2015 bill bar the Justice Department from doing to interfere with state marijuana laws?", "paragraph": "The ruling is one of several indications that some resolution between federal and state marijuana laws may be approaching. In 2013, the Justice Department recommended that federal officials not target dispensaries, growers and patients who complied with state marijuana laws and had no links to cartels or interstate smuggling. Moreover, the 2015 appropriations bill passed by Congress in December barred the Justice Department from spending money to interfere with any state\u2019s efforts to carry out its medical marijuana laws. The Justice Department has countered that it can still prosecute violations of the federal marijuana ban and continue cases already in the courts.", "answer": "spending money", "sentence": "Moreover, the 2015 appropriations bill passed by Congress in December barred the Justice Department from spending money to interfere with any state\u2019s efforts to carry out its medical marijuana laws.", "paragraph_sentence": "The ruling is one of several indications that some resolution between federal and state marijuana laws may be approaching. In 2013, the Justice Department recommended that federal officials not target dispensaries, growers and patients who complied with state marijuana laws and had no links to cartels or interstate smuggling. Moreover, the 2015 appropriations bill passed by Congress in December barred the Justice Department from spending money to interfere with any state\u2019s efforts to carry out its medical marijuana laws. The Justice Department has countered that it can still prosecute violations of the federal marijuana ban and continue cases already in the courts.", "paragraph_answer": "The ruling is one of several indications that some resolution between federal and state marijuana laws may be approaching. In 2013, the Justice Department recommended that federal officials not target dispensaries, growers and patients who complied with state marijuana laws and had no links to cartels or interstate smuggling. Moreover, the 2015 appropriations bill passed by Congress in December barred the Justice Department from spending money to interfere with any state\u2019s efforts to carry out its medical marijuana laws. The Justice Department has countered that it can still prosecute violations of the federal marijuana ban and continue cases already in the courts.", "sentence_answer": "Moreover, the 2015 appropriations bill passed by Congress in December barred the Justice Department from spending money to interfere with any state\u2019s efforts to carry out its medical marijuana laws."} -{"question": "What marijuana cases can the Justice Department still prosecute?", "paragraph": "The ruling is one of several indications that some resolution between federal and state marijuana laws may be approaching. In 2013, the Justice Department recommended that federal officials not target dispensaries, growers and patients who complied with state marijuana laws and had no links to cartels or interstate smuggling. Moreover, the 2015 appropriations bill passed by Congress in December barred the Justice Department from spending money to interfere with any state\u2019s efforts to carry out its medical marijuana laws. The Justice Department has countered that it can still prosecute violations of the federal marijuana ban and continue cases already in the courts.", "answer": "cases already in the courts", "sentence": "The Justice Department has countered that it can still prosecute violations of the federal marijuana ban and continue cases already in the courts .", "paragraph_sentence": "The ruling is one of several indications that some resolution between federal and state marijuana laws may be approaching. In 2013, the Justice Department recommended that federal officials not target dispensaries, growers and patients who complied with state marijuana laws and had no links to cartels or interstate smuggling. Moreover, the 2015 appropriations bill passed by Congress in December barred the Justice Department from spending money to interfere with any state\u2019s efforts to carry out its medical marijuana laws. The Justice Department has countered that it can still prosecute violations of the federal marijuana ban and continue cases already in the courts . ", "paragraph_answer": "The ruling is one of several indications that some resolution between federal and state marijuana laws may be approaching. In 2013, the Justice Department recommended that federal officials not target dispensaries, growers and patients who complied with state marijuana laws and had no links to cartels or interstate smuggling. Moreover, the 2015 appropriations bill passed by Congress in December barred the Justice Department from spending money to interfere with any state\u2019s efforts to carry out its medical marijuana laws. The Justice Department has countered that it can still prosecute violations of the federal marijuana ban and continue cases already in the courts .", "sentence_answer": "The Justice Department has countered that it can still prosecute violations of the federal marijuana ban and continue cases already in the courts ."} -{"question": "What resolution is indicative by this ruling?", "paragraph": "The ruling is one of several indications that some resolution between federal and state marijuana laws may be approaching. In 2013, the Justice Department recommended that federal officials not target dispensaries, growers and patients who complied with state marijuana laws and had no links to cartels or interstate smuggling. Moreover, the 2015 appropriations bill passed by Congress in December barred the Justice Department from spending money to interfere with any state\u2019s efforts to carry out its medical marijuana laws. The Justice Department has countered that it can still prosecute violations of the federal marijuana ban and continue cases already in the courts.", "answer": "federal and state marijuana laws", "sentence": "The ruling is one of several indications that some resolution between federal and state marijuana laws may be approaching.", "paragraph_sentence": " The ruling is one of several indications that some resolution between federal and state marijuana laws may be approaching. In 2013, the Justice Department recommended that federal officials not target dispensaries, growers and patients who complied with state marijuana laws and had no links to cartels or interstate smuggling. Moreover, the 2015 appropriations bill passed by Congress in December barred the Justice Department from spending money to interfere with any state\u2019s efforts to carry out its medical marijuana laws. The Justice Department has countered that it can still prosecute violations of the federal marijuana ban and continue cases already in the courts.", "paragraph_answer": "The ruling is one of several indications that some resolution between federal and state marijuana laws may be approaching. In 2013, the Justice Department recommended that federal officials not target dispensaries, growers and patients who complied with state marijuana laws and had no links to cartels or interstate smuggling. Moreover, the 2015 appropriations bill passed by Congress in December barred the Justice Department from spending money to interfere with any state\u2019s efforts to carry out its medical marijuana laws. The Justice Department has countered that it can still prosecute violations of the federal marijuana ban and continue cases already in the courts.", "sentence_answer": "The ruling is one of several indications that some resolution between federal and state marijuana laws may be approaching."} -{"question": "How much did HP pay for each Aruba share?", "paragraph": "Hewlett-Packard agreed on Monday to buy Aruba Networks, a maker of Wi-Fi access equipment for businesses, for about $3 billion in HP\u2019s biggest deal in more than three years. The deal would also be the first major transaction by the technology company since it announced plans to split itself in two last year. Under the terms of the agreement, HP will pay $24.67 a share in cash. That represents a roughly 34 percent premium to Aruba\u2019s closing price on Feb. 24, the day before Bloomberg News reported the merger discussions between the two. Buying Aruba would bolster HP\u2019s networking business as smartphones, tablets and other connected devices continue to proliferate. Aruba, a 13-year-old networking equipment maker, specializes in wireless networking access point hardware and software, which are used by hotels, universities and shopping malls. The company reported $728.9 million in revenue in its fiscal year that ended July 31, up nearly 22 percent from the prior year. Its net loss narrowed during the same time, to $29 million.", "answer": "$24.67", "sentence": "Under the terms of the agreement, HP will pay $24.67 a share in cash.", "paragraph_sentence": "Hewlett-Packard agreed on Monday to buy Aruba Networks, a maker of Wi-Fi access equipment for businesses, for about $3 billion in HP\u2019s biggest deal in more than three years. The deal would also be the first major transaction by the technology company since it announced plans to split itself in two last year. Under the terms of the agreement, HP will pay $24.67 a share in cash. That represents a roughly 34 percent premium to Aruba\u2019s closing price on Feb. 24, the day before Bloomberg News reported the merger discussions between the two. Buying Aruba would bolster HP\u2019s networking business as smartphones, tablets and other connected devices continue to proliferate. Aruba, a 13-year-old networking equipment maker, specializes in wireless networking access point hardware and software, which are used by hotels, universities and shopping malls. The company reported $728.9 million in revenue in its fiscal year that ended July 31, up nearly 22 percent from the prior year. Its net loss narrowed during the same time, to $29 million.", "paragraph_answer": "Hewlett-Packard agreed on Monday to buy Aruba Networks, a maker of Wi-Fi access equipment for businesses, for about $3 billion in HP\u2019s biggest deal in more than three years. The deal would also be the first major transaction by the technology company since it announced plans to split itself in two last year. Under the terms of the agreement, HP will pay $24.67 a share in cash. That represents a roughly 34 percent premium to Aruba\u2019s closing price on Feb. 24, the day before Bloomberg News reported the merger discussions between the two. Buying Aruba would bolster HP\u2019s networking business as smartphones, tablets and other connected devices continue to proliferate. Aruba, a 13-year-old networking equipment maker, specializes in wireless networking access point hardware and software, which are used by hotels, universities and shopping malls. The company reported $728.9 million in revenue in its fiscal year that ended July 31, up nearly 22 percent from the prior year. Its net loss narrowed during the same time, to $29 million.", "sentence_answer": "Under the terms of the agreement, HP will pay $24.67 a share in cash."} -{"question": "How long has Aruba been manufacturing networking equipment?", "paragraph": "Hewlett-Packard agreed on Monday to buy Aruba Networks, a maker of Wi-Fi access equipment for businesses, for about $3 billion in HP\u2019s biggest deal in more than three years. The deal would also be the first major transaction by the technology company since it announced plans to split itself in two last year. Under the terms of the agreement, HP will pay $24.67 a share in cash. That represents a roughly 34 percent premium to Aruba\u2019s closing price on Feb. 24, the day before Bloomberg News reported the merger discussions between the two. Buying Aruba would bolster HP\u2019s networking business as smartphones, tablets and other connected devices continue to proliferate. Aruba, a 13-year-old networking equipment maker, specializes in wireless networking access point hardware and software, which are used by hotels, universities and shopping malls. The company reported $728.9 million in revenue in its fiscal year that ended July 31, up nearly 22 percent from the prior year. Its net loss narrowed during the same time, to $29 million.", "answer": "13-year", "sentence": "Aruba, a 13-year -old networking equipment maker, specializes in wireless networking access point hardware and software, which are used by hotels, universities and shopping malls.", "paragraph_sentence": "Hewlett-Packard agreed on Monday to buy Aruba Networks, a maker of Wi-Fi access equipment for businesses, for about $3 billion in HP\u2019s biggest deal in more than three years. The deal would also be the first major transaction by the technology company since it announced plans to split itself in two last year. Under the terms of the agreement, HP will pay $24.67 a share in cash. That represents a roughly 34 percent premium to Aruba\u2019s closing price on Feb. 24, the day before Bloomberg News reported the merger discussions between the two. Buying Aruba would bolster HP\u2019s networking business as smartphones, tablets and other connected devices continue to proliferate. Aruba, a 13-year -old networking equipment maker, specializes in wireless networking access point hardware and software, which are used by hotels, universities and shopping malls. The company reported $728.9 million in revenue in its fiscal year that ended July 31, up nearly 22 percent from the prior year. Its net loss narrowed during the same time, to $29 million.", "paragraph_answer": "Hewlett-Packard agreed on Monday to buy Aruba Networks, a maker of Wi-Fi access equipment for businesses, for about $3 billion in HP\u2019s biggest deal in more than three years. The deal would also be the first major transaction by the technology company since it announced plans to split itself in two last year. Under the terms of the agreement, HP will pay $24.67 a share in cash. That represents a roughly 34 percent premium to Aruba\u2019s closing price on Feb. 24, the day before Bloomberg News reported the merger discussions between the two. Buying Aruba would bolster HP\u2019s networking business as smartphones, tablets and other connected devices continue to proliferate. Aruba, a 13-year -old networking equipment maker, specializes in wireless networking access point hardware and software, which are used by hotels, universities and shopping malls. The company reported $728.9 million in revenue in its fiscal year that ended July 31, up nearly 22 percent from the prior year. Its net loss narrowed during the same time, to $29 million.", "sentence_answer": "Aruba, a 13-year -old networking equipment maker, specializes in wireless networking access point hardware and software, which are used by hotels, universities and shopping malls."} -{"question": "Which company made the decision to split in 2018?", "paragraph": "Hewlett-Packard agreed on Monday to buy Aruba Networks, a maker of Wi-Fi access equipment for businesses, for about $3 billion in HP\u2019s biggest deal in more than three years. The deal would also be the first major transaction by the technology company since it announced plans to split itself in two last year. Under the terms of the agreement, HP will pay $24.67 a share in cash. That represents a roughly 34 percent premium to Aruba\u2019s closing price on Feb. 24, the day before Bloomberg News reported the merger discussions between the two. Buying Aruba would bolster HP\u2019s networking business as smartphones, tablets and other connected devices continue to proliferate. Aruba, a 13-year-old networking equipment maker, specializes in wireless networking access point hardware and software, which are used by hotels, universities and shopping malls. The company reported $728.9 million in revenue in its fiscal year that ended July 31, up nearly 22 percent from the prior year. Its net loss narrowed during the same time, to $29 million.", "answer": "Hewlett-Packard", "sentence": "Hewlett-Packard agreed on Monday to buy Aruba Networks, a maker of Wi-Fi access equipment for businesses, for about $3 billion in HP\u2019s biggest deal in more than three years.", "paragraph_sentence": " Hewlett-Packard agreed on Monday to buy Aruba Networks, a maker of Wi-Fi access equipment for businesses, for about $3 billion in HP\u2019s biggest deal in more than three years. The deal would also be the first major transaction by the technology company since it announced plans to split itself in two last year. Under the terms of the agreement, HP will pay $24.67 a share in cash. That represents a roughly 34 percent premium to Aruba\u2019s closing price on Feb. 24, the day before Bloomberg News reported the merger discussions between the two. Buying Aruba would bolster HP\u2019s networking business as smartphones, tablets and other connected devices continue to proliferate. Aruba, a 13-year-old networking equipment maker, specializes in wireless networking access point hardware and software, which are used by hotels, universities and shopping malls. The company reported $728.9 million in revenue in its fiscal year that ended July 31, up nearly 22 percent from the prior year. Its net loss narrowed during the same time, to $29 million.", "paragraph_answer": " Hewlett-Packard agreed on Monday to buy Aruba Networks, a maker of Wi-Fi access equipment for businesses, for about $3 billion in HP\u2019s biggest deal in more than three years. The deal would also be the first major transaction by the technology company since it announced plans to split itself in two last year. Under the terms of the agreement, HP will pay $24.67 a share in cash. That represents a roughly 34 percent premium to Aruba\u2019s closing price on Feb. 24, the day before Bloomberg News reported the merger discussions between the two. Buying Aruba would bolster HP\u2019s networking business as smartphones, tablets and other connected devices continue to proliferate. Aruba, a 13-year-old networking equipment maker, specializes in wireless networking access point hardware and software, which are used by hotels, universities and shopping malls. The company reported $728.9 million in revenue in its fiscal year that ended July 31, up nearly 22 percent from the prior year. Its net loss narrowed during the same time, to $29 million.", "sentence_answer": " Hewlett-Packard agreed on Monday to buy Aruba Networks, a maker of Wi-Fi access equipment for businesses, for about $3 billion in HP\u2019s biggest deal in more than three years."} -{"question": "At the end of the fiscal year, what was Aruba's revenue?", "paragraph": "Hewlett-Packard agreed on Monday to buy Aruba Networks, a maker of Wi-Fi access equipment for businesses, for about $3 billion in HP\u2019s biggest deal in more than three years. The deal would also be the first major transaction by the technology company since it announced plans to split itself in two last year. Under the terms of the agreement, HP will pay $24.67 a share in cash. That represents a roughly 34 percent premium to Aruba\u2019s closing price on Feb. 24, the day before Bloomberg News reported the merger discussions between the two. Buying Aruba would bolster HP\u2019s networking business as smartphones, tablets and other connected devices continue to proliferate. Aruba, a 13-year-old networking equipment maker, specializes in wireless networking access point hardware and software, which are used by hotels, universities and shopping malls. The company reported $728.9 million in revenue in its fiscal year that ended July 31, up nearly 22 percent from the prior year. Its net loss narrowed during the same time, to $29 million.", "answer": "$728.9 million", "sentence": "The company reported $728.9 million in revenue in its fiscal year that ended July 31, up nearly 22 percent from the prior year.", "paragraph_sentence": "Hewlett-Packard agreed on Monday to buy Aruba Networks, a maker of Wi-Fi access equipment for businesses, for about $3 billion in HP\u2019s biggest deal in more than three years. The deal would also be the first major transaction by the technology company since it announced plans to split itself in two last year. Under the terms of the agreement, HP will pay $24.67 a share in cash. That represents a roughly 34 percent premium to Aruba\u2019s closing price on Feb. 24, the day before Bloomberg News reported the merger discussions between the two. Buying Aruba would bolster HP\u2019s networking business as smartphones, tablets and other connected devices continue to proliferate. Aruba, a 13-year-old networking equipment maker, specializes in wireless networking access point hardware and software, which are used by hotels, universities and shopping malls. The company reported $728.9 million in revenue in its fiscal year that ended July 31, up nearly 22 percent from the prior year. Its net loss narrowed during the same time, to $29 million.", "paragraph_answer": "Hewlett-Packard agreed on Monday to buy Aruba Networks, a maker of Wi-Fi access equipment for businesses, for about $3 billion in HP\u2019s biggest deal in more than three years. The deal would also be the first major transaction by the technology company since it announced plans to split itself in two last year. Under the terms of the agreement, HP will pay $24.67 a share in cash. That represents a roughly 34 percent premium to Aruba\u2019s closing price on Feb. 24, the day before Bloomberg News reported the merger discussions between the two. Buying Aruba would bolster HP\u2019s networking business as smartphones, tablets and other connected devices continue to proliferate. Aruba, a 13-year-old networking equipment maker, specializes in wireless networking access point hardware and software, which are used by hotels, universities and shopping malls. The company reported $728.9 million in revenue in its fiscal year that ended July 31, up nearly 22 percent from the prior year. Its net loss narrowed during the same time, to $29 million.", "sentence_answer": "The company reported $728.9 million in revenue in its fiscal year that ended July 31, up nearly 22 percent from the prior year."} -{"question": "What is the percentage increase over February's closing price per share HP is paying for Aruba?", "paragraph": "Hewlett-Packard agreed on Monday to buy Aruba Networks, a maker of Wi-Fi access equipment for businesses, for about $3 billion in HP\u2019s biggest deal in more than three years. The deal would also be the first major transaction by the technology company since it announced plans to split itself in two last year. Under the terms of the agreement, HP will pay $24.67 a share in cash. That represents a roughly 34 percent premium to Aruba\u2019s closing price on Feb. 24, the day before Bloomberg News reported the merger discussions between the two. Buying Aruba would bolster HP\u2019s networking business as smartphones, tablets and other connected devices continue to proliferate. Aruba, a 13-year-old networking equipment maker, specializes in wireless networking access point hardware and software, which are used by hotels, universities and shopping malls. The company reported $728.9 million in revenue in its fiscal year that ended July 31, up nearly 22 percent from the prior year. Its net loss narrowed during the same time, to $29 million.", "answer": "34 percent", "sentence": "That represents a roughly 34 percent premium to Aruba\u2019s closing price on Feb. 24, the day before Bloomberg News reported the merger discussions between the two.", "paragraph_sentence": "Hewlett-Packard agreed on Monday to buy Aruba Networks, a maker of Wi-Fi access equipment for businesses, for about $3 billion in HP\u2019s biggest deal in more than three years. The deal would also be the first major transaction by the technology company since it announced plans to split itself in two last year. Under the terms of the agreement, HP will pay $24.67 a share in cash. That represents a roughly 34 percent premium to Aruba\u2019s closing price on Feb. 24, the day before Bloomberg News reported the merger discussions between the two. Buying Aruba would bolster HP\u2019s networking business as smartphones, tablets and other connected devices continue to proliferate. Aruba, a 13-year-old networking equipment maker, specializes in wireless networking access point hardware and software, which are used by hotels, universities and shopping malls. The company reported $728.9 million in revenue in its fiscal year that ended July 31, up nearly 22 percent from the prior year. Its net loss narrowed during the same time, to $29 million.", "paragraph_answer": "Hewlett-Packard agreed on Monday to buy Aruba Networks, a maker of Wi-Fi access equipment for businesses, for about $3 billion in HP\u2019s biggest deal in more than three years. The deal would also be the first major transaction by the technology company since it announced plans to split itself in two last year. Under the terms of the agreement, HP will pay $24.67 a share in cash. That represents a roughly 34 percent premium to Aruba\u2019s closing price on Feb. 24, the day before Bloomberg News reported the merger discussions between the two. Buying Aruba would bolster HP\u2019s networking business as smartphones, tablets and other connected devices continue to proliferate. Aruba, a 13-year-old networking equipment maker, specializes in wireless networking access point hardware and software, which are used by hotels, universities and shopping malls. The company reported $728.9 million in revenue in its fiscal year that ended July 31, up nearly 22 percent from the prior year. Its net loss narrowed during the same time, to $29 million.", "sentence_answer": "That represents a roughly 34 percent premium to Aruba\u2019s closing price on Feb. 24, the day before Bloomberg News reported the merger discussions between the two."} -{"question": "What is the previous investment that Enterprises are looking at new solutions for?", "paragraph": "\u201dEnterprises are facing a mobile-first world and are looking for solutions that help them transition legacy investments to the new style of I.T.,\u201d Meg Whitman, HP\u2019s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. \u201cBy combining Aruba\u2019s world-class wireless mobility solutions with HP\u2019s leading switching portfolio, HP will offer the simplest, most secure networking solutions to help enterprises easily deploy next-generation mobile networks.\u201d HP expects the deal to add to its earnings in the first full year after closing. Aruba will continue to do business under its own brand and will be led by its chief executive, Dominic Orr. Mr. Orr will report to the head of HP\u2019s enterprise group, Antonio Neri. The deal is expected to close by Oct. 31, pending approval by regulators and Aruba\u2019s shareholders.", "answer": "legacy investments", "sentence": "\u201dEnterprises are facing a mobile-first world and are looking for solutions that help them transition legacy investments to the new style of I.T.,\u201d Meg Whitman, HP\u2019s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201dEnterprises are facing a mobile-first world and are looking for solutions that help them transition legacy investments to the new style of I.T.,\u201d Meg Whitman, HP\u2019s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. \u201cBy combining Aruba\u2019s world-class wireless mobility solutions with HP\u2019s leading switching portfolio, HP will offer the simplest, most secure networking solutions to help enterprises easily deploy next-generation mobile networks.\u201d HP expects the deal to add to its earnings in the first full year after closing. Aruba will continue to do business under its own brand and will be led by its chief executive, Dominic Orr. Mr. Orr will report to the head of HP\u2019s enterprise group, Antonio Neri. The deal is expected to close by Oct. 31, pending approval by regulators and Aruba\u2019s shareholders.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201dEnterprises are facing a mobile-first world and are looking for solutions that help them transition legacy investments to the new style of I.T.,\u201d Meg Whitman, HP\u2019s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. \u201cBy combining Aruba\u2019s world-class wireless mobility solutions with HP\u2019s leading switching portfolio, HP will offer the simplest, most secure networking solutions to help enterprises easily deploy next-generation mobile networks.\u201d HP expects the deal to add to its earnings in the first full year after closing. Aruba will continue to do business under its own brand and will be led by its chief executive, Dominic Orr. Mr. Orr will report to the head of HP\u2019s enterprise group, Antonio Neri. The deal is expected to close by Oct. 31, pending approval by regulators and Aruba\u2019s shareholders.", "sentence_answer": "\u201dEnterprises are facing a mobile-first world and are looking for solutions that help them transition legacy investments to the new style of I.T.,\u201d Meg Whitman, HP\u2019s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement."} -{"question": "What new generation of equipment is HP looking to deploy?", "paragraph": "\u201dEnterprises are facing a mobile-first world and are looking for solutions that help them transition legacy investments to the new style of I.T.,\u201d Meg Whitman, HP\u2019s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. \u201cBy combining Aruba\u2019s world-class wireless mobility solutions with HP\u2019s leading switching portfolio, HP will offer the simplest, most secure networking solutions to help enterprises easily deploy next-generation mobile networks.\u201d HP expects the deal to add to its earnings in the first full year after closing. Aruba will continue to do business under its own brand and will be led by its chief executive, Dominic Orr. Mr. Orr will report to the head of HP\u2019s enterprise group, Antonio Neri. The deal is expected to close by Oct. 31, pending approval by regulators and Aruba\u2019s shareholders.", "answer": "mobile networks", "sentence": "\u201cBy combining Aruba\u2019s world-class wireless mobility solutions with HP\u2019s leading switching portfolio, HP will offer the simplest, most secure networking solutions to help enterprises easily deploy next-generation mobile networks .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201dEnterprises are facing a mobile-first world and are looking for solutions that help them transition legacy investments to the new style of I.T.,\u201d Meg Whitman, HP\u2019s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. \u201cBy combining Aruba\u2019s world-class wireless mobility solutions with HP\u2019s leading switching portfolio, HP will offer the simplest, most secure networking solutions to help enterprises easily deploy next-generation mobile networks .\u201d HP expects the deal to add to its earnings in the first full year after closing. Aruba will continue to do business under its own brand and will be led by its chief executive, Dominic Orr. Mr. Orr will report to the head of HP\u2019s enterprise group, Antonio Neri. The deal is expected to close by Oct. 31, pending approval by regulators and Aruba\u2019s shareholders.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201dEnterprises are facing a mobile-first world and are looking for solutions that help them transition legacy investments to the new style of I.T.,\u201d Meg Whitman, HP\u2019s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. \u201cBy combining Aruba\u2019s world-class wireless mobility solutions with HP\u2019s leading switching portfolio, HP will offer the simplest, most secure networking solutions to help enterprises easily deploy next-generation mobile networks .\u201d HP expects the deal to add to its earnings in the first full year after closing. Aruba will continue to do business under its own brand and will be led by its chief executive, Dominic Orr. Mr. Orr will report to the head of HP\u2019s enterprise group, Antonio Neri. The deal is expected to close by Oct. 31, pending approval by regulators and Aruba\u2019s shareholders.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cBy combining Aruba\u2019s world-class wireless mobility solutions with HP\u2019s leading switching portfolio, HP will offer the simplest, most secure networking solutions to help enterprises easily deploy next-generation mobile networks .\u201d"} -{"question": "Who is currently leading Aruba?", "paragraph": "\u201dEnterprises are facing a mobile-first world and are looking for solutions that help them transition legacy investments to the new style of I.T.,\u201d Meg Whitman, HP\u2019s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. \u201cBy combining Aruba\u2019s world-class wireless mobility solutions with HP\u2019s leading switching portfolio, HP will offer the simplest, most secure networking solutions to help enterprises easily deploy next-generation mobile networks.\u201d HP expects the deal to add to its earnings in the first full year after closing. Aruba will continue to do business under its own brand and will be led by its chief executive, Dominic Orr. Mr. Orr will report to the head of HP\u2019s enterprise group, Antonio Neri. The deal is expected to close by Oct. 31, pending approval by regulators and Aruba\u2019s shareholders.", "answer": "Dominic Orr", "sentence": "Aruba will continue to do business under its own brand and will be led by its chief executive, Dominic Orr .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201dEnterprises are facing a mobile-first world and are looking for solutions that help them transition legacy investments to the new style of I.T.,\u201d Meg Whitman, HP\u2019s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. \u201cBy combining Aruba\u2019s world-class wireless mobility solutions with HP\u2019s leading switching portfolio, HP will offer the simplest, most secure networking solutions to help enterprises easily deploy next-generation mobile networks.\u201d HP expects the deal to add to its earnings in the first full year after closing. Aruba will continue to do business under its own brand and will be led by its chief executive, Dominic Orr . Mr. Orr will report to the head of HP\u2019s enterprise group, Antonio Neri. The deal is expected to close by Oct. 31, pending approval by regulators and Aruba\u2019s shareholders.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201dEnterprises are facing a mobile-first world and are looking for solutions that help them transition legacy investments to the new style of I.T.,\u201d Meg Whitman, HP\u2019s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. \u201cBy combining Aruba\u2019s world-class wireless mobility solutions with HP\u2019s leading switching portfolio, HP will offer the simplest, most secure networking solutions to help enterprises easily deploy next-generation mobile networks.\u201d HP expects the deal to add to its earnings in the first full year after closing. Aruba will continue to do business under its own brand and will be led by its chief executive, Dominic Orr . Mr. Orr will report to the head of HP\u2019s enterprise group, Antonio Neri. The deal is expected to close by Oct. 31, pending approval by regulators and Aruba\u2019s shareholders.", "sentence_answer": "Aruba will continue to do business under its own brand and will be led by its chief executive, Dominic Orr ."} -{"question": "When is HP expected to merge with Aruba?", "paragraph": "\u201dEnterprises are facing a mobile-first world and are looking for solutions that help them transition legacy investments to the new style of I.T.,\u201d Meg Whitman, HP\u2019s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. \u201cBy combining Aruba\u2019s world-class wireless mobility solutions with HP\u2019s leading switching portfolio, HP will offer the simplest, most secure networking solutions to help enterprises easily deploy next-generation mobile networks.\u201d HP expects the deal to add to its earnings in the first full year after closing. Aruba will continue to do business under its own brand and will be led by its chief executive, Dominic Orr. Mr. Orr will report to the head of HP\u2019s enterprise group, Antonio Neri. The deal is expected to close by Oct. 31, pending approval by regulators and Aruba\u2019s shareholders.", "answer": "Oct. 31", "sentence": "The deal is expected to close by Oct. 31 , pending approval by regulators and Aruba\u2019s shareholders.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201dEnterprises are facing a mobile-first world and are looking for solutions that help them transition legacy investments to the new style of I.T.,\u201d Meg Whitman, HP\u2019s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. \u201cBy combining Aruba\u2019s world-class wireless mobility solutions with HP\u2019s leading switching portfolio, HP will offer the simplest, most secure networking solutions to help enterprises easily deploy next-generation mobile networks.\u201d HP expects the deal to add to its earnings in the first full year after closing. Aruba will continue to do business under its own brand and will be led by its chief executive, Dominic Orr. Mr. Orr will report to the head of HP\u2019s enterprise group, Antonio Neri. The deal is expected to close by Oct. 31 , pending approval by regulators and Aruba\u2019s shareholders. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201dEnterprises are facing a mobile-first world and are looking for solutions that help them transition legacy investments to the new style of I.T.,\u201d Meg Whitman, HP\u2019s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. \u201cBy combining Aruba\u2019s world-class wireless mobility solutions with HP\u2019s leading switching portfolio, HP will offer the simplest, most secure networking solutions to help enterprises easily deploy next-generation mobile networks.\u201d HP expects the deal to add to its earnings in the first full year after closing. Aruba will continue to do business under its own brand and will be led by its chief executive, Dominic Orr. Mr. Orr will report to the head of HP\u2019s enterprise group, Antonio Neri. The deal is expected to close by Oct. 31 , pending approval by regulators and Aruba\u2019s shareholders.", "sentence_answer": "The deal is expected to close by Oct. 31 , pending approval by regulators and Aruba\u2019s shareholders."} -{"question": "What type of business is HP hoping to help?", "paragraph": "\u201dEnterprises are facing a mobile-first world and are looking for solutions that help them transition legacy investments to the new style of I.T.,\u201d Meg Whitman, HP\u2019s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. \u201cBy combining Aruba\u2019s world-class wireless mobility solutions with HP\u2019s leading switching portfolio, HP will offer the simplest, most secure networking solutions to help enterprises easily deploy next-generation mobile networks.\u201d HP expects the deal to add to its earnings in the first full year after closing. Aruba will continue to do business under its own brand and will be led by its chief executive, Dominic Orr. Mr. Orr will report to the head of HP\u2019s enterprise group, Antonio Neri. The deal is expected to close by Oct. 31, pending approval by regulators and Aruba\u2019s shareholders.", "answer": "enterprises", "sentence": "\u201cBy combining Aruba\u2019s world-class wireless mobility solutions with HP\u2019s leading switching portfolio, HP will offer the simplest, most secure networking solutions to help enterprises easily deploy next-generation mobile networks.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201dEnterprises are facing a mobile-first world and are looking for solutions that help them transition legacy investments to the new style of I.T.,\u201d Meg Whitman, HP\u2019s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. \u201cBy combining Aruba\u2019s world-class wireless mobility solutions with HP\u2019s leading switching portfolio, HP will offer the simplest, most secure networking solutions to help enterprises easily deploy next-generation mobile networks.\u201d HP expects the deal to add to its earnings in the first full year after closing. Aruba will continue to do business under its own brand and will be led by its chief executive, Dominic Orr. Mr. Orr will report to the head of HP\u2019s enterprise group, Antonio Neri. The deal is expected to close by Oct. 31, pending approval by regulators and Aruba\u2019s shareholders.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201dEnterprises are facing a mobile-first world and are looking for solutions that help them transition legacy investments to the new style of I.T.,\u201d Meg Whitman, HP\u2019s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. \u201cBy combining Aruba\u2019s world-class wireless mobility solutions with HP\u2019s leading switching portfolio, HP will offer the simplest, most secure networking solutions to help enterprises easily deploy next-generation mobile networks.\u201d HP expects the deal to add to its earnings in the first full year after closing. Aruba will continue to do business under its own brand and will be led by its chief executive, Dominic Orr. Mr. Orr will report to the head of HP\u2019s enterprise group, Antonio Neri. The deal is expected to close by Oct. 31, pending approval by regulators and Aruba\u2019s shareholders.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cBy combining Aruba\u2019s world-class wireless mobility solutions with HP\u2019s leading switching portfolio, HP will offer the simplest, most secure networking solutions to help enterprises easily deploy next-generation mobile networks.\u201d"} -{"question": "Which political party(s) wanted to reform misleading vehicle safety ratings?", "paragraph": "Your Nov. 4 editorial \u201cThe Bill That Would Make Roads Less Safe\u201d unfairly represents strongly bipartisan transportation legislation that the House passed last week. Americans depend on safe transportation, and this bill makes our roads safer. Republican and Democratic bill sponsors saw the need to reform misleading truck and bus safety ratings. While these reforms are enacted, all trucker safety requirements will continue and data on violations, inspections and out-of-service rates will remain public. The graduated driver\u2019s license pilot program would allow 19\u00bd-year-old truck drivers only when accompanied by older drivers, and it would be based on recommendations of a task force that includes safety advocates. And the bill does not \u201cmake it harder for the department to raise the minimum insurance requirements for trucks and buses.\u201d It asks the Transportation Department to study increasing minimum insurance levels for intercity buses before devising new regulations. The bill actually includes numerous safety provisions to promote the deployment of safety technology, address highway-railway crossings, incentivize trucking companies to install the latest safety technology, enhance driver safety measures and more. BILL SHUSTER Washington", "answer": "Republican and Democratic", "sentence": "Republican and Democratic bill sponsors saw the need to reform misleading truck and bus safety ratings.", "paragraph_sentence": "Your Nov. 4 editorial \u201cThe Bill That Would Make Roads Less Safe\u201d unfairly represents strongly bipartisan transportation legislation that the House passed last week. Americans depend on safe transportation, and this bill makes our roads safer. Republican and Democratic bill sponsors saw the need to reform misleading truck and bus safety ratings. While these reforms are enacted, all trucker safety requirements will continue and data on violations, inspections and out-of-service rates will remain public. The graduated driver\u2019s license pilot program would allow 19\u00bd-year-old truck drivers only when accompanied by older drivers, and it would be based on recommendations of a task force that includes safety advocates. And the bill does not \u201cmake it harder for the department to raise the minimum insurance requirements for trucks and buses.\u201d It asks the Transportation Department to study increasing minimum insurance levels for intercity buses before devising new regulations. The bill actually includes numerous safety provisions to promote the deployment of safety technology, address highway-railway crossings, incentivize trucking companies to install the latest safety technology, enhance driver safety measures and more. BILL SHUSTER Washington", "paragraph_answer": "Your Nov. 4 editorial \u201cThe Bill That Would Make Roads Less Safe\u201d unfairly represents strongly bipartisan transportation legislation that the House passed last week. Americans depend on safe transportation, and this bill makes our roads safer. Republican and Democratic bill sponsors saw the need to reform misleading truck and bus safety ratings. While these reforms are enacted, all trucker safety requirements will continue and data on violations, inspections and out-of-service rates will remain public. The graduated driver\u2019s license pilot program would allow 19\u00bd-year-old truck drivers only when accompanied by older drivers, and it would be based on recommendations of a task force that includes safety advocates. And the bill does not \u201cmake it harder for the department to raise the minimum insurance requirements for trucks and buses.\u201d It asks the Transportation Department to study increasing minimum insurance levels for intercity buses before devising new regulations. The bill actually includes numerous safety provisions to promote the deployment of safety technology, address highway-railway crossings, incentivize trucking companies to install the latest safety technology, enhance driver safety measures and more. BILL SHUSTER Washington", "sentence_answer": " Republican and Democratic bill sponsors saw the need to reform misleading truck and bus safety ratings."} -{"question": "What type of license may 19 1/2 year old drivers license pilot program obtain?", "paragraph": "Your Nov. 4 editorial \u201cThe Bill That Would Make Roads Less Safe\u201d unfairly represents strongly bipartisan transportation legislation that the House passed last week. Americans depend on safe transportation, and this bill makes our roads safer. Republican and Democratic bill sponsors saw the need to reform misleading truck and bus safety ratings. While these reforms are enacted, all trucker safety requirements will continue and data on violations, inspections and out-of-service rates will remain public. The graduated driver\u2019s license pilot program would allow 19\u00bd-year-old truck drivers only when accompanied by older drivers, and it would be based on recommendations of a task force that includes safety advocates. And the bill does not \u201cmake it harder for the department to raise the minimum insurance requirements for trucks and buses.\u201d It asks the Transportation Department to study increasing minimum insurance levels for intercity buses before devising new regulations. The bill actually includes numerous safety provisions to promote the deployment of safety technology, address highway-railway crossings, incentivize trucking companies to install the latest safety technology, enhance driver safety measures and more. BILL SHUSTER Washington", "answer": "graduated driver\u2019s license", "sentence": "The graduated driver\u2019s license pilot program would allow 19\u00bd-year-old truck drivers only when accompanied by older drivers, and it would be based on recommendations of a task force that includes safety advocates.", "paragraph_sentence": "Your Nov. 4 editorial \u201cThe Bill That Would Make Roads Less Safe\u201d unfairly represents strongly bipartisan transportation legislation that the House passed last week. Americans depend on safe transportation, and this bill makes our roads safer. Republican and Democratic bill sponsors saw the need to reform misleading truck and bus safety ratings. While these reforms are enacted, all trucker safety requirements will continue and data on violations, inspections and out-of-service rates will remain public. The graduated driver\u2019s license pilot program would allow 19\u00bd-year-old truck drivers only when accompanied by older drivers, and it would be based on recommendations of a task force that includes safety advocates. And the bill does not \u201cmake it harder for the department to raise the minimum insurance requirements for trucks and buses.\u201d It asks the Transportation Department to study increasing minimum insurance levels for intercity buses before devising new regulations. The bill actually includes numerous safety provisions to promote the deployment of safety technology, address highway-railway crossings, incentivize trucking companies to install the latest safety technology, enhance driver safety measures and more. BILL SHUSTER Washington", "paragraph_answer": "Your Nov. 4 editorial \u201cThe Bill That Would Make Roads Less Safe\u201d unfairly represents strongly bipartisan transportation legislation that the House passed last week. Americans depend on safe transportation, and this bill makes our roads safer. Republican and Democratic bill sponsors saw the need to reform misleading truck and bus safety ratings. While these reforms are enacted, all trucker safety requirements will continue and data on violations, inspections and out-of-service rates will remain public. The graduated driver\u2019s license pilot program would allow 19\u00bd-year-old truck drivers only when accompanied by older drivers, and it would be based on recommendations of a task force that includes safety advocates. And the bill does not \u201cmake it harder for the department to raise the minimum insurance requirements for trucks and buses.\u201d It asks the Transportation Department to study increasing minimum insurance levels for intercity buses before devising new regulations. The bill actually includes numerous safety provisions to promote the deployment of safety technology, address highway-railway crossings, incentivize trucking companies to install the latest safety technology, enhance driver safety measures and more. BILL SHUSTER Washington", "sentence_answer": "The graduated driver\u2019s license pilot program would allow 19\u00bd-year-old truck drivers only when accompanied by older drivers, and it would be based on recommendations of a task force that includes safety advocates."} -{"question": "Who must accompany a 19 1/2 year old driver under the pilot program?", "paragraph": "Your Nov. 4 editorial \u201cThe Bill That Would Make Roads Less Safe\u201d unfairly represents strongly bipartisan transportation legislation that the House passed last week. Americans depend on safe transportation, and this bill makes our roads safer. Republican and Democratic bill sponsors saw the need to reform misleading truck and bus safety ratings. While these reforms are enacted, all trucker safety requirements will continue and data on violations, inspections and out-of-service rates will remain public. The graduated driver\u2019s license pilot program would allow 19\u00bd-year-old truck drivers only when accompanied by older drivers, and it would be based on recommendations of a task force that includes safety advocates. And the bill does not \u201cmake it harder for the department to raise the minimum insurance requirements for trucks and buses.\u201d It asks the Transportation Department to study increasing minimum insurance levels for intercity buses before devising new regulations. The bill actually includes numerous safety provisions to promote the deployment of safety technology, address highway-railway crossings, incentivize trucking companies to install the latest safety technology, enhance driver safety measures and more. BILL SHUSTER Washington", "answer": "older drivers", "sentence": "The graduated driver\u2019s license pilot program would allow 19\u00bd-year-old truck drivers only when accompanied by older drivers , and it would be based on recommendations of a task force that includes safety advocates.", "paragraph_sentence": "Your Nov. 4 editorial \u201cThe Bill That Would Make Roads Less Safe\u201d unfairly represents strongly bipartisan transportation legislation that the House passed last week. Americans depend on safe transportation, and this bill makes our roads safer. Republican and Democratic bill sponsors saw the need to reform misleading truck and bus safety ratings. While these reforms are enacted, all trucker safety requirements will continue and data on violations, inspections and out-of-service rates will remain public. The graduated driver\u2019s license pilot program would allow 19\u00bd-year-old truck drivers only when accompanied by older drivers , and it would be based on recommendations of a task force that includes safety advocates. And the bill does not \u201cmake it harder for the department to raise the minimum insurance requirements for trucks and buses.\u201d It asks the Transportation Department to study increasing minimum insurance levels for intercity buses before devising new regulations. The bill actually includes numerous safety provisions to promote the deployment of safety technology, address highway-railway crossings, incentivize trucking companies to install the latest safety technology, enhance driver safety measures and more. BILL SHUSTER Washington", "paragraph_answer": "Your Nov. 4 editorial \u201cThe Bill That Would Make Roads Less Safe\u201d unfairly represents strongly bipartisan transportation legislation that the House passed last week. Americans depend on safe transportation, and this bill makes our roads safer. Republican and Democratic bill sponsors saw the need to reform misleading truck and bus safety ratings. While these reforms are enacted, all trucker safety requirements will continue and data on violations, inspections and out-of-service rates will remain public. The graduated driver\u2019s license pilot program would allow 19\u00bd-year-old truck drivers only when accompanied by older drivers , and it would be based on recommendations of a task force that includes safety advocates. And the bill does not \u201cmake it harder for the department to raise the minimum insurance requirements for trucks and buses.\u201d It asks the Transportation Department to study increasing minimum insurance levels for intercity buses before devising new regulations. The bill actually includes numerous safety provisions to promote the deployment of safety technology, address highway-railway crossings, incentivize trucking companies to install the latest safety technology, enhance driver safety measures and more. BILL SHUSTER Washington", "sentence_answer": "The graduated driver\u2019s license pilot program would allow 19\u00bd-year-old truck drivers only when accompanied by older drivers , and it would be based on recommendations of a task force that includes safety advocates."} -{"question": "Does the proposed bill prevent raising or lowering insurance requirements for buses and trucks?", "paragraph": "Your Nov. 4 editorial \u201cThe Bill That Would Make Roads Less Safe\u201d unfairly represents strongly bipartisan transportation legislation that the House passed last week. Americans depend on safe transportation, and this bill makes our roads safer. Republican and Democratic bill sponsors saw the need to reform misleading truck and bus safety ratings. While these reforms are enacted, all trucker safety requirements will continue and data on violations, inspections and out-of-service rates will remain public. The graduated driver\u2019s license pilot program would allow 19\u00bd-year-old truck drivers only when accompanied by older drivers, and it would be based on recommendations of a task force that includes safety advocates. And the bill does not \u201cmake it harder for the department to raise the minimum insurance requirements for trucks and buses.\u201d It asks the Transportation Department to study increasing minimum insurance levels for intercity buses before devising new regulations. The bill actually includes numerous safety provisions to promote the deployment of safety technology, address highway-railway crossings, incentivize trucking companies to install the latest safety technology, enhance driver safety measures and more. BILL SHUSTER Washington", "answer": "the bill does not", "sentence": "And the bill does not \u201cmake it harder for the department to raise the minimum insurance requirements for trucks and buses.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Your Nov. 4 editorial \u201cThe Bill That Would Make Roads Less Safe\u201d unfairly represents strongly bipartisan transportation legislation that the House passed last week. Americans depend on safe transportation, and this bill makes our roads safer. Republican and Democratic bill sponsors saw the need to reform misleading truck and bus safety ratings. While these reforms are enacted, all trucker safety requirements will continue and data on violations, inspections and out-of-service rates will remain public. The graduated driver\u2019s license pilot program would allow 19\u00bd-year-old truck drivers only when accompanied by older drivers, and it would be based on recommendations of a task force that includes safety advocates. And the bill does not \u201cmake it harder for the department to raise the minimum insurance requirements for trucks and buses.\u201d It asks the Transportation Department to study increasing minimum insurance levels for intercity buses before devising new regulations. The bill actually includes numerous safety provisions to promote the deployment of safety technology, address highway-railway crossings, incentivize trucking companies to install the latest safety technology, enhance driver safety measures and more. BILL SHUSTER Washington", "paragraph_answer": "Your Nov. 4 editorial \u201cThe Bill That Would Make Roads Less Safe\u201d unfairly represents strongly bipartisan transportation legislation that the House passed last week. Americans depend on safe transportation, and this bill makes our roads safer. Republican and Democratic bill sponsors saw the need to reform misleading truck and bus safety ratings. While these reforms are enacted, all trucker safety requirements will continue and data on violations, inspections and out-of-service rates will remain public. The graduated driver\u2019s license pilot program would allow 19\u00bd-year-old truck drivers only when accompanied by older drivers, and it would be based on recommendations of a task force that includes safety advocates. And the bill does not \u201cmake it harder for the department to raise the minimum insurance requirements for trucks and buses.\u201d It asks the Transportation Department to study increasing minimum insurance levels for intercity buses before devising new regulations. The bill actually includes numerous safety provisions to promote the deployment of safety technology, address highway-railway crossings, incentivize trucking companies to install the latest safety technology, enhance driver safety measures and more. BILL SHUSTER Washington", "sentence_answer": "And the bill does not \u201cmake it harder for the department to raise the minimum insurance requirements for trucks and buses.\u201d"} -{"question": "What was the title of the Nov. 4 editiorial discussed in this paragraph?", "paragraph": "Your Nov. 4 editorial \u201cThe Bill That Would Make Roads Less Safe\u201d unfairly represents strongly bipartisan transportation legislation that the House passed last week. Americans depend on safe transportation, and this bill makes our roads safer. Republican and Democratic bill sponsors saw the need to reform misleading truck and bus safety ratings. While these reforms are enacted, all trucker safety requirements will continue and data on violations, inspections and out-of-service rates will remain public. The graduated driver\u2019s license pilot program would allow 19\u00bd-year-old truck drivers only when accompanied by older drivers, and it would be based on recommendations of a task force that includes safety advocates. And the bill does not \u201cmake it harder for the department to raise the minimum insurance requirements for trucks and buses.\u201d It asks the Transportation Department to study increasing minimum insurance levels for intercity buses before devising new regulations. The bill actually includes numerous safety provisions to promote the deployment of safety technology, address highway-railway crossings, incentivize trucking companies to install the latest safety technology, enhance driver safety measures and more. BILL SHUSTER Washington", "answer": "The Bill That Would Make Roads Less Safe", "sentence": "Your Nov. 4 editorial \u201c The Bill That Would Make Roads Less Safe \u201d unfairly represents strongly bipartisan transportation legislation that the House passed last week.", "paragraph_sentence": " Your Nov. 4 editorial \u201c The Bill That Would Make Roads Less Safe \u201d unfairly represents strongly bipartisan transportation legislation that the House passed last week. Americans depend on safe transportation, and this bill makes our roads safer. Republican and Democratic bill sponsors saw the need to reform misleading truck and bus safety ratings. While these reforms are enacted, all trucker safety requirements will continue and data on violations, inspections and out-of-service rates will remain public. The graduated driver\u2019s license pilot program would allow 19\u00bd-year-old truck drivers only when accompanied by older drivers, and it would be based on recommendations of a task force that includes safety advocates. And the bill does not \u201cmake it harder for the department to raise the minimum insurance requirements for trucks and buses.\u201d It asks the Transportation Department to study increasing minimum insurance levels for intercity buses before devising new regulations. The bill actually includes numerous safety provisions to promote the deployment of safety technology, address highway-railway crossings, incentivize trucking companies to install the latest safety technology, enhance driver safety measures and more. BILL SHUSTER Washington", "paragraph_answer": "Your Nov. 4 editorial \u201c The Bill That Would Make Roads Less Safe \u201d unfairly represents strongly bipartisan transportation legislation that the House passed last week. Americans depend on safe transportation, and this bill makes our roads safer. Republican and Democratic bill sponsors saw the need to reform misleading truck and bus safety ratings. While these reforms are enacted, all trucker safety requirements will continue and data on violations, inspections and out-of-service rates will remain public. The graduated driver\u2019s license pilot program would allow 19\u00bd-year-old truck drivers only when accompanied by older drivers, and it would be based on recommendations of a task force that includes safety advocates. And the bill does not \u201cmake it harder for the department to raise the minimum insurance requirements for trucks and buses.\u201d It asks the Transportation Department to study increasing minimum insurance levels for intercity buses before devising new regulations. The bill actually includes numerous safety provisions to promote the deployment of safety technology, address highway-railway crossings, incentivize trucking companies to install the latest safety technology, enhance driver safety measures and more. BILL SHUSTER Washington", "sentence_answer": "Your Nov. 4 editorial \u201c The Bill That Would Make Roads Less Safe \u201d unfairly represents strongly bipartisan transportation legislation that the House passed last week."} -{"question": "The proposed bill would expand what?", "paragraph": "Hundreds of Vermonters packed the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday for a committee hearing on legislation that would expand background checks for gun buyers and impose other new firearms restrictions. Several opponents argued that the bill is not needed, pointing to Vermont\u2019s rank in F.B.I. statistics as the safest state. Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country. The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties. It also would step up reporting to the federal background check system when a court adjudicates someone as mentally ill.", "answer": "federal background checks", "sentence": "The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties.", "paragraph_sentence": "Hundreds of Vermonters packed the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday for a committee hearing on legislation that would expand background checks for gun buyers and impose other new firearms restrictions. Several opponents argued that the bill is not needed, pointing to Vermont\u2019s rank in F.B.I. statistics as the safest state. Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country. The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties. It also would step up reporting to the federal background check system when a court adjudicates someone as mentally ill.", "paragraph_answer": "Hundreds of Vermonters packed the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday for a committee hearing on legislation that would expand background checks for gun buyers and impose other new firearms restrictions. Several opponents argued that the bill is not needed, pointing to Vermont\u2019s rank in F.B.I. statistics as the safest state. Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country. The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties. It also would step up reporting to the federal background check system when a court adjudicates someone as mentally ill.", "sentence_answer": "The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties."} -{"question": "How many Vermonters attended the committee hearing in the statehouse?", "paragraph": "Hundreds of Vermonters packed the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday for a committee hearing on legislation that would expand background checks for gun buyers and impose other new firearms restrictions. Several opponents argued that the bill is not needed, pointing to Vermont\u2019s rank in F.B.I. statistics as the safest state. Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country. The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties. It also would step up reporting to the federal background check system when a court adjudicates someone as mentally ill.", "answer": "Hundreds", "sentence": "Hundreds of Vermonters packed the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday for a committee hearing on legislation that would expand background checks for gun buyers and impose other new firearms restrictions.", "paragraph_sentence": " Hundreds of Vermonters packed the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday for a committee hearing on legislation that would expand background checks for gun buyers and impose other new firearms restrictions. Several opponents argued that the bill is not needed, pointing to Vermont\u2019s rank in F.B.I. statistics as the safest state. Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country. The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties. It also would step up reporting to the federal background check system when a court adjudicates someone as mentally ill.", "paragraph_answer": " Hundreds of Vermonters packed the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday for a committee hearing on legislation that would expand background checks for gun buyers and impose other new firearms restrictions. Several opponents argued that the bill is not needed, pointing to Vermont\u2019s rank in F.B.I. statistics as the safest state. Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country. The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties. It also would step up reporting to the federal background check system when a court adjudicates someone as mentally ill.", "sentence_answer": " Hundreds of Vermonters packed the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday for a committee hearing on legislation that would expand background checks for gun buyers and impose other new firearms restrictions."} -{"question": "When would the proposed bill step up reporting to the federal background check system?", "paragraph": "Hundreds of Vermonters packed the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday for a committee hearing on legislation that would expand background checks for gun buyers and impose other new firearms restrictions. Several opponents argued that the bill is not needed, pointing to Vermont\u2019s rank in F.B.I. statistics as the safest state. Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country. The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties. It also would step up reporting to the federal background check system when a court adjudicates someone as mentally ill.", "answer": "when a court adjudicates someone as mentally ill", "sentence": "It also would step up reporting to the federal background check system when a court adjudicates someone as mentally ill .", "paragraph_sentence": "Hundreds of Vermonters packed the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday for a committee hearing on legislation that would expand background checks for gun buyers and impose other new firearms restrictions. Several opponents argued that the bill is not needed, pointing to Vermont\u2019s rank in F.B.I. statistics as the safest state. Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country. The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties. It also would step up reporting to the federal background check system when a court adjudicates someone as mentally ill . ", "paragraph_answer": "Hundreds of Vermonters packed the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday for a committee hearing on legislation that would expand background checks for gun buyers and impose other new firearms restrictions. Several opponents argued that the bill is not needed, pointing to Vermont\u2019s rank in F.B.I. statistics as the safest state. Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country. The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties. It also would step up reporting to the federal background check system when a court adjudicates someone as mentally ill .", "sentence_answer": "It also would step up reporting to the federal background check system when a court adjudicates someone as mentally ill ."} -{"question": "What did supporters of the bill argue?", "paragraph": "Hundreds of Vermonters packed the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday for a committee hearing on legislation that would expand background checks for gun buyers and impose other new firearms restrictions. Several opponents argued that the bill is not needed, pointing to Vermont\u2019s rank in F.B.I. statistics as the safest state. Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country. The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties. It also would step up reporting to the federal background check system when a court adjudicates someone as mentally ill.", "answer": "Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country", "sentence": "Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country .", "paragraph_sentence": "Hundreds of Vermonters packed the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday for a committee hearing on legislation that would expand background checks for gun buyers and impose other new firearms restrictions. Several opponents argued that the bill is not needed, pointing to Vermont\u2019s rank in F.B.I. statistics as the safest state. Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country . The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties. It also would step up reporting to the federal background check system when a court adjudicates someone as mentally ill.", "paragraph_answer": "Hundreds of Vermonters packed the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday for a committee hearing on legislation that would expand background checks for gun buyers and impose other new firearms restrictions. Several opponents argued that the bill is not needed, pointing to Vermont\u2019s rank in F.B.I. statistics as the safest state. Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country . The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties. It also would step up reporting to the federal background check system when a court adjudicates someone as mentally ill.", "sentence_answer": "Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country ."} -{"question": "Background checks would be expanded to cover what type of sale?", "paragraph": "Hundreds of Vermonters packed the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday for a committee hearing on legislation that would expand background checks for gun buyers and impose other new firearms restrictions. Several opponents argued that the bill is not needed, pointing to Vermont\u2019s rank in F.B.I. statistics as the safest state. Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country. The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties. It also would step up reporting to the federal background check system when a court adjudicates someone as mentally ill.", "answer": "between private parties", "sentence": "The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties .", "paragraph_sentence": "Hundreds of Vermonters packed the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday for a committee hearing on legislation that would expand background checks for gun buyers and impose other new firearms restrictions. Several opponents argued that the bill is not needed, pointing to Vermont\u2019s rank in F.B.I. statistics as the safest state. Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country. The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties . It also would step up reporting to the federal background check system when a court adjudicates someone as mentally ill.", "paragraph_answer": "Hundreds of Vermonters packed the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday for a committee hearing on legislation that would expand background checks for gun buyers and impose other new firearms restrictions. Several opponents argued that the bill is not needed, pointing to Vermont\u2019s rank in F.B.I. statistics as the safest state. Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country. The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties . It also would step up reporting to the federal background check system when a court adjudicates someone as mentally ill.", "sentence_answer": "The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties ."} -{"question": "How many motorcyclists were accused of taking part in a gang assault?", "paragraph": "Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet, that occasionally rip through New York City, with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance.", "answer": "two", "sentence": "Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet, that occasionally rip through New York City, with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance.", "paragraph_sentence": " Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet, that occasionally rip through New York City, with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance. ", "paragraph_answer": "Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet, that occasionally rip through New York City, with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance.", "sentence_answer": "Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet, that occasionally rip through New York City, with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance."} -{"question": "Who was presenting evidence against two motorcyclists?", "paragraph": "Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet, that occasionally rip through New York City, with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance.", "answer": "Prosecutors", "sentence": "Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet, that occasionally rip through New York City, with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance.", "paragraph_sentence": " Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet, that occasionally rip through New York City, with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance. ", "paragraph_answer": " Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet, that occasionally rip through New York City, with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance.", "sentence_answer": " Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet, that occasionally rip through New York City, with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance."} -{"question": "Who was the gang assault on?", "paragraph": "Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet, that occasionally rip through New York City, with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance.", "answer": "a young family", "sentence": "Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet, that occasionally rip through New York City, with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance.", "paragraph_sentence": " Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet, that occasionally rip through New York City, with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance. ", "paragraph_answer": "Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet, that occasionally rip through New York City, with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance.", "sentence_answer": "Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet, that occasionally rip through New York City, with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance."} -{"question": "Where are wild motorcycle tours organized?", "paragraph": "Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet, that occasionally rip through New York City, with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance.", "answer": "the Internet", "sentence": "Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet , that occasionally rip through New York City, with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance.", "paragraph_sentence": " Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet , that occasionally rip through New York City, with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance. ", "paragraph_answer": "Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet , that occasionally rip through New York City, with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance.", "sentence_answer": "Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet , that occasionally rip through New York City, with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance."} -{"question": "Where do motorcycle tours occasionally rip through?", "paragraph": "Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet, that occasionally rip through New York City, with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance.", "answer": "New York City", "sentence": "Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet, that occasionally rip through New York City , with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance.", "paragraph_sentence": " Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet, that occasionally rip through New York City , with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance. ", "paragraph_answer": "Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet, that occasionally rip through New York City , with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance.", "sentence_answer": "Prosecutors presenting evidence against two motorcyclists accused of taking part in a gang assault on a young family have put a larger phenomenon on trial: wild motorcycle tours, organized on the Internet, that occasionally rip through New York City , with riders snarling traffic, doing stunts, running red lights and generally creating a nuisance."} -{"question": "Who's helmet camera filmed several videotapes?", "paragraph": "One of them was Drew Pardus, a safety consultant from Lower Manhattan, who said four bikers ignored a red light and nearly ran him over as he tried to cross West Street with his wife and young son. \u201cThey almost hit us twice,\u201d he told a 911 dispatcher. \u201cThey are speeding. They are doing wheelies. They are running red lights. They are a menace.\u201d Mr. Steinglass also showed several videotapes in court, filmed by the helmet camera of one of the bikers, Kevin Bresloff. Most were recorded before the bikers on trial encountered the S.U.V. and so have little to do with the assault. Still, the prosecutor made Mr. Bresloff, a Long Island motorcycle mechanic, narrate the tapes, explaining how he and other bikers drove up on sidewalks, ran red lights and did wheelies on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. The tapes also show some bikers racing down the highway standing on their seats. Portraying the bikers as a lawless mob is intended to counter the defense argument that it was Mr. Lien and his wife who started the conflict, out of frustration with the traffic problems caused by the motorcyclists.", "answer": "Kevin Bresloff", "sentence": "Mr. Steinglass also showed several videotapes in court, filmed by the helmet camera of one of the bikers, Kevin Bresloff .", "paragraph_sentence": "One of them was Drew Pardus, a safety consultant from Lower Manhattan, who said four bikers ignored a red light and nearly ran him over as he tried to cross West Street with his wife and young son. \u201cThey almost hit us twice,\u201d he told a 911 dispatcher. \u201cThey are speeding. They are doing wheelies. They are running red lights. They are a menace.\u201d Mr. Steinglass also showed several videotapes in court, filmed by the helmet camera of one of the bikers, Kevin Bresloff . Most were recorded before the bikers on trial encountered the S.U.V. and so have little to do with the assault. Still, the prosecutor made Mr. Bresloff, a Long Island motorcycle mechanic, narrate the tapes, explaining how he and other bikers drove up on sidewalks, ran red lights and did wheelies on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. The tapes also show some bikers racing down the highway standing on their seats. Portraying the bikers as a lawless mob is intended to counter the defense argument that it was Mr. Lien and his wife who started the conflict, out of frustration with the traffic problems caused by the motorcyclists.", "paragraph_answer": "One of them was Drew Pardus, a safety consultant from Lower Manhattan, who said four bikers ignored a red light and nearly ran him over as he tried to cross West Street with his wife and young son. \u201cThey almost hit us twice,\u201d he told a 911 dispatcher. \u201cThey are speeding. They are doing wheelies. They are running red lights. They are a menace.\u201d Mr. Steinglass also showed several videotapes in court, filmed by the helmet camera of one of the bikers, Kevin Bresloff . Most were recorded before the bikers on trial encountered the S.U.V. and so have little to do with the assault. Still, the prosecutor made Mr. Bresloff, a Long Island motorcycle mechanic, narrate the tapes, explaining how he and other bikers drove up on sidewalks, ran red lights and did wheelies on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. The tapes also show some bikers racing down the highway standing on their seats. Portraying the bikers as a lawless mob is intended to counter the defense argument that it was Mr. Lien and his wife who started the conflict, out of frustration with the traffic problems caused by the motorcyclists.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Steinglass also showed several videotapes in court, filmed by the helmet camera of one of the bikers, Kevin Bresloff ."} -{"question": "Who was a safety consultant?", "paragraph": "One of them was Drew Pardus, a safety consultant from Lower Manhattan, who said four bikers ignored a red light and nearly ran him over as he tried to cross West Street with his wife and young son. \u201cThey almost hit us twice,\u201d he told a 911 dispatcher. \u201cThey are speeding. They are doing wheelies. They are running red lights. They are a menace.\u201d Mr. Steinglass also showed several videotapes in court, filmed by the helmet camera of one of the bikers, Kevin Bresloff. Most were recorded before the bikers on trial encountered the S.U.V. and so have little to do with the assault. Still, the prosecutor made Mr. Bresloff, a Long Island motorcycle mechanic, narrate the tapes, explaining how he and other bikers drove up on sidewalks, ran red lights and did wheelies on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. The tapes also show some bikers racing down the highway standing on their seats. Portraying the bikers as a lawless mob is intended to counter the defense argument that it was Mr. Lien and his wife who started the conflict, out of frustration with the traffic problems caused by the motorcyclists.", "answer": "Drew Pardus", "sentence": "One of them was Drew Pardus , a safety consultant from Lower Manhattan, who said four bikers ignored a red light and nearly ran him over as he tried to cross West Street with his wife and young son.", "paragraph_sentence": " One of them was Drew Pardus , a safety consultant from Lower Manhattan, who said four bikers ignored a red light and nearly ran him over as he tried to cross West Street with his wife and young son. \u201cThey almost hit us twice,\u201d he told a 911 dispatcher. \u201cThey are speeding. They are doing wheelies. They are running red lights. They are a menace.\u201d Mr. Steinglass also showed several videotapes in court, filmed by the helmet camera of one of the bikers, Kevin Bresloff. Most were recorded before the bikers on trial encountered the S.U.V. and so have little to do with the assault. Still, the prosecutor made Mr. Bresloff, a Long Island motorcycle mechanic, narrate the tapes, explaining how he and other bikers drove up on sidewalks, ran red lights and did wheelies on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. The tapes also show some bikers racing down the highway standing on their seats. Portraying the bikers as a lawless mob is intended to counter the defense argument that it was Mr. Lien and his wife who started the conflict, out of frustration with the traffic problems caused by the motorcyclists.", "paragraph_answer": "One of them was Drew Pardus , a safety consultant from Lower Manhattan, who said four bikers ignored a red light and nearly ran him over as he tried to cross West Street with his wife and young son. \u201cThey almost hit us twice,\u201d he told a 911 dispatcher. \u201cThey are speeding. They are doing wheelies. They are running red lights. They are a menace.\u201d Mr. Steinglass also showed several videotapes in court, filmed by the helmet camera of one of the bikers, Kevin Bresloff. Most were recorded before the bikers on trial encountered the S.U.V. and so have little to do with the assault. Still, the prosecutor made Mr. Bresloff, a Long Island motorcycle mechanic, narrate the tapes, explaining how he and other bikers drove up on sidewalks, ran red lights and did wheelies on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. The tapes also show some bikers racing down the highway standing on their seats. Portraying the bikers as a lawless mob is intended to counter the defense argument that it was Mr. Lien and his wife who started the conflict, out of frustration with the traffic problems caused by the motorcyclists.", "sentence_answer": "One of them was Drew Pardus , a safety consultant from Lower Manhattan, who said four bikers ignored a red light and nearly ran him over as he tried to cross West Street with his wife and young son."} -{"question": "What were bikers standing on?", "paragraph": "One of them was Drew Pardus, a safety consultant from Lower Manhattan, who said four bikers ignored a red light and nearly ran him over as he tried to cross West Street with his wife and young son. \u201cThey almost hit us twice,\u201d he told a 911 dispatcher. \u201cThey are speeding. They are doing wheelies. They are running red lights. They are a menace.\u201d Mr. Steinglass also showed several videotapes in court, filmed by the helmet camera of one of the bikers, Kevin Bresloff. Most were recorded before the bikers on trial encountered the S.U.V. and so have little to do with the assault. Still, the prosecutor made Mr. Bresloff, a Long Island motorcycle mechanic, narrate the tapes, explaining how he and other bikers drove up on sidewalks, ran red lights and did wheelies on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. The tapes also show some bikers racing down the highway standing on their seats. Portraying the bikers as a lawless mob is intended to counter the defense argument that it was Mr. Lien and his wife who started the conflict, out of frustration with the traffic problems caused by the motorcyclists.", "answer": "their seats", "sentence": "The tapes also show some bikers racing down the highway standing on their seats .", "paragraph_sentence": "One of them was Drew Pardus, a safety consultant from Lower Manhattan, who said four bikers ignored a red light and nearly ran him over as he tried to cross West Street with his wife and young son. \u201cThey almost hit us twice,\u201d he told a 911 dispatcher. \u201cThey are speeding. They are doing wheelies. They are running red lights. They are a menace.\u201d Mr. Steinglass also showed several videotapes in court, filmed by the helmet camera of one of the bikers, Kevin Bresloff. Most were recorded before the bikers on trial encountered the S.U.V. and so have little to do with the assault. Still, the prosecutor made Mr. Bresloff, a Long Island motorcycle mechanic, narrate the tapes, explaining how he and other bikers drove up on sidewalks, ran red lights and did wheelies on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. The tapes also show some bikers racing down the highway standing on their seats . Portraying the bikers as a lawless mob is intended to counter the defense argument that it was Mr. Lien and his wife who started the conflict, out of frustration with the traffic problems caused by the motorcyclists.", "paragraph_answer": "One of them was Drew Pardus, a safety consultant from Lower Manhattan, who said four bikers ignored a red light and nearly ran him over as he tried to cross West Street with his wife and young son. \u201cThey almost hit us twice,\u201d he told a 911 dispatcher. \u201cThey are speeding. They are doing wheelies. They are running red lights. They are a menace.\u201d Mr. Steinglass also showed several videotapes in court, filmed by the helmet camera of one of the bikers, Kevin Bresloff. Most were recorded before the bikers on trial encountered the S.U.V. and so have little to do with the assault. Still, the prosecutor made Mr. Bresloff, a Long Island motorcycle mechanic, narrate the tapes, explaining how he and other bikers drove up on sidewalks, ran red lights and did wheelies on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. The tapes also show some bikers racing down the highway standing on their seats . Portraying the bikers as a lawless mob is intended to counter the defense argument that it was Mr. Lien and his wife who started the conflict, out of frustration with the traffic problems caused by the motorcyclists.", "sentence_answer": "The tapes also show some bikers racing down the highway standing on their seats ."} -{"question": "What were traffic problems caused by?", "paragraph": "One of them was Drew Pardus, a safety consultant from Lower Manhattan, who said four bikers ignored a red light and nearly ran him over as he tried to cross West Street with his wife and young son. \u201cThey almost hit us twice,\u201d he told a 911 dispatcher. \u201cThey are speeding. They are doing wheelies. They are running red lights. They are a menace.\u201d Mr. Steinglass also showed several videotapes in court, filmed by the helmet camera of one of the bikers, Kevin Bresloff. Most were recorded before the bikers on trial encountered the S.U.V. and so have little to do with the assault. Still, the prosecutor made Mr. Bresloff, a Long Island motorcycle mechanic, narrate the tapes, explaining how he and other bikers drove up on sidewalks, ran red lights and did wheelies on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. The tapes also show some bikers racing down the highway standing on their seats. Portraying the bikers as a lawless mob is intended to counter the defense argument that it was Mr. Lien and his wife who started the conflict, out of frustration with the traffic problems caused by the motorcyclists.", "answer": "the motorcyclists", "sentence": "Portraying the bikers as a lawless mob is intended to counter the defense argument that it was Mr. Lien and his wife who started the conflict, out of frustration with the traffic problems caused by the motorcyclists .", "paragraph_sentence": "One of them was Drew Pardus, a safety consultant from Lower Manhattan, who said four bikers ignored a red light and nearly ran him over as he tried to cross West Street with his wife and young son. \u201cThey almost hit us twice,\u201d he told a 911 dispatcher. \u201cThey are speeding. They are doing wheelies. They are running red lights. They are a menace.\u201d Mr. Steinglass also showed several videotapes in court, filmed by the helmet camera of one of the bikers, Kevin Bresloff. Most were recorded before the bikers on trial encountered the S.U.V. and so have little to do with the assault. Still, the prosecutor made Mr. Bresloff, a Long Island motorcycle mechanic, narrate the tapes, explaining how he and other bikers drove up on sidewalks, ran red lights and did wheelies on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. The tapes also show some bikers racing down the highway standing on their seats. Portraying the bikers as a lawless mob is intended to counter the defense argument that it was Mr. Lien and his wife who started the conflict, out of frustration with the traffic problems caused by the motorcyclists . ", "paragraph_answer": "One of them was Drew Pardus, a safety consultant from Lower Manhattan, who said four bikers ignored a red light and nearly ran him over as he tried to cross West Street with his wife and young son. \u201cThey almost hit us twice,\u201d he told a 911 dispatcher. \u201cThey are speeding. They are doing wheelies. They are running red lights. They are a menace.\u201d Mr. Steinglass also showed several videotapes in court, filmed by the helmet camera of one of the bikers, Kevin Bresloff. Most were recorded before the bikers on trial encountered the S.U.V. and so have little to do with the assault. Still, the prosecutor made Mr. Bresloff, a Long Island motorcycle mechanic, narrate the tapes, explaining how he and other bikers drove up on sidewalks, ran red lights and did wheelies on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. The tapes also show some bikers racing down the highway standing on their seats. Portraying the bikers as a lawless mob is intended to counter the defense argument that it was Mr. Lien and his wife who started the conflict, out of frustration with the traffic problems caused by the motorcyclists .", "sentence_answer": "Portraying the bikers as a lawless mob is intended to counter the defense argument that it was Mr. Lien and his wife who started the conflict, out of frustration with the traffic problems caused by the motorcyclists ."} -{"question": "Who was Mr. Bresloff?", "paragraph": "One of them was Drew Pardus, a safety consultant from Lower Manhattan, who said four bikers ignored a red light and nearly ran him over as he tried to cross West Street with his wife and young son. \u201cThey almost hit us twice,\u201d he told a 911 dispatcher. \u201cThey are speeding. They are doing wheelies. They are running red lights. They are a menace.\u201d Mr. Steinglass also showed several videotapes in court, filmed by the helmet camera of one of the bikers, Kevin Bresloff. Most were recorded before the bikers on trial encountered the S.U.V. and so have little to do with the assault. Still, the prosecutor made Mr. Bresloff, a Long Island motorcycle mechanic, narrate the tapes, explaining how he and other bikers drove up on sidewalks, ran red lights and did wheelies on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. The tapes also show some bikers racing down the highway standing on their seats. Portraying the bikers as a lawless mob is intended to counter the defense argument that it was Mr. Lien and his wife who started the conflict, out of frustration with the traffic problems caused by the motorcyclists.", "answer": "a Long Island motorcycle mechanic", "sentence": "Still, the prosecutor made Mr. Bresloff, a Long Island motorcycle mechanic , narrate the tapes, explaining how he and other bikers drove up on sidewalks, ran red lights and did wheelies on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway.", "paragraph_sentence": "One of them was Drew Pardus, a safety consultant from Lower Manhattan, who said four bikers ignored a red light and nearly ran him over as he tried to cross West Street with his wife and young son. \u201cThey almost hit us twice,\u201d he told a 911 dispatcher. \u201cThey are speeding. They are doing wheelies. They are running red lights. They are a menace.\u201d Mr. Steinglass also showed several videotapes in court, filmed by the helmet camera of one of the bikers, Kevin Bresloff. Most were recorded before the bikers on trial encountered the S.U.V. and so have little to do with the assault. Still, the prosecutor made Mr. Bresloff, a Long Island motorcycle mechanic , narrate the tapes, explaining how he and other bikers drove up on sidewalks, ran red lights and did wheelies on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. The tapes also show some bikers racing down the highway standing on their seats. Portraying the bikers as a lawless mob is intended to counter the defense argument that it was Mr. Lien and his wife who started the conflict, out of frustration with the traffic problems caused by the motorcyclists.", "paragraph_answer": "One of them was Drew Pardus, a safety consultant from Lower Manhattan, who said four bikers ignored a red light and nearly ran him over as he tried to cross West Street with his wife and young son. \u201cThey almost hit us twice,\u201d he told a 911 dispatcher. \u201cThey are speeding. They are doing wheelies. They are running red lights. They are a menace.\u201d Mr. Steinglass also showed several videotapes in court, filmed by the helmet camera of one of the bikers, Kevin Bresloff. Most were recorded before the bikers on trial encountered the S.U.V. and so have little to do with the assault. Still, the prosecutor made Mr. Bresloff, a Long Island motorcycle mechanic , narrate the tapes, explaining how he and other bikers drove up on sidewalks, ran red lights and did wheelies on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. The tapes also show some bikers racing down the highway standing on their seats. Portraying the bikers as a lawless mob is intended to counter the defense argument that it was Mr. Lien and his wife who started the conflict, out of frustration with the traffic problems caused by the motorcyclists.", "sentence_answer": "Still, the prosecutor made Mr. Bresloff, a Long Island motorcycle mechanic , narrate the tapes, explaining how he and other bikers drove up on sidewalks, ran red lights and did wheelies on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway."} -{"question": "Who was assaulted?", "paragraph": "Mr. Arlia argues that someone else made that hole and that the detective, who maintains he had no idea who was actually in the Range Rover, assumed it had been broken by a projectile from inside the car. \u201cHe actually thought it was an attack from within and he reacted,\u201d Mr. Arlia argued. \u201cHe never had any purposeful intent to cause harm.\u201d Mr. Steinglass pointed out in his opening that Detective Braszczok never intervened when he saw Mr. Lien assaulted, nor did he call the uniformed police. According to a witness at a pretrial hearing, the detective waited two days before telling the Police Department that he had been involved in the attack, a decision his lawyer attributed to his fear that he would be fired. Three hours after the assault, Mr. Steinglass pointed out, Detective Braszczok sent two texts to colleagues in the Police Department, one saying the biker tour was \u201cmayhem\u201d and another stating \u201cit was fun.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Lien", "sentence": "Mr. Steinglass pointed out in his opening that Detective Braszczok never intervened when he saw Mr. Lien assaulted, nor did he call the uniformed police.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Arlia argues that someone else made that hole and that the detective, who maintains he had no idea who was actually in the Range Rover, assumed it had been broken by a projectile from inside the car. \u201cHe actually thought it was an attack from within and he reacted,\u201d Mr. Arlia argued. \u201cHe never had any purposeful intent to cause harm.\u201d Mr. Steinglass pointed out in his opening that Detective Braszczok never intervened when he saw Mr. Lien assaulted, nor did he call the uniformed police. According to a witness at a pretrial hearing, the detective waited two days before telling the Police Department that he had been involved in the attack, a decision his lawyer attributed to his fear that he would be fired. Three hours after the assault, Mr. Steinglass pointed out, Detective Braszczok sent two texts to colleagues in the Police Department, one saying the biker tour was \u201cmayhem\u201d and another stating \u201cit was fun.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Arlia argues that someone else made that hole and that the detective, who maintains he had no idea who was actually in the Range Rover, assumed it had been broken by a projectile from inside the car. \u201cHe actually thought it was an attack from within and he reacted,\u201d Mr. Arlia argued. \u201cHe never had any purposeful intent to cause harm.\u201d Mr. Steinglass pointed out in his opening that Detective Braszczok never intervened when he saw Mr. Lien assaulted, nor did he call the uniformed police. According to a witness at a pretrial hearing, the detective waited two days before telling the Police Department that he had been involved in the attack, a decision his lawyer attributed to his fear that he would be fired. Three hours after the assault, Mr. Steinglass pointed out, Detective Braszczok sent two texts to colleagues in the Police Department, one saying the biker tour was \u201cmayhem\u201d and another stating \u201cit was fun.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Steinglass pointed out in his opening that Detective Braszczok never intervened when he saw Mr. Lien assaulted, nor did he call the uniformed police."} -{"question": "Who did not call the uniformed police?", "paragraph": "Mr. Arlia argues that someone else made that hole and that the detective, who maintains he had no idea who was actually in the Range Rover, assumed it had been broken by a projectile from inside the car. \u201cHe actually thought it was an attack from within and he reacted,\u201d Mr. Arlia argued. \u201cHe never had any purposeful intent to cause harm.\u201d Mr. Steinglass pointed out in his opening that Detective Braszczok never intervened when he saw Mr. Lien assaulted, nor did he call the uniformed police. According to a witness at a pretrial hearing, the detective waited two days before telling the Police Department that he had been involved in the attack, a decision his lawyer attributed to his fear that he would be fired. Three hours after the assault, Mr. Steinglass pointed out, Detective Braszczok sent two texts to colleagues in the Police Department, one saying the biker tour was \u201cmayhem\u201d and another stating \u201cit was fun.\u201d", "answer": "Detective Braszczok", "sentence": "Mr. Steinglass pointed out in his opening that Detective Braszczok never intervened when he saw Mr. Lien assaulted, nor did he call the uniformed police.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Arlia argues that someone else made that hole and that the detective, who maintains he had no idea who was actually in the Range Rover, assumed it had been broken by a projectile from inside the car. \u201cHe actually thought it was an attack from within and he reacted,\u201d Mr. Arlia argued. \u201cHe never had any purposeful intent to cause harm.\u201d Mr. Steinglass pointed out in his opening that Detective Braszczok never intervened when he saw Mr. Lien assaulted, nor did he call the uniformed police. According to a witness at a pretrial hearing, the detective waited two days before telling the Police Department that he had been involved in the attack, a decision his lawyer attributed to his fear that he would be fired. Three hours after the assault, Mr. Steinglass pointed out, Detective Braszczok sent two texts to colleagues in the Police Department, one saying the biker tour was \u201cmayhem\u201d and another stating \u201cit was fun.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Arlia argues that someone else made that hole and that the detective, who maintains he had no idea who was actually in the Range Rover, assumed it had been broken by a projectile from inside the car. \u201cHe actually thought it was an attack from within and he reacted,\u201d Mr. Arlia argued. \u201cHe never had any purposeful intent to cause harm.\u201d Mr. Steinglass pointed out in his opening that Detective Braszczok never intervened when he saw Mr. Lien assaulted, nor did he call the uniformed police. According to a witness at a pretrial hearing, the detective waited two days before telling the Police Department that he had been involved in the attack, a decision his lawyer attributed to his fear that he would be fired. Three hours after the assault, Mr. Steinglass pointed out, Detective Braszczok sent two texts to colleagues in the Police Department, one saying the biker tour was \u201cmayhem\u201d and another stating \u201cit was fun.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Steinglass pointed out in his opening that Detective Braszczok never intervened when he saw Mr. Lien assaulted, nor did he call the uniformed police."} -{"question": "How many days passed before informing the Police Department?", "paragraph": "Mr. Arlia argues that someone else made that hole and that the detective, who maintains he had no idea who was actually in the Range Rover, assumed it had been broken by a projectile from inside the car. \u201cHe actually thought it was an attack from within and he reacted,\u201d Mr. Arlia argued. \u201cHe never had any purposeful intent to cause harm.\u201d Mr. Steinglass pointed out in his opening that Detective Braszczok never intervened when he saw Mr. Lien assaulted, nor did he call the uniformed police. According to a witness at a pretrial hearing, the detective waited two days before telling the Police Department that he had been involved in the attack, a decision his lawyer attributed to his fear that he would be fired. Three hours after the assault, Mr. Steinglass pointed out, Detective Braszczok sent two texts to colleagues in the Police Department, one saying the biker tour was \u201cmayhem\u201d and another stating \u201cit was fun.\u201d", "answer": "two days", "sentence": "According to a witness at a pretrial hearing, the detective waited two days before telling the Police Department that he had been involved in the attack, a decision his lawyer attributed to his fear that he would be fired.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Arlia argues that someone else made that hole and that the detective, who maintains he had no idea who was actually in the Range Rover, assumed it had been broken by a projectile from inside the car. \u201cHe actually thought it was an attack from within and he reacted,\u201d Mr. Arlia argued. \u201cHe never had any purposeful intent to cause harm.\u201d Mr. Steinglass pointed out in his opening that Detective Braszczok never intervened when he saw Mr. Lien assaulted, nor did he call the uniformed police. According to a witness at a pretrial hearing, the detective waited two days before telling the Police Department that he had been involved in the attack, a decision his lawyer attributed to his fear that he would be fired. Three hours after the assault, Mr. Steinglass pointed out, Detective Braszczok sent two texts to colleagues in the Police Department, one saying the biker tour was \u201cmayhem\u201d and another stating \u201cit was fun.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Arlia argues that someone else made that hole and that the detective, who maintains he had no idea who was actually in the Range Rover, assumed it had been broken by a projectile from inside the car. \u201cHe actually thought it was an attack from within and he reacted,\u201d Mr. Arlia argued. \u201cHe never had any purposeful intent to cause harm.\u201d Mr. Steinglass pointed out in his opening that Detective Braszczok never intervened when he saw Mr. Lien assaulted, nor did he call the uniformed police. According to a witness at a pretrial hearing, the detective waited two days before telling the Police Department that he had been involved in the attack, a decision his lawyer attributed to his fear that he would be fired. Three hours after the assault, Mr. Steinglass pointed out, Detective Braszczok sent two texts to colleagues in the Police Department, one saying the biker tour was \u201cmayhem\u201d and another stating \u201cit was fun.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "According to a witness at a pretrial hearing, the detective waited two days before telling the Police Department that he had been involved in the attack, a decision his lawyer attributed to his fear that he would be fired."} -{"question": "Who argued that someone else made a hole?", "paragraph": "Mr. Arlia argues that someone else made that hole and that the detective, who maintains he had no idea who was actually in the Range Rover, assumed it had been broken by a projectile from inside the car. \u201cHe actually thought it was an attack from within and he reacted,\u201d Mr. Arlia argued. \u201cHe never had any purposeful intent to cause harm.\u201d Mr. Steinglass pointed out in his opening that Detective Braszczok never intervened when he saw Mr. Lien assaulted, nor did he call the uniformed police. According to a witness at a pretrial hearing, the detective waited two days before telling the Police Department that he had been involved in the attack, a decision his lawyer attributed to his fear that he would be fired. Three hours after the assault, Mr. Steinglass pointed out, Detective Braszczok sent two texts to colleagues in the Police Department, one saying the biker tour was \u201cmayhem\u201d and another stating \u201cit was fun.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Arlia", "sentence": "Mr. Arlia argues that someone else made that hole and that the detective, who maintains he had no idea who was actually in the Range Rover, assumed it had been broken by a projectile from inside the car.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Arlia argues that someone else made that hole and that the detective, who maintains he had no idea who was actually in the Range Rover, assumed it had been broken by a projectile from inside the car. \u201cHe actually thought it was an attack from within and he reacted,\u201d Mr. Arlia argued. \u201cHe never had any purposeful intent to cause harm.\u201d Mr. Steinglass pointed out in his opening that Detective Braszczok never intervened when he saw Mr. Lien assaulted, nor did he call the uniformed police. According to a witness at a pretrial hearing, the detective waited two days before telling the Police Department that he had been involved in the attack, a decision his lawyer attributed to his fear that he would be fired. Three hours after the assault, Mr. Steinglass pointed out, Detective Braszczok sent two texts to colleagues in the Police Department, one saying the biker tour was \u201cmayhem\u201d and another stating \u201cit was fun.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " Mr. Arlia argues that someone else made that hole and that the detective, who maintains he had no idea who was actually in the Range Rover, assumed it had been broken by a projectile from inside the car. \u201cHe actually thought it was an attack from within and he reacted,\u201d Mr. Arlia argued. \u201cHe never had any purposeful intent to cause harm.\u201d Mr. Steinglass pointed out in his opening that Detective Braszczok never intervened when he saw Mr. Lien assaulted, nor did he call the uniformed police. According to a witness at a pretrial hearing, the detective waited two days before telling the Police Department that he had been involved in the attack, a decision his lawyer attributed to his fear that he would be fired. Three hours after the assault, Mr. Steinglass pointed out, Detective Braszczok sent two texts to colleagues in the Police Department, one saying the biker tour was \u201cmayhem\u201d and another stating \u201cit was fun.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Arlia argues that someone else made that hole and that the detective, who maintains he had no idea who was actually in the Range Rover, assumed it had been broken by a projectile from inside the car."} -{"question": "Who was the prosecutor?", "paragraph": "Mr. Arlia argues that someone else made that hole and that the detective, who maintains he had no idea who was actually in the Range Rover, assumed it had been broken by a projectile from inside the car. \u201cHe actually thought it was an attack from within and he reacted,\u201d Mr. Arlia argued. \u201cHe never had any purposeful intent to cause harm.\u201d Mr. Steinglass pointed out in his opening that Detective Braszczok never intervened when he saw Mr. Lien assaulted, nor did he call the uniformed police. According to a witness at a pretrial hearing, the detective waited two days before telling the Police Department that he had been involved in the attack, a decision his lawyer attributed to his fear that he would be fired. Three hours after the assault, Mr. Steinglass pointed out, Detective Braszczok sent two texts to colleagues in the Police Department, one saying the biker tour was \u201cmayhem\u201d and another stating \u201cit was fun.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Arlia", "sentence": "Mr. Arlia argues that someone else made that hole and that the detective, who maintains he had no idea who was actually in the Range Rover, assumed it had been broken by a projectile from inside the car.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Arlia argues that someone else made that hole and that the detective, who maintains he had no idea who was actually in the Range Rover, assumed it had been broken by a projectile from inside the car. \u201cHe actually thought it was an attack from within and he reacted,\u201d Mr. Arlia argued. \u201cHe never had any purposeful intent to cause harm.\u201d Mr. Steinglass pointed out in his opening that Detective Braszczok never intervened when he saw Mr. Lien assaulted, nor did he call the uniformed police. According to a witness at a pretrial hearing, the detective waited two days before telling the Police Department that he had been involved in the attack, a decision his lawyer attributed to his fear that he would be fired. Three hours after the assault, Mr. Steinglass pointed out, Detective Braszczok sent two texts to colleagues in the Police Department, one saying the biker tour was \u201cmayhem\u201d and another stating \u201cit was fun.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " Mr. Arlia argues that someone else made that hole and that the detective, who maintains he had no idea who was actually in the Range Rover, assumed it had been broken by a projectile from inside the car. \u201cHe actually thought it was an attack from within and he reacted,\u201d Mr. Arlia argued. \u201cHe never had any purposeful intent to cause harm.\u201d Mr. Steinglass pointed out in his opening that Detective Braszczok never intervened when he saw Mr. Lien assaulted, nor did he call the uniformed police. According to a witness at a pretrial hearing, the detective waited two days before telling the Police Department that he had been involved in the attack, a decision his lawyer attributed to his fear that he would be fired. Three hours after the assault, Mr. Steinglass pointed out, Detective Braszczok sent two texts to colleagues in the Police Department, one saying the biker tour was \u201cmayhem\u201d and another stating \u201cit was fun.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Arlia argues that someone else made that hole and that the detective, who maintains he had no idea who was actually in the Range Rover, assumed it had been broken by a projectile from inside the car."} -{"question": "Which group performs the circumcision?", "paragraph": "The department\u2019s other decision was to abandon efforts to crack down on metzitzah b\u2019peh, the ancient ritual of ultra-Orthodox Jews in which the circumciser, or mohel, sucks blood from a newly cut penis with his mouth. Public-health authorities, like the American Academy of Pediatrics, have long warned about the dangers of mohels infecting babies with the herpes virus, which can be deadly to infants. The city Health Department has linked metzitzah b\u2019peh to more than a dozen infant herpes cases, and two deaths, since 2000. The Bloomberg administration tried to discourage the practice by requiring mohels to have parents sign a consent form acknowledging the risks. But mohels, citing religious freedom, refused to use the form. When Mr. de Blasio ran for office, he offered the politically powerful Orthodox community another approach. On Wednesday the Board of Health followed through: It voted to abandon consent forms in favor of education and friendly persuasion. It has a new brochure about the risks of metzitzah b\u2019peh, to be given to pregnant women by clinics and hospitals. A small photo of herpes blisters helps parents recognize a symptom of infection.", "answer": "ultra-Orthodox Jews", "sentence": "The department\u2019s other decision was to abandon efforts to crack down on metzitzah b\u2019peh, the ancient ritual of ultra-Orthodox Jews in which the circumciser, or mohel, sucks blood from a newly cut penis with his mouth.", "paragraph_sentence": " The department\u2019s other decision was to abandon efforts to crack down on metzitzah b\u2019peh, the ancient ritual of ultra-Orthodox Jews in which the circumciser, or mohel, sucks blood from a newly cut penis with his mouth. Public-health authorities, like the American Academy of Pediatrics, have long warned about the dangers of mohels infecting babies with the herpes virus, which can be deadly to infants. The city Health Department has linked metzitzah b\u2019peh to more than a dozen infant herpes cases, and two deaths, since 2000. The Bloomberg administration tried to discourage the practice by requiring mohels to have parents sign a consent form acknowledging the risks. But mohels, citing religious freedom, refused to use the form. When Mr. de Blasio ran for office, he offered the politically powerful Orthodox community another approach. On Wednesday the Board of Health followed through: It voted to abandon consent forms in favor of education and friendly persuasion. It has a new brochure about the risks of metzitzah b\u2019peh, to be given to pregnant women by clinics and hospitals. A small photo of herpes blisters helps parents recognize a symptom of infection.", "paragraph_answer": "The department\u2019s other decision was to abandon efforts to crack down on metzitzah b\u2019peh, the ancient ritual of ultra-Orthodox Jews in which the circumciser, or mohel, sucks blood from a newly cut penis with his mouth. Public-health authorities, like the American Academy of Pediatrics, have long warned about the dangers of mohels infecting babies with the herpes virus, which can be deadly to infants. The city Health Department has linked metzitzah b\u2019peh to more than a dozen infant herpes cases, and two deaths, since 2000. The Bloomberg administration tried to discourage the practice by requiring mohels to have parents sign a consent form acknowledging the risks. But mohels, citing religious freedom, refused to use the form. When Mr. de Blasio ran for office, he offered the politically powerful Orthodox community another approach. On Wednesday the Board of Health followed through: It voted to abandon consent forms in favor of education and friendly persuasion. It has a new brochure about the risks of metzitzah b\u2019peh, to be given to pregnant women by clinics and hospitals. A small photo of herpes blisters helps parents recognize a symptom of infection.", "sentence_answer": "The department\u2019s other decision was to abandon efforts to crack down on metzitzah b\u2019peh, the ancient ritual of ultra-Orthodox Jews in which the circumciser, or mohel, sucks blood from a newly cut penis with his mouth."} -{"question": "What is being used to influence parents?", "paragraph": "The department\u2019s other decision was to abandon efforts to crack down on metzitzah b\u2019peh, the ancient ritual of ultra-Orthodox Jews in which the circumciser, or mohel, sucks blood from a newly cut penis with his mouth. Public-health authorities, like the American Academy of Pediatrics, have long warned about the dangers of mohels infecting babies with the herpes virus, which can be deadly to infants. The city Health Department has linked metzitzah b\u2019peh to more than a dozen infant herpes cases, and two deaths, since 2000. The Bloomberg administration tried to discourage the practice by requiring mohels to have parents sign a consent form acknowledging the risks. But mohels, citing religious freedom, refused to use the form. When Mr. de Blasio ran for office, he offered the politically powerful Orthodox community another approach. On Wednesday the Board of Health followed through: It voted to abandon consent forms in favor of education and friendly persuasion. It has a new brochure about the risks of metzitzah b\u2019peh, to be given to pregnant women by clinics and hospitals. A small photo of herpes blisters helps parents recognize a symptom of infection.", "answer": "education", "sentence": "On Wednesday the Board of Health followed through: It voted to abandon consent forms in favor of education and friendly persuasion.", "paragraph_sentence": "The department\u2019s other decision was to abandon efforts to crack down on metzitzah b\u2019peh, the ancient ritual of ultra-Orthodox Jews in which the circumciser, or mohel, sucks blood from a newly cut penis with his mouth. Public-health authorities, like the American Academy of Pediatrics, have long warned about the dangers of mohels infecting babies with the herpes virus, which can be deadly to infants. The city Health Department has linked metzitzah b\u2019peh to more than a dozen infant herpes cases, and two deaths, since 2000. The Bloomberg administration tried to discourage the practice by requiring mohels to have parents sign a consent form acknowledging the risks. But mohels, citing religious freedom, refused to use the form. When Mr. de Blasio ran for office, he offered the politically powerful Orthodox community another approach. On Wednesday the Board of Health followed through: It voted to abandon consent forms in favor of education and friendly persuasion. It has a new brochure about the risks of metzitzah b\u2019peh, to be given to pregnant women by clinics and hospitals. A small photo of herpes blisters helps parents recognize a symptom of infection.", "paragraph_answer": "The department\u2019s other decision was to abandon efforts to crack down on metzitzah b\u2019peh, the ancient ritual of ultra-Orthodox Jews in which the circumciser, or mohel, sucks blood from a newly cut penis with his mouth. Public-health authorities, like the American Academy of Pediatrics, have long warned about the dangers of mohels infecting babies with the herpes virus, which can be deadly to infants. The city Health Department has linked metzitzah b\u2019peh to more than a dozen infant herpes cases, and two deaths, since 2000. The Bloomberg administration tried to discourage the practice by requiring mohels to have parents sign a consent form acknowledging the risks. But mohels, citing religious freedom, refused to use the form. When Mr. de Blasio ran for office, he offered the politically powerful Orthodox community another approach. On Wednesday the Board of Health followed through: It voted to abandon consent forms in favor of education and friendly persuasion. It has a new brochure about the risks of metzitzah b\u2019peh, to be given to pregnant women by clinics and hospitals. A small photo of herpes blisters helps parents recognize a symptom of infection.", "sentence_answer": "On Wednesday the Board of Health followed through: It voted to abandon consent forms in favor of education and friendly persuasion."} -{"question": "What is the health department distributing to influence parents?", "paragraph": "The department\u2019s other decision was to abandon efforts to crack down on metzitzah b\u2019peh, the ancient ritual of ultra-Orthodox Jews in which the circumciser, or mohel, sucks blood from a newly cut penis with his mouth. Public-health authorities, like the American Academy of Pediatrics, have long warned about the dangers of mohels infecting babies with the herpes virus, which can be deadly to infants. The city Health Department has linked metzitzah b\u2019peh to more than a dozen infant herpes cases, and two deaths, since 2000. The Bloomberg administration tried to discourage the practice by requiring mohels to have parents sign a consent form acknowledging the risks. But mohels, citing religious freedom, refused to use the form. When Mr. de Blasio ran for office, he offered the politically powerful Orthodox community another approach. On Wednesday the Board of Health followed through: It voted to abandon consent forms in favor of education and friendly persuasion. It has a new brochure about the risks of metzitzah b\u2019peh, to be given to pregnant women by clinics and hospitals. A small photo of herpes blisters helps parents recognize a symptom of infection.", "answer": "brochure", "sentence": "It has a new brochure about the risks of metzitzah b\u2019peh, to be given to pregnant women by clinics and hospitals.", "paragraph_sentence": "The department\u2019s other decision was to abandon efforts to crack down on metzitzah b\u2019peh, the ancient ritual of ultra-Orthodox Jews in which the circumciser, or mohel, sucks blood from a newly cut penis with his mouth. Public-health authorities, like the American Academy of Pediatrics, have long warned about the dangers of mohels infecting babies with the herpes virus, which can be deadly to infants. The city Health Department has linked metzitzah b\u2019peh to more than a dozen infant herpes cases, and two deaths, since 2000. The Bloomberg administration tried to discourage the practice by requiring mohels to have parents sign a consent form acknowledging the risks. But mohels, citing religious freedom, refused to use the form. When Mr. de Blasio ran for office, he offered the politically powerful Orthodox community another approach. On Wednesday the Board of Health followed through: It voted to abandon consent forms in favor of education and friendly persuasion. It has a new brochure about the risks of metzitzah b\u2019peh, to be given to pregnant women by clinics and hospitals. A small photo of herpes blisters helps parents recognize a symptom of infection.", "paragraph_answer": "The department\u2019s other decision was to abandon efforts to crack down on metzitzah b\u2019peh, the ancient ritual of ultra-Orthodox Jews in which the circumciser, or mohel, sucks blood from a newly cut penis with his mouth. Public-health authorities, like the American Academy of Pediatrics, have long warned about the dangers of mohels infecting babies with the herpes virus, which can be deadly to infants. The city Health Department has linked metzitzah b\u2019peh to more than a dozen infant herpes cases, and two deaths, since 2000. The Bloomberg administration tried to discourage the practice by requiring mohels to have parents sign a consent form acknowledging the risks. But mohels, citing religious freedom, refused to use the form. When Mr. de Blasio ran for office, he offered the politically powerful Orthodox community another approach. On Wednesday the Board of Health followed through: It voted to abandon consent forms in favor of education and friendly persuasion. It has a new brochure about the risks of metzitzah b\u2019peh, to be given to pregnant women by clinics and hospitals. A small photo of herpes blisters helps parents recognize a symptom of infection.", "sentence_answer": "It has a new brochure about the risks of metzitzah b\u2019peh, to be given to pregnant women by clinics and hospitals."} -{"question": "What disease did the city Health Department link the circumcisions to?", "paragraph": "The department\u2019s other decision was to abandon efforts to crack down on metzitzah b\u2019peh, the ancient ritual of ultra-Orthodox Jews in which the circumciser, or mohel, sucks blood from a newly cut penis with his mouth. Public-health authorities, like the American Academy of Pediatrics, have long warned about the dangers of mohels infecting babies with the herpes virus, which can be deadly to infants. The city Health Department has linked metzitzah b\u2019peh to more than a dozen infant herpes cases, and two deaths, since 2000. The Bloomberg administration tried to discourage the practice by requiring mohels to have parents sign a consent form acknowledging the risks. But mohels, citing religious freedom, refused to use the form. When Mr. de Blasio ran for office, he offered the politically powerful Orthodox community another approach. On Wednesday the Board of Health followed through: It voted to abandon consent forms in favor of education and friendly persuasion. It has a new brochure about the risks of metzitzah b\u2019peh, to be given to pregnant women by clinics and hospitals. A small photo of herpes blisters helps parents recognize a symptom of infection.", "answer": "herpes", "sentence": "Public-health authorities, like the American Academy of Pediatrics, have long warned about the dangers of mohels infecting babies with the herpes virus, which can be deadly to infants.", "paragraph_sentence": "The department\u2019s other decision was to abandon efforts to crack down on metzitzah b\u2019peh, the ancient ritual of ultra-Orthodox Jews in which the circumciser, or mohel, sucks blood from a newly cut penis with his mouth. Public-health authorities, like the American Academy of Pediatrics, have long warned about the dangers of mohels infecting babies with the herpes virus, which can be deadly to infants. The city Health Department has linked metzitzah b\u2019peh to more than a dozen infant herpes cases, and two deaths, since 2000. The Bloomberg administration tried to discourage the practice by requiring mohels to have parents sign a consent form acknowledging the risks. But mohels, citing religious freedom, refused to use the form. When Mr. de Blasio ran for office, he offered the politically powerful Orthodox community another approach. On Wednesday the Board of Health followed through: It voted to abandon consent forms in favor of education and friendly persuasion. It has a new brochure about the risks of metzitzah b\u2019peh, to be given to pregnant women by clinics and hospitals. A small photo of herpes blisters helps parents recognize a symptom of infection.", "paragraph_answer": "The department\u2019s other decision was to abandon efforts to crack down on metzitzah b\u2019peh, the ancient ritual of ultra-Orthodox Jews in which the circumciser, or mohel, sucks blood from a newly cut penis with his mouth. Public-health authorities, like the American Academy of Pediatrics, have long warned about the dangers of mohels infecting babies with the herpes virus, which can be deadly to infants. The city Health Department has linked metzitzah b\u2019peh to more than a dozen infant herpes cases, and two deaths, since 2000. The Bloomberg administration tried to discourage the practice by requiring mohels to have parents sign a consent form acknowledging the risks. But mohels, citing religious freedom, refused to use the form. When Mr. de Blasio ran for office, he offered the politically powerful Orthodox community another approach. On Wednesday the Board of Health followed through: It voted to abandon consent forms in favor of education and friendly persuasion. It has a new brochure about the risks of metzitzah b\u2019peh, to be given to pregnant women by clinics and hospitals. A small photo of herpes blisters helps parents recognize a symptom of infection.", "sentence_answer": "Public-health authorities, like the American Academy of Pediatrics, have long warned about the dangers of mohels infecting babies with the herpes virus, which can be deadly to infants."} -{"question": "What group has serious concerns about the procedure performed on babies?", "paragraph": "The department\u2019s other decision was to abandon efforts to crack down on metzitzah b\u2019peh, the ancient ritual of ultra-Orthodox Jews in which the circumciser, or mohel, sucks blood from a newly cut penis with his mouth. Public-health authorities, like the American Academy of Pediatrics, have long warned about the dangers of mohels infecting babies with the herpes virus, which can be deadly to infants. The city Health Department has linked metzitzah b\u2019peh to more than a dozen infant herpes cases, and two deaths, since 2000. The Bloomberg administration tried to discourage the practice by requiring mohels to have parents sign a consent form acknowledging the risks. But mohels, citing religious freedom, refused to use the form. When Mr. de Blasio ran for office, he offered the politically powerful Orthodox community another approach. On Wednesday the Board of Health followed through: It voted to abandon consent forms in favor of education and friendly persuasion. It has a new brochure about the risks of metzitzah b\u2019peh, to be given to pregnant women by clinics and hospitals. A small photo of herpes blisters helps parents recognize a symptom of infection.", "answer": "American Academy of Pediatrics", "sentence": "Public-health authorities, like the American Academy of Pediatrics , have long warned about the dangers of mohels infecting babies with the herpes virus, which can be deadly to infants.", "paragraph_sentence": "The department\u2019s other decision was to abandon efforts to crack down on metzitzah b\u2019peh, the ancient ritual of ultra-Orthodox Jews in which the circumciser, or mohel, sucks blood from a newly cut penis with his mouth. Public-health authorities, like the American Academy of Pediatrics , have long warned about the dangers of mohels infecting babies with the herpes virus, which can be deadly to infants. The city Health Department has linked metzitzah b\u2019peh to more than a dozen infant herpes cases, and two deaths, since 2000. The Bloomberg administration tried to discourage the practice by requiring mohels to have parents sign a consent form acknowledging the risks. But mohels, citing religious freedom, refused to use the form. When Mr. de Blasio ran for office, he offered the politically powerful Orthodox community another approach. On Wednesday the Board of Health followed through: It voted to abandon consent forms in favor of education and friendly persuasion. It has a new brochure about the risks of metzitzah b\u2019peh, to be given to pregnant women by clinics and hospitals. A small photo of herpes blisters helps parents recognize a symptom of infection.", "paragraph_answer": "The department\u2019s other decision was to abandon efforts to crack down on metzitzah b\u2019peh, the ancient ritual of ultra-Orthodox Jews in which the circumciser, or mohel, sucks blood from a newly cut penis with his mouth. Public-health authorities, like the American Academy of Pediatrics , have long warned about the dangers of mohels infecting babies with the herpes virus, which can be deadly to infants. The city Health Department has linked metzitzah b\u2019peh to more than a dozen infant herpes cases, and two deaths, since 2000. The Bloomberg administration tried to discourage the practice by requiring mohels to have parents sign a consent form acknowledging the risks. But mohels, citing religious freedom, refused to use the form. When Mr. de Blasio ran for office, he offered the politically powerful Orthodox community another approach. On Wednesday the Board of Health followed through: It voted to abandon consent forms in favor of education and friendly persuasion. It has a new brochure about the risks of metzitzah b\u2019peh, to be given to pregnant women by clinics and hospitals. A small photo of herpes blisters helps parents recognize a symptom of infection.", "sentence_answer": "Public-health authorities, like the American Academy of Pediatrics , have long warned about the dangers of mohels infecting babies with the herpes virus, which can be deadly to infants."} -{"question": "What day of the week was the baby found?", "paragraph": "The mother of a baby who was left this week in an unadorned cr\u00e8che inside a Roman Catholic church in Queens was found and will not face criminal prosecution, the county district attorney said late Wednesday. The baby, who was found on Monday, remained in stable condition at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center, officials said. Officially, the baby, a boy, is in the custody of the city\u2019s Administration for Children\u2019s Services, as is routine in such cases. Richard A. Brown, the Queens district attorney, said in a statement that his office had decided not to press charges against the woman, whom he did not identify by name, after she was located and interviewed on Wednesday.", "answer": "Monday", "sentence": "The baby, who was found on Monday , remained in stable condition at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center, officials said.", "paragraph_sentence": "The mother of a baby who was left this week in an unadorned cr\u00e8che inside a Roman Catholic church in Queens was found and will not face criminal prosecution, the county district attorney said late Wednesday. The baby, who was found on Monday , remained in stable condition at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center, officials said. Officially, the baby, a boy, is in the custody of the city\u2019s Administration for Children\u2019s Services, as is routine in such cases. Richard A. Brown, the Queens district attorney, said in a statement that his office had decided not to press charges against the woman, whom he did not identify by name, after she was located and interviewed on Wednesday.", "paragraph_answer": "The mother of a baby who was left this week in an unadorned cr\u00e8che inside a Roman Catholic church in Queens was found and will not face criminal prosecution, the county district attorney said late Wednesday. The baby, who was found on Monday , remained in stable condition at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center, officials said. Officially, the baby, a boy, is in the custody of the city\u2019s Administration for Children\u2019s Services, as is routine in such cases. Richard A. Brown, the Queens district attorney, said in a statement that his office had decided not to press charges against the woman, whom he did not identify by name, after she was located and interviewed on Wednesday.", "sentence_answer": "The baby, who was found on Monday , remained in stable condition at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center, officials said."} -{"question": "What kind of church was the baby found in?", "paragraph": "The mother of a baby who was left this week in an unadorned cr\u00e8che inside a Roman Catholic church in Queens was found and will not face criminal prosecution, the county district attorney said late Wednesday. The baby, who was found on Monday, remained in stable condition at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center, officials said. Officially, the baby, a boy, is in the custody of the city\u2019s Administration for Children\u2019s Services, as is routine in such cases. Richard A. Brown, the Queens district attorney, said in a statement that his office had decided not to press charges against the woman, whom he did not identify by name, after she was located and interviewed on Wednesday.", "answer": "Roman Catholic", "sentence": "The mother of a baby who was left this week in an unadorned cr\u00e8che inside a Roman Catholic church in Queens was found and will not face criminal prosecution, the county district attorney said late Wednesday.", "paragraph_sentence": " The mother of a baby who was left this week in an unadorned cr\u00e8che inside a Roman Catholic church in Queens was found and will not face criminal prosecution, the county district attorney said late Wednesday. The baby, who was found on Monday, remained in stable condition at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center, officials said. Officially, the baby, a boy, is in the custody of the city\u2019s Administration for Children\u2019s Services, as is routine in such cases. Richard A. Brown, the Queens district attorney, said in a statement that his office had decided not to press charges against the woman, whom he did not identify by name, after she was located and interviewed on Wednesday.", "paragraph_answer": "The mother of a baby who was left this week in an unadorned cr\u00e8che inside a Roman Catholic church in Queens was found and will not face criminal prosecution, the county district attorney said late Wednesday. The baby, who was found on Monday, remained in stable condition at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center, officials said. Officially, the baby, a boy, is in the custody of the city\u2019s Administration for Children\u2019s Services, as is routine in such cases. Richard A. Brown, the Queens district attorney, said in a statement that his office had decided not to press charges against the woman, whom he did not identify by name, after she was located and interviewed on Wednesday.", "sentence_answer": "The mother of a baby who was left this week in an unadorned cr\u00e8che inside a Roman Catholic church in Queens was found and will not face criminal prosecution, the county district attorney said late Wednesday."} -{"question": "What is the name of the hospital the baby was brought to?", "paragraph": "The mother of a baby who was left this week in an unadorned cr\u00e8che inside a Roman Catholic church in Queens was found and will not face criminal prosecution, the county district attorney said late Wednesday. The baby, who was found on Monday, remained in stable condition at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center, officials said. Officially, the baby, a boy, is in the custody of the city\u2019s Administration for Children\u2019s Services, as is routine in such cases. Richard A. Brown, the Queens district attorney, said in a statement that his office had decided not to press charges against the woman, whom he did not identify by name, after she was located and interviewed on Wednesday.", "answer": "Jamaica Hospital Medical Center", "sentence": "The baby, who was found on Monday, remained in stable condition at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center , officials said.", "paragraph_sentence": "The mother of a baby who was left this week in an unadorned cr\u00e8che inside a Roman Catholic church in Queens was found and will not face criminal prosecution, the county district attorney said late Wednesday. The baby, who was found on Monday, remained in stable condition at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center , officials said. Officially, the baby, a boy, is in the custody of the city\u2019s Administration for Children\u2019s Services, as is routine in such cases. Richard A. Brown, the Queens district attorney, said in a statement that his office had decided not to press charges against the woman, whom he did not identify by name, after she was located and interviewed on Wednesday.", "paragraph_answer": "The mother of a baby who was left this week in an unadorned cr\u00e8che inside a Roman Catholic church in Queens was found and will not face criminal prosecution, the county district attorney said late Wednesday. The baby, who was found on Monday, remained in stable condition at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center , officials said. Officially, the baby, a boy, is in the custody of the city\u2019s Administration for Children\u2019s Services, as is routine in such cases. Richard A. Brown, the Queens district attorney, said in a statement that his office had decided not to press charges against the woman, whom he did not identify by name, after she was located and interviewed on Wednesday.", "sentence_answer": "The baby, who was found on Monday, remained in stable condition at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center , officials said."} -{"question": "What is the name of the Queens district attorney?", "paragraph": "The mother of a baby who was left this week in an unadorned cr\u00e8che inside a Roman Catholic church in Queens was found and will not face criminal prosecution, the county district attorney said late Wednesday. The baby, who was found on Monday, remained in stable condition at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center, officials said. Officially, the baby, a boy, is in the custody of the city\u2019s Administration for Children\u2019s Services, as is routine in such cases. Richard A. Brown, the Queens district attorney, said in a statement that his office had decided not to press charges against the woman, whom he did not identify by name, after she was located and interviewed on Wednesday.", "answer": "Richard A. Brown", "sentence": "Richard A. Brown , the Queens district attorney, said in a statement that his office had decided not to press charges against the woman, whom he did not identify by name, after she was located and interviewed on Wednesday.", "paragraph_sentence": "The mother of a baby who was left this week in an unadorned cr\u00e8che inside a Roman Catholic church in Queens was found and will not face criminal prosecution, the county district attorney said late Wednesday. The baby, who was found on Monday, remained in stable condition at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center, officials said. Officially, the baby, a boy, is in the custody of the city\u2019s Administration for Children\u2019s Services, as is routine in such cases. Richard A. Brown , the Queens district attorney, said in a statement that his office had decided not to press charges against the woman, whom he did not identify by name, after she was located and interviewed on Wednesday. ", "paragraph_answer": "The mother of a baby who was left this week in an unadorned cr\u00e8che inside a Roman Catholic church in Queens was found and will not face criminal prosecution, the county district attorney said late Wednesday. The baby, who was found on Monday, remained in stable condition at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center, officials said. Officially, the baby, a boy, is in the custody of the city\u2019s Administration for Children\u2019s Services, as is routine in such cases. Richard A. Brown , the Queens district attorney, said in a statement that his office had decided not to press charges against the woman, whom he did not identify by name, after she was located and interviewed on Wednesday.", "sentence_answer": " Richard A. Brown , the Queens district attorney, said in a statement that his office had decided not to press charges against the woman, whom he did not identify by name, after she was located and interviewed on Wednesday."} -{"question": "Who is the baby in the custody of?", "paragraph": "The mother of a baby who was left this week in an unadorned cr\u00e8che inside a Roman Catholic church in Queens was found and will not face criminal prosecution, the county district attorney said late Wednesday. The baby, who was found on Monday, remained in stable condition at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center, officials said. Officially, the baby, a boy, is in the custody of the city\u2019s Administration for Children\u2019s Services, as is routine in such cases. Richard A. Brown, the Queens district attorney, said in a statement that his office had decided not to press charges against the woman, whom he did not identify by name, after she was located and interviewed on Wednesday.", "answer": "the city\u2019s Administration for Children\u2019s Services", "sentence": "Officially, the baby, a boy, is in the custody of the city\u2019s Administration for Children\u2019s Services , as is routine in such cases.", "paragraph_sentence": "The mother of a baby who was left this week in an unadorned cr\u00e8che inside a Roman Catholic church in Queens was found and will not face criminal prosecution, the county district attorney said late Wednesday. The baby, who was found on Monday, remained in stable condition at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center, officials said. Officially, the baby, a boy, is in the custody of the city\u2019s Administration for Children\u2019s Services , as is routine in such cases. Richard A. Brown, the Queens district attorney, said in a statement that his office had decided not to press charges against the woman, whom he did not identify by name, after she was located and interviewed on Wednesday.", "paragraph_answer": "The mother of a baby who was left this week in an unadorned cr\u00e8che inside a Roman Catholic church in Queens was found and will not face criminal prosecution, the county district attorney said late Wednesday. The baby, who was found on Monday, remained in stable condition at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center, officials said. Officially, the baby, a boy, is in the custody of the city\u2019s Administration for Children\u2019s Services , as is routine in such cases. Richard A. Brown, the Queens district attorney, said in a statement that his office had decided not to press charges against the woman, whom he did not identify by name, after she was located and interviewed on Wednesday.", "sentence_answer": "Officially, the baby, a boy, is in the custody of the city\u2019s Administration for Children\u2019s Services , as is routine in such cases."} -{"question": "What is the name of the law that the mother followed the spirit of?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe mother followed the spirit of New York\u2019s \u2018Safe Haven\u2019 Law, which allows a parent to leave a child not older than 30 days with an appropriate person or in a suitable location where the parent promptly notifies an appropriate person of the child\u2019s location,\u201d he said. \u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church, and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d Detectives from the 102nd Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared. One video clip showed the woman, with the infant, entering a dollar store on Jamaica Avenue, in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, around the corner from the church, at 111-11 86th Avenue.", "answer": "\u2018Safe Haven\u2019 Law", "sentence": "\u201cThe mother followed the spirit of New York\u2019s \u2018Safe Haven\u2019 Law , which allows a parent to leave a child not older than 30 days with an appropriate person or in a suitable location where the parent promptly notifies an appropriate person of the child\u2019s location,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe mother followed the spirit of New York\u2019s \u2018Safe Haven\u2019 Law , which allows a parent to leave a child not older than 30 days with an appropriate person or in a suitable location where the parent promptly notifies an appropriate person of the child\u2019s location,\u201d he said. \u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church, and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d Detectives from the 102nd Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared. One video clip showed the woman, with the infant, entering a dollar store on Jamaica Avenue, in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, around the corner from the church, at 111-11 86th Avenue.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe mother followed the spirit of New York\u2019s \u2018Safe Haven\u2019 Law , which allows a parent to leave a child not older than 30 days with an appropriate person or in a suitable location where the parent promptly notifies an appropriate person of the child\u2019s location,\u201d he said. \u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church, and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d Detectives from the 102nd Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared. One video clip showed the woman, with the infant, entering a dollar store on Jamaica Avenue, in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, around the corner from the church, at 111-11 86th Avenue.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe mother followed the spirit of New York\u2019s \u2018Safe Haven\u2019 Law , which allows a parent to leave a child not older than 30 days with an appropriate person or in a suitable location where the parent promptly notifies an appropriate person of the child\u2019s location,\u201d he said."} -{"question": "What is the name of the church?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe mother followed the spirit of New York\u2019s \u2018Safe Haven\u2019 Law, which allows a parent to leave a child not older than 30 days with an appropriate person or in a suitable location where the parent promptly notifies an appropriate person of the child\u2019s location,\u201d he said. \u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church, and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d Detectives from the 102nd Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared. One video clip showed the woman, with the infant, entering a dollar store on Jamaica Avenue, in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, around the corner from the church, at 111-11 86th Avenue.", "answer": "Church of the Holy Child Jesus", "sentence": "Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe mother followed the spirit of New York\u2019s \u2018Safe Haven\u2019 Law, which allows a parent to leave a child not older than 30 days with an appropriate person or in a suitable location where the parent promptly notifies an appropriate person of the child\u2019s location,\u201d he said. \u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church, and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d Detectives from the 102nd Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared. One video clip showed the woman, with the infant, entering a dollar store on Jamaica Avenue, in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, around the corner from the church, at 111-11 86th Avenue.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe mother followed the spirit of New York\u2019s \u2018Safe Haven\u2019 Law, which allows a parent to leave a child not older than 30 days with an appropriate person or in a suitable location where the parent promptly notifies an appropriate person of the child\u2019s location,\u201d he said. \u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church, and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d Detectives from the 102nd Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared. One video clip showed the woman, with the infant, entering a dollar store on Jamaica Avenue, in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, around the corner from the church, at 111-11 86th Avenue.", "sentence_answer": "Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared."} -{"question": "Why did the mother leave the baby in the manger?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe mother followed the spirit of New York\u2019s \u2018Safe Haven\u2019 Law, which allows a parent to leave a child not older than 30 days with an appropriate person or in a suitable location where the parent promptly notifies an appropriate person of the child\u2019s location,\u201d he said. \u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church, and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d Detectives from the 102nd Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared. One video clip showed the woman, with the infant, entering a dollar store on Jamaica Avenue, in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, around the corner from the church, at 111-11 86th Avenue.", "answer": "it was the warmest place in the church", "sentence": "\u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church , and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe mother followed the spirit of New York\u2019s \u2018Safe Haven\u2019 Law, which allows a parent to leave a child not older than 30 days with an appropriate person or in a suitable location where the parent promptly notifies an appropriate person of the child\u2019s location,\u201d he said. \u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church , and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d Detectives from the 102nd Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared. One video clip showed the woman, with the infant, entering a dollar store on Jamaica Avenue, in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, around the corner from the church, at 111-11 86th Avenue.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe mother followed the spirit of New York\u2019s \u2018Safe Haven\u2019 Law, which allows a parent to leave a child not older than 30 days with an appropriate person or in a suitable location where the parent promptly notifies an appropriate person of the child\u2019s location,\u201d he said. \u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church , and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d Detectives from the 102nd Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared. One video clip showed the woman, with the infant, entering a dollar store on Jamaica Avenue, in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, around the corner from the church, at 111-11 86th Avenue.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church , and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d"} -{"question": "What is the address of the church?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe mother followed the spirit of New York\u2019s \u2018Safe Haven\u2019 Law, which allows a parent to leave a child not older than 30 days with an appropriate person or in a suitable location where the parent promptly notifies an appropriate person of the child\u2019s location,\u201d he said. \u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church, and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d Detectives from the 102nd Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared. One video clip showed the woman, with the infant, entering a dollar store on Jamaica Avenue, in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, around the corner from the church, at 111-11 86th Avenue.", "answer": "111-11 86th Avenue", "sentence": "One video clip showed the woman, with the infant, entering a dollar store on Jamaica Avenue, in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, around the corner from the church, at 111-11 86th Avenue .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe mother followed the spirit of New York\u2019s \u2018Safe Haven\u2019 Law, which allows a parent to leave a child not older than 30 days with an appropriate person or in a suitable location where the parent promptly notifies an appropriate person of the child\u2019s location,\u201d he said. \u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church, and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d Detectives from the 102nd Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared. One video clip showed the woman, with the infant, entering a dollar store on Jamaica Avenue, in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, around the corner from the church, at 111-11 86th Avenue . ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe mother followed the spirit of New York\u2019s \u2018Safe Haven\u2019 Law, which allows a parent to leave a child not older than 30 days with an appropriate person or in a suitable location where the parent promptly notifies an appropriate person of the child\u2019s location,\u201d he said. \u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church, and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d Detectives from the 102nd Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared. One video clip showed the woman, with the infant, entering a dollar store on Jamaica Avenue, in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, around the corner from the church, at 111-11 86th Avenue .", "sentence_answer": "One video clip showed the woman, with the infant, entering a dollar store on Jamaica Avenue, in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, around the corner from the church, at 111-11 86th Avenue ."} -{"question": "Detectives from which Precinct reviewed surveillance video?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe mother followed the spirit of New York\u2019s \u2018Safe Haven\u2019 Law, which allows a parent to leave a child not older than 30 days with an appropriate person or in a suitable location where the parent promptly notifies an appropriate person of the child\u2019s location,\u201d he said. \u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church, and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d Detectives from the 102nd Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared. One video clip showed the woman, with the infant, entering a dollar store on Jamaica Avenue, in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, around the corner from the church, at 111-11 86th Avenue.", "answer": "102nd", "sentence": "Detectives from the 102nd Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe mother followed the spirit of New York\u2019s \u2018Safe Haven\u2019 Law, which allows a parent to leave a child not older than 30 days with an appropriate person or in a suitable location where the parent promptly notifies an appropriate person of the child\u2019s location,\u201d he said. \u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church, and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d Detectives from the 102nd Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared. One video clip showed the woman, with the infant, entering a dollar store on Jamaica Avenue, in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, around the corner from the church, at 111-11 86th Avenue.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe mother followed the spirit of New York\u2019s \u2018Safe Haven\u2019 Law, which allows a parent to leave a child not older than 30 days with an appropriate person or in a suitable location where the parent promptly notifies an appropriate person of the child\u2019s location,\u201d he said. \u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church, and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d Detectives from the 102nd Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared. One video clip showed the woman, with the infant, entering a dollar store on Jamaica Avenue, in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, around the corner from the church, at 111-11 86th Avenue.", "sentence_answer": "Detectives from the 102nd Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared."} -{"question": "What did the video capture the mother leaving the store with?", "paragraph": "Another video captured her leaving the store with the baby and newly purchased towels. Footage from a camera at the church showed the same woman entering with the infant, the police said. Then it showed her leaving \u2014 this time without him. It is not clear how long the baby was left alone lying atop a towel, his umbilical cord still attached. The videos were not time-stamped, the police said. But around 1 p.m., a parish maintenance worker, Jos\u00e9 Mor\u00e1n, returned from an hourlong lunch and heard the cries of a baby in the front of the nave.", "answer": "the baby and newly purchased towels", "sentence": "Another video captured her leaving the store with the baby and newly purchased towels .", "paragraph_sentence": " Another video captured her leaving the store with the baby and newly purchased towels . Footage from a camera at the church showed the same woman entering with the infant, the police said. Then it showed her leaving \u2014 this time without him. It is not clear how long the baby was left alone lying atop a towel, his umbilical cord still attached. The videos were not time-stamped, the police said. But around 1 p.m., a parish maintenance worker, Jos\u00e9 Mor\u00e1n, returned from an hourlong lunch and heard the cries of a baby in the front of the nave.", "paragraph_answer": "Another video captured her leaving the store with the baby and newly purchased towels . Footage from a camera at the church showed the same woman entering with the infant, the police said. Then it showed her leaving \u2014 this time without him. It is not clear how long the baby was left alone lying atop a towel, his umbilical cord still attached. The videos were not time-stamped, the police said. But around 1 p.m., a parish maintenance worker, Jos\u00e9 Mor\u00e1n, returned from an hourlong lunch and heard the cries of a baby in the front of the nave.", "sentence_answer": "Another video captured her leaving the store with the baby and newly purchased towels ."} -{"question": "What time was the baby discovered?", "paragraph": "Another video captured her leaving the store with the baby and newly purchased towels. Footage from a camera at the church showed the same woman entering with the infant, the police said. Then it showed her leaving \u2014 this time without him. It is not clear how long the baby was left alone lying atop a towel, his umbilical cord still attached. The videos were not time-stamped, the police said. But around 1 p.m., a parish maintenance worker, Jos\u00e9 Mor\u00e1n, returned from an hourlong lunch and heard the cries of a baby in the front of the nave.", "answer": "around 1 p.m", "sentence": "But around 1 p.m ., a parish maintenance worker, Jos\u00e9 Mor\u00e1n, returned from an hourlong lunch and heard the cries of a baby in the front of the nave.", "paragraph_sentence": "Another video captured her leaving the store with the baby and newly purchased towels. Footage from a camera at the church showed the same woman entering with the infant, the police said. Then it showed her leaving \u2014 this time without him. It is not clear how long the baby was left alone lying atop a towel, his umbilical cord still attached. The videos were not time-stamped, the police said. But around 1 p.m ., a parish maintenance worker, Jos\u00e9 Mor\u00e1n, returned from an hourlong lunch and heard the cries of a baby in the front of the nave. ", "paragraph_answer": "Another video captured her leaving the store with the baby and newly purchased towels. Footage from a camera at the church showed the same woman entering with the infant, the police said. Then it showed her leaving \u2014 this time without him. It is not clear how long the baby was left alone lying atop a towel, his umbilical cord still attached. The videos were not time-stamped, the police said. But around 1 p.m ., a parish maintenance worker, Jos\u00e9 Mor\u00e1n, returned from an hourlong lunch and heard the cries of a baby in the front of the nave.", "sentence_answer": "But around 1 p.m ., a parish maintenance worker, Jos\u00e9 Mor\u00e1n, returned from an hourlong lunch and heard the cries of a baby in the front of the nave."} -{"question": "What is the name of the parish maintenance worker that found the baby?", "paragraph": "Another video captured her leaving the store with the baby and newly purchased towels. Footage from a camera at the church showed the same woman entering with the infant, the police said. Then it showed her leaving \u2014 this time without him. It is not clear how long the baby was left alone lying atop a towel, his umbilical cord still attached. The videos were not time-stamped, the police said. But around 1 p.m., a parish maintenance worker, Jos\u00e9 Mor\u00e1n, returned from an hourlong lunch and heard the cries of a baby in the front of the nave.", "answer": "Jos\u00e9 Mor\u00e1n", "sentence": "But around 1 p.m., a parish maintenance worker, Jos\u00e9 Mor\u00e1n , returned from an hourlong lunch and heard the cries of a baby in the front of the nave.", "paragraph_sentence": "Another video captured her leaving the store with the baby and newly purchased towels. Footage from a camera at the church showed the same woman entering with the infant, the police said. Then it showed her leaving \u2014 this time without him. It is not clear how long the baby was left alone lying atop a towel, his umbilical cord still attached. The videos were not time-stamped, the police said. But around 1 p.m., a parish maintenance worker, Jos\u00e9 Mor\u00e1n , returned from an hourlong lunch and heard the cries of a baby in the front of the nave. ", "paragraph_answer": "Another video captured her leaving the store with the baby and newly purchased towels. Footage from a camera at the church showed the same woman entering with the infant, the police said. Then it showed her leaving \u2014 this time without him. It is not clear how long the baby was left alone lying atop a towel, his umbilical cord still attached. The videos were not time-stamped, the police said. But around 1 p.m., a parish maintenance worker, Jos\u00e9 Mor\u00e1n , returned from an hourlong lunch and heard the cries of a baby in the front of the nave.", "sentence_answer": "But around 1 p.m., a parish maintenance worker, Jos\u00e9 Mor\u00e1n , returned from an hourlong lunch and heard the cries of a baby in the front of the nave."} -{"question": "What was the baby laying atop of?", "paragraph": "Another video captured her leaving the store with the baby and newly purchased towels. Footage from a camera at the church showed the same woman entering with the infant, the police said. Then it showed her leaving \u2014 this time without him. It is not clear how long the baby was left alone lying atop a towel, his umbilical cord still attached. The videos were not time-stamped, the police said. But around 1 p.m., a parish maintenance worker, Jos\u00e9 Mor\u00e1n, returned from an hourlong lunch and heard the cries of a baby in the front of the nave.", "answer": "a towel", "sentence": "It is not clear how long the baby was left alone lying atop a towel , his umbilical cord still attached.", "paragraph_sentence": "Another video captured her leaving the store with the baby and newly purchased towels. Footage from a camera at the church showed the same woman entering with the infant, the police said. Then it showed her leaving \u2014 this time without him. It is not clear how long the baby was left alone lying atop a towel , his umbilical cord still attached. The videos were not time-stamped, the police said. But around 1 p.m., a parish maintenance worker, Jos\u00e9 Mor\u00e1n, returned from an hourlong lunch and heard the cries of a baby in the front of the nave.", "paragraph_answer": "Another video captured her leaving the store with the baby and newly purchased towels. Footage from a camera at the church showed the same woman entering with the infant, the police said. Then it showed her leaving \u2014 this time without him. It is not clear how long the baby was left alone lying atop a towel , his umbilical cord still attached. The videos were not time-stamped, the police said. But around 1 p.m., a parish maintenance worker, Jos\u00e9 Mor\u00e1n, returned from an hourlong lunch and heard the cries of a baby in the front of the nave.", "sentence_answer": "It is not clear how long the baby was left alone lying atop a towel , his umbilical cord still attached."} -{"question": "What is the name of the spokeswoman for the Diocese of Brooklyn?", "paragraph": "Rocio Fidalgo, a spokeswoman for the Diocese of Brooklyn, to which the church belongs, said that from time to time, people leave unwanted children at its churches, though she declined to say how often this happened. \u201cIt\u2019s not uncommon,\u201d Ms. Fidalgo said. \u201cBut we feel and we believe that these mothers trust our churches in the middle of their desperation.\u201d For the parish priest, the Rev. Christopher Ryan Heanue, 28, the infant\u2019s appearance carried a message of hope. And he saw in it some divine foresight. He had not intended for the cr\u00e8che to be set up so early in the season. \u201cThat was the providential part of this,\u201d he said on Wednesday. The baby, he added, \u201cfound in this a home.\u201d \u201cThe story went most certainly viral, because it\u2019s a beautiful story,\u201d he said. \u201cI pray that it\u2019s a story that will make people appreciate the gifts of life.\u201d", "answer": "Rocio Fidalgo", "sentence": "Rocio Fidalgo , a spokeswoman for the Diocese of Brooklyn, to which the church belongs, said that from time to time, people leave unwanted children at its churches, though she declined to say how often this happened.", "paragraph_sentence": " Rocio Fidalgo , a spokeswoman for the Diocese of Brooklyn, to which the church belongs, said that from time to time, people leave unwanted children at its churches, though she declined to say how often this happened. \u201cIt\u2019s not uncommon,\u201d Ms. Fidalgo said. \u201cBut we feel and we believe that these mothers trust our churches in the middle of their desperation.\u201d For the parish priest, the Rev. Christopher Ryan Heanue, 28, the infant\u2019s appearance carried a message of hope. And he saw in it some divine foresight. He had not intended for the cr\u00e8che to be set up so early in the season. \u201cThat was the providential part of this,\u201d he said on Wednesday. The baby, he added, \u201cfound in this a home.\u201d \u201cThe story went most certainly viral, because it\u2019s a beautiful story,\u201d he said. \u201cI pray that it\u2019s a story that will make people appreciate the gifts of life.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " Rocio Fidalgo , a spokeswoman for the Diocese of Brooklyn, to which the church belongs, said that from time to time, people leave unwanted children at its churches, though she declined to say how often this happened. \u201cIt\u2019s not uncommon,\u201d Ms. Fidalgo said. \u201cBut we feel and we believe that these mothers trust our churches in the middle of their desperation.\u201d For the parish priest, the Rev. Christopher Ryan Heanue, 28, the infant\u2019s appearance carried a message of hope. And he saw in it some divine foresight. He had not intended for the cr\u00e8che to be set up so early in the season. \u201cThat was the providential part of this,\u201d he said on Wednesday. The baby, he added, \u201cfound in this a home.\u201d \u201cThe story went most certainly viral, because it\u2019s a beautiful story,\u201d he said. \u201cI pray that it\u2019s a story that will make people appreciate the gifts of life.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Rocio Fidalgo , a spokeswoman for the Diocese of Brooklyn, to which the church belongs, said that from time to time, people leave unwanted children at its churches, though she declined to say how often this happened."} -{"question": "What is the name of the parish priest?", "paragraph": "Rocio Fidalgo, a spokeswoman for the Diocese of Brooklyn, to which the church belongs, said that from time to time, people leave unwanted children at its churches, though she declined to say how often this happened. \u201cIt\u2019s not uncommon,\u201d Ms. Fidalgo said. \u201cBut we feel and we believe that these mothers trust our churches in the middle of their desperation.\u201d For the parish priest, the Rev. Christopher Ryan Heanue, 28, the infant\u2019s appearance carried a message of hope. And he saw in it some divine foresight. He had not intended for the cr\u00e8che to be set up so early in the season. \u201cThat was the providential part of this,\u201d he said on Wednesday. The baby, he added, \u201cfound in this a home.\u201d \u201cThe story went most certainly viral, because it\u2019s a beautiful story,\u201d he said. \u201cI pray that it\u2019s a story that will make people appreciate the gifts of life.\u201d", "answer": "Rev. Christopher Ryan Heanue", "sentence": "For the parish priest, the Rev. Christopher Ryan Heanue , 28, the infant\u2019s appearance carried a message of hope.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rocio Fidalgo, a spokeswoman for the Diocese of Brooklyn, to which the church belongs, said that from time to time, people leave unwanted children at its churches, though she declined to say how often this happened. \u201cIt\u2019s not uncommon,\u201d Ms. Fidalgo said. \u201cBut we feel and we believe that these mothers trust our churches in the middle of their desperation.\u201d For the parish priest, the Rev. Christopher Ryan Heanue , 28, the infant\u2019s appearance carried a message of hope. And he saw in it some divine foresight. He had not intended for the cr\u00e8che to be set up so early in the season. \u201cThat was the providential part of this,\u201d he said on Wednesday. The baby, he added, \u201cfound in this a home.\u201d \u201cThe story went most certainly viral, because it\u2019s a beautiful story,\u201d he said. \u201cI pray that it\u2019s a story that will make people appreciate the gifts of life.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Rocio Fidalgo, a spokeswoman for the Diocese of Brooklyn, to which the church belongs, said that from time to time, people leave unwanted children at its churches, though she declined to say how often this happened. \u201cIt\u2019s not uncommon,\u201d Ms. Fidalgo said. \u201cBut we feel and we believe that these mothers trust our churches in the middle of their desperation.\u201d For the parish priest, the Rev. Christopher Ryan Heanue , 28, the infant\u2019s appearance carried a message of hope. And he saw in it some divine foresight. He had not intended for the cr\u00e8che to be set up so early in the season. \u201cThat was the providential part of this,\u201d he said on Wednesday. The baby, he added, \u201cfound in this a home.\u201d \u201cThe story went most certainly viral, because it\u2019s a beautiful story,\u201d he said. \u201cI pray that it\u2019s a story that will make people appreciate the gifts of life.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "For the parish priest, the Rev. Christopher Ryan Heanue , 28, the infant\u2019s appearance carried a message of hope."} -{"question": "How old is Rev.Christopher Ryan Heanue?", "paragraph": "Rocio Fidalgo, a spokeswoman for the Diocese of Brooklyn, to which the church belongs, said that from time to time, people leave unwanted children at its churches, though she declined to say how often this happened. \u201cIt\u2019s not uncommon,\u201d Ms. Fidalgo said. \u201cBut we feel and we believe that these mothers trust our churches in the middle of their desperation.\u201d For the parish priest, the Rev. Christopher Ryan Heanue, 28, the infant\u2019s appearance carried a message of hope. And he saw in it some divine foresight. He had not intended for the cr\u00e8che to be set up so early in the season. \u201cThat was the providential part of this,\u201d he said on Wednesday. The baby, he added, \u201cfound in this a home.\u201d \u201cThe story went most certainly viral, because it\u2019s a beautiful story,\u201d he said. \u201cI pray that it\u2019s a story that will make people appreciate the gifts of life.\u201d", "answer": "28", "sentence": "For the parish priest, the Rev. Christopher Ryan Heanue, 28 , the infant\u2019s appearance carried a message of hope.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rocio Fidalgo, a spokeswoman for the Diocese of Brooklyn, to which the church belongs, said that from time to time, people leave unwanted children at its churches, though she declined to say how often this happened. \u201cIt\u2019s not uncommon,\u201d Ms. Fidalgo said. \u201cBut we feel and we believe that these mothers trust our churches in the middle of their desperation.\u201d For the parish priest, the Rev. Christopher Ryan Heanue, 28 , the infant\u2019s appearance carried a message of hope. And he saw in it some divine foresight. He had not intended for the cr\u00e8che to be set up so early in the season. \u201cThat was the providential part of this,\u201d he said on Wednesday. The baby, he added, \u201cfound in this a home.\u201d \u201cThe story went most certainly viral, because it\u2019s a beautiful story,\u201d he said. \u201cI pray that it\u2019s a story that will make people appreciate the gifts of life.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Rocio Fidalgo, a spokeswoman for the Diocese of Brooklyn, to which the church belongs, said that from time to time, people leave unwanted children at its churches, though she declined to say how often this happened. \u201cIt\u2019s not uncommon,\u201d Ms. Fidalgo said. \u201cBut we feel and we believe that these mothers trust our churches in the middle of their desperation.\u201d For the parish priest, the Rev. Christopher Ryan Heanue, 28 , the infant\u2019s appearance carried a message of hope. And he saw in it some divine foresight. He had not intended for the cr\u00e8che to be set up so early in the season. \u201cThat was the providential part of this,\u201d he said on Wednesday. The baby, he added, \u201cfound in this a home.\u201d \u201cThe story went most certainly viral, because it\u2019s a beautiful story,\u201d he said. \u201cI pray that it\u2019s a story that will make people appreciate the gifts of life.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "For the parish priest, the Rev. Christopher Ryan Heanue, 28 , the infant\u2019s appearance carried a message of hope."} -{"question": "Why did the story go viral according to the priest?", "paragraph": "Rocio Fidalgo, a spokeswoman for the Diocese of Brooklyn, to which the church belongs, said that from time to time, people leave unwanted children at its churches, though she declined to say how often this happened. \u201cIt\u2019s not uncommon,\u201d Ms. Fidalgo said. \u201cBut we feel and we believe that these mothers trust our churches in the middle of their desperation.\u201d For the parish priest, the Rev. Christopher Ryan Heanue, 28, the infant\u2019s appearance carried a message of hope. And he saw in it some divine foresight. He had not intended for the cr\u00e8che to be set up so early in the season. \u201cThat was the providential part of this,\u201d he said on Wednesday. The baby, he added, \u201cfound in this a home.\u201d \u201cThe story went most certainly viral, because it\u2019s a beautiful story,\u201d he said. \u201cI pray that it\u2019s a story that will make people appreciate the gifts of life.\u201d", "answer": "it\u2019s a beautiful story", "sentence": "\u201cThe story went most certainly viral, because it\u2019s a beautiful story ,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rocio Fidalgo, a spokeswoman for the Diocese of Brooklyn, to which the church belongs, said that from time to time, people leave unwanted children at its churches, though she declined to say how often this happened. \u201cIt\u2019s not uncommon,\u201d Ms. Fidalgo said. \u201cBut we feel and we believe that these mothers trust our churches in the middle of their desperation.\u201d For the parish priest, the Rev. Christopher Ryan Heanue, 28, the infant\u2019s appearance carried a message of hope. And he saw in it some divine foresight. He had not intended for the cr\u00e8che to be set up so early in the season. \u201cThat was the providential part of this,\u201d he said on Wednesday. The baby, he added, \u201cfound in this a home.\u201d \u201cThe story went most certainly viral, because it\u2019s a beautiful story ,\u201d he said. \u201cI pray that it\u2019s a story that will make people appreciate the gifts of life.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Rocio Fidalgo, a spokeswoman for the Diocese of Brooklyn, to which the church belongs, said that from time to time, people leave unwanted children at its churches, though she declined to say how often this happened. \u201cIt\u2019s not uncommon,\u201d Ms. Fidalgo said. \u201cBut we feel and we believe that these mothers trust our churches in the middle of their desperation.\u201d For the parish priest, the Rev. Christopher Ryan Heanue, 28, the infant\u2019s appearance carried a message of hope. And he saw in it some divine foresight. He had not intended for the cr\u00e8che to be set up so early in the season. \u201cThat was the providential part of this,\u201d he said on Wednesday. The baby, he added, \u201cfound in this a home.\u201d \u201cThe story went most certainly viral, because it\u2019s a beautiful story ,\u201d he said. \u201cI pray that it\u2019s a story that will make people appreciate the gifts of life.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe story went most certainly viral, because it\u2019s a beautiful story ,\u201d he said."} -{"question": "What is the name of the parish secretary?", "paragraph": "Paul Cerni, the parish secretary, said that the shifts in the congregation\u2019s demographics have vaguely mirrored those in the broader community, with a growing number of immigrants from predominantly Catholic countries of Latin America replacing those of Western European descent. The parish, established in 1910, has a congregation that now numbers about 1,500 people, he said, with about a quarter foreign-born. \u201cWe should pray the baby gets a proper home,\u201d said Father Heanue, who arrived at the parish in February and is in charge of its day-to-day administration. Should the baby eventually be put up for adoption, he said, he had one wish. \u201cI would like to see the child stay in this community,\u201d he said.", "answer": "Paul Cerni", "sentence": "Paul Cerni , the parish secretary, said that the shifts in the congregation\u2019s demographics have vaguely mirrored those in the broader community, with a growing number of immigrants from predominantly Catholic countries of Latin America replacing those of Western European descent.", "paragraph_sentence": " Paul Cerni , the parish secretary, said that the shifts in the congregation\u2019s demographics have vaguely mirrored those in the broader community, with a growing number of immigrants from predominantly Catholic countries of Latin America replacing those of Western European descent. The parish, established in 1910, has a congregation that now numbers about 1,500 people, he said, with about a quarter foreign-born. \u201cWe should pray the baby gets a proper home,\u201d said Father Heanue, who arrived at the parish in February and is in charge of its day-to-day administration. Should the baby eventually be put up for adoption, he said, he had one wish. \u201cI would like to see the child stay in this community,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": " Paul Cerni , the parish secretary, said that the shifts in the congregation\u2019s demographics have vaguely mirrored those in the broader community, with a growing number of immigrants from predominantly Catholic countries of Latin America replacing those of Western European descent. The parish, established in 1910, has a congregation that now numbers about 1,500 people, he said, with about a quarter foreign-born. \u201cWe should pray the baby gets a proper home,\u201d said Father Heanue, who arrived at the parish in February and is in charge of its day-to-day administration. Should the baby eventually be put up for adoption, he said, he had one wish. \u201cI would like to see the child stay in this community,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": " Paul Cerni , the parish secretary, said that the shifts in the congregation\u2019s demographics have vaguely mirrored those in the broader community, with a growing number of immigrants from predominantly Catholic countries of Latin America replacing those of Western European descent."} -{"question": "Who is in charge of the parish's day-to-day administration?", "paragraph": "Paul Cerni, the parish secretary, said that the shifts in the congregation\u2019s demographics have vaguely mirrored those in the broader community, with a growing number of immigrants from predominantly Catholic countries of Latin America replacing those of Western European descent. The parish, established in 1910, has a congregation that now numbers about 1,500 people, he said, with about a quarter foreign-born. \u201cWe should pray the baby gets a proper home,\u201d said Father Heanue, who arrived at the parish in February and is in charge of its day-to-day administration. Should the baby eventually be put up for adoption, he said, he had one wish. \u201cI would like to see the child stay in this community,\u201d he said.", "answer": "Father Heanue", "sentence": "\u201cWe should pray the baby gets a proper home,\u201d said Father Heanue , who arrived at the parish in February and is in charge of its day-to-day administration.", "paragraph_sentence": "Paul Cerni, the parish secretary, said that the shifts in the congregation\u2019s demographics have vaguely mirrored those in the broader community, with a growing number of immigrants from predominantly Catholic countries of Latin America replacing those of Western European descent. The parish, established in 1910, has a congregation that now numbers about 1,500 people, he said, with about a quarter foreign-born. \u201cWe should pray the baby gets a proper home,\u201d said Father Heanue , who arrived at the parish in February and is in charge of its day-to-day administration. Should the baby eventually be put up for adoption, he said, he had one wish. \u201cI would like to see the child stay in this community,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "Paul Cerni, the parish secretary, said that the shifts in the congregation\u2019s demographics have vaguely mirrored those in the broader community, with a growing number of immigrants from predominantly Catholic countries of Latin America replacing those of Western European descent. The parish, established in 1910, has a congregation that now numbers about 1,500 people, he said, with about a quarter foreign-born. \u201cWe should pray the baby gets a proper home,\u201d said Father Heanue , who arrived at the parish in February and is in charge of its day-to-day administration. Should the baby eventually be put up for adoption, he said, he had one wish. \u201cI would like to see the child stay in this community,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe should pray the baby gets a proper home,\u201d said Father Heanue , who arrived at the parish in February and is in charge of its day-to-day administration."} -{"question": "What year was the parish established?", "paragraph": "Paul Cerni, the parish secretary, said that the shifts in the congregation\u2019s demographics have vaguely mirrored those in the broader community, with a growing number of immigrants from predominantly Catholic countries of Latin America replacing those of Western European descent. The parish, established in 1910, has a congregation that now numbers about 1,500 people, he said, with about a quarter foreign-born. \u201cWe should pray the baby gets a proper home,\u201d said Father Heanue, who arrived at the parish in February and is in charge of its day-to-day administration. Should the baby eventually be put up for adoption, he said, he had one wish. \u201cI would like to see the child stay in this community,\u201d he said.", "answer": "1910", "sentence": "The parish, established in 1910 , has a congregation that now numbers about 1,500 people, he said, with about a quarter foreign-born.", "paragraph_sentence": "Paul Cerni, the parish secretary, said that the shifts in the congregation\u2019s demographics have vaguely mirrored those in the broader community, with a growing number of immigrants from predominantly Catholic countries of Latin America replacing those of Western European descent. The parish, established in 1910 , has a congregation that now numbers about 1,500 people, he said, with about a quarter foreign-born. \u201cWe should pray the baby gets a proper home,\u201d said Father Heanue, who arrived at the parish in February and is in charge of its day-to-day administration. Should the baby eventually be put up for adoption, he said, he had one wish. \u201cI would like to see the child stay in this community,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "Paul Cerni, the parish secretary, said that the shifts in the congregation\u2019s demographics have vaguely mirrored those in the broader community, with a growing number of immigrants from predominantly Catholic countries of Latin America replacing those of Western European descent. The parish, established in 1910 , has a congregation that now numbers about 1,500 people, he said, with about a quarter foreign-born. \u201cWe should pray the baby gets a proper home,\u201d said Father Heanue, who arrived at the parish in February and is in charge of its day-to-day administration. Should the baby eventually be put up for adoption, he said, he had one wish. \u201cI would like to see the child stay in this community,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "The parish, established in 1910 , has a congregation that now numbers about 1,500 people, he said, with about a quarter foreign-born."} -{"question": "What month did Father Heanue arrive to the parish?", "paragraph": "Paul Cerni, the parish secretary, said that the shifts in the congregation\u2019s demographics have vaguely mirrored those in the broader community, with a growing number of immigrants from predominantly Catholic countries of Latin America replacing those of Western European descent. The parish, established in 1910, has a congregation that now numbers about 1,500 people, he said, with about a quarter foreign-born. \u201cWe should pray the baby gets a proper home,\u201d said Father Heanue, who arrived at the parish in February and is in charge of its day-to-day administration. Should the baby eventually be put up for adoption, he said, he had one wish. \u201cI would like to see the child stay in this community,\u201d he said.", "answer": "February", "sentence": "\u201cWe should pray the baby gets a proper home,\u201d said Father Heanue, who arrived at the parish in February and is in charge of its day-to-day administration.", "paragraph_sentence": "Paul Cerni, the parish secretary, said that the shifts in the congregation\u2019s demographics have vaguely mirrored those in the broader community, with a growing number of immigrants from predominantly Catholic countries of Latin America replacing those of Western European descent. The parish, established in 1910, has a congregation that now numbers about 1,500 people, he said, with about a quarter foreign-born. \u201cWe should pray the baby gets a proper home,\u201d said Father Heanue, who arrived at the parish in February and is in charge of its day-to-day administration. Should the baby eventually be put up for adoption, he said, he had one wish. \u201cI would like to see the child stay in this community,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "Paul Cerni, the parish secretary, said that the shifts in the congregation\u2019s demographics have vaguely mirrored those in the broader community, with a growing number of immigrants from predominantly Catholic countries of Latin America replacing those of Western European descent. The parish, established in 1910, has a congregation that now numbers about 1,500 people, he said, with about a quarter foreign-born. \u201cWe should pray the baby gets a proper home,\u201d said Father Heanue, who arrived at the parish in February and is in charge of its day-to-day administration. Should the baby eventually be put up for adoption, he said, he had one wish. \u201cI would like to see the child stay in this community,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe should pray the baby gets a proper home,\u201d said Father Heanue, who arrived at the parish in February and is in charge of its day-to-day administration."} -{"question": "How large is the parish's congregation?", "paragraph": "Paul Cerni, the parish secretary, said that the shifts in the congregation\u2019s demographics have vaguely mirrored those in the broader community, with a growing number of immigrants from predominantly Catholic countries of Latin America replacing those of Western European descent. The parish, established in 1910, has a congregation that now numbers about 1,500 people, he said, with about a quarter foreign-born. \u201cWe should pray the baby gets a proper home,\u201d said Father Heanue, who arrived at the parish in February and is in charge of its day-to-day administration. Should the baby eventually be put up for adoption, he said, he had one wish. \u201cI would like to see the child stay in this community,\u201d he said.", "answer": "1,500", "sentence": "The parish, established in 1910, has a congregation that now numbers about 1,500 people, he said, with about a quarter foreign-born.", "paragraph_sentence": "Paul Cerni, the parish secretary, said that the shifts in the congregation\u2019s demographics have vaguely mirrored those in the broader community, with a growing number of immigrants from predominantly Catholic countries of Latin America replacing those of Western European descent. The parish, established in 1910, has a congregation that now numbers about 1,500 people, he said, with about a quarter foreign-born. \u201cWe should pray the baby gets a proper home,\u201d said Father Heanue, who arrived at the parish in February and is in charge of its day-to-day administration. Should the baby eventually be put up for adoption, he said, he had one wish. \u201cI would like to see the child stay in this community,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "Paul Cerni, the parish secretary, said that the shifts in the congregation\u2019s demographics have vaguely mirrored those in the broader community, with a growing number of immigrants from predominantly Catholic countries of Latin America replacing those of Western European descent. The parish, established in 1910, has a congregation that now numbers about 1,500 people, he said, with about a quarter foreign-born. \u201cWe should pray the baby gets a proper home,\u201d said Father Heanue, who arrived at the parish in February and is in charge of its day-to-day administration. Should the baby eventually be put up for adoption, he said, he had one wish. \u201cI would like to see the child stay in this community,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "The parish, established in 1910, has a congregation that now numbers about 1,500 people, he said, with about a quarter foreign-born."} -{"question": "When did Pablo Picasso leave for Paris?", "paragraph": "BARCELONA \u2014 When a young Pablo Picasso left Barcelona for Paris in 1904, he left behind a group of friends who proved to be perhaps the greatest influence on his early life and work. One prominent Catalonian family, the Revent\u00f3s, helped establish Picasso in Barcelona, where his family had settled from M\u00e1laga when he was a teenager. Two brothers, Jacint (\u201cCinto\u201d) and Ram\u00f3n (\u201cMoni\u201d) Revent\u00f3s, became crucial friends for the young Picasso, influencing him both politically and artistically: Their household was frequented by pillars of the Catalan Modernisme movement, such as Santiago Rusi\u00f1ol and Ram\u00f3n Casas. Jacint Revent\u00f3s remained a friend until he and Picasso were elderly.", "answer": "1904", "sentence": "BARCELONA \u2014 When a young Pablo Picasso left Barcelona for Paris in 1904 , he left behind a group of friends who proved to be perhaps the greatest influence on his early life and work.", "paragraph_sentence": " BARCELONA \u2014 When a young Pablo Picasso left Barcelona for Paris in 1904 , he left behind a group of friends who proved to be perhaps the greatest influence on his early life and work. One prominent Catalonian family, the Revent\u00f3s, helped establish Picasso in Barcelona, where his family had settled from M\u00e1laga when he was a teenager. Two brothers, Jacint (\u201cCinto\u201d) and Ram\u00f3n (\u201cMoni\u201d) Revent\u00f3s, became crucial friends for the young Picasso, influencing him both politically and artistically: Their household was frequented by pillars of the Catalan Modernisme movement, such as Santiago Rusi\u00f1ol and Ram\u00f3n Casas. Jacint Revent\u00f3s remained a friend until he and Picasso were elderly.", "paragraph_answer": "BARCELONA \u2014 When a young Pablo Picasso left Barcelona for Paris in 1904 , he left behind a group of friends who proved to be perhaps the greatest influence on his early life and work. One prominent Catalonian family, the Revent\u00f3s, helped establish Picasso in Barcelona, where his family had settled from M\u00e1laga when he was a teenager. Two brothers, Jacint (\u201cCinto\u201d) and Ram\u00f3n (\u201cMoni\u201d) Revent\u00f3s, became crucial friends for the young Picasso, influencing him both politically and artistically: Their household was frequented by pillars of the Catalan Modernisme movement, such as Santiago Rusi\u00f1ol and Ram\u00f3n Casas. Jacint Revent\u00f3s remained a friend until he and Picasso were elderly.", "sentence_answer": "BARCELONA \u2014 When a young Pablo Picasso left Barcelona for Paris in 1904 , he left behind a group of friends who proved to be perhaps the greatest influence on his early life and work."} -{"question": "Who was the greatest influence on Picasso's early life?", "paragraph": "BARCELONA \u2014 When a young Pablo Picasso left Barcelona for Paris in 1904, he left behind a group of friends who proved to be perhaps the greatest influence on his early life and work. One prominent Catalonian family, the Revent\u00f3s, helped establish Picasso in Barcelona, where his family had settled from M\u00e1laga when he was a teenager. Two brothers, Jacint (\u201cCinto\u201d) and Ram\u00f3n (\u201cMoni\u201d) Revent\u00f3s, became crucial friends for the young Picasso, influencing him both politically and artistically: Their household was frequented by pillars of the Catalan Modernisme movement, such as Santiago Rusi\u00f1ol and Ram\u00f3n Casas. Jacint Revent\u00f3s remained a friend until he and Picasso were elderly.", "answer": "group of friends", "sentence": "BARCELONA \u2014 When a young Pablo Picasso left Barcelona for Paris in 1904, he left behind a group of friends who proved to be perhaps the greatest influence on his early life and work.", "paragraph_sentence": " BARCELONA \u2014 When a young Pablo Picasso left Barcelona for Paris in 1904, he left behind a group of friends who proved to be perhaps the greatest influence on his early life and work. One prominent Catalonian family, the Revent\u00f3s, helped establish Picasso in Barcelona, where his family had settled from M\u00e1laga when he was a teenager. Two brothers, Jacint (\u201cCinto\u201d) and Ram\u00f3n (\u201cMoni\u201d) Revent\u00f3s, became crucial friends for the young Picasso, influencing him both politically and artistically: Their household was frequented by pillars of the Catalan Modernisme movement, such as Santiago Rusi\u00f1ol and Ram\u00f3n Casas. Jacint Revent\u00f3s remained a friend until he and Picasso were elderly.", "paragraph_answer": "BARCELONA \u2014 When a young Pablo Picasso left Barcelona for Paris in 1904, he left behind a group of friends who proved to be perhaps the greatest influence on his early life and work. One prominent Catalonian family, the Revent\u00f3s, helped establish Picasso in Barcelona, where his family had settled from M\u00e1laga when he was a teenager. Two brothers, Jacint (\u201cCinto\u201d) and Ram\u00f3n (\u201cMoni\u201d) Revent\u00f3s, became crucial friends for the young Picasso, influencing him both politically and artistically: Their household was frequented by pillars of the Catalan Modernisme movement, such as Santiago Rusi\u00f1ol and Ram\u00f3n Casas. Jacint Revent\u00f3s remained a friend until he and Picasso were elderly.", "sentence_answer": "BARCELONA \u2014 When a young Pablo Picasso left Barcelona for Paris in 1904, he left behind a group of friends who proved to be perhaps the greatest influence on his early life and work."} -{"question": "Where was Pablo Picasso before he left for Paris in 1904?", "paragraph": "BARCELONA \u2014 When a young Pablo Picasso left Barcelona for Paris in 1904, he left behind a group of friends who proved to be perhaps the greatest influence on his early life and work. One prominent Catalonian family, the Revent\u00f3s, helped establish Picasso in Barcelona, where his family had settled from M\u00e1laga when he was a teenager. Two brothers, Jacint (\u201cCinto\u201d) and Ram\u00f3n (\u201cMoni\u201d) Revent\u00f3s, became crucial friends for the young Picasso, influencing him both politically and artistically: Their household was frequented by pillars of the Catalan Modernisme movement, such as Santiago Rusi\u00f1ol and Ram\u00f3n Casas. Jacint Revent\u00f3s remained a friend until he and Picasso were elderly.", "answer": "Barcelona", "sentence": "BARCELONA \u2014 When a young Pablo Picasso left Barcelona for Paris in 1904, he left behind a group of friends who proved to be perhaps the greatest influence on his early life and work.", "paragraph_sentence": " BARCELONA \u2014 When a young Pablo Picasso left Barcelona for Paris in 1904, he left behind a group of friends who proved to be perhaps the greatest influence on his early life and work. One prominent Catalonian family, the Revent\u00f3s, helped establish Picasso in Barcelona, where his family had settled from M\u00e1laga when he was a teenager. Two brothers, Jacint (\u201cCinto\u201d) and Ram\u00f3n (\u201cMoni\u201d) Revent\u00f3s, became crucial friends for the young Picasso, influencing him both politically and artistically: Their household was frequented by pillars of the Catalan Modernisme movement, such as Santiago Rusi\u00f1ol and Ram\u00f3n Casas. Jacint Revent\u00f3s remained a friend until he and Picasso were elderly.", "paragraph_answer": "BARCELONA \u2014 When a young Pablo Picasso left Barcelona for Paris in 1904, he left behind a group of friends who proved to be perhaps the greatest influence on his early life and work. One prominent Catalonian family, the Revent\u00f3s, helped establish Picasso in Barcelona, where his family had settled from M\u00e1laga when he was a teenager. Two brothers, Jacint (\u201cCinto\u201d) and Ram\u00f3n (\u201cMoni\u201d) Revent\u00f3s, became crucial friends for the young Picasso, influencing him both politically and artistically: Their household was frequented by pillars of the Catalan Modernisme movement, such as Santiago Rusi\u00f1ol and Ram\u00f3n Casas. Jacint Revent\u00f3s remained a friend until he and Picasso were elderly.", "sentence_answer": "BARCELONA \u2014 When a young Pablo Picasso left Barcelona for Paris in 1904, he left behind a group of friends who proved to be perhaps the greatest influence on his early life and work."} -{"question": "Who helped to establish Picasso in Barcelona?", "paragraph": "BARCELONA \u2014 When a young Pablo Picasso left Barcelona for Paris in 1904, he left behind a group of friends who proved to be perhaps the greatest influence on his early life and work. One prominent Catalonian family, the Revent\u00f3s, helped establish Picasso in Barcelona, where his family had settled from M\u00e1laga when he was a teenager. Two brothers, Jacint (\u201cCinto\u201d) and Ram\u00f3n (\u201cMoni\u201d) Revent\u00f3s, became crucial friends for the young Picasso, influencing him both politically and artistically: Their household was frequented by pillars of the Catalan Modernisme movement, such as Santiago Rusi\u00f1ol and Ram\u00f3n Casas. Jacint Revent\u00f3s remained a friend until he and Picasso were elderly.", "answer": "the Revent\u00f3s", "sentence": "One prominent Catalonian family, the Revent\u00f3s , helped establish Picasso in Barcelona, where his family had settled from M\u00e1laga when he was a teenager.", "paragraph_sentence": "BARCELONA \u2014 When a young Pablo Picasso left Barcelona for Paris in 1904, he left behind a group of friends who proved to be perhaps the greatest influence on his early life and work. One prominent Catalonian family, the Revent\u00f3s , helped establish Picasso in Barcelona, where his family had settled from M\u00e1laga when he was a teenager. Two brothers, Jacint (\u201cCinto\u201d) and Ram\u00f3n (\u201cMoni\u201d) Revent\u00f3s, became crucial friends for the young Picasso, influencing him both politically and artistically: Their household was frequented by pillars of the Catalan Modernisme movement, such as Santiago Rusi\u00f1ol and Ram\u00f3n Casas. Jacint Revent\u00f3s remained a friend until he and Picasso were elderly.", "paragraph_answer": "BARCELONA \u2014 When a young Pablo Picasso left Barcelona for Paris in 1904, he left behind a group of friends who proved to be perhaps the greatest influence on his early life and work. One prominent Catalonian family, the Revent\u00f3s , helped establish Picasso in Barcelona, where his family had settled from M\u00e1laga when he was a teenager. Two brothers, Jacint (\u201cCinto\u201d) and Ram\u00f3n (\u201cMoni\u201d) Revent\u00f3s, became crucial friends for the young Picasso, influencing him both politically and artistically: Their household was frequented by pillars of the Catalan Modernisme movement, such as Santiago Rusi\u00f1ol and Ram\u00f3n Casas. Jacint Revent\u00f3s remained a friend until he and Picasso were elderly.", "sentence_answer": "One prominent Catalonian family, the Revent\u00f3s , helped establish Picasso in Barcelona, where his family had settled from M\u00e1laga when he was a teenager."} -{"question": "Where did Picasso's family settle from when he was a teenager?", "paragraph": "BARCELONA \u2014 When a young Pablo Picasso left Barcelona for Paris in 1904, he left behind a group of friends who proved to be perhaps the greatest influence on his early life and work. One prominent Catalonian family, the Revent\u00f3s, helped establish Picasso in Barcelona, where his family had settled from M\u00e1laga when he was a teenager. Two brothers, Jacint (\u201cCinto\u201d) and Ram\u00f3n (\u201cMoni\u201d) Revent\u00f3s, became crucial friends for the young Picasso, influencing him both politically and artistically: Their household was frequented by pillars of the Catalan Modernisme movement, such as Santiago Rusi\u00f1ol and Ram\u00f3n Casas. Jacint Revent\u00f3s remained a friend until he and Picasso were elderly.", "answer": "M\u00e1laga", "sentence": "One prominent Catalonian family, the Revent\u00f3s, helped establish Picasso in Barcelona, where his family had settled from M\u00e1laga when he was a teenager.", "paragraph_sentence": "BARCELONA \u2014 When a young Pablo Picasso left Barcelona for Paris in 1904, he left behind a group of friends who proved to be perhaps the greatest influence on his early life and work. One prominent Catalonian family, the Revent\u00f3s, helped establish Picasso in Barcelona, where his family had settled from M\u00e1laga when he was a teenager. Two brothers, Jacint (\u201cCinto\u201d) and Ram\u00f3n (\u201cMoni\u201d) Revent\u00f3s, became crucial friends for the young Picasso, influencing him both politically and artistically: Their household was frequented by pillars of the Catalan Modernisme movement, such as Santiago Rusi\u00f1ol and Ram\u00f3n Casas. Jacint Revent\u00f3s remained a friend until he and Picasso were elderly.", "paragraph_answer": "BARCELONA \u2014 When a young Pablo Picasso left Barcelona for Paris in 1904, he left behind a group of friends who proved to be perhaps the greatest influence on his early life and work. One prominent Catalonian family, the Revent\u00f3s, helped establish Picasso in Barcelona, where his family had settled from M\u00e1laga when he was a teenager. Two brothers, Jacint (\u201cCinto\u201d) and Ram\u00f3n (\u201cMoni\u201d) Revent\u00f3s, became crucial friends for the young Picasso, influencing him both politically and artistically: Their household was frequented by pillars of the Catalan Modernisme movement, such as Santiago Rusi\u00f1ol and Ram\u00f3n Casas. Jacint Revent\u00f3s remained a friend until he and Picasso were elderly.", "sentence_answer": "One prominent Catalonian family, the Revent\u00f3s, helped establish Picasso in Barcelona, where his family had settled from M\u00e1laga when he was a teenager."} -{"question": "What is the intimate exhibition called at the Picasso Museum?", "paragraph": "These friendships have inspired an intimate exhibition, \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s,\u201d at the Picasso Museum in Barcelona through Jan. 10. The show includes letters and drawings that reveal the artist\u2019s lifelong connection to an adopted family whose influence came at a pivotal time in his life. \u201cWhen Picasso came to Barcelona after studying in Madrid, he tried to establish himself here as an artist,\u201d said Mal\u00e9n Gual, curator of the exhibition, during a recent tour. \u201cHe met Ram\u00f3n, who introduced Picasso to his family.\u201d \u201cThe Revent\u00f3s home was a lively place where Picasso met lots of people at parties,\u201d Ms. Gual continued. \u201cThe father was a poet and was in all the social meetings around the city. Picasso became an important friend for both Ram\u00f3n and Jacint.\u201d Picasso\u2019s early works are a far cry from his Cubist and Surrealist work later in his career. The museum chronicles these early works, including his Blue Period (1901-4) and Rose Period (1904-6). But it is the period around 1900 that began to shape the young artist \u2014 and his connection to his native country and his sense of home.", "answer": "Picasso I Els Revent\u00f3s", "sentence": "These friendships have inspired an intimate exhibition, \u201c Picasso I Els Revent\u00f3s ,\u201d at the Picasso Museum in Barcelona through Jan. 10.", "paragraph_sentence": " These friendships have inspired an intimate exhibition, \u201c Picasso I Els Revent\u00f3s ,\u201d at the Picasso Museum in Barcelona through Jan. 10. The show includes letters and drawings that reveal the artist\u2019s lifelong connection to an adopted family whose influence came at a pivotal time in his life. \u201cWhen Picasso came to Barcelona after studying in Madrid, he tried to establish himself here as an artist,\u201d said Mal\u00e9n Gual, curator of the exhibition, during a recent tour. \u201cHe met Ram\u00f3n, who introduced Picasso to his family.\u201d \u201cThe Revent\u00f3s home was a lively place where Picasso met lots of people at parties,\u201d Ms. Gual continued. \u201cThe father was a poet and was in all the social meetings around the city. Picasso became an important friend for both Ram\u00f3n and Jacint.\u201d Picasso\u2019s early works are a far cry from his Cubist and Surrealist work later in his career. The museum chronicles these early works, including his Blue Period (1901-4) and Rose Period (1904-6). But it is the period around 1900 that began to shape the young artist \u2014 and his connection to his native country and his sense of home.", "paragraph_answer": "These friendships have inspired an intimate exhibition, \u201c Picasso I Els Revent\u00f3s ,\u201d at the Picasso Museum in Barcelona through Jan. 10. The show includes letters and drawings that reveal the artist\u2019s lifelong connection to an adopted family whose influence came at a pivotal time in his life. \u201cWhen Picasso came to Barcelona after studying in Madrid, he tried to establish himself here as an artist,\u201d said Mal\u00e9n Gual, curator of the exhibition, during a recent tour. \u201cHe met Ram\u00f3n, who introduced Picasso to his family.\u201d \u201cThe Revent\u00f3s home was a lively place where Picasso met lots of people at parties,\u201d Ms. Gual continued. \u201cThe father was a poet and was in all the social meetings around the city. Picasso became an important friend for both Ram\u00f3n and Jacint.\u201d Picasso\u2019s early works are a far cry from his Cubist and Surrealist work later in his career. The museum chronicles these early works, including his Blue Period (1901-4) and Rose Period (1904-6). But it is the period around 1900 that began to shape the young artist \u2014 and his connection to his native country and his sense of home.", "sentence_answer": "These friendships have inspired an intimate exhibition, \u201c Picasso I Els Revent\u00f3s ,\u201d at the Picasso Museum in Barcelona through Jan. 10."} -{"question": "Where did Picasso study before going to Barcelona?", "paragraph": "These friendships have inspired an intimate exhibition, \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s,\u201d at the Picasso Museum in Barcelona through Jan. 10. The show includes letters and drawings that reveal the artist\u2019s lifelong connection to an adopted family whose influence came at a pivotal time in his life. \u201cWhen Picasso came to Barcelona after studying in Madrid, he tried to establish himself here as an artist,\u201d said Mal\u00e9n Gual, curator of the exhibition, during a recent tour. \u201cHe met Ram\u00f3n, who introduced Picasso to his family.\u201d \u201cThe Revent\u00f3s home was a lively place where Picasso met lots of people at parties,\u201d Ms. Gual continued. \u201cThe father was a poet and was in all the social meetings around the city. Picasso became an important friend for both Ram\u00f3n and Jacint.\u201d Picasso\u2019s early works are a far cry from his Cubist and Surrealist work later in his career. The museum chronicles these early works, including his Blue Period (1901-4) and Rose Period (1904-6). But it is the period around 1900 that began to shape the young artist \u2014 and his connection to his native country and his sense of home.", "answer": "Madrid", "sentence": "\u201cWhen Picasso came to Barcelona after studying in Madrid , he tried to establish himself here as an artist,\u201d said Mal\u00e9n Gual, curator of the exhibition, during a recent tour.", "paragraph_sentence": "These friendships have inspired an intimate exhibition, \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s,\u201d at the Picasso Museum in Barcelona through Jan. 10. The show includes letters and drawings that reveal the artist\u2019s lifelong connection to an adopted family whose influence came at a pivotal time in his life. \u201cWhen Picasso came to Barcelona after studying in Madrid , he tried to establish himself here as an artist,\u201d said Mal\u00e9n Gual, curator of the exhibition, during a recent tour. \u201cHe met Ram\u00f3n, who introduced Picasso to his family.\u201d \u201cThe Revent\u00f3s home was a lively place where Picasso met lots of people at parties,\u201d Ms. Gual continued. \u201cThe father was a poet and was in all the social meetings around the city. Picasso became an important friend for both Ram\u00f3n and Jacint.\u201d Picasso\u2019s early works are a far cry from his Cubist and Surrealist work later in his career. The museum chronicles these early works, including his Blue Period (1901-4) and Rose Period (1904-6). But it is the period around 1900 that began to shape the young artist \u2014 and his connection to his native country and his sense of home.", "paragraph_answer": "These friendships have inspired an intimate exhibition, \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s,\u201d at the Picasso Museum in Barcelona through Jan. 10. The show includes letters and drawings that reveal the artist\u2019s lifelong connection to an adopted family whose influence came at a pivotal time in his life. \u201cWhen Picasso came to Barcelona after studying in Madrid , he tried to establish himself here as an artist,\u201d said Mal\u00e9n Gual, curator of the exhibition, during a recent tour. \u201cHe met Ram\u00f3n, who introduced Picasso to his family.\u201d \u201cThe Revent\u00f3s home was a lively place where Picasso met lots of people at parties,\u201d Ms. Gual continued. \u201cThe father was a poet and was in all the social meetings around the city. Picasso became an important friend for both Ram\u00f3n and Jacint.\u201d Picasso\u2019s early works are a far cry from his Cubist and Surrealist work later in his career. The museum chronicles these early works, including his Blue Period (1901-4) and Rose Period (1904-6). But it is the period around 1900 that began to shape the young artist \u2014 and his connection to his native country and his sense of home.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWhen Picasso came to Barcelona after studying in Madrid , he tried to establish himself here as an artist,\u201d said Mal\u00e9n Gual, curator of the exhibition, during a recent tour."} -{"question": "What did Picasso try to establish himself as when arriving in Barcelona?", "paragraph": "These friendships have inspired an intimate exhibition, \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s,\u201d at the Picasso Museum in Barcelona through Jan. 10. The show includes letters and drawings that reveal the artist\u2019s lifelong connection to an adopted family whose influence came at a pivotal time in his life. \u201cWhen Picasso came to Barcelona after studying in Madrid, he tried to establish himself here as an artist,\u201d said Mal\u00e9n Gual, curator of the exhibition, during a recent tour. \u201cHe met Ram\u00f3n, who introduced Picasso to his family.\u201d \u201cThe Revent\u00f3s home was a lively place where Picasso met lots of people at parties,\u201d Ms. Gual continued. \u201cThe father was a poet and was in all the social meetings around the city. Picasso became an important friend for both Ram\u00f3n and Jacint.\u201d Picasso\u2019s early works are a far cry from his Cubist and Surrealist work later in his career. The museum chronicles these early works, including his Blue Period (1901-4) and Rose Period (1904-6). But it is the period around 1900 that began to shape the young artist \u2014 and his connection to his native country and his sense of home.", "answer": "an artist", "sentence": "\u201cWhen Picasso came to Barcelona after studying in Madrid, he tried to establish himself here as an artist ,\u201d said Mal\u00e9n Gual, curator of the exhibition, during a recent tour.", "paragraph_sentence": "These friendships have inspired an intimate exhibition, \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s,\u201d at the Picasso Museum in Barcelona through Jan. 10. The show includes letters and drawings that reveal the artist\u2019s lifelong connection to an adopted family whose influence came at a pivotal time in his life. \u201cWhen Picasso came to Barcelona after studying in Madrid, he tried to establish himself here as an artist ,\u201d said Mal\u00e9n Gual, curator of the exhibition, during a recent tour. \u201cHe met Ram\u00f3n, who introduced Picasso to his family.\u201d \u201cThe Revent\u00f3s home was a lively place where Picasso met lots of people at parties,\u201d Ms. Gual continued. \u201cThe father was a poet and was in all the social meetings around the city. Picasso became an important friend for both Ram\u00f3n and Jacint.\u201d Picasso\u2019s early works are a far cry from his Cubist and Surrealist work later in his career. The museum chronicles these early works, including his Blue Period (1901-4) and Rose Period (1904-6). But it is the period around 1900 that began to shape the young artist \u2014 and his connection to his native country and his sense of home.", "paragraph_answer": "These friendships have inspired an intimate exhibition, \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s,\u201d at the Picasso Museum in Barcelona through Jan. 10. The show includes letters and drawings that reveal the artist\u2019s lifelong connection to an adopted family whose influence came at a pivotal time in his life. \u201cWhen Picasso came to Barcelona after studying in Madrid, he tried to establish himself here as an artist ,\u201d said Mal\u00e9n Gual, curator of the exhibition, during a recent tour. \u201cHe met Ram\u00f3n, who introduced Picasso to his family.\u201d \u201cThe Revent\u00f3s home was a lively place where Picasso met lots of people at parties,\u201d Ms. Gual continued. \u201cThe father was a poet and was in all the social meetings around the city. Picasso became an important friend for both Ram\u00f3n and Jacint.\u201d Picasso\u2019s early works are a far cry from his Cubist and Surrealist work later in his career. The museum chronicles these early works, including his Blue Period (1901-4) and Rose Period (1904-6). But it is the period around 1900 that began to shape the young artist \u2014 and his connection to his native country and his sense of home.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWhen Picasso came to Barcelona after studying in Madrid, he tried to establish himself here as an artist ,\u201d said Mal\u00e9n Gual, curator of the exhibition, during a recent tour."} -{"question": "When did PIcasso start to shape as an artist?", "paragraph": "These friendships have inspired an intimate exhibition, \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s,\u201d at the Picasso Museum in Barcelona through Jan. 10. The show includes letters and drawings that reveal the artist\u2019s lifelong connection to an adopted family whose influence came at a pivotal time in his life. \u201cWhen Picasso came to Barcelona after studying in Madrid, he tried to establish himself here as an artist,\u201d said Mal\u00e9n Gual, curator of the exhibition, during a recent tour. \u201cHe met Ram\u00f3n, who introduced Picasso to his family.\u201d \u201cThe Revent\u00f3s home was a lively place where Picasso met lots of people at parties,\u201d Ms. Gual continued. \u201cThe father was a poet and was in all the social meetings around the city. Picasso became an important friend for both Ram\u00f3n and Jacint.\u201d Picasso\u2019s early works are a far cry from his Cubist and Surrealist work later in his career. The museum chronicles these early works, including his Blue Period (1901-4) and Rose Period (1904-6). But it is the period around 1900 that began to shape the young artist \u2014 and his connection to his native country and his sense of home.", "answer": "around 1900", "sentence": "But it is the period around 1900 that began to shape the young artist \u2014 and his connection to his native country and his sense of home.", "paragraph_sentence": "These friendships have inspired an intimate exhibition, \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s,\u201d at the Picasso Museum in Barcelona through Jan. 10. The show includes letters and drawings that reveal the artist\u2019s lifelong connection to an adopted family whose influence came at a pivotal time in his life. \u201cWhen Picasso came to Barcelona after studying in Madrid, he tried to establish himself here as an artist,\u201d said Mal\u00e9n Gual, curator of the exhibition, during a recent tour. \u201cHe met Ram\u00f3n, who introduced Picasso to his family.\u201d \u201cThe Revent\u00f3s home was a lively place where Picasso met lots of people at parties,\u201d Ms. Gual continued. \u201cThe father was a poet and was in all the social meetings around the city. Picasso became an important friend for both Ram\u00f3n and Jacint.\u201d Picasso\u2019s early works are a far cry from his Cubist and Surrealist work later in his career. The museum chronicles these early works, including his Blue Period (1901-4) and Rose Period (1904-6). But it is the period around 1900 that began to shape the young artist \u2014 and his connection to his native country and his sense of home. ", "paragraph_answer": "These friendships have inspired an intimate exhibition, \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s,\u201d at the Picasso Museum in Barcelona through Jan. 10. The show includes letters and drawings that reveal the artist\u2019s lifelong connection to an adopted family whose influence came at a pivotal time in his life. \u201cWhen Picasso came to Barcelona after studying in Madrid, he tried to establish himself here as an artist,\u201d said Mal\u00e9n Gual, curator of the exhibition, during a recent tour. \u201cHe met Ram\u00f3n, who introduced Picasso to his family.\u201d \u201cThe Revent\u00f3s home was a lively place where Picasso met lots of people at parties,\u201d Ms. Gual continued. \u201cThe father was a poet and was in all the social meetings around the city. Picasso became an important friend for both Ram\u00f3n and Jacint.\u201d Picasso\u2019s early works are a far cry from his Cubist and Surrealist work later in his career. The museum chronicles these early works, including his Blue Period (1901-4) and Rose Period (1904-6). But it is the period around 1900 that began to shape the young artist \u2014 and his connection to his native country and his sense of home.", "sentence_answer": "But it is the period around 1900 that began to shape the young artist \u2014 and his connection to his native country and his sense of home."} -{"question": "Who did Picasso become an important friend to in Barcelona?", "paragraph": "These friendships have inspired an intimate exhibition, \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s,\u201d at the Picasso Museum in Barcelona through Jan. 10. The show includes letters and drawings that reveal the artist\u2019s lifelong connection to an adopted family whose influence came at a pivotal time in his life. \u201cWhen Picasso came to Barcelona after studying in Madrid, he tried to establish himself here as an artist,\u201d said Mal\u00e9n Gual, curator of the exhibition, during a recent tour. \u201cHe met Ram\u00f3n, who introduced Picasso to his family.\u201d \u201cThe Revent\u00f3s home was a lively place where Picasso met lots of people at parties,\u201d Ms. Gual continued. \u201cThe father was a poet and was in all the social meetings around the city. Picasso became an important friend for both Ram\u00f3n and Jacint.\u201d Picasso\u2019s early works are a far cry from his Cubist and Surrealist work later in his career. The museum chronicles these early works, including his Blue Period (1901-4) and Rose Period (1904-6). But it is the period around 1900 that began to shape the young artist \u2014 and his connection to his native country and his sense of home.", "answer": "Ram\u00f3n and Jacint", "sentence": "Picasso became an important friend for both Ram\u00f3n and Jacint .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "These friendships have inspired an intimate exhibition, \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s,\u201d at the Picasso Museum in Barcelona through Jan. 10. The show includes letters and drawings that reveal the artist\u2019s lifelong connection to an adopted family whose influence came at a pivotal time in his life. \u201cWhen Picasso came to Barcelona after studying in Madrid, he tried to establish himself here as an artist,\u201d said Mal\u00e9n Gual, curator of the exhibition, during a recent tour. \u201cHe met Ram\u00f3n, who introduced Picasso to his family.\u201d \u201cThe Revent\u00f3s home was a lively place where Picasso met lots of people at parties,\u201d Ms. Gual continued. \u201cThe father was a poet and was in all the social meetings around the city. Picasso became an important friend for both Ram\u00f3n and Jacint .\u201d Picasso\u2019s early works are a far cry from his Cubist and Surrealist work later in his career. The museum chronicles these early works, including his Blue Period (1901-4) and Rose Period (1904-6). But it is the period around 1900 that began to shape the young artist \u2014 and his connection to his native country and his sense of home.", "paragraph_answer": "These friendships have inspired an intimate exhibition, \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s,\u201d at the Picasso Museum in Barcelona through Jan. 10. The show includes letters and drawings that reveal the artist\u2019s lifelong connection to an adopted family whose influence came at a pivotal time in his life. \u201cWhen Picasso came to Barcelona after studying in Madrid, he tried to establish himself here as an artist,\u201d said Mal\u00e9n Gual, curator of the exhibition, during a recent tour. \u201cHe met Ram\u00f3n, who introduced Picasso to his family.\u201d \u201cThe Revent\u00f3s home was a lively place where Picasso met lots of people at parties,\u201d Ms. Gual continued. \u201cThe father was a poet and was in all the social meetings around the city. Picasso became an important friend for both Ram\u00f3n and Jacint .\u201d Picasso\u2019s early works are a far cry from his Cubist and Surrealist work later in his career. The museum chronicles these early works, including his Blue Period (1901-4) and Rose Period (1904-6). But it is the period around 1900 that began to shape the young artist \u2014 and his connection to his native country and his sense of home.", "sentence_answer": "Picasso became an important friend for both Ram\u00f3n and Jacint .\u201d"} -{"question": "What was the important thing about the museum?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe most important thing about our museum is that we can show Picasso in his youth,\u201d Ms. Gual said. \u201cI think he\u2019s one of the few artists who you can see all of his early knowledge and his evolution in one place.\u201d What \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s\u201d pinpoints in this period is not only the letters between Picasso and the Revent\u00f3s brothers and the intimate illustrations he included in many of them, but also early artwork that was directly influenced by the friendships, including drawings from around 1900 of each brother decked in dapper outfits, with Ram\u00f3n smoking a pipe. The brothers\u2019 careers \u2014 Ram\u00f3n, a writer, and Jacint, a doctor \u2014 influenced the young Picasso, too.", "answer": "show Picasso in his youth", "sentence": "\u201cThe most important thing about our museum is that we can show Picasso in his youth ,\u201d Ms. Gual said.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe most important thing about our museum is that we can show Picasso in his youth ,\u201d Ms. Gual said. \u201cI think he\u2019s one of the few artists who you can see all of his early knowledge and his evolution in one place.\u201d What \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s\u201d pinpoints in this period is not only the letters between Picasso and the Revent\u00f3s brothers and the intimate illustrations he included in many of them, but also early artwork that was directly influenced by the friendships, including drawings from around 1900 of each brother decked in dapper outfits, with Ram\u00f3n smoking a pipe. The brothers\u2019 careers \u2014 Ram\u00f3n, a writer, and Jacint, a doctor \u2014 influenced the young Picasso, too.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe most important thing about our museum is that we can show Picasso in his youth ,\u201d Ms. Gual said. \u201cI think he\u2019s one of the few artists who you can see all of his early knowledge and his evolution in one place.\u201d What \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s\u201d pinpoints in this period is not only the letters between Picasso and the Revent\u00f3s brothers and the intimate illustrations he included in many of them, but also early artwork that was directly influenced by the friendships, including drawings from around 1900 of each brother decked in dapper outfits, with Ram\u00f3n smoking a pipe. The brothers\u2019 careers \u2014 Ram\u00f3n, a writer, and Jacint, a doctor \u2014 influenced the young Picasso, too.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe most important thing about our museum is that we can show Picasso in his youth ,\u201d Ms. Gual said."} -{"question": "What kind of illustrations did PIcasso share in his letters to the Reventos brothers?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe most important thing about our museum is that we can show Picasso in his youth,\u201d Ms. Gual said. \u201cI think he\u2019s one of the few artists who you can see all of his early knowledge and his evolution in one place.\u201d What \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s\u201d pinpoints in this period is not only the letters between Picasso and the Revent\u00f3s brothers and the intimate illustrations he included in many of them, but also early artwork that was directly influenced by the friendships, including drawings from around 1900 of each brother decked in dapper outfits, with Ram\u00f3n smoking a pipe. The brothers\u2019 careers \u2014 Ram\u00f3n, a writer, and Jacint, a doctor \u2014 influenced the young Picasso, too.", "answer": "intimate illustrations", "sentence": "What \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s\u201d pinpoints in this period is not only the letters between Picasso and the Revent\u00f3s brothers and the intimate illustrations he included in many of them, but also early artwork that was directly influenced by the friendships, including drawings from around 1900 of each brother decked in dapper outfits, with Ram\u00f3n smoking a pipe.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe most important thing about our museum is that we can show Picasso in his youth,\u201d Ms. Gual said. \u201cI think he\u2019s one of the few artists who you can see all of his early knowledge and his evolution in one place.\u201d What \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s\u201d pinpoints in this period is not only the letters between Picasso and the Revent\u00f3s brothers and the intimate illustrations he included in many of them, but also early artwork that was directly influenced by the friendships, including drawings from around 1900 of each brother decked in dapper outfits, with Ram\u00f3n smoking a pipe. The brothers\u2019 careers \u2014 Ram\u00f3n, a writer, and Jacint, a doctor \u2014 influenced the young Picasso, too.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe most important thing about our museum is that we can show Picasso in his youth,\u201d Ms. Gual said. \u201cI think he\u2019s one of the few artists who you can see all of his early knowledge and his evolution in one place.\u201d What \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s\u201d pinpoints in this period is not only the letters between Picasso and the Revent\u00f3s brothers and the intimate illustrations he included in many of them, but also early artwork that was directly influenced by the friendships, including drawings from around 1900 of each brother decked in dapper outfits, with Ram\u00f3n smoking a pipe. The brothers\u2019 careers \u2014 Ram\u00f3n, a writer, and Jacint, a doctor \u2014 influenced the young Picasso, too.", "sentence_answer": "What \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s\u201d pinpoints in this period is not only the letters between Picasso and the Revent\u00f3s brothers and the intimate illustrations he included in many of them, but also early artwork that was directly influenced by the friendships, including drawings from around 1900 of each brother decked in dapper outfits, with Ram\u00f3n smoking a pipe."} -{"question": "What directly influenced Picasso's early artwork?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe most important thing about our museum is that we can show Picasso in his youth,\u201d Ms. Gual said. \u201cI think he\u2019s one of the few artists who you can see all of his early knowledge and his evolution in one place.\u201d What \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s\u201d pinpoints in this period is not only the letters between Picasso and the Revent\u00f3s brothers and the intimate illustrations he included in many of them, but also early artwork that was directly influenced by the friendships, including drawings from around 1900 of each brother decked in dapper outfits, with Ram\u00f3n smoking a pipe. The brothers\u2019 careers \u2014 Ram\u00f3n, a writer, and Jacint, a doctor \u2014 influenced the young Picasso, too.", "answer": "friendships", "sentence": "What \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s\u201d pinpoints in this period is not only the letters between Picasso and the Revent\u00f3s brothers and the intimate illustrations he included in many of them, but also early artwork that was directly influenced by the friendships , including drawings from around 1900 of each brother decked in dapper outfits, with Ram\u00f3n smoking a pipe.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe most important thing about our museum is that we can show Picasso in his youth,\u201d Ms. Gual said. \u201cI think he\u2019s one of the few artists who you can see all of his early knowledge and his evolution in one place.\u201d What \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s\u201d pinpoints in this period is not only the letters between Picasso and the Revent\u00f3s brothers and the intimate illustrations he included in many of them, but also early artwork that was directly influenced by the friendships , including drawings from around 1900 of each brother decked in dapper outfits, with Ram\u00f3n smoking a pipe. The brothers\u2019 careers \u2014 Ram\u00f3n, a writer, and Jacint, a doctor \u2014 influenced the young Picasso, too.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe most important thing about our museum is that we can show Picasso in his youth,\u201d Ms. Gual said. \u201cI think he\u2019s one of the few artists who you can see all of his early knowledge and his evolution in one place.\u201d What \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s\u201d pinpoints in this period is not only the letters between Picasso and the Revent\u00f3s brothers and the intimate illustrations he included in many of them, but also early artwork that was directly influenced by the friendships , including drawings from around 1900 of each brother decked in dapper outfits, with Ram\u00f3n smoking a pipe. The brothers\u2019 careers \u2014 Ram\u00f3n, a writer, and Jacint, a doctor \u2014 influenced the young Picasso, too.", "sentence_answer": "What \u201cPicasso I Els Revent\u00f3s\u201d pinpoints in this period is not only the letters between Picasso and the Revent\u00f3s brothers and the intimate illustrations he included in many of them, but also early artwork that was directly influenced by the friendships , including drawings from around 1900 of each brother decked in dapper outfits, with Ram\u00f3n smoking a pipe."} -{"question": "How many sections were in the exhibition?", "paragraph": "The exhibition comprises three sections: letters and artwork from the early years of the friendships; illustrations by Picasso that accompany Ram\u00f3n\u2019s literary works, including newspaper and magazine articles; and the renewed friendship with the Revent\u00f3s family, beginning in the 1950s. Picasso and Jacint remained in touch until Jacint\u2019s death in 1968. The lifelong connection between the two runs through the exhibition, from lengthy to spontaneous letters: \u201cI\u2019m spending a few days in Paris and would like to see you,\u201d Jacint wrote to Picasso in 1921. \u201cI\u2019m staying at the Grand Hotel. If you have a minute, write me a note and we\u2019ll meet where and when you suggest. I don\u2019t have anything to do.\u201d", "answer": "three", "sentence": "The exhibition comprises three sections: letters and artwork from the early years of the friendships; illustrations by Picasso that accompany Ram\u00f3n\u2019s literary works, including newspaper and magazine articles; and the renewed friendship with the Revent\u00f3s family, beginning in the 1950s.", "paragraph_sentence": " The exhibition comprises three sections: letters and artwork from the early years of the friendships; illustrations by Picasso that accompany Ram\u00f3n\u2019s literary works, including newspaper and magazine articles; and the renewed friendship with the Revent\u00f3s family, beginning in the 1950s. Picasso and Jacint remained in touch until Jacint\u2019s death in 1968. The lifelong connection between the two runs through the exhibition, from lengthy to spontaneous letters: \u201cI\u2019m spending a few days in Paris and would like to see you,\u201d Jacint wrote to Picasso in 1921. \u201cI\u2019m staying at the Grand Hotel. If you have a minute, write me a note and we\u2019ll meet where and when you suggest. I don\u2019t have anything to do.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The exhibition comprises three sections: letters and artwork from the early years of the friendships; illustrations by Picasso that accompany Ram\u00f3n\u2019s literary works, including newspaper and magazine articles; and the renewed friendship with the Revent\u00f3s family, beginning in the 1950s. Picasso and Jacint remained in touch until Jacint\u2019s death in 1968. The lifelong connection between the two runs through the exhibition, from lengthy to spontaneous letters: \u201cI\u2019m spending a few days in Paris and would like to see you,\u201d Jacint wrote to Picasso in 1921. \u201cI\u2019m staying at the Grand Hotel. If you have a minute, write me a note and we\u2019ll meet where and when you suggest. I don\u2019t have anything to do.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The exhibition comprises three sections: letters and artwork from the early years of the friendships; illustrations by Picasso that accompany Ram\u00f3n\u2019s literary works, including newspaper and magazine articles; and the renewed friendship with the Revent\u00f3s family, beginning in the 1950s."} -{"question": "How long did Picasso and Jacint remain in touch?", "paragraph": "The exhibition comprises three sections: letters and artwork from the early years of the friendships; illustrations by Picasso that accompany Ram\u00f3n\u2019s literary works, including newspaper and magazine articles; and the renewed friendship with the Revent\u00f3s family, beginning in the 1950s. Picasso and Jacint remained in touch until Jacint\u2019s death in 1968. The lifelong connection between the two runs through the exhibition, from lengthy to spontaneous letters: \u201cI\u2019m spending a few days in Paris and would like to see you,\u201d Jacint wrote to Picasso in 1921. \u201cI\u2019m staying at the Grand Hotel. If you have a minute, write me a note and we\u2019ll meet where and when you suggest. I don\u2019t have anything to do.\u201d", "answer": "until Jacint\u2019s death", "sentence": "Picasso and Jacint remained in touch until Jacint\u2019s death in 1968.", "paragraph_sentence": "The exhibition comprises three sections: letters and artwork from the early years of the friendships; illustrations by Picasso that accompany Ram\u00f3n\u2019s literary works, including newspaper and magazine articles; and the renewed friendship with the Revent\u00f3s family, beginning in the 1950s. Picasso and Jacint remained in touch until Jacint\u2019s death in 1968. The lifelong connection between the two runs through the exhibition, from lengthy to spontaneous letters: \u201cI\u2019m spending a few days in Paris and would like to see you,\u201d Jacint wrote to Picasso in 1921. \u201cI\u2019m staying at the Grand Hotel. If you have a minute, write me a note and we\u2019ll meet where and when you suggest. I don\u2019t have anything to do.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The exhibition comprises three sections: letters and artwork from the early years of the friendships; illustrations by Picasso that accompany Ram\u00f3n\u2019s literary works, including newspaper and magazine articles; and the renewed friendship with the Revent\u00f3s family, beginning in the 1950s. Picasso and Jacint remained in touch until Jacint\u2019s death in 1968. The lifelong connection between the two runs through the exhibition, from lengthy to spontaneous letters: \u201cI\u2019m spending a few days in Paris and would like to see you,\u201d Jacint wrote to Picasso in 1921. \u201cI\u2019m staying at the Grand Hotel. If you have a minute, write me a note and we\u2019ll meet where and when you suggest. I don\u2019t have anything to do.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Picasso and Jacint remained in touch until Jacint\u2019s death in 1968."} -{"question": "When did Jacint die?", "paragraph": "The exhibition comprises three sections: letters and artwork from the early years of the friendships; illustrations by Picasso that accompany Ram\u00f3n\u2019s literary works, including newspaper and magazine articles; and the renewed friendship with the Revent\u00f3s family, beginning in the 1950s. Picasso and Jacint remained in touch until Jacint\u2019s death in 1968. The lifelong connection between the two runs through the exhibition, from lengthy to spontaneous letters: \u201cI\u2019m spending a few days in Paris and would like to see you,\u201d Jacint wrote to Picasso in 1921. \u201cI\u2019m staying at the Grand Hotel. If you have a minute, write me a note and we\u2019ll meet where and when you suggest. I don\u2019t have anything to do.\u201d", "answer": "1968", "sentence": "Picasso and Jacint remained in touch until Jacint\u2019s death in 1968 .", "paragraph_sentence": "The exhibition comprises three sections: letters and artwork from the early years of the friendships; illustrations by Picasso that accompany Ram\u00f3n\u2019s literary works, including newspaper and magazine articles; and the renewed friendship with the Revent\u00f3s family, beginning in the 1950s. Picasso and Jacint remained in touch until Jacint\u2019s death in 1968 . The lifelong connection between the two runs through the exhibition, from lengthy to spontaneous letters: \u201cI\u2019m spending a few days in Paris and would like to see you,\u201d Jacint wrote to Picasso in 1921. \u201cI\u2019m staying at the Grand Hotel. If you have a minute, write me a note and we\u2019ll meet where and when you suggest. I don\u2019t have anything to do.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The exhibition comprises three sections: letters and artwork from the early years of the friendships; illustrations by Picasso that accompany Ram\u00f3n\u2019s literary works, including newspaper and magazine articles; and the renewed friendship with the Revent\u00f3s family, beginning in the 1950s. Picasso and Jacint remained in touch until Jacint\u2019s death in 1968 . The lifelong connection between the two runs through the exhibition, from lengthy to spontaneous letters: \u201cI\u2019m spending a few days in Paris and would like to see you,\u201d Jacint wrote to Picasso in 1921. \u201cI\u2019m staying at the Grand Hotel. If you have a minute, write me a note and we\u2019ll meet where and when you suggest. I don\u2019t have anything to do.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Picasso and Jacint remained in touch until Jacint\u2019s death in 1968 ."} -{"question": "In what hotel did Jacint suggest Picasso meet him in a letter he wrote in 1921?", "paragraph": "The exhibition comprises three sections: letters and artwork from the early years of the friendships; illustrations by Picasso that accompany Ram\u00f3n\u2019s literary works, including newspaper and magazine articles; and the renewed friendship with the Revent\u00f3s family, beginning in the 1950s. Picasso and Jacint remained in touch until Jacint\u2019s death in 1968. The lifelong connection between the two runs through the exhibition, from lengthy to spontaneous letters: \u201cI\u2019m spending a few days in Paris and would like to see you,\u201d Jacint wrote to Picasso in 1921. \u201cI\u2019m staying at the Grand Hotel. If you have a minute, write me a note and we\u2019ll meet where and when you suggest. I don\u2019t have anything to do.\u201d", "answer": "Grand Hotel", "sentence": "\u201cI\u2019m staying at the Grand Hotel .", "paragraph_sentence": "The exhibition comprises three sections: letters and artwork from the early years of the friendships; illustrations by Picasso that accompany Ram\u00f3n\u2019s literary works, including newspaper and magazine articles; and the renewed friendship with the Revent\u00f3s family, beginning in the 1950s. Picasso and Jacint remained in touch until Jacint\u2019s death in 1968. The lifelong connection between the two runs through the exhibition, from lengthy to spontaneous letters: \u201cI\u2019m spending a few days in Paris and would like to see you,\u201d Jacint wrote to Picasso in 1921. \u201cI\u2019m staying at the Grand Hotel . If you have a minute, write me a note and we\u2019ll meet where and when you suggest. I don\u2019t have anything to do.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The exhibition comprises three sections: letters and artwork from the early years of the friendships; illustrations by Picasso that accompany Ram\u00f3n\u2019s literary works, including newspaper and magazine articles; and the renewed friendship with the Revent\u00f3s family, beginning in the 1950s. Picasso and Jacint remained in touch until Jacint\u2019s death in 1968. The lifelong connection between the two runs through the exhibition, from lengthy to spontaneous letters: \u201cI\u2019m spending a few days in Paris and would like to see you,\u201d Jacint wrote to Picasso in 1921. \u201cI\u2019m staying at the Grand Hotel . If you have a minute, write me a note and we\u2019ll meet where and when you suggest. I don\u2019t have anything to do.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI\u2019m staying at the Grand Hotel ."} -{"question": "Whose illustrations accompanied Ramon's literary works?", "paragraph": "The exhibition comprises three sections: letters and artwork from the early years of the friendships; illustrations by Picasso that accompany Ram\u00f3n\u2019s literary works, including newspaper and magazine articles; and the renewed friendship with the Revent\u00f3s family, beginning in the 1950s. Picasso and Jacint remained in touch until Jacint\u2019s death in 1968. The lifelong connection between the two runs through the exhibition, from lengthy to spontaneous letters: \u201cI\u2019m spending a few days in Paris and would like to see you,\u201d Jacint wrote to Picasso in 1921. \u201cI\u2019m staying at the Grand Hotel. If you have a minute, write me a note and we\u2019ll meet where and when you suggest. I don\u2019t have anything to do.\u201d", "answer": "Picasso", "sentence": "The exhibition comprises three sections: letters and artwork from the early years of the friendships; illustrations by Picasso that accompany Ram\u00f3n\u2019s literary works, including newspaper and magazine articles; and the renewed friendship with the Revent\u00f3s family, beginning in the 1950s.", "paragraph_sentence": " The exhibition comprises three sections: letters and artwork from the early years of the friendships; illustrations by Picasso that accompany Ram\u00f3n\u2019s literary works, including newspaper and magazine articles; and the renewed friendship with the Revent\u00f3s family, beginning in the 1950s. Picasso and Jacint remained in touch until Jacint\u2019s death in 1968. The lifelong connection between the two runs through the exhibition, from lengthy to spontaneous letters: \u201cI\u2019m spending a few days in Paris and would like to see you,\u201d Jacint wrote to Picasso in 1921. \u201cI\u2019m staying at the Grand Hotel. If you have a minute, write me a note and we\u2019ll meet where and when you suggest. I don\u2019t have anything to do.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The exhibition comprises three sections: letters and artwork from the early years of the friendships; illustrations by Picasso that accompany Ram\u00f3n\u2019s literary works, including newspaper and magazine articles; and the renewed friendship with the Revent\u00f3s family, beginning in the 1950s. Picasso and Jacint remained in touch until Jacint\u2019s death in 1968. The lifelong connection between the two runs through the exhibition, from lengthy to spontaneous letters: \u201cI\u2019m spending a few days in Paris and would like to see you,\u201d Jacint wrote to Picasso in 1921. \u201cI\u2019m staying at the Grand Hotel. If you have a minute, write me a note and we\u2019ll meet where and when you suggest. I don\u2019t have anything to do.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The exhibition comprises three sections: letters and artwork from the early years of the friendships; illustrations by Picasso that accompany Ram\u00f3n\u2019s literary works, including newspaper and magazine articles; and the renewed friendship with the Revent\u00f3s family, beginning in the 1950s."} -{"question": "How many secretaries general has the United Nations had?", "paragraph": "The United Nations has had eight secretaries general. All have been men. Each has been selected through back-room dealing dominated by the five world powers that hold permanent seats on the Security Council. It\u2019s time to change that. The appointment of the civil servant who serves as the next head of the United Nations should be more transparent. It would be powerfully symbolic to appoint a woman to the helm of an organization created 70 years ago to tackle the world\u2019s most pressing problems through diplomacy and global consensus. Encouragingly, both objectives are being championed this year with unprecedented vigor within the United Nations as the current secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, moves toward the end of his second five-year term on Dec. 31, 2016.", "answer": "eight", "sentence": "The United Nations has had eight secretaries general.", "paragraph_sentence": " The United Nations has had eight secretaries general. All have been men. Each has been selected through back-room dealing dominated by the five world powers that hold permanent seats on the Security Council. It\u2019s time to change that. The appointment of the civil servant who serves as the next head of the United Nations should be more transparent. It would be powerfully symbolic to appoint a woman to the helm of an organization created 70 years ago to tackle the world\u2019s most pressing problems through diplomacy and global consensus. Encouragingly, both objectives are being championed this year with unprecedented vigor within the United Nations as the current secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, moves toward the end of his second five-year term on Dec. 31, 2016.", "paragraph_answer": "The United Nations has had eight secretaries general. All have been men. Each has been selected through back-room dealing dominated by the five world powers that hold permanent seats on the Security Council. It\u2019s time to change that. The appointment of the civil servant who serves as the next head of the United Nations should be more transparent. It would be powerfully symbolic to appoint a woman to the helm of an organization created 70 years ago to tackle the world\u2019s most pressing problems through diplomacy and global consensus. Encouragingly, both objectives are being championed this year with unprecedented vigor within the United Nations as the current secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, moves toward the end of his second five-year term on Dec. 31, 2016.", "sentence_answer": "The United Nations has had eight secretaries general."} -{"question": "What gender have all secretary general's been?", "paragraph": "The United Nations has had eight secretaries general. All have been men. Each has been selected through back-room dealing dominated by the five world powers that hold permanent seats on the Security Council. It\u2019s time to change that. The appointment of the civil servant who serves as the next head of the United Nations should be more transparent. It would be powerfully symbolic to appoint a woman to the helm of an organization created 70 years ago to tackle the world\u2019s most pressing problems through diplomacy and global consensus. Encouragingly, both objectives are being championed this year with unprecedented vigor within the United Nations as the current secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, moves toward the end of his second five-year term on Dec. 31, 2016.", "answer": "men", "sentence": "All have been men .", "paragraph_sentence": "The United Nations has had eight secretaries general. All have been men . Each has been selected through back-room dealing dominated by the five world powers that hold permanent seats on the Security Council. It\u2019s time to change that. The appointment of the civil servant who serves as the next head of the United Nations should be more transparent. It would be powerfully symbolic to appoint a woman to the helm of an organization created 70 years ago to tackle the world\u2019s most pressing problems through diplomacy and global consensus. Encouragingly, both objectives are being championed this year with unprecedented vigor within the United Nations as the current secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, moves toward the end of his second five-year term on Dec. 31, 2016.", "paragraph_answer": "The United Nations has had eight secretaries general. All have been men . Each has been selected through back-room dealing dominated by the five world powers that hold permanent seats on the Security Council. It\u2019s time to change that. The appointment of the civil servant who serves as the next head of the United Nations should be more transparent. It would be powerfully symbolic to appoint a woman to the helm of an organization created 70 years ago to tackle the world\u2019s most pressing problems through diplomacy and global consensus. Encouragingly, both objectives are being championed this year with unprecedented vigor within the United Nations as the current secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, moves toward the end of his second five-year term on Dec. 31, 2016.", "sentence_answer": "All have been men ."} -{"question": "How many world powers hold permanent seats on the Security Council?", "paragraph": "The United Nations has had eight secretaries general. All have been men. Each has been selected through back-room dealing dominated by the five world powers that hold permanent seats on the Security Council. It\u2019s time to change that. The appointment of the civil servant who serves as the next head of the United Nations should be more transparent. It would be powerfully symbolic to appoint a woman to the helm of an organization created 70 years ago to tackle the world\u2019s most pressing problems through diplomacy and global consensus. Encouragingly, both objectives are being championed this year with unprecedented vigor within the United Nations as the current secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, moves toward the end of his second five-year term on Dec. 31, 2016.", "answer": "five", "sentence": "Each has been selected through back-room dealing dominated by the five world powers that hold permanent seats on the Security Council.", "paragraph_sentence": "The United Nations has had eight secretaries general. All have been men. Each has been selected through back-room dealing dominated by the five world powers that hold permanent seats on the Security Council. It\u2019s time to change that. The appointment of the civil servant who serves as the next head of the United Nations should be more transparent. It would be powerfully symbolic to appoint a woman to the helm of an organization created 70 years ago to tackle the world\u2019s most pressing problems through diplomacy and global consensus. Encouragingly, both objectives are being championed this year with unprecedented vigor within the United Nations as the current secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, moves toward the end of his second five-year term on Dec. 31, 2016.", "paragraph_answer": "The United Nations has had eight secretaries general. All have been men. Each has been selected through back-room dealing dominated by the five world powers that hold permanent seats on the Security Council. It\u2019s time to change that. The appointment of the civil servant who serves as the next head of the United Nations should be more transparent. It would be powerfully symbolic to appoint a woman to the helm of an organization created 70 years ago to tackle the world\u2019s most pressing problems through diplomacy and global consensus. Encouragingly, both objectives are being championed this year with unprecedented vigor within the United Nations as the current secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, moves toward the end of his second five-year term on Dec. 31, 2016.", "sentence_answer": "Each has been selected through back-room dealing dominated by the five world powers that hold permanent seats on the Security Council."} -{"question": "What type of person would be powerfully symbolic to appoint as the next head of the United Nations?", "paragraph": "The United Nations has had eight secretaries general. All have been men. Each has been selected through back-room dealing dominated by the five world powers that hold permanent seats on the Security Council. It\u2019s time to change that. The appointment of the civil servant who serves as the next head of the United Nations should be more transparent. It would be powerfully symbolic to appoint a woman to the helm of an organization created 70 years ago to tackle the world\u2019s most pressing problems through diplomacy and global consensus. Encouragingly, both objectives are being championed this year with unprecedented vigor within the United Nations as the current secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, moves toward the end of his second five-year term on Dec. 31, 2016.", "answer": "a woman", "sentence": "It would be powerfully symbolic to appoint a woman to the helm of an organization created 70 years ago to tackle the world\u2019s most pressing problems through diplomacy and global consensus.", "paragraph_sentence": "The United Nations has had eight secretaries general. All have been men. Each has been selected through back-room dealing dominated by the five world powers that hold permanent seats on the Security Council. It\u2019s time to change that. The appointment of the civil servant who serves as the next head of the United Nations should be more transparent. It would be powerfully symbolic to appoint a woman to the helm of an organization created 70 years ago to tackle the world\u2019s most pressing problems through diplomacy and global consensus. Encouragingly, both objectives are being championed this year with unprecedented vigor within the United Nations as the current secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, moves toward the end of his second five-year term on Dec. 31, 2016.", "paragraph_answer": "The United Nations has had eight secretaries general. All have been men. Each has been selected through back-room dealing dominated by the five world powers that hold permanent seats on the Security Council. It\u2019s time to change that. The appointment of the civil servant who serves as the next head of the United Nations should be more transparent. It would be powerfully symbolic to appoint a woman to the helm of an organization created 70 years ago to tackle the world\u2019s most pressing problems through diplomacy and global consensus. Encouragingly, both objectives are being championed this year with unprecedented vigor within the United Nations as the current secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, moves toward the end of his second five-year term on Dec. 31, 2016.", "sentence_answer": "It would be powerfully symbolic to appoint a woman to the helm of an organization created 70 years ago to tackle the world\u2019s most pressing problems through diplomacy and global consensus."} -{"question": "About how many years ago was the U.N. organization created?", "paragraph": "The United Nations has had eight secretaries general. All have been men. Each has been selected through back-room dealing dominated by the five world powers that hold permanent seats on the Security Council. It\u2019s time to change that. The appointment of the civil servant who serves as the next head of the United Nations should be more transparent. It would be powerfully symbolic to appoint a woman to the helm of an organization created 70 years ago to tackle the world\u2019s most pressing problems through diplomacy and global consensus. Encouragingly, both objectives are being championed this year with unprecedented vigor within the United Nations as the current secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, moves toward the end of his second five-year term on Dec. 31, 2016.", "answer": "70 years ago", "sentence": "It would be powerfully symbolic to appoint a woman to the helm of an organization created 70 years ago to tackle the world\u2019s most pressing problems through diplomacy and global consensus.", "paragraph_sentence": "The United Nations has had eight secretaries general. All have been men. Each has been selected through back-room dealing dominated by the five world powers that hold permanent seats on the Security Council. It\u2019s time to change that. The appointment of the civil servant who serves as the next head of the United Nations should be more transparent. It would be powerfully symbolic to appoint a woman to the helm of an organization created 70 years ago to tackle the world\u2019s most pressing problems through diplomacy and global consensus. Encouragingly, both objectives are being championed this year with unprecedented vigor within the United Nations as the current secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, moves toward the end of his second five-year term on Dec. 31, 2016.", "paragraph_answer": "The United Nations has had eight secretaries general. All have been men. Each has been selected through back-room dealing dominated by the five world powers that hold permanent seats on the Security Council. It\u2019s time to change that. The appointment of the civil servant who serves as the next head of the United Nations should be more transparent. It would be powerfully symbolic to appoint a woman to the helm of an organization created 70 years ago to tackle the world\u2019s most pressing problems through diplomacy and global consensus. Encouragingly, both objectives are being championed this year with unprecedented vigor within the United Nations as the current secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, moves toward the end of his second five-year term on Dec. 31, 2016.", "sentence_answer": "It would be powerfully symbolic to appoint a woman to the helm of an organization created 70 years ago to tackle the world\u2019s most pressing problems through diplomacy and global consensus."} -{"question": "When should the draft for the U.N.'s yearly resolution, with it's new guidelines, be finalized?", "paragraph": "Croatia and Namibia are leading an effort to give the organization\u2019s 193 member states a greater say in the selection of the secretary general as part of a yearly resolution that is being drafted. New guidelines, which are still being negotiated and will be finalized by mid-September, would allow members to formally nominate applicants and vet the finalists. Until now, the five permanent members of the Security Council \u2014 Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States \u2014 have bargained behind closed doors to pick from a short list of candidates that is not formally publicized. Those who have prevailed have been palatable to those five governments, a common-denominator criterion that has the potential to doom the chances of more impressive and qualified public servants. Currently, there is not an effort underway to make the process truly democratic by allowing member states to elect the secretary general though a vote. Yet, by opening it to greater public scrutiny, the Security Council would be likely to take into account input and concerns from around the globe.", "answer": "by mid-September", "sentence": "New guidelines, which are still being negotiated and will be finalized by mid-September , would allow members to formally nominate applicants and vet the finalists.", "paragraph_sentence": "Croatia and Namibia are leading an effort to give the organization\u2019s 193 member states a greater say in the selection of the secretary general as part of a yearly resolution that is being drafted. New guidelines, which are still being negotiated and will be finalized by mid-September , would allow members to formally nominate applicants and vet the finalists. Until now, the five permanent members of the Security Council \u2014 Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States \u2014 have bargained behind closed doors to pick from a short list of candidates that is not formally publicized. Those who have prevailed have been palatable to those five governments, a common-denominator criterion that has the potential to doom the chances of more impressive and qualified public servants. Currently, there is not an effort underway to make the process truly democratic by allowing member states to elect the secretary general though a vote. Yet, by opening it to greater public scrutiny, the Security Council would be likely to take into account input and concerns from around the globe.", "paragraph_answer": "Croatia and Namibia are leading an effort to give the organization\u2019s 193 member states a greater say in the selection of the secretary general as part of a yearly resolution that is being drafted. New guidelines, which are still being negotiated and will be finalized by mid-September , would allow members to formally nominate applicants and vet the finalists. Until now, the five permanent members of the Security Council \u2014 Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States \u2014 have bargained behind closed doors to pick from a short list of candidates that is not formally publicized. Those who have prevailed have been palatable to those five governments, a common-denominator criterion that has the potential to doom the chances of more impressive and qualified public servants. Currently, there is not an effort underway to make the process truly democratic by allowing member states to elect the secretary general though a vote. Yet, by opening it to greater public scrutiny, the Security Council would be likely to take into account input and concerns from around the globe.", "sentence_answer": "New guidelines, which are still being negotiated and will be finalized by mid-September , would allow members to formally nominate applicants and vet the finalists."} -{"question": "What one major change is to be made to the current U.N. guidelines?", "paragraph": "Croatia and Namibia are leading an effort to give the organization\u2019s 193 member states a greater say in the selection of the secretary general as part of a yearly resolution that is being drafted. New guidelines, which are still being negotiated and will be finalized by mid-September, would allow members to formally nominate applicants and vet the finalists. Until now, the five permanent members of the Security Council \u2014 Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States \u2014 have bargained behind closed doors to pick from a short list of candidates that is not formally publicized. Those who have prevailed have been palatable to those five governments, a common-denominator criterion that has the potential to doom the chances of more impressive and qualified public servants. Currently, there is not an effort underway to make the process truly democratic by allowing member states to elect the secretary general though a vote. Yet, by opening it to greater public scrutiny, the Security Council would be likely to take into account input and concerns from around the globe.", "answer": "allow members to formally nominate applicants and vet the finalists", "sentence": "New guidelines, which are still being negotiated and will be finalized by mid-September, would allow members to formally nominate applicants and vet the finalists .", "paragraph_sentence": "Croatia and Namibia are leading an effort to give the organization\u2019s 193 member states a greater say in the selection of the secretary general as part of a yearly resolution that is being drafted. New guidelines, which are still being negotiated and will be finalized by mid-September, would allow members to formally nominate applicants and vet the finalists . Until now, the five permanent members of the Security Council \u2014 Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States \u2014 have bargained behind closed doors to pick from a short list of candidates that is not formally publicized. Those who have prevailed have been palatable to those five governments, a common-denominator criterion that has the potential to doom the chances of more impressive and qualified public servants. Currently, there is not an effort underway to make the process truly democratic by allowing member states to elect the secretary general though a vote. Yet, by opening it to greater public scrutiny, the Security Council would be likely to take into account input and concerns from around the globe.", "paragraph_answer": "Croatia and Namibia are leading an effort to give the organization\u2019s 193 member states a greater say in the selection of the secretary general as part of a yearly resolution that is being drafted. New guidelines, which are still being negotiated and will be finalized by mid-September, would allow members to formally nominate applicants and vet the finalists . Until now, the five permanent members of the Security Council \u2014 Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States \u2014 have bargained behind closed doors to pick from a short list of candidates that is not formally publicized. Those who have prevailed have been palatable to those five governments, a common-denominator criterion that has the potential to doom the chances of more impressive and qualified public servants. Currently, there is not an effort underway to make the process truly democratic by allowing member states to elect the secretary general though a vote. Yet, by opening it to greater public scrutiny, the Security Council would be likely to take into account input and concerns from around the globe.", "sentence_answer": "New guidelines, which are still being negotiated and will be finalized by mid-September, would allow members to formally nominate applicants and vet the finalists ."} -{"question": "In the past, which countries bargained in private to determine who would become secretary general of the U.N.", "paragraph": "Croatia and Namibia are leading an effort to give the organization\u2019s 193 member states a greater say in the selection of the secretary general as part of a yearly resolution that is being drafted. New guidelines, which are still being negotiated and will be finalized by mid-September, would allow members to formally nominate applicants and vet the finalists. Until now, the five permanent members of the Security Council \u2014 Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States \u2014 have bargained behind closed doors to pick from a short list of candidates that is not formally publicized. Those who have prevailed have been palatable to those five governments, a common-denominator criterion that has the potential to doom the chances of more impressive and qualified public servants. Currently, there is not an effort underway to make the process truly democratic by allowing member states to elect the secretary general though a vote. Yet, by opening it to greater public scrutiny, the Security Council would be likely to take into account input and concerns from around the globe.", "answer": "Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States", "sentence": "Until now, the five permanent members of the Security Council \u2014 Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States \u2014 have bargained behind closed doors to pick from a short list of candidates that is not formally publicized.", "paragraph_sentence": "Croatia and Namibia are leading an effort to give the organization\u2019s 193 member states a greater say in the selection of the secretary general as part of a yearly resolution that is being drafted. New guidelines, which are still being negotiated and will be finalized by mid-September, would allow members to formally nominate applicants and vet the finalists. Until now, the five permanent members of the Security Council \u2014 Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States \u2014 have bargained behind closed doors to pick from a short list of candidates that is not formally publicized. Those who have prevailed have been palatable to those five governments, a common-denominator criterion that has the potential to doom the chances of more impressive and qualified public servants. Currently, there is not an effort underway to make the process truly democratic by allowing member states to elect the secretary general though a vote. Yet, by opening it to greater public scrutiny, the Security Council would be likely to take into account input and concerns from around the globe.", "paragraph_answer": "Croatia and Namibia are leading an effort to give the organization\u2019s 193 member states a greater say in the selection of the secretary general as part of a yearly resolution that is being drafted. New guidelines, which are still being negotiated and will be finalized by mid-September, would allow members to formally nominate applicants and vet the finalists. Until now, the five permanent members of the Security Council \u2014 Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States \u2014 have bargained behind closed doors to pick from a short list of candidates that is not formally publicized. Those who have prevailed have been palatable to those five governments, a common-denominator criterion that has the potential to doom the chances of more impressive and qualified public servants. Currently, there is not an effort underway to make the process truly democratic by allowing member states to elect the secretary general though a vote. Yet, by opening it to greater public scrutiny, the Security Council would be likely to take into account input and concerns from around the globe.", "sentence_answer": "Until now, the five permanent members of the Security Council \u2014 Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States \u2014 have bargained behind closed doors to pick from a short list of candidates that is not formally publicized."} -{"question": "What two countries lead the effort to transform the way in which the selection of the secretary general is chosen?", "paragraph": "Croatia and Namibia are leading an effort to give the organization\u2019s 193 member states a greater say in the selection of the secretary general as part of a yearly resolution that is being drafted. New guidelines, which are still being negotiated and will be finalized by mid-September, would allow members to formally nominate applicants and vet the finalists. Until now, the five permanent members of the Security Council \u2014 Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States \u2014 have bargained behind closed doors to pick from a short list of candidates that is not formally publicized. Those who have prevailed have been palatable to those five governments, a common-denominator criterion that has the potential to doom the chances of more impressive and qualified public servants. Currently, there is not an effort underway to make the process truly democratic by allowing member states to elect the secretary general though a vote. Yet, by opening it to greater public scrutiny, the Security Council would be likely to take into account input and concerns from around the globe.", "answer": "Croatia and Namibia", "sentence": "Croatia and Namibia are leading an effort to give the organization\u2019s 193 member states a greater say in the selection of the secretary general as part of a yearly resolution that is being drafted.", "paragraph_sentence": " Croatia and Namibia are leading an effort to give the organization\u2019s 193 member states a greater say in the selection of the secretary general as part of a yearly resolution that is being drafted. New guidelines, which are still being negotiated and will be finalized by mid-September, would allow members to formally nominate applicants and vet the finalists. Until now, the five permanent members of the Security Council \u2014 Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States \u2014 have bargained behind closed doors to pick from a short list of candidates that is not formally publicized. Those who have prevailed have been palatable to those five governments, a common-denominator criterion that has the potential to doom the chances of more impressive and qualified public servants. Currently, there is not an effort underway to make the process truly democratic by allowing member states to elect the secretary general though a vote. Yet, by opening it to greater public scrutiny, the Security Council would be likely to take into account input and concerns from around the globe.", "paragraph_answer": " Croatia and Namibia are leading an effort to give the organization\u2019s 193 member states a greater say in the selection of the secretary general as part of a yearly resolution that is being drafted. New guidelines, which are still being negotiated and will be finalized by mid-September, would allow members to formally nominate applicants and vet the finalists. Until now, the five permanent members of the Security Council \u2014 Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States \u2014 have bargained behind closed doors to pick from a short list of candidates that is not formally publicized. Those who have prevailed have been palatable to those five governments, a common-denominator criterion that has the potential to doom the chances of more impressive and qualified public servants. Currently, there is not an effort underway to make the process truly democratic by allowing member states to elect the secretary general though a vote. Yet, by opening it to greater public scrutiny, the Security Council would be likely to take into account input and concerns from around the globe.", "sentence_answer": " Croatia and Namibia are leading an effort to give the organization\u2019s 193 member states a greater say in the selection of the secretary general as part of a yearly resolution that is being drafted."} -{"question": "How many member state's are a part of the U.N.?", "paragraph": "Croatia and Namibia are leading an effort to give the organization\u2019s 193 member states a greater say in the selection of the secretary general as part of a yearly resolution that is being drafted. New guidelines, which are still being negotiated and will be finalized by mid-September, would allow members to formally nominate applicants and vet the finalists. Until now, the five permanent members of the Security Council \u2014 Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States \u2014 have bargained behind closed doors to pick from a short list of candidates that is not formally publicized. Those who have prevailed have been palatable to those five governments, a common-denominator criterion that has the potential to doom the chances of more impressive and qualified public servants. Currently, there is not an effort underway to make the process truly democratic by allowing member states to elect the secretary general though a vote. Yet, by opening it to greater public scrutiny, the Security Council would be likely to take into account input and concerns from around the globe.", "answer": "193", "sentence": "Croatia and Namibia are leading an effort to give the organization\u2019s 193 member states a greater say in the selection of the secretary general as part of a yearly resolution that is being drafted.", "paragraph_sentence": " Croatia and Namibia are leading an effort to give the organization\u2019s 193 member states a greater say in the selection of the secretary general as part of a yearly resolution that is being drafted. New guidelines, which are still being negotiated and will be finalized by mid-September, would allow members to formally nominate applicants and vet the finalists. Until now, the five permanent members of the Security Council \u2014 Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States \u2014 have bargained behind closed doors to pick from a short list of candidates that is not formally publicized. Those who have prevailed have been palatable to those five governments, a common-denominator criterion that has the potential to doom the chances of more impressive and qualified public servants. Currently, there is not an effort underway to make the process truly democratic by allowing member states to elect the secretary general though a vote. Yet, by opening it to greater public scrutiny, the Security Council would be likely to take into account input and concerns from around the globe.", "paragraph_answer": "Croatia and Namibia are leading an effort to give the organization\u2019s 193 member states a greater say in the selection of the secretary general as part of a yearly resolution that is being drafted. New guidelines, which are still being negotiated and will be finalized by mid-September, would allow members to formally nominate applicants and vet the finalists. Until now, the five permanent members of the Security Council \u2014 Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States \u2014 have bargained behind closed doors to pick from a short list of candidates that is not formally publicized. Those who have prevailed have been palatable to those five governments, a common-denominator criterion that has the potential to doom the chances of more impressive and qualified public servants. Currently, there is not an effort underway to make the process truly democratic by allowing member states to elect the secretary general though a vote. Yet, by opening it to greater public scrutiny, the Security Council would be likely to take into account input and concerns from around the globe.", "sentence_answer": "Croatia and Namibia are leading an effort to give the organization\u2019s 193 member states a greater say in the selection of the secretary general as part of a yearly resolution that is being drafted."} -{"question": "What group published a list of candidates that features detailed bios of world leaders from different backgrounds?", "paragraph": "Informal lists of potential candidates have begun to circulate. One published by the Campaign to Elect a Woman U.N. Secretary General, an independent group, features the biographies of accomplished world leaders of diverse backgrounds. They include President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf of Liberia, Christine Lagarde, the head of the International Monetary Fund, and Alicia B\u00e1rcena Ibarra, the executive secretary of the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean. There is no shortage of distinguished women who would revitalize the role of secretary general and energize the organization\u2019s ongoing efforts to promote gender equality.", "answer": "Campaign to Elect a Woman U.N. Secretary General", "sentence": "One published by the Campaign to Elect a Woman U.N. Secretary General , an independent group, features the biographies of accomplished world leaders of diverse backgrounds.", "paragraph_sentence": "Informal lists of potential candidates have begun to circulate. One published by the Campaign to Elect a Woman U.N. Secretary General , an independent group, features the biographies of accomplished world leaders of diverse backgrounds. They include President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf of Liberia, Christine Lagarde, the head of the International Monetary Fund, and Alicia B\u00e1rcena Ibarra, the executive secretary of the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean. There is no shortage of distinguished women who would revitalize the role of secretary general and energize the organization\u2019s ongoing efforts to promote gender equality.", "paragraph_answer": "Informal lists of potential candidates have begun to circulate. One published by the Campaign to Elect a Woman U.N. Secretary General , an independent group, features the biographies of accomplished world leaders of diverse backgrounds. They include President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf of Liberia, Christine Lagarde, the hea \ No newline at end of file